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The Real Fear Behind Climate Conspiracy Theories Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=29596"><span class="small">Eve Andrews, Grist</span></a>   
Monday, 09 April 2018 13:23

Andrews writes: "Conspiracy theories are security blankets. They protect those that uphold them from their own responsibility in the crisis in question - mass shooting conspiracists don't want to confront their attachment to guns, an anti-Semitic conspiracist wants to believe she lost her job because of a Jewish world domination plot, and climate conspiracists don't want to change their behavior."

'Conspiracy theories are security blankets.' (photo: George Rose/Getty Images)
'Conspiracy theories are security blankets.' (photo: George Rose/Getty Images)


The Real Fear Behind Climate Conspiracy Theories

By Eve Andrews, Grist

09 April 18

 

hen I was 18, Naomi Wolf’s The Beauty Myth shaped my ideas about sex, attractiveness, and life as a woman. To summarize: It’s all controlled by men! So I was alarmed to learn that the influential feminist scholar has turned to shaping ideas about who controls the weather — specifically, by tweeting relentlessly about covert chemical spraying, unfamiliar cloud patterns, and schemes to manipulate the weather. Wolf is a cloud truther.

Cloud Trutherism (my own term for it) is one of many conspiracy theories surrounding climate change. It is not your standard climate denial, but rather a persistent belief that airplanes are the real and ignored cause of climate change. It’s worth mentioning here that the carbon impact of air travel is to blame for a significant portion of emissions, but that’s not the Cloud Truther cause.

Adherents’ beliefs range from the somewhat benign (cloud-seeding projects are having runaway and largely ignored effects on the climate) to the extreme (the government is secretly using aircraft for geoengineering and spraying its citizens with disease-causing chemicals), but it all boils down to: It can’t just be carbon emissions and other greenhouse gases. The scientists are wrong, and, depending on what part of the internet you land upon, part of a nefarious global plot to control the climate.

You basically have two choices when it comes to a daunting problem like climate change, says Stephan Lewandowsky, a professor at the University of Bristol who studies the psychology and cognitive theory of conspiracy theories. “You can either accept the science and say, ‘we have to deal with this problem,’ and then look for the solutions least offensive to your worldview. Or you say, ‘the problem doesn’t exist!’ You deny the problem. The moment you do that, you have to figure out how to justify that to yourself.”

Conspiracy theories are security blankets. They protect those that uphold them from their own responsibility in the crisis in question — mass shooting conspiracists don’t want to confront their attachment to guns, an anti-Semitic conspiracist wants to believe she lost her job because of a Jewish world domination plot, and climate conspiracists don’t want to change their behavior.

While it’s tempting just to mock this type of thinking, climate-related conspiracy theories are actively counterproductive to climate action. “Although often parodied as inconsequential fantasies entertained by disenfranchised people on the fringes of society, conspiracy theories can influence what ordinary people intend to do in important domains,” found one study by Karen Douglas, a psychologist at the University of Kent who studies conspiracy theories.

I wanted to talk to a Cloud Truther to understand the people behind these theories — and how they might respond to the point that said theories relieve them of any responsibility to, say, limit one’s carbon emissions.

Dave Dahl is the author of one website frequently cited by Wolf, artificialclouds.com. (He’s not Dave Dahl of “Dave’s Killer Bread” fame, nor Dave Dahl, the climate-denying Minnesota meteorologist.)

Dahl, a web designer in California with an implausibly perfect radio voice, does accept that climate change is real. While he doesn’t align with the more extreme beliefs within cloud trutherism, he finds the explanation of how climate change creates more extreme weather events to be “too abstract.” He believes climatologists aren’t paying enough attention to the role of cloud seeding — a real practice involving spraying clouds from above with silver iodide that (usually) local governments use to stimulate rain and snow in cases of, for example, extreme drought — and the water component of aircraft emissions, which he sees as the primary causes of climate change.

Dahl describes how his time as a former navigator in the Navy involved a lot of skygazing — and noticed, he says, more and more aircraft trails across the sky. He asks me whether I’ve ever seen a blue sky “become cloudy from jets,” which I tell him I have not, but I also admit that I don’t spend significant time staring upwards. He’s observed it happening before a rainstorm in California where he lives, he says — clear evidence that the clouds are being engineered to produce rainstorms.

Which is how we get to Hurricane Harvey: Clearly a product of cloud-seeding, Dahl tells me. This is the subject of a 20-minute YouTube video by cloud-seeding enthusiast Jim Lee. The evidence? According to a county memo, Culverson County, far on the west end of Texas, engaged in cloud-seeding on August 25, the day that Hurricane Harvey made landfall in Houston. Dahl explains that the storm passed through enhanced clouds — and probably “loads more in other Western states” — on its way to Houston, which is what made it so extreme.

“But Hurricane Harvey came through the Gulf,” I said. “It didn’t pass through West Texas or any other states on its way to Houston.”

“Aha — hmm,” Dahl responded. “Well, I guess if it came that way that’s probably not the case. But I wonder if that’s true?” (It is true.) “Maybe we should look a little more closely.”

If you sincerely believed that aircraft were the single greatest threat to the state of the planet, wouldn’t you avoid flying? Dahl, for one, does not. “We’re all part of the problem. I’m not sure the answer is flying less. Maybe the answer is stop weather modification and see what happens, but that would be very difficult to do,” he said. Nor does Dahl believe that individual changes — consuming less, driving electric, eating less meat — make enough of a difference to matter.

I asked Douglas, the University of Kent professor, whether conspiracy theories about climate change will proliferate as evidence of it becomes more and more difficult to ignore.

“People will strongly hold onto their beliefs even in the face of contradictory evidence, so it’s difficult to imagine conspiracy theorizing decreasing,” Douglas wrote to me. “But I’m not sure if it would increase.”

Lewandowsky, the University of Bristol professor, says that there’s evidence of a way to “inoculate” against conspiracy theories, and that’s instilling a sense of control.

“For example, even just saying: ‘We’ve already started to tackle the problem, but we need to increase our efforts even more.’ That is a more empowering message than, ‘It’s so big, it’s horrendous, and we haven’t even started solving it.’ If I tell you that, that’s very demotivating! That’s a tough ask!

“I think if people know what to do about climate change, and they feel they can do this without hurting too much, chances are they’re less skeptical, less in denial of the problem.”

To get back to Wolf: As Sarah Ditum pointed out in The New Statesman in 2014, The Beauty Myth was actually exposing a conspiracy — the patriarchy! — but that was one turned out to be real. And it’s yielded a healthy movement of women (and some men) who work to counteract the damaging forces of sexist advertising and media.

I felt a fair amount of guilt even writing this article. Our ecosystems are certainly changing, which elicits a real, documented sense of loss. And I get the sense, poring through endless documentations of cloud-streaked sky in the chemtrail community, that the people obsessed with the patterns of clouds are mourning a change they do not control. I don’t want to ridicule anyone who fears the same things I do — that the world is changing, and I can’t control it, and it only seems to be getting worse. I do wish they were better informed, a desire that will surely bring the fires of the cloud-seeding truther community down upon the inbox.

More than anything, I hope that a young woman like a teen me, who sees Naomi Wolf as a source of truth and authority, will not find herself waist-deep in the climate conspiracy theory internet and think: “Wow, there’s really nothing I can do about this.”


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FOCUS | John Oliver: Scott Pruitt Can 'Go F*ck Himself Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=34577"><span class="small">Marlow Stern, The Daily Beast</span></a>   
Monday, 09 April 2018 10:41

Stern writes: "The 'Last Week Tonight' host didn't mince words when it came to Trump's scandal-plagued head of the Environmental Protection Agency."

John Oliver. (photo: HBO)
John Oliver. (photo: HBO)


John Oliver: Scott Pruitt Can 'Go F*ck Himself

By Marlow Stern, The Daily Beast

09 April 18


The ‘Last Week Tonight’ host didn’t mince words when it came to Trump’s scandal-plagued head of the Environmental Protection Agency.

n addition to his past scandals, which include spending loads of taxpayer money on first-class flights and fancy hotels, Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt came under fire this past week after it emerged he’d spent $3 million of your money on a 20-person security detail in order to attend the Rose Bowl and Disneyland, among other things.  

“OK, so I’m a little torn on this one,” said John Oliver. “Because on the one hand, that does seem wasteful, but on the other hand, if anyone needs security at Disneyland, it’s Scott Pruitt—a man who even Mickey and Minnie Mouse would tell to go fuck himself.”

“This is a pretty sudden fall from grace for Pruitt, who’s been a conservative favorite for his aggressively pro-industry stance,” Oliver added, citing Scott Pruitt’s LinkedIn page, which still describes him as “a leading advocate against the EPA’s activist agenda.”

The Last Week Tonight host dedicated a large portion of Sunday night’s program to Trump appointee Pruitt’s myriad embarrassments, including an appearance last week on Fox News where he was confronted about reports that he’d bypassed the White House to give raises to his favorite aides, and his unbelievable $50-a-night deal for a room at a lobbyist’s tony condo in Washington, D.C. (actually, Pruitt paid $6,100 over six months, or a little over $1,000 a month).

“That should not have been done,” Pruitt told Fox News of the unsanctioned raises. “I don’t know [who did it]. I found out about this yesterday, and I corrected the action.” Of the condo kerfuffle, he offered, “They’ve said that it was market rate.”   

So Oliver pointed to a few places on Airbnb in the same D.C. area that advertised for around $50 a night, including a couple of pretty sketchy beds to sleep on and “a leather couch named Black Beauty.”

Taxpayers even wound up forking over $2,460 for a repair at the apartment after Pruitt was found unresponsive in his bathroom and security had to break down the door. According to reports, Pruitt was just napping.

“The day that happened was a Wednesday. So on top of everything else, the director of the EPA was sitting at home taking a nap in the middle of the day on a Wednesday,” said Oliver. “Get the fuck up, Pruitt! You’ve got a country to ruin!”

Many thought Pruitt would be fired last week, but instead Trump offered his support, saying he thought the pro-industry Pruitt had “done a fantastic job at EPA… he’ll be fine.”

“Who knows why he thinks that,” wondered Oliver. “Maybe it’s because Pruitt’s doing exactly what Trump wants him to do—dismantling the EPA and wrecking the environment. Or maybe Trump just now knows that if you want to get rid of Scott Pruitt, you’re going to have to kick his door down, wake him up from a nap, drag him out, and eventually change the fucking locks.”


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FOCUS: On Police Shootings, Time to Take to the Streets Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=36478"><span class="small">John Kiriakou, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Monday, 09 April 2018 10:28

Kiriakou writes: "Innocent people of color will continue to die at the hands of the police. And nobody is doing anything about it. At the risk of sounding like a broken record, I believe that our only alternative is to take to the streets."

John Kiriakou. (photo: The Washington Post)
John Kiriakou. (photo: The Washington Post)


On Police Shootings, Time to Take to the Streets

By John Kiriakou, Reader Supported News

09 April 18

 

olice in Brooklyn, New York, last week killed a mentally-ill man named Saheed Vassell. The story won’t shock you. A variation of it happens all the time in America. Somebody calls 911, says that a black man may or may not have a gun. The cops arrive. And 10 seconds later the man is dead.

That’s what happened in Brooklyn. Saheed Vassell was mentally ill. That fact was known by practically everybody in the neighborhood, including the neighborhood beat cops. Vassell was a broom handler at a local barbershop. He liked to drink outside. The local beat cops routinely stopped to talk to him. They occasionally bought him Jamaican food and once took him to the hospital when he went off his anti-psychotic medications.

Last Wednesday, somebody called 911 and said that a man in a brown jacket was pointing “what was described as a silver firearm” at people on the street. One caller said, “There’s a guy walking around the street. He looks like he’s crazy, but he’s pointing something at people that looks like a gun and he’s, like, popping it as if, like, if he’s pulling a trigger.” Indeed, surveillance video showed Vassell aggressively going from person to person on the street, pointing what was clearly not a firearm at them. None of his “victims” called the police.

Three plainclothes and two uniformed officers arrived on the scene. They said that Vassell “took a two-handed shooting stance and pointed an object at the officers.” Six seconds later, he was dead. The cops had fired 10 shots. Vassell wasn’t holding a gun, of course. He was holding what has alternately been described as a pipe, a piece of a welding tool, and a showerhead.

This scene repeats itself all over America, every few days. Vassell’s death came only a week or so after police in Sacramento, California, shot and killed Stephon Clark in his grandmother’s backyard. The police said that Clark, too, was holding a gun. He wasn’t. Two cops had answered a call that somebody was breaking windows in the neighborhood. Clark was walking to his grandmother’s house at the same time. A police helicopter saw him and notified the cops on the ground. Clark, fearing for his safety, ran from the front yard to the back. When he was cornered there, one of the cops shouted “Gun! Gun! Gun!” Both opened fire, hitting Clark eight times. Six bullets hit him in the back. The forensic evidence contradicts the police version of events. The cops said initially that when they arrived at the front yard and commanded Clark to show his hands, he fled to the backyard. They pursued him. At that point, “the man turned and advanced toward the officers while holding an object extended in front of him. The officers believed the suspect was pointing a firearm at them. Fearing for their safety, the officers fired their duty weapons, striking the suspect multiple times.”

But that story wasn’t true. What the Sacramento Police didn’t say in their original statement to the press was that Clark had a white iPhone in his hands. When additional cops arrived on the scene, one is heard on a body camera asking, “What did he have on him?” Another responded, “Like this, something in his hands. It looked like a gun from our perspective.” Minutes later, another voice is heard to say, “Hey, mute that.” The audio on the body camera then cuts off.

I can tell you that when I went through weapons training at the CIA, not all of that class had to do with what guns to use, how to use them, and how to clean them. Some of the class had to do with what to do when you actually shot someone. We were told first never to draw the weapon unless we intended to kill someone. We were to never draw the weapon to frighten someone, to fire a warning shot, or to intimidate. The weapon was meant solely to kill someone. I remember one instructor saying, “You wouldn’t believe the paperwork involved when you draw a weapon. So if you draw it, make sure it’s worth drawing.”

The second part of that lesson was something that I’m sure cops around the country are taught every day. My instructor said, “Remember, if you have to kill somebody in the line of duty, it’s because you feared for your safety. Always say you feared for your safety.” I thought that was something of a bad joke at the time. But we see it play out all across the country all the time.

Just look at the statement from the Sacramento Police Department: “The officers believed the suspect was pointing a firearm at them. Fearing for their safety, the officers fired their duty weapons, striking the suspect multiple times.” This statement could be copied and pasted into every police report in America that involves a fatal shooting.

I don’t have the space here to debate the pros and cons of police policy. It is the place, though, to say that the police kill far, far more people of color than they do whites. They are far quicker to resort to violence without even understanding the basics of what is happening; indeed, they usually fire at a suspect within seconds of their arrival on scene.

But when the police kill 10.1 Native Americans per million residents and 6.7 African-Americans per million residents versus only 2.9 whites per million residents, you have a problem. Are the cops racists? Are they afraid? Are they poorly trained? Are they unqualified? The answer may be yes to all of these questions. So long as the system — police departments, local and state governments, and courts — cover for them, though, we’ll never know the answers. In the meantime, innocent people of color will continue to die at the hands of the police. And nobody is doing anything about it.

At the risk of sounding like a broken record, I believe that our only alternative is to take to the streets. In the past few years, I’ve become personally acquainted with leaders and participants in the Black Lives Matter movement, the ANSWER Coalition, Code Pink, and other organizations. I’m going to follow their lead. We accomplish nothing by sitting quietly and hoping that the politicians do something. We have to force them to.



John Kiriakou is a former CIA counterterrorism officer and a former senior investigator with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. John became the sixth whistleblower indicted by the Obama administration under the Espionage Act - a law designed to punish spies. He served 23 months in prison as a result of his attempts to oppose the Bush administration's torture program.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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The Battle for Paradise: Puerto Ricans and Ultrarich "Puertopians" Are Locked in a Pitched Struggle Over How to Remake the Island Print
Monday, 09 April 2018 08:48

Excerpt: "When Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico on September 20, 2017, Puerto Ricans almost immediately began worrying about disaster capitalists swooping in to buy up beleaguered public utilities and damaged beachfront property on the cheap."

Corozal, Puerto Rico. (photo: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Corozal, Puerto Rico. (photo: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)


The Battle for Paradise: Puerto Ricans and Ultrarich "Puertopians" Are Locked in a Pitched Struggle Over How to Remake the Island

By Naomi Klein and Lauren Feeney, The Intercept

09 April 18


When Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico on September 20, 2017, Puerto Ricans almost immediately began worrying about disaster capitalists swooping in to buy up beleaguered public utilities and damaged beachfront property on the cheap.

ike everywhere else in Puerto Rico, the small mountain city of Adjuntas was plunged into total darkness by Hurricane Maria. When residents left their homes to take stock of the damage, they found themselves not only without power and water, but also totally cut off from the rest of the island. Every single road was blocked, either by mounds of mud washed down from the surrounding peaks, or by fallen trees and branches. Yet amid this devastation, there was one bright spot.

A Solar Oasis

Just off the main square, a large, pink colonial-style house had light shining through every window. It glowed like a beacon in the terrifying darkness.

The pink house was Casa Pueblo, a community and ecology center with deep roots in this part of the island. Twenty years ago, its founders, a family of scientists and engineers, installed solar panels on the center’s roof, a move that seemed rather hippy-dippy at the time. Somehow, those panels (upgraded over the years) managed to survive Maria’s hurricane-force winds and falling debris. Which meant that in a sea of post-storm darkness, Casa Pueblo had the only sustained power for miles around.

And like moths to a flame, people from all over the hills of Adjuntas made their way to the warm and welcoming light.

Already a community hub before the storm, the pink house rapidly transformed into a nerve center for self-organized relief efforts. It would be weeks before the Federal Emergency Management Agency or any other agency would arrive with significant aid, so people flocked to Casa Pueblo to collect food, water, tarps, and chainsaws — and draw on its priceless power supply to charge up their electronics. Most critically, Casa Pueblo became a kind of makeshift field hospital, its airy rooms crowded with elderly people who needed to plug in oxygen machines.

Thanks also to those solar panels, Casa Pueblo’s radio station was able to continue broadcasting, making it the community’s sole source of information when downed power lines and cell towers had knocked out everything else. Twenty years after those panels were first installed, rooftop solar power didn’t look frivolous at all — in fact, it looked like the best hope for survival in a future sure to bring more Maria-sized weather shocks.

Visiting Casa Pueblo on a recent trip to the island was something of a vertiginous experience — a bit like stepping through a portal into another world, a parallel Puerto Rico where everything worked and the mood brimmed with optimism.

It was particularly jarring because I had spent much of the day on the heavily industrialized southern coast, talking with people suffering some of the cruellest impacts of Hurricane Maria. Not only had their low-lying neighborhoods been inundated, but they also feared the storm had stirred up toxic materials from nearby fossil fuel-burning power plants and agricultural testing sites they could not hope to assess. Compounding these risks — and despite living adjacent to two of the island’s largest electricity plants — many still were living in the dark.

The situation had felt unremittingly bleak, made worse by the stifling heat. But after driving up into the mountains and arriving at Casa Pueblo, the mood shifted instantly. Wide open doors welcomed us, as well as freshly brewed organic coffee from the center’s own community-managed plantation. Overhead, an air-clearing downpour drummed down on those precious solar panels.

read the rest at The Intercept...


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Almost All Violent Extremists Share One Thing: Their Gender Print
Monday, 09 April 2018 08:39

Kimmel writes: "The fact is that virtually all of those mobilizing on all sides of this growing clash are young men - whether right-wing extremists, anti-immigrant zealots, anti-Muslim skinheads and neo-Nazis or young Muslims readying for jihad."

'Young men often come into extremist movements because they experience downsizing in specifically gendered ways.' (image: Rob Dobi/Guardian)
'Young men often come into extremist movements because they experience downsizing in specifically gendered ways.' (image: Rob Dobi/Guardian)


Almost All Violent Extremists Share One Thing: Their Gender

By Michael Kimmel, Guardian UK

09 April 18


Most people who commit acts of terrorist violence are young men. We overlook their gender to our peril

ccording to an ever-growing number of young men in Europe, the United States and across the Muslim world, we are at the beginning of a war. And no one knows how it will end.

To me, what is interesting in the paragraph you just read is not the indeterminacy of the outcome. All crises are like that. No, it is the fact that “ever-growing number of young men” probably does not seem notable to most readers.

The fact is that virtually all of those mobilizing on all sides of this growing clash are young men – whether right-wing extremists, anti-immigrant zealots, anti-Muslim skinheads and neo-Nazis or young Muslims readying for jihad.

It’s so obvious, it barely needs noting.

And so it isn’t noted.

If we imagine for a moment that all those amassing on all the different sides of this looming cataclysm, all those drifting to the edges of the political spectrum and toward violent extremism, were female, would there be any other story? Wouldn’t magazines be filled with individual profiles, TV news shows highlighting the relationship between femininity and violence, bookshelves sagging from the weight of the “gender” analysis?

Yet the fact that virtually every single violent extremist is male creates hardly a ripple.

It can be easy to think: “But wait, what about those female suicide bombers? What about those skinhead girls? Those women of the Klan?”

This proves my point. We notice the minuscule percentage of female activists. We over-notice them precisely because they are so counterintuitive.

***

I have interviewed over 100 current or former extremists, including American neo-Nazis and white supremacists, jihadists and Islamists in Canada and Great Britain, and anti-immigration skinheads in Europe, to understand how they experience masculinity on the extreme right. I heard many stories of what I came to call aggrieved entitlement: a gendered sense of entitlement thwarted by larger economic and political shifts, their ambitions choked, their masculinity lost.

Young men often come into extremist movements because they experience downsizing, outsourcing or economic displacement in specifically gendered ways: they feel themselves to be emasculated. This political-economic emasculation is often accompanied by a more personal sense of emasculation: they come because they are isolated or bullied in school and feel they need the support of something much bigger than they are.

Joining rightwing groups lent a gendered coherence to their sense of emasculation and frustration. Their manhood had been taken from them by unseen conspiratorial forces, and their recruitment was seen as a way to reclaim their manhood and to restore that sense of entitlement.

Proving one’s masculinity plays a central role in recruitment, or entry, into the movement. Entry is a gendered effort to ward off the shame that comes with their failures – their failures as men. “The emotion of shame is the primary or ultimate cause of all violence,” writes psychiatrist James Gilligan in his stunning book Violence. “The purpose of violence is to diminish the intensity of shame and replace it as far as possible with its opposite, pride, thus preventing the individual from being overwhelmed by the feeling of shame.”

It’s not just that they are male – anatomically so, chromosomally so – but that they see themselves as men. They enter feeling like failed men, like men who need to prove their masculinity, need to feel like real men, yet are thwarted at every turn.

The ex-Nazis, jihadists and white supremacists I have interviewed felt like failures as men. But instead of turning that sense of emasculation inward toward depression, interpersonal violence, suicide or self-medication through drugs or alcohol, these young men were somehow convinced to externalize their sense of emasculation, turn it into righteous political rage and lash out at those forces that they came to believe responsible for their emasculation.

Their failure was not theirs as individuals; it was something done to them – by an indifferent state, by predatory corporations and rapacious bankers, by a host of “others” who had preyed upon global sympathies to get special bargains. They were not failures; they were victims.

It is this sense of victimhood – that they are the new victims of the politically correct, multicultural society – that lends a degree of righteousness to their political activities. Once inside, these men developed a worldview that constantly shored up their own sense of masculinity through the emasculation of the “others”.

***

I do not suggest that once we understand gender, we will fully understand the lure of violent extremism. Of course not. We still need to take many other factors into account.

A host of structural variables provide much of the foundation of extremism, including economic displacement in an increasingly interconnected global economy, the threats to – or collapse of – domestic patriarchy (wives working, children getting an education that circumvents paternal authority), political marginalization.

On to this foundation we add the psychological variables: childhood trauma, bullying, child abuse, sexual abuse. Women’s employment and education have also set dramatic changes in motion.

But I argue that we cannot fully understand violent extremist movements without a gender analysis. And, more than that, we cannot adequately meet this challenge without understanding how gender – masculinity – is so deeply and intimately enmeshed in participants’ experience.

There is a gendered political psychology of extremism: that the men who join do experience the need for camaraderie and community; the threats to a solid, grounded identity; the desire for a life of meaning and purpose; and the inability or obstacles to achieving that life as specifically gendered feelings urges and emotion.

Just for a moment, then, let’s pay attention to gender and see where it takes us.

***

So this is how it works: These young men feel entitled to a sense of belonging and community, of holding unchallenged moral authority over women and children, and of feeling that they count in the world and that their lives matter.

Experiencing threats to the lives they feel they deserve leads these young men to feel ashamed and humiliated. And it is this aggrieved entitlement – entitlement thwarted and frustrated – that leads some men to search for a way to redeem themselves as men, to restore and retrieve that sense of manhood that has been lost.

Joining up is a form of masculine compensation, an alternate route to proving manhood. To not see this as gendered is to miss the point.

Journalists and researchers usually start by focusing on the content of radical extremist ideology and then work backward to search for the fertile political and economic ground in which such hateful ideologies can take root.

Such research strategies can explain long-term political and economic causes, but they can’t explain the filter mechanisms by which thousands experience the same political and economic circumstances yet only a handful are smitten by the cause.

It is common to then move immediately from these large-scale macro-level explanations to an individual psychopathology model. There must be something “wrong” with these particular guys, something in their family life or their upbringing.

It seems possible – probable – that their fathers beat them, abandoned them, were implacably ruthless with them. Or perhaps the boys were victims of abuse and bullying from male peers.

Psychological reductionism runs rampant as an explanation of violent extremism, but it begs the same question as the overly macro-level structural explanation: in the vast universe of kids who are abused, beat up, abandoned, bullied and otherwise mistreated by a hostile world, why do only a few of them ever blow themselves up as suicide bombers or begin training to defend the white race from “outsiders”?

Why these particular boys and men and not all the others?

In a sense, these two explanations turn understanding on its head. We need to ask why there are so few who end up in extremist movements, not why there are so many.

After all, there are thousands – no, hundreds of thousands – of boys in America who are bullied and gay-baited every single day. Yet they don’t pick up assault weapons and “pull a Columbine” in every middle and high school in the land.

So we need to ask what are the structural features of those schools where they do pick up assault weapons, as well as the psychological characteristics of those particular boys.

What mediates between these over-deterministic structural explanations and the reductionist psychopathological ones is gender.

Masculinity.

It is the specific ways that specific groups of young men understand and enact masculinity that help us navigate between the macro and micro, between the structural and the psychological.

It’s within the gendered connection between humiliation and violence where we will find the key to understanding how some young men get into extremist politics and, therefore, how we, as policymakers, civil and community leaders, parents, religious leaders and citizens, can provide a route they can use to get out.

***

We need to explore the experience of deep emotional connection, belonging, compensation for shame and humiliation, and purpose and mission in life – the sense of finally living a life of glory and strength and power – that provides the emotional nutrients that generate a breeding ground for young men eager and energized to prove their manhood.

For the extreme rightwingers, theirs is a movement not to take power, but to restore authority to its rightful heirs – “us”, not “them”. To restore what was, and what should have been.

And, in the process, to restore their manhood. It is through their participation in the movement that they see an opportunity to retrieve that sense of masculinity that has been stolen from them by illegitimate poseurs and their government and its corporate henchmen.

Challenging violent extremism, therefore, means engaging these young men as men, not simply as jihadists or neo-Nazis or white supremacists.

It means offering them new ways by which they can prove their masculinity, to feel that they are real men – that their lives matter.

These are young men who feel small, who resent being made to feel small and who are looking to get big by destroying others.

They search, sometimes literally, for that magic bullet that will make them a real man.


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