Groups are dangerous. (“Groups give me an itch.” – Keith Laumer’s fictional diplomat Jame Retief) They possess powers that mystify the uninitiated, and terrify those who… well, those who seek to be accepted by a group! I, a determined “non-joiner,” have regular clashes with groups of all sorts. From them have come some of the most instructive moments of my life to date.
Now and then, I pseudo-join a group – lately, it’s usually a “writers’ group” – to see what sort of blather dominates within it. It’s probably a practice I should abandon; sooner or later I wind up “contributing.” At that point, a lot of the other members suggest that I might be happier in some other group. Well, you can’t please everyone, and only a fool would try.
Today, the trend appears to be trying not to offend anyone.
In his vitally important book The American Tradition, the late Clarence Carson wrote:
When groups become accustomed to having others submit to threats and pressure, they will become less and less willing to brook resistance. But there comes a time when social order requires resistance to the anarchy of contending groups. The road of resistance, however, leads to despotism in one form or another.
Dr. Carson’s focus was on the interplay between groups and the dynamic of power. Yet there are social and cultural aspects to groups that are equally important. As I’m a writer, I have a particular interest in how groups influence and condition the operations of the creative mind.
Not long ago, I was briefly a member of an online writers’ group organized through Meetup. At the last of the meetings I “attended,” the talk turned quickly to “sensitivity readers:” a variety of “reader” who scans through your manuscript looking for anything that might offend anyone. The immediate consensus among the other members was that such a “service” is a vital new offering that we should all employ. I was shocked into silence. (Now you know why that was my last meeting.)
As I didn’t hang around after that, I have no idea whether another member ever challenged the premise behind the “sensitivity reader:” i.e., that it’s supremely important not to offend anyone. I don’t know if anyone ever noted the similarity between a “sensitivity reader” and a censor. And I don’t know whether the monetary cost of such a service was ever discussed. But I’d bet heavily that any member who dared to challenge the consensus would either be beaten into submission or induced to leave the group.
The individual’s need for acceptance is one of Abraham Maslow’s steps to self-actualization. Its power is considerable, which is why people who “prefer their own company” – e.g., isolates like me – are regarded as dangerous. (“You are a deviant from the social norm!” — Roger Zelazny.) To be accepted by a group is regarded as a guarantee of sorts: specifically, that the group’s norms are your norms, and that the group will haul you back into line if you start to deviate.
Therein also lies a great part of why the other nations of the world – including our so-called allies – are ineradicably suspicious of the United States. We champion individualism… or did, until not too long ago.
This has been something of a self-indulgence, for which reason I’ll try to close it off promptly. It’s a brief rumination on the nature and consequences of being “out of step,” as Frank Chodorov put it. America is a land where the individual is supposed to be free to march to his own chosen drummer… or none. But groups are hostile to such persons. They often exercise their weight in attempts to squash them. It takes a lot of resilience to face them down, especially the more militant ones.
Just now, several high-profile groups the Left has championed have been thrown onto the back foot, as our British cousins would say, by the aggressive initiatives of the Trump Administration to neuter their influence over federal policy and operation. Those groups have been in the ascendant for some time. They got used to being able to bully the federal government. That’s a good metric for their sociocultural power… and a warning to the rest of us.
The Left’s strategic emphasis on militant groups is plain from its weaponization of federal law enforcement agencies. Putting an end to that obscenity is a paramount mission for the Trump Administration… wait: What’s that, Sweetie? The FBI is at the door again? All right, you get the Mace; I’ll fetch the shotguns. Back later, Gentle Reader.