Hot Air
 
 
Confirmed: Conservatives understand liberal positions better than liberals  
understand conservative positions
 
posted at 1:21 pm on April 13, 2012 by Tina Korbe


 
 


At The American, AEI resident scholar Andrew Biggs highlights an  
interesting study that confirms what most conservatives probably already know 
to  be 
true of themselves: We understand why our liberal friends think what they  
think more than they understand why we think what we think. 
[University of Virginia professor Jonathan] Haidt’s research asks  
individuals to answer questionnaires regarding their core moral beliefs—what  
sorts 
of values they consider sacred, which they would compromise on, and how  
much it would take to get them to make those compromises. By themselves, these  
exercises are interesting. (Try them _online _ (http://www.yourmorals.org/) 
and see where you come out.) 
But Haidt’s research went one step further, asking self-indentified  
conservatives to answer those questionnaires as if they were  liberals and for 
liberals to do the opposite. What Haidt found is that  conservatives understand 
liberals’ moral values better than liberals  understand where conservatives 
are coming from. Worse yet, liberals don’t know  what they don’t know; 
they don’t understand how limited their knowledge of  conservative values is. 
If anyone is close-minded here it’s not  conservatives.
Haidt has one theory to explain his results, while Biggs has another. Haidt 
 says conservatives speak a broader and more encompassing language of six 
moral  values, while liberals focus on a narrow subset of those values. Biggs 
says  conservatives understand liberal positions because they’re inundated 
with them —  by the media, by academia, even to a certain extent by the 
culture. 
Haidt and Biggs both have a point. It takes just about a year of actively  
debating politics or witnessing the debate of politics to realize that (a) 
the  two parties to the debate don’t speak the same language and (b) the 
liberal  party will have few opportunities to learn the conservative’s 
language. 
It’s not  only that we don’t use the same words, it’s that we also assign 
completely  different meanings to the same words. 
The president’s prattling about the Buffett Rule is a perfect example. He  
repeatedly uses the word “fair” when he discusses this rule that would 
require  anyone who earns more than $1 million a year to pay at least 30 
percent 
in  taxes. The Buffett Rule is actually officially named “The Paying a Fair 
Share  Act.” 
Conservatives have been quick to cede the word “fair” to the president.  
Instead of debating whether The Buffett Rule actually is fair, we’ve  focused 
on the idea that economic growth and entitlement reform are the  keys to 
deficit reduction. We know that our definition of “fair” is  different than 
liberals’ definition of “fair,” so we’re never going to be able  to 
convince liberals that the Buffett Rule actually is unfair. In a  world 
dominated 
by liberal influences in the media, academy and culture, we have  no choice 
but focus on the fact that The Buffett Rule would do very little to  reduce 
the deficit. 
If liberals understood the conservative definition of “fair,” they might  
better understand how it’s possible to oppose the Buffett Rule. As  the 
debate stands at this moment, it’s conceivable that the average liberal  thinks 
conservatives actually oppose a rule we think is fair just because we  don’t 
think it will adequately reduce the deficit. But why would anybody oppose  
a fair rule? In fact, we oppose the Buffett Rule because, by our definition, 
it  is unfair — not to mention that it does very little to reduce the 
deficit. (As  an aside, I’ve been searching for an article in which a 
conservative argues  explicitly that the Buffett Rule is unfair and am finding 
it 
surprisingly hard  to find. Has anybody read a good one?) 
The word “just” is defined as “based on right.” Our concept of what is 
fair  starts with our concept of what is a right. Whereas progressives think  
that rights are given by the government, conservatives think that “we are  
endowed by our Creator with certain inalienable rights.” Among our God-given  
rights is the right to keep the fruits of our labor. So far, I have never 
heard  a good argument that we have a right or a claim to the fruits of others
’ labor  unless they have promised them to us for some reason. We certainly 
never have an  intrinsic a priori claim on the fruits of someone else’s 
labor. 
As long as he is allowed to keep what he has earned, the conservative 
thinks  he has been treated fairly — even if others have more than he has. The  
liberal has a completely different definition of fairness. Liberals seem to  
think we have a right to the same fruits no matter what our labor. 
It is true that different kinds and quantities of work yield different 
kinds  and quantities of fruits. That is sometimes hard to take — but if, in 
the 
end,  we receive the fruits we agreed to when we selected our labor, then 
the fruits  we receive are fair. (For example, if we agree to a particular day
’s wages and  we receive that day’s wages, then we have been treated 
fairly. Nobody changed  the deal to which we agreed.) In making the choice to 
be 
a secretary and not a  hedge fund manager, for example, the secretary 
forgoes some of the fruits of the  hedge fund manager — but obtains some fruits 
the hedge fund manager never  tastes, say the fruit of more time to spend with 
family or the fruit of less  stress. If we are not content with the fruits 
of our labor, perhaps we ought  first to consider changing our labor, rather 
than demand we be given different  fruits. 
One last thought: Conservatives clearly have a more expansive view of what  
constitutes “fruits.” We do not measure success and fairness solely by 
money. In  the example above, I recognize the worth of time off and less 
pressure — two  intangibles. For all that liberals like to talk about 
conservative 
greed, it’s  interesting that conservatives can content themselves with 
less money in  exchange for other benefits whereas liberals seem blind to those 
benefits and  just want the money.

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