The Potential Militant Extremist Inside Each of Us

http://www.miller-mccune.com/culture_society/potential-militant-extremist-inside-1343

The fanatical thinking that leads to militant extremism is a 
seductive narrative that may have a surprisingly widespread low-level 
resonance in the general population, finds one study.

By Lee Drutman
July 20, 2009

Ever since 9/11, the threat of militant extremism has loomed large in 
the American psyche. But how much do we really know about the 
militant-extremist mindset?

According to one new study, we may actually be able to learn more 
than we think just by looking in the mirror. That's the conclusion 
from group of psychologists who presented undergraduates in two 
countries with a broad range of framings common to militant extremist 
fanatical groups. In survey after survey, students generally failed 
to strongly dissociate themselves from the sentiments.

"If, in fact, extremist thinking is something bizarre, you'd expect 
people to disagree with the statements," said Gerard Saucier, a 
professor of psychology at the University of Oregon and the lead 
researcher on the study. "What you get instead is that they're 
failing to disavow them. A typical showing is a mixture of agree and 
disagree." The findings are reported in the May issue of Perspectives 
on Psychological Science.

In order to determine what goes into the militant-extremist mindset, 
Saucier and his colleagues (a pair of Oregon psychology grad 
students, Laura Geuy Akers and Seraphine Shen-Miller; Goran Knezevic, 
a professor of psychology at the University of Belgrade; and Lazar 
Stankov, currently a visiting professor at National Institute of 
Education, Singapore, formerly a research scientist with Educational 
Testing Service) first read widely. They examined the published 
materials of 13 militant extremist groups, which they defined as 
groups that combine fanatical beliefs and values and advocacy of 
extremist means, including violence.

The extremists came from across regions, religions and cultures. They 
ranged from the Baader-Meinhof Gang (Germany) to Meir Kahane and 
followers (Palestine and Israel) to the Lord's Resistance Army 
(Uganda) to the Tamil Tigers (Sri Lanka) to Aum Shinrikyo (Japan) to 
the Shining Path (Peru) to home-grown U.S. extremists like the 
Unabomber and Timothy McVeigh.

The researchers then extracted 16 key themes that occurred over and 
over in the texts. Taken together, the themes cohere into what 
Saucier and colleagues describe as a "seductive narrative": The 
modern world has fallen into a catastrophic state. The ordinary 
mechanisms of change are no longer valid. Only extreme, violent 
measures can save things. This is a war of us against them, a war of 
good versus evil, a war of necessity. Any and all means are not only 
justified, they are glorified. God is on our side. In the end utopia 
will be restored.

"The persuasive force comes from the storyline," Saucier said. "When 
I tried putting all the themes together to get a composite storyline, 
it was kind of striking. What struck me was the highly emotional kind 
of thinking. It has a lot of a kind of motivational force to it." (In 
the journal article, Saucier and colleagues call this story "the 
seductive narrative in militant-extremist thinking" and write that it 
"may seem like a dramatic comic book.")

Then, the researchers asked 215 American undergraduates and 297 
advanced high school students from Serbia how much they agreed or 
disagreed with statements. On a five-point scale (going from strongly 
disagree to strongly agree), American undergraduates averaged 2.5, 
with nobody averaging higher than a 4; Serbian students averaged 
2.95, with only very few scoring 4 or higher.

"The simple but unattainable position is to see militant extremists 
as some kind of maverick freaks or severely mentally disturbed people 
or exceptionally evil," said Knezevic, the University of Belgrade 
psychology professor, in an e-mail. But, he noted, "the psychological 
constituents of it are omnipresent in humans. ... Consequently, the 
immense recruiting potential for all sorts of future extreme and 
destructive political programs will continue to be present in human societies."

A depressing statement, perhaps, but the researchers hope that by 
identifying the dangerous thought patterns, they can promote modes of 
thinking that they call "antithetical to militant extremism."

These include the general virtues of toleration, respect for rules 
and ethical responsibility for actions, as well as being comfortable 
with the imperfections of the world and not longing for some 
glorified past or future utopia or dwelling on some current 
catastrophe. They describe 16 such modes in the journal article. "The 
pattern of thinking should be promoted everywhere as part of 
educational standards," Knezevic said.

Saucier suggested that better understanding militant extremist 
thinking can help "to defuse the phenomenon, because the story line 
may be a kind of a key glue in how movements operate, and so a big 
piece is just understanding that." Saucier also thought that such an 
understanding might allow pollsters to better design questions to 
gauge the levels of support for such movements internationally.

But while militant extremist thinking may lie dormant in many people, 
it takes certain conditions to activate the thinking. One is the 
general condition in society. "Failed states, oppressive governments, 
factors like that," Saucier said. "There is a good chance those broad 
contextual factors will heighten tendencies towards extremist 
patterns." This explains why brutal regimes often gain popular 
support when a society descends into chaos.

The other is the social context. "It depends on who you hang around 
with," Saucier said. If someone prone to militant extremist thinking 
falls in with a group of similarly minded folks, the individuals are 
likely to feed off each other.

Recently, far-right nationalist parties have been gaining ground in 
some European countries as the economy continues to struggle. For 
example, in the Netherlands, the nationalist Freedom Party did 
surprisingly well. And in the United Kingdom, two members of the 
British National Party who were just elected to the European 
Parliament recently made news by saying the EU should sink boats of 
African immigrants in order to stop Europe from being "swamped by the 
Third World." Such sentiments may lead to more widespread militant 
extremist thinking.

"I see indications that ethnonationalism is a pretty good 
place-setter for militant extremism wherever the ethnonationalists 
feel particularly obstructed and adopt an angry and aggressive tone," 
said Saucier, who is now beginning to explore the psychological 
construct behind such thinking. "It is pretty easy to see that 
ethnonationalism can easily get one well into a militant-extremist 
thinking pattern because of the emphasis on fervor-promoting themes 
like an obstructed group, an illegitimate government, a glorious past 
and so on."

In the larger context of personality research, the militant-extremism 
study is also an attempt, as Stankov put it, to ask: "Is there 
something new that captures that militant mindset of terrorists or 
can it be understood in terms of the well-established constructs from 
the broad areas of personality and social psychology?"

The question of evil, of course, is a longstanding one in modern 
psychology. Following World War II, a lot of psychological research 
investigated if there was a particular fascist mindset or personality 
that would explain the rise of brutal totalitarian states. Theodore 
Adorno, for example, developed a theory of the authoritarian 
personality, and came up with a set of tests to rank one's propensity 
to this kind of thinking. Stanley Milgram's famous Obedience to 
Authority experiments, meanwhile, seemed to suggest given the "right" 
conditions, most people would follow orders even when the orders were 
to administer a potentially fatal electric shock.

Saucier and colleagues, however, draw more inspiration from a 1951 
work by Eric Hoffer called The True Believer: Thoughts on the nature 
of mass movements, which posits fanaticism as something different 
from Nazi/Fascist/Communist authoritarianism, but no less dangerous.

"Hoffer's work is based on a much broader look at fanatical groups," 
Saucier said. "And one of the things that is going on in this work is 
that we're going back to a different foundation looking at attitudes, 
one not coming out of the fascism-authoritarian school, but one with 
a much broader background."

Finally, in an era in which so much psychological research focuses on 
happiness, Stankov notes that it is important to remember that most 
people also have a dark side that would be dangerous to ignore.

"Our work can be seen as a reaction to what is sometimes called 
'positive psychology.'" Stankov said. "What we are doing is saying 
that 'hate' is still around and it can be harmful and we need to 
understand its nature and its workings in society."

.


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