dmv.community is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
A small regional Mastodon instance for those in the DC, Maryland, and Virginia areas. Local news, commentary, and conversation.

Administered by:

Server stats:

161
active users

#sociology

12 posts12 participants0 posts today

Fire. Plane crashes. Subway violence. Politics. It seems like there’s a lot to be scared of these days. But how is this different from the past? And what’s it doing to us — individually and collectively? Writing for The Ringer, Lex Pryor explores the magnetic pull of fear in American culture:

flip.it/369.GE

flip.itA United State of FearFire. Plane crashes. Subway violence. Politics. It seems like there’s a lot to be scared of these days. But how is this different from the past? And what’s it doing to us—individually and collectively?
Replied in thread

“Many women, I think, resist feminism because it is an agony to be fully conscious of the brutal misogyny which permeates culture, society, and all personal relationships.”
― Andrea Dworkin in her book, Our Blood: Prophecies and Discourses on Sexual Politics 🧶

📢 New article published! “From Quarantine to Deglobalisation” by Tabea Scharrer, our RTG member Chinwe Beneditte Ogbonna, and Gerhild Perl is out in “Routed: Migration & (Im)mobility Magazine” (Issue 26). It explores shifting mobility under pandemic constraints. Read it here: t1p.de/co-article01

@unifreiburg @dfg_public @politicalscience @sociology @mehlera @histodons #migration #globalstudies #academicpublishing #histodons #sociology #politicalscience

Routed Magazine · From Quarantine to DeglobalisationBy Tabea Scharrer, Chinwe Beneditte Ogbonna, and Gerhild Perl

Just finished #reading Ali Meghji's book "Decolonizing #Sociology"--great analysis of how #colonialism affected the sociology discipline & theoretical #canon. He argues for subverting sociological imperialism, centering the process and effects of coloniality within sociological research, & embracing #autonomous sociologies. It's very readable & approachable, clear in argument but also in its advocacy for walking a new path. Highly recommended, even for students.

politybooks.com/bookdetail?boo

The family group/tribe is built on mutual support, but the modern conservative version is transactional, based on membership and loyalty. Actions that look like kindness are in reality actions to reinforce tribal loyalty. I think this is why so many people in conservative communties, who are trapped in entirely conservative information spaces, have a hard time breaking free. They see examples of community support as affirmations of their community goodness, and this narrative is drummed into them constantly. Conservative leaders have the advantage of labeling any disruptive people or ideas as 'foreign' and a threat, even if from within the community, so that they never even have to engage with new ideas on merit.

Kindness isnt a relevant trait to their tribal functioning, because the ability to be unkind and cruel to people who arent toeing the tribal line is necessary to upholding 'family law'. Kindness in others undermines their attempts to police peoples behavior (this is why its so important that men are in charge). Therefore, not only is kindness devalued, it is actively persecuted as a threat to conservative values. And that is only treatment of your in-group. If you reject kindness internally, imagine how easy it is to subject an out-group to cruel inhumanity. You can literally justify anything. What is horrifying is the degree to which everyday members of conservative communities have become willfully blind to the terrible treatment of others in order to hang on to an image of community goodness. I have witnessed far too much of this in my life.

Its worth stating that the left has its own, different kind of tribalism. They embrace kindness but there is a lot of pressure to prove the right kind of worth. It has a distinctly multicultural, anti-authoritarian tribalism, where the rules of the tribe are under constant negotiation. This makes communicating a platform challenging. Its a lot simpler for conservative platforms whose rules come from demagogues and an old book.

The flaw of designing a system without compassion is that the cruelty eventually becomes impossible to hide from the tribe, and the cruelty comes for everyone. #uspol #politics #disability #sociology #anthropology #kindness #geopol

“If there is a useful and relevant political science literature on the processes through which random social media memes are becoming the basis for dramatic changes in U.S. governmental structures and policies, I’d love to see it.”

- @himself.bsky.social reviews Chris Hayes’ new book on our dysfunctional attention economy

programmablemutter.com/p/the-a

Programmable Mutter · The attention economy is devouring politicsBy Henry Farrell
so humans ARE actually nice… we were right all along! 🤣👽💚

this is pretty fascinating book about the science of human kindness, and what we can do to promote it. we’re very interested in kindness, because it seems like people don’t always know what it is and isn’t - and that includes us!

being awkward isn’t inherently unkindness. not knowing something isn’t inherently unkindness. not having all the answers isn’t inherently unkindness. having boundaries and wishing people would respect them isnt inherently unkindness.

but discrimination, turning away from other people’s problems and reality all the time, and enforcing meaningless “rules” to keep others down absolutely are. so what do we do about it? well, what HAVE we done about it?

hopefully we can get back to it, because the underlying message is just to be kind. ☮️ including to yourselves, friends!! 🩵

#books #reading #science #sociology

There's definitely a much better way to do it but here's my really messy freedom equation with way too many comments.

It calculates the total amount of freedom a population has by separating things everyone can do from things everyone can stop others from doing.

#NoamChomsky:

“There are no poor countries, only failed systems of resource management.”

“No one will place the truth in your mind; it is something you must discover for yourself.”

“If you want to control a people, create an imaginary enemy that appears more dangerous than you, then present yourself as their savior.”

“One of the clearest lessons of history: rights are not granted; they are taken by force.”

The concept of lying is so fascinating to me. I mean that in the strictly walled off mentally-divorced-from-any-context fascination sense.

People lie. Everybody lies. Lies of omission, lies of regret, white lies, political lies.

Abraham Lincoln said “No man has a good enough memory to be a successful liar” and I wonder if that is even functionally true anymore.

Replied in thread

@tofugolem I believe that there is a generalized breakdown of sensemaking in the USA. The noise from the idiots drowned out everything until they looked reasonable because they were the loudest. Then they burned down everything that might give some orientation. Now they are filling the void with sham-institutions were madness reigns.
#uspol #sociology

Weik, Karl E. "The collapse of sensemaking in organizations: The Mann Gulch disaster." Studi Organizzativi 2008/2 (2009).
hptc-pro.com/wp-content/upload