Please forgive my little speech here, as I'm sure I'm not saying anything people don't already know, and to most of you this will read as "Nasat discovers the obvious and acts like it's interesting". But I'm feeling a little down over it and I felt like letting off a bit of steam.
So, I've been lurking on and off around a site that offers various articles on certain political and social issues. While I sympathized with their basic position, I was concerned that they were alienating potential supporters with their prescriptive outlooks. I'm sorry to be vague here, but it doesn't really matter what it was about - this isn't supposed to be about the issues under discussion, instead about the irritating nature of politics. So I left a few comments - which I rarely do anywhere - and got into a discussion as an anonymous visitor. And I don't know why I bothered. I was pretty much accused of being a troll stirring up trouble, because evidently visitors half-agreeing with some of their agenda but half-disagreeing must be there to cause mischief. Some regulars were polite, but it was clear from their responses that they were evaluating what I was saying not on the basis of what I was actually stating but on their pre-conceived assumptions as to what I must mean. I was pretty much already categorized and pigeon-holed as "person with such and such an outlook and beliefs", and responded to (however politely) as though those were the arguments I was making. Now, maybe it was just poor communication on my part, and I wasn't skilled enough at actually making my points, but it felt like my part in the discussion was irrelevant. They didn't understand my starting position or where I was coming from, and so didn't understand the points I was making. It's like I wasn't even there, and they were just dismantling my words so as to reinforce the assumptions and conclusions that existed prior to my input. In short, as a form of communication I failed it utterly, and I don't know how much is me and how much them.
Obviously, I'm not saying I expected my opinion to matter too much, but given that my concern was at least in part for their own success, and the potential dangers of alienating possible allies, I thought they'd at least take me seriously. I also pointed out what I perceived as a confusion in their basic position, using in part my own wariness in order to demonstrate it - namely, that they seemed to have two potential central goals, which weren't necessarily at odds, yet their manner of promoting the first essentially made the second unachievable. Rather than discuss this, I was told I must be ignorant or a troll, and several personal attacks were made. I then pointed out that being at least somewhat familiar with their usual activity, this is exactly the sort of behaviour they condemn in the groups and people they oppose. Now, this is pretty standard, I'm sure, but it's irritating me - no one is going to support or recommend your ideologies if you treat well-intentioned maybe-supporters with such aggression when they come to you with concern. Their response to this, sigh, was that this made me an attention whore using the "agree with me or I'll leave and that matters because my attention is a prize you must value" argument. So I went away and presumably left them feeling smug.
This is one of the reasons I like to avoid politics; because there doesn't seem to be any room for complexity or ambiguity in it. Either you agree with a set of principles and assumptions in their entirety or you're outcast. And if you're not affiliated with a group's worldview in its entirety, you must be with the other lot, sharing their perspective. It's like the concept of the individual doesn't even exist for these people. There's only affiliation with the group, the agenda or the ideology. And it frustrates me on their benefit, too. Can't they see that in trying to gain popular support for their stance on this, they need not to alienate those who might sympathise with a least some of their platform? I left the site convinced not only that I wouldn't be sending anyone their way but that they ultimately represented the same thing as the groups they opposed. They didn't see that either, of course, saying the failure was thus mine and that it was an "epic" one. Of course I understand the difference between them and the groups they oppose, but when it comes to what they represent to me and how they operate, for all intents and purposes they were coming across the same! It totally soured me on these people's movement even though I retain sympathy for their basic position.
This is the basic problem with politics - people cling to an ideology that maps out an entire worldview, and then join with other people who promote that worldview. It then reinforces itself over and over until any outside perspective becomes a target for aggression. Anything that deviates from it is wrong, any other position ignorant. After all, they have at hand all the arguments and logic and experience justifying their position, and any different perspectives don't match with that bank of justifications and evidence.
And these political discussion groups just become closed clubs for people to reinforce their beliefs without facing other perspectives.
Anyway, that's the mini-rant over. If it was TL;DR, my fault.
So, I've been lurking on and off around a site that offers various articles on certain political and social issues. While I sympathized with their basic position, I was concerned that they were alienating potential supporters with their prescriptive outlooks. I'm sorry to be vague here, but it doesn't really matter what it was about - this isn't supposed to be about the issues under discussion, instead about the irritating nature of politics. So I left a few comments - which I rarely do anywhere - and got into a discussion as an anonymous visitor. And I don't know why I bothered. I was pretty much accused of being a troll stirring up trouble, because evidently visitors half-agreeing with some of their agenda but half-disagreeing must be there to cause mischief. Some regulars were polite, but it was clear from their responses that they were evaluating what I was saying not on the basis of what I was actually stating but on their pre-conceived assumptions as to what I must mean. I was pretty much already categorized and pigeon-holed as "person with such and such an outlook and beliefs", and responded to (however politely) as though those were the arguments I was making. Now, maybe it was just poor communication on my part, and I wasn't skilled enough at actually making my points, but it felt like my part in the discussion was irrelevant. They didn't understand my starting position or where I was coming from, and so didn't understand the points I was making. It's like I wasn't even there, and they were just dismantling my words so as to reinforce the assumptions and conclusions that existed prior to my input. In short, as a form of communication I failed it utterly, and I don't know how much is me and how much them.
Obviously, I'm not saying I expected my opinion to matter too much, but given that my concern was at least in part for their own success, and the potential dangers of alienating possible allies, I thought they'd at least take me seriously. I also pointed out what I perceived as a confusion in their basic position, using in part my own wariness in order to demonstrate it - namely, that they seemed to have two potential central goals, which weren't necessarily at odds, yet their manner of promoting the first essentially made the second unachievable. Rather than discuss this, I was told I must be ignorant or a troll, and several personal attacks were made. I then pointed out that being at least somewhat familiar with their usual activity, this is exactly the sort of behaviour they condemn in the groups and people they oppose. Now, this is pretty standard, I'm sure, but it's irritating me - no one is going to support or recommend your ideologies if you treat well-intentioned maybe-supporters with such aggression when they come to you with concern. Their response to this, sigh, was that this made me an attention whore using the "agree with me or I'll leave and that matters because my attention is a prize you must value" argument. So I went away and presumably left them feeling smug.
This is one of the reasons I like to avoid politics; because there doesn't seem to be any room for complexity or ambiguity in it. Either you agree with a set of principles and assumptions in their entirety or you're outcast. And if you're not affiliated with a group's worldview in its entirety, you must be with the other lot, sharing their perspective. It's like the concept of the individual doesn't even exist for these people. There's only affiliation with the group, the agenda or the ideology. And it frustrates me on their benefit, too. Can't they see that in trying to gain popular support for their stance on this, they need not to alienate those who might sympathise with a least some of their platform? I left the site convinced not only that I wouldn't be sending anyone their way but that they ultimately represented the same thing as the groups they opposed. They didn't see that either, of course, saying the failure was thus mine and that it was an "epic" one. Of course I understand the difference between them and the groups they oppose, but when it comes to what they represent to me and how they operate, for all intents and purposes they were coming across the same! It totally soured me on these people's movement even though I retain sympathy for their basic position.
This is the basic problem with politics - people cling to an ideology that maps out an entire worldview, and then join with other people who promote that worldview. It then reinforces itself over and over until any outside perspective becomes a target for aggression. Anything that deviates from it is wrong, any other position ignorant. After all, they have at hand all the arguments and logic and experience justifying their position, and any different perspectives don't match with that bank of justifications and evidence.
And these political discussion groups just become closed clubs for people to reinforce their beliefs without facing other perspectives.
Anyway, that's the mini-rant over. If it was TL;DR, my fault.
