Sources of Our
Travel in time with me to the 1980s when an experienced educator suggested to me that the so-called “Me Generation” of students at that time were headed for a troubled future because of their growing belief that everyone’s opinions were equally valid regardless of established facts. We have equal rights (or should), but it’s foolish to believe that we’re equally right.
Fast forward to the election year of 2016 when my wife and I witnessed a widespread denial of provable facts. We were in an Amtrak station when a fellow passenger I dubbed Alice in Wonderland was on her phone loudly explaining that the 2012 mass murder of students and teachers in Connecticut’s Sandy Hook School was a hoax perpetrated by those wanting “to take our guns.” She told her listener to check it out “on Facebook.” Clearly, we were in the presence of a conspiracist with a social media megaphone.
We knew there were ridiculous lies lurking in dark corners of the Internet—President Obama wasn’t a citizen, climate change was a hoax, the moon landings never happened—but I hadn’t come across a True Believer before. Watching Angry Alice spread online fiction to who knows how many eventual Believers was both disturbing and sad: disturbing because we were witnessing the spread of a lie and were powerless to stop it; sad because we were seeing a human being with the priceless gift of reason twisting it without evidence to satisfy her own paranoia. Surely, she was taught the habit of critical thinking in school. Apparently, she broke the habit and was a recovering thinker.
The distinguished essayist Christopher Hitchens called conspiracy theories “the exhaust fumes of democracy.” Smelly, useless, and poisonous.
We later learned that the Sandy Hook “hoax” was promoted by right-wing radio personality Alex Jones, who was sued for defamation by eight grieving families. Jones must pay more than $965 million in damages and has declared bankruptcy. Justice.
Fast forward again to the 2020 presidential election when the losing candidate claimed—with no evidence—that his election was “stolen.” Even though 60 of 61 courts ruled that Biden won fairly (one didn’t rule because of a legal technicality), many of the loser’s followers became True Believers in the Big Lie. Many GOP legislators who know better but are afraid of losing votes became, and remain, election deniers publicly but privately admit the election was fair.
In his 2017 book The Death of Expertise, Tom Nichols, professor of national security at the US Naval War College and at Harvard, writes about “the emergence of a positive hostility” to established facts and expert views. “This is new in American culture, and it represents the aggressive replacement of expert views or established knowledge with the insistence that every opinion on any matter is as good as every other.” This remarkable change in our public discourse “is not only unprecedented but dangerous.… Indeed, ignorance has now become hip….” But why would anyone prefer fashionable to factual?
Some good news: schools are working to make ignorance unfashionable. An award-winning government teacher at an area high school tells me that most of his students do not believe all opinions to be equally valid and that by the time they graduate, most “are at least decent at understanding credibility of sources and recognizing more reliable versus less reliable information.”
He said that challenges include competition from social media for students’ attention, lingering absenteeism since the pandemic, and, for some, “the tidal wave they get outside of school [regarding] their political socialization and the related ability to think critically about the difference between information and propaganda.” If schools overcome these challenges, our discontents will fade.