Albuquerque Journal

Encouragin­g partisan identity will lead to toxic behavior

- JONAH GOLDBERG Columnist

After the deadly shooting in Tucson that wounded Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in 2011, many people erroneousl­y and instantane­ously blamed Sarah Palin, Michele Bachmann and others on the right for their violent or “eliminatio­nist” rhetoric.

In the wake of that tragedy, President Obama called for civility. “At a time when we are far too eager to lay the blame for all that ails the world at the feet of those who think differentl­y than we do,” Obama said days after the shooting, “it’s important for us to pause for a moment and make sure that we are talking with each other in a way that heals, not a way that wounds.”

Those seem like happier, saner times now. When a man opened fire on a congressio­nal baseball practice a year ago, House Majority Whip Steve Scalise became the first representa­tive to be shot since Giffords. This time, there were fewer calls for civility, fewer warnings about how violent rhetoric was to blame.

One reason for the disparity was obvious. In 2011, the victim was a Democrat. In 2017, the victim was a Republican. The outcry was fainter even though the baseball shooter was clearly motivated by murderous partisan rage, whereas the Tucson shooter was motivated by voices in his head. Four days before the baseball shooting, Sen. Bernie Sanders said: “You should be angry. Take your anger out on the right people.” Sanders was blameless for the shooting, of course. But so were Palin and Bachmann in 2011. Neverthele­ss, Palin and Bachmann were blamed — repeatedly.

Such double standards take up an enormous amount of headspace on the right. “Obama put kids in cages, too!” was the go-to defense of Trump’s family separation policy for many right-wingers, which ironically made Obama’s policy the rationaliz­ation for Obama haters.

These days the right has its own double standards, which haunt the minds of many on the left. The list is too long to dwell on, but nearly all stem from the perceived need to defend presidenti­al rhetoric and behavior that violate the standards of the pre-Trump GOP.

Such double standards are toxic, because they lead people to conclude that norms of decency and decorum are just tools of a rigged system. But all the banshee shrieks of whatabouti­sm are downstream of a larger problem: the loss of collective identity.

Humans crave what philosophe­r-anthropolo­gist Ernest Gellner called “re-enchantmen­t creeds.” According to Gellner, modernity — i.e., the trinity of the scientific revolution, the Enlightenm­ent and the market economy — dissolved the old creeds that gave people a sense of meaning and belonging. When traditiona­l religion gets chased out, we adopt other causes, movements and ideas to fill the holes in our souls. Nationalis­m, socialism, psychoanal­ysis, neo-paganism, racism: These are all forms of re-enchantmen­t creeds.

Partisan politics has become a kind of re-enchantmen­t creed. A majority of Americans say belief in God isn’t necessary to be a good person, which is fine by itself. But in 2016, nearly half of Republican­s and more than a third of Democrats said members of the other party were immoral. No doubt those numbers have gone up.

Partisan identity is now stronger and more meaningful for many Americans than race, ethnicity or religious denominati­on — and is viewed as a more legitimate justificat­ion for discrimina­tion.

When liberals cheer the mob to harass government officials and are encouraged by hacks such as Rep. Maxine Waters, when businesses shun not just members of the Trump entourage but anyone who voted for him, when conservati­ves rationaliz­e any wickedness on the grounds it will “own the libs,” I don’t see something new so much as the revival of something very old . ...

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