Hidden Brain - Episode 59: The Deep Story
Episode Date: January 24, 2017In the months since the presidential election, many have noted that lots of Americans live in bubbles — echo chambers filled with the voices of people who mostly agree with us. Sociologist Arlie Hoc...hschild felt this long before the rise of Donald Trump, and five years ago she went on a mission to understand the other side. She left her own liberal bubble in Berkeley, California for a conservative one, deep in the Louisiana bayou.
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When we think about politics, many of us think it's all about debates.
Arguments about things like immigration.
It's called extreme vetting.
There are children suffering in this catastrophic war.
Or perhaps we think politics is a way to achieve our economic goals.
The Secretary Clinton, you're calling for a tax increase in the wealthiest Americans.
And Mr. Trump, you're calling for tax cuts for the wealthy. Well, I'm really calling for
major jobs because the wealthy are going to create tremendous jobs.
Trickle down did not work. It got us into the mess we were in in 2008 and 2009.
But here's the thing. Economists, psychologists and journalists have long noted a paradox.
Economists, psychologists, and journalists have long noted a paradox. Millions of Americans seem to ignore their ideologies and their economic interests when it comes to voting.
Working class people often vote for conservatives who promise tax cuts for the wealthy.
Liberal elites, whom I personally benefit from a less progressive tax code,
are often the ones arguing most strongly for higher taxes and economic safety nets.
In the 1990s, Democrats who decried the powerful taking advantage of the week rallied behind
President Bill Clinton after he was caught having an affair with an intern. More recently,
family values conservatives supported the thrice-married Donald Trump even after
he boasted about groping women.
Why do people seemingly vote against their interests and their values?
One hypothesis, voting is less about ideology and economics and more about expressing our
emotional needs. I've watched my country go from a place where I felt safe to a very unsafe world.
I don't feel safe anymore here.
The forgotten men and women of our country will be forgotten no longer.
I also want to tell the children not to be afraid because we are not alone.
This week on Hidden Brain, what if politics is less aboutan. We all have stories. Stories about our traditions,
stories about our setbacks, stories about our dreams. These stories shape our identity. They help us define who's on our side and who's not.
My guest today explores how such stories shape the way we think about politics.
Arleigh Hokeshield is a sociologist at the University of California at Berkeley and the author
of the book Strangers in their own land, Anger and Morning on the American right. She's a liberal who has
spent years talking to people who politically disagree with her in an attempt to understand
what she calls their deep story. Arlie, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Well, thank you very much. I'm delighted to be here. So you decided a few years ago to head out
from Berkeley and spend extended amounts of
time in Louisiana to understand the views of conservatives.
Tell me what motivated this project.
Why did you go?
Five years ago, I already felt like a lot of others that I was living in an enclave
and that other Americans with different political views were living in their enclaves.
And that I didn't understand the people with whom I knew I had deep disagreements.
So I decided to get out of my enclave in Berkeley, California, kind of a progressive democratic town, and find an equal and opposite
uncleith, which was as far right as Berkeley, California is left. I looked in
2012 at the proportion of whites that voted for Brock Obama in his
reelection. It was about half in California. For the whole region of the South, it was a third
and in Louisiana, it was 12%. So I thought, wow, let me go there. So you went out to Louisiana
long before Donald Trump announced that he was running for president, but you say that he happened
to come along at a point when three distinct forces were in place. Many older heterosexual
married whites feel their economic lives are unstable, that their cultural views are often painted
as outmoded, and that demographic changes are turning them into a minority. Together you say
these produce a sense of pervasive anxiety, of feeling that they are strangers in their own land. Can you give me a couple of specific
examples of how the people you spoke with express those anxieties? Yes, I met a woman whose
husband hadn't had a raise in 20 years. She hadn't had one in a decade. So they were
doing okay, but they weren't advancing,
even though they worked extremely long hours.
And she said, you know, I know you people on the coasts
think that we in the south are old fashioned
and ill-educated.
And we know the epithets that you people apply to us,
that we are homophobic, that we are home of pho-bic, that we're
racist, that we're sexist.
So she felt humiliated and put down, and like a whole way of life, and a kind of people
was going out.
They almost felt like Native Americans.
They felt like another minority group that didn't have a name.
You talk to many people for many hours on end, you made repeated visits back to Louisiana,
and then you constructed something that you call a deep story. It's a story that you
say feels emotionally true. It captures, as you say, the hopes, fears, pride, shame, resentment,
and anxiety of people. And since the story is so central
to your book, I want to spend some time with it, it's a story that you tell in three scenes.
And part one is something you'll call waiting in line.
Right. In this scene, you're waiting in line as in a pilgrimage, it's facing up a hill at the top of which is the
American dream. Your feet are tired, you've been in that line a long time, the
line is not moving, and you don't have any ill will as you experience yourself
toward anyone, but you are quite riveted on the goal of getting some reward for the hard work that you've put in.
And scene two, you notice a head that somebody seems to be cutting in line. I think how unfair,
it's just not right. I obey the rules, I'm not cutting in line, and somebody else is.
I obey the rules, I'm cutting in line, and somebody else is. So, who are these line cutters?
Well, they are blacks who, through affirmative action, have access to jobs formally reserved
for whites, their women, much larger group, who now have access to jobs formally reserved for men.
They're immigrants, refugees, and in your perception, even public sector workers.
Actually, also cutting in line for these Louisiana's would be the endangered brown pelican
with its oil drenched wings. Because I many times heard people say, well, you
know, these environmentalists are putting animals ahead of us people. So all this happens,
and then you turn around and you see that the supervisor of this long line, the person
designated to keep order in it, Barack Obama Obama seems to be signaling to the people who have cut it in line.
He seems to be sponsoring them and egging them on, encouraging them.
So you think, well, wait a minute.
He's not taking care of me.
He's setting me back because my position in line is going backward.
And then they felt in this line as they're pushed back and injustice had been done.
So when people sort of internalize the story, the story, this feeling that you're waiting
in line, that people are cutting in line, and that the people who are supposed to be minding
the line and maintaining order are in some ways betraying how the line is supposed to operate.
That this deep story, when you ran this story by the people you met and befriended, many
of them told you that you had captured something that fell true to them.
So many liberals, for example, might say that conservatives are being brainwashed by Fox
News, you would say, no, the appeal of Fox is that they confirm to people
that the deep story is true.
Yes, well, I think it's a cyclical relationship
because Fox News is a deep story news source.
It begins with it, it firms it, it passes it on.
But yeah, it's a fit for them.
They watch it to confirm this worldview. It passes it on. But yeah, it's a fit for them.
They watch it to confirm this worldview.
And there's another part of what emerges from this deep story is that government is now
suspect in all of its manifestations.
And that's a Fox News story, story too that the government had become an instrument
of the line cutters. That's the implication of the deep story.
As you point out, there's an irony here because, of course, many conservative states are poorer
than liberal states. They use more government benefits than liberal states. As you point out,
nearly half of Louisiana State budget comes from federal spending.
So how do people reconcile the deep story, this antipathy toward people who are being helped
by the federal government, with their own deep dependence on the federal government?
Well, it's interesting. I spent five years asking that question. And when we think about tensions between social classes, liberals tend to look
up at the 1% the Wall Street, the people that caused the 2008 crash, and that's where
the tension is, you know, Occupy Wall Street. They look up the class ladder. People I came to know, the Tea Party advocates
in Louisiana looked down the class ladder.
The big tension line was between the middle class,
blue collar class on one hand,
and the welfare recipients and poor people on the other.
And it's not that they don't know that their state is very poor.
I asked people about that too. And the conclusion I came to is that they know about the red
state paradox. It's not a matter of not knowing. But it's just less important than the deep story. The deep story has to do
with people getting ahead of you unfairly who probably don't work as hard as you do, and
I bet the rules as well as you do. That just gloomed larger.
When we come back, I'm going to talk to Arley specifically about Donald Trump. Our conversation will be informed by a single, stark fact.
53 of Louisiana's 64 parishes are majority white.
Hillary Clinton won 10 of the 11 parishes, where whites are not in the majority. Of the 53 majority white parishes, Donald Trump won all 53.
Stay with us.
This is Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Arle you say that regardless of whether Donald Trump was making an argument that was in
the economic self-interest of his audience, he was making an argument that was in their
emotional self-interest.
He made many of the people you talk with feel like they were no longer strangers in their
own land.
He seemed to be the guy against all of the line cutters, against blacks, against women, against
immigrants, against refugees, against public sector workers. I went with a member of the
Tea Party to a Donald Trump rally in March, a day before the primary in New Orleans, and she coming out of this
rally said, gosh, there aren't very many black people here.
And in fact, the only black people I saw were insecurity and selling Donald Trump t-shirts
out in the front lawn.
And I asked her about that, and she just avoided the topic.
So what are the points that you make is that conservatives feel that liberals have morally
boxed them into a corner to express how you really feel about the poor, about people
of color, about women, about gays, can expose you to charges that you are an uncarrying person
or even a bigoted person.
And one of the things that I think you're saying is that Trump's rhetoric gave people away
to talk openly about their deep story, perhaps for the very first time.
I think that's right, but you know, I got a sense of the complexity of racism. First of all,
I got a sense of the complexity of racism. First of all, people did not feel that they were racist.
One man, for example, said, well, a racist is someone who uses the N word.
I don't ever use that word.
If somebody uses that word on my Facebook, I take them off my Facebook page.
I'm offended by it.
And the other definition of a racist is someone who hates Blacks.
He said, I don't hate Blacks, but that, of course, leaves out a lot of kind of institutional
expressions of racism.
And they fell to the side given the primacy of this deep story. So speaking of the institutional ways in which race
might play out, you point out that there
are relatively few government regulations for things
like guns or motorcycles or liquor,
but there are lots of regulations when it comes to abortion
or how low someone can wear his pants over his underwear.
It seems to me this isn't sort of a one-size-fits-all.
I don't want the government in my life philosophy.
Not at all.
It's fine if the government controls women or blacks
in Louisiana.
It has a kind of image of itself as a state,
as a political culture of bravado and freedom
the Wild West, but as you say, that didn't
apply to women if an adult accompanies a teenager, say, rape victim something, to a nearby state
to get an abortion. They can be jailed. So for people who don't want big government, they
certainly allow an enormous role for government to make choices for the
individual with regard to abortion. And there were a number of in local
parishes ordinances about how low your pants could go, and this applied to black
teenagers. So very strange, and what would seem like government intrusion.
Many of the women you spoke with obviously endorsed the conservative deep story, but you
also point out that in some ways they are the victims of this deep story,
that the deep story in some ways is resentful of women for being in the workplace, advancing
in the workplace, perhaps at the expense of men. How do the women you speak with reconcile
this tension between being subscribers to the deep story and also having the deep story,
burst of the deep story and also having the deep story essentially try and exclude them. They handled that paradox in a variety of ways. Every woman that I spoke to worked. Blue
collar women, you know, had to work middle class women. They all worked and they believed in equal pay for equal work.
At the same time, I think many of them felt protective
of vulnerable blue collar white men.
And as a class, this group was doing badly. Studies have shown outside of my book that they're more depressed, a higher suicide rate, more likely to not live with the mother of their children.
So, some of the women who feel, okay, these high school educated white men, they're the kind of men I'm going to marry, have married,
they're my brother, my father, my uncle, and let's get someone to answer the economic issues
that face such men.
So in this regard, they're thinking not of themselves as workers, but as wives and mothers.
It feels like you're laying out for me something that is actually a paradox.
Many of the people you spoke with, they're older, they're mostly white, many of them are men. They tell you
they feel like they're strangers in their own land. But that's also the way the African-American
man who gets repeatedly pulled over by the police also feels. That's also the way, you
know, the undocumented Latina teenager who was brought to the country by her parents
when she's a baby. that's how she feels too.
And I feel like in many of our political debates, each side is saying, I feel so anxious that
I am not welcome in this country.
I must do something to take my country back and both sides feel this and they feel this
intensely and they feel the other side is responsible for their anxiety.
Yes. this intensely and they feel the other side is responsible for their anxiety. Yes, I think that's right.
I started this book with the Red State Paradox and Mind, but I ended it with the Blue State
Paradox and Mind.
What has been missing in the Democratic Party that it does not speak to the anxieties, the desire
for recognition, the actual economic dilemmas in Rust Belt states and rural states in the
south, that it's lost blue-collar and white voters. What's missing?
Why didn't the Democratic Party stand up
and make sense to the people I came to know?
That was the paradox I ended up with.
Arlie Hoeksheel, I want to thank you
for talking with me on Hidden Brain today.
Thank you, I had great pleasure.
Thank you, great pleasure. This week's podcast was produced by Maggie Penman and edited by Tara Boyle.
Our team includes Jenny Schmidt, Renee Clark, Raina Cohen and Chloe Connelly.
Our unsung heroes this week are Sarah McCammon, who helped us with this podcast and her colleagues
on the NPR politics team.
For the last 18 months, they have covered the political campaign tirelessly
and as a new administration takes office, they're still at it.
You should check them out at the NPR Politics Podcast.
For more hidden brain, you can follow us on Facebook and Twitter
and listen for my stories on your local public radio station.
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doesn't know about us to follow our show. I'm Shankar Vidantam and this is NPR.
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