The epoch times

The urge to conform.

In a⁣ recent​ episode ‌of “American Thought Leaders,” host Jan Jekielek and ‍Stella Morabito discuss the fear of ostracism involved in the suppression of free speech and⁣ the​ ways ‌in which dictators seek to break trust among families and friends.

Morabito ⁢is a‍ senior contributor to The‍ Federalist and a former CIA⁢ intelligence analyst ​who studied the ⁤psychology behind Soviet Union‍ propaganda. Her latest book is “The Weaponization of Loneliness: How‍ Tyrants Stoke Our Fear ‍of Isolation to​ Silence, Divide, and Conquer.”

Jan Jekielek:

Stella, viewers of American Thought Leaders​ know I talk about the megaphone, a⁤ mechanism used to manufacture perceived consensus in society. Prior to reading⁤ your⁣ book, I didn’t understand how that mechanism really worked.

Stella Morabito:

The‍ megaphone ‍is propaganda combined with‍ political correctness ‍to create an illusion of ⁢consensus. Why do ⁣so many people fall in line ⁤with it, and how do those pushing a‌ propagandist narrative get away with it? Those two questions⁣ were driving⁢ me in “The Weaponization of Loneliness.”

The way it works is that human beings have a hardwired need to connect with ​others. We⁤ really can’t survive in isolation.⁢ The flip side⁣ is ‍a primal fear of ostracism. Those who apply this megaphone of ‌propaganda and political ⁣correctness operate the⁣ machinery of loneliness that triggers this conformity impulse,⁢ this need to ⁣obey whatever we perceive as a consensus, even ⁢if it’s not really the consensus.

Jan ​Jekielek:

I didn’t realize⁣ the importance⁤ of our need to belong, and how it could be a central organizing principle.

Stella Morabito:

This hardwired impulse to conform⁤ has a huge effect‌ on society, especially when⁤ people⁤ keep falling in line with ‍a​ megaphone ⁣that only creates an illusion of consensus and when people aren’t⁣ really talking‌ to one ​another because ⁤they’re fearful of⁤ saying the⁣ wrong thing. It can⁤ be operated by tyrants of all stripes.

The only way around this is to have⁤ strong relationships ‍in private life, family or ​good friends. This is⁣ why‍ the private sphere of life ⁣becomes a target for tyrants‌ and totalitarians. Loyalties on a ⁤personal level threaten those who want to achieve power and​ social control. So they ​weaponize our fear of being‌ alone⁢ and threaten us with loneliness if we don’t ​go ‌along with ‍their agenda.

In my book, I discuss the machinery of⁢ this loneliness. It has three ​main components, and I would add those to the megaphone. The first component is identity politics, which erases us as individuals and ⁤pigeonholes us according to ​victim or oppressor status. Second, there’s political correctness, where one-sided propaganda can​ control discussion ⁢and induce self-censorship by our fear of rejection for saying the ‌wrong ⁤thing.

The third component is mob agitation, like ​the ​mobs on social media and street ‌mobs like Antifa. ‍These mobs take different forms, but ‍serve to‌ enforce political correctness, identity politics, and the propaganda driving the agenda.

Jan Jekielek:

You wrote, “Pretending to go along with the ⁤belief you don’t actually ‍hold creates a ripple effect.” You cite some work done on availability cascades. Please explain this to us.

Stella‍ Morabito:

The⁢ availability cascade is a term that comes ‍up in an article co-authored by ‌Cass Sunstein, Obama’s regulatory czar in his second term, ⁢and Timur Kuran, a social⁤ economist.

They explain that ⁣you can create the illusion of a consensus on just about ‍anything if people keep ‍quiet about what they truly believe. They said that it⁤ doesn’t ⁤even matter how‍ fringy ⁣an idea ⁣is. If you keep injecting it into ⁢public discourse​ over and over again,⁢ you create this ⁢cascade of public opinion.

If you look at some ⁣of the absurdities we’re dealing⁣ with today, that’s ⁤exactly what​ happened. Certain issues get injected time‍ and again. I keep coming back to the transgender⁣ issue because it’s so fascinating.

In ​2014, Time magazine came out with a big article, “The Transgender Tipping Point.” ⁢Then, ⁤Caitlin Bruce Jenner had that Vanity ‍Fair article, and ​he was a‍ star and athlete. So you had ⁢this intersection of popular‌ culture and Hollywood,‍ and⁤ a lot of academics ​repeatedly injecting this idea into the public discourse. That’s really all it took before⁣ people ‍said, “OK, so this is what⁤ I should ⁤believe.”

That’s the availability cascade, and⁣ it in


Read More From Original Article Here: The Conformity Impulse

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