Daniel Willingham--Science & Education
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Nazis in Charlottesville

8/14/2017

 
Like so many other Americans, I am starting this week despondent about the weekend events in Charlottesville, Virginia. Yes, I work there and live nearby, so there was some poignancy in seeing events unfold in streets and near buildings I know so well. But more, it’s the bitter recognition of how far we have to go. Like others, I am certain that we’re not seeing a resurgence of racism, antisemitism, and chauvinism, but a more realistic look at what has always been there.

Educators might be particularly dejected. Have we not in some way failed? How can people believe ideas that are so self-evidently wrong? Are they that ignorant of basic facts? Are they that incapable of probing the soundness of the ideas they espouse?

Key tenets—at least those made public—of the organizer of Saturday’s rally are (1) white people are oppressed in America; (2) European culture is dying (3) the white race is “dispossessed.” (4) the solution to these so-called problems is what he calls “peaceful ethnic cleansing” which he apparently thinks can be squared with the Constitution. Readers of this blog will not need to be convinced that these ideas are factually laughable, so I won’t marshal evidence against them.

You can’t blame people for thinking that anyone who believes this nonsense simply closes their mind to facts and is motivated by ideology—an ideology that is plain evil. What good is education in the face of someone who closes their mind to facts?

I’ve put it crudely, but I think something close to this is right. Yet it’s worth trying to refine our understanding of the motivation of the Nazis* who gathered in Charlottesville.

People hold beliefs for multiple reasons. One—but only one—reason people believe things is in an effort to make their beliefs coordinate with reality, to be in line with the objective truth about the world.

People also hold beliefs to belong to a group, to maintain social ties. They believe things to regulate emotions. They believe things to promote and maintain their self-image. The believe things to protect values they consider important.

So for example, I might believe that a secret cabal of Jews runs the world economy because my close friends and family believe it; I hold this belief, in part, to maintain social ties. Now suppose I hear that some friends have threatened an elderly Jewish store owner in my neighborhood, which upsets a little, because he’s a nice old guy who has always been pleasant to me. I may adopt a new belief—the old man must be part of the cabal, or at least knows about it—as a way of regulating my emotions. I don’t want to feel bad for the store owner, and I don’t want to believe my friends are doing something wrong. So I start to have doubts about the old man.  

This is why persuaders work so hard to create doubt; doubt as to whether we know cigarettes cause cancer, doubt as to whether whether we know human activity changes the climate, doubt about whether we know GMOs are safe. If we doubt, that means there is not a settled reality out there in the world with which we must be sure our beliefs align. That allows the other influencers—emotion, social ties, sacred values—room to operate. We tell ourselves “no one really knows” and so we go with beliefs that feel right.

An important aspect of this situation is that is that we never admit to ourselves that we are influenced by anything other than facts. I may believe the science linking cigarettes to cancer is “unclear” because thinking that it’s clear, coupled with the fact that I smoke, makes me very anxious. But I’ll never say “I choose not to believe the science because doing so frightens me.”

This fact is our secret weapon. People actually want to believe what’s true. So if I could sit the Nazis down and present evidence that they are wrong about racial differences, they would change their minds? How much factual evidence is required to change an inaccurate belief obviously varies, depending the strength of the other motivators—to what extent to you believe something because it maintains social ties, is important to your identity, and so on.

It would be very very difficult indeed to persuade the people who marched in Charlottesville that their ideas about race, religion, immigration, history, the United States government, and many other things are wrong. But for each person who marched, there are likely hundreds or thousands who did not march but who read about these events and thought “Huh. Well, I see their point.”

These people might be reached. The children of these people might be reached.

The way to reach them is with facts, by building in them a habit of seeking evidence for their own beliefs, and with the skills to seek and evaluate that evidence. That’s the long-term goal of educators. So if you’re an educator, don’t lose heart. If you think your curriculum needs to do a better job on the history of the KKK, or Nazism, or the Constitution, or whatever, then work for that change. But in the main, keep doing what you’re doing. Every educator has learned, years after the fact, that he or she had a profound influence on a student, although at the time that was not at all obvious. The same principle applies here. You likely do not know the good you are doing.

In the shorter term, educators and non-educators can help by fighting fake news in all its aspects. Fake news stories are designed to provide what looks like objective evidence for a wished-for belief. Everyone has a friend or two on Facebook who reposts these stories. Don’t just roll your eyes. Let your friend know it’s not accurate.

Equally important, stand up for mainstream media sites that get it right. If you don’t already do it, support a newspaper you admire by paying for a subscription. Over the last decade I have been interviewed for hundreds of stories about education. With apologies to my friends in these media, my impression is that writers for television, radio, and magazines all, to a greater or lesser extent, worry about entertaining their audience. In my experience, newspapers are the only medium where truth is the primary concern. You know newspapers are struggling. Do your small part.

Truth is our greatest weapon against senseless evil. Fight with it. Fight for it. And don’t be discouraged.
 
*I’m aware that not all of the marchers would call themselves Nazis and I’m aware they varied in the degree to which they were coy about their veneration for Nazism. I tend to paint racist, antisemitic xenophobes with a broad brush. It’s a personal failing I’m not really working to correct. 
Tarjinder Gill
8/14/2017 03:29:28 pm

I think the only way forward is not just with education but actual debate. The growth of no-platforming has robbed the public of necessary debates, arguments and presentation of evidence.

I don't think it's good enough to just say "we are right, racism is wrong". While the Neo-Nazi argument is blunt enough, it doesn't apply to all the alt-right. Neither can their arguments be assumed. The gulf between the ones that I have heard and their depiction is huge. It's that which needs to be narrowed and fought.

The "anti-racist" movement lacks coherence and a strong argument, and sends out contradictory messages about integration/segregation and race. Richard Spencer mirrors the Black Lives Matters rhetoric to a t. He exploits the hypocrisy on matters of race and this needs to be understood to be challenged. Calling him names might make people feel good but it doesn't stop him reaching his audience.

This all requires a degree of self-examination and ability to allow discussion and debate of difficult and at times painful topics. It also means halting the rise of "activist" teachers who believe they are entitled to give their "correct" political interpretation over evidence and facts (the spreading of fake news does not belong to just the alt-right).

If we are not able to explore issues from a range of views and help young people to understand why we have come to the conclusions we have about racial equality then we should expect extreme movements of all kinds to fill the void with half truths and conspiracies.

Dan willingham
8/14/2017 06:36:43 pm

YES. More on this later this week.

Kate
8/14/2017 08:07:45 pm

Well said, Tarjinder Gill, and very true.

Mabel
8/17/2017 05:23:10 am

That is the heart of the matter very well argued, Tarjinder. If only the platform upon which reasonable debate becomes possible were as open and accessible to all of humanity.

Kelly
8/14/2017 06:07:51 pm

This is a really nice and thoughtful piece, Dan. Thank you for sharing.

Barbara
8/14/2017 07:54:51 pm

Well said. Thank you, Dan.

Jennifer Thompson
8/14/2017 08:38:58 pm

Dan, thank you for your post. I attended one of your breakout sessions at the NH Summer Educators Summit last week during which you addressed how we might help students strengthen their online media analysis skills ("Helping Students Think Critically about Fake News, Real News, and the Difference Between Them"). During your explanation of why people might hold certain beliefs even if they are based on misinformation and propaganda, I was thinking about people who hold beliefs like those who marched in Charlottesville. I've been in the maddening, frustrating position of producing verified, widely circulated and generally accepted evidence of the Holocaust to a white supremacist, but it was like hitting a wall. As you wrote above, that person cannot be reached--even with facts.

We can equip our students with the courage to face and openly, publicly denounce ignorance and twisted facts. Unfortunately, however, teachers have come under fire for that as well, as has happened to me even in my little NH school. I hope that you will continue to post on this subject.

Stephen G Kennedy
8/14/2017 09:05:22 pm

This is beautifully stated, and well articulated. As a retired educator, I hope that teachers will speak strongly and rationally for "real" history, and help students think clearly for themselves. At the same time, we have to realize how much parents influence their children -- and how limited logic can be in the face of bias and feeling. Students can be caught between a beloved teacher and their parents -- this is not to soft-pedal the teaching, but to keep the student's heart at heart. Teachers, too, need to be strong with and for each other -- confronting with kindness the biases they hear in the lounge and whispered in meetings. History is made at crossroads that occur daily -- educators can determine whether we take a healthy or a dysfunctional road at many, many moments. Thank you for your myriad contributions, Dr. Willingham.

Ken link
8/14/2017 09:56:09 pm

Thanks, Dan, for providing vision through the fog that is Charlottesville. Smartly written, I am grateful for your message to educators as this will most certainly be a sensitive topic that must/will be grappled with when our doors open next month.

David Fortin
8/15/2017 08:06:56 pm

Hi Dan---thanks for this--I plan on sharing with my colleagues...

I do wonder though, given the resignations from presidential advisory boards (Richard Trumka of the AFL-CIO just resigned today), the president's comments today and your being there, if you'll consider stepping down from the Nat Board of Ed Sciences. While we need your voice at the national level for ed, there's also a red line that the president's policies must cross making one's presence on such a board untenable.

R. Craigen
8/16/2017 01:40:01 am

You miss a few salient facts about Kessler, the fellow behind the Unite The Right event. Namely that he was involved in the far-left Occupy Wall Street protests and that he was an Obama supporter.

Notwithstanding a crazed individual's singular murderous action on that day, there was a pretty even share of violence, hatred and incitement on all sides present there.

Conservative groups repudiated the rally and its leadership well in advance of the event and have spent the past few days engaging in ritual re-denunciations of those groups. However I see little in the way of corresponding formal denunciation of the hate groups that came armed to the teeth to clash with the fascists, white supremacists, etc. Antifa and BLM members were eager and more than willing to incite, ramp up and participate in street violence. It was clear to those reporting (and honestly reported by a few) that this is why they were there.

For myself I don't take denunciations seriously if they simply fall on one side and fail to acknowledge the reciprocal ugliness on the other -- or worse, apologize or diminish it. This is not a time for political opportunism but for clarity, and a commitment to tell the WHOLE truth.

K. Hall
8/16/2017 04:19:26 pm

Thank you R. Craigen for stating the truth as our President has attempted to do, over and over. If we ignore or excuse one source of hate and violence while attacking and telling the truth about the other, do we not just help to grow support for the one we attack? The White Supremacists are gleefully touting their recent large growth in numbers; is that not chilling enough to cause us to take a second look at why the media continues to excuse violent Left extremists, as they have been doing since the numerous violent events before the election. Lets tell the whole truth. It will keep us free and in one piece as a country.

Francesco Rocchi
9/3/2017 09:36:08 am

I also would like to thank prof. Willingham for this post. I work as a teacher in Italy, where we are also experiencing similar problems (as anywhere else in the world, or seemingly so, sadly).

It's really despairing to see students, who I often admire for their intelligence and wit, following and endorsing absurd or simplistic ideas they grabbed from the tv or social networks. And the feeling of not being able, quite often, to show them that what they believe is plainly false (for the reasons very well explained in this post) is obviously quite frustrating to me.

So frustrating that I wonder whether it is always a good idea to tackle and debunk these ideas directly and "frontally", so to speak. Since people (including students) are likely to reinforce their beliefs when they see them challenged, I wonder if it is possibile to leave general principles aside for a second (no more than a second!) and have our interlocutors focusing on details which do not challenge their belief as a whole, but might leave some seeds of doubt.

As for the example of the elderly Jewish store owner, it could be a good idea not to start from debunking anti-semitism in general, but from asking our students if it is conceivable that the man was not part of the cabal. I do not mean by this that teachers should refrain from condemnation of antisemitism or, even worse, give the impression they might give such a stupid idea any credit...I only mean that it could be good, at least sometimes, to "attack from another direction", before systematically debunking false myths and fake news (which remains essential).

If we cannot convince them straight away, they might convince themselves on the long run, if we help them not to get sclerotised in their beliefs.

We sadly cannot expect our students to drop their wrong ideas all of a sudden, but we might help them keep their minds open to sensible suggestions...or at least I hope so.

Karen Byrd
9/5/2017 01:14:20 pm

Thanks for your article - I appreciate it.
I retired from teaching middle school last June. About 18 months ago I interrupted two 7th graders at 7:45 am who were running through the halls shouting "Heil Hitler." I immediately showed them a picture on my phone of my Jewish 3 year old grandson (adorable) and asked if they wanted to kill him. The students were shocked. I explained that Hitler had wanted to kill him and had in fact killed many just like him. I explained that if they say "Heil Hitler" many will believe that they want to kill little boys just like my grandson. After they said they didn't want to kill anyone, I suggested they write an apology. One boy brought a written note to my homeroom about 20 minutes later saying he wouldn't say that again.
I expected a call to my principal or some kind of reaction to my emotional response to these boys, but none ever came. In retrospect I think that perhaps my reaction was spot-on. We do need to teach our students that "Heil Hitler" is equal to any other death threat. I think that making it personal may actually help teens understand why this is a big deal.

Marnie Ginsberg link
9/7/2017 02:47:25 pm

Very smart action, Karen. Thanks for sharing that strategy...


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