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Politics in an Age
of Vilification
Steve Boyko
and Aron Gottesman
All politics involves
tradeoffs. The source of these tradeoffs is the
contradictions that materialize when the core objective
is political hegemony. Partisan political agendas can
foster imbalances of societal rights relative to
individual responsibilities. Subsidizing entitlements
for political patronage to gain a mandate oftentimes
contains the seeds of political self-destruction.
These tradeoffs are
reflected in the liberal and conservative platforms.
Broadly, liberals believe in an evolutionary
constitution and in the redistribution of wealth through
government programs. Conservatives are strict
constructionists, who strive to establish equity through
individual incentives and the rule of law. The intent of
this analysis is not to arbitrate “left” versus “right”
political positions, but to develop realistic constructs
from which to develop political strategies that
rationally balance societal rights and individual
responsibilities.
The liberal platform
has been summarized by the French motto: “Liberte,
Fraternite, et Egalite” (freedom, fraternity, and
equality). “Liberte” begets liberals who desire
freedom of choice. “Fraternite” begets either
socialists or communists that desire a classless
society. The end-condition for both groups is “egalite.”
The difficulty that liberals face is that tradeoffs are
required to achieve these disparate objectives. For
example, their utopian desire for a classless society is
conflicted by those who must be subsidized because they
have made bad choices.
Liberals focus on
average rewards, in which all members of society receive
similar rewards, independent of effort. This focus
maximizes societal participation, but fails to maximize
profit or efficiency. Socialists pervert the income
statement through declaring an unearned societal
dividend (i.e., habitual welfare), while contemporary
communists distort the balance sheet through some
variant of a “takings” violation (i.e., prohibiting
smoking in bars). The redistribution effort, intended to
optimize consumption, tends to become institutionalized
as corruption as critical mass approaches. The existing
Social Security structure, perceived by many as an
unfair distribution of wealth, is an example of a
redistribution effort that has failed to meet its
potential.
The conservative platform can be segmented by
classifying those focused on the past, present or
future. Those focused on the present are engaged in
pursuing success in our competitive society, where
success is motivated through incentives to create
wealth, property rights that reward success and the rule
of law to enforce contracts and protect property.
Conservatives tend to employ a marginal reward model to
maximize profits and efficiency. Too often, however,
those who are unable to compete find themselves
marginalized from participating in societal benefits and
tend to focus on the past or future.
Those focused on the future transcend present
difficulties for promises of religious rewards in the
hereafter. It is best left to clerics to define the
heavenly reward system; yet too great a focus on
religious conservatism can lead to cultural
fundamentalism, a major source of difficulty in the
Middle East.
Those focused on the past strive to maintain regulatory
systems that provide protection from competition,
allowing the continued annuitization of entrenched cash
flows. Regulation represents normative or consensus
decision-making that is largely a political power play
between competing interests. Those who fight to maintain
antiquated regulatory systems are practitioners of
market fundamentalism. These regulatory systems become
societal non-compete clauses that favor the vested
interest of those who preserve the status quo.
One glaring example of the dangers of market
fundamentalism is the problem that arose when Western
idealized precepts of market fundamentalism were
introduced to the realities of the post-Soviet successor
states.
The challenge for liberal politics is to achieve a
satisfactory minimum standard of living for the average
citizen. Should this fall short, liberal politics tend
to fall victim to elitist errors of co-mission that
result in the socio-economic problems of corruption and
economic stagnation. The challenge for conservative
politics is to ensure a wide distribution of rewards to
prevent those focused on cultural or market
fundamentalism from attaining critical mass. Should this
not occur, conservative politics tend to fall victim to
errors of omission. These result in the socio-economic
problems of class warfare and the undue concentration of
wealth.
In
our opinion, political success flows from rationally
addressing these challenges. Self-analysis permits the
development of political platforms that have wide appeal
to voters, most of whom are uninterested in ideological
nuances. Unfortunately, many on the left and right
choose the path of vilification instead of such an
analysis. One of the sillier footnotes to the year 2003
was an academic study, entitled “"Political Conservatism
as Motivated Social Cognition," that was published in
the American Psychological Association’s Psychology
Bulletin. This study claimed to identify the
underlying psychological motivations associated with
political conservatism. The underlying motivations that
the authors identified included “fear and aggression,”
“dogmatism and intolerance of ambiguity,” among other
motivations.
The authors grouped former President Reagan and
talk-show host Rush Limbaugh together with Hitler and
Mussolini. Ignoring collectivist economic policies, this
contrived construct went so far as to argue that Stalin
and Castro could be perceived as political
conservatives. While wrapped in academic language, the
tone of the study suggested a partisan hit job. Not
surprisingly, the study was widely scorned on right-wing
web sites and by conservative politicians. Yet
vilification is not unidirectional. Some conservatives
unfairly label liberals as “unpatriotic” or
“un-American.” The degree to which partisan politics on
both sides of the debate in the United States have
denigrated into vilification instead of debate is
startling.
Why vilify? One explanation is that vilification and
ad hominem attacks that seek the moral imperative
are the method through which the intellectually lazy
attempt to win arguments. After all, if conservatives
are fascists or if liberals are unpatriotic, then who
could possibly support them, regardless of the strength
of their arguments? The endemic vilification of
political opponents does not so much suggest that many
conservatives and liberals truly believe each other to
be villains as it indicates the fragility of their own
worldview.
While the vilification pep rally may buoy partisan
spirits, the likelihood of it resulting in electoral
success is questionable. Listeners to Rush Limbaugh will
find comparisons to Hitler ridiculous. Similarly,
attempts to convince undecided voters that Senator
Hillary Clinton is unpatriotic are ludicrous. In this
context, vilification resonates falsely.
Of
course, not all vilification is motivated by ideological
or political considerations exclusively. Any analysis of
the incendiary nature of politics in America today would
be incomplete without recognizing the degree to which
profit motivates vilification. “Preaching to the choir”
makes little sense, unless the “choir” is paying upwards
of $23.50 per book! Bill O’Reilly, Sean Hannity, Al
Franken, Michael Moore and Ann Coulter are all best
selling authors with highly entertaining books that
mercilessly attack their political opponents. We live in
a capitalistic society; hence it should come as no
surprise that some politics has a capitalistic agenda.
The challenge for those striving for political success
is to continue to focus on addressing the challenges and
tradeoffs associated with developing political
platforms, instead of resorting to vilification
strategies.
Stephen A. Boyko is President of Global Market
Thoughtware, Inc., an international consulting company.
He has over twenty-five years of business and financial
experience in a broad range of financial service
industries.
Aron A. Gottesman, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor of
Finance at the Lubin School of Business at Pace
University, and is the Associate Director of the William
C. Freund Center for the Study of Securities Market.
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