Today’s Culture of Hate

I grew up in the 1950s, the Jim Crow era, where I saw bigotry and hatred first-hand on a daily basis.  Then came the 1960s, the time of ‘Peace and love’, the Civil Rights Movement, Martin Luther King and others who showed us the way out of the culture of hatred.  I thought we could only get better from there on.  I was wrong.  Never in my 72 years have I seen as much unwarranted, unprovoked hatred as we see today, both here in the U.S. and elsewhere in the world.  It is … depressing, to say the least.  Robert Reich is a better person than I am, or perhaps just better able to put his thoughts into words than I am, but what he has to say about the current culture of hate reflects my own feelings, though admittedly he is calmer about it all than I tend to be!


The corrosiveness of hate

The challenge ahead

By Robert Reich

16 October 2023

I’m trying not to despair, but the world seems awash in hate right now. In the Middle East. In Ukraine and Russia. In rabid anti-immigrant movements in Europe. Among some Trump followers, including Trump Republicans in Congress.

Threats are mounting against Muslim Americans and Jewish Americans. On Saturday, outside of Chicago, a 6-year-old boy was stabbed to death in an anti-Muslim hate crime. Threats of domestic terrorism are mounting.

Yesterday I saw a demonstration by students at a university that prides itself on free speech and inclusion, but the rally reeked of hatefulness and intolerance.

Tragically, hate is a huge motivator. “The whole secret of politics is knowing who hates who,” wrote Kevin Phillips, the political analyst who died last week.

I did not know Phillips well. We appeared together on various panels and forums over the years, so I heard a lot of his views about political strategy. I’m reluctant to speak ill of someone recently deceased, but it is important to understand Phillips’s legacy.

His 1969 book, “The Emerging Republican Majority,” was for many decades the GOP’s blueprint for how to win over white voters unhappy with the Democratic Party’s embrace of civil rights in the 1960s.

Phillips urged Republicans to link white voters’ racial anxieties to issues such as crime, federal spending, and voting rights, and make racially coded appeals such as “law and order.”

It worked — helping to produce Richard M. Nixon’s landslide victory in 1972, Reagan’s in 1980 (aided by Reagan’s condemnation of “welfare queens”), George W. Bush’s 1986 victory (remember “Willie Horton”?), and GOP majorities for decades.

Phillips’s politics of hate was the predicate for Trump’s politics of resentment and fear — Trump’s dehumanizing of immigrants and Muslims, use of antisemitic tropes, denigrating “globalists,” “coastal elites,” and the “deep state” bureaucrats, and attacking the mainstream media as “enemies of the people” and Democrats as “socialists.”

The politics of hate is central to today’s fierce divide between red and blue states — including Ron DeSantis’s and Greg Abbott’s wars on trans youth, “critical race theory,” women wanting to preserve autonomy over their own bodies, and undocumented immigrants.  

And it’s at the heart of the “great replacement theory” peddled by Tucker Carlson and other bottom-feeders in the right-wing media.

Rupert Murdoch and Roger Ailes built Fox News on fear and hate. Social media is now overflowing with it.

I have spent much of my adult life condemning haters (I repeatedly took on Phillips). But I do not hate them.

Hate is a corrosive. It consumes and devours those who practice it.

History shows that where hate is normalized, its poison seeps into the subsoil of a culture. It gruesomely distorts societies.

Brutality, fear, and distrust transform otherwise rational human beings into close-minded fanatics. People no longer listen to the “other side.” They view them as threats, enemies.

When hatred becomes entrenched, it can last generations. Haters pass their hatred and bigotry on to their children.

Yet today, too many politicians, both here and abroad, are fueling hatred for their own selfish purposes.

Real leaders stand up against hate. They reject bigotry. They denounce intolerance. They seek to bring people together rather than spur revenge and retribution.  

I’m often reminded of Abraham Lincoln’s words in his Second Inaugural Address, on March 4, 1865 — when the end of the deadly Civil War was in sight, when South and North were brimming with hate of each other, and when many on the Union side were eager to punish the rebels. But Lincoln understood his task:

“With malice toward none with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in to bind up the nation’s wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan ~ to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.”

Of course Hamas militants must be held responsible. So must Putin. So must Trump. So must those who are now threatening Muslim Americans and Jewish Americans, as must everyone who is blinded by hate.

In holding them responsible, though, we must make every effort not to fuel even more hate.


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21 thoughts on “Today’s Culture of Hate

  1. Jill, what troubles me is when hate is used as a selling point to go along with its companion fear. Fear sells, it always has, but hate greases the skids. Whether one’s first name is Adolph, Donald, Benito, Vladimir, Jair, Ron… we need people to ask them more questions. We should never forget Adolph rounded up the intellectuals as well as Jews, gypsies, gays, etc.

    Keith

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I blame the freeriders. Hate is easier. I don’t need concern what happens if I can hate you. I don’t much care that you hate me either. Love requires work, love requires sharing, caring. Love requires an interest in someone’s else’s wellbeing. Love is hard. It’s why anarchy won’t work.

    Liked by 3 people

  3. “Of course Hamas militants must be held responsible. So must Putin. So must Trump.”

    Not to play the blame game, but one cannot mention those three names witout adding Netanyahu. He is asT least as responsi le as the leaders of Hamas in the current Midfle East conflagration.

    As for the rest of it, we do not have enough good people stepping up to fight conservative/republican/populist viewpoints and talking points. Is it fear of retaliation, or apathy, or what. We need more people to take a stand and speak up. We need to say, Humans need to take care of each other, no matter what, instead of hating each other, because this us what humans do best!

    Liked by 4 people

    • From what I’m reading, about 80% of Israelis blame Netanyahu to a large extent. I’ll be surprised if he can hold his seat once the dust settles.

      Perhaps I’m not open-minded enough, but I’m not sure there are any ‘good people’ on the ‘conservative’ side of the the aisle. Humans seem bent on self-destruction through ignorance, greed, and arrogance.

      Liked by 2 people

      • I think there are always good people everywhere, some just get bad starts in life. But mostly, good people would be those who condemn conservative/republican/populist policies.
        But I do not mean that like Trimp tried to say about good people on both sides. I’m talking about people who find it impossible to hate. Such people do not carry Confederate flags, or bring weapobs to rallies.

        Liked by 3 people

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