By Nitzhakon
So I’ve “gotten into it” any number of times about Hitler being a Socialist, that you can’t say NAZI without understanding it comes from “National Socialist German Worker’s Party”, and so on. And there is plenty of evidence that he was, indeed, a Socialist.
I was born and raised in the “People’s Republic of Marxachusetts” and grew up very, very liberal. Name a Left/Right issue, I was on the Left. No question. Yet each time I abandoned a Left position to move Rightward, I can point to a seminal event or other piece of insight/learning that ushered in a reconsidering of my former position and – often – describe my thought process after that event as well as new insights and thought patterns that started to ascend.
As one example, still fresh in my mind despite (cough cough a long time), is the moment when I started to doubt the anti-gun teachings I’d been impressed with all my life (bolding in original):
I was living in the Midwest when my police officer neighbor remarked that I should get a gun for self-defense. Having been raised, all my life, to believe that civilian gun ownership was wrong, it shocked me to my core that – of all people – a cop was telling me this.
Unlike most Leftists – and have no doubt that I still was one – I didn’t dismiss this as a flier data point stated by a knuckledraggingslopedforeheadredneck, but rather it made me think those great two words that often stand at the threshold of a new insight: That’s weird…
I can also describe – and did – the thought processes and cascades that came from that moment. As I can when I started to question my “pro-abortion” stance to move towards the pro-life view. And many other shifts, including my transitioning from a climate alarmist to CO2-mageddon skeptic. All of this ties back to something our host said some time ago on their old blog about humility. In this context, the willingness to admit the possibility of error. Humility is the opposite of Vanity, and while the Seven Deadly Sins – and Seven Heavenly Virtues – are Catholic constructs (not that there’s anything wrong with that!) I have found them to be useful intellectual tools. I have told my children, in teaching them my values, that it’s my belief that all humans have 1-2 sins that dominate a particular person’s weaknesses, that there are 1-2 that are “intermediate”, and the rest fall off Pareto-like into the trivial.
As noted in an excellent book I recently read, learning requires change, and change requires the humility to admit one might be wrong in one’s beliefs. This is, as an aside, is something I would ask when doing interviews back in my days as a corporate slave, er, drone, um, I mean employee: Tell me about a time when you changed your mind on something significant. Describe the background, your initial thoughts, what you changed to, and why you changed your mind.
If reworded a little, it’s also an excellent question to ask of a potential new boss.
2 comments:
I have a Facebook friend in Deutschland. He's as anti war as me. His Uncles were in the Wermacht. One of them lost his toes in Stalingrad. I imagine most of you detest Nazism. And yet, if General Paulus had been successful at Stalingrad Stalin would have been disposed. One can only ask if the world would have been better, worse or the same. THE JEWISH QUESTION. As a long term participant and lover of Musicals I'd certainly protest and keep Roger's and Hammerstein from the ovens! Thus and as always...life is mostly making the best of a bad situation. Joe Mack
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