But are we on the shore building intellectual sandcastles here or have we actually got our toes in the water yet? The meta-game is to be above it all and imagine we're making a contribution simply by analyzing how fucked up each side is. Meanwhile society as a whole drifts towards some -ism that we, for real ethical reasons, object to but don't or can't do anything about — Baden
Yeah, that's an apt criticism, and the Selma example is a good one. I've never been very politically active (mostly because I don't know how to interact with people outside bars and small gatherings) and that sometimes makes me liable to 'beautiful soul' armchair analysis. I still think the point I was trying to make is valid, but I do need to separate the wheat from the ivory starbucks meta-chaff.
--
I think my last post was sloppy and confusingly mixed up two different themes:
(a)
authentic vs
inauthentic outrage
(b) What sort of missteps are grounds for
legitimate outrage?
I do think these are closely linked, but nevertheless distinct. I didn't outline very well the way in which I think they're related to one another.
(Separating the question of legitimacy from the question of authenticity opens up a category of 'authentic outrage for illegitimate reasons' which might appear troubling, but I don't think it is. I'll bracket that at this point, but I'd be willing to defending that in more detail, and will probably expand on it below)
@Hanover's post moved from diplomatic agnosticism regarding a specific example toward a broader criticism of a general climate of performative outrage. I was trying, in my post, to demonstrate that I acknowledge the existence of that climate (which I sincerely do find to be problematic) but
also...
The
also was this: Peformative outrage exists - moreover,
illegitimate performative outrage exists, and is rampant. BUT. That doesn't mean that we should approach all outrage as opportunity to comment on a corrupt climate. People fake injuries all the time, for pills. Someone comes to a doctor, leg mangled - 'Well I can't say one way or the other in this case, but what I think is worth talking about how many people
do fake."
But the other point is this: The political use of
illegitimate occasions for outrage, whether the outrage is authentic or not, casts doubt on
legitimate uses of outrage. Selma is clearly legitimate, whatever the degree of personal authenticity for the people involved. Whatever the artifice, it embodies an authentic outrage, but strategically. It worked.
What would work now?
So...oh but I don't know how to say what I want to say now. It's tip of the tongue.
Something like: You can argue for the pragmatic use of tactical outrage, and I think you're right, but that use will only be pragmatic as long as it actually moves people. Moves people other than the people who are already moved. If you reach a crisis point where everyone suspects that everything is politics and is inauthentic ---then that rationale utterly fails. I would argue that that's already happened (2016), and that the left, in denial, is sleepwalking to the same tune. There was plenty of tactical outrage directed at Trump. But, like a bad dream, any attempt by the democrats to capitalize on that outrage just made the rest of the country like trump all the more, ala Berlusconi.
Intellectually, ivory-starbucks, I have no problem suggesting to Hanover that he's mixing up levels. Pragmatically, sewer-thing, I think Hanover's dead right. If you want to mobilize on that level, you have to focus on what people feel - not what should they feel.