The politics of pessimism


pessimissm imagesNewspaper headlines and TV or radio news bulletins would have us believe erroneously that a new age has come upon us, the Age of Cassandra. People are being assailed not just with contemporary doom or past gloom, but with prophecies of disasters about to befall. The dawn of the new millennium has now passed; the earth is still intact and the fin de siecle jeremiahs have now gone off to configure a new date for the apocalypse.

It can, I believe be said with some certainly that the doom-mongers will never run out of business. Human nature has an inclination for pessimism and anxiety with each age having its demagogues, foretelling doom or dragging it in their wake. But what makes the modern age so different is that the catastrophes are more in your face. Their assault on our senses is relentless. Whether it be sub-conscious or not, this is a situation not lost on politicians. They play upon people’s propensity for unease, turning it into a very effective political tool.

Deluding the general public

All too often, when politicians want to change the status quo, they take advantage of people’s fears of the unknown and their uncertainties about the future. For example, details about a new policy may be leaked to the press. Of course, the worst case scenario is presented in all its depressing detail. When the general public reacts in horror, the government appears to cave in. and then accepting some of the suggestions from their critics, ministers water down their proposals. This allows the same time fooling the public into believing that they have got one over on the government. Or even that they have some say in the making of policy.

There are several principles at play here. And both are rather simple: unsettle people and then play on their fears; and second, people must be given an opportunity to make a contribution, however insignificant, in a given situation; otherwise they become dissatisfied not fearful or anxious.

A similar ruse, at a local level, will further illustrate how easily people’s base fears are exploited. A common practice is to give people a number of options, say in a housing development, ranging from no change to radical transformation of an area. The aim is to persuade people to agree significant modifications, which may involve disruption to their lives, and possibly extra expenditure. The individuals fearful of the worst possible outcome plump for the middle course. And this incidentally is invariably the option favoured by the authorities. Every thing is achieved under the guise of market research. But it is obviously a blatant exercise in the manipulation of people’s fears.

 

Fear and survival

Fear and anxieties about the future affect us all. People are wracked with self-doubt and low self-esteem. In the struggle to exit and advance in life, a seemingly endless string of obstacles is encountered, so many in fact that any accomplishment seems surprising. Even when people do succeed, they are still nagged by uncertainly.

Not surprisingly, feeling like doubt, fear, anxiety and pessimism are usually associated with failure. Yet, if properly harnessed they are the driving force behind success, the very engines of genius.

If things turn out well for a long time ,there is a further anxiety: that of constantly waiting for something to go wrong. People then find themselves propitiating the gods: not walking on lines on the pavements, performing rituals before public performances wearing particular clothes and colours so that they can blame the ritual not themselves when things go wrong.

But surely the real terror comes when success continues uninterrupted for such a long period of time that we forget failure is like!

We crave for and are fed a daily diet of anxiety. Horror films and disaster movies have an increasing appeal. Nostradamus pops his head up now and again. And other would-be prophets make a brief appearance, predicting the demise of human kind. Perhaps, this is all just a vestige of the hardships of early man our attempt to recreate the struggle of a past age, as life becomes more and more comfortable.

Mankind cannot live by contentment alone. And so, a world awash with anxieties and pessimism has been created. Being optimistic is a struggle. But survival dictates that mankind remain ever sanguine.

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