Ian wrote:hadespussercats wrote:Robert_S wrote:hadespussercats wrote:
Is it a sort of vicarious thrill, you think? Like, "Hey, s/he isn't that different from me-- which means I could be president, if I really wanted it..."
Never stopping to think "Fuck! I'm not really qualified to deal with that job at all!"
...I'd love to be absolutely outclassed in every respect by a presidential candidate-- someone smarter, more insightful, more educated on a wider variety of subjects, funnier, better-looking, more athletic, you name it.
Wouldn't it be great to be able to vote for a real hero? Why wouldn't you want your leader to be better than you?
That would go against the "folksy" principle. We'd love it, but we're not folksy. Voters in GOP primaries, especially places like Iowa, are all about the plain-spoken candidates who can hang out at the state fair.
I'm reminded of a statement about leadership, that a leader must be ahead of the people, in that he must lead them "to" someplace, but a leader must also follow those they lead in as much as they must be in touch with, and respond to, where the people are willing to go; to follow Ian's text, a leader who is too far ahead of the curve is just as bad as one who doesn't in fact lead, but rather simply reflects what the people seem to want to hear -- a perfect representative of the status quo.
I'm also reminded of Francis Galton's experiments on the wisdom of the crowd. Galton, from what I'm told, was something of an elitest. Yet he conducted an experiment, where a crowd of people were asked to weigh in on some question (say, the weight of a pig). He found that while the individual answers ranged widely, the average of all the "guesses" yielded an answer that was very close to true. Perhaps the crowd is weighing in on the centrist position implicitly because that is where the answer likely lies.
Now, I don't believe any of the above nonsense, but it makes entertaining reading.

I'm a little more cynical than that. Because of kinship selection effects, which themselves are likely determined by our reproductive strategy (K-selection, few offspring, rather than r-selection, many offspring [e.g. bacteria]) and the viscosity of our populations (groups of people tend to do relatively small amounts of moving around -- if your neighbors move to a different continent every 2-3 days, your relationships and investment in them would be grossly altered), certain norms of behavior emerge in our conscious values. We care more about those who are like us, than those who are different; if we judge them too different, we may want them to be "cut off" from our tribe altogether. This makes both genetic sense, and it operates similarly in the memetosphere -- those who are most like us are most likely to value what we value and further those ends. In both senses, electing someone that is like you makes sense -- biologically, our brains are evolved to increase our anxiety the further we stray from our "in-group", and as a matter of course, we expect those who are like us -- not necessarily in a relevant way -- to share the same values and opinions we have. It's why "elitist" has become a derogatory term and not one of approbation. We've come a long way from Plato's philosopher-kings and golden lies. The future is a populist future.