
Exploring The Dynamics Of Polarization
by Tom Atlee
Founder And Co-Director of the Co-Intelligence Institute
How do we encounter people whom we see as
significantly different from us? Do we see them
as stereotypes or as unique individuals? Do we
treat them as threats or as fellows?
Treating each other respectfully is the basic
idea behind calls for "civility" and the new
dignitarian movement
www.dignitarians.org. Treating each
other respectfully and with an open mind and
heart not only allows us all to feel welcome in
the world we share, but allows us to find more
comprehensive truths together by understanding
the puzzle-pieces each of us holds so we can
discover a bigger, richer picture than each of us
originally saw.
Polarization makes it hard to do that.
Polarization is "the increasing concentration of
groups, forces or interests around two
conflicting or contrasting positions" - Us and
Them, the right way and the wrong way. One of
the most fundamental ways of framing political
polarization is "Left vs. Right." For
explorations of the history and diverse meanings
of the terms "Left" and "Right," see the
Wikipedia essay on the topic
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Left-Right_politics.*
These terms are designed to organize forces for
political battle more than for greater human
understanding.
If we wish to reduce polarization, it is vital
that we separate people - ourselves and others
- from the ideologies and positions we've all
gotten attached to, so that we can come together
as fellow citizens to figure out the relative
truth and usefulness of various ideas and
options. To do this, we need to see ourselves as
citizens and people first, and partisans second.
This is not to say that things don't look
different to each of us. They do. But those
differences can be assets if we can learn to see
our diverse views as resources instead of sides
of a battle, and notice that we simultaneously
share a lot of common ground. If we open our
eyes and look carefully, we will likely find that
on any given issue, a different group of people
agree with us. That is as it should be: It
reminds us that the issues are defined more by
individual viewpoints than by the Left and Right
conglomerates of positions. Each individual
viewpoint has gifts and limitations worthy of
exploration - all of which can be grist for the
mill of our collective deliberation (our
collective intelligence) as we discover and
develop more inclusive perspectives and options
we all find truer and more useful than what we
started out with.
To the extent we can free ourselves from the
polarized prisons of Left and Right, we will have
more creatively productive deliberations. The
reverse is true as well: To the extent we have
well-designed and well-run deliberations which
help us use our differences creatively in light
of our common ground, we will free ourselves from
those polarized prisons of Left and Right and
discover the power of our uniqueness and our
shared creativity.
But most of us seldom experience such remarkable
conversations. More often than not, we are
trapped in - and blinded by - this manipulated
narrative called "Left vs. Right" that's designed
to make us feel like heroes in an epic of Good
vs. Evil. It keeps us from seeing each other,
from recognizing potential allies, from talking
with each other or treating each other like the
decent human beings most of us are. Most
importantly, it keeps us from coming together to
free our minds and hearts to create a society and
world that work for all.
To an outsider, people battling from the Left and
the Right look like two people fighting in a
dangerously rocking rowboat. When the boat runs
into a snag and sprouts a leak in one side, the
person on the other side yells, "Look, there's a
hole in your side of the boat! Ha! Now you'll
sink!" and keeps on fighting, convinced victory
is at hand. But from outside, this allegedly
win/lose game looks more like a lose/lose game,
especially in the long run.
Let's dissect this Left/Right worldview and note well its many
shortcomings.
ARE THESE CATEGORIES OF "LEFT" AND "RIGHT" -
LIBERAL AND CONSERVATIVE - AS CLEARCUT AS THEY
SEEM?
If we only consider the broad generalized
outlines, we can note true differences between
liberals and conservatives, just as we can
describe differences between Californians and
Minnesotans, whites and blacks, Christians and
Jews. But these differences pale in comparison
to the similarities and common interests of both
groups - to say nothing of the vast diversity we
find WITHIN each group and the number of people
who fall outside either one. Polarization begins
as we lose sight of these mind-expanding facts
and believe the groups are homogenous, mutually
exclusive, and dedicated to good (or evil).
In reality they are far from homogenous. Most
conservatives are not rich, and most liberals are
not blue collar union men. Most liberals are
neither less rational nor more empathic than the
average conservative. There are racists,
xenophobes and culturally sensitive people on
both sides. Many liberals are pro-Life. Many
conservatives are pro-Choice. Individual
corporations often fund the campaigns of both
liberal and conservative politicians
simultaneously, while many politicians in both
categories have huge grassroots networks
supporting them. The ACLU and the American
Conservative Union (ACU) are working together
against the Patriot Act. Aging hippy parents
work with Christian fundamentalists to maintain
educational policies friendly to home schooling.
Pat Buchanan joins with Ralph Nader attacking
NAFTA and GATT. Certain people from both the
Left and the Right fight for decentralization of
power and empowered communities. At the same
time, certain other people from both the Left and
the Right fight for greater respect for authority
and greater powers for the Federal Government.
Conservative US Senator Orrin Hatch and liberal
US Senator Ron Wyden cosponsored a bill to base
US health care policy on the outcomes of
widespread public deliberations. People from
both sides make war and protect the environment.
These are only a few examples of the vast
diversity within each worldview and vast common
ground among members of every "side" - realities
that become hidden as polarization heats up.
The Wikipedia article cited above notes that Left
and Right parties tend to "find it expedient to
adopt opposing sides." In this strategic
polarization, the Left and the Right claim for
themselves certain archetypal polar values. But
most Americans (and many other people across the
political spectrum) value BOTH of those supposed
polar opposites. Most people want order AND
freedom, individual rights AND social justice;
policies that are rational AND compassionate,
realistic AND idealistic; a healthy economy AND a
healthy environment; strong families AND a strong
society; individual success AND the common good.
They believe individuals should be responsible
AND they believe social policies and programs can
support or undermine people's chances AND they
believe disadvantaged people should not be
neglected. They don't believe we should have to
choose between national security, on the one
hand, and peace and liberty on the other. People
of all persuasions suspect concentrations of
power and wealth, but they don't want to stifle
entrepreneurial creativity with too much
regulation. They think soldiers should be
respected, but so should protesters. They feel a
strong sense of patriotism, but don't want
America to be an empire dominating the world.
And most have serious concerns about the state of
American democracy. Any reasonably open-minded
examination will find vast common ground across
the lines of division we have painted between us.
It isn't that there's no difference between Left
and Right. It's just that reality is more
complex than that oversimplified spectrum makes
us believe. As the Lets Talk America program
www.letstalkamerica.org motto suggests:
"What if what unites us is more than we realizeŠ
and what divides us is less than we fear?"
HOW THE DARK SIDE OF POLARIZATION REPRODUCES ITSELF
Our polarized failure to see the nuanced, complex
reality about our collective beliefs and kinship
is seriously impeding our ability to meet the
challenges of the 21st Century - and degrading
our humanity at the same time.
* It tricks us into dehumanizing the other
side - ignoring their individual uniqueness,
their diversity, their humanity, their resources,
their potential fellowship toward shared goals.
* It breaks connections between us as citizens
and members of our communities, causing a loss of
what some sociologists call "social capital" -
the networks of relationship through which we get
the non-governmental, non-profit work of our
society done.
* It teaches us that we can't disagree civilly
- that we can't respectfully "agree to
disagree." This reduces our ability to
collaborate and, in particular, to engage in
creative dialogues with each other in which we
could together move beyond false choices and find
solutions that embrace both freedom and security,
a healthy economy and a healthy environment, and
all the other supposed dichotomies.
* It gets us to ignore information, insights,
and solutions from the other side, feeding our
sloppy thinking and depriving us of the knowledge
we need to understand the full reality we face
when wrestling with social and environmental
issues. By feeding our mutual ignorance, it
undermines our society's ability to reach high
quality decisions, solutions and initiatives.
* It supports people and systems that benefit
from our alienation from our fellows - people
and systems that seek to manipulate us all -
dividing and conquering our communities and our
nation for the power and profit of the few.
* It supports the ugly side of us all - the
righteously hateful, narrow-minded side that,
under the right conditions - with the wrong
leaders - produces the kind of civil war and
genocide we saw in Sarajevo and Rwanda.
* Through all these alienating dynamics,
polarization reinforces itself. It reinforces a
"you are either with us or against us" attitude
that silences, alienates and depopulates the
"middle" or "center" of our political life. On
both sides, this strengthens the hard-liners at
the expense of moderates - leaving only the
extremes active. To the extent we buy into the
false spectrum of Left and Right, our leaders can
manipulate us into not relating to people on the
other side at all, so that we soon know so little
about them that we will believe ANYTHING about
them. Those of us who try to bridge the gap will
find the challenge overwhelming, both within
ourselves and from the feedback from our fellows.
Polarization begets greater polarization.
* The extreme of polarization is genocide and
civil war. Once genocide begins, participants
have an increasing psychological need to sustain
the polarized logic to make sense of their own
side's increasingly unethical behaviors in the
face of their increasingly dehumanized opponents.
("After all, THEY are monsters.") When the
genocidal period comes to a close, collective
denial may allow a haunted return to normal. But
that leaves kindling in place for the next spark.
Only deep efforts to clarify, understand and
forgive can prevent a re-emergence of the
polarized logic. No society is immune to this
collective insanity, unless it works to dissolve
polarization early, with high quality dialogue.
* In summary, polarization undermines our
collective resilience and tears us apart.
Ultimately, it weakens us as communities and
societies so that we are more vulnerable to
stresses and pressures from the outside, more
subject to stresses and fissures on the inside,
less able to respond together creatively to the
challenges and opportunities we face. As Abraham
Lincoln so wisely pointed out, "A house divided
against itself cannot stand." We can help keep
our house united by recognizing all the different
parts that serve to make it functional, strong
and interesting.
THE DYNAMICS OF POLARIZATION IN A MAJORITARIAN DEMOCRACY
One of my saddest realizations in researching
polarization was that majoritarianism, itself -
one of the fundamental principles of republican
democracy - is an engine of polarization.
Although majority rule is a giant step beyond
dictatorship, it has several dangerous
side-effects. The U.S. founding fathers
recognized and addressed one of them - the power
of majorities to oppress minorities. They
attempted to handle that by limiting concentrated
governmental power and protected the rights of
states, individuals and associations. That at
least provided tools for later generations to
continually address the problem.
Unfortunately, the founders of the U.S. did not
also set things up to limit the tendency of
majoritarianism to split the "house" of democracy
in two. Here's how it works:
* In a majoritarian democracy a proposal wins
or someone is considered legitimately elected if
they get over 50% of the votes. It is harder to
get over 50% in a field of three or more options
than in a field with only two options. So in an
effort to get over 50% people gather primarily
into two parties. To solidify the power of those
parties, partisans voluntarily or forcefully
suppress complexity and diversity (the full range
of information, perspectives, options, etc.) so
there always seem to be only two opposing
alternatives for everyone to rally around. (This
suppression of diversity and shades of
disagreement can be reversed through processes
like the Public Conversation Project
www.publicconversations.org, where
participants are encouraged to voice their
individual shades of difference with the official
"party line" they've needed to espouse for the
sake of political solidarity.)
* Partisan leaders invoke archetypal energies
for the battle they are waging by making the
opposite side seem wrong, stupid, insane or even
evil. The other side is painted as powerful and
united - so that "we" must be (or at least SEEM
to be) just as powerful and united. Therefore,
no public dissent among us is allowed (regardless
of the actual diversity among us).
* At first these dynamics increase the
APPARENT (though not real) homogeneity of each
side. But this APPARENT uniformity evolves into
ACTUAL uniformity by decreasing the exposure of
each side to the arguments and people on the
other side. That decreases the ACTUAL diversity
of opinion on each side, since each is becoming
more righteously closed-minded and conformist
about their own perspective and ignorant of the
other's. Gregory Bateson calls this
"schismogenesis" - the systemic co-creation of
division (schism).
* As the apparent extremism of each side
increases, the other side is able to paint itself
as moderate in the face of the other's extremism.
* The more extreme each side's views get, the
more they think that the media, government,
academia, etc., are controlled by the other side
- which, in turn, feeds even more extreme views
and actions, in an effort to have some impact on
the monolith partisans think they face. (In many
cases we might more accurately view these
institutions as controlled by interests that
aren't on the political spectrum, per se, but who
use ideological conflict to manipulate
populations or the policy apparatus for
non-ideological power and profit.)
In summary, whatever reality Left and Right have
gets solidified into dangerous polarization by
our majoritarian system and those who benefit
from our mutual isolation. Polarization grows
through "reinforcing feedback dynamics" that work
like this: partisan solidarity reduces mutual
understanding, which makes it easier for
partisans to stereotype each other, which makes
people not want to reach across the divides,
which leads to no contact and fear of the other
side, which strengthens partisan solidarity, etc.
The cycle repeats, generating more and more
alienation.
MOVING BEYOND THE LEFT/RIGHT TRANCE
The solution to all this is not to set aside all
our differences. The solution is to sort out our
real individual differences from the artificial,
overly generalized dichotomies of polarization -
and then to bring those real differences into
respectful, creative dialogue that honors our
common ground and seeks mutual benefit and the
common good.
The Left/Right frame of reference muddies our
understanding of the actual diversity of our
viewpoints and our full range of options. It
supports sloppy thinking that messes up truly
useful distinctions that we could all learn from.
Furthermore, the Left/Right frame of reference
interferes with productive inquiry by motivating
us to assert, attack and defend positions rather
than share in exploration. It impedes our
ability to show up in our full uniqueness and
diversity, ready to engage with each other
creatively in search of larger truths. It acts
as if there are only two
views/options/perspectives and that each of us is
fully aligned with one of them. This is a
self-reinforcing, life-suffocating lie.
We can break out of this Left/Right trance. We
can free ourselves from culturally reinforced
broad generalizations about how whole masses of
the population feel about whole bundles of
issues. We can talk to each other, read each
other's information, actively explore for allies
"on the other side", and learn to become more
nuanced (or be able to talk in less
black-and-white terms) about our own views.
We can support bridge-building conversations and
public dialogues about specific issues, which
expose citizens from across the political
spectrum to other people, information and ideas
in contexts where they can expand their thinking,
build relationships, and move ahead together
towards positive social change.
A number of current initiatives are described and
linked on the National Coalition for Dialogue and
Deliberation webpage "The De-Polarization of
America: Major Dialogue- and Deliberation-Related
Efforts That Are Bridging the Partisan Divide"
www.thataway.org/resources/practice/issues/polarization/polarization.html
These include: The September Project, Let's Talk
America, PBS Deliberation Day, Calling the
Question, and the "We the People" National
Convention.
None of this means we should stop our currently
partisan work for the world. There is no reason
we can't do it all. That is, we can
SIMULTANEOUSLY
a. fight for our respective sides;
b. honor the right of (and need for) all views to be heard;
c. publicly acknowledge how our addiction to partisanship
limits us; and
d. create opportunities, activities and
institutions that support our ability to move
beyond "sides" and "positions" to explore the
whole picture together, considering each view as
a piece of the picture puzzle we're all trying to
put together.
To the extent we succeed in building a powerful
culture of dialogue and deliberation (d), we will
probably feel less need to fight each other as
partisans (a). We will wake up, more and more,
to the fact that we are all in this together. We
will learn, step by step, how to generate the
collective wisdom, will and action needed to
create a decent world together where our children
can all live well together for endless
generations to come.
May we find such wisdom to pass on to them, that
they can build on and pass on to their children.
* For other interesting political spectra and
models see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_model and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_spectrum
_________________
PS: New material has been added to
www.co-intelligence.org/polarization.html
Tom Atlee * The Co-Intelligence Institute *
PO Box 493 * Eugene, OR
97440
http://www.co-intelligence.org * http://www.democracyinnovations.org
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