Sunday, February 26, 2023

Enemies Within

One of my recent reads was Scars of Independence: America’s Violent Birth by Holger Hoock. The focus of most histories of the War of Independence is on military engagements and high level politics in Congress and in London. But of course it also was a civil war, and a brutal one at that. Hoock's focus is largely on the civil war. The populace was more closely divided than is generally remembered. According to Benjamin Franklin a third of the population was Loyalist (openly or quietly) including his own son who was Royal Governor of New Jersey. Another third was for Independence. The remainder bent whichever direction the wind blew in their particular locale in hopes of avoiding targeting by either side. It didn’t always work: “You’re either with us or against us” is a common sentiment in these situations to justify actions against neutrals. (“Silence is violence” would be the modern counterpart.) Self-styled Committees of Safety and their Loyalist counterparts often called at the homes of people who seemed suspiciously neutral and demanded loyalty oaths under threat of life and limb. Attacks on civilians with opposing views and reprisals for them ranged from property confiscation to tar-and-feather assaults to murder by ad hoc militias. Although a general amnesty was declared for participants in civil violence (on either side) as part of the final peace settlement, in practice the Loyalists who remained in the United States had a hard time of it for years after the war.


 
What is it about civil wars that makes them particularly savage? Perhaps an answer can be found in the writings of Harvard anthropologist and evolutionary psychologist Richard Wrangham, in particular The Goodness Paradox: The Strange Relationship between Virtue and Violence in Human Evolution published in 2019. Humans differ from other primates in our capacities for both kindness and violence. There is a classic dispute between followers of Rousseau and Hobbes: the former regard people as naturally kind and generous unless corrupted by social structures while the latter regard people as naturally rapacious unless restrained by social structures. Both are half-right and half-wrong. We are naturally both regardless of social structures; whether we express kindness or aggression at any given moment depends on the circumstances.
 
Wrangham distinguishes between reactive violence and proactive violence. Reactive violence is spontaneous, as when tempers flare when someone bumps into someone else at a bar. Proactive violence is planned such as a raid against an enemy or a bank robbery. Reactive violence does happen of course, but it is rare by the standards not only of primates but of other mammals other than domesticated ones among which aggression has deliberately been bred out. Most people are remarkably tolerant of minor transgressions that would start fights even among wild herbivores. Meantime, the capacity for proactive violence has not diminished at all. Many anthropologists have argued that humans somehow self-domesticated; the signs of it are not just behavioral but involve physical changes similar to those we see in domestic animals compared to their wild ancestors. Wrangham argues that this happened when early humans developed sufficient communication skills to form coalitions against dominant males. In all other primates (even bonobos) a single bullying alpha male through aggression and physical prowess dominates a group and gets most of the mating opportunities. At some point early humans could conspire to take this guy out by forming an alpha coalition to overwhelm him. The unintended effect over generations was self-domestication: a reduction of personal in-group reactive violence.
 
These coups or revolutions (if we may call them that) are proactive violence. It is no wonder that they are especially vicious compared to clashes with true outsiders since the penalties for losing a civil war to the alpha male and his allies (his communication skills advanced too, so he probably has some) is likely to be fatal.
 
Humans being great rationalizers, we are likely to invent competing moralities and ideologies to justify why our coalition should prevail against that coalition. Some of them are even convincing. But at bottom they may be little different from the motivations of some gang that rid the clan of a bullying jerk 200,000 years ago.

 
Guns N' Roses – Civil War



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