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.. her answers are too long and too detailed. For shame, appealing to the rational faculties. What? No demagoguery???[/font]
[font size="3"]Groups, he observed, are eager to follow not those who present the most accurate picture of reality, but those who most clearly reflect group members cherished ideals. And the more distressing the groups reality is, the more those ideals became divorced from it.[/font]
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But since reality can only be defied for so long, the leaders who inspire the most enthusiasm by catering to powerful wishes also provoke the most disillusionment when those wishes do not materialize. And when that happens we hardly ever blame ourselves for being irrationally hopeful. We blame the leader for not being good enough or for not being good any longer.
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Like all theories, Freuds does not apply universally. It suits groups under threat, where cohesion is neither assured by a shared enterprise nor ensured by trusted institutions. In other words, it suits the very circumstances many of us live in today.
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Contemporary social psychologists have found new evidence for Freuds insights. A growing amount of recent research shows that the more uncertainty we feel, especially about our identities, relationships, and future, the more vulnerable we are to the reassuring appeal of leaders peddling the simplest and most dangerous of narratives:
We are good and they are evil. (My, my how often have we seen this message on GD-Pr??_Bill USA}
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