The Daily Escape:
Oatman, AZ on Route 66 – February 2023 photo by Laurel Anne Lindsay
Some of you may have heard about a study called âThe Hidden Tribes of Americaâ by the group More in Common. Itâs trying to understand the forces driving political polarization in America today. They classify the American electorate into seven distinct groups, they call âTribesâ.
But their key conclusion is that most people donât belong on the far left or far right: (brackets by Wrongo)
ââŚthe largest group that we uncovered in our research has so far been largely overlooked. It is a group of Americans we call the Exhausted Majority…representing a two-thirds majority of Americans, who arenât part of the Wings….most members of the Exhausted Majority arenât [simply] political centrists or moderates. On specific issues, their views range across the spectrum.â
More:
âBut while they hold a variety of views, the members of the Exhausted Majority are also united in important ways: They are fed up with the polarization plaguing American government and societyâŚ.. [they] are so frustrated with the bitter polarization of our politics that many have checked out completelyâŚ.. they arenât ideologues who dismiss as evil or ignorant the people who donât share their exact political views. They want to talk and to find a path forward.
This chart from the study graphically illustrates the seven tribal groups of the American populace. As you can see, there is a left-wing group that is about 8% of the US population. And there are two right-wing groups that equal about 25% of Americans. That leaves four groups in what the authors call the âExhausted Majorityâ. They are 67% of the American populace.
Here are some demographic characteristics of the seven groups:
- Progressive Activists: younger, highly engaged, secular, cosmopolitan, angry.
- Traditional Liberals: older, retired, open to compromise, rational, cautious.
- Passive Liberals: unhappy, insecure, distrustful, disillusioned.
- Politically Disengaged: young, low income, distrustful, detached, patriotic,
- Moderates: engaged, civic-minded, middle-of-the-road, pessimistic, Protestant.
- Traditional Conservatives: religious, middle class, patriotic, moralistic.
- Devoted Conservatives: white, retired, highly engaged, uncompromising,
Wrongo identifies as one of the Traditional Liberals, their description rings true.
The authors say that in their research, this tribal membership predicted differences in Americansâ views on various political issues better than demographic, ideological, and partisan groupings. You can read or download the whole study here.
An âExhausted Majorityâ may be a positive political development. Wrongo spends nearly every day thinking that there are just two opposing camps. And that they each view each other with fear and loathing, refusing to listen to anything that doesn’t fit their existing narrative. As weâre entering the next presidential campaign, itâs good to know that Wrongoâs view of our polarization might be well, wrong.
Is the âExhausted Majorityâ merely a new response to our dysfunctional politics? Wrongo isnât alone in thinking that whatâs wrong with our country will take decades to overcome. Faced with that, people start to look for quick fixes, or a way to stop listening to the wrangling. And you donât have to be unaligned with either Party to share this sense of exasperation.
The people described in the âExhausted Majorityâ are similar. Itâs also true that for most people, politics isnât the be-all-end-all of their lives. Theyâd prefer that the business of government didnât require their involvement. Theyâre trying to get their kids educated, and to keep them safe. They prefer to see political compromise happen without needing to be involved.
But if you can walk away from politics when it frustrates you, then youâre in the lucky minority:
- There are large numbers of parents who have discovered that their child is addicted to opioids.
- There are many people who had lost their health insurance when they were laid off.
- Many sent their daughter to college in the South only to learn that she no longer has any reproductive rights.
- Many are worried that books are being taken from public school libraries.
- Some fear that they may lose the right to vote.
These people canât simply throw up their hands and walk away. Only political action will help them. We all know that the political radicals are irredeemable. We also know they make the most noise, but they’re a minority.
The fed-up people on both sides and in the middle have to find a way to take the country back from the radicals, instead of allowing ourselves to be herded into existing opposing camps.
Time to wake up America! We canât simply drop out. Thereâs too much at stake. Democrats need to find candidates and a message that can motivate an additional 5%-15% of the âExhausted Majorityâ to vote with them. To help you wake up, watch, and listen to the RedMolly band play a very nice cover of Richard Thompsonâs âVincent Black Lightning 1952â. It’s a surprise how beautifully it adapts to a bluegrass idiom, and the dobro work makes it:
âVincent Black Lightningâ is one of the most perfect songs ever written. We saw Thompson perform it live at Tanglewood last summer.
I prefer a different division of the US and the rest of North America into 11 distinct nations. So recommend this book: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Nations
Some 20 years ago my wife and I traveled to Mississippi to visit Vicksburg National Military Park. It was the first and only time I ever travelled to the deep south. When we arrived at our hotel – part of which was an historic mansion, we were regaled with a scene of college kids from âOle Missâ dressed as confederate officers and Southern Belles. We arrived at night and the scene was simply astonishing.
These folks are only in their 40s now and my guess is that they continue to harbor a version of the âlost causeâ fantasy. And these would represent the new southâs elite class.
We continue to have a vast regional divide that is, i suggest, deeper than simple politics. This would explain why conservative states in the South have truly miserable systems of public health and so on, but in Ohio, Iowa, Utah and whatever – there are much better systems of public institutions. I know the Ohio system well – county systems of care allow even rural folks to receive care (we took care of my mother in law in Ohio from 1992-2007 – both with visits and remotely).
Worse still is the existence of right wing media which creates a permanent disinformation system that seems to reach poorly educated whites much better than do the reliable sources.
I am done with Freedomâs Dominion. For me a relentlessly depressing read (well written) when each chapter is about yet one more horror: https://www.basicbooks.com/titles/jefferson-cowie/freedoms-dominion/9781541672819/
Were the Supreme Court full of honest men, then the aftermath of their Shelby County decision would be horror and even apologies, but they are truly partisan hacks, so the efforts at voter suppression are exactly what they hoped for.