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10 The Problem with Anger Management: Pufferfish and the paradox of impermeability
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Published:October 2022
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Abstract
This chapter takes on the final question of Part II: Can we formulate a concern in common that isn’t anti-populist? Answering in the affirmative, it introduces the notion of anger management, shorthand for a mode of governance that ‘leads’ by stoking aggrieved entitlement (keeping victimized anger on simmer, ready to boil over on cue). COVID-19 offered a taste of how destructive anger management can be, and bigger challenges of interdependence like climate change lie ahead. Aiming our concern at anger management need not invite technocracy, or handing the reins over to the ‘experts.’ Rather, the common concern is for life, and the goal is to care for public health, not to pronounce moral threats to democracy. There is a bigger threat, which is that anger management can kill us with its bluster. The chapter introduces pufferfish as an icon for this problem. Anger management—or ‘government by pufferfish’—is a maladapted reflex that is undeniably bad for the world.
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