A Crucial Element of Democracy

This is a blog by Robert Gutierrez ...
While often taken for granted, civics education plays a crucial role in a democracy like ours. This Blog is dedicated to enticing its readers into taking an active role in the formulation of the civics curriculum found in their local schools. In order to do this, the Blog is offering a newer way to look at civics education, a newer construct - liberated federalism or federation theory. Daniel Elazar defines federalism as "the mode of political organization that unites separate polities within an overarching political system by distributing power among general and constituent governments in a manner designed to protect the existence and authority of both." It depends on its citizens acting in certain ways which Elazar calls federalism's processes. Federation theory, as applied to civics curriculum, has a set of aims. They are:
*Teach a view of government as a supra federated institution of society in which collective interests of the commonwealth are protected and advanced.
*Teach the philosophical basis of government's role as guardian of the grand partnership of citizens at both levels of individuals and associations of political and social intercourse.
*Convey the need of government to engender levels of support promoting a general sense of obligation and duty toward agreed upon goals and processes aimed at advancing the common betterment.
*Establish and justify a political morality which includes a process to assess whether that morality meets the needs of changing times while holding true to federalist values.
*Emphasize the integrity of the individual both in terms of liberty and equity in which each citizen is a member of a compacted arrangement and whose role is legally, politically, and socially congruent with the spirit of the Bill of Rights.
*Find a balance between a respect for national expertise and an encouragement of local, unsophisticated participation in policy decision-making and implementation.
Your input, as to the content of this Blog, is encouraged through this Blog directly or the Blog's email address: gravitascivics@gmail.com .
NOTE: This blog has led to the publication of a book. The title of that book is TOWARD A FEDERATED NATION: IMPLEMENTING NATIONAL CIVICS STANDARDS and it is available through Amazon in both ebook and paperback versions.

Friday, December 4, 2020

THE NECESSITY OF EMPATHY

 

[Note:  From time to time, this blog issues a set of postings that summarize what the blog has been emphasizing in its previous postings.  Of late, the blog has been looking at various obstacles civics educators face in teaching their subject.  It’s time to post a series of such summary accounts.  The advantage of such summaries is to introduce new readers to the blog and to provide a different context by which to review the blog’s various claims and arguments.  This and upcoming summary postings will be preceded by this message.]

 While many people will readily believe that this nation, as any nation, probably has a number of incubating problems, they might question why they should really care.  Afterall, if they are incubating, they probably don’t have much of an effect on the quality of their lives.  But such problems can be, according to the journalist Ezra Klein, social/political explosives just waiting to burst on the scene and their ability to effect people can be extensive. 

Problems of racial relations, opioid use, loss of jobs to foreign producers, laws concerning firearms, tax policies and their effects on equality, abortion rights, etc. are or have been such problems.  Realization of such developments should encourage prudent citizens to know them and address them. 

In that vein, one would be helped to know why incubation of problems occurs.  It turns out and makes sense that a lack of empathy plays an important role.  This posting looks at why this is the case.  According to Klein and backed up by such experts as the American neuro-endocrinologist, Robert Sapolsky, it is difficult to engender empathy for people who do not belong to one’s defining, identity groupings.

          Relevant to this general condition, people view their identity along various domains.  They include the often-cited categories – e.g., race, nationality, ethnicity – but also less thought of classifications – class, careers, social relationships, religion, etc.  And with those categories in mind, when one considers the ever-present realities of life, most prominently the conditions of scarcity, one can see that economic/political conflicts are part of life. 

And often, people cannot resist defining such conflicts in terms of identity.  Both in terms of one’s emotions and what one sees as truth, identity classifications simplify those aspects of life both cognitively and emotionally.  Adding to the relevant mix of factors – factors that cause scarcity and factors that affect how people see scarcity and other social conditions – are ways people are disposed to define their identity.

          In turn, those factors not only determine membership, but also exclusion.  They assist one to identify those who don’t belong to one’s grouping.  The excluded lack some physical, social, economic, aesthetic, or some such quality or condition.  Those other people are seen not as individuals but as reflecting believed – often inaccurately – attributes that somehow “explain” any shortcomings they might be experiencing.  

These shortcomings might include full allocation of civil rights, economic standing, social recognition, or some combination of these types of rights or benefits.  For example, poverty, under such thinking, results from laziness; unjust treatment by authority figures results from criminal tendencies; unfair labor treatment results from illegal status such as is the case for many immigrants.  The point is these problems under the rubric of identity thinking targets groups, not individuals. 

Therefore, two levels of faulty thinking take place:  believing incorrect information and attributing inaccurately supposed group attributes (that might or might not exist) to individuals.  Or stated in more common language, people engage in prejudicial judgements.

Is this natural for people to do?  Yes and no.  It is natural for people to believe well of or empathize with people who belong to one’s perceived identity group; it is natural to not empathize and to hold in suspicion those who do not belong to one’s group.  Yet, to not empathize with other people proves to be inefficient and contrary to the common good. 

It stands in the way – through a variety of dysfunctional social arrangements and processes – of benefiting from the potential these perceived “other” people could contribute.  And given the realities of reciprocity, one can see how unjust treatment emanating from a lack empathy can lead to all sorts of social problems.

So, how can one encourage empathy?  What seems logical is for educators to plan and to implement appropriate civics instruction that at least approaches an important accomplishment.  That is, it identifies and respects what is natural; that is, the instruction recognizes the existence of prejudicial tendencies and does not underestimate the power of their influence.  People are prone to, in part, define their social world in terms of Us vs. Them. 

This suggests that, one, lessons need to point out this tendency and instruct students as to its inaccuracy.  Two, point out that a belief in these inaccuracies leads to inefficiencies not least of which is a less than an optimal economy that can miss providing many potential opportunities.  And three, provide instruction that exposes students firsthand to as many relevant realities as are possible and safe.

This third goal reflects another factor.  It turns out that empathy occurs more readily by experiences that expose a person to the actual, relevant events or conditions.  In the ideal, teaching a student about how migrant workers are treated would be greatly enhanced by students actually spending some time with these workers.  Short of that, videos of their treatment would be helpful.  Just reading about it would be less helpful.  The fuller the exposure is, the more likely an empathetic response will occur, and the more powerful the instructive impact will be.

So, to remind the reader of the initial question of this posting – why care about incubating problems? – the answer has to do with the practical concerns of what results from mistreated and mis-defined members of the polity.  Those problems are affecting significant numbers within the nation. 

That is, a society that harbors an inability to empathize with all identity groups making up the populous – or more accurately, with the individuals who makeup those groups – leads to dysfunctional conditions.  Those conditions are legal, political, social, and economic in nature.  It happens to be a losing proposition on many fronts.

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