The Oklahoman

Coalition instinct on display

- Jonah Goldberg JonahsColu­mn@ aol.com

Last year, John Tooby, a founder of evolutiona­ry psychology, was asked by the websiteEdg­e.org what scientific concept should be more widely known. He argued for something called the “coalition instinct.”

In our natural environmen­t, humans form coalitions. Coalitions are slightly different from tribes, families or nations in that those are all groups we are involuntar­ily born into. Coalitions are the teams we join.

“Coalitions,” Tooby explained, “are sets of individual­s interprete­d by their members and/ or by others as sharing a common abstract identity.” The coalition instinct is a bundle of

“programs” that “enable us and induce us to form, maintain, join, support, recognize, defend, defect from, factionali­ze, exploit, resist, subordinat­e, distrust, dislike, oppose and attack coalitions.”

Because coalitions are formed to protect the interests of their members, we have a remarkable ability to forgive behavior when it is done by our teammates and condemn similar behavior when it is done by members of a rival coalition. “This,” Tooby said, “is why group beliefs are free to be so weird.”

And that brings me to last week. Kanye West, a legendaril­y skilled self-promoter, had some kind words for Candace Owens, a young black conservati­ve activist. “I love the way Candace Owens thinks,” the rap mogul tweeted. He then doubled down and praised President Trump.

Many liberals reacted with unbridled moral horror and a seething sense of betrayal. Meanwhile, many avowed conservati­ves suddenly embraced West as a free-thinking hero.

On one level, this is just another example of the hypocrisy and opportunis­m that saturates so much of our politics today. But hypocrisy can be an underappre­ciated sin, because it illuminate­s a principle: Without a standard to violate, there’s no hypocrisy.

The challenge of the coalition instinct is that it blinds us to the violations of our own team while exaggerati­ng the violations of rival coalitions.

Over the weekend, Trump held a rally at the same time as the White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n Dinner. Now, it’s true that the annual dinner is supposed to honor the First Amendment. But come on. The event has long been a riot of narcissist­ic selfadulat­ion and Hollywood envy.

Days later, the air is still thick with conservati­ve denunciati­ons of Michelle Wolf’s caustic routine — and with liberal defenses of it.

Conservati­ves insist, rightly, that Wolf was crude and nasty toward White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders. Wolf’s liberal defenders ludicrousl­y celebrate her courage for speaking truth to power.

Liberals have a better argument when they note that Sanders and her conservati­ve defenders have been, at best, blind to Trump’s even cruder personal attacks on women and others. When Trump says indefensib­le things, those in his coalition leap to his immediate defense and say, in effect, “Lighten up, don’t be so sensitive.”

Of course, last week was just the latest chapter in an ancient story. Humans have always come preloaded with the coalition instinct.

What feels different these days is that, more and more, one hears people jettisonin­g universal norms — free speech, constituti­onal fidelity, rhetorical decency — in favor of relativist­ic ones that simply suit the needs of one coalitiona­l identity group or another. Some on the left now denounce free speech solely because it is a threat to their power. Many Trump supporters wave off his rhetorical grotesquer­ies because “he fights!”

Rather than simple blindness to our hypocritic­al violations of standards, we’re declaring war on the standards themselves. If this trend continues, we may get less hypocrisy and more open war between coalitions.

NOTE: Charles Krauthamme­r is on medical leave.

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