9169 words

I Can Tol­er­ate Any­thing Ex­cept The Out­group

Sep­tem­ber 30, 2014

Con­tent warn­ing: Pol­i­tics, re­li­gion, so­cial jus­tice, spoil­ers for “The Se­cret of Fa­ther Brown”. This isn’t es­pe­cially orig­i­nal to me and I don’t claim any­thing more than to be ex­plain­ing and re­word­ing things I have heard from a bunch of other peo­ple. Un­apolo­get­i­cally America-​centric be­cause I’m not in­formed enough to make it oth­er­wise. Try to keep this off Red­dit and other sim­i­lar sorts of things.

I

In Chester­ton’s The Se­cret of Fa­ther Brown, a beloved no­ble­man who mur­dered his good-​for-nothing brother in a duel thirty years ago re­turns to his home­town wracked by guilt. All the towns­peo­ple want to for­give him im­me­di­ately, and they mock the tit­u­lar priest for only being will­ing to give a mea­sured for­give­ness con­di­tional on penance and self-​reflection. They lec­ture the priest on the virtues of char­ity and com­pas­sion.

Later, it comes out that the beloved no­ble­man did not in fact kill his good-​for-nothing brother. The good-​for-nothing brother killed the beloved no­ble­man (and stole his iden­tity). Now the towns­peo­ple want to see him lynched or burned alive, and it is only the priest who – con­sis­tently – of­fers a mea­sured for­give­ness con­di­tional on penance and self-​reflection.

The priest tells them:

It seems to me that you only par­don the sins that you don’t re­ally think sin­ful. You only for­give crim­i­nals when they com­mit what you don’t re­gard as crimes, but rather as con­ven­tions. You for­give a con­ven­tional duel just as you for­give a con­ven­tional di­vorce. You for­give be­cause there isn’t any­thing to be for­given.

He fur­ther notes that this is why the towns­peo­ple can self-​righteously con­sider them­selves more com­pas­sion­ate and for­giv­ing than he is. Ac­tual for­give­ness, the kind the priest needs to cul­ti­vate to for­give evil­do­ers, is re­ally re­ally hard. The fake for­give­ness the towns­peo­ple use to for­give the peo­ple they like is re­ally easy, so they get to boast not only of their for­giv­ing na­ture, but of how much nicer they are than those mean old priests who find for­give­ness dif­fi­cult and want penance along with it.

After some thought I agree with Chester­ton’s point. There are a lot of peo­ple who say “I for­give you” when they mean “No harm done”, and a lot of peo­ple who say “That was un­for­give­able” when they mean “That was gen­uinely re­ally bad”. Whether or not for­give­ness is right is a com­pli­cated topic I do not want to get in here. But since for­give­ness is gen­er­ally con­sid­ered a virtue, and one that many want credit for hav­ing, I think it’s fair to say you only earn the right to call your­self ‘for­giv­ing’ if you for­give things that gen­uinely hurt you.

To bor­row Chester­ton’s ex­am­ple, if you think di­vorce is a-ok, then you don’t get to “for­give” peo­ple their di­vorces, you merely ig­nore them. Some­one who thinks di­vorce is ab­hor­rent can “for­give” di­vorce. You can for­give theft, or mur­der, or tax eva­sion, or some­thing you find ab­hor­rent.

I mean, from a util­i­tar­ian point of view, you are still doing the cor­rect ac­tion of not giv­ing peo­ple grief be­cause they’re a di­vorcee. You can have all the Util­ity Points you want. All I’m say­ing is that if you “for­give” some­thing you don’t care about, you don’t earn any Virtue Points.

(by way of il­lus­tra­tion: a bil­lion­aire who gives $100 to char­ity gets as many Util­ity Points as an im­pov­er­ished pen­sioner who do­nates the same amount, but the lat­ter gets a lot more Virtue Points)

Tol­er­ance is also con­sid­ered a virtue, but it suf­fers the same sort of dimished ex­pec­ta­tions for­give­ness does.

The Em­peror sum­mons be­fore him Bod­hid­harma and asks: “Mas­ter, I have been tol­er­ant of in­nu­mer­able gays, les­bians, bi­sex­u­als, asex­u­als, blacks, His­pan­ics, Asians, trans­gen­der peo­ple, and Jews. How many Virtue Points have I earned for my mer­i­to­ri­ous deeds?”

Bod­hid­harma an­swers: “None at all”.

The Em­peror, some­what put out, de­mands to know why.

Bod­hid­harma asks: “Well, what do you think of gay peo­ple?”

The Em­peror an­swers: “What do you think I am, some kind of ho­mo­pho­bic bigot? Of course I have noth­ing against gay peo­ple!”

And Bod­hid­harma an­swers: “Thus do you gain no merit by tol­er­at­ing them!”

II

If I had to de­fine “tol­er­ance” it would be some­thing like “re­spect and kind­ness to­ward mem­bers of an out­group”.

And today we have an al­most un­prece­dented sit­u­a­tion.

We have a lot of peo­ple – like the Em­peror – boast­ing of being able to tol­er­ate every­one from every out­group they can imag­ine, lov­ing the out­group, writ­ing long paeans to how great the out­group is, stay­ing up at night fret­ting that some­body else might not like the out­group enough.

This is re­ally sur­pris­ing. It’s a total re­ver­sal of every­thing we know about human psy­chol­ogy up to this point. No one did any ge­netic en­gi­neer­ing. No one passed out weird glow­ing pills in the pub­lic schools. And yet sud­denly we get an en­tire group of peo­ple who con­spic­u­ously pro­mote and de­fend their out­groups, the outer the bet­ter.

What is going on here?

Let’s start by ask­ing what ex­actly an out­group is.

There’s a very bor­ing sense in which, as­sum­ing the Em­peror’s straight, gays are part of his “out­group” ie a group that he is not a mem­ber of. But if the Em­peror has curly hair, are straight-​haired peo­ple part of his out­group? If the Em­peror’s name starts with the let­ter ‘A’, are peo­ple whose names start with the let­ter ‘B’ part of his out­group?

Nah. I would dif­fer­en­ti­ate be­tween mul­ti­ple dif­fer­ent mean­ings of out­group, where one is “a group you are not a part of” and the other is… some­thing stronger.

I want to avoid a very easy trap, which is say­ing that out­groups are about how dif­fer­ent you are, or how hos­tile you are. I don’t think that’s quite right.

Com­pare the Nazis to the Ger­man Jews and to the Japan­ese. The Nazis were very sim­i­lar to the Ger­man Jews: they looked the same, spoke the same lan­guage, came from a sim­i­lar cul­ture. The Nazis were to­tally dif­fer­ent from the Japan­ese: dif­fer­ent race, dif­fer­ent lan­guage, vast cul­tural gap. But the Nazis and Japan­ese mostly got along pretty well. Heck, the Nazis were ac­tu­ally mod­er­ately pos­i­tively dis­posed to the Chi­nese, even when they were tech­ni­cally at war. Mean­while, the con­flict be­tween the Nazis and the Ger­man Jews – some of whom didn’t even re­al­ize they were any­thing other than Ger­man until they checked their grand­par­ents’ birth cer­tifi­cate – is the stuff of his­tory and night­mares. Any the­ory of out­groupish­ness that naively as­sumes the Nazis’ nat­ural out­group is Japan­ese or Chi­nese peo­ple will be to­tally in­ad­e­quate.

And this isn’t a weird ex­cep­tion. Freud spoke of the nar­cis­sism of small dif­fer­ences, say­ing that “it is pre­cisely com­mu­ni­ties with ad­join­ing ter­ri­to­ries, and re­lated to each other in other ways as well, who are en­gaged in con­stant feuds and ridi­cul­ing each other”. Nazis and Ger­man Jews. North­ern Irish Protes­tants and North­ern Irish Catholics. Hutus and Tut­sis. South African whites and South African blacks. Is­raeli Jews and Is­raeli Arabs. Any­one in the for­mer Yu­goslavia and any­one else in the for­mer Yu­goslavia.

So what makes an out­group? Prox­im­ity plus small dif­fer­ences. If you want to know who some­one in for­mer Yu­goslavia hates, don’t look at the In­done­sians or the Zulus or the Ti­betans or any­one else dis­tant and ex­otic. Find the Yu­gosla­vian eth­nic­ity that lives closely in­ter­min­gled with them and is most con­spic­u­ously sim­i­lar to them, and chances are you’ll find the one who they have eight hun­dred years of seething ha­tred to­ward.

What makes an un­ex­pected in-​group? The an­swer with Ger­mans and Japan­ese is ob­vi­ous – a strate­gic al­liance. In fact, the World Wars forged a lot of un­ex­pected tem­po­rary pseudo-​friendships. A re­cent ar­ti­cle from War Nerd points out that the British, after spend­ing cen­turies sub­ju­gat­ing and de­spis­ing the Irish and Sikhs, sud­denly needed Irish and Sikh sol­diers for World Wars I and II re­spec­tively. “Crush them be­neath our boots” quickly changed to fawn­ing songs about how “there never was a cow­ard where the sham­rock grows” and end­less paeans to Sikh mil­i­tary prowess.

Sure, scratch the paeans even a lit­tle bit and you find con­de­scen­sion as strong as ever. But eight hun­dred years of the British com­mit­ting geno­cide against the Irish and con­sid­er­ing them lit­er­ally sub­hu­man turned into smiles and songs about sham­rocks once the Irish started look­ing like use­ful can­non fod­der for a larger fight. And the Sikhs, dark-​skinned peo­ple with tur­bans and beards who pretty much ex­em­plify the Eu­ro­pean stereo­type of “scary for­eigner”, were lauded by every­one from the news media all the way up to Win­ston Churchill.

In other words, out­groups may be the peo­ple who look ex­actly like you, and scary for­eigner types can be­come the in-​group on a mo­ment’s no­tice when it seems con­ve­nient.

III

There are cer­tain the­o­ries of dark mat­ter where it barely in­ter­acts with the reg­u­lar world at all, such that we could have a dark mat­ter planet ex­actly co-​incident with Earth and never know. Maybe dark mat­ter peo­ple are walk­ing all around us and through us, maybe my house is in the Times Square of a great dark mat­ter city, maybe a few me­ters away from me a dark mat­ter blog­ger is writ­ing on his dark mat­ter com­puter about how weird it would be if there was a light mat­ter per­son he couldn’t see right next to him.

This is sort of how I feel about con­ser­v­a­tives.

I don’t mean the sort of light-​matter con­ser­v­a­tives who go around com­plain­ing about Big Gov­ern­ment and oc­ca­sion­ally vot­ing for Rom­ney. I see those guys all the time. What I mean is – well, take cre­ation­ists. Ac­cord­ing to Gallup polls, about 46% of Amer­i­cans are cre­ation­ists. Not just in the sense of be­liev­ing God helped guide evo­lu­tion. I mean they think evo­lu­tion is a vile athe­ist lie and God cre­ated hu­mans ex­actly as they exist right now. That’s half the coun­try.

And I don’t have a sin­gle one of those peo­ple in my so­cial cir­cle. It’s not be­cause I’m de­lib­er­ately avoid­ing them; I’m pretty live-​and-let-live po­lit­i­cally, I wouldn’t os­tra­cize some­one just for some weird be­liefs. And yet, even though I prob­a­bly know about a hun­dred fifty peo­ple, I am pretty con­fi­dent that not one of them is cre­ation­ist. Odds of this hap­pen­ing by chance? 12150 = 11045 = ap­prox­i­mately the chance of pick­ing a par­tic­u­lar atom if you are ran­domly se­lect­ing among all the atoms on Earth.

About forty per­cent of Amer­i­cans want to ban gay mar­riage. I think if I re­ally stretch it, maybe ten of my top hun­dred fifty friends might fall into this group. This is less as­tro­nom­i­cally un­likely; the odds are a mere one to one hun­dred quin­til­lion against.

Peo­ple like to talk about so­cial bub­bles, but that doesn’t even begin to cover one hun­dred quin­til­lion. The only metaphor that seems re­ally ap­pro­pri­ate is the bizarre dark mat­ter world.

I live in a Re­pub­li­can con­gres­sional dis­trict in a state with a Re­pub­li­can gov­er­nor. The con­ser­v­a­tives are def­i­nitely out there. They drive on the same roads as I do, live in the same neigh­bor­hoods. But they might as well be made of dark mat­ter. I never meet them.

To be fair, I spend a lot of my time in­side on my com­puter. I’m brows­ing sites like Red­dit.

Re­cently, there was a thread on Red­dit ask­ing – Red­di­tors Against Gay Mar­riage, What Is Your Best Sup­port­ing Ar­gu­ment? A Red­dit user who didn’t un­der­stand how any­body could be against gay mar­riage hon­estly wanted to know how other peo­ple who were against it jus­ti­fied their po­si­tion. He fig­ured he might as well ask one of the largest sites on the In­ter­net, with an es­ti­mated user base in the tens of mil­lions.

It soon be­came clear that no­body there was ac­tu­ally against gay mar­riage.

There were a bunch of posts say­ing “I of course sup­port gay mar­riage but here are some rea­sons some other peo­ple might be against it,” a bunch of oth­ers say­ing “my ar­gu­ment against gay mar­riage is the gov­ern­ment shouldn’t be in­volved in the mar­riage busi­ness at all”, and sev­eral more say­ing “why would you even ask this ques­tion, there’s no pos­si­ble good ar­gu­ment and you’re wast­ing your time”. About halfway through the thread some­one started say­ing ho­mo­sex­u­al­ity was un­nat­ural and I thought they were going to be the first one to ac­tu­ally an­swer the ques­tion, but at the end they added “But it’s not my place to de­cide what is or isn’t nat­ural, I’m still pro-​gay mar­riage.”

In a thread with 10,401 com­ments, a thread specif­i­cally ask­ing for peo­ple against gay mar­riage, I was even­tu­ally able to find two peo­ple who came out and op­posed it, way near the bot­tom. Their posts started with “I know I’m going to be down­voted to hell for this…”

But I’m not only on Red­dit. I also hang out on LW.

On last year’s sur­vey, I found that of Amer­i­can LWers who iden­tify with one of the two major po­lit­i­cal par­ties, 80% are De­mo­c­rat and 20% Re­pub­li­can, which ac­tu­ally sounds pretty bal­anced com­pared to some of these other ex­am­ples.

But it doesn’t last. Pretty much all of those “Re­pub­li­cans” are lib­er­tar­i­ans who con­sider the GOP the lesser of two evils. When al­lowed to choose “lib­er­tar­ian” as an al­ter­na­tive, only 4% of vis­i­tors con­tin­ued to iden­tify as con­ser­v­a­tive. But that’s still… some. Right?

When I broke the num­bers down fur­ther, 3 per­cent­age points of those are ne­o­re­ac­tionar­ies, a bizarre sect that wants to be ruled by a king. Only one per­cent of LWers were nor­mal every­day God-‘n-​guns-but-not-George-III con­ser­v­a­tives of the type that seem to make up about half of the United States.

It gets worse. My for­ma­tive years were spent at a uni­ver­sity which, if it was sim­i­lar to other elite uni­ver­si­ties, had a fac­ulty and a stu­dent body that skewed about 90-10 lib­eral to con­ser­v­a­tive – and we can bet that, like LW, even those few token con­ser­v­a­tives are Mitt Rom­ney types rather than God-n’-guns types. I get my news from vox.com, an Of­fi­cial Lib­eral Ap­proved Site. Even when I go out to eat, it turns out my fa­vorite restau­rant, Cal­i­for­nia Pizza Kitchen, is the most lib­eral restau­rant in the United States.

I in­habit the same ge­o­graph­i­cal area as scores and scores of con­ser­v­a­tives. But with­out mean­ing to, I have cre­ated an out­ra­geously strong bub­ble, a 10^45 bub­ble. Con­ser­v­a­tives are all around me, yet I am about as likely to have a se­ri­ous en­counter with one as I am a Ti­betan lama.

(Less likely, ac­tu­ally. One time a Ti­betan lama came to my col­lege and gave a re­ally nice pre­sen­ta­tion, but if a con­ser­v­a­tive tried that, peo­ple would protest and it would be can­celed.)

IV

One day I re­al­ized that en­tirely by ac­ci­dent I was ful­fill­ing all the Jew­ish stereo­types.

I’m nerdy, over-​educated, good with words, good with money, weird sense of humor, don’t get out­side much, I like deli sand­wiches. And I’m a psy­chi­a­trist, which is about the most stereo­typ­i­cally Jew­ish pro­fes­sion short of maybe stand-​up co­me­dian or rabbi.

I’m not very re­li­gious. And I don’t go to syn­a­gogue. But that’s stereo­typ­i­cally Jew­ish too!

I bring this up be­cause it would be a mis­take to think “Well, a Jew­ish per­son is by de­f­i­n­i­tion some­one who is born of a Jew­ish mother. Or I guess it sort of also means some­one who fol­lows the Mo­saic Law and goes to syn­a­gogue. But I don’t care about Scott’s mother, and I know he doesn’t go to syn­a­gogue, so I can’t gain any use­ful in­for­ma­tion from know­ing Scott is Jew­ish.”

The defin­ing fac­tors of Ju­daism – Torah-​reading, synagogue-​following, mother-​having – are the tip of a giant ice­berg. Jews some­times iden­tify as a “tribe”, and even if you don’t at­tend syn­a­gogue, you’re still a mem­ber of that tribe and peo­ple can still (in a sta­tis­ti­cal way) infer things about you by know­ing your Jew­ish iden­tity – like how likely they are to be psy­chi­a­trists.

The last sec­tion raised a ques­tion – if peo­ple rarely se­lect their friends and as­so­ciates and cus­tomers ex­plic­itly for pol­i­tics, how do we end up with such in­tense po­lit­i­cal seg­re­ga­tion?

Well, in the same way “going to syn­a­gogue” is merely the iceberg-​tip of a Jew­ish tribe with many dis­tin­guish­ing char­ac­ter­is­tics, so “vot­ing Re­pub­li­can” or “iden­ti­fy­ing as con­ser­v­a­tive” or “be­liev­ing in cre­ation­ism” is the iceberg-​tip of a con­ser­v­a­tive tribe with many dis­tin­guish­ing char­ac­ter­is­tics.

A dis­pro­por­tion­ate num­ber of my friends are Jew­ish, be­cause I meet them at psy­chi­a­try con­fer­ences or some­thing – we self-​segregate not based on ex­plicit re­li­gion but on im­plicit tribal char­ac­ter­is­tics. So in the same way, po­lit­i­cal tribes self-​segregate to an im­pres­sive ex­tent – a 1/10^45 ex­tent, I will never tire of ham­mer­ing in – based on their im­plicit tribal char­ac­ter­is­tics.

The peo­ple who are ac­tu­ally into this sort of thing sketch out a bunch of spec­u­la­tive tribes and sub­tribes, but to make it eas­ier, let me stick with two and a half.

The Red Tribe is most clas­si­cally typ­i­fied by con­ser­v­a­tive po­lit­i­cal be­liefs, strong evan­gel­i­cal re­li­gious be­liefs, cre­ation­ism, op­pos­ing gay mar­riage, own­ing guns, eat­ing steak, drink­ing Coca-​Cola, dri­ving SUVs, watch­ing lots of TV, en­joy­ing Amer­i­can foot­ball, get­ting con­spic­u­ously upset about ter­ror­ists and com­mies, mar­ry­ing early, di­vorc­ing early, shout­ing “USA IS NUM­BER ONE!!!”, and lis­ten­ing to coun­try music.

The Blue Tribe is most clas­si­cally typ­i­fied by lib­eral po­lit­i­cal be­liefs, vague ag­nos­ti­cism, sup­port­ing gay rights, think­ing guns are bar­baric, eat­ing arugula, drink­ing fancy bot­tled water, dri­ving Priuses, read­ing lots of books, being highly ed­u­cated, mock­ing Amer­i­can foot­ball, feel­ing vaguely like they should like soc­cer but never re­ally being able to get into it, get­ting con­spic­u­ously upset about sex­ists and big­ots, mar­ry­ing later, con­stantly point­ing out how much more civ­i­lized Eu­ro­pean coun­tries are than Amer­ica, and lis­ten­ing to “every­thing ex­cept coun­try”.

(There is a partly-​formed at­tempt to spin off a Grey Tribe typ­i­fied by lib­er­tar­ian po­lit­i­cal be­liefs, Dawkins-​style athe­ism, vague an­noy­ance that the ques­tion of gay rights even comes up, eat­ing paleo, drink­ing Soy­lent, call­ing in rides on Uber, read­ing lots of blogs, call­ing Amer­i­can foot­ball “sports­ball”, get­ting con­spic­u­ously upset about the War on Drugs and the NSA, and lis­ten­ing to filk – but for our cur­rent pur­poses this is a dis­trac­tion and they can safely be con­sid­ered part of the Blue Tribe most of the time)

I think these “tribes” will turn out to be even stronger cat­e­gories than pol­i­tics. Har­vard might skew 80-20 in terms of De­moc­rats vs. Re­pub­li­cans, 90-10 in terms of lib­er­als vs. con­ser­v­a­tives, but maybe 99-1 in terms of Blues vs. Reds.

It’s the many, many dif­fer­ences be­tween these tribes that ex­plain the strength of the fil­ter bub­ble – which have I men­tioned seg­re­gates peo­ple at a strength of 1/10^45? Even in some­thing as seem­ingly po­lit­i­cally un­charged as going to Cal­i­for­nia Pizza Kitchen or Sushi House for din­ner, I’m re­strict­ing my­self to the set of peo­ple who like cute ar­ti­sanal piz­zas or soph­sti­cated for­eign foods, which are clas­si­cally Blue Tribe char­ac­ter­is­tics.

Are these tribes based on ge­og­ra­phy? Are they based on race, eth­nic ori­gin, re­li­gion, IQ, what TV chan­nels you watched as a kid? I don’t know.

Some of it is cer­tainly ge­netic – the ge­netic con­tri­bu­tion to po­lit­i­cal as­so­ci­a­tion range from 0.4 to 0.6. Her­i­tabil­ity of one’s at­ti­tudes to­ward gay rights range from 0.3 to 0.5, which hi­lar­i­ously is a lit­tle more her­i­ta­ble than ho­mo­sex­u­al­ity it­self.

(for an in­ter­est­ing at­tempt to break these down into more rig­or­ous con­cepts like “tra­di­tion­al­ism”, “au­thor­i­tar­i­an­ism”, and “in-​group fa­voritism” and find the ge­netic load­ing for each see here. For an at­tempt to trace the spe­cific genes in­volved, which mostly turn out to be NMDA re­cep­tors, )

But I don’t think it’s just ge­net­ics. There’s some­thing else going on too. The word “class” seems like the clos­est ana­logue, but only if you use it in the so­phis­ti­cated Paul Fussell Guide Through the Amer­i­can Sta­tus Sys­tem way in­stead of the bor­ing “an­other word for how much money you make” way.

For now we can just ac­cept them as a brute fact – as mul­ti­ple co­ex­ist­ing so­ci­eties that might as well be made of dark mat­ter for all of the in­ter­ac­tion they have with one an­other – and move on.

V

The worst re­ac­tion I’ve ever got­ten to a blog post was when I wrote about the death of Osama bin Laden. I’ve writ­ten all sorts of stuff about race and gen­der and pol­i­tics and what­ever, but that was the worst.

I didn’t come out and say I was happy he was dead. But some peo­ple in­ter­preted it that way, and there fol­lowed a bunch of com­ments and emails and Face­book mes­sages about how could I pos­si­bly be happy about the death of an­other human being, even if he was a bad per­son? Every­one, even Osama, is a human being, and we should never re­joice in the death of a fel­low man. One com­menter came out and said:

I’m sur­prised at your re­ac­tion. As far as peo­ple I ca­su­ally stalk on the in­ter­net (ie, LJ and Face­book), you are the first out of the “in­tel­li­gent, rea­soned and thought­ful” group to be un­com­pli­cat­edly happy about this de­vel­op­ment and not to be, say, dis­gusted at the re­ac­tions of the other 90% or so.

This com­menter was right. Of the “in­tel­li­gent, rea­soned, and thought­ful” peo­ple I knew, the over­whelm­ing emo­tion was con­spic­u­ous dis­gust that other peo­ple could be happy about his death. I hastily back­tracked and said I wasn’t happy per se, just sur­prised and re­lieved that all of this was fi­nally be­hind us.

And I gen­uinely be­lieved that day that I had found some un­ex­pected good in peo­ple – that every­one I knew was so hu­mane and com­pas­sion­ate that they were un­able to re­joice even in the death of some­one who hated them and every­thing they stood for.

Then a few years later, Mar­garet Thatcher died. And on my Face­book wall – made of these same “in­tel­li­gent, rea­soned, and thought­ful” peo­ple – the most com­mon re­sponse was to quote some por­tion of the song “Ding Dong, The Witch Is Dead”. An­other pop­u­lar re­sponse was to link the videos of British peo­ple spon­ta­neously throw­ing par­ties in the street, with com­ments like “I wish I was there so I could join in”. From this exact same group of peo­ple, not a sin­gle ex­pres­sion of dis­gust or a “c’mon, guys, we’re all human be­ings here.”

I gen­tly pointed this out at the time, and mostly got a bunch of “yeah, so what?”, com­bined with links to an ar­ti­cle claim­ing that “the de­mand for re­spect­ful si­lence in the wake of a pub­lic fig­ure’s death is not just mis­guided but dan­ger­ous”.

And that was when some­thing clicked for me.

You can talk all you want about Is­lam­o­pho­bia, but my friend’s “in­tel­li­gent, rea­soned, and thought­ful peo­ple” – her name for the Blue Tribe – can’t get to­gether enough en­ergy to re­ally hate Osama, let alone Mus­lims in gen­eral. We un­der­stand that what he did was bad, but it didn’t anger us per­son­ally. When he died, we were able to very ra­tio­nally apply our bet­ter na­ture and our Far Mode be­liefs about how it’s never right to be happy about any­one else’s death.

On the other hand, that same group ab­solutely loathed Thatcher. Most of us (though not all) can agree, if the ques­tion is posed ex­plic­itly, that Osama was a worse per­son than Thatcher. But in terms of ac­tual gut feel­ing? Osama pro­vokes a snap judg­ment of “flawed human being”, Thatcher a snap judg­ment of “scum”.

I started this essay by point­ing out that, de­spite what ge­o­graph­i­cal and cul­tural dis­tance would sug­gest, the Nazis’ out­group was not the vastly dif­fer­ent Japan­ese, but the almost-​identical Ger­man Jews.

And my hy­poth­e­sis, stated plainly, is that if you’re part of the Blue Tribe, then your out­group isn’t al-​Qaeda, or Mus­lims, or blacks, or gays, or trans­peo­ple, or Jews, or athe­ists – it’s the Red Tribe.

VI

“But racism and sex­ism and cis­sex­ism and anti-​Semitism are these giant all-​encompassing so­cial fac­tors that verge upon being human uni­ver­sals! Surely you’re not ar­gu­ing that mere po­lit­i­cal dif­fer­ences could ever come close to them!”

One of the ways we know that racism is a giant all-​encompassing so­cial fac­tor is the Im­plicit As­so­ci­a­tion Test. Psy­chol­o­gists ask sub­jects to quickly iden­tify whether words or pho­tos are mem­bers of cer­tain ger­ry­man­dered cat­e­gories, like “ei­ther a white per­son’s face or a pos­i­tive emo­tion” or “ei­ther a black per­son’s face and a neg­a­tive emo­tion”. Then they com­pare to a dif­fer­ent set of ger­ry­man­dered cat­e­gories, like “ei­ther a black per­son’s face or a pos­i­tive emo­tion” or “ei­ther a white per­son’s face or a neg­a­tive emo­tion.” If sub­jects have more trou­ble (as mea­sured in la­tency time) con­nect­ing white peo­ple to neg­a­tive things than they do white peo­ple to pos­i­tive things, then they prob­a­bly have sub­con­scious pos­i­tive as­so­ci­a­tions with white peo­ple. You can try it your­self here.

Of course, what the test fa­mously found was that even white peo­ple who claimed to have no racist at­ti­tudes at all usu­ally had pos­i­tive as­so­ci­a­tions with white peo­ple and neg­a­tive as­so­ci­a­tions with black peo­ple on the test. There are very many claims and coun­ter­claims about the pre­cise mean­ing of this, but it ended up being a big part of the ev­i­dence in favor of the cur­rent con­sen­sus that all white peo­ple are at least a lit­tle racist.

Any­way, three months ago, some­one fi­nally had the bright idea of doing an Im­plicit As­so­ci­a­tion Test with po­lit­i­cal par­ties, and they found that peo­ple’s un­con­scious par­ti­san bi­ases were half again as strong as their un­con­scious racial bi­ases (h/t Bloomberg. For ex­am­ple, if you are a white De­mo­c­rat, your un­con­scious bias against blacks (as mea­sured by some­thing called a d-​score) is 0.16, but your un­con­scious bias against Re­pub­li­cans will be 0.23. The Cohen’s d for racial bias was 0.61, by the book a “mod­er­ate” ef­fect size; for party it was 0.95, a “large” ef­fect size.

Okay, fine, but we know race has real world con­se­quences. Like, there have been sev­eral stud­ies where peo­ple sent out a bunch of iden­ti­cal re­sumes ex­cept some­times with a black per­son’s photo and other times with a white per­son’s photo, and it was no­ticed that em­ploy­ers were much more likely to in­vite the fic­tional white can­di­dates for in­ter­views. So just some stu­pid Im­plicit As­so­ci­a­tion Test re­sults can’t com­pare to that, right?

Iyen­gar and West­wood also de­cided to do the re­sume test for par­ties. They asked sub­jects to de­cide which of sev­eral can­di­dates should get a schol­ar­ship (sub­jects were told this was a gen­uine de­ci­sion for the uni­ver­sity the re­searchers were af­fil­i­ated with). Some re­sumes had pho­tos of black peo­ple, oth­ers of white peo­ple. And some stu­dents listed their ex­pe­ri­ence in Young De­moc­rats of Amer­ica, oth­ers in Young Re­pub­li­cans of Amer­ica.

Once again, dis­crim­i­na­tion on the basis of party was much stronger than dis­crim­i­na­tion on the basis of race. The size of the race ef­fect for white peo­ple was only 56-44 (and in the re­verse of the ex­pected di­rec­tion); the size of the party ef­fect was about 80-20 for De­moc­rats and 69-31 for Re­pub­li­cans.

If you want to see their third ex­per­i­ment, which ap­plied yet an­other clas­sic method­ol­ogy used to de­tect racism and once again found par­ty­ism to be much stronger, you can read the paper.

I & W did an un­usu­ally thor­ough job, but this sort of thing isn’t new or ground-​breaking. Peo­ple have been study­ing “be­lief con­gru­ence the­ory” – the idea that dif­fer­ences in be­liefs are more im­por­tant than de­mo­graphic fac­tors in form­ing in-​groups and out­groups – for decades. As early as 1967, Smith et al were doing sur­veys all over the coun­try and find­ing that peo­ple were more likely to ac­cept friend­ships across racial lines than across be­liefs; in the forty years since then, the ob­ser­va­tion has been repli­cated scores of times. Insko, Moe, and Na­coste’s 2006 re­view Be­lief Con­gru­ence And Racial Dis­crim­i­na­tion con­cludes that:

The lit­er­a­ture was judged sup­port­ive of a weak ver­sion of be­lief con­gru­ence the­ory which states that in those con­texts in which so­cial pres­sure is nonex­is­tent or in­ef­fec­tive, be­lief is more im­por­tant than race as a de­ter­mi­nant of racial or eth­nic dis­crim­i­na­tion. Ev­i­dence for a strong ver­sion of be­lief con­gru­ence the­ory (which states that in those con­texts in which so­cial pres­sure is nonex­is­tent, or in­ef­fec­tive, be­lief is the only de­ter­mi­nant of racial or eth­nic dis­crim­i­na­tion) and was judged much more prob­lem­atic.

One of the best-​known ex­am­ples of racism is the “Guess Who’s Com­ing To Din­ner” sce­nario where par­ents are scan­dal­ized about their child mar­ry­ing some­one of a dif­fer­ent race. Pew has done some good work on this and found that only 23% of con­ser­v­a­tives and 1% (!) of lib­er­als admit they would be upset in this sit­u­a­tion. But Pew also asked how par­ents would feel about their child mar­ry­ing some­one of a dif­fer­ent po­lit­i­cal party. Now 30% of con­ser­v­a­tives and 23% of lib­er­als would get upset. Av­er­age them out, and you go from 12% up­set­ness rate for race to 27% up­set­ness rate for party – more than dou­ble. Yeah, peo­ple do lie to poll­sters, but a pic­ture is start­ing to come to­gether here.

(Har­vard, by the way, is a tossup. There are more black stu­dents – 11.5% – than con­ser­v­a­tive stu­dents – 10% – but there are more con­ser­v­a­tive fac­ulty than black fac­ulty.)

Since peo­ple will de­light in mis­in­ter­pret­ing me here, let me overem­pha­size what I am not say­ing. I’m not say­ing peo­ple of ei­ther party have it “worse” than black peo­ple, or that par­ty­ism is more of a prob­lem than racism, or any of a num­ber of stu­pid things along those lines which I am sure I will nev­er­the­less be ac­cused of be­liev­ing. Racism is worse than par­ty­ism be­cause the two par­ties are at least kind of bal­anced in num­bers and in re­sources, whereas the brunt of an en­tire coun­try’s racism falls on a few un­der­priv­i­leged peo­ple. I am say­ing that the un­der­ly­ing at­ti­tudes that pro­duce par­ty­ism are stronger than the un­der­ly­ing at­ti­tudes that pro­duce racism, with no nec­es­sary im­pli­ca­tions on their so­cial ef­fects.

But if we want to look at peo­ple’s psy­chol­ogy and mo­ti­va­tions, par­ty­ism and the par­tic­u­lar vari­ant of trib­al­ism that it rep­re­sents are going to be fer­tile ground.

VII

Every elec­tion cycle like clock­work, con­ser­v­a­tives ac­cuse lib­er­als of not being suf­fi­ciently pro-​America. And every elec­tion cycle like clock­work, lib­er­als give ex­tremely un­con­vinc­ing de­nials of this.

“It’s not that we’re, like, against Amer­ica per se. It’s just that… well, did you know Eu­rope has much bet­ter health care than we do? And much lower crime rates? I mean, come on, how did they get so awe­some? And we’re just sit­ting here, can’t even get the gay mar­riage thing sorted out, se­ri­ously, what’s wrong with a coun­try that can’t… sorry, what were we talk­ing about? Oh yeah, Amer­ica. They’re okay. Cesar Chavez was re­ally neat. So were some other peo­ple out­side the main­stream who be­came fa­mous pre­cisely by crit­i­ciz­ing ma­jor­ity so­ci­ety. That’s sort of like Amer­ica being great, in that I think the parts of it that point out how bad the rest of it are often make ex­cel­lent points. Vote for me!”

(sorry, I make fun of you be­cause I love you)

There was a big brouhaha a cou­ple of years ago when, as it first be­came ap­par­ent Obama had a good shot at the Pres­i­dency, Michelle Obama said that “for the first time in my adult life, I am proud of my coun­try.”

Re­pub­li­cans pounced on the com­ment, ask­ing why she hadn’t felt proud be­fore, and she back­tracked say­ing of course she was proud all the time and she loves Amer­ica with the burn­ing fury of a mil­lion suns and she was just say­ing that the Obama cam­paign was par­tic­u­larly in­spir­ing.

As un­con­vinc­ing de­nials go, this one was pretty far up there. But no one re­ally held it against her. Prob­a­bly most Obama vot­ers felt vaguely the same way. I was an Obama voter, and I have proud mem­o­ries of spend­ing my Fourth of Julys as a kid de­bunk­ing peo­ple’s heart­felt emo­tions of pa­tri­o­tism. Aaron Sorkin:

[What makes Amer­ica the great­est coun­try in the world?] It’s not the great­est coun­try in the world! We’re sev­enth in lit­er­acy, 27th in math, 22nd in sci­ence, 49th in life ex­pectancy, 178th in in­fant mor­tal­ity, third in me­dian house­hold in­come, No. 4 in labor force, and No. 4 in ex­ports. So when you ask what makes us the great­est coun­try in the world, I don’t know what the f*** you’re talk­ing about.

(An­other good re­tort is “We’re num­ber one? Sure – num­ber one in in­car­cer­a­tion rates, drone strikes, and mak­ing new par­ents go back to work!”)

All of this is true, of course. But it’s weird that it’s such a clas­sic in­ter­est of mem­bers of the Blue Tribe, and mem­bers of the Red Tribe never seem to bring it up.

(“We’re num­ber one? Sure – num­ber one in lev­els of sex­ual de­gen­er­acy! Well, I guess prob­a­bly num­ber two, after the Nether­lands, but they’re re­ally small and shouldn’t count.”)

My hunch – both the Red Tribe and the Blue Tribe, for what­ever rea­son, iden­tify “Amer­ica” with the Red Tribe. Ask peo­ple for typ­i­cally “Amer­i­can” things, and you end up with a very Red list of char­ac­ter­is­tics – guns, re­li­gion, bar­be­cues, Amer­i­can foot­ball, NASCAR, cow­boys, SUVs, un­re­strained cap­i­tal­ism.

That means the Red Tribe feels in­tensely pa­tri­otic about “their” coun­try, and the Blue Tribe feels like they’re liv­ing in for­ti­fied en­claves deep in hos­tile ter­ri­tory.

Here is a pop­u­lar piece pub­lished on a major media site called Amer­ica: A Big, Fat, Stu­pid Na­tion. An­other: Amer­ica: A Bunch Of Spoiled, Whiny Brats. Amer­i­cans are ig­no­rant, sci­en­tif­i­cally il­lit­er­ate re­li­gious fa­nat­ics whose “pa­tri­o­tism” is ac­tu­ally just nar­cis­sism. You Will Be Shocked At How Ig­no­rant Amer­i­cans Are, and we should Blame The Child­ish, Ig­no­rant Amer­i­can Peo­ple.

Need­less to say, every sin­gle one of these ar­ti­cles was writ­ten by an Amer­i­can and read al­most en­tirely by Amer­i­cans. Those Amer­i­cans very likely en­joyed the ar­ti­cles very much and did not feel the least bit in­sulted.

And look at the sources. HuffPo, Salon, Slate. Might those have any­thing in com­mon?

On both sides, “Amer­i­can” can be ei­ther a nor­mal de­monym, or a code word for a mem­ber of the Red Tribe.

VIII

The other day, I logged into OKCu­pid and found some­one who looked cool. I was read­ing over her pro­file and found the fol­low­ing sen­tence:

Don’t mes­sage me if you’re a sex­ist white guy

And my first thought was “Wait, so a sex­ist black per­son would be okay? Why?”

(The girl in ques­tion was white as snow)

Around the time the Fer­gu­son riots were first start­ing, there were a host of ar­ti­cles with ti­tles like Why White Peo­ple Don’t Seem To Un­der­stand Fer­gu­son, Why It’s So Hard For Whites To Un­der­stand Fer­gu­son, and White Folks Lis­ten Up And Let Me Tell You What Fer­gu­son Is All About, this last of which says:

So­cial media is full of peo­ple on both sides mak­ing pre­sump­tions, and be­liev­ing what they want to be­lieve. But it’s the white folks that don’t un­der­stand what this is all about. Let me put it as sim­ply as I can for you […]

No mat­ter how wrong you think Trayvon Mar­tin or Michael Brown were, I think we can all agree they didn’t de­serve to die over it. I want you white folks to un­der­stand that this is where the anger is com­ing from. You fo­cused on the loot­ing….”

And on a hunch I checked the au­thor pho­tos, and every sin­gle one of these ar­ti­cles was writ­ten by a white per­son. White Peo­ple Are Ru­in­ing Amer­ica ? White. White Peo­ple Are Still A Dis­grace ? White. White Guys: We Suck And We’re Sorry ? White. Bye Bye, Whiny White Dudes ? White. Dear En­ti­tled Straight White Dudes, I’m Evict­ing You From My Life ? White. White Dudes Need To Stop White­s­plain­ing ? White. Rea­sons Why Amer­i­cans Suck #1: White Peo­ple ? White.

We’ve all seen ar­ti­cles and com­ments and ar­ti­cles like this. Some un­sa­vory peo­ple try to use them to prove that white peo­ple are the real vic­tims or the media is bi­ased against white peo­ple or some­thing. Other peo­ple who are very nice and op­ti­mistic use them to show that some white peo­ple have de­vel­oped some self-​awareness and are will­ing to en­gage in self-​criticism.

But I think the sit­u­a­tion with “white” is much the same as the sit­u­a­tion with “Amer­i­can” – it can ei­ther mean what it says, or be a code word for the Red Tribe.

(ex­cept on the blog Stuff White Peo­ple Like, where it ob­vi­ously serves as a code word for the Blue tribe. I don’t know, guys. I didn’t do it.)

I re­al­ize that’s mak­ing a strong claim, but it would hardly be with­out prece­dent. When peo­ple say things like “gamers are misog­y­nist”, do they mean the 52% of gamers who are women ? Do they mean every one of the 59% of Amer­i­cans from every walk of life who are known to play video or com­puter games oc­ca­sion­ally? No. “Gamer” is a coded ref­er­ence to the Gray Tribe, the half-​branched-off col­lec­tion of lib­er­tar­i­an­ish tech-​savvy nerds, and every­one knows it. As well ex­pect that when peo­ple talk about “fe­do­ras”, they mean In­di­ana Jones. Or when they talk about “urban youth”, they mean fresh­men at NYU. Every­one knows ex­actly who we mean when we say “urban youth”, and them being young peo­ple who live in a city has only the most ten­u­ous of re­la­tions to the ac­tual con­cept.

And I’m say­ing words like “Amer­i­can” and “white” work the same way. Bill Clin­ton was the “first black Pres­i­dent”, but if Her­man Cain had won in 2012 he’d have been the 43rd white pres­i­dent. And when an angry white per­son talks at great length about how much he hates “white dudes”, he is not being hum­ble and self-​critical.

IX

Imag­ine hear­ing that a lib­eral talk show host and co­me­dian was so en­raged by the ac­tions of ISIS that he’d recorded and posted a video in which he shouts at them for ten min­utes, curs­ing the “fa­nat­i­cal ter­ror­ists” and call­ing them “utter sav­ages” with “sav­age val­ues”.

If I heard that, I’d be kind of sur­prised. It doesn’t fit my model of what lib­eral talk show hosts do.

But the story I’m ac­tu­ally re­fer­ring to is lib­eral talk show host / co­me­dian Rus­sell Brand mak­ing that same rant against Fox News for sup­port­ing war against the Is­lamic State, adding at the end that “Fox is worse than ISIS”.

That fits my model per­fectly. You wouldn’t cel­e­brate Osama’s death, only Thatcher’s. And you wouldn’t call ISIS sav­ages, only Fox News. Fox is the out­group, ISIS is just some ran­dom peo­ple off in a desert. You hate the out­group, you don’t hate ran­dom desert peo­ple.

I would go fur­ther. Not only does Brand not feel much like hat­ing ISIS, he has a strong in­cen­tive not to. That in­cen­tive is: the Red Tribe is known to hate ISIS loudly and con­spic­u­ously. Hat­ing ISIS would sig­nal Red Tribe mem­ber­ship, would be the equiv­a­lent of going into Crips ter­ri­tory with a big Bloods gang sign tat­tooed on your shoul­der.

But this might be un­fair. What would Rus­sell Brand an­swer, if we asked him to jus­tify his de­ci­sion to be much an­grier at Fox than ISIS?

He might say some­thing like “Ob­vi­ously Fox News is not lit­er­ally worse than ISIS. But here I am, talk­ing to my au­di­ence, who are mostly white British peo­ple and Amer­i­cans. These peo­ple al­ready know that ISIS is bad; they don’t need to be told that any fur­ther. In fact, at this point being angry about how bad ISIS is, is less likely to gen­uinely change some­one’s mind about ISIS, and more likely to pro­mote Is­lam­o­pho­bia. The sort of peo­ple in my au­di­ence are at zero risk of be­com­ing ISIS sup­port­ers, but at a very real risk of Is­lam­o­pho­bia. So rant­ing against ISIS would be coun­ter­pro­duc­tive and dan­ger­ous.

On the other hand, my au­di­ence of white British peo­ple and Amer­i­cans is very likely to con­tain many Fox News view­ers and sup­port­ers. And Fox, while not quite as evil as ISIS, is still pretty bad. So here’s some­where I have a gen­uine chance to reach peo­ple at risk and change minds. There­fore, I think my de­ci­sion to rant against Fox News, and maybe hy­per­bol­i­cally say they were ‘worse than ISIS’ is jus­ti­fied under the cir­cum­stances.”

I have a lot of sym­pa­thy to hypothetical-​Brand, es­pe­cially to the part about Is­lam­o­pho­bia. It does seem re­ally pos­si­ble to de­nounce ISIS’ atroc­i­ties to a pop­u­la­tion that al­ready hates them in order to “weak-​man” a cou­ple of already-​marginalized Mus­lims. We need to fight ter­ror­ism and atroc­i­ties – there­fore it’s okay to shout at a poor girl ten thou­sand miles from home for wear­ing a head­scarf in pub­lic. Chris­tians are being ex­e­cuted for their faith in Sudan, there­fore let’s picket the peo­ple try­ing to build a mosque next door.

But my sym­pa­thy with Brand ends when he acts like his au­di­ence is likely to be fans of Fox News.

In a world where a neg­li­gi­ble num­ber of Red­di­tors op­pose gay mar­riage and 1% of Less Wrongers iden­tify con­ser­v­a­tive and I know 0/150 cre­ation­ists, how many of the peo­ple who visit the YouTube chan­nel of a well-​known lib­eral ac­tivist with a Che-​inspired ban­ner, a chan­nel whose episode names are things like “War: What Is It Good For?” and “Sarah Sil­ver­man Talks Fem­i­nism” – how many of them do you think are big Fox News fans?

In a way, Rus­sell Brand would have been braver tak­ing a stand against ISIS than against Fox. If he at­tacked ISIS, his view­ers would just be a lit­tle con­fused and un­com­fort­able. Whereas every mo­ment he’s at­tack­ing Fox his view­ers are like “HA HA! YEAH! GET ‘EM! SHOW THOSE IG­NO­RANT BIG­OTS IN THE OUT­GROUP WHO’S BOSS!”

Brand acts as if there are just these coun­tries called “Britain” and “Amer­ica” who are re­ceiv­ing his ma­te­r­ial. Wrong. There are two par­al­lel uni­verses, and he’s only broad­cast­ing to one of them.

The re­sult is ex­actly what we pre­dicted would hap­pen in the case of Islam. Bom­bard peo­ple with im­ages of a far-​off land they al­ready hate and tell them to hate it more, and the re­sult is ramp­ing up the in­tol­er­ance on the cou­ple of dazed and mar­gin­al­ized rep­re­sen­ta­tives of that cul­ture who have ended up stuck on your half of the di­vide. Sure enough, if in­dus­try or cul­ture or com­mu­nity gets Blue enough, Red Tribe mem­bers start get­ting ha­rassed, fired from their jobs (Bren­dan Eich being the ob­vi­ous ex­am­ple) or oth­er­wise shown the door.

Think of Bren­dan Eich as a mem­ber of a tiny re­li­gious mi­nor­ity sur­rounded by peo­ple who hate that mi­nor­ity. Sud­denly fir­ing him doesn’t seem very noble.

If you mix to­gether Po­dunk, Texas and Mosul, Iraq, you can prove that Mus­lims are scary and very pow­er­ful peo­ple who are ex­e­cut­ing Chris­tians all the time – and so we have a great ex­cuse for kick­ing the one re­main­ing Mus­lim fam­ily, ran­dom peo­ple who never hurt any­one, out of town.

And if you mix to­gether the open-​source tech in­dus­try and the par­al­lel uni­verse where you can’t wear a FreeBSD t-​shirt with­out risk­ing some­one try­ing to ex­or­cise you, you can prove that Chris­tians are scary and very pow­er­ful peo­ple who are per­se­cut­ing every­one else all the time, and you have a great ex­cuse for kick­ing one of the few peo­ple will­ing to af­fil­i­ate with the Red Tribe, a guy who never hurt any­one, out of town.

When a friend of mine heard Eich got fired, she didn’t see any­thing wrong with it. “I can tol­er­ate any­thing ex­cept in­tol­er­ance,” she said.

“In­tol­er­ance” is start­ing to look like an­other one of those words like “white” and “Amer­i­can”.

“I can tol­er­ate any­thing ex­cept the out­group.” Doesn’t sound quite so noble now, does it?

X

We started by ask­ing: mil­lions of peo­ple are con­spic­u­ously prais­ing every out­group they can think of, while con­spic­u­ously con­demn­ing their own in-​group. This seems con­trary to what we know about so­cial psy­chol­ogy. What’s up?

We noted that out­groups are rarely lit­er­ally “the group most dif­fer­ent from you”, and in fact far more likely to be groups very sim­i­lar to you shar­ing al­most all your char­ac­ter­is­tics and liv­ing in the same area.

We then noted that al­though lib­er­als and con­ser­v­a­tives live in the same area, they might as well be two to­tally dif­fer­ent coun­tries or uni­verse as far as level of in­ter­ac­tion were con­cerned.

Con­tra the usual idea of them being marked only by vot­ing be­hav­ior, we de­scribed them as very dif­fer­ent tribes with to­tally dif­fer­ent cul­tures. You can speak of “Amer­i­can cul­ture” only in the same way you can speak of “Asian cul­ture” – that is, with a lot of in­te­rior bound­aries being pushed under the rug.

The out­group of the Red Tribe is oc­ca­sion­ally blacks and gays and Mus­lims, more often the Blue Tribe.

The Blue Tribe has per­formed some kind of very im­pres­sive act of alchemy, and trans­muted all of its out­group ha­tred to the Red Tribe.

This is not sur­pris­ing. Eth­nic dif­fer­ences have proven quite tractable in the face of shared strate­gic aims. Even the Nazis, not known for their eth­nic tol­er­ance, were able to get all buddy-​buddy with the Japan­ese when they had a com­mon cause.

Re­search sug­gests Blue Tribe / Red Tribe prej­u­dice to be much stronger than better-​known types of prej­u­dice like racism. Once the Blue Tribe was able to en­list the blacks and gays and Mus­lims in their ranks, they be­came al­lies of con­ve­nience who de­serve to be re­ha­bil­i­tated with mildly con­de­scend­ing paeans to their virtue. “There never was a cow­ard where the sham­rock grows.”

Spend­ing your en­tire life in­sult­ing the other tribe and talk­ing about how ter­ri­ble they are makes you look, well, trib­al­is­tic. It is def­i­nitely not high class. So when mem­bers of the Blue Tribe de­cide to ded­i­cate their en­tire life to yelling about how ter­ri­ble the Red Tribe is, they make sure that in­stead of say­ing “the Red Tribe”, they say “Amer­ica”, or “white peo­ple”, or “straight white men”. That way it’s hum­ble self-​criticism. They are so in­ter­ested in jus­tice that they are will­ing to cri­tique their own beloved side, much as it pains them to do so. We know they are not ex­ag­ger­at­ing, be­cause one might ex­ag­ger­ate the flaws of an enemy, but that any­one would ex­ag­ger­ate their own flaws fails the cri­te­rion of em­bar­rass­ment.

The Blue Tribe al­ways has an ex­cuse at hand to per­se­cute and crush any Red Tribers un­for­tu­nate enough to fall into its light-​matter-universe by defin­ing them as all-​powerful dom­i­neer­ing op­pres­sors. They ap­peal to the fact that this is def­i­nitely the way it works in the Red Tribe’s dark-​matter-universe, and that’s in the same coun­try so it has to be the same com­mu­nity for all in­tents and pur­poses. As a re­sult, every Blue Tribe in­sti­tu­tion is per­ma­nently li­censed to take what­ever emer­gency mea­sures are nec­es­sary against the Red Tribe, how­ever dis­turb­ing they might oth­er­wise seem.

And so how vir­tu­ous, how noble the Blue Tribe! Per­fectly tol­er­ant of all of the dif­fer­ent groups that just so hap­pen to be al­lied with them, never in­tol­er­ant un­less it hap­pen to be against in­tol­er­ance it­self. Never stoop­ing to en­gage in petty tribal con­flict like that awful Red Tribe, but al­ways nobly crit­i­ciz­ing their own cul­ture and striv­ing to make it bet­ter!

Sorry. But I hope this is at least a lit­tle con­vinc­ing. The weird dy­namic of outgroup-​philia and ingroup-​phobia isn’t any­thing of the sort. It’s just good old-​fashioned in-​group-favoritism and out­group bash­ing, a lit­tle more so­phis­ti­cated and a lit­tle more sneaky.

XI

This essay is bad and I should feel bad.

I should feel bad be­cause I made ex­actly the mis­take I am try­ing to warn every­one else about, and it wasn’t until I was al­most done that I no­ticed.

How vir­tu­ous, how noble I must be! Never stoop­ing to en­gage in petty tribal con­flict like that silly Red Tribe, but al­ways nobly crit­i­ciz­ing my own tribe and striv­ing to make it bet­ter.

Yeah. Once I’ve writ­ten a ten thou­sand word essay sav­agely at­tack­ing the Blue Tribe, ei­ther I’m a very spe­cial per­son or they’re my out­group. And I’m not that spe­cial.

Just as you can pull a fast one and look humbly self-​critical if you make your au­di­ence as­sume there’s just one Amer­i­can cul­ture, so maybe you can trick peo­ple by as­sum­ing there’s only one Blue Tribe.

I’m pretty sure I’m not Red, but I did talk about the Grey Tribe above, and I show all the risk fac­tors for being one of them. That means that, al­though my cri­tique of the Blue Tribe may be right or wrong, in terms of mo­ti­va­tion it comes from the same place as a Red Tribe mem­ber talk­ing about how much they hate al-​Qaeda or a Blue Tribe mem­ber talk­ing about how much they hate ig­no­rant big­ots. And when I boast of being able to tol­er­ate Chris­tians and South­ern­ers whom the Blue Tribe is mean to, I’m not being tol­er­ant at all, just notic­ing peo­ple so far away from me they wouldn’t make a good out­group any­way.

I had fun writ­ing this ar­ti­cle. Peo­ple do not have fun writ­ing ar­ti­cles sav­agely crit­i­ciz­ing their in-​group. Peo­ple can crit­i­cize their in-​group, it’s not hu­manly im­pos­si­ble, but it takes nerves of steel, it makes your blood boil, you should sweat blood. It shouldn’t be fun.

You can bet some white guy on Gawker who week after week churns out “Why White Peo­ple Are So Ter­ri­ble” and “Here’s What Dumb White Peo­ple Don’t Un­der­stand” is hav­ing fun and not sweat­ing any blood at all. He’s not crit­i­ciz­ing his in-​group, he’s never even con­sid­ered crit­i­ciz­ing his in-​group. I can’t blame him. Crit­i­ciz­ing the in-​group is a re­ally dif­fi­cult project I’ve barely begun to build the men­tal skills nec­es­sary to even con­sider.

I can think of crit­i­cisms of my own tribe. Im­por­tant crit­i­cisms, true ones. But the thought of writ­ing them makes my blood boil.

I imag­ine might I feel like some lib­eral US Mus­lim leader, when he goes on the O’Reilly Show, and O’Reilly am­bushes him and de­mands to know why he and other Amer­i­can Mus­lims haven’t con­demned be­head­ings by ISIS more, de­mands that he crit­i­cize them right there on live TV. And you can see the wheels in the Mus­lim leader’s head turn­ing, think­ing some­thing like “Okay, ob­vi­ously be­head­ings are ter­ri­ble and I hate them as much as any­one. But you don’t care even the slight­est bit about the vic­tims of be­head­ings. You’re just look­ing for a way to score points against me so you can em­barass all Mus­lims. And I would rather per­son­ally be­head every sin­gle per­son in the world than give a smug bigot like you a sin­gle mi­cro­gram more stu­pid self-​satisfaction than you’ve al­ready got.”

That is how I feel when asked to crit­i­cize my own tribe, even for cor­rect rea­sons. If you think you’re crit­i­ciz­ing your own tribe, and your blood is not at that tem­per­a­ture, con­sider the pos­si­bil­ity that you aren’t.

But if I want Self-​Criticism Virtue Points, crit­i­ciz­ing the Grey Tribe is the only hon­est way to get them. And if I want Tol­er­ance Points, my own per­sonal cross to bear right now is tol­er­at­ing the Blue Tribe. I need to re­mind my­self that when they are bad peo­ple, they are merely Osama-​level bad peo­ple in­stead of Thatcher-​level bad peo­ple. And when they are good peo­ple, they are pow­er­ful and nec­es­sary cru­saders against the evils of the world.

The worst thing that could hap­pen to this post is to have it be used as con­ve­nient feces to fling at the Blue Tribe when­ever feces are nec­es­sary. Which, given what has hap­pened to my last cou­ple of posts along these lines and the ob­vi­ous bi­ases of my own sub­con­scious, I al­ready ex­pect it will be.

But the best thing that could hap­pen to this post is that it makes a lot of peo­ple, es­pe­cially my­self, fig­ure out how to be more tol­er­ant. Not in the “of course I’m tol­er­ant, why shouldn’t I be?” sense of the Em­peror in Part I. But in the sense of “being tol­er­ant makes me see red, makes me sweat blood, but darn it I am going to be tol­er­ant any­way.”

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