See, the thing is that conservatives always believe that they’re deeper into the in group than they really are. They can’t imagine themselves as part of the out group. Quick example, about five years back, I had a fox news addicted co-worker bitching at me about millennials. I was like “bro, we’re in our thirties, we’re not kids anymore”, because he and I are both the same age, and both millennials. He looked like I just slapped him and said “no, I am NOT a millennial”, so, because I physically cannot stop myself from arguing with anyone about anything, I spent five minutes proving to him that he was, in fact, a millennial. He put up the WOKE FAKE NEWStm defenses, cleared recent history, and was back to griping about millennials before the day was out, still supporting things that hurt millennials and not daring the imagine that Fox News could possibly be talking about him. He’s the child of immigrants, he’s got his citizenship by his dad being born here and him being born here. He supports rounding up brown people and ending birthright citizenship because he’ll still believe right down to his core that they’re not talking about him even as they’re loading him into the box cars.
I would say it’s a crisis of empathy, but I’m not sure that’s completely true. I’m not going to fight people on Lemmy about it, but I personally know my own share of conservative people who have no problem with empathy (and many who do have a problem with it, in fairness). I think it’s a distinct phenomenon that they really do believe that it could never happen to them, or to anyone who doesn’t “deserve it”. I’ve encountered that kind of circular logic quite a bit, where if their policies hurt you, it’s probably because you deserved it, and their policies can’t possibly hurt them because they know they don’t deserve it.
They believe the law is always on the side of good, despite much evidence to the contrary, and the mere fact that the law can be changed making it intrinsically not a moral absolute.
See, the thing is that conservatives always believe that they’re deeper into the in group than they really are. They can’t imagine themselves as part of the out group. Quick example, about five years back, I had a fox news addicted co-worker bitching at me about millennials. I was like “bro, we’re in our thirties, we’re not kids anymore”, because he and I are both the same age, and both millennials. He looked like I just slapped him and said “no, I am NOT a millennial”, so, because I physically cannot stop myself from arguing with anyone about anything, I spent five minutes proving to him that he was, in fact, a millennial. He put up the WOKE FAKE NEWStm defenses, cleared recent history, and was back to griping about millennials before the day was out, still supporting things that hurt millennials and not daring the imagine that Fox News could possibly be talking about him. He’s the child of immigrants, he’s got his citizenship by his dad being born here and him being born here. He supports rounding up brown people and ending birthright citizenship because he’ll still believe right down to his core that they’re not talking about him even as they’re loading him into the box cars.
I would say it’s a crisis of empathy, but I’m not sure that’s completely true. I’m not going to fight people on Lemmy about it, but I personally know my own share of conservative people who have no problem with empathy (and many who do have a problem with it, in fairness). I think it’s a distinct phenomenon that they really do believe that it could never happen to them, or to anyone who doesn’t “deserve it”. I’ve encountered that kind of circular logic quite a bit, where if their policies hurt you, it’s probably because you deserved it, and their policies can’t possibly hurt them because they know they don’t deserve it.
They believe the law is always on the side of good, despite much evidence to the contrary, and the mere fact that the law can be changed making it intrinsically not a moral absolute.