CapnG said:
The vast majority of my friends and associates are apolitical, they consider all politicians to be sychophants and crooks and most don't vote.
This is exactly what I'm talking about. Saying that politicians are corrupt is a rather weak and obvious excuse (the operative word) for not being socially engaged or caring about what happens to the civilization. OF COURSE, they're corrupt that doesn't mean you just say "Whatever, I'm just not voting!" That's extremely childish.
CapnG said:
Second, it's funny to me you consider it an adolescent attitude, because I consider it the opposite. To me latching on to Liberal/conservative viewpoints and declaring "I'm with them!" is essentially modified peer-pressure, the height of adolescent behaviour.
Again, this is a matter of self possession. One can identify as a Liberal (or even a Conservative) without toting the party line. Have you ever know anyone who identified as a Christian or Jew yet didn't go along with all the dogma of their respective faith? It's the same dynamic. The analogous teen however, desperate to forge his/her identity through what often amounts to acts of knee-jerk nonconformism or perhaps disillusioned by the hypocrisy of the establishment, usually renounces religion altogether while the divergent concepts of religion and spirituality never even occur to him/her. I think a measure of that goes on with the apolitical.
CapnG said:
To me it smacks of hypocrisy of the highest order. It's like going into a job you hate everyday with a big fat smile on your face. If you disagree, you shouldn't be there, otherwise of what value is freedom?
This is also absurd. If one finds that his/her politics lean one way or the other then why WOULDN'T that person want to try to effect change within largest governing body of the ideological bent?
CapnG said:
No, armed revolution is.
The political process is far beyond fresh and vital. It's not even stale and inert. It's more like a zombie, reanimated and kept alive through arcane and evil means...
Excuses, excuses. . .
If this were true, it would be so in part because of the apathy of the people you mentioned earlier.
CapnG said:
I can understand why it might seem that way. Speaking only for myself it's more like this: Okay this guy on the left is full of crap and this guy on the right is full of crap. Hmmm... no place for me. Might as well stand here in the middle.
. . . and do nothing.
Why not actively present YOUR position instead of wallowing in the self-pitying narcissistic fatalism?
The philosophy of disengagement seems to be (like Libertarianism) the byproduct of the "Wellesian" excess of comfort of the American middle class. I've found that most self-proclaimed "apolitical" types are from a demographic for whom soft drinks and consumer electronics are tailored.
I suppose it's easy, while still no excuse, to opt out of the political process if your schools are well funded, you're afforded every social right of the land and the near homogeneity of your surroundings makes it so any injustices that aren't resolved in 40 minutes (an hour with commercials) can be banished with the press of a button on your remote control.
That's not to say that there aren't those in the thick of things who are equally apathetic but they usually don't wear it as a mark of their cleverness.
This "centrist" thing may just be a new trend, a label that people find it socially acceptable to use right now. I guess that's fine, but this apolitical malarkey should be called just what it is - laziness.