Saturday, January 8, 2011

Criminal Thinking and Disordered Nationalism

A note about an issue of The American Conservative, originally published on Los Thunderlads 17 October 2007:

The highlight of the issue is a piece by psychotherapist Jim Pittaway analyzing American nationalism in terms of the therapeutic model of "Criminal Thinking." Pittaway explains that "the unholy triad at the core of antisocial thinking is narcissism, impatience, and need for control." "The narcissistic predator carries senses of special entitlement and deep grievance." Because his view of himself is so exalted, he cannot recognize that his behavior has brought unjust suffering upon anyone else. As an example of this kind of pathology, Pittaway quotes United States Senator Jon Tester. "Refereeing a civil war in Iraq has distracted us from fighting a war in Afghanistan." As if our troops were just minding their own business, quietly making their way to the home of Taliban/ al Qaeda, when they took a wrong turn and wound up in the middle of this mysterious conflict in Iraq.

In the context of a disordered nationalism, impatience and the need to control others combine to create a sense that one's leaders are in fact omnipotent, and that if there is evil in the world it can only be because those leaders have defaulted in their duties. "In this construct, any failure to control must necessarily be failure on the part of whoever was supposed to do the controlling; the core idea of America's potential to control everything can never be questioned. This logically absurd notion is an irreducible component of both the criminal personality and our New Nationalism. So, like the habituated criminal, nationalist America does not have to accomodate society around us and instead must pursue ever more desperate measures to control things that cannot, and ought not, be controlled." These "ever more desperate measures" form a "kind of progression of increasingly less desirable outcomes experienced by the Criminal-Thinking offender when he tries to take control of the situation, loses it, escalates, and winds up dead or in prison for crimes he never intended to commit when he started out. As long as he cannot self-regulate, and the criminal thinker cannot, he is doomed to play out to the end."

Pittaway gives two ways out of nationalistic Criminal Thinking. As you would expect in a magazine called The American Conservative, one way out is an appeal to such American exemplars of the republican tradition as Lincoln and Jefferson, claiming that they both preached and exhibited self-restraint. "Self-control -- not controlling others -- is at the heart of American patriotic tradition." The grimmer way out is the path Germany traveled after the Third Reich. "When you're living in the rubble you've created, narcissism is difficult to sustain. When you have to engage in a daily struggle to survive, impatience is useless if not deadly. When you have been defeated so thoroughly that you lack both capability and will to resist those who beat you, you don't control anything. By 1950, those same German people and their leadership reverted to pro-social thinking in government."

http://www.amconmag.com/2007/2007_10_22/article1.html

In the same issue Dave Lindorff reports on a bizarre incident that occurred this August 29, when without authorization a crew loaded a B-52 with six cruise missiles armed with live nuclear warheads and flew across the country. Even more bizarre, six airmen connected with the incident have died in the weeks since. Most bizarre of all, the story has barely received notice in the mainstream press.

The cover story argues that conservatives will need to share more than hatred of Hillary Clinton if they are to win the 2008 elections. An article about Graham Greene expresses amazement that G. W. Bush recently mentioned The Quiet American when he himself so obviously embodies the worst traits of that novel's two protagonists. Uri Avnery reviews Mearsheimer and Walt's The Lobby, Neil Clark decries the British Conservative Party's leftward drift, and Pat Buchanan expresses nostalgia for Richard Nixon's Southern Strategy.

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