(Don’t know why it’s sideways.)

We all know American intro to politics textbooks are garbage, but this graph was really funny to me. This is obviously just a rebranded horseshoe theory, but the author makes it very clear that this graph is special because it’s about relative political attitudes, NOT ideology (don’t worry he’s got a bespoke ideology cumpiss too). As if you can remove ideology and still maintain any representation of real world politics.

Basically, this dude legitimizes his theory by arguing that radicals and reactionaries are similar because they both use violence, despite having different goals. Liberals and conservatives, on the other hand, are notorious for never using violence, and have never supported the police or started wars that have killed millions of people. That violence isn’t real because the state says it’s good.

The creme de la creme comes on the next page though, where he shoehorns his horseshoe theory onto other countries. According to him, Xi Jinping is a conservative, Maoists are reactionary rather than Ultras (arguably true but that’s from our perspective), liberals want more capitalist reform (objectively correct, but for the wrong reason), and the real radicals are the ones that want Taiwan to invade.

Overall, 3/10. I feel like I need to learn Chinese to read a good textbook.

  • andys_nuts [none/use name]
    ·
    3 years ago

    This is a significant step down even from the absurdity that is horseshoe theory. Horseshoe theory says people too far from the enlightened center are basically the same, but at least it has the sense to not imply that if you keep going right you eventually end up on the left.