"Nevertheless, we make no claims about the model’s predictive accuracy. The model is highly abstract and remains to be empirically calibrated and tested. Nor can we assume that tipping points would obtain in radically different applications, such as affective polarization, voter polarization, or media polarization."
They were documenting the computational model that they used and they did note that it had some predictive success.
Additionally,
“ We see indications of empirical validation in recent events. Prior to 2019, one might have assumed that a global pandemic would bring together those who disagreed on issues for which hot-button righteous indignation was a luxury that could no longer be afforded. Instead, mask wearing became a partisan crest that identified friend and foe on a partisan battlefield. Similar dynamics can be observed in the two impeachment trials of former President Donald Trump. In the first trial, evidence of collusion with a foreign government failed to exert the expected unifying effect. In the second case, an attack on the US Capitol initially elicited bipartisan outrage, followed by a reversal of position among Republican leaders in the weeks leading up to the Senate trial.”
Do you mean in the word "affective"? It's a perfectly cromulent word.
It's the adjectival form of the word "affect" in its noun sense, meaning "mood" or "feeling". This form is pronounced differently: A-fect (emphasis on the first syllable, with the vowel like in "rat").
"Affective polarization" is "people being polarized in how they feel about each other", i.e. animosity towards people in the other party. It's a technical term used by sociologists and not in common use, but it's not a typo.
Seems like completely made up pseudo-scientific bs?
Edit (due to downvotes):
Like they make up a model based on the past. Probably the model is massively tuned to the past data set. If it makes any testable predictions about the future, I would be very surprised if those predictions ended up being more accurate than chance.
If you read the actual research, they clearly state that they aren’t asserting that their model currently holds predictive accuracy, while also noting that it did have successes.
“ In closing, our study should be viewed as a small, but important, first step. The sources of political and ideological polarization have been widely investigated, but relatively little attention has been directed to the possibility that the causal mechanisms are characterized by irreversible tipping points. The lack of attention does not reflect the low importance of the problem. The historical lesson from climate research may be instructive. As with incremental global warming (28), the dynamics of reversibility cannot be revealed with observational data tracking changes over time in the level of polarization. Instead, climatologists have relied on increasingly sophisticated and empirically calibrated computational models to show how the self-reinforcing dynamics of global warming can be reversed through the reduction of carbon and methane emissions only up to a critical threshold, beyond which civilization as we know it may be doomed. We extend the concern with an environmental tipping point to the study of polarization. The need for empirical calibration in our model calls for increased investment in the study of irreversible phase change, while our findings call for urgency in mobilizing remediation efforts before it is too late.”
Shia-Sunni, Turkey-Greek, Catholic-Reformation are a few that come to mind. Take a look at Middle East and you would see long standing polarization.. Anti-semitism is also another long standing polarization.
Slavery was abolished, but you still have people flying confederate flags and arguing for slavery (in a more modern rendition)
Slavery was abolished unilaterally, not as a reversal of the political polarization, and it could be argued that although the explicit practice of slavery is no longer polarizing, Jim Crow laws and their modern antecedents such as The Southern Strategy have been continually polarizing in American politics ever since.
Slavery took a civil war with 500,000 dead to end the polarization. Yeah, it ended, and that's good, but... is there a way where we can end that kind of polarization without 500,000 dead?
Maybe. Maybe. Or maybe that triggers the civil war.
Look, it's possible. It could even be what we need. But for it to work, we'd need wisdom and honest compromise, not sound-bite driven trench-warfare politics. Under current conditions, I see a low probability that it would work.
Sure. The civil war that would inevitably result from that almost certainly wouldn't result in 500,000 dead due to modern medicine. All of the people who died in the first civil war from things that we consider simple to treat now (like infections) would survive.
Understanding logical fallacy has been shown to act as an “inoculant” against fake news.
I don’t think these things reverse (time doesn’t go backwards) so much as settle as the last generation that held such beliefs dies off.
>80% followed religion in the US in ‘99. Now it’s <50%. Coincidentally about the same percent of support for conservative politics (not economics but the ephemeral civic life tradition or death type).
It’s how it goes; humans were the hard drives and CPUs of our economics until recently, and the costly in real terms old money network winds down with them. A lot of folks will feel disenfranchised, many rightly so, but also of lot rich folks today made it rich in an era of imploding pensions and gambling away others retirements, so if they get hosed, oh well.
In the end all will be forgotten and implicitly I think we know that so we just keep going.
It has honestly been pretty amazing, looking from Australia, seeing social distancing and mask wearing become partisan issues in the US. They must be some of the most innocuous actions people can take to prevent the spread of infection. Here, even vaccine rates are approaching 90% in most places.
Yup, it's crazy. Now we're coming up on a million dead in the USA, many of them entirely preventable, and the culpability stands directly at the feet of the culture warriors on both sides of this partisan divide.
(Does the previous sentence upset you and make you want to point fingers at your opposing partisan group? If so, you may be part of the problem I am describing.)
Only fools try to win an argument with their spouse, or pick an unnecessary fight with their neighbor.
It's really the senseless, avoidable destruction, death, and suffering that bothers me.
People in the USA will cut off their own nose to spite their face.
Today the Times is reporting a bipartisan effort to fund and support the >100k kids who lost a parent or caregiver recently.
The mind reels.
Even before we hit 100k dead, I wondered how many fewer would have to die if the pandemic had broken out in a non-election year.
> the culpability stands directly at the feet of the culture warriors on both sides of this partisan divide
Both sides? Huh.
> Does the previous sentence upset you and make you want to point fingers at your opposing partisan group? If so, you may be part of the problem I am describing.
Interesting. Another way to think about it is that if you always punish everyone for anyone's malfeasance, there is no penalty for malfeasance. It's a great way to ensure malefactors continue malefacting.
Sometimes the "correct" people are such insufferable, hypocritical assholes that the other side will slice its neck to spite the body, regardless of how incorrect they may be. If people can't see this game of chicken being a pretty sizable part of our issues then they should check their own biases.
I think you nailed it. The people patriotically spreading covid, attacking our system of government, preventing any action on climate change, and so forth don't actually think they're doing the right thing. They just feel so slighted and aggrieved, so disrespected, that they see harming their uppity neighbors as the greatest good. They are Ahab and the libs are their white whale.
The thing is, people don't respect you when you behave like that, when your ego is more important than their life. You can't make people respect you by hitting them. There's the tipping point right there.
It's fun to think I'm running the show, isn't it. Yes, I fully own my unbounded contempt for the fragile-ego'ed patriots tearing the country apart. But I'm not running the show, am I? And that doesn't matter. The people running the show, Clinton and Obama and Biden and so forth, speak in diplomatic terms and offer olive branches and try to see the other side and it earns them nothing but vilification. Because the fragile egos listen to people who want to keep them angry and suspicious. Who treats them with greater contempt, the politicians who try to work on their behalf while being burned in effigy or the propagandists who lie to them to keep them aggrieved?
And how is anyone supposed to respect someone whose values are so askew and who is so easily led?
This is nothing new. Here's Lincoln on the same topic:
Please stop posting flamewar comments to HN. We've had to ask you this before, and we ban accounts that keep doing it. It's not what this site is for, and it destroys what it is for.
Please don't perpetuate flamewars on HN and particularly please stop posting personal attacks. We ban accounts that do that, and you've unfortunately done it repeatedly. That's not cool here.
This whole subthread stands out as particularly wretched but even in a context as bad as this, "your sneering ass" was egregious.
I think perhaps you’ve misunderstood me. I don’t think that we should “punish everyone”.
I’m saying that both parties that are waging war are equally responsible for the war being an ongoing conflict. It doesn’t matter who’s right and who’s wrong, it matters that both parties are conducting warfare.
Remember the whole “deplorables” thing? That set the stage for a team identification banner that you can wear (or not wear) on the front of your face. It’s not one specific act by one specific person, it’s the willingness of the group to vocally and vehemently disrespect the other group as a whole, to subscribe to the belief that all of the people in the other group are Fundamentally Bad. As we all know, both of the groups at issue are doing precisely this, and have been doing so since before covid. It’s such a habit, that you’re doing it right now.
In a word? Disunity. If you are promoting disunity, you’re the problem. (As an interesting aside, this is fundamentally the root problem I have with the existence of nations and borders in general - all so-called sovereign states promote human disunity, to some necessary-for-their-existence extent.)
TFA explains why an ideological/culture war, beyond a certain point, means that any significant crisis or upset will result in useless, senseless, unnecessary, and preventable destruction. It’s a result of the partisan brawlers being constantly ready and willing to brawl with the Other Team, and has nothing to do with the ideology or positions of either of the warring factions.
> I’m saying that both parties that are waging war are equally responsible for the war being an ongoing conflict. It doesn’t matter who’s right and who’s wrong, it matters that both parties are conducting warfare.
But it does matter. And the two sides aren't fighting the same way or doing all the same things. If you have one person shooting at another and the other throws a rock back, it isn't sufficient at that point to say, "See, they're both fighting. If that rock thrower would just stop throwing rocks we would have peace."
The deplorable thing is an interesting case. Clinton was actually giving Republican voters credit (and she wasn't making a public announcement). She was saying a small minority are in the "basket of deplorables", by which she meant white supremacists and such. She was saying the rest were reasonable, so Trump wouldn't win. But the right seized on it. They are the ones who made it a big story. It was their bloody shirt. They wanted to fight. They wanted the people she hadn't been referring to at all to be insulted. Fox News, the elephant in the room, is working 24/7 to make sure their audience feels insulted and belittled. There is nothing the left can do unilaterally to get them to stop because they are unconstrained by honesty or fairness and THEY WANT TO FIGHT. That's the whole point.
And moreover, what Hillary Clinton said is not even close to as insulting, as vilifying, as what goes on in the right wing bubble all the time. They promote a conspiracy theory in which the left are pedophiles, murderers, and rapists. Their leader promotes violence, says cops should rough up protestors. And these are supposed to be equal? You're comparing a gnat to an elephant and saying to the gnat, "You're the problem!"
Sure, we need to stop fighting, and that's what the left has tried to do innumerable times. That's what Clinton tried to do, and then Obama, and now Biden: turn down the heat. But it doesn't matter what they do if the right hears about it only through the mouthpieces in their bubble who are intent on keeping the heat as high as possible. Unlike the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal you can't protect yourself from belligerent propagandists by covering your head with a towel. They have agency too.
The problem with this analogy is that it takes only one to stop tangoing. It takes two to stop fighting. Curling up in a fetal position doesn't end the fight; and it rewards the party who keeps fighting until they are satisfied.
If a rapist assaults someone, that person can perhaps bring the violence to a more rapid end by yielding to the rapist, but we don't hold the two parties equally at fault. We don't tell the victim, "It takes two to tango." I am not saying these are perfectly parallel situations. I am trying to get you to see how your account is simplistic.
> Does the previous sentence upset you and make you want to point fingers at your opposing partisan group? If so, you may be part of the problem I am describing.
"Both sides" is neither courageous nor meaningful. It is simply ceding the field to the motivated and anointing them as the meaningful.
At what point will you stand up? At what point will you affix blame? At what point will you seek justice?
We know the answer. You will stay silent while millions die. We have been here before.
"We preferred to keep silent. We are certainly not without guilt/fault, and I ask myself again and again, what would have happened, if in the year 1933 or 1934—there must have been a possibility—14,000 Protestant pastors and all Protestant communities in Germany had defended the truth until their deaths? If we had said back then, it is not right when Hermann Göring simply puts 100,000 Communists in the concentration camps, in order to let them die. I can imagine that perhaps 30,000 to 40,000 Protestant Christians would have had their heads cut off, but I can also imagine that we would have rescued 30–40,000 million [sic] people, because that is what it is costing us now." -- Rev. Martin Niemöller
You can have the comfort of your "Both Sides"--just don't delude yourself that you will take action "at some point"--because you never will.
And looking at Australia from the US, I see things like:
"From September 13, households living in the NSW government's LGAs of concern will be allowed to spend an additional hour of recreation outdoors, as long as all adults in the household are fully vaccinated. This is on top of the already-permitted hour of exercise, meaning households will be able to visit a park" [0]
and recoil in horror at how your country has become an authoritarian police state.
Viewing us as an authoritarian police state is very funny, because those measures were not partisan, widely supported, and now over on account of us doing them, and achieving a high vaccination rate. Reading this one article, aghast at the authoritarianism is very interesting. What I recoil in horror at is the 800k dead Americans, surely though they appreciate how free everyone over there has been.
America has the highest incarceration rate in the world.
I am skeptical of the framing of the original work in the article. If you actually read the original research, it boils down to building a model on willingness to cooperate based on differing views and observing that past a specific point cooperation is no longer possible. This is not uninteresting for the scientist in me, but the kind of large generalization made in the article are simply not supported by the work nor by the authors.
To be fair, the abstract is somewhat asking for it given this:
> Confronted with a deadly global pandemic that threatened not only massive loss of life but also the collapse of our medical system and economy, why were we unable to put partisan divisions aside and unite in a common cause, similar to the national mobilization in the Great Depression and the Second World War?
The world is complex and while trying to model that complexity is an interesting problem, this kind of statement (by a co-author) falls short of my expectations for rigorous scientific communication and vulgarization:
> “If we reach that point, we cannot unite even in the face of war, climate change, pandemics, or other challenges to the survival of our society.”
I am not arguing that their research is useless or uninteresting, simply that it shouldn't be communicated like it actually proves anything for on-the-ground polarization.
It's a bit like when we have AI papers that anthropomorphize their model by saying they benefit from "dreaming". This is true among the community of experts that actually work on the topic, it is simply irrelevant or downright misleading for a more "public" audience.
When I see an abstract like that, I think that what's about to follow is going to be a highly ideological and partisan op-ed dressed up as "science". Rephrased, the abstract is saying
"Why isn't everyone a morally pure collectivist like me, and how can we fix that?"
And the answer is: because you're not morally pure, the "common causes" you want us to unite behind are exaggerated and collectivism has a track record of being far more deadly than the things it's trying to solve. But that answer wouldn't be ideologically acceptable to academia.
I think we've had many "tipping" that keep pushing the denominator further down.
The first time I saw that in my adult life was the memorial service for late Minnesota senator Paul Wellstone 20 years ago. The speakers turned it into a political rally. It was beyond distasteful. For some reason, it really stuck in my mind as the end of decency.
It's funny as someone on the left I also remember the death of Paul Wellstone as a turning point. But to me it was the fact that the right wing media had become so powerful that they could manufacture whatever outrage they wanted. The manufactured outrage was that the funeral of the most passionate progressive senator, days before his election, became an expression of people wanting to continue his legacy.
Everybody always says the liberal media is so powerful but I don't think it holds a candle to the right wing media's power to manufacture constant outrage. These live with constant popular uprisings manufactured by the right such as anti-CRT, anti-mask, anti-immigrant. The left has nowhere near that kind of power.
It may be worth noting that such was the polarization of Great Britain in WWII that Ireland remained officially neutral while London was being bombarded with rockets, and they went right back to bombing each other within a few years of the external threat being removed. This is the level of polarization and sectarianism I've been warning about for years, and we're way deeper into it than I think most people realize.
People only hate because it feels good to do it, righteous hate feels the best of all. There isn't a lot to compete with that feeling, except maybe actualizing one of the sadistic fantasies it creates. When your basic needs are taken care of and there's nothing else that is more intense in your life available to you, the little rush it gives you from hating those scumbags feels good and becomes a habit, and then it becomes as satisfying as having a cigarette or even a coffee in the morning, and so we seek out conflict. In nature fighting is expensive, so the conflict itself in many ways is also a luxury. The reason people are doing this is because they love it.They're going to do it until they realize they love it and then decide they don't anymore.
I've thought a lot about what beliefs people would need to change to mitigate the chain reaction we've set in motion, and there is no single one or cluster that makes much of a difference. We like this too much, and we're affluent enough to indulge it. While I have opinions on which ones would really help, barring a wave of Damascene conversions, I can't think of anything persuasive enough to change someones idea of self. It would require a viral idea that improved the quality of someone's thought in general, where through transmitting it you could raise enough boats to head off the imminent dark period.
Anyway, maybe we will just see what shakes out of a period of attrition.
> t may be worth noting that such was the polarization of Great Britain in WWII that Ireland remained officially neutral while London was being bombarded with rockets, and they went right back to bombing each other within a few years of the external threat being removed.
This is the first I’ve heard of this. Do you have any references that dig into this time and context that you could share?
Well, Ireland was neutral in World War 2 and the IRA actually allied itself with the Nazis. See "Operation Dove". "Enemy of my enemy is my friend" sort of thing.
Fact is, a bunch of European countries refused to fight the Nazis, or only declared war on them right at the very end when the Allies had already defeated them. It's never widely discussed because it's kind of shameful for those states. If the Allies had fallen, so would all the neutral countries and they wouldn't have been treated well by Hitler. They let the Brits, Americans and Russians fight, whilst sitting back and waiting to be saved.
Well, we're at a point where foreign attacks on our elections are a partisan issue, the response to a pandemic which has killed some 770k citizens is a partisan issue, whether or not we can use democratic elections to select our leaders is a partisan issue, to say nothing of catastrophic climate change. But then, for much of the first century of the existence of the US whether or not some humans could own others as slaves was a partisan issue, and then whether you could secede if an election didn't go your way was a partisan issue (hey, history rhymed!). If there are tipping points, we seem to be able to make the phase shift back the other way again, albeit with horrendous casualties. So there's hope.
>> any regulation there would risk violating the 1st amendment.
Perhaps, but its a risk the US took for decades (1938 - 1985) and the political climate was less divisive during that period. You can't say "nothing can be done" when things can and have been done that we don't do anymore.
What is interesting is the loss of the "commons," here. Even if we brought back the fairness doctrine, in practice the fragmentation of the media landscape would still drive a different style of discourse. We aren't going to go back to 3 national news broadcasts.
And the justification for the doctrine extended the same way. It didn't regulate newspapers for example. Because the airways aren't privately owned, but rather leased from the public, the doctrine was considered more a regulation of this common space, than a regulation on speech on general.
You are right. But there is still a finite radio broadcast spectrum we don't apply this to, and a finite number of cable channels, a finite number of social media platforms, search engines or browsers with a million users, etc.
I am not saying something like that is a good idea. I am saying that to throw your hands up and say nothing can be done is not accurate. A lot of times people say you can't regulate a thing because you can't regulate every possible instance. But by that logic we shouldn't have stop signs because people run through them everyday. Yet stop signs are important.
There is no limit on the number of cable channels, social media platforms, search engines, or browsers. Anyone can create more. Unlike with RF spectrum there are no fundamental physical limits.
The mainstream media is very much part of the problem. For example, both the idea that the US could've avoided a substantial proportion of those pandemic-related deaths and people's beliefs about how it could've done so are the result of systematic, partisan misinformation by trusted publications like the New York Times about how the US compares to other countries, what those other countries have been doing, how well it works, the actual evidence for stuff like vaccines and masks, and so on. (One thing that stood out to me lately is that their readers evidently think Europe did much better, from the comments section - and it's obvious why, because pretty much the only comparisons with Europe the NYT publishes are ones that make the US look bad, and if they flip the other way it stops publishing them.)
Some of this unfortunately leaked into the narrative here in the UK, like the stupid idea that the reason we were failing was because our incompetent government couldn't achieve South Korean levels of mass testing - something which the media kept pushing even after their actual level of Covid testing fell massively behind the US and UK, and even after it became clear that their test and trace wasn't nearly as effective at controlling Covid as the media spin claimed.
What are the measures by which the US is doing better than continental Europe? What are some things the NYT was publishing but stopped publishing when they didn't fit the defeatist storyline?
I don't doubt that partisan propaganda spread as news is among the chief reasons the US is at war with itself right now, but you lose me when you pick the NYT as the chief culprit.
Overall, the US seems to be doing about as well as continental Europe in ways that actually matter, like deaths. What the NYT did was cherry-picking figures - for example, for a while last winter they kept comparing Spanish cases to Florida cases to downplay the Spanish wave as less bad, even though the trajectory of the Spanish outbreak was much scarier, and then suddenly forgot about that comparison when Spain passed them. (The Spanish press pointed out that their outbreak was worse than the US based on the NYT's metric and described it as such, which is partly how I noticed it happen.) I think that was a replacement for some other, broader comparison between the US and Europe they dropped earlier on after it stopped making the US look bad. It was really blatant too - they kept on reusing the same comparisions week after week as the gap gradually narrowed, and then when it would've flipped poof that metric went away.
Similarly, they stopped comparing the actual per-capita level of Covid testing in South Korea and the USA when the US passed them and not only started using meaningless metrics like test postivity (the two countries had... very different ideas on who to test, which didn't include most people with symptoms in South Korea) but outright claimed it was a lie to say the US was now the country doing more Covid testing using the swapped metric. I'm pretty sure there were quite a few others too which I've forgotten about or just missed. Haven't really been following their reporting so much lately.
Then Sweden dropped to the bottom of the rankings in both Europe and the world for deaths. It did much better than the UK and America. Suddenly it's not got any lessons for the world anymore, and when it's mentioned at all it's only to tell us that for unclear reasons it can't be compared to anything except its direct neighbours. Then Baltic states did worse than Sweden so the narrative became, you can't compare to anything except a cherry-picked list of specifically Scandinavian states.
The media is a major, major driving force of political polarization everywhere, because it acts as a firehose of ideological propaganda. It's not even the stories you see that's the biggest problem. It's the things they know about but never tell you, in case it'd make you doubt your commitment to the journalist's ideology.
I can't recall if it was satirical news article, photoshopped meme, or real thing, but it went something like this:
> AMISH COMMUNITY UNAFFECTED BY COVID-19
> Reporters asked a local community member how they have avoided the deadly pandemic despite interacting with known carriers. The man responded, "We don't have Internet or TV."
> One thing that stood out to me lately is that their readers evidently think Europe did much better, from the comments section - and it's obvious why...
People who post in comments sections are a tiny unrepresentative subset of readers.
In my experience, the NYT comment section is mostly filled with garbage by partisans who cannot tolerate or process anything except that which fits their chosen perspective. For proof, just read comments attached to opinion articles by their token non-liberals. I don't think anything of value can be inferred from such a self-selected dysfunctional group.
> The polarization is mostly between those who trust mainstream media and those who don’t.
I don't think your statement is complete.
The polarisation is about truth. Is science true? Is what $Politician says true? Is $NewsReport true?
A common standard for honesty, education -- and maybe even decency -- seems to have disappeared.
The only real brake on some people's behaviour appears to be when they suffer socio-economic consequences. But being part of a large faction is an effective buffer.
Sean Hannity has been openly calling for "peaceful" preparations for civil war since the election. Everyone in my town are switching their cars to matte black battle cruisers for some reason and the nasty hateful comments about the evil libs get discussed openly in any store I walk into. Shoppers and employees. The point is tipped my friend next move is yours unless you want to swing from a lamp post at the next big Drumph rally.
Extreme partisan polarization in US politics is normal; people just forgot because of the long New Deal + Civil Rights realignments of 1932 to about 1994, which resulted in an unusually long period where the (still very strong) ideological polarization in our political system did not cleanly map to the divide between the two major parties. The era of “bipartisanship” wasn't free of ideological divides (civil rights, anti-war movement, etc.) its just that those divisive issues cut across the parties.
The partisanship in this comment itself is absolutely bursting at the seams. It isn’t civil to draw lines and define reality in a way that your viewpoints about are simple common sense facts that everyone can agree on, whereas “their” viewpoints are fuming with blind partisan animus. Most of your items have plenty of room for disagreement in terms of interpretation of events, policy responses, values, and more.
It seems to me that the pandemic itself is not that big of a threat to society - after all, even if we did absolutely nothing and went about business as usual, some small X% of the population would die, hospitals might be forced to do bed rationing for a while (leading to more deaths), but the vast majority of citizens would get better in a few weeks due to their natural immune systems. 20-30 years in the future you wouldn't be able to tell it ever happened.
The threat to society as it relates to the pandemic is all due to red vs. blue political in-fighting over how much responsibility and power the government should have for protecting its citizens. That plus the added threat of economic turmoil due to commercially onerous government mandates/policies/efforts to reduce X% (lockdowns, capacity mandates, rent moratoriums, etc.).
I just find it interesting that society is tearing itself apart over a problem that essentially solves itself over time regardless of our actions, meanwhile society is not tearing itself apart over a problem that does not solve itself over time (climate change) and where doing nothing will eventually have consequences of apocalyptic proportions.
We now suspect that's basically what happened during a previous coronavirus pandemic in 1889. Fortunately this time we have vaccines and other treatments to reduce the death rate.
81 comments
[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 138 ms ] thread"Nevertheless, we make no claims about the model’s predictive accuracy. The model is highly abstract and remains to be empirically calibrated and tested. Nor can we assume that tipping points would obtain in radically different applications, such as affective polarization, voter polarization, or media polarization."
Additionally,
“ We see indications of empirical validation in recent events. Prior to 2019, one might have assumed that a global pandemic would bring together those who disagreed on issues for which hot-button righteous indignation was a luxury that could no longer be afforded. Instead, mask wearing became a partisan crest that identified friend and foe on a partisan battlefield. Similar dynamics can be observed in the two impeachment trials of former President Donald Trump. In the first trial, evidence of collusion with a foreign government failed to exert the expected unifying effect. In the second case, an attack on the US Capitol initially elicited bipartisan outrage, followed by a reversal of position among Republican leaders in the weeks leading up to the Senate trial.”
It's the adjectival form of the word "affect" in its noun sense, meaning "mood" or "feeling". This form is pronounced differently: A-fect (emphasis on the first syllable, with the vowel like in "rat").
"Affective polarization" is "people being polarized in how they feel about each other", i.e. animosity towards people in the other party. It's a technical term used by sociologists and not in common use, but it's not a typo.
Edit (due to downvotes): Like they make up a model based on the past. Probably the model is massively tuned to the past data set. If it makes any testable predictions about the future, I would be very surprised if those predictions ended up being more accurate than chance.
“ In closing, our study should be viewed as a small, but important, first step. The sources of political and ideological polarization have been widely investigated, but relatively little attention has been directed to the possibility that the causal mechanisms are characterized by irreversible tipping points. The lack of attention does not reflect the low importance of the problem. The historical lesson from climate research may be instructive. As with incremental global warming (28), the dynamics of reversibility cannot be revealed with observational data tracking changes over time in the level of polarization. Instead, climatologists have relied on increasingly sophisticated and empirically calibrated computational models to show how the self-reinforcing dynamics of global warming can be reversed through the reduction of carbon and methane emissions only up to a critical threshold, beyond which civilization as we know it may be doomed. We extend the concern with an environmental tipping point to the study of polarization. The need for empirical calibration in our model calls for increased investment in the study of irreversible phase change, while our findings call for urgency in mobilizing remediation efforts before it is too late.”
https://www.pnas.org/content/118/50/e2102144118
Even slavery was abolished in the US and that seemed like an irreversible polarization.
Slavery was abolished, but you still have people flying confederate flags and arguing for slavery (in a more modern rendition)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_strategy
Look, it's possible. It could even be what we need. But for it to work, we'd need wisdom and honest compromise, not sound-bite driven trench-warfare politics. Under current conditions, I see a low probability that it would work.
https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/10/31/us-democracy-mandatory-...
But I have a feeling that's not what you meant.
I don’t think these things reverse (time doesn’t go backwards) so much as settle as the last generation that held such beliefs dies off.
>80% followed religion in the US in ‘99. Now it’s <50%. Coincidentally about the same percent of support for conservative politics (not economics but the ephemeral civic life tradition or death type).
It’s how it goes; humans were the hard drives and CPUs of our economics until recently, and the costly in real terms old money network winds down with them. A lot of folks will feel disenfranchised, many rightly so, but also of lot rich folks today made it rich in an era of imploding pensions and gambling away others retirements, so if they get hosed, oh well.
In the end all will be forgotten and implicitly I think we know that so we just keep going.
(Does the previous sentence upset you and make you want to point fingers at your opposing partisan group? If so, you may be part of the problem I am describing.)
Only fools try to win an argument with their spouse, or pick an unnecessary fight with their neighbor.
It's really the senseless, avoidable destruction, death, and suffering that bothers me.
People in the USA will cut off their own nose to spite their face.
Today the Times is reporting a bipartisan effort to fund and support the >100k kids who lost a parent or caregiver recently.
The mind reels.
Even before we hit 100k dead, I wondered how many fewer would have to die if the pandemic had broken out in a non-election year.
Both sides? Huh.
> Does the previous sentence upset you and make you want to point fingers at your opposing partisan group? If so, you may be part of the problem I am describing.
Interesting. Another way to think about it is that if you always punish everyone for anyone's malfeasance, there is no penalty for malfeasance. It's a great way to ensure malefactors continue malefacting.
The thing is, people don't respect you when you behave like that, when your ego is more important than their life. You can't make people respect you by hitting them. There's the tipping point right there.
I kid, but it's a close call.
And how is anyone supposed to respect someone whose values are so askew and who is so easily led?
This is nothing new. Here's Lincoln on the same topic:
https://www.nps.gov/liho/learn/historyculture/cooperunionadd...
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
This whole subthread stands out as particularly wretched but even in a context as bad as this, "your sneering ass" was egregious.
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
I’m saying that both parties that are waging war are equally responsible for the war being an ongoing conflict. It doesn’t matter who’s right and who’s wrong, it matters that both parties are conducting warfare.
Remember the whole “deplorables” thing? That set the stage for a team identification banner that you can wear (or not wear) on the front of your face. It’s not one specific act by one specific person, it’s the willingness of the group to vocally and vehemently disrespect the other group as a whole, to subscribe to the belief that all of the people in the other group are Fundamentally Bad. As we all know, both of the groups at issue are doing precisely this, and have been doing so since before covid. It’s such a habit, that you’re doing it right now.
In a word? Disunity. If you are promoting disunity, you’re the problem. (As an interesting aside, this is fundamentally the root problem I have with the existence of nations and borders in general - all so-called sovereign states promote human disunity, to some necessary-for-their-existence extent.)
TFA explains why an ideological/culture war, beyond a certain point, means that any significant crisis or upset will result in useless, senseless, unnecessary, and preventable destruction. It’s a result of the partisan brawlers being constantly ready and willing to brawl with the Other Team, and has nothing to do with the ideology or positions of either of the warring factions.
The only way out is to stop warring.
But it does matter. And the two sides aren't fighting the same way or doing all the same things. If you have one person shooting at another and the other throws a rock back, it isn't sufficient at that point to say, "See, they're both fighting. If that rock thrower would just stop throwing rocks we would have peace."
The deplorable thing is an interesting case. Clinton was actually giving Republican voters credit (and she wasn't making a public announcement). She was saying a small minority are in the "basket of deplorables", by which she meant white supremacists and such. She was saying the rest were reasonable, so Trump wouldn't win. But the right seized on it. They are the ones who made it a big story. It was their bloody shirt. They wanted to fight. They wanted the people she hadn't been referring to at all to be insulted. Fox News, the elephant in the room, is working 24/7 to make sure their audience feels insulted and belittled. There is nothing the left can do unilaterally to get them to stop because they are unconstrained by honesty or fairness and THEY WANT TO FIGHT. That's the whole point.
And moreover, what Hillary Clinton said is not even close to as insulting, as vilifying, as what goes on in the right wing bubble all the time. They promote a conspiracy theory in which the left are pedophiles, murderers, and rapists. Their leader promotes violence, says cops should rough up protestors. And these are supposed to be equal? You're comparing a gnat to an elephant and saying to the gnat, "You're the problem!"
Sure, we need to stop fighting, and that's what the left has tried to do innumerable times. That's what Clinton tried to do, and then Obama, and now Biden: turn down the heat. But it doesn't matter what they do if the right hears about it only through the mouthpieces in their bubble who are intent on keeping the heat as high as possible. Unlike the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal you can't protect yourself from belligerent propagandists by covering your head with a towel. They have agency too.
It takes two to tango.
If a rapist assaults someone, that person can perhaps bring the violence to a more rapid end by yielding to the rapist, but we don't hold the two parties equally at fault. We don't tell the victim, "It takes two to tango." I am not saying these are perfectly parallel situations. I am trying to get you to see how your account is simplistic.
"Both sides" is neither courageous nor meaningful. It is simply ceding the field to the motivated and anointing them as the meaningful.
At what point will you stand up? At what point will you affix blame? At what point will you seek justice?
We know the answer. You will stay silent while millions die. We have been here before.
"We preferred to keep silent. We are certainly not without guilt/fault, and I ask myself again and again, what would have happened, if in the year 1933 or 1934—there must have been a possibility—14,000 Protestant pastors and all Protestant communities in Germany had defended the truth until their deaths? If we had said back then, it is not right when Hermann Göring simply puts 100,000 Communists in the concentration camps, in order to let them die. I can imagine that perhaps 30,000 to 40,000 Protestant Christians would have had their heads cut off, but I can also imagine that we would have rescued 30–40,000 million [sic] people, because that is what it is costing us now." -- Rev. Martin Niemöller
You can have the comfort of your "Both Sides"--just don't delude yourself that you will take action "at some point"--because you never will.
"From September 13, households living in the NSW government's LGAs of concern will be allowed to spend an additional hour of recreation outdoors, as long as all adults in the household are fully vaccinated. This is on top of the already-permitted hour of exercise, meaning households will be able to visit a park" [0]
and recoil in horror at how your country has become an authoritarian police state.
[0] https://www.9news.com.au/national/coronavirus-nsw-restrictio...
America has the highest incarceration rate in the world.
To be fair, the abstract is somewhat asking for it given this:
> Confronted with a deadly global pandemic that threatened not only massive loss of life but also the collapse of our medical system and economy, why were we unable to put partisan divisions aside and unite in a common cause, similar to the national mobilization in the Great Depression and the Second World War?
The world is complex and while trying to model that complexity is an interesting problem, this kind of statement (by a co-author) falls short of my expectations for rigorous scientific communication and vulgarization:
> “If we reach that point, we cannot unite even in the face of war, climate change, pandemics, or other challenges to the survival of our society.”
It's a bit like when we have AI papers that anthropomorphize their model by saying they benefit from "dreaming". This is true among the community of experts that actually work on the topic, it is simply irrelevant or downright misleading for a more "public" audience.
Likewise, many groups with minimal differences, i.e. group think, may still fight intensely over those small differences.
"Why isn't everyone a morally pure collectivist like me, and how can we fix that?"
And the answer is: because you're not morally pure, the "common causes" you want us to unite behind are exaggerated and collectivism has a track record of being far more deadly than the things it's trying to solve. But that answer wouldn't be ideologically acceptable to academia.
We no longer have differences in opinion, we have differences of reality. Climate Change, pandemics, January 6th... the list goes on and on now.
For me, the exclusion of Lawrence Lessig from political debates was a big indicator that things were already off the rails.
The first time I saw that in my adult life was the memorial service for late Minnesota senator Paul Wellstone 20 years ago. The speakers turned it into a political rally. It was beyond distasteful. For some reason, it really stuck in my mind as the end of decency.
Everybody always says the liberal media is so powerful but I don't think it holds a candle to the right wing media's power to manufacture constant outrage. These live with constant popular uprisings manufactured by the right such as anti-CRT, anti-mask, anti-immigrant. The left has nowhere near that kind of power.
People only hate because it feels good to do it, righteous hate feels the best of all. There isn't a lot to compete with that feeling, except maybe actualizing one of the sadistic fantasies it creates. When your basic needs are taken care of and there's nothing else that is more intense in your life available to you, the little rush it gives you from hating those scumbags feels good and becomes a habit, and then it becomes as satisfying as having a cigarette or even a coffee in the morning, and so we seek out conflict. In nature fighting is expensive, so the conflict itself in many ways is also a luxury. The reason people are doing this is because they love it.They're going to do it until they realize they love it and then decide they don't anymore.
I've thought a lot about what beliefs people would need to change to mitigate the chain reaction we've set in motion, and there is no single one or cluster that makes much of a difference. We like this too much, and we're affluent enough to indulge it. While I have opinions on which ones would really help, barring a wave of Damascene conversions, I can't think of anything persuasive enough to change someones idea of self. It would require a viral idea that improved the quality of someone's thought in general, where through transmitting it you could raise enough boats to head off the imminent dark period.
Anyway, maybe we will just see what shakes out of a period of attrition.
This is the first I’ve heard of this. Do you have any references that dig into this time and context that you could share?
Fact is, a bunch of European countries refused to fight the Nazis, or only declared war on them right at the very end when the Allies had already defeated them. It's never widely discussed because it's kind of shameful for those states. If the Allies had fallen, so would all the neutral countries and they wouldn't have been treated well by Hitler. They let the Brits, Americans and Russians fight, whilst sitting back and waiting to be saved.
^love thy enemy
Not sure what can be done with media pushing disinformation for political reasons, any regulation there would risk violating the 1st amendment.
Perhaps, but its a risk the US took for decades (1938 - 1985) and the political climate was less divisive during that period. You can't say "nothing can be done" when things can and have been done that we don't do anymore.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FCC_fairness_doctrine
And the justification for the doctrine extended the same way. It didn't regulate newspapers for example. Because the airways aren't privately owned, but rather leased from the public, the doctrine was considered more a regulation of this common space, than a regulation on speech on general.
I am not saying something like that is a good idea. I am saying that to throw your hands up and say nothing can be done is not accurate. A lot of times people say you can't regulate a thing because you can't regulate every possible instance. But by that logic we shouldn't have stop signs because people run through them everyday. Yet stop signs are important.
Some of this unfortunately leaked into the narrative here in the UK, like the stupid idea that the reason we were failing was because our incompetent government couldn't achieve South Korean levels of mass testing - something which the media kept pushing even after their actual level of Covid testing fell massively behind the US and UK, and even after it became clear that their test and trace wasn't nearly as effective at controlling Covid as the media spin claimed.
I don't doubt that partisan propaganda spread as news is among the chief reasons the US is at war with itself right now, but you lose me when you pick the NYT as the chief culprit.
Similarly, they stopped comparing the actual per-capita level of Covid testing in South Korea and the USA when the US passed them and not only started using meaningless metrics like test postivity (the two countries had... very different ideas on who to test, which didn't include most people with symptoms in South Korea) but outright claimed it was a lie to say the US was now the country doing more Covid testing using the swapped metric. I'm pretty sure there were quite a few others too which I've forgotten about or just missed. Haven't really been following their reporting so much lately.
[1] http://91-divoc.com/pages/covid-visualization/?chart=countri...
At first it was "Sweden has become the world's cautionary tale", and "a red flag as the United States and Britain move to lift lockdowns".
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/07/business/sweden-economy-c...
Then Sweden dropped to the bottom of the rankings in both Europe and the world for deaths. It did much better than the UK and America. Suddenly it's not got any lessons for the world anymore, and when it's mentioned at all it's only to tell us that for unclear reasons it can't be compared to anything except its direct neighbours. Then Baltic states did worse than Sweden so the narrative became, you can't compare to anything except a cherry-picked list of specifically Scandinavian states.
The media is a major, major driving force of political polarization everywhere, because it acts as a firehose of ideological propaganda. It's not even the stories you see that's the biggest problem. It's the things they know about but never tell you, in case it'd make you doubt your commitment to the journalist's ideology.
> AMISH COMMUNITY UNAFFECTED BY COVID-19 > Reporters asked a local community member how they have avoided the deadly pandemic despite interacting with known carriers. The man responded, "We don't have Internet or TV."
People who post in comments sections are a tiny unrepresentative subset of readers.
In my experience, the NYT comment section is mostly filled with garbage by partisans who cannot tolerate or process anything except that which fits their chosen perspective. For proof, just read comments attached to opinion articles by their token non-liberals. I don't think anything of value can be inferred from such a self-selected dysfunctional group.
I don't think your statement is complete.
The polarisation is about truth. Is science true? Is what $Politician says true? Is $NewsReport true?
A common standard for honesty, education -- and maybe even decency -- seems to have disappeared.
The only real brake on some people's behaviour appears to be when they suffer socio-economic consequences. But being part of a large faction is an effective buffer.
Also, debt peonage was practiced for a long time after that [0, 1].
[0]: https://www.pbs.org/tpt/slavery-by-another-name/themes/peona...
[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_by_Another_Name
The threat to society as it relates to the pandemic is all due to red vs. blue political in-fighting over how much responsibility and power the government should have for protecting its citizens. That plus the added threat of economic turmoil due to commercially onerous government mandates/policies/efforts to reduce X% (lockdowns, capacity mandates, rent moratoriums, etc.).
I just find it interesting that society is tearing itself apart over a problem that essentially solves itself over time regardless of our actions, meanwhile society is not tearing itself apart over a problem that does not solve itself over time (climate change) and where doing nothing will eventually have consequences of apocalyptic proportions.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7252012/
Consider the past 2 decades. 9/11, the war on terror, the 2008 crash, the 2016 election, and most recently covid.
Have we recovered from any of these?
I don't think this story is about a society that's tearing itself apart, but one that is unable to handle or heal from traumatic events.