Ares Land wrote: ↑Wed Dec 17, 2025 2:54 am
'Believe' is important here. A lot of the grievances are beliefs, not fact, which means perceived hardship is more of a factor than factual hardship.
This means you can improve the economic situation, and
still see a right-wing surge.
I agree they're wrong, but if they didn't have economic anxiety, they wouldn't be thinking in these terms. They don't under ordinary circumstances. Under ordinary circumstances, tribes share resources with other tribes and expect the favor to be returned in the future. This is why the far right makes other nationalities out to be inferior. The implication is that they are too weak to return favors done to them.
This is an article published in 2024. It's not data from the 2024 election. Leading up to the election, Republicans created a huge stink about how life was affordable before Biden. (Now Trump is saying the affordability agenda is a Democrat hoax.)
Ares Land wrote: ↑Wed Dec 17, 2025 2:54 am
Exposure to novelty (in very general terms) calms down authoritarianism, it's one point Altermeyer mentions. It doesn't have to be college education.
The context of exposure matters a lot. I gave examples previously about how more exposure can lead to ethnic conflict. The incentives are misaligned in Northeast India, for example. Also, some personality types respond to other ways of life with instinctive disgust.
Ares Land wrote: ↑Wed Dec 17, 2025 2:54 am
Also, and I agree with you on that, what we need is a reformed left.
It's a problem these days that leftist intellectuals don't think in terms of systems.
Ares Land wrote: ↑Wed Dec 17, 2025 2:54 am
One last point is that fascism should be made unacceptable again. That's the part I'm really pessimistic about.
Unlikely unless you can defeat another fascist power in an epic war. These days, fascists find fascists from other countries sympathetic. They practically have a fascist international.
Ares Land wrote: ↑Wed Dec 17, 2025 2:54 am
The claim that small-scale organic farmers are far-right is surprising. It's certainly wrong in my experience.
I don't agree that small scale farmers are far right. (Did you miss my epic flame war with Eddy about this?) I think their incentives make them vote for policies that push society as a whole to the far right.
Even the farmers in Bengal are not far right. They are center-left people who support welfare and the arts. Their actions are nevertheless causing society to embrace the far right. (I have already explained this in some detail.) This is why I'm skeptical of the center-left as a whole.
Ares Land wrote: ↑Wed Dec 17, 2025 2:54 am
Fully automated industrial farming isn't feasible. It leads to environmental disaster, epidemics, supply chain breakdown.
Sure, under capitalism. I also support using genetically modified organisms, BTW. Some kinds of food processing are demonstrably harmful and should probably be discouraged, but not "processed foods" in general.
I think a major cause of the rise of the far right is that most people genuinely don't want to live in the kinds of societies leftist intellectuals offer them these days. In this context, it's significant that I'm offering a better life to everyone, even peasants, than you are.
Ares Land wrote: ↑Wed Dec 17, 2025 2:54 am
At no point do I, or anyone, seriously argue for an all-farmer society. Small or small-ish scale, somewhat less industrialized farming does not mean an all-farmer society. The percentage of farmers in the West in tiny. Double a tiny percentage and you still get a tiny percentage.
If the percentages are minuscule, then the effects of your policies won't lead to any significant societal transformation. If they do transform society, then they will either result in fascism or an all-peasant society for the reasons I've tried to explain.
Ares Land wrote: ↑Wed Dec 17, 2025 2:54 am
Another point: you don't want state-run farms. The state, or local communities, can
help but it's completely unable to run farms. Urban bureaucrats almost universally get the idea they know farming better than farmers do, they should not be able to entertain that notion.
In the Soviet Union, agriculture was organized by the government. This is not what I'm suggesting. Loosely:
In my proposal, applicants who want farming jobs would be assigned land by the government. Then their work would be subsidized by the government as long as the people vote for it. If they mismanage the property, it will be taken away and assigned to other applicants. Jobs should be plentiful enough that they won't be left to starve.
None of this is "organized by" or "run by" the government. The government is a minimalistic entity whose job is to enact the will of the people. It upholds human rights because without those, it's impossible to know what the people want in the first place.