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"Mechanisms of extremist mobilization"

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Blogger Paul D. Van Pelt said...

I have had discussions with associates, mostly moderates, about this topic. My older brother summed things up pretty well: without cooperation, there is no civilization. Extremists do not count themselves anti-civilization. They wear blinders, crafted by anarchy and insurrection, asserting something like: this is not the way things are supposed to be, WE know how things should be. I have friends, living calmer expatriate lives in several parts of the world. They miss some aspects of life as Americans, but would not return for love or money. Sadly, it seems to me there is no solution to this. We there to be one, it would be draconian, affecting all in order to impede a few. That would not be America either. So we have come to entropy via complexity, a figurative black hole, subsuming much of the progress which brought us here.

February 18, 2023 at 8:20 AM

Anonymous Joseph Heath said...

Slightly off topic, but a question about the replacement theory stuff. A lot of coverage of it in the media and among academics (e.g. here) treats it like a wingnut conspiracy theory, an extremist belief, etc. But it's not hard to see how the way that many progressives talk about racial justice nurtures and encourages the belief. It has become increasingly common, for example, to use the term "white supremacy" to describe any institution in which whites form the numerical majority (i.e. minorities are underrepresented). This is reinforced by a lot of "white privilege" checklists, which systematically confuse racial privilege with majority privilege. In both cases, the expansive use of these terms implies that the only way to combat white supremacy, or white privilege, is to make it so that whites are no longer a demographic majority.

So that part is not a conspiracy theory, it's a pretty literal reading of what people at the progressive end of the Democratic party (woke/DEI/etc.) have been saying for a while. Plus ever since The Emerging Democratic Majority there has been a lot of excitement among Democrats about the declining number of white voters, so that's not a conspiracy either. The conspiracy part is when conservatives connect up this idea that racial justice requires demographic transformation with liberal support for abortion and increased immigration (the former to reduce the number of whites, the latter to increase the number of non-whites). THAT part is obviously a conspiracy theory, in the sense that it is an exercise in connect-the-dots thinking where there isn't actually any connection. Still, it seems to me that about 80% of replacement theory comes from just listening to what left-liberals are saying, and maybe 20% from further paranoia. Am I mistaken about this?






March 19, 2023 at 3:51 PM

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