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Another visit to the virtual coffee house of wisdom and camaraderie β where level heads put the world to rights, and wonky heads chitchat about whatever they please and meander wherever their fancy takes them. Such refuges are welcome when the world is going through turbulent times.
So, I thought today we might talk about the US election. Since quitting my academic job and going full time on Living with Limerence, I have started to spend time on TwitterX in an attempt to spread the word about limerence to the wider world. Right now, the two sociopolitical tribes in the US are split between triumphalism and devastation.
In both the UK and US there are some areas of the country where support for the two main parties is pretty closely balanced, and that balance swings back or forth in the cultural winds. The problem with this outcome is that many people sincerely believe that he intends to usher in a totalitarian regime of fascism, corruption and domination.
Regardless of whether those fears are rational or irrational, these people are really suffering. Their worldview has been smashed. They feel unable to trust their neighbours, and some are even planning to estrange themselves from family members who voted for Trump. Within my framework for understanding the world, both those outcomes were inconceivable. In the university there was a palpable sense of grief and bewilderment after the vote and a significant amount of anger.
The world no longer made sense. How could more than half our country vote to destroy a hard-won union that facilitated free trade, freedom of movement, and cultural exchange? And how could half of Americans vote for a vulgar, narcissistic blowhard who told ridiculous, self-serving lies? When I encountered Brexit voters they seemed like ordinary people with sincere fears about the negative effects of immigration, undemocratic intergovernmental law-making, and a suspicion of elites who considered themselves above the people they supposedly served.