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How the altruistic response to far right riots reveals the innate goodness in human beings

Amid the of the recent riots across England and Northern Ireland, there have been many heartening incidents. In many cases, the rioters have been met with counter-protesters, who risked violence and injury to voice their opposition to racism and their support for asylum seekers.

Author


  • Steve Taylor

    Senior Lecturer in Psychology, Leeds Beckett University

Why are some people capable of cruelty and brutality while others are selfless and compassionate? As a psychologist, I have spent many years examining this puzzle, and believe that the answer lies in the concept of connection – the degree to which people feel connected to one another, and to the world in general.

In Southport, dozens of volunteers turned out in the early morning after the riots to clean up the debris. Local trades people volunteered to rebuild walls and replace windows, while a building developer – Kingswood ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾s – of the Southport Islamic Society Mosque. Several local firms donated boards, materials, ladders, mixers and bricks.

In Liverpool, the Spellow Hub Library was torched and badly damaged by rioters. In addition to staff and local residents helping to clear up, a local resident, Alex McCormick, set up a GoFundMe campaign . She hoped to raise a few thousand pounds, but so far people have .

Last Wednesday evening, thousands of rallied in response to planned far right riots.

The spectrum of human nature

In my recent book , I suggest the best way to understand human nature is in terms of a continuum of connection. A small proportion of people are severely disconnected. They exist in a state of psychological isolation, cut off from other people and the world around them. They don’t feel empathy for anyone beyond a narrow circle of family and friends and others who share their ideology and ethnicity.

Because of their intense separateness, disconnected people feel a strong sense of frustration, which sometimes manifests itself in aggression and destruction. In turn, this may attract them to far-right political movements.

has found that right-wing populist movements appeal to people with high levels of dissatisfaction with life, and also to . Right-wing populist parties act as for people’s discontent.

Anger and a lack of empathy are a dangerous . Disconnected people sometimes externalise their frustration, blaming it on society or on other people. , they focus on vulnerable groups such as asylum seekers, immigrants and ethnic minorities.

When they stem from more , people . They may vent their frustration and destructive impulses in the political arena, also , and encouraging less privileged and disconnected people to take direct action.

People who feel connected

However, most people . In general, human beings are . Rather than feeling destructive impulses, most of us feel a natural impulse to help others, to nurture their development and alleviate suffering. This explains why so many people have been appalled by the cruelty and brutality of far-right rioters and feel the impulse to counter it with positive action.

Disconnected and connected people perceive the world in . To a disconnected group, asylum seekers and immigrants may seem like enemies who are responsible for society’s problems. To the connected group, asylum seekers and immigrants are fellow human beings who deserve respect and compassion. Connected people are able to empathise with asylum seekers, aware that many of them have undergone severe trauma in their home countries.

In my view, human beings are naturally altruistic. In emergency situations, people often respond with spontaneous heroism, risking their lives for others – something we’ve . Heroic altruism stems from a deep unconscious place – more specifically, from a fundamental .

There is a strong link between disconnection and negative childhood experiences. As I show in , the most severely disconnected people – such as and – often emerge from abusive, traumatic childhoods.

Other disconnected people suffer a prolonged lack of affection and attention during early childhood. The research of the psychologist found this may cause “affectionless psychopathy” in adult life. For privileged disconnected people, this may be the result of being taken away to at a young age.

Others emerge from a where empathy and emotion are seen as weak and undesirable. This doesn’t mean that everyone who emerges from this background becomes cruel and brutal, but it increases the likelihood.

Cruelty and brutality emerge when something goes wrong in our development. Under healthy conditions, human beings naturally develop empathy and altruism. That’s why, as the last week has shown, kindness and compassion arise so consistently in response to brutality.

The Conversation

Steve Taylor does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

/Courtesy of The Conversation. View in full .