Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Tribalism

[A]n enthusiastic Tory backbencher like me can hardly wait to switch on the Today programme every morning in order to listen to all the bad news. The health crisis has deepened, the rail network has gone pear-shaped and Tony Blair's mania for world tourism has made him a laughing stock.
- David Cameron, 2002

Via Freemania

In wake of the recent Foot and Mouth issue, both Stephan Newton and Tom Freeman have commented on the eagerness of some Conservative commentators to focus on how bad this could be for the Labour Party, as opposed to how bad it could be for the farming industry or country. As Tom notes, this tendency, by all parties, to turn important issues into political point-scoring is hardly new.

Nor is it confined to politics. Tribalism – viewing the world largely through the prism of Us and Them – is everywhere. Tribalism replaces open and honest discussion with an infantile attempt to prove that my country/political group/religious belief/football team/etc. is better than yours. It replaces the discussion of ideas and issues with simplistic point-scoring.

You can see tribalism in action across the Internet: Anytime a discussion of politics starts to revolve around whether the Nazis or BNP are left- or rightwing, or whether atheists or religious believers have killed the most people. These aren’t serious discussions, but merely attempts to prove that ‘our’ beliefs are better than ‘their’ beliefs – as though groups such as leftwing, Christian, etc. were almost completely homogenous, without important rifts and divisions. Once the discussion enters this stage, it becomes utterly pointless.

I suppose that’s why I’m attracted to explicitly non-tribalist projects such as ‘Blogpower’ and ‘In Search of High Places’, which are concerned with individuals more than ideologies.

4 comments:

Stephen Newton said...

Not convinced by your 'individuals more than ideologies' line.

Without an idea of what the world should be like, politics loses all direction and meaning.

But as soon as you develop an idea of what the world should be like, you have an ideology.

Moreover, the faith this idea places in the power of the indvidual is ideolgical in the extreme. There is stongly implied rejection of collectivism and interdependence.

Matt M said...

Sorry if I was a bit vague - what I meant was simply that the projects mentioned treat you more as an individual than as a member of "group X".

Graf von Straf Hindenburg said...

Yeah, the real tragedy sort of gets lost in the spin, doesn't it?

Colonel Robert Neville said...

Great post Matt old stick:

But I believe that sometimes we do and must believe that ours IS better than theirs as sometimes it empirically is. Such as our Allied forces and world is better than your Nazi Axis forces and world, our West is better than your Mid East Islamist basket case state.

Our Capitalist Democracy and human rights for women, gays, free expression etc is better than your Communist hellhole.

Better than genital mutilation of children, or all behaviour dictated by the limits of superstitious traditions. Better than a cannibal Dictator rapist, or a head slicing warlord etc, etc.

This clear superiority of progress is proven for example in the direction of global migration to the enormously successful and human scale West and not much in the other direction.

All the best colonelrobertneville.blogspot.com

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