Flyover: Is the left's vocabulary meaner than the right's?

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Like many, I have been highly interested in understanding the rift in US and global politics that has resulted in the rise of Trump, LePen, Ford and Brexit.

While I run mostly in left/urban/secular/keen circles, I try as often as possible to talk to people in other circles to understand their view. My own politics match neither side, which gives me some extra perspective. However, living in left circles, I have encountered more of their terms.

The amount of hate between the sides has grown, and become very polarizing. To the surprise of most of my left friends, I believe that by some measures, the hate of the leftie side towards the right is greater than the hate the other way. Naturally, each side has the intuition that the other is more to blame.

I come to this conclusion by examining the vocabulary and stereotypes each side uses for the other. Not for or by the leaders of the other side (where the vocabulary is extremely nasty as well) but rather for the voters in the middle of each side. People you know, not the wing-nuts (to use another pejorative that goes both directions.) Here are the terms I have collected that I have seen commonly used, not between politicians, but between ordinary people. Some of these terms are used more by the fringes.

(Keen and Steward are my names for the two sides, I will discuss these terms more in later posts.)

Left/Urban/Democrat/Secular/Keen Right/Rural/Republican/Religious/Stewards
Idiots Libtards
Racists Politically Correct
Nazis Social Justice Warrior (SJW)
Deplorables Snowflakes
Flyover residents Bleeding Heart Liberals
Duped by Trump "Tolerant"
Fools Globalist
Fundies God-hating
Populists Elite
Vote against own interests *Baby-killers (Abortion debate)
Misogynists Snobs
Xenophobes *Anti-American
*Fascist *Fascist
Homophobes
Regressives *Feminazi
*Redneck
*White Trash / Trailer Trash
Media are fake news Media are fake news

While I have heard other terms, most are either in fairly rare use or only used by the most fringe writers. Some terms, like "Cuck," (when used as a short for cuckservative) are used as an insult within the group rather than for the other side. Items with a star were suggested by readers. I have left out stereotypes that are ancient and bidirectional.

I am generally looking for terms and stereotypes you might hear a mainstream person (ideally a person you know or would generally respect) use, to describe a voter for the other side. Perhaps in a phrase like, "They voted for Trump/Clinton because they are 'X'" Not what you saw on 4chan.

Upon considering this list, I could not avoid the conclusion that the terms on the left side (literally and figuratively) are considerably more hateful. In fact, only "Libtard" is a nasty insult, and many of the other terms on the right would, if not for their sarcastic intent, be taken as descriptive or positive. A few others, like Snowflake are pretty mild.

I am just asking about the tone of the terms. Whether the terms are valid or not, or what sins each side commits, is not the question here.

I am interested in other contributions to the list, to assure it is not biased. Put them in the comments. What have you heard your friends, otherwise reasonable people -- not wing nuts of either stripe -- say?

Trends

While there is disagreement (of course) about which side is "meaner" what is perhaps of greater interest is the recent delta. Regardless of whether you think the left is better or worse than the right, we can also consider whether the left has gotten worse or improved in recent years, particularly post-Trump-candidacy. And we can ask the same about the right. There are some suggestions that the right hides its hateful stereotypes better and is worse than it appears, and that brings up its own questions.

It seems without question that the rift has worsened, and we may wish to learn if, in the case that stereotypes have worsened, has that been one of the causes of the increase in the rift, or is it caused by it?

Superiority

The particular problem I see illustrated by this list is that many on the left express an idea, either explicitly or implicitly, of superiority. That the other side is not just wrong because they disagree, but because they are stupid, or more charitably less educated or informed only by lying media. The latter comes with a further implication of inferiority, because it suggest that you have been fooled by various lies, but we superior people see through them.

Demographically, in areas like wealth and education, there is a real (though modest) superiority for the left-leaning regions over the right-leaning ones, which doesn't make things better, in fact it may make them worse.

While not all on the left side do express superiority over their political rivals, it seems clearly true that the right side perceives that they do. The right side feels the left side looks down on them as inferiors (correctly or not) while it seems much less frequent that the left thinks the right looks down on them as inferiors. Both sides do make the common presumption that anybody who disagrees so much with me must be stupid rather than just different, but I observe an asymmetry in this.

Both sides are not monoliths, either. On the right we have many different factions -- the more extreme alt-right, evangelical and hard-line conservative factions, and more centrist conservative factions. Likewise the left has its radical/antifa, progressive and socialist factions and centrist liberal groups. And there are people in between both. The more radical factions tend to do more of the hard talking and insulting, but once again my judgement is I see the terms on the right side above much more commonly from the more extreme factions, while I see many of the left side terms even from the more centrist liberals -- triggered I think by the shocking arrival of Trump and his base, and the lumping of all Trump supporters into more negative categories.

Is this important?

I think this is very important, because I think this rift plays a large role in the origin of the new factions on the right, and for Trump himself. If one side views the other as inferior, it is a powerful unifying force in both directions, but the ones looked down on are least likely to cooperate with the people who "think they are better." They become more more inclined to rally behind the devil on their side over somebody neutral on the "superior" side.

In my conversations with Trump voters, it has become clear that many of them are quite aware of most of Trump's flaws. They voted for him in part because he wasn't Clinton, wasn't the representative of the elites, actually declared a desire to fight them (even though he was one of them.) Of course, why they voted is much more complex than that, and will be the subject of future articles.

The gulf between the sides keeps going. Both sides can and should take steps back towards civility. But it might have to start on the left side.

Comments

Rulers and would-be rulers have always tried to portray those they rule as inferior, to rationalize the violence of imposing authority. The Romans disparaged the people of their conquered neighbors, the English disparaged the Scots, Welsh, and Irish, the "progressives" in America despised and attempted to destroy the culture of the plains Indians, etc, etc.

In America however, we still have a strong feeling since we overthrew the rule of George the Mad German Usurper that we owe no allegiance to anyone who displays a lust for power, and that it is in fact our patriotic duty to oppose them.

Hillary Clinton, in her recent trip to India, was quoted as saying:
"If you look at the map of the United States, there's all that red in the middle where Trump won."
"I win the coast, I win, you know, Illinois and Minnesota, places like that."
"I won the places that represent two-thirds of America's gross domestic product."
"So I won the places that are optimistic, diverse, dynamic, moving forward. And his whole campaign, 'Make America Great Again,' was looking backwards."
http://www.businessinsider.com/hillary-clinton-says-trump-won-backwards-states-in-2016-2018-3

This was quite a stunning open claim of superiority of places she won over places she lost, with apparently no concern that her party needs to win some of the places she lost.

Yes, the mask slipped when she let fly with that "deplorables" snark, and now it's long gone. The theme of her campaign was "It's my TURN, you fucking PEASANTS", and she came completely unglued when she lost. Since then, she's just kept on damaging the Democratic party by trying to publicly prop up her ego, instead of fading into well-earned obscurity like Mondale or Dukakis.

-jcr

I'd add "redneck" and "white trash" as older terms that I still hear frequently.

You've got feminazi on the Left/Urban/Democrat/Secular/Keen - I believe it's a term coined, or at least socialized, by Rush Limbaugh, who is definitely not considered part of that grouping.

Fixed. I am not even sure whether to include this suggestion. I have heard it a little more often, but it's not the sort of term I hear from people I know or speak to.

Without question calling some or a group racist or Nazis is incredibly negative. And I’ll grant you it can seem/be hateful. But, um... it is also literally accurate in a whole bunch of cases. When the KKK holds an event and folks call attendees of that event racist, they are making a factual statement. Similarly we are seeing the American Nazi party attend/organize rallies. Call folks at those events Nazis is likewise a factual statement.

Contrast this with libtard, which conflates and perpetuates the very ugly “retarded”, which is in the same broad bucket as “nigger” or “spic” or “kike” - among the most hateful and ugly words out there.

There is no problem with calling someone a racist or a nazi if they are indeed a racist or a nazi.
Unfortunately the words have come to mean anyone to the right of Chairman Mao.
They are thrown about like confetti, with little thought for the fact that they are actually damaging the credibility of the accuser.

Identity politics is poison and the left would be far far better returning to redistributive policies based solely on wealth and utterly blind to identity.

Positive discrimination is just discrimination, people did note vote so much for trump as they did against ever encroaching intersectionality .

Something many people don't think about is that our current political parties are more like loose coalitions than united parties. There are extreme and moderate factions looking for balance (or vying for power). In an attempt to advance my agenda I have to partner with someone who we agree with on some number of issues. When you do this you risk being branded with the extreme views of those people. If I consort with someone who is an actual Nazi, perhaps I want to rethink my friends. That said, if I have an affiliation with someone with extreme views on immigration, but we also happen to agree on an agenda to fund early childhood education, does that make me anti-immigration too? I feel that many see issues as transitive, when they are not.

I agree that there is far too much guilt by association. However I think that this is inflamed greatly by activists who are strongly incented to take extreme positions to maintain relevance. Calling someone a nazi because they submitted a piece to a publication that published a piece that someone claimed was written by a nazi sympathiser gets you noticed.
Have you ever wondered why justice movements once the battle is mostly won, continue to exist and morph into something that is parody like?
If the enemy no longer exists, one is simply fabricated or imagined.

Used against the left: "tumblrina" (often modified, eg: "pink-haired tumblrina")

Used by the left: "cishet scum"

As someone who is fairly well in the classic Liberal Left quadrant of the political map, I don't disagree with you in broad terms. In fact, I sadly and frequently find myself dismayed by the behaviour of people I would otherwise call my allies, which goes directly into why I'm bothering to comment here: don't paint too broad with too broad a brush by labeling this sort of namecalling as "the left" or "the right". There are many, many individuals on both sides of our frustratingly two-sided political system that do not engage in this sort of thing. Perhaps the emphasis should not be on whose immature namecallers are meaner but rather how to get everyone to engage in more reasoned discourse.

I do agree, there are of course far more than two sides. But for my central issue, which is how each side perceives the other side's attitude (which comes from that actual attitude) then the group is "anybody who feels insulted by the attitude."

So let's say you are not part of the mainstream of the right, but the left acts in a way that conveys they think anybody like you is inferior. You are still going to feel that even if not precisely the target.

I see Neanderthal used a fair bit, and Becky mostly used internal to the left, not against the right

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