Culture How Do We Come Back from Conspiracy and Delusion?

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https://threestringraconteur.com/2022/01/31/how-do-we-come-back-from-conspiracy-and-delusion/
January 31, 2022 Posted by Nathan Standing Culture
I don’t know where to start. This is the first time in my memory that one of the two American political parties embraced insane fantasies and rejected the foundation of liberal democracy. It’s my first time. I can see where we fell, but I don’t know how to come back.
Most Republicans probably started this authoritarian dance because it was convenient to their reelection. Drive a new wedge issue for another point on this week’s poll. “Don’t listen to those polls that make me look bad.” But each new political generation pushed that knob to eleven. Their people bought it all, but now they’re stuck holding that tiger’s tail. A big part of America has fallen down this rabbit hole, convinced that everyone else is lying. Republicans can’t let go now. Just look at Liz Cheney. The current crop of Tea Party showboats thinks dysfunction is good. It’s not as if Matt Gaetz, Louie Gohmert, or Jim Jordan wanted to spend all their time governing when there’s more red meat to throw.

Delusion​

In 2022, 60% of American adults blamed Donald Trump for inciting the Jan. 6th violence. That almost sounds hopeful. Ninety-two percent of Democrats agree. Good. But only 27% of Republicans fault Trump. Just after Jan. 6th, nearly half of Republicans (44%) publicly supported armed insurrection. Polls about false election fraud claims have been remarkably consistent. It doesn’t matter that it’s a lie.
How about that Civil War that never seems to end? I know it well. I was raised in a Virginia system overflowing with Lost Cause tropes and lies. Yup, just like all the White kids around me. Most of us tried to emulate that imaginary southern culture. Yes, the ideas were that attractive. That’s why Trump added a New Race War to the nonexistent Republican Party platform.
And, of course, there’s Trump’s Big Lie. Talk about convenient delusions. A month ago, a University of Massachusetts poll reported that about 70% of Republicans believed Biden was not the legitimate President. Trump lays it on thickly at every rally. Something about Jewish space lasers, dead dictators, complex coordination across multiple states, and <mumble mumble> hackers.
None of his supporters care about ‘how.’ Think about that.

The First Taste is Free​

Conspiracies are unlikely, but they’re addictive. These twisted, convoluted, improbable explanations are both nutzo-crazy and deeply attractive to many of us. It feels good to think that you are one of the few who can see behind the curtain.
Have you noticed how the people who believe each plot – who are in the know – never seem to recognize they’re convenient? I like this quote from the Nevada Current paper:
“If reality doesn’t fit what you want it to be, you have to change what you believe – or you have to change reality,” Cassino explained.
That’s where conspiracy theories come in. If you oppose firearm restrictions, then the slaughter of 20 first-graders and six adults at an elementary school with an AR-15 is a real problem for you. Cassino explained: “It’s easier for people who believe strongly in gun rights to say it didn’t happen rather than change their minds” about guns.
American support for conspiracy theories and armed rebellion isn’t new,” Nevada Current, Jan. 6th, 2022.

Reinforcement​

Do you want to know the nub of the problem? People can’t just abandon one false claim. That’s one of the tricks of building a worldview. The people spinning out new conspiracies twist each idea into the bird’s nest of existing plots. They all support each other. It’s not even teasing a thread out of a tapestry; the claims are too tightly tangled. Losing any of the closely-held beliefs threatens the rest. Nobody will change when the costs are that high.

CAn We Come Back From Addiction?​

Even though it’s nonsense, I don’t see how we come back from all this. Yes, it’s easy to laugh at the irrationality of a secret, world-ruling cabal of Satan-worshiping shape-shifting lizard-people pedophiles. Joke about space lasers. It’s all unhinged. But the plots and subplots are addictive in that traditional sense: after a few, people need more. They have to reinforce their interconnected conspiracies to feel normal. And as time passes, they need more. Those old plots don’t give you that endocrine rush anymore. You will want – need – deeper and stronger contrivance to feel normal.
I can see how easy it is to fall into this mass delusion. What I can’t see is how we ever come back from it. Once people decide that objective reality only masks the real story, they’re not listening anymore.
 
This soyboy's got more projection than a twelve screen movie theater.

To answer this fool's cry-typed question: People believe in conspiracy for three reasons.
  1. To reassure themselves in times of uncertainty and find explanations.
  2. To feel safe when they feel powerless and out of control.
  3. To feel good about themselves and bolster their self-esteem.
People who have an overinflated sense of the importance of the groups that they belong to, but at the same time, the feeling that those groups are underappreciated, those kinds of feelings draw people towards conspiracy theories, especially conspiracy theories about their groups. So in having those sorts of beliefs, you can maintain the idea that your group is good and moral and upstanding, whereas others are the evildoers out there who are trying to ruin it for everybody else.

Hence why people believe ridiculous things about Trump, and Nazis, and Nazi trumpets. They want some reassurance when something is happening that they don't understand, and they want to do it in the most self-flattering way possible, so they package it with a noble cause. A sense of one’s own righteousness can be an excellent cover for self-interest. Especially if it is used to block awkward information that contradicts the conspiracy. The result is a highly motivating conjunction of cognitive identity, a sense of belonging, a sense of status, and a sense of purpose and meaning, all wrapped up in the mutual worship of the splendor in their heads.
 
Ignoring the shit eating fart huffing tone of the author (which is INCREDIBLY difficult) I will just break down everything this Author believes is a "Delusion".
In 2022, 60% of American adults blamed Donald Trump for inciting the Jan. 6th violence. That almost sounds hopeful.
Trump didn't tell anyone to do this, called for them to stop, didn't pardon any of those arrested and then stepped down as president. I cannot see in anyway Trump incited this other than calling out the illegitimacy of the sketchiest presidential election in modern American history.
Polls about false election fraud claims have been remarkably consistent....And, of course, there’s Trump’s Big Lie. Talk about convenient delusions. A month ago, a University of Massachusetts poll reported that about 70% of Republicans believed Biden was not the legitimate President.
The Arizona, Texas and I believe Minnesota (maybe Michigan, cant remember) audits have all shown that more than a quarter of the votes were fraudulent, the vast majority being mail in votes for Biden. These are audits in only one of the electoral counties per state that were ALLOWED to happen. Every other attempt to audit other counties has been blocked by local, state and federal powers. Not suspicious at all right?
]Trump added a New Race War to the nonexistent Republican Party platform.
Actual Conspiracy theory nonsense that this author is making up.

The projection is off the scale and the gall of this petulant worm to try and act superior when they know NOTHING but what reddit, snopes and wikipedia tells them to think.
 
In 2022, 60% of American adults blamed Donald Trump for inciting the Jan. 6th violence.
Drumph incited a Capitol policeman to unholster his weapon and discharge it into a woman for climbing through a window?

The powers of the Orange Man are truly frightening in their scale and accuracy.

Most Republicans probably started this authoritarian dance because it was convenient to their reelection.
>Mindlessly obey the unelected experts
>Cover your face at all times, regardless of vax (unless you are an attendee at an elite soiree)
>CONSOOM Vax then get excited for next Vax
>Show your Vax papers, please, or you will be exiled from public life.

Tell me more about these authoritarian Republicans.
 
This is the first time in my memory that one of the two American political parties embraced insane fantasies and rejected the foundation of liberal democracy.
Liberal Democracy has always been a farce. People always envision it as a pirate ship but, it's always been a Vietnamese refugee ship. In the olden times, the captain of a pirate ship was democratically elected... but all the pirates had a good knowledge of what it were like to live on hardtack and rum, drinking from a lemon brine to keep 'yer teeth. On a Vietnamese refugee vessel, most of the occupants are children and rice farmers. If they had any seamen, they'd have little experience on a ship of that prestige. It's inherently retarded to assume that the majority of people are versed enough in geopolitik to elect a man in charge of negotiating with hostile regimes. If we were able to maintain some variant of Athenian Democracy, sure I'd support it. But this isn't Old Greece and we've got a voterbase of hundreds of millions instead of a curated pool of educated landowning men.
 
1) you take your so-called conspiracies and delusions
2) you write them on the soles of your shoes
3) you turn your shoes up sideways
4) grease them motherfuckers up like bacon
5) and shove them up your ass!
 
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