Winston Churchill once said, "A young person who isn't a liberal has
no heart. An old person who isn't conservative has no brain." Indeed, it
seems pretty common to see passionate young people sputter and burn
out, get kind of cynical, and end up conservative in their middle-age
era.
I'm only 31, but I'm starting to feel the
tug. Not a serious tug, but I'm feeling the pull a little bit. And I
want to know why, so I've been thinking about it a lot lately. But it
was only with Robin Williams' death that I started to piece together
some cogent thoughts about it.
(My parents, who
are conservative, think this is maturity kicking in. I don't know that
I'd call it that. I think people confuse maturity with cynicism.)
So
let me explain the Robin Williams thing. My first thought when I heard
that Robin Williams killed himself - after the shock and sadness - was,
"Hold on a second. How many kids got kidnapped and sold into sex
slavery, or bombed by weapons we paid for, just since Robin Williams
died? Why are we as a culture crying over THIS one guy, while kids are
getting killed left and right and we just sigh and shake our heads? Why
all the consternation over this but not that?"
And
I shook my head because we are so shortsighted. We aren't affected by
these kids dying and getting sold because we haven't ENCOUNTERED them.
They never made an impact on US, PERSONALLY -- so the idea of them
getting killed is abstract. It doesn't hit close to home. It's just
vague, distant, general woe. Bad tidings from afar. It doesn't AFFECT us
because THEY don't affect us. But Robin Williams made us laugh, so the
end result is, we get sad when a 63-year-old dude kills himself but
barely spare a thought when an entire house full of Palestinian children
gets killed by a bomb we paid for. How awful. How unconscionable. What
is wrong with us.
And as I went to post about it
on Facebook, in my righteous indignation, I sagged. That's too obvious a
thing to complain about. Of course we're hypocrites. Of course our
priorities are messed up. Why bother joining the chorus of the Righteous
Captains Obvious?
That's when it hit me. This is the overture to the seduction of Conservatism.
Going
from liberal to conservative is the exact same path as the five stages
of grief. Here is the Liberal-To-Conservative Five Stages:
First,
you're in denial. This is when you're a kid and have the rose-colored
glasses and the world is a wonderful place, a simple place with good
guys and bad guys.
Second, you're angry. This is
when you're a teenager and early adult, and you are becoming aware
something is dreadfully, fundamentally WRONG with society. This is when
Rage Against the Machine does you some good. You detect the staggering
amount of BS that society is built upon, and you can't STAND it. It
offends the purity you are still used to insisting upon.
Third,
you bargain. This is when you're in that activism phase, early adult to
college. "If only" is your mantra, and you have all the ideas for how
things could be fixed. You're probably right, too. You try to find a way
to make it work.
Fourth, you get depressed. This
happens when you realize you begin to realize that humans pretty much
deserve whatever they get because we are a selfish and shallow bunch of
monkey-spawn who refuses to grow up. We start realizing, in the words of
Bob Dylan, that we "know too much to argue or to judge." We "let it
be." We start thinking we're wise now, transcending the whole affair by
being aloof and detached. We can't change anything, and we no longer
have the energy to waste on a hopeless affair.
Fifth,
we accept it. Human beings are hopelessly myopic and we can't change
it. Why continue to expend our energy and passion caring so fully about
something too huge to contain? We can't be responsible for the entire
world. It's far too tiring. Better to focus our energies on a small
group of people - the people who affect us. We no longer have room in
our hearts for Palestinian children getting bombed. We can't change it
anyway. We only have room for the Robin Williams in our lives. We focus
on that stuff; we push out the other stuff. We stop voting for the needs
of mankind; it's a waste of time anyway. We vote in our own
self-interest instead. And we have kids, who grow up to loathe who and
what we've become, who hate that we've stopped fighting the man and
become in the man out of our weariness. And we look down at them and say
with our sorrowful wisdom, "I was once like you. I guess I just grew
out of it."
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DISCLAIMER
TIME:Now this is a model that could be applied to other transitions -
not just liberal to conservative. I'm only using the terms "liberal" and
"conservative" to represent "convictions for change based on what's
good for society at large" vs "convictions based on what's good for my
group(s)." I'm aware there are some conservative libertarians who
promote their philosophy for the empowerment of society at large. I'm
adding this disclaimer so my younger, passionate conservative friends
don't feel like I'm calling them myopic and calloused. That's not what
I'm trying to say.
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I'm
currently at the tail end of Stage 4, verging on Acceptance. But there
are two acceptances. There is the "surrender" acceptance and the "zen"
acceptance. I'm choosing the "zen" acceptance - society is what it is. I
may be able to change it; I may not. Either way, I am going to stay
true to my outrage. I wasn't wrong when I got angry and listened to Rage
Against the Machine. I wasn't wrong when I tried to find ways to change
it. I wasn't wrong until my inability to make a vast difference got me
depressed. I'm only a drop in a bucket; but that doesn't mean I should
let myself be polluted.
And here I quote one of my favorite authors, Stephen R Donaldson...
"Mortal
lives are not stones. They are not seas. For impermanence to judge
itself by the standards of permanence is folly. Or it is arrogance. Life
merely is what it is, neither more nor less. To deem it less because it
is not more is to heed the counsels of Despair... We were not promised
ease. The purpose of life - if it may be said to have purpose - is not
ease. It is to choose, and to act upon the choice. In that task, we are
not measured by outcomes. We are measured only by daring and effort and
resolve."
So this is what I learned from Robin Williams, and how I answer Winston Churchil.