The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Right-wing dystopian myths are dangerous

- Paul Krugman He writes for the New York Times.

Desensitiz­ation is an amazing thing. At this point most political observers simply accept it as a fact of life that an overwhelmi­ng majority of Republican­s accept the Big Lie that the 2020 election was stolen — a claim with nothing to support it, not even plausible anecdotes.

Urban elites are constantly accused of not understand­ing Real America. And, to be fair, most big-city residents probably don’t have a good sense of what life is like in rural areas and small towns.

But I’d argue that right-wing mispercept­ions of blue America run far deeper — and are far more dangerous.

Let’s start with the politics. The other day the Washington Post’s Dave Weigel, reporting from the campaign trail, noted that many Republican candidates are claiming that Democrats are deliberate­ly underminin­g the nation and promoting violence against their opponents; some are even claiming that we’re already in a civil war.

Some (many?) of these candidates have been winning primaries, suggesting that the GOP base agrees with them. Actually, I’d like to see some surveys along the lines of those showing that most Republican­s accept the Big Lie. How many Republican­s believe that President Joe Biden and other leading Democrats are left-wing radicals, indeed Marxists?

Relatedly, I’d like to know how many Republican­s believe that Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ors looted and burned large parts of America’s major cities.

On the domestic violence front, a study by the Anti-Defamation League found that 75% of extremist-related domestic killings from 2012 to 2021 were perpetrate­d by the right and only 4% by the left.

Finally, about BLM: The protests were, in fact, overwhelmi­ngly peaceful. Yes, there was some arson and looting, with total property damage typically estimated at $1 billion to $2 billion. That may sound like a lot, but America is a big country, so it needs to be put in perspectiv­e.

Here’s one point of comparison. Back in April, Greg Abbott, the governor of Texas, pulled a political stunt at the border with Mexico, temporaril­y imposing extra security checks that caused a major slowdown of traffic, disrupting business and leading to a lot of spoiled produce. Total economic losses have been estimated at around $4 billion; that is, a few days of border-security theater appear to have caused more economic damage than a hundred days of mass protests.

Yet pointing out these facts probably won’t change many minds. Nor does there seem to be any way to change the perception that a lax attitude toward law enforcemen­t has turned America’s big cities into dangerous hellholes. It’s true that violent crime rose during the pandemic, but it rose about as much in rural America as it did in urban areas. And despite that recent rise, violence in many cities is far lower than it was not long ago.

Some cities, notably Philadelph­ia and Chicago, are back to or above early 1990s murder rates, but they’re not representa­tive of the broader picture.

But who among the Republican base will acknowledg­e this reality?

The fact is that a large segment of the U.S. electorate has bought into an apocalypti­c vision of America that bears no relationsh­ip to the reality of how the other half thinks, behaves or lives. We don’t have to speculate about whether this dystopian fantasy might lead to political violence and attempts to overthrow democracy; it already has.

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