Us vs. Them

It’s those people; you know, Them. They’re the problem.

Something said as often as this – indeed, sometimes simply assumed without saying – is worth examining. Of course, we’re really motivated to think about it when the speaker is pointing a finger in our faces and saying “It’s you people. You’re the problem.”

It’s Us versus Them. While divisiveness is becoming our national pastime, it’s nothing new. Worse, perhaps, but not new. We seek to be part of an Us, and there must be a Them for there to be an Us. It’s less fun on the receiving end, being one of Them.

Collaboration

Let’s start with what the issue is not: collaboration. Human beings combine efforts to accomplish things, including survival. Whether a team, a community, a movement in the arts, a profession, or any number of other undertakings, being a contributing part of something greater than oneself can be a highlight of one’s life.

Obviously, there is nothing wrong with like-minded individuals gathering to pursue common interests (unless there is something wrong with those common interests, of course). Indeed, it’s how things get done and, every now and then, how greatness is achieved.

It does not have to be the ’27 Yankees or John Coltrane’s Classic Quartet for greatness to be within reach, either. We recognize the kind of Us we admire in a community group raising enough money for a child to receive necessary treatment, a team of fire fighters saving lives, or a staff keeping a business afloat despite adverse circumstances through hard work and skill.

Competition

As a fan of all the major sports, and not just at the professional level (high school basketball is one of the great entertainment bargains anywhere), I’m not the one to decry competition. Healthy, spirited competition pushes participants to greater heights. And, in general, no one better appreciates the effort it takes to strive to be the best than the similarly motivated opponent. Fans are sometimes surprised when intense rivals end up friends, but they needn’t be.

Urban blues reached some of its highest heights in the Blues clubs of ’50s and ’60s Chicago. A bit of Social Darwinism was involved on so-called Blue Monday; bands competed onstage Monday night, and the fans present decided who played there the rest of the week. The losers had to scramble for work, but the brilliance honed by the best of the best made for essential listening in its own right, and inspired rock ‘n’ roll and its “British invasion”.

One of the pillars of capitalism is the idea that competition in the marketplace tends to improve the quality, quantity and price of goods and services, to society’s general benefit. While recognizing it is not perfect, I support our system, but note with chagrin that an area of law called Antitrust is fading away. You may have heard of it. Younger readers, ask your parents or check it out; it’s fascinating.

The problem with Us vs. Them is not in the “versus”, as such.

Where the Problems Lie

Real problems arise in how and why we form the Us and, especially, how the members of each Us regard the Them.

Who is Us and how we form the Us

Consider the sheer number of the kinds of Us each person represents. Within any given conversation, it may be easy to say which group is Us and which is Them. The categories that provide an Us to belong to, however, are limitless, including one’s: ethnic background, religion, race, gender, family, political party, neighborhood, marital status, health, profession, socioeconomic class, education, personality traits, body habitus, lifestyle, and tastes and preferences in just about anything. Any difference will do.

As mentioned above, every Us needs a Them, and all these categories in which we differ are available.

How an Us regards a Them

A critically harmful error often occurs in how the members of an Us regard the Them. Follow the “reasoning” here:
(a) Something must distinguish Us from Them; there is a difference.
(b) If we’re not the same, one must be superior, and that’s gotta be Us.
(c) If we’re not the same, one must be inferior, and that’s gotta be Them.
(d) So, of course, those people are the problem; them. They’re inferior. What do you expect?

In the extreme cases, where humanity runs completely off the rails, it gets worse and goes like this: “They are so inferior, they are barely human…As a matter of a fact, they are not fully human.”

This is no stretch when one contemplates:
(a) the sickeningly effective representation, in the movie Cabaret, of Germany’s descent into evil madness when it became “entertaining” under the Nazis to depict Jews as apes; or
(b) the existence of slavery while the words “We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness….” were written.

Why we form the Us – and the Them

Even in the less extreme cases, why do we seem to need a Them? Are we so insecure in our self-worth that we need someone, anyone, to feel superior to? (“At least we’re not [_______]!”) Do we need someone to dislike, or blame, or even hate?

There are also economic incentives for devaluing others. It escapes me why, but somehow it is considered more palatable to steal from “inferior” beings. What, they deserve it? Maybe it’s just easier.

Science Fiction and Other Thoughts

Here is an exercise I find helpful: Consider as many individuals as is manageable – those on your block, in your town, in your state, in the country, or in the world. From the dozens to the billions of people, each complex, multi-faceted human being is a bundle of beliefs, experiences and aspirations and a member of any number and kind of Usses. Very few are members of exactly the same Us. (Indeed, it may not be possible.) Again, every Us has a Them, and there is a dizzying array of each.

The dizzying array

To state the obvious, all members of every Them we identify consider themselves an Us superior to our Them.

Everyone is a member of countless Usses and Thems. Which of these categorical differences really matter? It is intriguing how many science fiction books and movies are built on the following premise: The one thing that would bring human beings together is having hostile aliens as a common enemy. Those [_________] people aren’t so bad if we need ’em to have a shot at defeating invading Martians. I suspect the theme endures from The Day the Earth Stood Still to Independence Day and so on, because we recognize some rueful truth in it.

There’s another complication. Many people are going to be part of not only the Thems we must oppose for some categories, but also in at least one Us in which we must get along and work together. So, it is possible to collaborate with some of those people. Kind of. But if she’s one of Them, how can she be one of Us? Who’s keeping score?

Furthermore, if each member of every Us and Them knows their group is superior, who is correct? How can we tell? Who decides? Actually, the answers are easy: each of us decides. Our perspective is the correct one. Our group is not only right, but more worthwhile as well. The one trait universally shared, apparently, is hubris. As something to build on, this does not seem promising.

Pause

Amid celebration of our obvious superiority, a pause for some introspection might be in order. I’ve noticed, for example, that I am wrong sometimes. It’s a shocking revelation, I know, but I make mistakes. Perfection completely, persistently, and maddeningly eludes me. Maybe if you are different than I, you can help me muddle through. And vice versa. Just saying.

How’s that perceived need for Us vs. Them been working out for us all, anyway? From centuries past right up to the present, a tragic combination of economic incentive and the need to assert superiority has fostered war, tribalism, pogroms, and humanitarian crises. Conflict is inevitable, I suppose, and even some wars must be fought (e.g. the Allies in WW II), but who needs Us vs. Them as an approach to life’s interactions? It’s wrong. It’s destructive. It’s lunacy.

OK….So? The Merits Beckon

Is the point that nothing is ever better than anything else? Of course not. Some ideas are nutty; some are brilliant. Is there right and wrong? Of course. Honesty is right; lying and stealing are wrong – and we know it.

We also know what distinguishes the quest for excellence from the arrogant and mistaken assumption of categorical superiority: the merits. One of the most striking parts of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Dream is for his children – that they one day “live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.” This is one of history’s greatest speeches not only for its eloquence and its aspirations, but also for its wisdom.

Time To Move On

So, it should not be Us vs. Them, after all. Let’s move on, even as we continue to strive for excellence in all endeavors, alone or in groups. If the need to be “the best” (or first, or whatever) motivates someone to cure cancer, great. We cannot find our self-worth in the denigration of others, however; quite the contrary. As we look elsewhere, we can make ourselves and our groups the best we can be. We can enjoy our rivalries, and play the Super Bowl, the stock market, or a game of Yahtzee, to win.

No, it’s not “Us vs. Them”.

It is “We”. You know, “the People”. Why do We, the People, need to await the arrival of aliens to finally get it right? It’s time to catch up to the wisdom of our cherished rhetoric.

Ken Bossong

© 2019 Kenneth J. Bossong


What’s The Matter?

Admit it. You dread reading or watching the news, avoid discussing politics with most people, and will do almost anything to escape conversation on any topic with some people. If not, you are probably one of those folks everyone else is avoiding.

It seems nearly everyone is either angry, upset, incredulous, or disengaged. Some are all of these, and more. Institutions to which we traditionally turn seem to be weakening, if not crumbling. Life has become satire, as if we were Yossarian living out the book Catch 22 every day. I’ve got to stop saying “You can’t make this stuff up”, because I’ve been saying it nearly constantly for quite a while, and it’s getting old.

What The Problem Is Not

Oddly, it occurs to me that the problem is not that everyone is acting in their own interest. First, as human beings, it seems to me, we have little choice. Self preservation is in our nature. Second, and getting closer to the point, doing well puts us in position to do more good. There’s a reason why the airlines tell us to get our own oxygen masks on before helping others in an emergency.

No, the problem is not people acting in their self interest. It’s just that we are so often wrong about what is in our best interest – and increasingly so – with consequences that range from frustrating to tragic to catastrophic.

It’s closer to the truth, actually, that what’s wrong with us is that we are NOT acting in our true best interests as human beings, when behaving badly, whether acting alone or in groups.

Individually

We make these mistakes as individuals in countless roles in various settings. Among them are as citizens, workers, neighbors, family members, lovers, friends, leaders, officials, public figures, thinkers, artists, writers, and other creators.

We err in big decisions and in small; in private or on the world’s stage; often or once in a while.

Collectively

One would hope that collective wisdom would help us get it right when it comes to discerning our true best interests. Herd mentality often sends the stampede in the wrong direction, though. Such mistakes are made, again, in any number of settings, as within neighborhoods, towns, counties, states, and countries; professions and occupations; religions; races and ethnicities; genders; clubs and associations; socioeconomic groups; and political parties.

Recurring Mistakes

So, what are we talking about here? What “mistakes”? What are we wrong about? There is no point pretending that the list is short, if we were to get into all the nutty stuff we human beings do, but there are some real killers worth exploring, as we will in future posts. Among them are these:

The perceived need for Us versus Them (If you’re not just like me, you must be inferior; the need for enemies.)

Regarding all interactions and relationships as zero-sum games (Since the good in the world is finite, you must do poorly for me to do well.)

Racism and other systematized, irrational hatreds (That it’s morally wrong is a given; the extent of the irrationality involved is staggering.)

Not dealing with people or issues on the merits (Making decisions on the merits requires hard work; alas, we are often lazy, at least.)

Where We Are

I have lost count of the number of people who have told me stories about incidents that have happened to them or someone they know that go something like this: “I can’t (be your friend, talk to you, work with you, etc.) if you (believe in, voted for, like, etc.) (fill in a the name of a person, an attitude, a belief, etc.).” While we’re busy creating the largest possible divides between us with name-calling, insults and the recitation of brainless slogans, genuinely and significantly bad stuff is happening in our communities, our country and our world. Raise your hand if you think any of this is in our best interest. I thought so.

But, enough about the Congress and the White House.

You don’t have to be a cynic or even a skeptic to notice that the unacceptable has become the expected. That is the biggest mistake of all, and we’re all complicit in this one. It’s time to call out the unacceptable for what it is and behave accordingly. Like Yossarian, I hate stewed tomatoes (my favorite line in the book).

Ken Bossong

© 2019 Kenneth J. Bossong