By Dan Hagen
Let’s say I propose a solution to
some problem, and you tell me:
A ) that trying to solve the
problem will make it worse;
B ) that the proposed solution
will accomplish nothing whatsoever and/or;
Congratulations, sir. You’re a
reactionary.
In the 1980s, observing the rise
of the new American right, the late philosopher Albert Hirschman identified a
rigidity in their thinking characterized by these three standard jerks of the conservative
knee. He branded them, in order, “perversity,” “futility” and “jeopardy.”
“Hirschman shows that these
objections are stupefying, mechanical, hyperbolic and often wrong,” wrote Cass
Sunstein in the May 23, 2013, New York Review of Books.
“The current debate over gun
control is a case study in ‘the rhetoric of reaction,’” Sunstein said. “Those
who object to legal restrictions urge that far from decreasing the risk of
violence, such restrictions will actually increase it. For Hirschman, this
objection would be an example of ‘perversity.’ Opponents also contend that if
we want to save lives, gun control will have absolutely no effect — the
argument from futility. We can find precisely the same rhetorical gambits in
countless other debates, including those over Obamacare, increases in the
minimum wage, affirmative action and same-sex marriage.”
In the 1980s, Sunstein noted, “Hirschman
was struck by the routine, stylized, even mechanical character of much of
conservative thinking.”
Hirschman died late in 2012, but
had he lived longer, he might have added a fourth standard response to his
reactionary trio: “fantasy,” the claim that the problem itself, however glaring
and obvious, does not in fact exist.
For example, right wingers routinely
deny the existence of the American health care crisis with an angry, dismissive
claim that access to an emergency room and — presuming one survives that
experience long enough to receive the subsequent staggering medical bills —
access to the bankruptcy courts is more than enough “health care” for ordinary
Americans. It’s more than Daniel Boone had, you whiny weaklings.
Meanwhile, the congressional
Republicans who make these claims receive free outpatient care at Walter Reed
Army Medical Center and National Naval Medical Center, and a generous variety
of other comfortably subsidized health care services.
See? No problem at all.
Sources: The article An Original Thinker of
Our Time by Cass R. Sunstein, based on the book Worldly Philosopher: The
Odyssey of Albert O. Hirschman
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