June 6, 2012 |
Photo Credit: ajagendorf25
Why on Earth would a working-class person ever vote for a
conservative candidate? This question has obsessed the American left
since Ronald Reagan first captured the votes of so many union members,
farmers, urban Catholics and other relatively powerless people – the
so-called "Reagan Democrats". Isn't the Republican party the party of
big business? Don't the Democrats stand up for the little guy, and try
to redistribute the wealth downwards?
Many commentators on the left have embraced some version of the
duping hypothesis: the Republican party dupes people into voting against
their economic interests by triggering outrage on cultural issues.
"Vote for us and we'll protect the American flag!" say the Republicans.
"We'll make English the official language of the United States! And most
importantly, we'll prevent gay people from threatening your marriage
when they … marry! Along the way we'll cut taxes on the rich, cut
benefits for the poor, and allow industries to dump their waste into
your drinking water, but never mind that. Only we can protect you from
gay, Spanish-speaking flag-burners!"
One of the most robust findings in social
psychology is
that people find ways to believe whatever they want to believe. And the
left really want to believe the duping hypothesis. It absolves them
from blame and protects them from the need to look in the mirror or
figure out what they stand for in the 21st century.
Here's a more painful but ultimately constructive diagnosis, from the
point of view of moral psychology: politics at the national level is
more like religion than it is like shopping. It's more about a moral
vision that unifies a nation and calls it to greatness than it is about
self-interest or specific policies. In most countries, the right tends
to see that more clearly than the left. In America the Republicans did
the hard work of drafting their moral vision in the 1970s, and Ronald
Reagan was their eloquent spokesman. Patriotism, social order, strong
families, personal responsibility (not government safety nets) and free
enterprise. Those are values, not government programs.
The Democrats, in contrast, have tried to win voters' hearts by
promising to protect or expand programmes for elderly people, young
people, students, poor people and the middle class. Vote for us and
we'll use government to take care of everyone! But most Americans don't
want to live in a nation based primarily on caring. That's what families
are for.
One reason the left has such difficulty forging a lasting connection
with voters is that the right has a built-in advantage – conservatives
have a broader moral palate than the liberals (as we call leftists in
the US). Think about it this way: our tongues have taste buds that are
responsive to five classes of chemicals, which we perceive as sweet,
sour, salty, bitter, and savoury. Sweetness is generally the most
appealing of the five tastes, but when it comes to a serious meal, most
people want more than that.
In the same way, you can think of the moral mind as being like a
tongue that is sensitive to a variety of moral flavors. In my research
with colleagues at
YourMorals.org,
we have identified six moral concerns as the best candidates for being
the innate "taste buds" of the moral sense: care/harm,fairness/cheating, liberty/oppression, loyalty/betrayal,
authority/subversion, and sanctity/degradation. Across many kinds of
surveys, in the UK as well as in the USA, we find that people who
self-identify as being on the left score higher on questions about
care/harm. For example, how much would someone have to pay you to kick a
dog in the head? Nobody wants to do this, but liberals say they would
require more money than conservatives to cause harm to an innocent
creature.
But on matters relating to group loyalty, respect for authority and
sanctity (treating things as sacred and untouchable, not only in the
context of religion), it sometimes seems that liberals lack the moral
taste buds, or at least, their moral "cuisine" makes less use of them.
For example, according to our data, if you want to hire someone to
criticize your nation on a radio show in another nation (loyalty), give
the finger to his boss (authority), or sign a piece of paper stating
one's willingness to sell his soul (sanctity), you can save a lot of
money by posting a sign: "Conservatives need not apply."
In America, it is these three moral foundations that underlie most of
the "cultural" issues that, according to duping theorists, are used to
distract voters from their self-interest. But are voters really voting
against their self-interest when they vote for candidates who share
their values? Loyalty, respect for authority and some degree of
sanctification create a more binding social order that places some
limits on individualism and egoism. As marriage rates plummet, and
globalization and rising diversity erodes the sense of common heritage
within each nation, a lot of voters in many western nations find
themselves hungering for conservative moral cuisine.
Despite being in the wake of a financial crisis that – if the duping
theorists were correct – should have buried the cultural issues and
pulled most voters to the left, we are finding in America and many
European nations a stronger shift to the right. When people fear the
collapse of their society, they want order and national greatness, not a
more nurturing government.
Even on the two moral taste buds that both sides claim – fairness and
liberty – the right can often outcook the left. The left typically
thinks of equality as being central to fairness, and leftists are
extremely sensitive about gross inequalities of outcome – particularly
when they correspond along racial or ethnic lines. But the broader
meaning of fairness is really proportionality – are people getting
rewarded in proportion to the work they put into a common project?
Equality of outcomes is only seen as fair by most people in the special
case in which everyone has made equal contributions. The conservative
media (such as the Daily Mail, or Fox News in the US) is much more
sensitive to the presence of slackers and benefit cheats. They are very
effective at stirring up outrage at the government for condoning
cheating.
Similarly for liberty. Americans and Britons all love liberty, yet
when liberty and care conflict, the left is more likely to choose care.
This is the crux of the US's monumental battle over Obama's healthcare
plan. Can the federal government compel some people to buy a product
(health insurance) in order to make a plan work that extends care to 30
million other people? The derogatory term "nanny state" is rarely used
against the right (pastygate being perhaps an exception). Conservatives
are more cautious about infringing on individual liberties (eg of gun
owners in the US and small businessmen) in order to protect vulnerable
populations (such as children, animals and immigrants).
In sum, the left has a tendency to place caring for the weak, sick
and vulnerable above all other moral concerns. It is admirable and
necessary that some political party stands up for victims of injustice,
racism or bad luck. But in focusing so much on the needy, the left often
fails to address – and sometimes violates – other moral needs, hopes
and concerns. When working-class people vote conservative, as most do in
the US, they are not voting against their self-interest; they are
voting for their moral interest. They are voting for the party that
serves to them a more satisfying moral cuisine. The left in the UK and
USA should think hard about their recipe for success in the 21st
century.
Jonathan
Haidt is a professor of psychology at New York University's Stern
School of Business. He is the author of The Righteous Mind: Why Good
People are Divided by Politics and Religion. To take the survey
described in this essay, visit www.yourmorals.org/express_welcome_sacredness.php
Jonathan Haidt is an associate professor in the department of psychology at the University of Virginia.
This is the kind of shit the Republican are publishing !!!! Wow!!!! Johnathan Haidt must have been a left over thinker from Constantin The Great Administration!!!!! I have never EVER read anything so Applauding as this assault on the Average American Voter. First "lefties" have better MORALS than Republicans. We don't go to church once a week and "play" Christian, MOST of us live in IT in our DAILY WALKS that is why we tend to be more willing to help poor people!!!! What "moral" campus was this Johnathon Haidt using...."save the Empire??" The Chinese Empire???? Talk about "moral pallets" isn't it ill moral to rape your earth and shit on it in the name of GREED for oil, prosperity and personal gain at the expense of communities, health of people the earth and animals!!!!! Morals are exactly what the Left stand for!!!! The moral right to live on God's Earth to be stewards of GOD'S gifts...NOT SERVING MEN"S GREED.
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