Archive for September, 2019

Potential Submission for NSW Parliamentary Inquiry into Renewable Energy

September 15, 2019

The terms of reference of the Inquiry are as follows

The inquiry is looking at the capacity and economic opportunities of renewable energy. It will also cover trends in energy supply and exports, including investment and other financial arrangements, and effects on regional communities, water security, the environment and public health. The Committee will also consider options to support sustainable economic development in communities affected by changing energy and resource markets, including the role of government policies.

The Committee on Environment and Planning inquire into and report on the sustainability of energy supply and resources in NSW, including:
1) The capacity and economic opportunities of renewable energy.
2) Emerging trends in energy supply and exports, including investment and other financial arrangements.
3) The status of and forecasts for energy and resource markets.
4) Effects on regional communities, water security, the environment and public health.
5) Opportunities to support sustainable economic development in regional and other communities likely to be affected by changing energy and resource markets, including the role of government policies.
6) Any other related matters.

General

  1. Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions are not declining significantly. Those emissions produce climate change, and need to be cut back, to allow some degree of climate stability to emerge. Otherwise, it may become increasingly hard to sustainably maintain life in Australia.
  2. The problem is global not national. Because of this, every state has to stop pretending that it can only act when others act. Otherwise no one will act.
  3. Fossil Fuel burning is the primary cause of climate change.
  4. Fossil fuel mining and burning, badly affects the health of those living nearby, and the crops being grown nearby. Fossil fuels are poisons. No amount of positive advertising about new technologies will alter this in the foreseeable future.
  5. Exports of fossil fuels do affect the world levels of greenhouse gas emissions. They do not just affect the atmospheres of the countries they burn in. Every export, helps destabilise climate in the world and Australia. That other people will export is no defence as, unless someone stops, no one will.
  6. Carbon Capture and Reuse or Storage, has not been shown to work at the levels, price and low energy usage, required for it to make fossil power climate safe.
  7. Rehabilitation of land devastated by coal mining does not seem that common in Australia, and most of it faces the road, rather than goes deep. See the Hunter Valley.
  8. Coal mining takes large amounts of water, and risks polluting large quantities of water, despoiling rivers or subterranean water aquifers. This is particularly destructive, in times of lengthening drought.
  9. Destroying agricultural land, in a country with few very fertile areas of farmable land, and growing population, strains sustainable survival.
  10. Therefore, as part of the struggle against climate change and ecological despoliation, the government should not allow any more coal or gas mines, no matter how economically beneficial they are claimed to be. It should not encourage the building of more coal fired power stations. Gas based energy should not be enabled unless it is replacing coal, as it is still a source of greenhouse gas emissions, particularly ‘fugitive emissions’ or those emissions from well sites and from leaky pipes. It should be assumed all old gas pipes are leaky.
  11. Transport and agriculture also seem to be major sources of greenhouse gas emissions.
  12. Land-clearing and deforestation prevents the breakdown of carbon dioxide into carbon and oxygen, and heightens the risk of water runoff. It increases the risks of climate change.
  13. Renewable based, electric, or hydrogen, powered transport needs to be encouraged so as to replace petrol fuel transport.
  14. We also need to encourage regenerative agriculture to improve carbon storage, land fertility and water retention.
  15. Different types of energy storage need investigation, development and installation, domestically, locally and grid wide. There may not be one universal solution.
  16. Renewable energy is essential, but it is not enough to solve the problems of climate change, and sustainability, by itself.

Politics of Economics

  1. Polls consistently show that the majority of Australian people want to encourage renewable energy, but this so far has not produced any change in politics, economic regulation, or economic process.
  2. If large-scale renewable energy is installed the way that most major private or public/private projects seem to be installed nowadays, with apparently low levels of real consultation, or as impositions from on high, then there will, more likely, be resistance as people see their landscapes being destroyed for the profit of outsiders, with little local benefit.
  3. This resistance is particularly important in rural areas, where it is easy to organise a resistance which motivates a large proportion of the relatively small local population.
  4. Companies have more incentive to make money than to get local communities involved. Taking a hint from coal mines they may even import labour, so that most of the money earned in construction goes outside the areas being developed.
  5. Renewable projects, in the long term, appear to require few maintenance jobs, so the overall employment available in a rural area may decline as jobs lost from agriculture are not replaced.
  6. As with fossil fuel mining, land use can be changed and valuable agricultural land rendered unfarmable in the long term.
  7. Together with “imposition from on high,” this importation of labour, lack of continual work, destruction of other jobs, and change of land-use may mean that local councils are, at best, unenthusiastic about renewable projects, particularly when faced with relentless upbeat ‘information’ from fossil fuel companies.
  8. It is frequently suggested in the literature, that the ways corporations gain land through secret negotiations with land owners, and with no recompense to other locals who are not involved, but have to look at the results, that conflict and jealousy can be caused in small towns, which adds to the bad reception of the renewable installations.
  9. These points can also encourage astro-turf groups, and corporate deniers move in and make allies to delay the transition, so as to lengthen the time available to profit from fossil fuels, even if people do not want more coal power and coal mines.
  10. If community groups and local citizens can fully participate in the energy transformation the transformation will encounter less resistance.
  11. Lessening community dependence on the grid, means that local areas may be able to survive climate change based weather events that pull down grid power lines, or put centralised power stations out of commission. This supports national resilience.
  12. Community groups can find it hard to build their own energy sources, and lessen their dependence on the grid, because of regulations which are geared towards protecting existing corporate players in the energy market.
  13. Community groups and Local Councils require regulation and implementation schedules that allow them to act.
  14. A paradox. Community energy may lack the speed to produce the transformation in time, but if we do not encourage community based energy, it may be alienating for most people, put in place without proper consultation or participation, and generate protest and disruption.

NSW

  1. Regulations structure the market and both encourage and limit what can be done. Company control over parts of the grid, also encourages and limits what can be done.
  2. Current regulations hinder local community based installations from happening, in the ways that people would like.
  3. For example, I have heard of attempts by small towns to power themselves, as well as use the grid, but it proved impossible, or extremely costly, to link power from one rooftop to another house. Likewise, some local councils have had the same problem with plans to generate power on one of their rooves and transfer the power across the road to another council building. Similarly with trying to power the main street shops with a small solar farm on suitable roof tops.
  4. Talking with people from various organisations and Local Councils it appears that NSW is renowned for the vagueness of its position. It seems hard for people to figure out precisely what help or hindrance is available.
  5. For example, it does not seem clear to many people what the designation of an area as an “energy priority zone” actually means. Although I have heard of companies deciding there must be some benefit to this, it does not really encourage any activity.
  6. Likewise regulations, such as the corporations act, may prevent communities or councils raising money for projects with ease. For example, if the energy source is above a certain size then the certification system works in a different way. If the money is above a certain amount then it appears there are different requirements as to how it needs to be administered and how many shareholders can be involved. These issues can limit the capacity of local organisations to raise money from the community, pay that money back and limit the size of the energy source. If this is not the case, then it needs to be set out clearly, as it certainly appears that people think this is the case.
  7. New regulations, need to be developed in consultation with local community power groups, and local Councils. Government’s need to listen to accounts of the problems that such groups face, and help them as much as they help larger businesses.
  8. I have often been told that the grid connections are such that local suppliers of renewable energy face difficulty shifting their energy elsewhere in NSW. Sometimes the grid is apparently just not designed for non-centralised, non-one way energy traffic.
  9. Grid issues need to be remedied, but large energy companies cannot be relied upon to provide help for their much smaller rivals. So public works may be necessary.
  10. Some Energy companies are both suppliers and retailers. This reputedly enables them to increase the price of supply while selling below cost, thus making life difficult for smaller retailers while still making a profit. If true, such a situation needs remedying.

Climate change and renewables

  1. Climate change, produces tumultuous changes in the weather, and may affect renewables.
  2. Wind patterns may change – affecting the areas which are good for windfarms.
  3. Solar panels may need cleaning regularly because of dust deposits, especially if there are high winds and no rain. This takes water, which may produce problems with locals.
  4. Pumped hydro storage may be affected by drought and evaporation. If installed then it needs to be installed near permanent supplies of water, probably near the coast.

Recommendations

  1. The NSW government should engage in planning to shift the economy away from dependence on fossil fuels in any way; mining, energy supply and so on. It should probably set signposts for the end of large scale fossil fuel exploration, mining, export and import. It should insist on proper rehabilitation for all mines. Fossil fuels do not produce sustainability.
  2. The government, should encourage renewable based electric or hydrogen powered electric transport.
  3. It should encourage regenerative agriculture, and discourage land clearing.
  4. It should encourage an investigation into the best ways of energy storage for different situations – making the information public.
  5. It should encourage Community and Local Council based renewable Energy.
  6. It should discourage “top down” imposition of renewable projects by companies, and make it illegal for companies to have secret agreements and negotiations with local landowners.
  7. It should run an inquiry into the effects of regulation on small scale renewable energy projects, with input from local groups and local Councils.
  8. It should abolish those regulations, or powers held by business, which render small scale energy difficult to impossible.
  9. If the government is going to designate areas as “special” with regard to renewable energy, the designation should have clear and beneficial consequences for the whole of NSW.
  10. The government should aim for regulatory clarity.
  11. It should help simplify processes of raising money for local projects.
  12. It should consider acting to make the grid suitable for renewable energy, by building new parts of the grid and changing the grid anatomy.
  13. It should investigate, and try to eliminate, those ways of price-fixing that benefit large scale operators and penalise small scale operators.
  14. It should make consideration of climate change factors part of any renewable installation.
  15. The government should investigate laws to compel the construction of energy efficient housing and office blocks, and to encourage renewable energy to be deployed on all new buildings in the most appropriate ways. Ideally people in cities should be able to choose between renewable energy and new toll roads.

Thank you.

Capitalism and Authoritarianism

September 11, 2019

For me, right-wing thought is thought which tends to support hierarchy, authority, power, expansion of power, dictation over people’s personal lives and the enforcement of heavily bounded social categories. It reduces all liberty to the right to buy the products you can afford. Thus the right tends to hate egalitarianism, feminism, anti-racism and so on. They rarely support liberation movements that openly oppose capitalism. As I have argued previously they tend to use quite a lot of force to suppress free-speech, and then suppress awareness of the suppression, just as they suppress awareness of the general political shift rightwards. Right-wing thought has very little to do with conservative thought.

The left tend to favour relative egalitarianism (no one thinks everyone will be completely equal in everything, just that superiority in earning money or inheriting money, should not lead to massive inequalities of power and opportunity). They tend to favour people reclaiming their power and being treated as important politically. They tend to think that the State should not regulate your sex and recreational life, and so on.

I’d add that both modes of thought, tend to be non-systemic and have only a few solutions to problems, and they tend to think that if their policy is not working this must be because:

  • Somebody is deliberately working to prevent the policy being successful.
  • They have not applied the policy strongly enough.

They both tend not to think that unintended consequences are normal and need looking out for, and adjusting one’s actions for. They tend to think knowledge is complete and causality is obvious. The left tends to value looking at a diversity of solutions more than the right does, but this is a fragile virtue, and easily overthrown.

Libertarians tend to think that they understand complexity issues, but they seem completely unaware of the (hopefully) unintended, but expectable, consequences of imposing ‘free markets’ in the context of corporate dominance.

Of course many people on the right are actually more leftish than they believe, and its fair enough to protest against this particular categorisation of politics, but if you look at actual Right wing politics, it tends to nanny the rich and boot the poor, or give more liberty to the already powerful and curtail the liberty of everyone else. At the best it promises to restore the exclusionary power of people who felt they were dominant, but have lost that dominance.

Is it possible to separate this kind of hierarchical and authoritarian thinking from capitalism? I suspect not. After all, libertarians, and social-democrats, have been trying for years, and capitalism has not changed. It has in fact got stronger and more severe in its politics over the last 40 years of constant chatter about the benefit of free markets. There is certainly less liberty, less ability to influence politics, less protection at work, less equity in wealth distribution, less support in misfortune, less interest in protecting essential infrastructure, unless someone makes a profit out of it. Capitalism is not incompatible with dictatorship, although that support then distorts it’s official ideology still further.

I suspect this authoritarianism occurs because capitalism is primarily about the reduction of all values and morality to profit and wealth. This always becomes support for the wealth hierarchy, disciplining the work force, keeping ordinary folk down and assuming that protecting profit is better than protecting survival and continuance. Capitalism seems to suppress empathy for others, unless there is a buck in it, as capital accumulation can generally only occur if you separate yourself from the needs of other people.

In capitalism wealth controls all the modes of power: it can buy politicians, it can buy laws, it can buy the police, it can buy the military, it can buy the media, it can buy ‘knowledge’ that suits it, it can buy the economics that suit it and so on. Almost nothing is beyond purchase, and capitalism spreads its managerial modes of organisation everywhere, even into Churches. Consequently, capitalism becomes unchallengable, taken for granted, part of our sponsored common sense. The only movement that is officially acceptable, and that has much chance of winning out, is to strengthen capitalism and intensify its effects and spread.

In this process, support for authority is so great, that unintended consequences, such as ecological destruction tend to be ignored. If destroying ecologies is what keeps the system going, then that is what the system will do to preserve its power structures. Hence, the ability of free market leaders to encourage destruction, and to try and lower the legal consequences of destruction. They do not see how they themselves are part of a bigger system they need for survival and which they are destroying, or they think that wealth and authority will protect them. Everyone else, all ordinary people, are just rubbish and should be culled, as it is their fault for having too many children or being relatively poor or something. Hence the population line they continually push.

In the contemporary world, capitalism has no serious challengers except for Islamic fundamentalism, and it is doubtful that Islam will ever have much appeal in the West in the short term, so there is no incentive whatsoever for capitalists not to support their own hierarchies and authority and impose it everywhere so as to cement that lack of opposition, their wealth and their power.

“Solar radiation management”

September 10, 2019

Solar radiation management usually involves reflecting sunlight back into space to lower global warming. The cheapest versions of this proposal involve injecting particles or gasses into the upper atmosphere. The idea is it might give us time to reduce emissions, and reduce Greenhouse Gas levels in the atmosphere, through some kind of carbon removal technology which actually works at the kind of levels we need.

There are a few problems:

  1. We can only model the effects, and use those models to guide us in implementation. We will not know the effects until they arrive. Our models will always be out of date.
  2. Effects from this kind of geoengineering will not be immediate, so it will be even harder to judge what effects are arising from the technology.
  3. Some countries will suffer bad weather events after the process begins. We won’t know if they suffered those effects because of the process, because of climate change, or because of normal weather or a combination of all three.
  4. Some countries which suffer bad weather effects leading to famine or large scale destruction, might decide this is climate warfare against them – which could lead to conventional war. If not they would probably demand and deserve compensation, which would probably cause frictions between badly affected countries.
  5. We would have to have a world-wide agreement on this, and ownership of this, how it was used and what the effects are, to preserve peace and co-ordinate the practice. This is probably impossible.
  6. It will not stop the seas from getting more acidic, leading to ocean death, especially if it encourages delays to reduction of GHG emissions.
  7. It will be costly – not amazingly costly, but costly enough. If there is a world financial crash or war, then it could be discontinued, and climate change might “catch up” leading to more weather instability, and ferocity.

This is not a solution. But we don’t have a solution. This is a problem.

Psycho-Social Analysis of Destructive Politics

September 2, 2019

This is an exposition fantasy-summary of an article by Bobby Azarian, which strikes me as interesting, but needing a shift into the social. All the good bits should be assumed to be his, the bad bits remain with me. Everything in block quotes or double inverted commas (“ ”) is from the original article.

We can begin by noting that apparently destructive politics seems triumphant at the moment, with Trump in the US, Johnson in the UK, Putin in Russia, Morrison in Australia, Modi in India, Duterte in the Philippines, Bolsonaro in Brazil, Viktor Orbán in Hungary, Andrzej Duda in Poland, and the list goes on.

These are people who deceive, appear immune when caught out, refuse to engage in genuine discussion, ostensibly lack compassion and empathy, may encourage violence, overtly benefit only small sections of the population, put their nation explicitly ahead of the world, and, on the whole, ignore climate change and other disasters, even proposing, and boasting of, acts which will make those disasters worse. For these leaders, it appears that the prime mark of competence, in their ministers (and anyone else) is loyalty to them.


Azarian’s original article is about President Trump, but it is probably expandable.

So let’s see.

First off, there is nothing much to be said about the mental state of such leaders. In a sane, well adjusted, society, they might be dismissed and have relatively little popularity or power, but today they have both. So the question has to be directed at their appeal to the ‘collective mind’. There are some severe problems with the idea of a collective mind, and how such a mind might arise outside of common social experience; consequently I will try and emphasise, or reinsert, elementary social processes into the exposition.

This helps remind us that the problems are systemic and organisational, rather than individual; the factors we might point to interact in particular social contexts, in complex ways, and may produce unexpected results. That is the main divergence from Azarian.

Azarian states:

This list will begin with the more benign reasons for Trump’s intransigent support. As the list goes on, the explanations become increasingly worrisome, and toward the end, border on the pathological. It should be strongly emphasized that not all Trump supporters are racist, mentally vulnerable, or fundamentally bad people. It can be detrimental to society when those with degrees and platforms try to demonize their political opponents or paint them as mentally ill when they are not.

We can agree with that, so let’s avoid saying people with particular political dispositions are mentally ill, or in some way being abnormal or unusual. If there is a social mind (or collective consciousness), then it is widely distributed, ‘normal’, and socially influenced or even generated. If the problem is a collection of individually ill-minds then we will probably find those minds politically distributed all over the place.

So point by point.

1. Practicality Trumps Morality
These leaders tend to benefit the wealthy, the business sector, and sometimes the locally established Church, so no surprise they get support there. They also promise material benefits to ordinary people, and show a certainty which promises lack of anxiety. This can only work when people perceive themselves as losing out, and think that with these leaders the good times might be coming back. Another step towards making a version of ‘practicality’, the basis of morality, is the suppression of empathy towards those not in one’s in-group. Such empathy becomes defined as impractical. This shall be discussed in more detail later on.

It does not matter if the leaders seem immoral, as they appear to be strong and trying to benefit their people, which the normal system does not, and neither do normal politicians. Whether these people will stay with their leaders, when the benefits do not arrive is difficult to tell. However, they would have to know the benefits are not going to arrive, and they may never be able to know that due to the ‘mess of information’ (see below: point 7a), the discrediting of counter-information as disloyal, and with continual media bias towards the leader. People often seem prepared to wait a long time in political terms for promised benefits that may never arrive – say of free markets or communism. We start off with a wide spread social situation of alienation from ‘ordinary politics’, not a set of individual psychologies. Later discussion will try and explain this alienation.

2. The Brain’s Attention System Is More Strongly Engaged by Colourful leadership
All of these leaders are colourful. They engage the emotions, and bombard people with messages. Trump keeps both attention and emotional arousal high at all times. He uses twitter constantly. He generates fuss and reaction, which keeps him in view. Media, no matter how hostile, is focused on him, and its agenda is led by him. Putin is known for his bare chest and athletic feats, Johnson for being an eccentric and annoying his enemies. These people, largely keep themselves in the public eye, in a dominant and often hectoring position. They start discussions, even if they refuse to actually discuss and primarily engage in abuse or threat. They respond without shame, and gain attention. If something is going badly for them, they can largely ignore it, or shift blame and attention elsewhere.

If leadership is partly about being looked at, recognized, and setting the parameters of speech, then they are markedly leaders.

3. Obsession with Entertainment and Celebrities
This observation is obviously supposed to be primarily about the US, but I think the point is nowadays universal, and a celebrity is a person who has developed techniques of attracting attention and interest. So this is primarily a restatement of the last point, that the leaders are colourful, known, and gain media attention.

Celebrity has become a normal part of the ‘hype’ emerging from the economic system, providing guarantees of ‘star-power,’ sales, attention time, and excitement. “You are always left wondering what outrageous thing [the President] is going to say or do next. He keeps us on the edge of our seat.” As long as he discomforts whomever we identify as the villains, then this is fun to watch. It adds excitement to an otherwise staid, boring and probably depressing routine. It lifts people into another world, where change becomes possible, and identified enemies seem on the back foot.

4. “Some Men Just Want to Watch the World Burn.”
“Some people are supporting [these leaders] simply to be rebellious or to introduce chaos into the political system. They may have such distaste for the establishment” that their only hope is to rip it down. Yet this may not be entirely pathological, it could be that the system is dysfunctional, apparently oppressing, and ignoring, the leader’s supporters or the ordinary person. The supporters’ hope might be that good may come of ripping that uncaring system and dysfunctional system down. And if that is not much hope, then ripping it down is enjoyable and liberating, given how badly people have been ignored. ‘If I’m going down, so does everyone else. Suck on that, you creeps!’

Normally, people might glumly get on with things, figuring that if they get involved they may get hurt or lose out still further, but in this situation they perceive that someone is actually acting; they don’t have to do much other than vaguely support the actor at first. Later on, when it’s clear the leader is having an effect, they can get more actively involved.

If some form of instinctual psychoanalysis is correct, then normal society requires repression of anger, hostility and selfishness (even with legitimate cause), while the destructive leader liberates these drives against both the failing society and the out-groups that have been created (see below). This is especially so if their in-groups encourage both the suppression of empathy for others, and the possibility of imagining themselves in a similar position to the weaker people. Hence the popularity of destructive leaders finding a weak group such as refugees, or unemployed people and attacking them.

There is also the possibility that by participating in this right of anger and hatred, or directly in the process of harming those weaker than themselves, people may feel empowered, gain a ‘high’ and feel temporarily liberated, even if they are destroying their own lives in the process. This sense of liberation reinforces the sense that the leader is special.

4a. The Joy and Necessity of Self-Destruction

Freud hypothesized the Death Instinct to explain why people so often go against their real self interest and seem to gain pleasure from their own self-destruction. Christians posit the Fall and Sin, as the cause. Whatever the ultimate explanation, this is something anyone can observer for themselves, by watching people destroy their own lives and families for no reason that is obvious to the people involved.

In this short discussion we can suggest that some self-destructive urges arise from a confluence of several interacting factors, which should become clearer as we progress, such as: loyalty to a punitive hierarchy; emphasized in-group and out-group construction and polarization; suppression of empathy; suppression of awareness of existential threats (or substitution of more easily dealt with threats); information mess; a sense of relative deprivation; misguided attempts at total control, and being caught in a failing society that routinely does not deliver what it has promised.

Again this is a response to a social system which has lost its way as far as normal people are concerned. They have very little invested in its continuation; investing in its destruction by others, or by themselves, has potential.

5. The Fear Factor: Conservatives Are More Sensitive to Threat
It is possible that “the conservative brain has an exaggerated fear response when faced with stimuli that may be perceived as threatening.”

a 2014 fMRI study found that it is possible to predict whether someone is a liberal or conservative simply by looking at their brain activity while they view threatening or disgusting images, such as mutilated bodies. Specifically, the brains of self-identified conservatives generated more activity overall in response to the disturbing images.

Let us presume this is a continuum, not a binary: in other words there is likely to be a fair amount of overlap throughout the population.

Conservatism is likely to be distributed, and there is nothing conservative about these destructive leaders. This may need emphasising. They are not claiming to maintain the status quo, but to demand either a reversion to a distant and imagined time, or the liberation of new, or already powerful, forces in society. If, what we are discussing is a conservatism, then it is a radical conservatism that does not conserve.

Similarly, it is only certain ‘disturbing images’ that are found frightening or else people could fear their heroes. One question is whether people feel this fear, if they think the hurt is going to be delivered to other people in some kind of out-group. In general, destructive leaders do not encourage empathy towards out-groups.

This lack of empathy, not only helps separate the in-group from the out-group, but forms the basis of official morality. At best, it is implied out-groups do not deserve compassion or help, even if this is something that it is claimed the in-group might do in safer or more settled times. Empathy is supposed to be impractical and difficult. It constitutes a hallmark of those other out-groups who would attack the leader to benefit the dismissed out-groups at the expense of the in-group. Indeed, the commitment of the in-group might well be shown by its ability to be practical and harden its heart. Once that has occurred, then abuse and harm of out-groups becomes more possible and fear of the out-group can be largely unchecked.

5a Making the Outgroup

In-groups and out-groups are normal to human social processes; we always tend to value those people we are closest too and consider most like us, or related to us. They often tend to be graded rather than binaries; perhaps people may consider they are closest to their family, then their town, then the nation, and different to people from another town or nation depending on the context. People, are usually categorised as male or female, and supposed to have things in common with other males and females, although they may feel closer to the other-gender people in their family than same-gender people elsewhere. Again, these identifications vary socially, and in different contexts. There is nothing wrong with this.

However, constructing fiercely bounded in-groups and out-groups (perhaps separated by fear), is part of the work of a destructive leader. An ideal outgroup should be easily separable from the in-group, have relatively little contact with the in-group, be easy to identify, and not be very powerful. Hence, people with different ‘racial’ characteristics, or strong cultural markers (such as dress or exaggerated non-mainstream interests), and who are in a relatively powerless minority, make good out-groups. Cultural differences can then be portrayed as marking ‘savagery,’ ‘brutality,’ ‘cunning’ or otherwise despicable people.

If the out-group is powerful, then they can probably defend themselves, and so is hard to attack. If the out-group is powerful and look like ‘us’ (as, for example, ‘the 0.1%’ may well do), then they are doubly hard to attack, and serve little motivating function.

If there is a history of conflict between the groups, then this adds to the impetus. Laws and threats can be directed at the out-group to make more tensions between the mainstream and the out-group higher. For example, voting or citizenship requirements can be made more or less impossible for the out-group to satisfy. Law enforcement procedures can be harder on the out-group and put disproportionate numbers of them in prison. The out-group becomes nervous about the mainstream, which increases the friction and inspires more separation.

For full effect, the out-group, or some of their reputed cultural behaviour, should be made to inspire visceral disgust, as well as fear. That way people’s reactions involve less chance of rational consideration, and there is less chance they may reach out to the out-group. You might know a good person in the out-group, but if you generally feel disgust, then that produces less challenge to the categorisation in the first place.

By portraying, more or less powerless, out-groups as powerful and threatening (terrorists, ethnic minorities, religious minorities, people aligned with the other main political party, intellectuals, stupid people), the destructive leader’s supporters are wired up to avoid (often fictitious) threat, and will seek safety in the Strong Man. The fear also helps explain why the system is dysfunctional, because it is under threat from these supposedly powerful, disgusting or brutal, out-groups.

5b: Making the Ingroup

The destructive in-group should be relatively easy to identify, or quite broad to attract the maximum number of people. They should be bound by identity (at least in opposition to the despised out-group). They should be portrayed as strong victims, strong to give hope and victims to give anger. They are not to blame for whatever is going on, that is primarily the fault of the out-group. The leader should, in some way, exemplify their ambitions, while being special – this is quite hard. Boundaries should be policed, and people who visibly stray from the group should be punished as an example for the others. This is probably why the leader values loyalty, and makes an example of those who appear disloyal. Or perhaps, this is the leader’s normal mode of thinking, and he/she encourages that mode of thinking everywhere.

When split into sharply bonded in-groups and out-groups, and pushed by destructive leaders, hostility can increase so rapidly that it heads to violence faster than most people will expect – as in former Yugoslavia, or Rwanda. So we shall consider some of the factors that can increase divisions quickly.

6. The Power of Reminders of Mortality and Perceived Existential Threat

humans have a unique awareness of their own mortality. The inevitably of one’s death creates existential terror and anxiety that is always residing below the surface. In order to manage this terror, humans adopt cultural worldviews — like religions, political ideologies, and national identities — that act as a buffer by instilling life with meaning and value.

Psychologist Ernest Becker, named these kinds of worldviews, ‘immortality projects’. They are the views and acts which hide death from us, or mitigate its effects by proposing immortality, or something to thoroughly occupy our attention. This behaviour is clearly normal. When reminded of mortality through perception of threat then people will defend their prime cultural worldviews and immortality projects, and the future they promise. They may even intensify those views, in an effort to ward off, or conceal, the threat.

For example, threats of climate change can provoke responses which increase people’s aggravation of climate change, in an attempt to demonstrate and reinforce their cultural worldviews and their imagined future. People may well support ecological destruction so as to protect their cultural values or, on the other hand, they may have unrealistic expectations of the capacity of renewable energy to save their culture and life from crashing. Likewise, we may observe that when religious people feel they are under challenge, they may intensify the hardness of their views and their condemnation, and outcasting of sinners, apparently to get on side with God and guarantee their safe immortality.

in a study with American students, scientists found that making mortality salient increased support for extreme military interventions by American forces that could kill thousands of civilians overseas. Interestingly, the effect was present only in conservatives.

If the author had said ‘primarily in Conservatives’, then I might be more inclined to accept this, but categories are not always that precise, as I have argued above. We could expected some overlap. But let us assume, as a hypothesis, that constant awareness of threat from outgroups (especially out-groups identified as disgusting or brutal), is more likely to lead to support for violent responses against those out-groups.

By constantly emphasizing existential threat, [these leaders] may be creating a psychological condition that makes the brain respond positively rather than negatively to bigoted statements and divisive rhetoric.

People, in contemporary society, do face real and complex existential threats: from ecological damage, from collapsing economic systems, from collapsing welfare systems, from neoliberal workplaces that do not value them, from changing communities, from development projects, from entrenched high-level corruption, etc., and they do know about them, even if they suppress this awareness. The regularity of life and their immortality projects are threatened. So they are possibly increasingly likely to favour violent responses, if ‘good’ out-group targets are identified for blame.

7. Dunning-Kruger Effect: Humans Often Overestimate Their Political Expertise
The Dunning-Kruger effect applies to all forms of expertise that are important to people, not just politics. For example, engineers seem to routinely think they understand social science without training or study. People are often unaware they are uninformed, especially if they have not studied a field in detail. They don’t know how much they don’t know. They think they can understand complex fields with a few “common-sense” cultural axioms. Indeed, they are often right, cultural common sense is good at explaining things, that is why it is common; it just may not explain them accurately. People also think that “experts,” who retail theories at odds with cultural common sense are idiots – and sometimes, of course, they are correct.

7a Mess of Information

What I have called the ‘mess of information’, is socially generated confusion of information. Trust in the accuracy of information becomes largely influenced by people’s political allegiance, and the whole of society has been politicised during the rise of the destructive leader. Belief in particular kinds and sources of information, and a generalised distrust of information becomes a part of people’s self-identity as a member of some in-group or other.

False information and hype has become a standard feature of commercial practice, with companies smearing other company’s products, and promising that their unreleased products will be the best things on the market, to prevent sales of other products becoming established. Advertising is known to be untruthful, and is prevalent. Companies will prosecute people for ‘slandering’ or telling unwelcome truths about their products. Companies will dismiss members of staff who (even anonymously) express opinions which they consider detrimental to their profit, even if the statements are accurate. People know, and experience, that information is often biased and ‘interested.’

Many supposed experts give opinions which seem compatible with their employers’ interests, but not otherwise believable. For example experts have continually promised that tax-cuts for the rich will deliver prosperity for everyone, and still make those promises. WaterNSW can argue that huge extractions of water by big irrigation businesses, who are trying to farm high-water-use crops in near desert conditions, has no effect on river flows. Similarly, we can be told that unfiltered exhaust stacks for motorway tunnels have no health effects despite the large amount of medical evidence that suggests they do. And of course, we can be told we can keep burning fossil fuels without ill-effect, that we can keep on cutting down forests with no ill-effect, that we can over-fish without ill effect, that we can keep on pouring poisons into the environment with no ill effects, and so on.

It is possible for experts (as well as ordinary people) to live in a closed world, in which their agreed truth is taken for granted, and in those cases people who are not experts can have valuable insights. The clue is whether the experts take notice of those insights or blithely ignore them.

Real experts change their minds with evidence, but mainstream culture seems to insist that real experts will stick firmly to their position because it is right, otherwise they are considered to bend with the wind. This is a cultural and social problem of information. This problem is intensified by the tendency for people to believe people who are categorised as belonging their in-group, or to similar groups to themselves, or who reinforce what they already ‘know’. Information from out-groups is almost by definition wrong. This problem increases, the more in-groups and out-groups become separated by politicians and daily experience.

Knowledge is social. What is known, or considered true, is reinforced by other people who are valued by the knower. What people come to know, may distract them from evidence that might contradict that knowing. If a person primarily talks with their in-group, this reinforces their cultural common sense, and reduces their awareness of challenges to their ideas, ‘knowledge’ and facts.

We live in a society which encourages information overload, with deceptive information rendered normal as part of advertising and commercial action. Media organisations are excused from attempting to provide accuracy, because of political convenience and commercial ownership. As a result, data to support almost any position can be found with a bit of effort, especially data which supports established cultural common sense and reduces fears of real problems. There is too much information. We cannot evaluate everything, so we evaluate most of it through trusted others who appear to belong to our various in-groups. If the information comes from an in-group we consider it more trustworthy than if it comes from an out-group. This is the information mess. The Dunning Kruger effect implies that people almost certainly think they have the ability to navigate this mess, but actually do not – all the time.

In this kind of situation, if the in-group leader denies actual knowledge through simple cultural common-sense, especially if the knowledge fits in with experience and emotions, they are likely to be accepted as truthful far more easily than the scientist who is saying something difficult or complex, that is threatening, or which suggests the in-group is partially responsible for the problems they face.

A further problem with the mess of information is that an authoritarian hierarchy disrupts the flow of accurate information. Underlings will not want to be the bearers of bad news, and will tend to adjust information to mesh with the imagined desire of their superiors. People can be thought not to be committed if they give criticism upwards, or say the plans will not work. Whistleblowers who publicise the hierarchy’s corruption, veniality or stupidity will be punished, to make sure such disloyalty to the group, and its leaders, does not occur again. This hiding of knowledge and criticism, will happen all the way up the hierarchy. The people at the top will have very little idea about what is happening on the ground, or about how the system is not working, and will not be able to correct its faults, or mistaken actions. Similarly people at the top rarely find it necessary to explain the procedures and ideas that they are really using, while covering up their known failings and frictions with others on the same level, so those below have to imagine what is desired or intended by those above.

We could also ask where is it that people are going to get accurate information about their problems from? The media are corporately owned, so if capitalism or the corporate sector are the likely cause of problems, then this is unlikely to be covered. The same for any other ownership of media. And this problem becomes worse the more media ownership becomes concentrated, and the number of media owners decline. Furthermore, the destructive leader’s techniques of gaining support, may not come out of nowhere. In the US and Australia, the right wing commentariat have been using similar techniques, to the ones described in this article to gain celebrity, to persuade people, to build in-groups and out-groups to reward loyalty and to condemn those who disagree with them. In Australia we have: Alan Jones; Andrew Bolt; Miranda Divine; Janet Albrechtsen , Gerald Henderson; Paul Murray; Peta Credlin; Ray Hadley ; the list goes on. Destructive information distortion is already common (even if the information is true), and appears to come to cover up our real problems, through arousing passion and reflex condemnation. It also helps build loyalty to the commentator (and hence profit from advertising for the commentator) and a fear of looking for information elsewhere

In a quick summary we can make the following points. Self-destructive information mess in the kinds of system we have been describing arises due to:

  • Too much information to process, and information generated to support any position is findable.
  • Loyalty to an ingroup hierarchy.
  • Fear of loss of status, or expulsion, if challenging a punitive hierarchy.
  • Fear of loss of status, or expulsion if challenging the in-group’s beliefs.
  • Looking towards the in-group for confirmation and reward, rather than checking what is happening outside; what we might call internal vs external adaptation.
  • Guilt over breaking one’s ethical codes, and suppressing empathy, to stay in place or advance.
  • Reassertion of failing “immortality projects” against the out-group’s insistence they are failing.
  • Habituation by normal media styles of commentary – used to build audiences and keep people listening.
  • The pleasure of upsetting the out-group, and building status in the in-group overwhelms self-preservation or the ability to listen to others.
  • The immediate pleasure of suppressing anxiety about what the effects of what you are doing might produce.

Eventually the destructive authoritarian system grinds down in fantasy, unintended effects and unchecked destruction. And this is social.

8. Relative Deprivation — A Misguided Sense of Entitlement

Relative deprivation is:

the discontent felt when one compares their position in life to others who they feel are equal or inferior but have unfairly had more success than them.

Life is unfair and chaotic. People with less skills than you, will have more money and success, perhaps because of their parents and the inheritance of wealth, social position and contacts, or perhaps because of sheer luck. In other words success might be distributed by class of birth. As well, we might not understand what skills are needed to have success in a particular field, so this unfairness is reinforced by the previous points about the Dunning Kruger effect, and the information mess.

This relative deprivation can lead to resentment, which reinforces, and is reinforced by, point 4 “Some Men Just Want to Watch the World Burn,” especially if the person’s failure in life can be blamed upon the cunning or special privilege that has been given to some out-group (in reality or imagination).

This problem is increased by living in a society which promises us that happiness comes from endless consumption and acquisition, and that everyone can succeed if they work hard enough. Neither promise is always true, and acceptance of either can lead to desperation and disappointment. Then, life does not seem to be working out, or being satisfactory, when you have done everything you were expected to in terms of cultural common-sense.

This idea may imply that the middle classes are particularly prone to being seduced by authoritarian leadership as they are the ones who have suffered comparative decline and feel threatened from ‘above’ and ‘below’ <https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2016-13929-004&gt;. Working class people may tend to expect that the system is rigged against them, and not feel so much deprivation or threat.

9. Lack of Exposure to Dissimilar Others
This seems common in contemporary society.

Intergroup contact, or contact with members of groups that are outside one’s own, “has been experimentally shown to reduce prejudice”. The problem of prejudice may be compounded as people seem to increasingly be selecting to be with those who are ‘like them’ and obviously part of the in-group. It is exceedingly hard to maintain internet groups which are not dominated by one particular faction, and which engage in discussion rather than name-calling.

The idea is that voters for authoritarian figures, may have experienced significantly less contact with minorities, or out-groups, than other people have. They may also have gone out of their way not to mix with out-group others, as those others are scary, don’t make sense, or whatever. Being with people who are part of one’s in-group lowers uncertainty in an uncertain world. You know what to do, and what not to do, to be accepted, to not offend others, or to receive support and sympathy. You probably won’t have to deal with that much disruptive knowledge. In this case, people can be more easily convinced of the terror of others and the necessity of keeping in-group boundaries up. So this merges with point 5, “sensitivity to threat” and the manufacture of in-groups and out-groups.

10. Authoritarian Conspiracy Theories Target the Mentally Vulnerable

The link between schizotypy and belief in conspiracy theories is well-established, and a recent study published in the journal Psychiatry Research has demonstrated that it is still very prevalent in the population.

I don’t like this idea, that mentally ill people tend to be attracted to conspiracy theories.

There is a big problem here, as we could exist in a conspiratorial world. It is relatively well documented, that neo-conservatives ‘conspired’ to have a war with Iraq before 9/11 and got one afterwards, despite the lack of evidence implying Iraq had any involvement, and despite the inconvenient evidence of possible Saudi Arabian involvement. Evidence was manufactured, or distorted to give an excuse for the wanted war, whether deliberately or not.  Neoliberals spent years ‘conspiring’ to convince people that  ‘free markets’ (in which the main aim of governments is to support big business), deliver good results for ordinary people rather than funneling wealth off to the already wealthy, and setting up an even more thorough plutocracy. Politicians do appear to have lists of talking points, so they can appear on topic and unified (no matter how abruptly the points will have surfaced), and it can appear that some media goes along with this.

Ordinary people plan together, so why can’t powerful people plan, or take advantage of others’ planning, to have an effect on the world, which could be expected to benefit them?

All people like to make sense of the world. Conspiracy theory manages to link things which otherwise appear disparate, and provides an over-arching narrative giving the believer a sense of their place in the world with others, without subjecting them to the threat of randomness. Trump and other authoritarians are good at making what, looks to me, like fictional explanations, which distract people from their real oppressors (such as Trump himself). This is not new, and may particularly arise when planning has been giving benefits to the ruling groups which are not shared with others, and the harmful consequences of that planning can be blamed on the out-groups who opposed that planning, or who happen to be generally disliked.

Because the world is complex, it may need to be stated that plans do not always have the expected consequences. The second Iraq war did not make the US dominant and safe. It demonstrated that the modern US is defeatable (or can fail in fully extending its military might) and that it rarely has a taste for a long painful war of attrition. The US has great powers of destruction, but little power of holding onto what it has gained against popular opposition and it will create popular opposition.

11. The Nation’s Collective Narcissism

Collective narcissism is an unrealistic shared belief in the greatness of one’s national group.

I’d say this occurs when a group’s previously taken for granted superiority is challenged, and they don’t know what to do about it, and they never felt that powerful anyway. It’s a consequence of apparent social decline, or loss of hope in normal social practice.

People might see a previous ethnic minority climbing up the ladder to success while they, themselves, are in decline. There might be more people who came to the country as migrants, disrupting expectations about who one will meet, and how to behave. Women might get to speak, and put forward their views, challenging males who feel they are losing privilege and respect for no observable benefit for themselves (and are indeed losing respect and power because of actions from other sources such as neoliberal economics and corporate power).

Sometimes the group, which feels in decline, can, in reality, still be dominant, even if the majority of its members remain poor or relatively powerless, while they are told out-group members are secretly dominating everything and holding them back. The upper groups in the US appear to be primarily male, but feminists can be blamed for the average male’s sense of powerlessness. Scapegoats, and scapegoat out-groups, are usually easy to find, and the expulsion or destruction of the Scapegoat is a common human process – as it can help build unity amongst the expellers.

Rather than think deeply about problems outside cultural common sense, people tend to think they are being victimized. I’m not sure this process can be called ‘narcissism’. People do struggle and don’t get ahead and this really does generate a problem. That is the way class society works, and if out-group members appear to be taking positions members of the in-group might have normally been expected to occupy, then this generates resentment, yet again.

Left-wing identity politics, as misguided as they may sometimes be, are generally aimed at achieving equality, while the right-wing brand is based on a belief that one nationality or race is superior or entitled to success and wealth for no other reason than identity.

I’ve said that before as well. Must be true 🙂

However, this point is really a further elaboration of point 8 “relative deprivation”. People feel they have lost something, which was previously there, and this may have to do with the rise of an out-group.

12. The Desire to Want to Dominate Others
People like control, which is not surprising. Not being in control can be life threatening.
However, the point the author is making is that some people:

have a preference for the societal hierarchy of groups, specifically with a structure in which the high-status groups have dominance over the low-status ones.

Hierarchy is normal, and probably gives people a sense of place. It may give them a sense of life progression, if they think they can move up the hierarchy as they age, or make an effort to do so, giving them more control over other people and more status and respect. Humans like status and respect.

Hierarchy, might also mean that there were out-groups who previously had to give you respect, perhaps because they were oppressed. This rarely happens when social disruption is widespread or democracy has spread, and people are starved of status and respect, no matter how hard they have worked or served others.

Nowadays, with high rates of social change, older people are often treated as though ignorant of the contemporary world, with nothing to contribute. Their possessions and hard work have not given them what they expected. Their experience is revealed to be useless every time they try and work out a new remote control. Their kids know more than they do. It’s unfair. It leads to resentment, a sense of meaning collapse and provides a challenge to established immortality projects. People are more likely to be happy to tear things down, in the hope established meaning can be restored. Once again, they find, through their experience, the current system does not work or fulfil its promises. Cultural common sense is threatened.

Authoritarian leaders often reinstate the hierarchies, or the idea of hierarchy, forcefully, and hence appeal to the displaced, because they are implying that those people deserve respect again, and the possibility of advancement. All they have to do is follow and trust the leader.

However, when we live in complex societies, ecologies and climate systems that are changing, total control is, in reality, impossible. Unintended effects and consequences of actions are routine. The only way to appear to approach total control, is violence, suppression of contrary evidence, and complete fantasy. Still more authority appears to be needed to deal with the compounding divergencies from the aims of the control, and the systems keep getting harder to live with. The problems are not solved.

13. Authoritarian Personality

Authoritarianism refers to the advocacy or enforcement of strict obedience to authority at the expense of personal freedom, and is commonly associated with a lack of concern for the opinions or needs of others. Authoritarian personality is characterized by belief in total and complete obedience to authority. Those with this personality often display aggression toward outgroup members, submissiveness to authority, resistance to new experiences, and a rigid hierarchical view of society. Authoritarianism is often triggered by fear, making it easy for leaders who exaggerate threat or fear monger to gain their allegiance.

If we accept that the left is ideally about increasing equality, and opportunity for everyone who has been marginalised (workers, women, gays, previously despised ethnic groups) and the right is about enforcing hierarchy and authority, then this is, by definition a right wing position.

But it is a pointless truism to say authoritarian politics, appeals to authoritarian people. I don’t know what we gain from this statement at all.

I’m inclined to dismiss this point as contributing little to our understanding, other than a reminder that authoritarianism seems as normal a human response to life, as demands for participation and democracy. Everything else is explained by the functions of hierarchy.

14. Racism and Bigotry

Not every supporter of authoritarian and destructive leadership is racist. But it goes with the processes of finding scapegoats and out-groups to blame, and the fear factor.

Destructive leaders routinely appeal to prejudice as a solution to problems, and routinely try and shut down discussion between groups to increase prejudice, which indirectly increases the information mess. Once again, this is simply a technique of increasing the bonds of the in-group and making them feel threatened by, and superior to, an out-group scapegoat of some kind. It does not seem to be a new point.

15. Pathological Structures

This point is not in the article.

There is an argument that forms of organisational patterning, like corporations and dictatorships select for pathological personality types. For example, business may select for people who can sacrifice everything for money and power. Dictatorships select for those with a loose relationship to truth, and an easy brutality. Both types of organisation select for people with low levels of concern for others, or low empathy – hence what normal people may think of as moral behaviour is truncated in both situations – but the ordinary person has to go along with it, or their existence within the organisation is threatened. They may tend to believe they are only following orders, there is nothing much else they can do, and that those they are persecuting are not that valuable anyway, and probably deserve punishment.

These dynamics cause the organisations to be even more uninhabitable by mentally ok people, who have to react by leaving, or by becoming crazy to survive – and the more people who become crazy to survive the organisation, the worse it gets….

Corporations routinely exploit people and routinely treat them as expendable or disposable. In contemporary politics, government bodies have been forced to behave in a corporate manner, as is almost every other institution. This is neoliberalism in action. Everything hinges on profit, the “bottom line,” and the latest management fad. People are restructured every couple of years and have to learn new ways of doing the same work, rather than accumulating skills, expertise and respect. Workers are usually sacked in the restructuring process, for reasons which are never completely clear, and which therefore cause worry (and more work) for everyone. After they are sacked, people face harassment from the organisations which are supposed to help them survive and find new work. If you are old enough, you know the system no longer works as well as it used to. If you are young, the advice of your elders about dealing with the situation is massively out of date. As a result, very few institutions are not malfunctional. Very few institutions support human existence.

Why should anyone have loyalty to such institutions? Why shouldn’t they feel angry and threatened? Why shouldn’t they want to rip them down? Why doesn’t the experience of work, make them crazier than they might otherwise have been?

Our society sets itself up for a fall, and the authoritarian destructive leader, delivers.

Conclusion
Looking at all this, we are constantly coming back to: identity groups; loss of social meaning; perception, and suppression, of existential threat; challenges to (or loss of) immortality projects and routines; and the consequences of information mess. Society, and its hierarchies no longer function as they are supposed to according to cultural common sense. People rarely get satisfaction and status from adhering to normal social routines. Indeed, normal routines may seem pathologically destructive. The world both looks like, and feels like, it is falling apart. Social identities are challenged, and people feel they are being left out or suffering relative deprivation. This will generate discontent. And rightly.

What the authoritarian leader does is: attract attention, find compelling scapegoats, reinforce in-groups, and help alienate out-groups, while promising to tear down the tattered remnants of the corrupt, non-functional, society which gives people nothing, and which has alienated them from power,  work and satisfaction. He will restore their lost dominance and place. The mess of information and Dunning-Kruger effect reinforce this cultural common sense, and the information system gives prominence to the leader and furthers their ability to attract attention. This gives people hope. They don’t care that much about the leader’s morality, because the morality of the society they live in seems non-existent – and certainly does not benefit them. Almost anything is better than what they have now. They are content to watch the corrupt, useless system be destroyed, and even participate in its destruction; they may find this pleasurable as well. The leader, and they way he operates, may give them a pleasurable high, or sense of liberation, which reinforces their sense he is right.

All of these factors interact and reinforce each other, but they do not set up a stable system – and in a future post I hope to explore the ways that destructive leaders and the forces which support them can be overcome.

That is an explanation for what is happening, and yes it depends on the interaction between social process and human psychology. Not one or the other, but both.

Religious Freedom again

September 2, 2019

There was yet another article in the SMH today about protecting religious freedom. We still have not seen any evidence that religious people are being persecuted in Australia beyond occasionally facing questioning, and having their assumptions of moral superiority challenged, but the debate goes on – and its about the “information mess”, that I often write about, so here we are again.

And at the moment these comments, and presumably others, seem to have been suppressed at the SMH.

The “pro-freedom” author asserts:

“Religious freedom…, is not about a group of entitled, God-bothering zealots insisting on their civic privilege”.

The problem is that nothing in his article contradicts this imagined position.

Lets begin by accepting the reality that religion is important to many people, and that religion will always be important to many people. Following a particular religion, or not, may be one of the most important decisions in a person’s life; it may be the most frightening depending on their society or if their God is one of the threatening ones.

So let us be clear, Religion is important and should be protected – just like discussion and difference.

The author lists all the things the legislation would protect: such as a person’s right to remain employed, to have accommodation, education, or engage in sport. Doctors would not be personally forced to perform abortions, or commit euthanasia, etc. This is fine, good even.

However, the author objects to the proposed Bill because the bill only makes religious belief a “protected attribute” of individuals “akin to age, sex or sexual orientation,” and does not recognise religion as a “positive good” for everyone.

While religion may be a positive good for me, I’m not sure absolutely everything which can be classified as religion is a positive good for everyone. Mass human sacrifice? Religious terror? Religious war? Religious discrimination? Fear of eternal torture? These acts and ideas can be important to religious people, but why should they be protected?

Then the author slides into demands for the freedom of religious people to discriminate against others on the grounds of sexuality, gender, or marriage and what looks like a request to be able to offend, humiliate, intimidate, insult or ridicule other people on religious grounds. Offense might be fine, but these things can slowly shift into violence.

He wants Religious people to be able to *ensure* a person dies with huge suffering if religious people have any control over the sufferer’s body. He wants freedom for organisations to sack people if they marry someone of the same gender. Religious businesses should be able to break the law about discriminating against religion, by being able to sack people on grounds of their religion, and to refuse to serve customers because of their religion or other grounds. He presumably wants religious schools to be able to dismiss children on religious grounds as that keeps coming up from other religious people.

It is hard not to see all this as primarily about entitled religious people wanting privilege, and refusing to act with the general community. He gives no grounds for making exceptions to this position. If someone declares that truly religious people should be able to kill or assault people because they are of the wrong religion or gender, where does he stand and why? If people insist that their religion requires them to genitally, or otherwise, mutilate their children or other people’s children, where does he stand and why? If religions want to excommunicate or burn up businesses that deal with gay, black, people, or women, where does he stand and why? No limits are even suggested.

The lack of limits apparently stems from the idea that

Christianity and other religious traditions aspire through public outreach to strengthen communities. They need protection to conduct their public work in an authentic manner. To ignore the communitarian dimension of religious faith – as this bill does – strikes at the heart of the personal identity of believers.

But, the bill clearly does not stop people doing good works in the community, but if those good works involve discrimination, assertions of superiority, or attacks on the community, then perhaps they are not good works?

Perhaps the Author should read Matthew 6

“1: Be careful not to perform your righteous acts before men to be seen by them. If you do, you will have no reward from your Father in heaven. 2 So when you give to the needy, do not sound a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and on the streets, to be praised by men. Truly I tell you, they already have their reward.”

Jesus does not seem to expect that Christians should seek out flattery and recognition for Good Works – they should just do them.

The bill also does not recognise the social benefits of atheism, in atheists’ attempts to prohibit burning of heretics, enslavement of non-believers, wife beating, and so on. More sadly, the bill does not recognise the rights of atheists to exist. This is a problem – after all its easily possible to imagine that religious people will discriminate and persecute atheists as well as people from other religions or sects. We can repeatedly see how religious people accuse atheists of not having morals… even when the atheist is clearly holding a moral position such as “gay people should not be persecuted simply because they are gay”. But then if the mainstream Christian demand is that they should have the right to discriminate against Christians from other denominations, we can assume that atheists will get less protection than Cthulhu worshippers.

The bill is certainly not perfect, but it appears that some religious people will demand the privilege to harm others, and will not be satisfied until they can do this with impunity, simply because they say their religion (whatever it is) requires this, or justifies this.