• Maeve
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    4 hours ago

    They are just polite about it and use the right euphemisms.

    Yes. That my cognitive dissonance was so loud I could clearly see the evermore rightward march of the Democratic party, be horrified by ever-shifting rhetoric and policy but failed to recognize it until one of our brothers here pointed out to me in direct yet civil terms, i was embarrassed. Not ashamed, because I think shame wouldn’t have allowed me to admit to myself, let alone others, that this is exactly correct.

    No matter our nationality, political ideals, deep, honest, fearless introspection is necessary.

    Sometimes I feel the fear of Uncertainty stinging clear And I, I can’t help but ask myself How much I let the fear take the wheel and steer It’s driven me before, and it seems to have a vague Haunting mass appeal But lately I’m beginning to find that I Should be the one behind the wheel

    • TheOubliette@lemmy.ml
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      1 hour ago

      Yes, it’s horrifying what a small change in perspective - a new angle of criticism, for example - can reveal about our world. There’s no need to feel embarrassment, we are all embedded in a milieu of PR campaigns and a handful of political memes recycled indefinitely and it is so pervasive that it is not something that poli sci professors usually escape, either. Usually it’s the exact opposite. They repeat and entrench lines of thought handed down to them without ever critically engaging with it. Universities across the West teach collective action problems as if they are laws and not constantly openly contradicted by example or that politucs is a one-dimensional axis from liberal to conservative. The latter truly reveals how little they have questioned or learned and opens up its own interesting questions about how academia functions. But anyways, point is, even the people nominally tasked with becoming experts on these sorts of things don’t just automatically recognize this predominant myopia.

      Recognizing such pervasive false perspectives and tropes tends to require a cold splash of reality that contradicts the narrative or extensive reading to discover new thought patterns. Or like in your case, talking to someone that has already done so. All we can do is be open to the constructive self-criticism like you make note of and to do our best to be personally morally consistent and empathetic.

      • Maeve
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        24 minutes ago

        Thank you for your generous and insightful reply. I’m definitely not a political scientist, and I guess the embarrassment was for myself, realizing on the one hand that our policies are terrible, and on the other, that hope lies with the Democratic party.

        While I don’t salivate at the idea of war, and especially civil war, I can not fear it; dread and fear not always being the same thing or of the same source. I’ll do what is necessary, while also acknowledging that my opponents are decent, but misguided and just as heavily brainwashed people. I just hope when it comes to that, fascism won’t prevail, whether that happens in whatever years I have left, or follows the generations behind me.