August 25, 2023

In modern political parlance, the term echo chamber has come to mean an environment where a given individual only encounters opinions and philosophies that mirror their own, giving rise to a reinforcement of that person’s original positions while insulating them from any conflicting information.

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Although both progressives and conservatives accuse each other of living inside of their own respective echo chambers, any clear-minded, honest person will admit that the progressive echo chamber is more isolated, more dismissive of even the possibility of considering an opposing viewpoint and more outright hostile to the other side.

It has long been said that progressives view conservatives as not only incorrect on the facts, but also as outright evil, while most conservatives see progressives as sorely misguided and somewhat naïve but not evil per se.

Speaking from my own anecdotal experience, I see conservatives far more likely to be friends with progressives and to be able to enjoy their shared common interests (perhaps sports, classic movies, music/concerts, etc.) than the other way around. I have encountered very few progressives who don’t define another person’s entire friendship worthiness by whether that person buys into the big progressive tenets, such as abortion, gender fluidity, race/ethnic-based quotas, etc. If a conservative doesn’t align with a progressive on those (and other) issues, then that person is not merely “wrong,” they are evil and therefore not worthy of respect and civil treatment.

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This all comes to mind after I received my latest copy of my college alumni magazine, Boston University’s Bostonia. Published three times a year, Bostonia is an eclectic mix of local Boston happenings as they apply to the school/alumni, maybe a few general interest articles on food or art, and always—always—a hyper political piece espousing a popular progressive stance. This piece, which is usually the cover feature, is written not to persuade an undecided reader with a balanced presentation of all the relevant angles, but instead is written from a pointed progressive angle, assumed to be correct with a definite air of “If you don’t accept all of our assumptions and hypotheticals at face value, then you’re obviously a mental inferior.”

This edition’s cover story, “How the AR-15 Divided a Nation” is such a predictable anti-gun/anti-NRA/anti-Republican Party screed that it contains no surprises whatsoever, presents no new information, and cites no new cause/effect insights of any kind. The article starts by using the cheap rhetorical device of listing the locations of well-known recent mass shooting sites:

A mall in Allen, Tex.

A grocery store in Buffalo, N.Y.

A supermarket in Boulder, Colo.

A synagogue in Pittsburg, Pa.