I Would Agree With You But Then We Would Both Be Wrong

ryan_frownAs if on cue, Republican Party nominee for Vice President and current congressman, Paul Ryan, was back in the news warning about “generations of men not even thinking about working or learning to value the culture of work, so there is a real culture problem here that has to be dealt with.”

Ryan then offers a bait and switch, condemning government programs that have historically addressed the consequences of poverty and offering up free market solutions, like limiting long-term unemployment insurance and opposing living wage policies.  Somehow his fear of a “dependency culture” has led him to believe in the superior intelligence of private enterprise and the character faults of an underclass bred to depend on government assistance. How I would love to agree with him, but then we would both be horribly wrong.

For some historical antecedents to this debate, read my two-part series from “Becoming Conscious of Capitalism”, beginning with How Wealth Became Concentrated and the Poor Were to Blame: Paupers are Everywhere.

Confirmation Bias and Collective Folly

For all of you seeking an image, symbol, or story to help you understand the mysteries of confirmation bias, I offer this YouTube presentation of a woman advocating for deer crossing signs to be moved to places safer for deer to cross. (sent to me by Steve Maybury, further confirming my sense of his humor)
 

 

"Underneath the many variations of collective folly lie at least two fundamental patterns that alert us to the potential of folly’s emergence. The first pattern is a movement toward separation and fragmentation. In this pattern, group members resist ideas, other group members, or other groups that are deemed “not me” or “not us.”


Sometimes this pull is subtle. Group members ignore divergent perspectives or data, welcoming only the data and perspectives that confirm what they know, or think they know. The cognitive sciences describe this behavior as confirmation bias—a tendency to search for and interpret information in ways that confirm our existing preconceptions.
"
~ Edited passage from The Power of Collective Wisdom: And the Trap of Collective Folly

If you missed it the first time …

Becoming Conscious of Capitalism:
The Death and Rebirth of Prosperity’s Dream

a serial narrative by Alan Briskin
Dragon-wtbkFREE: SUBSCRIBE NOW
to receive your weekly dose of reality

(Watch for the next series)


Postmark, Oakland, CA, August 11, 2012
Today the Republican nominee for President Mitt Romney chose the Wisconsin Congressman Paul Ryan to be his vice presidential nominee. The news was filled with many different perspectives about this selection, one of which was the unusual philosophical connection Ryan has with the author Ayn Rand.

Below is an excerpt about Ayn Rand from my new serial narrative, Becoming Conscious of Capitalism, and her unusual link with Paul Ryan.

I wrote the serial over the past few months with an eye to collective folly but also as a serious attempt to discover the links between capitalism and partisan politics. Along with my commentary, I include some of my HDR (high dynamic range) photography as well as FLASH POINTS ripped from today’s headlines and those of earlier historic perspectives.

I hope you will find the serial stimulating, an irreverent romp through history as we polka our way to the Presidential elections.  Sometimes trying to keep sane means embracing insanity as an important herald of what to pay attention to. Read on for a “sneak preview” excerpt from Chapter Six of the series…
Read More

Death Wish II: The Rise of Michele Bachmann

This is not a post about Michele Bachmann so much as a reflection on the interior of a nation generating leaders who are reflections of our own most discomforting emotions – vengefulness, paranoia, rigidity, fear, and most disturbing, an addiction to the light.  And by addiction to the light I mean a wish to believe that there is one path to the divine and that path must be obeyed without reservation.  Ms. Bachmann calls this path Jesus or Christian but I strongly suspect these are just symbolic words for believing that one is more righteous than others.  We all have these feelings at times – a self righteous sense of being better than others or conversely not feeling valued enough by others – but when this becomes a group phenomenon it carries with it a great wave of destructiveness.

How do I know these interior feelings are gaining traction in the collective rather than simply being about the person of Michele Bachmann? Well, because one of the Republican candidates for President, Tim Pawlenty, told me so.  On his leaving the presidential race he acknowledged a slight misstep.  He thought he brought a “rational, established, credible, strong record…”  However, he added “But I think the audience, so to speak, was looking for something different.”  So much is suggested when a Midwesterner uses the phrase “so to speak.”   The words that come to my mind as different from “rational” “credible” “established” and “strong” are irrational, unreliable, temporary, and desperate.  How is that for a shadow job description of a role considered the most powerful in the world?

The collective has a way of flirting with disaster by generating leaders who exhibit extreme forms of polarization.  The leaders themselves are often empty vessels for the collective, opportunistic and inflated about their talents, accomplishments, and vision. No wonder politicians, literally the manifestation of the people, sometimes get a bad name.

What has become particularly clear is that the collective ability to engage the irrational, unreliable, temporary, and desperate is not a matter of compromise.  It is a matter of necessity, and it takes compassion.  You say what?

I say compassion, but an unrelenting compassion that goes for the jugular, meaning an ability to cut to the throat of the matter.  This is a form of compassion that uses speech, as opposed to physical violence, as a means to break the trance that carries groups to the edge of the cliff and beyond.  This is a particular kind of speech that uses humor, surprise, sojourns into common sense, and makes the most of persuasive skills to make a point, counter a false argument, and rally the collective to something larger than itself.  It is not simply telling people it will be hard or that it will take compromise.  This is common sense but it is also paternal and patronizing.  We need to wake ourselves up, find new images, and take on directly those dark emotions that are smoldering in the heat of uncertainty, ambiguity, and flickering violence.  And it is not a job for one person but for all of us who care about birthing a new consciousness.

Dayenu in Reverse

In the Jewish tradition, there is a song beloved on Passover.  It’s called Dayenu (pronounced DI A NU) and its meaning is that even in the most difficult of times, it is critical that we appreciate what we have – that what has been done for us is sufficient.  Loosely translated, dayenu means “it would have been enough.”  It is a song sung to God and I remember this song more than others because on Passover, as a child, I sung it with such exuberance, banging my fist on the table and screaming at the top of my lungs, I was asked to leave.

These memories come back to me as I read Bernie Sanders, the son of Jewish immigrants, who also happens to be Vermont’s U.S. Senator.  He is an independent and socialist and I suspect others things outside the normal way business is done.  If the Senate could ask him to leave, I’m sure they would, because he deals in solutions that nobody wants to hear.

And he has found a way to make dayenu relevant again at the Congressional table, although not in exactly the same way it had originally been intended.  He asks the wealthy in America if there is ever going to be enough for them.

He has an ear for rhythm:

In 2007, the top 1% of all income earners in the U.S. made 23.5% of all income.

NOT ENOUGH

The percentage of income going to the top 1% has nearly tripled since the mid-1970’s.

NOT ENOUGH

80% of all new income earned from 1980 to 2005 has gone to the top 1 percent.

NOT ENOUGH

The top 1 percent now owns more wealth than the bottom 90 percent.
NOT ENOUGH

Wall Street executives now earn more than they did before the financial bail out of Wall Street firms.

NOT ENOUGH

The United States now has, by far, the most unequal distribution of income and wealth of any major country on earth.

NOT ENOUGH

You see Sanders has the melody so critical to deep understanding.  For many at the top there is such a feeling of scarcity and privilege that it can never be enough.  Lo Dayenu would be their song – Never Enough.

And so Sanders has proposed solutions, believing if a raggedy group of slaves fleeing through the desert and being attacked from all sides could sing about having enough, then it’s possible that even in the most wealthy country in the world, it might again be possible.

In his speech to the Senate on June 27th, he listed 13 measures that could reduce the deficit without cutting Social Security, Medicare or other programs.

End the tax breaks for oil and gas companies.

AND THERE WOULD STILL BE ENOUGH FOR EVERYONE

Eliminate offshore tax havens, bringing the deficit down by $40 billion over the next decade.

AND THERE WOULD STILL BE ENOUGH FOR EVERYONE

Repeal the Bush-era tax cuts for the top two percent of earners, generating $700 billion.

AND THERE WOULD STILL BE ENOUGH FOR EVERYONE

Establish an estate tax on inherited wealth of more than $3.5 million, raising another $70 billion over a decade.

AND THERE WOULD STILL BE ENOUGH FOR EVERYONE

Shrink military spending and bring the Iraq and Afghanistan wars to an end as soon as possible.

AND THERE WOULD STILL BE ENOUGH FOR EVERYONE

Dayenu is a reminder that to live psychologically with the concept of scarcity is to remain a slave.  It must never be used as a justification for social inequality.  Rather, it is a call for community, that we are grateful for what we have and most notably for laws that bind us together and make us appreciate ourselves as a community.

Tea and Intolerance, Part Five: What Can Be Done

Aikido
Aikido World Headquarters, Tokyo, Japan; photo by Alan Briskin

I began this series of posts by addressing the question of what can be done in groups and collectives whose members value open and honest dialogue but are faced with individuals or sub groups who are adamant about their beliefs, dogmatic in their tone, and unrelenting in their positions.  I explored the Tea Party as a case in point and wondered how there might be a way to understand their appearance on the national stage from historical as well as psychological and social perspectives.  Most critically, I wondered if there is a way to step inside another’s shoes without having to agree with them, but still able to respect the larger framework and validity of their respective positions.

To my delight I began to receive answers from the universe of people, events, and projects I interacted with.  Here was my first revelation – that when one asks a question sincerely without too many preconceived answers, new possibilities begin to emerge. I began to notice that my attention, having been shaped by my interior question, began to have greater focus, subtlety, and agility.  I could pay attention longer to an issue rather than moving to a reductionist position.  I could sense nuances and texture to arguments that seemed at first blush right or wrong and I could move more easily through the ambiguity and complexity of the issues.  I was having reverse attention deficit disorder symptoms without the side effects of medication.  For entrepreneurs reading this, we should call it RADD and market it.

Second, by listening with this kind of attention, I began to see, hear, and grasp new facets of friends and colleagues, many of whom I’ve known for decades.

Rather than offering opinions about the particular events of the day, dramatized by the daily newscasts, our conversations deepened and had a broader sweep.  We began talking about the history of people in general who have lost power and considered how we all try in different ways to hold onto the past. The discussion was no longer about us and them, but about the human condition.  We also talked about the consequences when deeper values feel betrayed and anger and powerlessness enfold us.  In the USA, for example, there is a deeply held value that if one works hard, one can succeed and be rewarded without virtually any limit.  This is a critical, almost sacred belief.  It is a belief that for some felt violated by perceived government intrusion as well as by seeing executives who oversaw our financial collapse bailed out by government and then still reaping rewards.

For another colleague, the unfolding of events with the Tea Party was like a detective story with a reminder to follow the money.  Behind the movement that was televised was another movement of industries such as oil, gas, and coal that sought in the Tea Party a chance to protect themselves from government oversight and regulations emerging in the face of climate change.  Executives like the Koch brothers understood how to strategically invest in a political movement that provided their own industries cover.  Of course it helped that these executives did not believe in climate change or that government should regulate them or that current subsidies to their industries should be  altered. Their world view had more to do with self-interest and personal honor, qualities that are also deeply rooted in American society and viewed quite positively by many.

Finally, another colleague acknowledged that she has stopped watching the news altogether and that she found herself temporarily at an impasse.  Although she personally believes we cannot rid ourselves of those things we condemn, she still feels a meta intolerance for others she sees as incapable of dealing with complexity and who are also unwilling to engage in genuine dialogue.  For her, the experience of vitriolic rhetoric and an utter absence of curiosity to go beyond one’s existing opinions are akin to being exposed to toxins that bring tears and pain into her body.

Taking People Seriously, But Listening Differently

Beyond the new kinds of conversations I was having, my next revelation came in a exchange with a political colleague from a major California city who had been on the city’s school board for decades.  How, I asked incredulously, could he tolerate being on the school board for decades and actually seek reelection, voluntarily?  School boards are notorious for inviting the most extreme and unyielding arguments in the name of civic discussion. He took my question in respectfully, and with a knowing smile, which I appreciated.  He was silent for a bit, as if rummaging through his mind for how to respond to me both intellectually and emotionally.  He said to me, almost as if musing out loud, “I take people seriously, but not literally.”  And then after a pause he said, “What I notice is that most people take each other literally, but not seriously.”

Here was, at least in part, an answer to my question about working with diversity, including people who are adamant, certain of their positions, and aggressive in their expression.  It is possible to listen to others without being pulled into the literalness of their world view.  And at the same time, it is possible to consider another person’s opinions respectfully, giving them their due as human beings worthy of dignity. We are all worthy of having dignity.

To do this effectively, however, is a discipline that is more about what happens within us than simply practicing an external behavior.  We have to ask ourselves whether we actually do take others seriously, and if not, what internal recalibrations are possible. Humans can sense in others, imprecise as it may be, what is authentic and what is expedient.

This brings me back to the larger question of collective wisdom and folly. My colleague, who found herself at times caught in feelings of meta intolerance for others, is an exceptionally empathic person.  She is one of those rare individuals who senses into others, seeking to resonate with their feelings and thoughts.  Possibly this is how her thoughts came to rest on a subject quite important to me, the neuro psychology of group interaction and behavior.

She spoke of some of her recent readings in this area and noted that humans are wired for empathy as a function of our being social animals.  We need each other to survive.  At the same time, she said, we are wired to overestimate threat and cautious of letting our guard down.  This is also a survival mechanism.  The dilemma is in resolving these two facets of our human wiring and the danger is that we end up operating in a closed system of thought, suspended in a state of reactivity, and fearful of letting go of what we know.  Without being conscious of making a choice, we often choose to stay in a place of fear creating a vicious cycle that reinforces our closed system of thought while maintaining a closed in network of friends who think like we do.

The alternative is becoming conscious of our choices, which also means becoming responsible for our thoughts.  This does not mean, however, that we can mechanically choose what we want to think, willy nilly, as if choice was like shopping for sale items at Target.  Mindfulness of this kind requires a great deal of practice at just noticing what thoughts emerge, and what feeling associations go along with these thoughts.  If for example, I find myself thinking of people who annoy me, I can notice if that brings me feelings of pleasure because I feel superior to them or alternatively feelings of guilt, betrayal or anger.  I can learn to gently nudge my thoughts and feelings in different directions, to see what comes of it.  If for example, I notice that my stream of thoughts suggest I am feeling stuck or lonely or misunderstood, I can take a walk, read a book, or watch a movie and notice how the thoughts and associated feelings begin to morph.   The practice is not about forcing oneself to have different thoughts but more like an artist becoming acquainted with a new brush technique and seeking to master that technique for their artistic expression.  For myself, I have always been privy to dark thoughts but have learned to bring them into a greater context that includes empathic understanding.

The same is true for our work in groups.  We do not need to regulate our thoughts in an austere or judgmental manner.  By noticing how our thoughts emerge in relation to others, we are preparing ourselves to create new avenues of communication.  We can begin leaning into empathic responses without denying our cautionary ones.  We can listen for the symbolic and metaphorical meanings behind literal statements without ignoring that differences may exist.  And we can actually become more direct with others.  Why?  Because the subtle ways we patronize and condescend to each other is based on fear and control.

Respectful communication can include highlighting and even intensifying differences when both parties are genuinely engaged with each other.  This means, however, that we cannot simply be mouthpieces for others – whether that is a group we are affiliated with or a canon of beliefs we have become identified with.  We generate real dialogue when we stand in our own authentic space, acknowledge our own worldview, and then nudge ourselves and others into new perspectives, perspectives that incorporate multiple views but are slaves to none.

This is what is achieved through inquiry and what is meant by emergence, an emergence of new thought forms that build on the bones of our memory joined with the sensing of a desired future.  This way of being in groups is haunting us, reminescent of the earliest human who sat together gathered around a fire or those individuals over two millenia ago who first imagined the common space of the Athenian polis.  A future is wating to be born from us and through us, and its labor pains are being felt right now throughout the world.

Read all of this five-part series:

I:   Tea and Intolerance

II:  The Logic of the Ghost

III:  Serving the Ghosts of Defiance and Resentment

IV: The Authoritarian Personality in Us All