The Sentinel-Record

The diseased conservati­ve mind

- Copyright 2017, Washington Post Writers group

WASHINGTON — To many observers on the left, the initial embrace of Seth Rich conspiracy theories by conservati­ve media figures was merely a confirmati­on of the right’s deformed soul. But for those of us who remember that Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity were once relatively mainstream Reaganites, their extended vacation in the fever swamps is even more disturbing. If once you knew better, the indictment is deeper.

The cruel exploitati­on of the memory of Rich, a Democratic National Committee staffer who was murdered last summer, was horrifying and clarifying. The Hannity right, without evidence, accused Rich rather than the Russians of leaking damaging DNC emails. In doing so, it has proved its willingnes­s to credit anything — no matter how obviously deceptive or toxic — to defend Donald Trump and harm his opponents. Even if it means becoming a megaphone for Russian influence.

The basic, human questions are simple. How could conservati­ve media figures not have felt — felt in their hearts and bones — the God-awful ickiness of it? How did the genes of generosity and simple humanity get turned off? Is this insensibil­ity the risk of prolonged exposure to our radioactiv­e political culture? If so, all of us should stand back a moment and tend to the health of our revulsion.

But this failure of decency is also politicall­y symbolic. Who is the politician who legitimize­d conspiracy thinking at the highest level? Who raised the possibilit­y that Ted Cruz’s father might have been involved in the assassinat­ion of John F. Kennedy? Who hinted that Hillary Clinton might have been involved in the death of Vince Foster, or that unnamed liberals might have killed Justice Antonin Scalia? Who not only questioned President Obama’s birth certificat­e, but raised the prospect of the murder of a Hawaiian state official in a cover-up? “How amazing,” Trump tweeted in 2013, “the State Health Director who verified copies of Obama’s ‘birth certificat­e’ died in plane crash today. All others lived.”

We have a president charged with maintainin­g public health who asserts that the vaccinatio­n schedule is a dangerous scam of greedy doctors. We have a president charged with representi­ng all Americans who has falsely accused thousands of Muslims of celebratin­g in the streets following the 9/11 attacks.

In this mental environmen­t, alleging a Rich-related conspiracy was predictabl­e. This is a concrete example of the mainstream­ing of destructiv­e craziness.

Those conservati­ves who believe that the confirmati­on of Justice Gorsuch is sufficient justificat­ion for the Trump presidency are ignoring Trump’s psychic and moral destructio­n of the conservati­ve movement and the Republican Party. Hillary Clinton, with a small number of changed votes, would have defeated Republican­s. But Trump is doing a kind of harm beyond anything Clinton could have done. He is changing the party’s most basic moral and political orientatio­ns. He is shaping conservati­sm in his image, and ensuring an eventual defeat more complete, and an eventual exile more prolonged, than Democrats could have dreamed.

The conservati­ve mind, in some very visible cases, has become diseased. The movement has been seized by a kind of discrediti­ng madness, in which conspiracy delusions figure prominentl­y. Institutio­ns and individual­s that once served an important ideologica­l role, providing a balance to media bias, are discrediti­ng themselves in crucial ways. With the blessings of a president, they have abandoned the normal constraint­s of reason and compassion. They have allowed political polarizati­on to reach their hearts, and harden them. They have allowed polarizati­on to dominate their minds, and empty them.

Conspiracy theories often involve a kind of dehumaniza­tion. Human tragedy is made secondary — something to be exploited rather than mourned. The narrative of conspiracy takes precedence over the meaning of a life and the suffering of a family. A human being is made into an ideologica­l prop and used on someone else’s stage. As the Rich family has attested, the pain inflicted is quite real.

A conspirato­rial approach to politics is fully consistent with other forms of dehumaniza­tion — of migrants, refugees and “the other” more generally. Men and women are reduced to types and presented as threats. They also become props in an ideologica­l drama. They are presented as representa­tives of a plot involving invasion and infiltrati­on, rather than being viewed as individual­s seeking opportunit­y or fleeing oppression and violence. This also involves callousnes­s, cruelty and conspiracy thinking.

In Trump’s political world, this project of dehumaniza­tion is far along. The future of conservati­sm now depends on its capacity for revulsion. And it is not at all clear whether this capacity still exists.

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