Thank you. It strikes me as quite useful to pay attention to the history of rationality movements, especially their failures.
High points partial transcript of a lecture about polarizing political rhetoric. There's a link to the lecture, and I'll finish the partial transcript next week.
This is very careful analysis by a linguist-- relevent to your first paragraph, not the second.
This is very interesting indeed. A fascinating read, to be sure. While we here seem to take an instantaneous view of the political climate surrounding us, it is refreshing to see a historical perspective. Now that this Kathryn has highlighted the tendency, an explanation should, I think, be needed. Why is political discourse turning more harsh and irrational than it used to, and starting to turn out oddly similar to Nazi rhetoric?
Some possibilities:
Most of that is excellent, but #6 can't be an answer to "why is political discourse getting fascist-ish now?" unless fascism has become more fun recently. Is there any reason to think it has? (It's not impossible. If part of the fun is the feeling of being part of something big, that may be easier to achieve in our more highly connected age. But then, that goes for other non-fascist ways to be part of something big, too.)
Point one doesn't work-- there are names and eras which are remembered when it was unusually bad.
It's possible that political hostility are more visible in the US because we have periods of relative civility.
In its present form, the social order depends for its continued existence on the acceptance, without too many embarrassing questions, of the propaganda put forth by those in authority and the propaganda hallowed by the local traditions. The problem, once more, is to find the happy mean. Individuals must be suggestible enough to be willing and able to make their society work, but not so suggestible as to fall helplessly under the spell of professional mind-manipulators.
Sometimes the "happy" is not the "mean"; sometimes the optimum is an extremum. It may well be true that the present form of the social order depends on acceptance of propaganda, but then so much the worse for the present form.
Note that there are ways of being "suggestible" in the sense of being pro-social, other than being "suggestible" in the sense of buying whatever arguments or assertions are made to you. For example, when some colleagues suggest "let's go to the pizza place" I might go along even though pizza might not be my favorite food at that moment. I simply like their company, and I go along. I also recognize that in the future the roles may reverse, with everyone going to my favorite place. No unreason is required for this kind of social cohesion.
I still love Aldous Huxley, but that snippet was an embarrassment.
The novel Brave New World looks more prescient with the passage of time, not less. The novel's main female character Lenina Crowne has jumped off its pages and into our lives. It wouldn't take much of a stretch to imagine that a real life Lenina in our world would carry a smart phone on her contraceptive-loaded Malthusian belt (or perhaps we should now call them "Fluke Belts"?) , have Facebook & Twitter accounts, go to "feelies" based on Twilight & Hunger Games novels, and even sport tattoos.
Years ago, I stumbled upon this most interesting segment while reading Aldous Huxley's Brave New World Revisited, of which I have finally found an online version that enables me to share its contents with you:
Obviously I most fervently recommend this book as something a rationalist and humanist would probably greatly enjoy. In fact, if there is enough demand, an entire thread to discuss said book's contents, the facts that it relates and the insights that it brings, would be a wonderful undertaking. This thread, however, has the significantly narrower objective of bringing to the fore the history of the defunct Institute For Rational Analysis (which has an heir in the Propaganda Critic, a website which analyses current propaganda with the help of the tool set the institute developed), and look at its history for insights on how to conduct our own, oddly similar, philanthropic endeavors, especially the newly-created Centre For Modern Rationality, and especially on the obstacles and opposition we should expect to meet, and speculate on how to navigate them, if and when they should arise.
I have included the second paragraph because, while it not directly relevant to the the external difficulties the Institute had to face, it highlights a very important topic: our responsibility towards these youth. We will, most probably, be tearing apart all the morality infrastructure, all the adaptations of which they would be executers. And we might also hurt their chances of integrating in a society where clear thinking and mental hygiene are not in the mainstream. What are the measures we should take to help young rationalists be able to win, if they decide one of the games they want to win at is " live happily with non-rationalist people, befriend them, and perhaps even spread our message further"? Or, for that matter "make decisions quickly and efficiently on what's the right thing and the wrong thing to do in a given situation"?