The Prince George Citizen

How blindness to racism happens

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U.S. President Donald Trump’s tweet proposing that four Democratic congresswo­men of colour – three of them born in the United States, one a naturalize­d citizen – “go back” to the “totally broken and crime infested places from which they came” was textbook racism. Yet while some Republican­s condemned the statement – Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, who is black, lamented its “racially offensive language” – others flatly denied that there was a racial component to the salvo.

A particular­ly contorted reaction came from Rep. Andy Harris of Maryland, who said, “Clearly, it’s not a racist comment,” adding that the president “could have meant go back to the district they came from, to the neighborho­od they came from.” But the president could hardly have made his meaning more clear: he said the four “originally came from countries whose government­s are a complete and total catastroph­e.”

“Well, I certainly do not think the president’s a racist,” said Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., who suggested that the tweet was justified by the representa­tives’ constant criticism “not only [of] the president but also Congress and our country.”

Fear of crossing a president who’s popular with the Republican base surely explains some of the convoluted rationaliz­ations on offer. But a psychologi­cal phenomenon called cognitive dissonance may also shed

light on some people’s unwillingn­ess to acknowledg­e the self-evident racism in the tweets.

Cognitive dissonance, first described by the psychologi­st Leon Festinger in the late 1950s, occurs when conflict emerges between what people want to believe and the reality that threatens those beliefs. The human mind does not like such inconsiste­ncies: they set off alarms that spur the mind to alter some beliefs to make the perceived reality fit with one’s preferred views.

In the case of Trump’s remarks – when absorbed by his supporters who do not consider themselves racist – those inconsiste­ncies can be summarized in a sort of syllogism: (1) I do not support racists. (2) I do support President Trump. (3) President Trump has just made a racist remark. Those three facts simply don’t fit together comfortabl­y in the mind.

Just as a hungry person will seek food to alleviate hunger, Festinger argued, people who experience mental discrepanc­ies of this sort will work to put them in accord, to reduce the dissonance. And they will often go to extraordin­ary lengths to do so: resolving cognitive dissonance often takes considerab­le mental gymnastics.

Supporters of Trump who experience cognitive dissonance over his remarks essentiall­y have three psychologi­cal options to resolve it, altering in various ways the three beliefs that are in tension. One is to change the belief that they do not support racists. This response is unlikely, however, because it would require a massive overhaul of the view of the self, placing the person in a category he or she knows is morally dubious, not to mention socially vilified. Very rare is the person who will resolve psychologi­cal dissonance by saying, “Actually, I am a monster.”

Another option is to introduce new beliefs that bolster support for Trump. This does not address the conflicts among beliefs head-on but rather lessens the impact of the inflammato­ry statement by considerin­g positive informatio­n about the president.

One approach along these lines is to emphasize the awfulness of the policy positions and statements of the congresswo­men Trump attacked, thereby casting the president as a defender of decency (and perhaps as a victim himself, not an aggressor). Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., for instance, described Democratic Reps. Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and Ilhan Omar of Minnesota as “a bunch of communists” who “hate Israel” and “hate our own country.”

Relatedly, Marc Short, U.S. Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff, played up Trump’s lack of racism in other contexts, noting that his transporta­tion secretary, Elaine Chao,was born in Taiwan. As reasons for supporting the president grow – either his sterling qualities or the negative characteri­stics of his opponents – it becomes easier to overlook a single misstep.

A third route to resolving dissonance, in this specific case, is to flatly (and boldly) reject the consensus that telling someone to “go back” to their family’s country of origin is racist. Rep. Harris – with his revisionis­t argument that Trump wanted the women to go back to their districts – is probably the most striking example of this. But Fox News analyst Brit Hume may also belong in this category, with his hairsplitt­ing statement that Trump’s comments were “nativist, xenophobic... and politicall­y stupid” – but absolutely not racist, “a word so recklessly flung around these days that its actual meaning is being lost.”

If Trump is just the latest in a long parade of people falsely accused of racism by liberals, that, too, makes it easier to take his side. (“Xenophobic” is not too far from “racist,” definition­ally, but it does not carry nearly the same moral charge, so reframing the accusation that way may well ease psychologi­cal tension.)

Since the uproar, Trump has proclaimed that many people agree with his controvers­ial statement and that indeed, “a lot of people love it.”

But decades of behavioral research suggests that not all the people refraining from condemning the president support his attacks. Instead, they’re doing mental contortion­s to explain away the ugliness, to justify their continued support of him – and to maintain their positive views of themselves.

— Kathleen Vohs teaches at the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of

Management.

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