Hidden Brain - A Conspiracy of Silence
Episode Date: April 15, 2022We all self-censor at times. We keep quiet at dinner with our in-laws, or nod passively in a work meeting. But what happens when we take this deception a step further, and pretend we believe the oppos...ite of what we really feel? In this favorite episode from 2020, economist and political scientist Timur Kuran explains how our personal, professional and political lives are shaped by the fear of what other people think.If you like this show, please check out our new podcast, My Unsung Hero! And if you'd like to support our work, you can do so at support.hiddenbrain.org.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
All of us have had moments when we censor ourselves.
A friend says something, we disagree, but instead of arguing, we smile and hide our discomfort.
We go along to get along.
There are times though, when we carry this deception a step further.
We don't just smile and go along, we actively pretend we believe
the opposite of what we really think.
Why would we do that? Maybe we're attending a wedding and our hosts have prepared a
special meal. We don't like it, but we say it's great. We feel it would be hurtful to say what we really think.
Or maybe there's a new initiative underway at our company. We hate it, but we recognize that management won't look kindly at the centers.
So we pretend to like the plan.
At a larger scale, perhaps our country is doing something we'd detest.
But protesting can get us in trouble with powerful people.
So we pretend to be supporters.
There are also times when we are the ones causing others to hide their true beliefs.
We are the hosts of the wedding, or we are the ones who are enthusiastic about a new initiative
at our company or a new policy
in the country. Others pretend to agree with us because they are afraid of what we might think of them,
afraid of what we might do. This week on Hidden Brain, how our personal, professional,
and political lives are shaped by the fear of what other people think.
I would bet that 95% of the people on this side of the aisle support intellectually this amendment.
And a lot of them would vote for it if it came to vote.
But no, no, no, gosh, we might poke the bear.
If the present gets upset with us, then we might not be in the majority.
And so let's don't do anything that might upset the present.
Many economists study how people's choices reflect their inner preferences.
If I like one product rather than another, I buy the product I like.
My behavior reflects my preferences.
Over the past several decades, Duke University economist and political scientist Timor Quran
has studied how our outward behavior sometimes does not reflect our inner preferences. The rupture
between our inner thoughts and outward actions has profound consequences in our personal and
professional lives and in our politics. Timor Kharan, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thank you for inviting me. I'm wondering if we can start with a very simple example of this
phenomenon that you've studied for so many years to more.
We all go over to friends and neighbors' homes for a dinner party or for a birthday party.
What happens in the course of these conversations that reveal this idea you're talking about
where our inner thoughts don't always manifest in our outward actions and behavior?
Well, sometimes when we go over to friends, we have to jointly decide what we're going
to do together.
And sometimes it so happens that the group perceives that everyone wants to watch a movie
when actually no one does or few do.
So people to appear cooperative say that they would like to watch a movie and everybody
ends up leaving the event dissatisfied or less satisfied than they could have been. They've
watched a movie when none of them really wanted to spend the evening that way.
And I feel I have been to dinner parties where I have not necessarily had the greatest time
of my life, but when you leave, you don't tell your host, I really had a boring evening,
you say nice things, in some ways your outward behavior does not necessarily reflect how
you feel on the inside.
And in the process, you miscommunicate what you generally enjoy. So you may be giving your host and other guests,
perhaps who are leaving at the same time, that you're the type of person who loves to watch movies.
And maybe the same episode will occur again at the next gathering at somebody else's home.
Everyone's expectation will be that this is a group
that loves to watch movies,
so the inefficiency will perpetuate itself.
Simply because all the guests,
just like you have said to the host
that they had a good time,
so the problem doesn't correct itself.
Some years ago, I think you were at USC, I believe,
and you have a story about how the same behavior
manifests itself in our professional life.
If I recall correctly, the economics department
was looking to diversify the staff
and bring on more women onto the faculty.
Tell me what happened in private conversations
and in public conversations around that issue.
The department was under pressure to hire more women.
There was a great willingness on the part
of most members of the department to do this,
but there was a sense that if we limited ourselves to looking
at women or had decided in advance to hire a female candidate, that we might be making
a mistake, and that we would be sacrificing quality, this was not voiced, however, these concerns were not voiced in the department meeting,
they were voiced in private conversations and when we actually started deciding and in the
presence of everyone else, nobody voiced the objections that were quite commonly being voiced
privately. I want to look at one third example before we tie all of these together.
You grew up in Turkey and your family was a decidedly secular family and you
believed in the secular project of Turkey. But there was something happening in
the country at the time that you were growing up and you were a child that you
didn't quite realize. You didn't realize that there were people who actually had deep disagreements with the
way you and your family looked at the world and looked at the future of Turkey, but they
were not voicing those disagreements, but those disagreements were actually just under
the surface.
Can you describe to me what happened?
It's those disagreements you were referring to're actually quite widespread, but they were not being voiced among secular intellectuals and secular leaders at the time when I was growing up in Turkey
in the 1960s and the 1970s, a form of assertive secularism, which was not simply the separation of church and state,
or in this case, mosque and state,
but the control of religion by the state
and the repression of religion.
You could not be hired by a state agency
if you were a woman and wearing a headscarf.
This was generating enormous resentments,
and there were people who could see
that these resentments were building up
and that they would explode and that they could backfire,
yet they could not voice these
because opposing this measure would be perceived
as being against Turkey's modernization process
being anti-western.
So we looked at these three different domains, the interpersonal domain, the professional
domain, the political domain, and even some ways connected these different things together
into a common phenomenon that you call preference falsification.
What is preference falsification tomorrow?
Preference falsification is the act of misrepresenting one's wants
because of perceived social pressures.
And it aims specifically to manipulate the perceptions of others
about one's motivations or dispositions. Preference falsification is the form of lying,
but one aimed at disguising your true preference and also the information that underlies that
preference. Now some people might say it sounds like self-sensorship, but you argue it's not quite the same as self-sensorship.
It's broader, because preference falsification can take the form of actively pretending
that you have a preference that is quite different from the preference you privately have.
You may express your private preference to your spouse, to a close friend, and in public
project a very different preference.
That's preference falsification.
It's not simply going quiet.
It's not simply deciding not to enter the conversation.
It can involve entering the conversation on the opposite side of where you would like
to belong.
To more as studied societies with widespread preference falsification,
now the phenomenon can be hard to spot because people don't go around waving a flag
saying that they are falsifying their preferences.
The point after all is to misrepresent how you really feel.
But one way to spot it is when one regime comes to an end
and a new one suddenly springs up in its place.
That's what happened in East Germany in 1989,
when the Berlin Wall came down.
Thousands of East Germans came across the border today,
perhaps more than a hundred
thousand. So many that border police lost count. So, Timor, you've done some work looking
at the Soviet Union and the satellite states of the Soviet Union before and after, and
somewhere is the demise of the Berlin Wall. In East Germany, what did we see before the wall came down? What did we see after the wall came down?
Before the wall came down, very few people would actually admit
to having been sincere supporters of the regime that fell. It became hazardous to admit
that one sincerely believed in the regime. You tell the interesting story of a New York Times correspondent who went to Eastern Europe.
I believe the story may have to do with Czechoslovakia, not East Germany.
Tell me that story and what the correspondent found before and after in some ways the demise
of communism.
After several East European satellites of the Soviet Union fell in quick succession,
the New York Times was full of stories about people who could finally speak the truth after years
of falsifying their preferences and falsifying their knowledge.
They finally felt free to criticize the regime, and every day
the paper was full of stories about people who finally felt liberated. Well, it occurred
to the New York Times after several weeks that they hadn't really covered the former establishment,
the Communists. So they sent one of their reporters to Czechoslovakia to see how Communists were
fairing and what they thought about the changes that were taking place. And in his first article,
he sent from Prague, said, well, I went looking for Communists and I couldn't find a Communist
anywhere. And people who had made a career by rising in the Communist Party, running communist
organizations, they were now all saying that they were not really communists at any point,
that they were simply playing along in order to advance, in order to feed their children,
in order to have a roof over their head.
And you see the same thing, of course, in other countries, which are not necessarily divided
on, you know, on the lines of communism versus capitalism, you know, after Saddam Hussein
fell in Iraq, it was hard to find people who were fans of Saddam Hussein. When a few weeks
earlier, it was very hard to find critics of Saddam Hussein in Iraq and probably the same thing in China before and after the revolution. You see the same
patterns in other countries too. Oh absolutely and in China the people who had supported the cultural
revolution wholeheartedly denied that they did that after the regime fell. In Iraq people serving Saddam were doing so for the same reason that many
checks and many East Germans and many Poles served their communist regimes without believing
in the regime. from the preference walls
fires.
When we come back, how leaders create preference falsification among their followers and how dictators
can get millions to fall in line.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
To more Quran is the author of Private Truths Public Lies, the social consequences of preference
falsification.
He points out there were many political dissidents in East Germany before the Berlin Wall came down, most preferred to remain in the shadows. After the Wall
came down and the Communist regime crumbled, there were many East Germans who still felt
loyalty toward the old regime, but now, with the tide turned, it was the turn of these
Communist sympathizers to remain silent, to hide their true beliefs.
Tomorrow I want to talk about how authoritarian regimes create the conditions for preference
falsification and I want to jump forward from the 20th century to the 21st century.
In 2013, the world woke up one day to news from North Korea.
This morning, North Korea.
Can you talk a moment both about what happened in North Korea if you remember that incident
tomorrow, but also about the larger idea about the strategic use of violence in order to enforce
preference falsification?
I do remember that episode one of its effects was to make North Korea's dictator signal that absolutely anyone could be punished and
punished severely for this loyalty. If Kim can execute a relative and do so without
any due process, we could do this to anyone. Authoritarian regimes like that of North Korea,
the limit descent or eliminate descent entirely,
also by blocking the emergence of a civic society.
Individuals are not allowed to form groups that have any autonomy.
The state controls everything.
A second measure that these regimes used is to give people the sense that they are always
being watched.
There are cameras everywhere, there are informants everywhere, and people are encouraged
to send information to the regime about signs of the scent to give the sense that no one is immune.
No matter how small your community, no matter how useful you are to the regime, no matter how close you are to the dictator himself,
you are not immune. If you are disloyal or you signal that you might be disloyal, that you're sympathetic to the centers, you will be punished.
You will be punished.
You know, I am remembering a video from that incident that was probably circulated by state media. And if I recall correctly, it showed Kim's uncle.
You know, this was a major party gathering with hundreds and hundreds of senior people in North Korea gathered.
And Kim's uncle was basically
grabbed from this big meeting in full public view of all these other people,
taken outside the meeting and was shortly thereafter given a trial, quote unquote a trial,
and then shot. You could argue if Kim wanted to get rid of his uncle, he could have put his
uncle on trial or had his uncle arrested at his home
and then, you know, had a trial and secret and done all of this in hiding.
But in some ways, the very visibility of what happened that you could not just take
North Korea's number two man and have him executed,
but you could take him from this meeting of all the dignitaries of North Korea,
really sent a signal in some ways that no one
was safe.
I wanted to talk for a moment about the theatricality of the violence that is often necessary to
enforce this kind of preference falsification.
The choreography here includes not just the audacity of dragging Kim's uncle out of this gathering,
but the fact that nobody in the audience objected.
Everybody, and these were powerful people,
were part of the North Korean regime.
There were military leaders, there were industrial leaders,
there were major political leaders.
Nobody lifted a finger to defend the uncle.
This is part of the theatrics.
To demonstrate to the entire nation
that if you are the sloyal,
if you do anything that threatens the regime,
nobody will come to your help because everybody is living in fear.
This is part of the system of control. Saddam did something very similar,
except it was even more dramatic. In one of the party congresses, he identified somebody in the audience, had them dragged out and shot in the hallway,
and the entire party congress heard the shot
and nobody made a move.
And that was Saddam's way of communicating the same message.
And of course, this was very widely publicized for the same reason that Kim White, the same message, and of course this was very widely publicized for the same reason
that Kim widely publicized his execution.
So we imagine that in totalitarian states, the powers that be hold on to power through
ruthless acts of violence, like we've just been talking
about. And of course, this is true, but you say this does not explain how widely preference
falsification is practiced. And in some ways, if you looked at the prison population, for
example, of the of the old Soviet Union, you don't necessarily see a huge number of people
in prison. In other words, you don't need many, many examples of this kind of violence
to actually have preference falsification multiply itself across an entire society.
No, you don't. Of course, there were periods in the Soviet Union of massive violence under
Stalin. There were millions of people who were either executed or sent to the Gulag Archipelago
in Siberia. This does happen, but when we look at the Eastern
Europe as a whole and if we look at Soviet history, we see periods when there was actually
very little violence. The violence committed earlier was enough to keep people in line, you just needed to punish people occasionally. And there was the case of
a high-level person in the East German Secret Service who was found guilty of something and he
was demoted to being the doorman. And this was a visible reminder to everyone every day as they entered the big building of the German Secret Service of what could happen, how you could lose all your comforts and all your privileges. of Eastern Europe, like Chakrasovakia, where there was actually very little violence that prisons
did not have an especially large number of political prisoners, what kept the system going
is that people were expected to turn on dissidents and to avoid befriending them, even if they agreed with them. So when Vatslav
Havel, the famous writer and later the president of Czechoslovakia and then later president of
the Czech Republic, when he and a few friends of his signed the declaration called Charter-77, which asked the Czech Republic
essentially to respect certain human rights. The government launched a campaign of vilification
and expected citizens to participate in it. Millions of people, including school children,
wrote letters to newspapers,
condemning these traitors, these monsters,
and the people who signed the declaration
lost many of their friends.
There were people who, when they saw them walking down the street,
they moved to the other side. So, it was not to have to say hello to them. So, what sustained
these East European regimes was not just the punishments that were delivered by the regime. It was not just the oppression of the regime, but it was actually people helping to vilify the enemies of the regime or the a result of the fear they feel from the top, in some ways they're
becoming enforcers themselves and in some ways that's how the system perpetuates. The system
perpetuates itself by turning the victims into victimizers and everyone becomes complicit in
this system of oppression which also creates a great deal
of guilt in people.
One of the reasons why Vatslav Havils' friends would move to the other side of the road
when they saw him coming is that it gave them pain to have to ignore what's love, not say hello to him, or as the case might be, to have
to say something insulting to him when they actually deep down they admired what he was doing,
and they felt ashamed that they were not part of this group of dissidents themselves.
this group of dissidents themselves. So each act of conformism, each act of preference falsification that is undertaken to buy some comfort becomes a burden on everyone else.
It makes everyone else feel the need to issue similar signals.
So one of the profound implications of this theory
is that it helps explain something
that seems mysterious otherwise,
which is when you look at different societies,
the speed at which revolutionary change can sometimes unfold
is often staggering.
So even we talked about East Germany earlier,
more than
three quarters of East Germans had not foreseen that the fall of communism was coming.
Most people believe the regime was stable. Can you talk about this idea of how preference
falsification in some ways conceals vulnerabilities in societies and allows in some ways for revolutionary
change to happen? This was true in your own native land of Turkey.
It's true in the Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979.
It's true in China.
Many other places, the speed of change,
can be explained in some ways by the extent of preference falsification.
Yes, in these repressive regimes,
there are millions of people who are doing what is expected of them
to signal that they are supporters of the regime when they actually are dissatisfied, but
they don't reveal themselves.
While they are becoming increasingly dissolutioned,
they are still going along, they are still informing on others.
But if a few people get to the point where they do say enough is enough,
you get to the point where you're ready to jump in.
But we don't know until movement gets going,
we don't see that actually the potential is there. So even
the CIA did not see the East European revolutions coming. The KGB did not see this. The dissidents
themselves did not see it. As the signs of the approaching revolution
started to multiply, what stuff Havill was asked
whether a revolution was coming.
And he said, let's stop dreaming.
He didn't see it coming.
And this is true in some ways of your own family's experience
in Turkey tomorrow.
I mean, your family in some ways, as we discussed earlier, were decidedly secular.
They believed in the idea of a secular Turkey.
They believed that this would be the regime going forward.
Your family failed to see what was coming down the pike.
This is correct.
And when I was growing up in Turkey, I failed to see what was coming in. I failed to see the
resentments that were building up. I bought into the notion that there were some
obscurantists or very conservative Muslims who were backward thinking but with modernization their numbers would diminish
and education would solve the problem there was nothing to worry about. I did not
see at the time the pain that this was generating and the many resentments that it was generating that would cause huge problems for Turkey down the road.
Your scholar of Islamic studies, besides the other work you've done, and one of the interesting things you've looked at recently,
is the rise in some ways of atheism in many parts of
the Muslim world.
Can you talk a little bit about that?
Because again, that's the flip side of what you've just described, happened in Turkey.
What is the data show in terms of what's happening underneath the surface in many Muslim majority
countries? majority countries. The percentage of atheists and deists, people who classify themselves as
believing in God but not in Islam is rising and the figures are startlingly high even at religious schools, they are in double digits. In Iran, religiosity has fallen
dramatically. The evidence from Saudi Arabia shows rise in the percentage of
atheists and people who have secretly converted out of Islam. None of this, of course, gets captured in public statistics, and you won't see it in outward behaviors.
But actually, what happened in Turkey is now happening in reverse. In the middle of the 20th century, it was genuinely religious people who were hiding their
religiosity and pretending to be secular. Now there are many people who are actually secular,
who are pretending to be religious, or who no longer believe in God, or who no longer believe in God or who no longer believe in Islam but are pretending
publicly to do so. Fear has changed sides and the form of religious preference
falsification has changed sides. It's just the same phenomenon but the opposite
side is benefiting.
We've looked at preference falsification in North Korea, the Soviet Union, and other repressive
regimes.
It's clear that totalitarian states create ideal conditions for the formation of preference
falsification.
Many of us might imagine that countries with a free press, with protections for free speech,
democracies, these would not be nations where preference
falsification flourishes.
But is that true?
When we come back, we'll take a closer look at preference falsification in the United
States.
When Timur Koran first began proposing his ideas about preference falsification some two
decades ago, many of his colleagues said, okay, that kind of stuff happens in repressive
totalitarian regimes.
It can't happen in democracies like the United States, where the freedom of expression
is enshrined in the Constitution.
Timur says, this was a dangerous misunderstanding.
You don't need re-education camps in Siberia to frighten people into falling in line.
Recent studies show a majority of Americans are afraid to share their political views, whether they are Democrats or Republicans.
Of course, it varies depending on the context,
depending on whether the country is red or blue,
but a substantial share of Americans are afraid
that if they express their political views truthfully, that they will get
demoted, they might get fired, and there are substantial numbers of Americans who believe
that people who hold the wrong political views should be fired, should not be given opportunities. And this is just a very
concrete cost of today of expressing political views. I want to look at preference falsification
on both the right and the left and maybe start with a Republican party.
I want to go back to 2016 and candidate Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election.
He was a very unusual candidate.
He said many things that were unconventional for a politician.
He played on some of the questions we've been talking about because he articulated views
that many people may have held, but were uncomfortable expressing themselves.
And so he became their vehicle for the views.
But also in interpersonal conversations and debates,
Trump regularly insulted many of his opponents.
Sometimes he went so far as to insult not just his opponents,
but the families of his opponents.
I remember one time he mocked the appearance of Heidiy crews the wife of senator ted crews from texas
brump has clearly attacked
cruises wife by putting up that side by side of the two women with cruises
wife looking very awkward not a great moment for her and mullonia trump looking
you know like a model
uh... so i mean basically he was, my wife's prettier than yours is.
Can you talk a bit about the ways in which
these dramatic expressions of insult
may have in some way shaped how Republicans
started to respond to Donald Trump?
You started to recognize that if you crossed him in a debate,
you were not just gonna get a policy response,
you were gonna get a smackdown,
you were gonna get insulted,
maybe even your family members would get insulted.
Yes, this is something it's analogous to the theatrics in North Korea and in Baghdad.
We talked about through those insults and attacks Trump was sending in 2016 that if you crossed them no matter who you were you would get attacked
and he would try to destroy your reputation and that his followers would join in attacking you. And it was very important that he demonstrate that nobody
was immune to this. He has attacked leading commentators on Fox News who have been among
his supporters. He's tried to destroy the reputations. He's insulted them. The message he sends by doing that is very similar to
the message North Korea's dictator sent when he had his
uncle
executed in plain sight
Everyone went along with what happened nobody objected in
Trump's case very few people defend went along with what happened, nobody objected.
In Trump's case, very few people defend publicly
the person who was being attacked, the person who was picked by Trump to be part of his cabinet.
And suddenly he's demonized, he's fired,
and very few people stand up for him.
People continue to support Trump.
So there's a parallel here in the tactics being employed
to build and maintain power. I want to play you a clip of Republican Senator Bob Corcor, chastising his fellow Republicans
for being unwilling to cross President Trump, even if that meant sacrificing
their core beliefs about free trade policies.
I would bet that 95% of the people on this side of the aisle support intellectually this
amendment.
And a lot of them would vote for it if it came to vote.
But no, no, no, gosh, we might poke the bear.
If the president gets upset with us, then we might not be in the majority.
And so let's don't do anything that might upset the president.
So look, I'm a no.
Pretty remarkable tomorrow.
In some ways, when I'm hearing that, I'm hearing in some ways the language of preference
falsification.
Absolutely.
And people are afraid, in this case, Republican
office-solders are afraid, if they cross Trump, he might not support them in their
reelection bid that Trump might support an opponent more to his liking. So there have been many people who privately wish that Trump would go away
and disagree with many of the policies that he is pursuing, disagree vehemently with his style,
style, but don't object even his opponents in the 2016 election in the primaries like Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio have fallen in line. Yeah, I mean, and one of the things you said earlier
stuck with me, which is that in some ways each time he did one of these things and people
did not cross him, it sent a signal and the signal was not just that he could say whatever he
wanted, the signal was that no one would actually stand up to him from his own party.
And of course, once you do that, you essentially send a signal that going forward, you are
alone if you basically stand up and cross Donald Trump. And in some ways, that is so similar
to what you were telling me earlier in the conversation we were having about Kim Jong-un
or what happened in Turkey or what happened in the Soviet Union.
And he actually articulated his strategy quite well when he said I could shoot somebody on Fifth Avenue in New York and nothing would happen to me. This was a signal he was sending to all Republicans, not to cross him, that he could do anything to them,
and the party would stay behind him. His reason for attacking McCain was also an element of this strategy. McCain is a hero of both the right and the left. Why
you might ask would Trump, while he's running for president in 2016, go out of his way to
criticize McCain as a loser for having become a prisoner in Vietnam, you would think that
tens of millions of Republicans would be horrified by that.
Well his strategy there was to show that he could take on even a hero like McCain.
Many observers and I would include myself in the group did not appreciate at the time.
When he attacked McCain, I thought, well now he's gone a step too far.
He's lost the military vote, but he actually went up in the polls, not down.
We're having this conversation in late November 2020.
It's been about three weeks since the general election.
And it's really striking because I think everyone generally senses that most Republicans believe
the election is over, that Donald Trump lost and that Joe Biden won.
And yet the number of Republicans who've been willing to come forward and actually say this,
you know, you can count them on the fingers of one hand the prominent republicans who've been
willing to come forward and do that i mean this is really preference falsification in spades
this is preference falsification in spades most republican elites believe that trump lost the election, it turns out that 88% of Republicans in general believe the election
was stolen. Trump may continue whether he actively tries to run in 2024 or not. He may
continue leading the party and he may play a very important role in selecting not only
the next nominee of the Republican Party, but also nominees in various states.
So many Republican office holders are at the moment just waiting to see what will happen
just waiting to see what will happen, and while they are waiting,
they are continuing to play this game
of also supporting his efforts
to overturn the result of the election.
Let's look at an example of preference falsification
on the left.
In 2020, over the summer, especially,
the country was captivated by the Black Lives Matter
movement. And this was especially true in California. In the 2020 election, one of the things that
was on the California ballot, the ballot proposition for Californians was to vote on affirmative action.
And I want to play you a little clip of what happened
in that ballot initiative.
California voters soundly rejected Prop 16,
which would have restored affirmative action
and racial preferences.
Every single major elected Democrat,
Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsom,
big labor unions across the state,
big organization, nonprofit organizations,
all in favor of it, but the voters said no.
Can you talk about this for a moment to more, that there was such support for Black Lives
Matter in 2020, and you would think that a state that basically was strongly for Black Lives
Matter would also support affirmative action, but in some ways it seemed as if the private
preferences of Californians was not being revealed in the protests that we saw on the streets. This is not new, affirmative action, whether it's racial affirmative action or gender-based
affirmative action.
It has generally been unpopular, even in heavily democratic states.
This is what we find when we pull people giving them anonymity.
In public, though, especially in heavily democratic states,
many people pretend that they support it.
And the extensive preference falsification is especially high
among educated people, among corporate leaders in academia, in journalism.
And so because they strongly support affirmative action, we get the sense that this is a widely
supported policy measure, but in fact it is not.
So between the 2016 and 2020 elections, Donald Trump, who is widely seen as a misogynist by those on the left,
lost support among men, but held steady with women,
between the 2016 presidential election and the 2020
presidential election.
Trump's obviously was also seen widely by those on the left as a racist, but he lost
ground among white voters and gained ground among blacks, Latinos, and Asians.
Now, many of the differences between 2016 and 2020 are small, but it's revealing
that Trump did not lose ground among the very groups who were said to be
affected the worst by his presidency.
There are lots of theories about why this has happened.
Can preference falsification explain some of these outcomes to him?
Absolutely.
And we need to recognize it's possible for a person to dislike Trump as a person, think
that he did a horrible job,
think that he said horrible things,
perhaps against them, their Latino,
and he has said these characterized all Hispanics
as rapists and murders.
And at the same time, like certain positions
that he is taking, controversial positions he's taking,
I think this probably explains why Trump did not lose ground
among African-Americans and why he even gained ground
among Muslims.
It's tourling now to know exactly why these groups
supported or increased their support for Trump.
But I think that we're going to find out that these certain policies that the leftists likes
and that Trump has very vocally supported and pursued probably played a role. They wouldn't admit it publicly, which is why the
pollsters missed the rising support within those groups, but probably these are the factors
that drove the rise in Trump's support.
One of the really interesting things that you say
about preference falsification is that there are ways
to express your discontent with a regime
or with a new system, but you have to do it in a way
that is subtle, and one of the ways you can do it
is through humor. I want to play you a clip
of the comedian Chris Rock talking about war culture at the Academy Awards where he
was hosting.
It's the 88th Academy Awards, which means this whole no-black nominees thing has happened
at least 71 other times.
Okay, you got to figure that it happened in the 50s, in the 60s, and black people did not protest.
Why?
Because we have real things to protest at the time.
You know, you have real things to protest.
You know, it's too busy being raked and lynched to care about who won best cinematographer.
What's revealing here to more is not just that he's making the joke, but that the audience is laughing,
and this might not be an audience that's actually very comfortable with what he's saying.
Can you talk a little bit about how humor sometimes is a marker of what's underneath the surface in many societies. Humor is used in repressive societies and in context where people feel constrained in
what they can say or to signal that one is aware of certain contradictions without taking ownership of the preferences being expressed or the facts
being pointed to. In laughing, they signal that they understand what is being communicated,
but don't have to take ownership for it.
It's almost like the court gesture role in sort of ancient times. I mean, the one person
who could speak truth to the king was the court gesture because it was understood that the gesture
was gesting and everyone can laugh and you can discuss sort of truths that are beneath the
surface without being marched off to be executed. Yes, this is exactly the role that comedians play and comedy flourishes in repressive
societies and it tends to gravitate toward areas where preference falsification is rampant, looking at the comedy
shows is a good place to start.
I'm wondering why the preference falsification is more likely to help people and groups
who have strong views or extreme views rather
than moderates.
I mean, if you think they should be, for example, zero immigration to the United States,
you can call anyone who has even mildly pro-immigrant views, you know, a traitor.
On the other hand, if you think that they should be open borders to the United States,
you can call anyone who calls for any immigration restrictions a racist.
I feel it's harder to do this if you have moderate views precisely because moderation
suggests a certain amount of flexibility, nuance, or even compromise. Does preference
falsification, you think, tend to drive moderation out of the conversation and reward extreme positions?
It does, and it's one of the manifestations of it is the hyper polarization we see in the United States today.
In both parties we are seeing struggles between extremists and moderates and it's the moderates who are finding it necessary to falsify their preferences, to give up certain nuances in their arguments,
and those individuals find it very risky to participate in debates because they get demonized
by both sides.
I'm wondering if you can talk a moment about what the consequences of this are.
What are the consequences?
I mean, we've seen in some ways how preference falsification operates and sort of the effects
that it has.
But what are the consequences?
Should we just simply say, well, you know, different groups rise and fall, different
things come to the fore at different times.
What are the negative effects of preference falsification?
What are the things that it doesn't allow us to do that are a freer expression and sharing of ideas
might allow us to do?
One of the huge causes that we can't have an informed debate, all sorts of ideas that
might prove very useful, don't get expressed. And bad ideas don't get scrutinized because people are afraid
of criticizing them. And sometimes they're on some issues, there are two extreme ideas that
are surviving in different communities, one on the right, one on the left, neither gets scrutinized, neither
gets criticized, people who have reservations, people who have ways of improving the ideas.
They don't express themselves.
Well if the potential solutions, potential remedies don't get expressed, then nobody will build on them.
So we've seen how preference falsification has all these negative effects. I want to
spend a moment talking about a couple of potentially positive effects of preference falsification.
Can you talk a moment about how in some ways preference falsification might play a role
in maintaining norms of decency and mutual respect
because in some ways we are afraid to cross one another.
This might go all the way back to the initial conversation we were having.
If everyone expressed everything they were feeling in their hearts,
much social interaction would come to a grinding halt
because if we actually told everyone what we thought of them,
we would likely have very few friends left.
That's true, and that you've pointed to one of the favorable consequences
of preference falsification.
We have friends who have bad taste in what they wear.
We have friends who get terrible haircuts.
If we expressed our preference, this would
make it quite uncomfortable for them. And if everyone reminded us of all the things they
didn't like about us all the time, it would be pretty uncomfortable for us. So preference
falsification is also an instrument of civility. Isn't it also the case that if you look at our major political parties, there are really
coalitions of different and often competing interests.
So on the right, you have country club, free market republicans who have to get along
with populists and evangelicals.
On the left, you might have supporters of the MeToo movement who want to punish sexual predators,
who have to sit together and work together with people
who argue there's too much incarceration
and too much punishment in the country.
Can you talk a moment about how, in some ways, preference
falsification allows these coalitions to stick together?
And I think it's partly the same phenomenon
you were describing a second earlier. It comes about because largely people are willing to hold their tongues
or bite their tongues instead of saying everything that's on their minds.
Yes, absolutely. I would add that they are unstable coalitions. One of the things that has held the Democratic Party together in the 2016-2020 period is a common hatred
of Trump and a common desire to get rid of him because he's undermining various projects that they hold a deer. Once Trump is gone and they are governing, they will have to make choices.
And what we are going to see in the 2020 to 2024 period under Joe Biden is we're going to see whether he is able to hold this coalition together by making
the various constituencies bite their tongue on various issues to keep facade of unity. In 2016, 2020, Trump was the person who did that to call the shots and kept the coalition
together and various groups like the country club're about to see is whether in the absence
of a ruthless president who's willing to destroy the reputation of literally anyone who
crosses him to keep his coalition together, to keep his base together, whether in the absence of such a president, one who is more used to
compromising and who is more civil will be able to keep the democratic coalition together.
To more Quran is an economist and political scientist at Duke University.
He is the author of Private Truths Public Lies,
the social consequences of preference falsification.
Timur, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you very much for the discussion, Shankar. It was an honor. Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Medural Media is our exclusive advertising sales partner.
Our audio production team includes Bridget McCarthy, Laura Quarell, Autumn Barnes and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyd is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
Our run sun hero for this episode is our former producer, Raina Cohen.
Raina first introduced me to Timor Koran's work while we were working on another episode.
I've been fascinated by the theory of preference falsification ever since.
Rainer has also shaped many other hidden brain episodes.
As a colleague, she was always thoughtful and kind.
We miss her and are so grateful for all her contributions to our show.
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