Here’s an exercise:
I want you to recollect the most thoughtless or insensitive words you’ve ever said; or the stupidest or most embarrassing thing you’ve ever done; or the angriest outburst you’ve ever had.
Really, do it. It shouldn’t take long. Those moments are typically easy to recall, because we tend to be ashamed of them and they’re therefore imprinted indelibly in our memories.
Now imagine that someone managed to record that atypical instant of your very worst behavior, and has posted it on the Internet. And now, everyone who has never met you and knows nothing of you — which is to say, outside a tiny circle of friends and family, the entire world — knows you only through that recording, and is gaining a first impression of you via the worst moment you’ve ever had. The whole world is judging you based solely on that one instant of atypical bad behavior, bad behavior of which you’re already ashamed and wish you could do something, anything, to retract.
Are people forming accurate impressions of you? Do you feel you’re being treated fairly? Reasonably?
I can’t imagine there’s anyone who would answer any of the preceding questions, “Yes.” So then why do so many people instantly and reflexively judge the totality of a stranger based on a single reported instance of the stranger’s behavior?
I can think of various reasons that might apply case-by-case, but my guess is that the overall explanation for individual such acts of condemnation is self-pleasure through sanctimony. Sanctimony, contempt, dudgeon, umbrage, outrage… all are among the most self-pleasuring emotions available to humans. This alone should render them the least trustworthy. But for many people, the insidious high delivered by, say, a solid hit of dudgeon is too alluring an opportunity to pass up.
Now let’s talk about condemnation mobs. Have you ever ginned up or joined a dudgeon mob on Twitter or elsewhere on the Internet? Have a look at the video below, depicting the Two Minutes Hate from the movie version of Nineteen Eighty-Four. Do you see any similarities between this and some of the wildfire denunciations you sometimes see flaring up (and that perhaps you’ve been part of) on the Internet? Is it possible George Orwell was depicting not just some fictional behavior peculiar to a certain dystopic novel, but was instead expressing a profound insight into an ugly and universal human tendency?
What’s behind the mob behavior? My guess is, it has to do with an innate human hatred of the feeling of powerlessness and concomitant attraction to things that make us feel powerful (think vengeance and torture and other such behaviors that logic can’t do much to explain). It’s the pleasure brought on by a surge of empowerment. You see someone you typically perceive as higher status or otherwise more powerful than yourself; that person is suddenly vulnerable; you have the force of overwhelming numbers and passion on your side; the typically more powerful person is suddenly less powerful, and the person with the power is you! It’s a rush. And who doesn’t love a good rush?
Part of what’s involved in the instant condemnation reflex (group or singleton) is something known as the Fundamental Misattribution Error. Here’s how it works:
I’m driving along the highway, minding my own business, and I change lanes. But oh shit, somehow I didn’t see how quickly the car I just moved in front of was approaching, and he had to apply the brakes as a result of my move. It was just a careless, innocent, and essentially harmless mistake on my part; I certainly didn’t intend to cut the guy off, and I would have waited if I’d seen him. How do I know all this? Because I have direct access to my own thoughts and I know my behavior in the context of my whole life, which includes such information as I’m a nice and courteous person and generally a careful driver, and if I do something rude, it’s always an accident and I would apologize for it if I could.
The other guy, though, has access to none of this context. The only thing he knows about me is that I just did something rude to him. And he’s a good person. Courteous, careful, etc. If someone does something rude to a courteous, careful, worthy-of-respect good person, the rude person must ipso facto be an asshole.
So… he rolls down the window, races ahead, and cuts in front of me, flipping me the bird on the way. Which he knows I deserve, because he’s already figured out I’m an asshole.
You can see the rest: now I’m thinking, What? I made a dumb, harmless mistake; I’m a good person; and he’s flipping me off? He must be an asshole! And I act accordingly.
Etc. Each person perceiving himself with the greatest possible knowledge and context, and reducing the other person to the only thing he knows about the other person, which is that the other person just did something bad to a good person. I understand my own behavior in the context of character; the other guy’s behavior is his character.
I’ve written about this before (Dudgeon is Easy; Understanding, Hard; also And Why Beholdest Thou The Mote In Thy Brother's Eye...?). What put me in mind of it recently was the crazy mob reaction to an after-game video interview with Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman (I actually don’t know anything about sports, but I do follow The New Yorker’s Amy Davidson), plus some people going after a friend of mine on a list serv for a long-ago stupid thing my friend had said. What made me want to write about the topic again, though, wasn’t the interview as such, or what the list serv people were saying; it was that, in my anger at how unfairly the list serv people were treating my friend, I wound up resorting to sarcasm. And then realized: I was falling into the very trap I was trying to get them to understand -- treating them as though they were unworthy of respect just because of one unfortunate series of comments they were making.
I’m not much on religion, but there are two bible passages I think are profound, timelessly relevant — and almost universally ignored except via lip service. These are, of course:
Let he who is without sin cast the first stone
and
The mote and the beam
They're really worth thinking about. Everybody knows them, but how often are they applied?
Everybody knows the instinct to judge the entirety of a person based on one stupid mistake while ignoring everything else he or she has ever said or done is ungenerous; the conclusion, almost inevitably caricatured or otherwise inaccurate; the practice, innately hypocritical because anyone on the receiving end of such treatment would find it wildly unfair. I’m hoping this post will serve as a handy link we can forward to others when they slip up — or that people will remind me of when I do.
I want you to recollect the most thoughtless or insensitive words you’ve ever said; or the stupidest or most embarrassing thing you’ve ever done; or the angriest outburst you’ve ever had.
Really, do it. It shouldn’t take long. Those moments are typically easy to recall, because we tend to be ashamed of them and they’re therefore imprinted indelibly in our memories.
Now imagine that someone managed to record that atypical instant of your very worst behavior, and has posted it on the Internet. And now, everyone who has never met you and knows nothing of you — which is to say, outside a tiny circle of friends and family, the entire world — knows you only through that recording, and is gaining a first impression of you via the worst moment you’ve ever had. The whole world is judging you based solely on that one instant of atypical bad behavior, bad behavior of which you’re already ashamed and wish you could do something, anything, to retract.
Are people forming accurate impressions of you? Do you feel you’re being treated fairly? Reasonably?
I can’t imagine there’s anyone who would answer any of the preceding questions, “Yes.” So then why do so many people instantly and reflexively judge the totality of a stranger based on a single reported instance of the stranger’s behavior?
I can think of various reasons that might apply case-by-case, but my guess is that the overall explanation for individual such acts of condemnation is self-pleasure through sanctimony. Sanctimony, contempt, dudgeon, umbrage, outrage… all are among the most self-pleasuring emotions available to humans. This alone should render them the least trustworthy. But for many people, the insidious high delivered by, say, a solid hit of dudgeon is too alluring an opportunity to pass up.
Now let’s talk about condemnation mobs. Have you ever ginned up or joined a dudgeon mob on Twitter or elsewhere on the Internet? Have a look at the video below, depicting the Two Minutes Hate from the movie version of Nineteen Eighty-Four. Do you see any similarities between this and some of the wildfire denunciations you sometimes see flaring up (and that perhaps you’ve been part of) on the Internet? Is it possible George Orwell was depicting not just some fictional behavior peculiar to a certain dystopic novel, but was instead expressing a profound insight into an ugly and universal human tendency?
What’s behind the mob behavior? My guess is, it has to do with an innate human hatred of the feeling of powerlessness and concomitant attraction to things that make us feel powerful (think vengeance and torture and other such behaviors that logic can’t do much to explain). It’s the pleasure brought on by a surge of empowerment. You see someone you typically perceive as higher status or otherwise more powerful than yourself; that person is suddenly vulnerable; you have the force of overwhelming numbers and passion on your side; the typically more powerful person is suddenly less powerful, and the person with the power is you! It’s a rush. And who doesn’t love a good rush?
Part of what’s involved in the instant condemnation reflex (group or singleton) is something known as the Fundamental Misattribution Error. Here’s how it works:
I’m driving along the highway, minding my own business, and I change lanes. But oh shit, somehow I didn’t see how quickly the car I just moved in front of was approaching, and he had to apply the brakes as a result of my move. It was just a careless, innocent, and essentially harmless mistake on my part; I certainly didn’t intend to cut the guy off, and I would have waited if I’d seen him. How do I know all this? Because I have direct access to my own thoughts and I know my behavior in the context of my whole life, which includes such information as I’m a nice and courteous person and generally a careful driver, and if I do something rude, it’s always an accident and I would apologize for it if I could.
The other guy, though, has access to none of this context. The only thing he knows about me is that I just did something rude to him. And he’s a good person. Courteous, careful, etc. If someone does something rude to a courteous, careful, worthy-of-respect good person, the rude person must ipso facto be an asshole.
So… he rolls down the window, races ahead, and cuts in front of me, flipping me the bird on the way. Which he knows I deserve, because he’s already figured out I’m an asshole.
You can see the rest: now I’m thinking, What? I made a dumb, harmless mistake; I’m a good person; and he’s flipping me off? He must be an asshole! And I act accordingly.
Etc. Each person perceiving himself with the greatest possible knowledge and context, and reducing the other person to the only thing he knows about the other person, which is that the other person just did something bad to a good person. I understand my own behavior in the context of character; the other guy’s behavior is his character.
I’ve written about this before (Dudgeon is Easy; Understanding, Hard; also And Why Beholdest Thou The Mote In Thy Brother's Eye...?). What put me in mind of it recently was the crazy mob reaction to an after-game video interview with Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman (I actually don’t know anything about sports, but I do follow The New Yorker’s Amy Davidson), plus some people going after a friend of mine on a list serv for a long-ago stupid thing my friend had said. What made me want to write about the topic again, though, wasn’t the interview as such, or what the list serv people were saying; it was that, in my anger at how unfairly the list serv people were treating my friend, I wound up resorting to sarcasm. And then realized: I was falling into the very trap I was trying to get them to understand -- treating them as though they were unworthy of respect just because of one unfortunate series of comments they were making.
I’m not much on religion, but there are two bible passages I think are profound, timelessly relevant — and almost universally ignored except via lip service. These are, of course:
Let he who is without sin cast the first stone
and
The mote and the beam
They're really worth thinking about. Everybody knows them, but how often are they applied?
Everybody knows the instinct to judge the entirety of a person based on one stupid mistake while ignoring everything else he or she has ever said or done is ungenerous; the conclusion, almost inevitably caricatured or otherwise inaccurate; the practice, innately hypocritical because anyone on the receiving end of such treatment would find it wildly unfair. I’m hoping this post will serve as a handy link we can forward to others when they slip up — or that people will remind me of when I do.