2021年7月13日 星期二

The deadly triumph of the paranoid style

The crazies were always there, but now they've taken over a whole party.
Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, Republican of Georgia, at a news conference in June about her bill to audit the correspondence and financial statements of Dr. Anthony Fauci.Andrew Harnik/Associated Press
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By Paul Krugman

Opinion Columnist

"Vaccination," declared a featured speaker at last weekend's Conservative Political Action Conference, "is the most monstrously conceived and dangerous communist plot we have ever had to face." The crowd cheered.

Oh, wait. That wasn't a speech at CPAC; it's a line uttered by General Jack D. Ripper in the Stanley Kubrick movie "Dr. Strangelove," and it was about water fluoridation, not Covid vaccines. (Anti-fluoridation conspiracy theories were a real thing in the 1950s and 1960s.) But Ripper's line wasn't much different from the content of many actual CPAC speeches.

The point is that the madness we're now seeing on the right is, in one sense, nothing new. Richard Hofstadter wrote a famous 1964 essay titled "The Paranoid Style in American Politics," tracing McCarthyism all the way back to the 18th-century panic over the Bavarian Illuminati. As he documented, there has always been a streak in our political psychology that sees elite institutions, from government to education, as secret fronts for a vast global conspiracy.

So if you marvel over Ronny Jackson, the former White House physician, declaring that the Democratic Party of Joe Biden — Joe Biden! — is "socialist Communist Marxist," remember that Robert Welch, founder of the John Birch Society, insisted that Dwight Eisenhower was a "dedicated, conscious agent of the communist conspiracy." And while the Birchers were a fringe faction, they weren't as fringy as all that; if they had been, William F. Buckley wouldn't have felt compelled to spend time trying to excommunicate them from the conservative movement.

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What's different now, of course, is that bizarre conspiracy theories have become totally mainstream on the right. These days you're excommunicated from the Republican Party if you don't embrace the Big Lie that the election was stolen, don't denounce modestly center-left Democrats as the second coming of Stalin and, increasingly, don't declare that mask mandates are the equivalent of the Holocaust and vaccines are a globalist plot to achieve mind control.

How did that happen?

Most of what I've read emphasizes real changes in American society that have put defenders of traditional order on edge. Our economic center of gravity has shifted away from rural America to big metropolitan areas. Racial diversity has increased, as has social tolerance; religiosity, especially the strength of the white evangelical movement, has declined; we had a Black president. What we're seeing, the story goes, is a backlash against these changes.

And all of these points probably have some validity. But watching things play out, especially since the Jan. 6 putsch, makes me wonder whether we're overthinking this. How much of what's going on is simply group dynamics that have given pre-existing craziness license to express itself?

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Put it this way: Surely there was always a significant faction of Americans willing to believe in dark conspiracy theories. But they were restrained by a conservative political establishment that considered conspiracy theorizing bad politics and, not incidentally, bad for business. So people who might have been inclined to spout Bircher-type rhetoric weren't just excluded from power; they were inhibited in their willingness to state their views because it would have been bad for their careers.

Then came the elections first of Barack Obama, then of Donald Trump. Neither election changed the fundamentals of American society very much — but they changed things enough to produce a sort of tipping point, giving political paranoia the critical mass it had previously lacked. The crazies no longer felt the need to moderate their tone; on the contrary, they began a sort of arms race, in which they competed to out-crazy one another.

And as far as the incentive to hide one's true views is concerned, the upper hand is now on the other foot. These days it's the sane Republicans who have to adopt protective camouflage, pretending to share the dominant paranoia (and perhaps, people being what they are, starting to believe the crazy themselves).

The result has been a remarkable, and horrifying, transformation of American politics. One of our major political parties has, quite simply, gone mad. This madness will kill thousands of Americans in the next few months, because politics is by far the best predictor of who is still refusing to get vaccinated. But Covid deaths may be only the beginning of the deadly effects of the triumph of the paranoid style.

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Quick Hits

The strange link between paranoid politics and quack medicine.

The return of "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion."

Before Covid denial, there was the climate hoax.

Kristi Noem, a CPAC star who managed Covid by telling South Dakotans that "personal responsibility was the best answer."

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Facing the Music

There is indeed something happening here.YouTube

Paranoia strikes deep.

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2021年7月10日 星期六

Plan a Summer Microadventure

Families can find awe locally, kids face climate curveballs at camp, and more from NYT Parenting.
A roundup of new guidance and stories from NYT Parenting.
Golden Cosmos

That family trip to the beach this summer may offer a long-awaited respite from the boredom of hunkering down during the pandemic. But if you're short on vacation time, and looking to stay closer to home, consider a microadventure.

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This week, Emily Pennington argues that outdoor fun doesn't have to be had on a Grand Canyon-scale. A microadventure, which could mean simply exploring your own backyard, can easily spark awe — an emotion that may have gone missing in our lives.

"Awe basically shuts down self-interest and self-representation and the nagging voice of the self," said Dacher Keltner, a professor of psychology at the University of California, Berkeley. "That's different from feeling pride or amusement or just feeling good. It's like, 'I'm after something sacred.'"

Summer camps are open and offering kids the opportunity for adventure after pandemic isolation, but another emergency is keeping campers from fully enjoying the great outdoors — climate change.

"Rising temperatures, wildfire smoke, shifting species ranges and more are introducing risks, and camps are struggling to adapt," writes John Schwartz, a climate reporter. "And with deadly heat waves, like the one in the Pacific Northwest, dealing with extreme heat is becoming a necessity to keep campers safe."

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New York City parents are happily signing their children up for the adventure that is in-person learning this summer. "While last summer's city learning program, fully virtual, enrolled 177,000 students, about 201,000 children are enrolled in this year's in-person program so far," report Emma Goldberg and Precious Fondren.

While you may have booked a camp slot and helped plan a packed academic schedule for the fall, it's not your job to save your kid from boredom, Shalini Shankar contends in Opinion.

Also this week, writer Joyce Maynard says that more than 30 years after her divorce she realizes growing up in a "broken home" didn't break her children's spirits, and fellow novelist Viet Thanh Nguyen offers advice for artists whose parents want them to be engineers.

Finally, parents never stop wanting to help their children through tough times, even when those kids become young adults. Julie Halpert offers ways to support adult children who are grappling with mental health challenges.

Thanks for reading!

— Melonyce McAfee, senior editor, NYT Parenting

THIS WEEK IN NYT PARENTING

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Ali Lapetina for The New York Times

Climate Change Is Making It Harder for Campers to Beat the Heat

Burn bans, flashlight campfires, extreme heat and stronger rainstorms: Today's campers are experiencing their summer fun against the backdrop of climate change.

By John Schwartz

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Andrea D'Aquino

How to Support Adult Children Struggling With Mental Health

Expert advice on how to gently offer help and compassion.

By Julie Halpert

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John Tully for The New York Times

Who Needs the Grand Canyon? Try a Microadventure.

How to find a sense of awe and discover a miraculous world right outside your door.

By Emily Pennington

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Anamaria Morris

Guest Essay

A 'Broken Home' Didn't Break Me, or My Kids

Three decades after her divorce, the novelist Joyce Maynard celebrates what would have been her 44th wedding anniversary. 

By Joyce Maynard

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Jose A. Alvarado Jr. for The New York Times

Who's Happy About In-Person Summer School? N.Y.C. Parents.

With low virus rates easing safety concerns, more than 200,000 children have been enrolled in the city's summer learning program.

By Emma Goldberg and Precious Fondren

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María Medem

Guest Essay

Advice for Artists Whose Parents Want Them to Be Engineers

How to follow your heart, even if it disappoints your parents.

By Viet Thanh Nguyen

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Nicholas Konrad/The New York Times

Guest Essay

A Packed Schedule Doesn't Really 'Enrich' Your Child

Overscheduling them with extracurriculars or putting them in front of screens aren't the only choices.

By Shalini Shankar

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Tiny Victories

Parenting can be a grind. Let's celebrate the tiny victories.

My 4-year-old constantly wants to run ahead of me in parking lots. Remembering my fondness for the "Super Friends" cartoons from my youth, I told him we were part of a secret group of superheroes, and that we need to hold hands to activate our powers whenever we walk near cars. Now he eagerly grabs for my hand while shouting, "Wonder Twin powers, activate!" after we park our car. — Jane Cannici, Morristown, N.J.

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