Is conforming to a group really a good idea?
Whatever happened to independent thinking? Or original ideas? When did we stop thinking for ourselves and start letting someone else do our thinking for us?
We are all equals, by right of our birth, and yet so many people all over the world are controlled by such a small number of others. Why is that?
Well, it’s the
same reason you didn’t speak up in that meeting when you had a different
opinion than the rest, simply because you did not want to appear
unsupportive of the group's efforts. It’s the same reason that the NASA
engineers for the Challenger space shuttle pushed ahead with the launch
in 1986, even though they knew about faulty parts before lift-off and
didn’t want the negative press coverage of their team.
Or
when senior military officers at Pearl Harbor ignored warnings about an
invasion in 1941 because they had already convinced themselves that an
attack by the Japanese was unlikely.
But you see, the ability to steer your life means learning to
THINK for yourself, and for too many, the need to BELONG is often much
more important instead. This need to belong can override nearly every
rational thought we have because folks in a group are more concerned
about maintaining unity than expressing critical thought, or evaluating
the best choices, in any given situation.
Interestingly,
though, independent thinkers don’t have the same desire to BELONG.
Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., Einstein, Picasso, Galileo – none of
them concerned themselves with conforming to popular culture or
conventional wisdom. To the contrary, they had a remarkable tendency to
explore and find their own meaning in life.
This
is easier said than done, of course. Learning to think for yourself may
mean that you have to turn your back on beliefs you have held dearly
since childhood. It also means that you may be alone and isolated in
your opinions, and our culture makes being the “lone man out” very
difficult.
I
mean, how many in Washington even remember what they believe anymore,
when it seems so many just want to “go along to get along,” rather than
express any independent thinking at all?
"With groupthink, critical thinking is replaced by irrational
actions, statements, etc. and then dehumanizing anyone who disagrees.
And the greater the groupthink, the less free we become because we just
surrender control of our lives to the consensus of the group.”
This
is known as “groupthink,” and it’s paralyzing our country. A Yale
psychologist coined this phrase in 1972. He said you could spot it
whenever the “desire for group consensus overrides people's common sense
desire to present alternatives, critique a position, or express an
unpopular opinion.” It’s like when Nancy Pelosi said the non-sensical
phrase, "We have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in
it," or when President Obama promised, “If you like your doctor, you can
keep your doctor.” None of it made sense – but none of it needed to as
long as it was consistent with the consensus of their group.
And if anyone should express any thought that is outside their group’s consensus?
They are
dehumanized. For example, if conservatives are racist, greedy, heartless
and elitist, then how could their opinions possibly deserve any
consideration whatsoever?
I
mean, if you listen to some folks, you’d think that conservatives would
like to reinstate segregation, pollute the drinking water and take food
out of the mouths of starving children. If this is your “groupthink,”
though, is it really that far to rationalize opening fire on a
congressional GOP baseball practice, injuring five, including House
Majority Whip Steve Scalise?
Or
for students at the University of California-Berkeley to set the campus
on fire and throw rocks through windows when a conservative speaker is
scheduled to appear on campus?
Or
for Madonna to appear at a march in Washington and tell the crowd that
she’s "thought an awful lot about blowing up the White House"?
With
groupthink, critical thinking is replaced by irrational actions,
statements, etc. and then dehumanizing anyone who disagrees. And the
greater the groupthink, the less free we become because we just
surrender control of our lives to the consensus of the group.
The worst part is that most folks today don’t even realize they already have.
Louis
R. Avallone is a Shreveport businessman, attorney and author of “Bright
Spots, Big Country, What Makes America Great.” He is also a former aide
to U.S. Representative Jim McCrery and editor of The Caddo
Republican.
His columns have appeared regularly in The Forum since 2007. Follow him
on Facebook, on Twitter @louisravallone or by e-mail at louisavallone@mac.com, and on American Ground Radio at 101.7FM and 710 AM, weeknights from 6 - 7 p.m., and streaming live on keelnews.com.