Literacy is a bridge from misery to hope.
— Kofi Annan
This week, CNBC reporter Donie O'Sullivan conducted a brief interview with a Trump supporter—and a true American nihilist.
O'Sullivan asked if the man whether he planned to get vaccinated.
"Our days are numbered," he said. "It don't matter."
A cohort of killjoys like this man walks among us.
Perhaps Covid-19 is a divine instrument that will rid us of all the nihilists like him; I often wonder.
In any event, I place the blame for rampant nihilism in America today not on globalization, urbanization, or declining church attendance, but on the source of so many social woes: illiteracy.
When people read, they take hope—hope in progress, hope in their fellows, hope in their leaders, hope in themselves. They "read to know they're not alone," as writer William Nicholson says.
They're alone, unread, and ready to die.
How many right-wing nihilists are nihilists because they're illiterate?
"It don't matter" is their worldview, and on that ground they can justify anything: shooting their enemies; trafficking in drugs; swindling their customers; trafficking in teenage girls; spreading Covid-19; you name it.
"It don't matter."
According to the National Center for Educational Statistics, one-fifth of the US population is functionally illiterate.
And they're not all immigrant peasants, as conservatives insist. Among the 43 million illiterates in the US, 15.5 million are White (14.5 million are Latino; and 13 million are Black or "other").
Illiteracy affects our entire society:
- Illiterates are sickies. The Milken Institute reports that illiteracy results in $238 billion in excess healthcare costs every year, a dollar amount equaling the annual healthcare costs for 47 million Americans.
- Illiterates are sponges. The National Council for Adult Learning reports that illiteracy costs $225 billion in crime, joblessness, and loss of tax revenue due to joblessness, every year. Add that to the healthcare costs and we're wasting over half a trillion dollars annually on them.
- Illiterates are criminals. In addition, the US Department of Justice reports that 75% of prison inmates are illiterate. (Criminals can't read, so we throw the book at 'em.)
How many right-wing nihilists are nihilists because they're illiterate?
No study exists to answer the question.
But studies do exist that show that right wing people are out of touch with factual reality:
- Four in 10 Republicans believe the flu is more deadly than Covid-19, although Covid-19 is over 11 times more deadly (Brookings).
- Six in 10 Republicans believe Biden "stole" the presidential election (Reuters).
- Three in 10 Republicans believe Qanon's conspiracy theories (Survey Center on American Life).
I think so.
They're alone, unread and ready to die, because "it don't matter."
When people read, they find hope.
When they don't, they are hopeless—in both senses of the word.
NOTE: Embedded links in my posts lead to sources and other good stuff.