When Things Fall Apart (Throwback)
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Speaker 2 An old man says to his grandson, There's a fight going on inside me.
Speaker 2 It's a terrible fight between two wolves.
Speaker 2 One is evil, angry, greedy, jealous, arrogant, and cowardly.
Speaker 2 The other is good, peaceful, loving, modest, generous, honest, and trustworthy.
Speaker 2 These two wolves are also fighting within you and inside every other person too.
Speaker 2 After a moment, the boy asks, which wolf will win?
Speaker 2 The old man smiles. The one you feed.
Speaker 2 What we assume in other people is what we get out of them.
Speaker 2 Our view of human nature tends to be a self-fulfilling prophecy. If we assume that people are fundamentally selfish, then that's how they will behave.
Speaker 2 If we assume that people are fundamentally decent, then maybe we can create create a very different kind of society.
Speaker 4 This is Rutger Bregman.
Speaker 2 I'm a Dutch historian and I'm the author of the book Humankind, a Hopeful History.
Speaker 4 But this story doesn't start off hopeful.
Speaker 6 There's a very widespread assumption that human beings are basically selfish, brutal, barbarian.
Speaker 4 And this is author Rebecca Solmit.
Speaker 6 Cowardly, just sort of despicable, and that civilization is some sort of structural overlay that keeps us from realizing our true brutal natures, preventing us from doing what we would really do if we could do anything we wanted, which would be rape, loot, pillage, maraud, steal.
Speaker 4 And that idea that if you take away civilization, that people are essentially evil, has been an easy sell.
Speaker 7 Introduce a little anarchy.
Speaker 9 Upset the established order, and everything becomes chaos.
Speaker 2 So many of these Hollywood movies like Batman gives us a very simplistic view of how evil really works.
Speaker 4 The story of Batman has always been about the battle of good versus evil. The two wolves, Batman and the Joker.
Speaker 9 This city just showed you that it's full of people ready to believe in good until their spirit breaks completely.
Speaker 4 In the film The Dark Knight, the Joker tries to convince Batman that everyone, from the mayor to the people of Gotham, are all just out for themselves.
Speaker 11 I'll show you. When the ships are down,
Speaker 12 these
Speaker 10 civilized people, they'll eat each other.
Speaker 3 See, I'm not a monster.
Speaker 1 I'm just ahead of the curve.
Speaker 2 Yeah, the Joker is really interesting.
Speaker 2 He's the quintessential stereotypical depiction of evil in our culture, I would say.
Speaker 13 So the Joker believes that everybody is dark, selfish, maybe even a little evil, like how we really are. And Batman is good.
Speaker 13 These two sides are a trope as old as storytelling, an idea that plays into something called the thin veneer theory.
Speaker 2
Veneer theory is a very old idea that's deeply entrenched in Western culture. It goes like this.
Supposedly our civilization is just a thin layer, just a thin veneer.
Speaker 2 And below that lies raw human nature.
Speaker 2
The theory basically says that humans deep down are fundamentally selfish. Or maybe even worse than that.
Maybe we're even beasts or monsters.
Speaker 13 And the only thing keeping us from eating each other is civilization. Basically, hierarchy, governments, law and order.
Speaker 2 And when that's taken away, then when something happens,
Speaker 2 just a crisis, a natural disaster, maybe a war breaks out, then people show who they really are. Then that veneer
Speaker 2 cracks.
Speaker 13 Civilization goes away.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2 yes, our true human nature is revealed.
Speaker 13 This is an idea that many of us accept as truth. But what if veneer theory doesn't actually hold up against scrutiny? What if it's a story we tell ourselves?
Speaker 6 What if it's justifying shackles, authoritarianism,
Speaker 6 justifying institutional violence,
Speaker 6 justifying inequality, holding us all in place, justifying lack of rights and freedoms, hierarchies, social controls.
Speaker 15 Things fall apart. That is why you have prisons and you have laws, you have borders and you have standards.
Speaker 6 And the science, the evidence, the sociology doesn't really support that, but a lot of people believe it and it props up a lot of social structures that I think themselves are pretty brutal.
Speaker 2 Dystopia is a world where the police will not protect you.
Speaker 13 Authorities in China are strengthening their efforts to stamp out unrest over stringent COVID measures.
Speaker 2 Tehran has been using death sentences as a way to intimidate people.
Speaker 17 The American people know that there is rising crime across this country.
Speaker 18 You have actual gang members killing people in cold blood and broad daylight. But who do they want to go after? Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 The world can often feel like a cold, brutal place. If you turn on the news or scroll social media, you're probably going to see dark stories about things happening in the world.
Speaker 4 It can feel isolating and scary, and a lot of times, hopeless. It can be easy to believe that the only thing keeping us from total chaos is that thin veneer of civilization.
Speaker 4 But what if the thin veneer is what's causing the problem? A fragile shell, a cover that's actually preventing us from having a better world.
Speaker 13 On this episode of Through Line from NPR, how we've come to believe veneer theory and the stories that make us fear one another,
Speaker 13 and how it might be time to tell a different story to feed the other wolf.
Speaker 20 Hi, my name is Grace Brown and I'm from Upland, Indiana. And you're listening to ThruLine from NPR.
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Speaker 5 Part 1.
Speaker 13 The weaker springs of human nature.
Speaker 7 To judge from the history of mankind, we shall be compelled to conclude that the fiery and destructive passions of war reign in the human breast with much more powerful sway than the mild and beneficent sentiments of peace.
Speaker 4 These are words from the Federalist Papers, a series of essays that argued in favor of the Constitution of the United States of America.
Speaker 7 And that to model our political systems upon speculations of lasting tranquility is to calculate on the weaker springs of the human character.
Speaker 4 The essays paint a bleak picture of human nature, that without government and civilization, people would hurt each other whenever the opportunity presented itself.
Speaker 7 A fondness for power is implanted in most men, and it is natural to abuse it when acquired.
Speaker 2 And this is actually something that the Founding Fathers really had in mind when they were designing the Constitution.
Speaker 7 We, the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union,
Speaker 2 why they wanted to create this elaborate balance of power, because they believe that if they wouldn't have that veneer of civilization, that, you know, hell will break loose.
Speaker 7 One great error is that we suppose mankind is more honest than they are. Our prevailing passions are ambition and interest.
Speaker 14 Alexander Hamilton
Speaker 10 How does a bastard, orphan, son of a whore and a Scotsman, dropped in the middle of a forgotten spot in the Caribbean by providence of Parval
Speaker 4 Alexander Hamilton was one of the main authors of the Federalist Papers. He's been immortalized in recent years by Lim Manuel Miranda's musical, and those were his words you've been hearing.
Speaker 7 A fondness for power is implanted in most men, and it is natural to abuse it when acquired.
Speaker 4 He's seen as an immigrant, an innovator, and a patriot. And while those things may be true, What's often left out of his story is that he was very pessimistic about human nature.
Speaker 4 And that wasn't exactly original or unique for his time.
Speaker 13 He was articulating a very old view of human beings as fundamentally bad and in need of civilization to behave well. This idea shows up in societies all over the world.
Speaker 13 But in the West, where we're going to focus this episode, the idea was most potently captured by one of Europe's most famous philosophers,
Speaker 13 Thomas Hobbes.
Speaker 10 During the time, men live without a common power to keep them all in awe.
Speaker 10 They are, in that conditions, called war, and such a war as is of every man against every man.
Speaker 2 And he argued that back in the state of nature, we lived lives that were, in his famous words, nasty, brutish, and short.
Speaker 10 In such condition, there is no place for industry, because the fruit thereof is uncertain, and the life of man solitary, poor,
Speaker 10 nasty, brutish, and short.
Speaker 2 It was only when we gave up our liberty and we appointed a powerful ruler that he called a Leviathan. It was only then that we established peace.
Speaker 2 So yes, we lost our liberty, but we gained security in return. That's the grand bargain that we made with the rise of civilization.
Speaker 13 Thomas Hobbes thought a strong government was necessary to keep us from killing each other, from devolving into a state of mutual destruction.
Speaker 13 And if you look at the time and place he was born, it's easy to understand why he might have seen the world this way.
Speaker 6 Thomas Hobbes was an Englishman who lived during the Civil Wars, which were bloody and nasty in that country, and they're often blamed for shaping his political philosophy.
Speaker 13 From 1642 to 1651, English elites fought each other in a series of wars over governance and religious freedom. Thomas Hobbes lived during these brutal, bloody wars.
Speaker 13 But author Rebecca Solnett argues that a deeper backdrop was that Thomas Hobbes lived in a very Christian society.
Speaker 6 In which one of the fundamental beliefs was that somehow we fell from grace, were kicked out of paradise, and were fallen and somehow had to be redeemed through Jesus and the church.
Speaker 6 So Christianity itself has, if not a thin veneer theory, at least a theory that human beings are kind of a mess that needs some cleanup work.
Speaker 13 Hobbes' idea caught on quickly and influenced politicians and philosophers for generations, all the way up to Alexander Hamilton.
Speaker 13 He put into words long-held beliefs about human nature, and he did this at a time when Europeans were colonizing much of the earth and and looking for justifications.
Speaker 6 Hobbes' idea that somehow you need authoritarian structures to control people corresponds really well to imperialism and colonialism, people who saw themselves as civilization imposing order on chaos.
Speaker 2 It's been strongly developed in Western culture. Since the dawn of civilization, obviously rulers have always
Speaker 2 looked for justifications of their power.
Speaker 2 And this has has always been one of the most logical and straightforward explanations. Like, we need to be in power to protect you from yourself.
Speaker 2 A hundred years after Thomas Hobbes published his famous book Leviathan, another philosopher came along, and his name was Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
Speaker 25 Civilization is a hopeless race to discover remedies for the evils it produces.
Speaker 2 And in almost every single way, he
Speaker 2 believed the opposite of what Hobbes had argued.
Speaker 25 Every man having been born free and master of himself, no one else may under any pretext, whatever subject him without his consent.
Speaker 2 According to Jean-Jacques Rousseau, our life in the state of nature was actually pretty good. We were quite healthy, we had lots of exercise, we had a varied diet, and it was pretty peaceful as well.
Speaker 2 But then
Speaker 2 everything went wrong when we gave up our liberty
Speaker 2 and we invented private property. and we settled down in villages and cities and we created this thing called civilization.
Speaker 6 Human beings in a state of nature are pure and innocent and good and society is what corrupts them.
Speaker 2 So according to Rousseau, civilization was not what has saved us, but it was our downfall.
Speaker 2 This big debate between Hobbes and Rousseau, it really lies at the heart of our biggest political discussions between the realists and the idealists, between conservatives and progressives.
Speaker 2 You know, very often when we're debating each other on Twitter, it's basically Hobbes and Rousseau all over again.
Speaker 4 What is the essential nature of humanity? Are we inherently good or inherently bad? Are we more prone to being selfish individuals or helpful members of communities?
Speaker 4 Maybe the way we collectively answer these questions dictates how we structure our society.
Speaker 2 Our theory of human nature has absolutely massive implications for pretty much everything.
Speaker 2 So just to give a couple of examples, education. If you believe that kids are fundamentally lazy and selfish, then you need a quite hierarchical schooling system.
Speaker 2 But if you think that kids are naturally curious and creative, then maybe you don't need, you know, all that homework.
Speaker 2 Maybe you can just give kids the freedom to decide for themselves what they find interesting.
Speaker 2 If you are the CEO of a company, if you believe that your employees are fundamentally selfish, well, what are you going to do? You need a lot of bureaucracy, probably.
Speaker 2 Maybe you're going to place cameras to make sure that your employees don't steal equipment.
Speaker 2 If you believe that your employees are fundamentally cooperative and actually want to do what's best for the company, then maybe you can work in self-directed teams and you don't need all those managers.
Speaker 2 And you can actually rely on people's intrinsic motivation. So again and again and again and again, our view of human nature has pretty practical implications for how we live our lives.
Speaker 6 It's very useful to the authorities and people invested in those structures to believe in their own value and necessity.
Speaker 6 And essentially it's a justification for hierarchy, for authority, for the violence that authorities impose, which is always justified as like, oh, we're bombing these people to prevent violence.
Speaker 6 The police are shooting these people to prevent violence. We're beating these people up to prevent disorder.
Speaker 4 And all of this brings us back to the essential debate.
Speaker 2 Who was right?
Speaker 2 Was Thomas Hobbes right or was Jean-Jacques Rousseau right?
Speaker 2 Was civilization our salvation or has it been our doom?
Speaker 4
The truth is, Hobbes and Rousseau were both kind of just making stuff up. They had very little evidence for their viewpoints.
Modern science was in its infancy when they were alive.
Speaker 4 These were just ideas that popped into their heads.
Speaker 2 So, for a long time, this was just a philosophical question, and there was not really a way to resolve the debate. But now, that's different.
Speaker 2 Now, we've got the evidence from modern anthropology, archaeology, and I think we can actually say who was more or less right.
Speaker 13 Coming up, we revisit one of the the most famous psychological experiments ever conducted and find out why we feed the wolf we feed.
Speaker 10 Hey, this is Pilal Battery from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and you're listening to Thru Live on NPR.
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Speaker 6 Part two
Speaker 13 feeding the wolf.
Speaker 11 As a psychologist, I have focused my career about understanding how ordinary people or good people
Speaker 11 get seduced to doing bad things, evil things, if you will.
Speaker 4 The voice you just heard is American psychologist Philip Zimbardo speaking to a Dutch public broadcaster, VPRO, back in 2011.
Speaker 11 And I have focused on trying to understand the power of situations and systems to dominate individuals.
Speaker 4 Maybe you've never heard of him, but the study he conducted back in 1971 at Stanford University might ring a bell.
Speaker 26 These are not prisoners, and this is not a prison. They are college students, and they were part of an astonishing experiment.
Speaker 2 The Stanford Prison Experiment is the most famous experiment in the history of psychology and it was done by a young psychologist named Philip Zimbardo and he had a pretty simple idea.
Speaker 2 He recruited 24 students and he said to 12 of them you're gonna be the guards and to the other 12 you're gonna be the prisoners.
Speaker 2 And so he put these prisoners in a fake prison in the basement of Stanford University.
Speaker 4 Zimbardo and his team wanted to see what happened when people either became guards or prisoners. The prisoners' rights movement had started the decade before, and Zimbardo wanted to show how the U.S.
Speaker 4 prison system was failing.
Speaker 26 There, they were led to a simulated prison block consisting of three small cells, a narrow hallway, and a closet designed for solitary confinement. This would be their entire world for two weeks.
Speaker 4
The experiment was filmed by Zimbardo and his research team. And on the first day, it was mostly uneventful.
The students playing prisoners were taken and put into their cells.
Speaker 4 But then, on the second date of the experiment, things began to unravel.
Speaker 27 There's a very sharp change. in the whole nature of what was happening in that prison.
Speaker 2 There was a rebellion among the inmates.
Speaker 27
They refused to eat. They barricaded themselves in their cells.
They started ripping off their numbers, started screaming out obscenities at the guards.
Speaker 2 And that was countered by the guards with fire extinguishers. And after that, the guards, you know, basically did all kinds of terrible things.
Speaker 2 They tried to break their subordinates.
Speaker 27 The guards then began to escalate their use of power. Some of them had prisons clean out toilet bowls with their bare hands to do things which were really degrading and humiliating.
Speaker 27 And the prisons did it without complaining, just did it because this is what they had to do.
Speaker 2 And it was actually one inmate who really, you know, went ballistic.
Speaker 28
He started screaming, and I'm quoting here: I mean, Jesus Christ, I'm burning up inside. Don't you know? I want to get out.
This is all fucked up inside. I can't stand another night.
Speaker 28 I just can't take it anymore.
Speaker 2
So, that's one of the reasons that the Stanford Prison Experiment became so famous. Because if you just look at the video of it, it's very, very powerful.
And you think, what happened to these guys?
Speaker 2 And the story, as it's been told for, well, half a century, was that these guards, they
Speaker 2 initially described themselves as hippies, pacifists, right, who would never hurt a fly.
Speaker 2 But then in the context of being in that prison and being handed this power over the prisoners, they turned into monsters. So it's a very powerful illustration of veneer theory, right?
Speaker 2 These boys showed who they really were once they were in that situation.
Speaker 13 The results of the Stanford prison experiment made it into almost all psychology textbooks.
Speaker 13 And its essential takeaway that given the right context, human beings will be quick to act brutally was often accepted uncritically.
Speaker 2
That's basically the story that's been taught for decades and decades. It's incredibly famous in the United States, in Europe, in Asia.
I recently visited Japan.
Speaker 2 Everyone knows about the Stanford Prison Experiment there as well.
Speaker 13 But why was the conclusion of the study so easy to believe and accept?
Speaker 13 Well, according to Rutger, it's because it provides, quote, scientific evidence for what Thomas Hobbes was arguing centuries before.
Speaker 2
The way I see it is that they were just telling a very old story with basically the same message. People deep down are just rotten.
We are rotten to the core.
Speaker 13 But when Rutger was writing his book, Humankind: A Hopeful History, he wanted to find out whether anyone had actually really looked into the Stanford prison experiment.
Speaker 2 And that's when he stumbled upon this study published in French. It's a study by a sociologist called Thibald Texier.
Speaker 13 Thibala Texier.
Speaker 2 The title in French is
Speaker 2 The History of a Lie.
Speaker 13 It was first published in 2018.
Speaker 2 This is astounding. He was the first one to go into the archives of the Stanford Prison Experiment to study what really happened.
Speaker 13 For the most part, Zimbardo's results were accepted. No one had gone into the source materials to investigate it further.
Speaker 2 There was the archival material that could be looked up.
Speaker 13 Letexier got on a plane and flew to California, went to Stanford and did just that.
Speaker 2 And what he found was really, really shocking.
Speaker 4 Letexier spent hours and hours looking through videos and documents that showed...
Speaker 2 These students were being pressured all the time to behave as nasty and sadistic as possible.
Speaker 5 And they weren't all up for it.
Speaker 2 Some student guards said things like, if it were up to me, I would just, you know, sit here and play cards and make music together with the inmates.
Speaker 27 The guards then began to escalate their use of power.
Speaker 2 But that's obviously not the result that Philip Zimbardo wanted.
Speaker 2 So he, together with one of his co-researcher, a man named David Jeffey, they basically pulled a huge amount of tricks to convince these students to start behaving in a really terrible way.
Speaker 4 David Jaffe, Zimbardo's co-researcher, also played the role of prison warden.
Speaker 4 In one of the recordings from the Stanford Archives, you can hear him pushing one of the guards in an experiment to be tough on the inmates.
Speaker 29 But we really want to get you active and involved because the guards have to know that every guard is going to be what we call a tough guard.
Speaker 4 Jaffe tells the participant he has to be a tough guard to which the participant responds, I'm not too tough. I'm not too tough.
Speaker 9 You have to kind of try and get it in you. Well, I don't, I don't know about that.
Speaker 4 This experiment was supposed to show that in a prison, guards would naturally begin to act sadistically towards prisoners.
Speaker 4 But when some of the students playing guards refused to treat prisoners badly, the experimenters appealed to their values.
Speaker 2 And so they said to the students, like, you're progressive, right? You want this.
Speaker 2
You also, you know, want the criminal justice system in the U.S. to be reformed quite radically.
So come on, play along with this. We need these results.
Speaker 29 It's really important for the workings of the experiment with the MSR
Speaker 29 because
Speaker 29 whether or not we can make this thing seem like a prison, which is the aim of the thing,
Speaker 29 depends largely on the guard's behavior.
Speaker 2 If the subjects already sort of know, if they can guess what the point of the experiment is, then obviously the experiment is not very scientific. Then it's just a play.
Speaker 2 that people are participating in.
Speaker 2 This is like the opposite of science.
Speaker 2 I asked Letexier for my book if there's still something we can learn from the Stanford Prison Experiment, and he said, Well, basically, everything that can go wrong in science, that's what we learn about it.
Speaker 13 Zimbardo has acknowledged that there were problems with the methodology of his study, but he defends the study's conclusions and says the experiment was a cautionary tale of what would happen to anyone if we underestimate the power of social roles and systemic structures.
Speaker 4 And how did this end up affecting Zimbardo's career?
Speaker 2
Oh, actually, he had a fantastic career. He became the head of the American Psychological Association.
He's the most famous living psychologist in the world today.
Speaker 2 What makes people go wrong?
Speaker 11 Interestingly, I asked this question when I was a little kid.
Speaker 30 I want to share with you some ideas about the secret power of time in a very short.
Speaker 13 These are some clips of Zimbardo giving talks on a range of topics.
Speaker 13 He's also played by Billy Krudup in the 2015 feature film about the Sanford Prison Experiment, which currently has an 84% rating on rotten tomatoes. The experiment clearly has entertainment value.
Speaker 13 So, 30 years after Zimbardo, another group of psychologists adapted the idea to television.
Speaker 31 In 2001, Professors Alex Haslam and Steve Rijker set up another experimental situation involving men assigned to the roles of guards and prisoners. This experiment was filmed by the BBC.
Speaker 2 The BBC had an idea of creating a new reality television show.
Speaker 2 And they had heard about the Stanford Prison Experiment, they had seen the footage and they were like, this is great television, right? This should be great for ratings.
Speaker 13 So they asked two psychology professors to replicate the Stanford prison experiment. which they would then turn into a reality TV show.
Speaker 13 This is Alex Haslam, one of those psychologists, speaking about the experiment.
Speaker 16 Whereas in Zimbardo's study he didn't have
Speaker 16 much or any kind of ethical
Speaker 16 oversight of the project as a whole.
Speaker 16 In our study we had an ethical committee on site that was monitoring all aspects of the study and were explicitly there to ensure that we didn't have any of the kind of abuses of the form that were
Speaker 16 manifested in Zimbardo's study.
Speaker 2 So there would be no interference in the experiment. They would just leave the prisoners alone and watch what would happen.
Speaker 13
The experiment took place over the course of nine days. Cameras were rolling the entire time.
And they turned all that tape into four episodes of reality TV.
Speaker 2 I have watched the whole BBC prison experiment.
Speaker 2
I'll never get those hours back. It was the most boring thing I've ever seen.
And nothing happens. It just goes on and on and on for hours.
It's so incredibly boring.
Speaker 13 Some prisoners escaped from their cells, but there was no abuse from the guards, no uprising.
Speaker 4 The fact is, the results of the Stanford prison experiment were not replicated. Without coaching from the people running the experiment, the guards didn't become abusive bullies.
Speaker 4 Still, despite the BBC show and LaTeX
Speaker 4 review, the Stanford prison experiment still persists as an example of thin veneer theory. The idea that without the constraints of civilization, humans would basically eat each other.
Speaker 4 Why do you think this study has been so persistent? Like, even though people have clearly debunked it, why do people still believe in it?
Speaker 2
It's just exciting. It's a fantastic, compelling story.
Why do people binge-watch Game of Thrones? Why do we all love succession?
Speaker 2 It's just, it's a fantastic story. It resonates with us on a very deep level.
Speaker 2 There's this concept in medicine, you know, the notion of a placebo. You know, you give someone a pill and if only the person believes that that pill will cure him,
Speaker 2 then, you know, it may actually do.
Speaker 4 We become the wolf we feed.
Speaker 2
We humans, we become the stories that we tell ourselves. Our stories are never just stories.
They are self-fulfilling prophecies.
Speaker 4 What happens when the stories we tell ourselves actually impact real-life situations? What can we learn when we look at events where the thin veneer of civilization is removed?
Speaker 4 During war or natural disasters, how do human beings actually respond to each other when things fall apart?
Speaker 4 Coming up, we revisit one of the greatest natural disasters in U.S. history and look behind its headlines.
Speaker 32 I'm Yvette Allison-Herman. I'm in Long Beach, California, and you're listening to True Line from NPR.
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Speaker 5 Part 3.
Speaker 13 When the elites panic.
Speaker 34 Every person is hereby ordered to immediately evacuate the city of New Orleans, or if no other alternative.
Speaker 9 This is not the strongest part of the hurricane yet, and you can see completely horizontally.
Speaker 12 You cannot even look in a northward direction.
Speaker 2 Waters from Lake Pontchatrain broke through a levee.
Speaker 19 I need someone out here, man. I'm going to die in this panic.
Speaker 4 New Orleans is called the Big Bowl.
Speaker 19 We won't die in here. Pray for me.
Speaker 35 We have to pray for everybody, even myself.
Speaker 6 Poor people were left to their own devices in a city that everyone knew was gonna flood.
Speaker 36 Much of New Orleans is below sea level.
Speaker 6 The levees were gonna break.
Speaker 19 When Katrina breached the levees that held the water back, the bowl was swamped.
Speaker 6 It was gonna be a disaster.
Speaker 2 People were on their own.
Speaker 19 The water is steady rising in the attic, ma'am. Sunrise cannot come soon enough.
Speaker 34 Phone lines are down.
Speaker 26 Water stopped running.
Speaker 19 Apocalyptic.
Speaker 26 The sewer system is backed up.
Speaker 1 It is everything we feared.
Speaker 6 Immediately after that happened, the U.S. media and a lot of government officials, including the then mayor, the governor of Louisiana, began repeating these
Speaker 6 disaster myths.
Speaker 13 Disaster myths. This is something author Rebecca Solnit talks about in her book, A Paradise Built in Hell, which focuses on how people respond during disasters.
Speaker 13
She started writing this book shortly after Hurricane Katrina. She wanted to know what really happens when the thin veneer of civilization is gone.
Are we really helpless? Are we lawless?
Speaker 13 Do we need authority to survive?
Speaker 25 Who are we?
Speaker 37 Police tried to keep the city from descending into complete chaos.
Speaker 33 A city that is in a virtual state state of anarchy tonight.
Speaker 36 There were reportedly rapes, more children being raped and killed, and sheer anarchy.
Speaker 19 People running around with guns.
Speaker 4 Some considerable violence, we are told there.
Speaker 13 The news coverage of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina was dark. It gave the impression of a total apocalypse.
Speaker 6 They sent refrigerator trucks to the Superdome, the sports arena in which a lot of people took shelter, because they decided there were 200 corpses in there because they decided there'd been some kind of mass murder rampage.
Speaker 38 Thousands of evacuees sought refuge in that shelter of last resort only to be subjected to an unspeakable breakdown of law and order.
Speaker 6
Money no longer existed. Banks were not open.
Credit cards didn't work. ATM machines didn't work.
There were no storekeepers with a few exceptions.
Speaker 6 And so people were going like into pharmacies to get diapers and medicine. People were going into stores to get food and water.
Speaker 6 People who'd swum through toxic things and became part of portraying the stranded victims as monsters who needed to be controlled. Except they had an extra layer of racial bias.
Speaker 1 Quickly, news reports were saturated with a lasting image of Katrina.
Speaker 10 The looter.
Speaker 19 Looters are running free.
Speaker 37 Mass looting.
Speaker 18 Looting has lost.
Speaker 10 Looting in New Orleans.
Speaker 19 Free for all. Three gentlemen just climbed into the broken window of this mini-mart here.
Speaker 39 You see a black family, it says they're looting. You see a white family, it says they're looking for food.
Speaker 21 They represent a frightening breakdown of law and order.
Speaker 13 The news about the violence and the looting was greatly exaggerated at the highest levels, including by the city's mayor and police chief.
Speaker 13 Most of the horrific violence at the Superdome, the reports of dozens of murders and rapes, was actually a myth.
Speaker 13 Many of the stories of brutality at the superdome were debunked. Instead, what was happening was thousands of people waiting days to be evacuated with limited food, water, and medical supplies.
Speaker 4 The truth is, there was violence that was happening during Katrina's aftermath, but it wasn't being committed by the people being blamed by the elites.
Speaker 21 In New Orleans today, a federal jury convicted five current and former police officers in the shooting deaths of unarmed civilians six days after Hurricane Katrina.
Speaker 6 There had been a lot of violence by the police,
Speaker 6 by white supremacists.
Speaker 6 Who were the monsters?
Speaker 6 It was people who thought they were somehow divinely ordained, Allah Hobbes, to govern over the rest of us.
Speaker 4 Thomas Hobbes, the English philosopher, the Leviathan. Remember him?
Speaker 35 I have one message for these
Speaker 34 for these hoodlums.
Speaker 6 They were the governor who said that she had troops and they were locked and loaded.
Speaker 35 These troops know how to shoot and kill and they are more than willing to do so if necessary and I expect they will.
Speaker 6 The mayor who fell apart.
Speaker 24 Megan had taken bribes worth half a million dollars both before Katrina and after Katrina.
Speaker 6 The Bush era of FEMA also failed profoundly.
Speaker 4 Five days after Katrina hit, much-needed federal assistance had yet to reach New Orleans.
Speaker 4 Bad collaboration between the federal and local governments meant that rescues were delayed and even the basics like food and water or medical supplies were running short.
Speaker 6 So many people who were exactly those people were supposed to be the damn thin veneer turned out to be the wild dogs, the callous people.
Speaker 2 It's the elites who are supposed to help. They're the ones who panic.
Speaker 2 It's the elites who are watching the situation unfold from a distance, you know, from behind their screens.
Speaker 2 They've got their theory of human nature.
Speaker 2 They're big believers also in veneer theory. So they get very worried.
Speaker 6 The elites decide the rest of us are going to behave badly, which justifies their own violence, their own power grabs, their own selfishness.
Speaker 4 Rebecca Solnit says, while the elites panicked, the people on the ground in New Orleans, most of whom were black, actually did the opposite.
Speaker 6 What I focused on was the pro-social stuff, the incredible things people did to rescue and take care of each other, the incredible way people
Speaker 6 within hours didn't become marauding hordes, but became spontaneous communities of mutual aid and care.
Speaker 3 At first, it was, I'm just helping me and mine.
Speaker 5 You think?
Speaker 13 This is Malik Rahim. Rebecca interviewed him for her book, and so we reached out to.
Speaker 3 And I'm from
Speaker 3 New Orleans,
Speaker 3 Communité Care, Algiers, Louisiana.
Speaker 13 Algiers Point, where Malik lives, is a neighborhood in New Orleans that became infamous for white vigilantes that would patrol the streets during Katrina, claiming to shoot looters.
Speaker 3 One of my neighbors came by my house crying.
Speaker 8 And I said, man, what's wrong with you?
Speaker 3 And he told me, he said, man, listen, they was about to kill me around the corner.
Speaker 8 I said, what?
Speaker 3 He was telling me to run.
Speaker 13 An investigation by reporters found that at least 11 black men were shot in the days following the hurricane. A ProPublica report says, quote, the shooters, it appears, were all white.
Speaker 3 New Orleans was on the verge of a racial war. And a racial war that as a black, I knew we couldn't win.
Speaker 13 Malik remained in his house after the storm, and he had help from a friend to stay safe.
Speaker 13 They'd stand guard on Malik's front porch, watching all this desperation, this violence from white supremacists, this lack of action from the government unfold.
Speaker 13 And they got to talking about social movements.
Speaker 3 We discussed why so many social movements start off with such vigor and end in such despair, you know. The reason is because they lost
Speaker 3 what they had in common, that common ground that brought them together.
Speaker 2 Common ground.
Speaker 13 That's the collective Malik and his friends started after those conversations at his house. They stepped in to fill the needs of the community, needs that were not met by the government.
Speaker 13 They worked in a city where tens of thousands were stranded without an evacuation plan, with no running water or electricity. In the face of immense difficulty, they banded together and built.
Speaker 3 People had lost hope, and that's what Common Ground came down into.
Speaker 3 We restored hope by teaching civic responsibility.
Speaker 4 Common Ground started by providing rescues and basic aid to anyone they could.
Speaker 4 They created health clinics, shelters, mobile street medics, a whole network of mutual aid made up of all kinds of volunteers. The kind of mutual aid that Malik helped make popular as a Black Panther.
Speaker 4 The kind of mutual aid that has existed in Black communities for generations before Katrina.
Speaker 4 Common Ground would end up helping thousands of people. Malik says this includes some of those white vigilantes.
Speaker 3 I seen one of those vigilantes had to bring his mother to our health clinic. And our health clinic went from being the Panther Clinic to a hippie clinic to just the clinic.
Speaker 13
Malik and his colleagues in Common Ground didn't turn anyone away. It wasn't us against them.
And chaos didn't have to reign.
Speaker 3 When you start exposing those myths, then people start coming together.
Speaker 3 And when they start coming together, then they start sharing and understand that the only way we're going to survive this is as if we do it together.
Speaker 13 Malik says Common Ground started with just a few people, then grew to dozens within a week, then to thousands.
Speaker 3 It's nothing more noble.
Speaker 3 than saving life as we know.
Speaker 13 Malik and Rebecca both talk about how disasters like Hurricane Katrina are a window into what really happens when the thin veneer goes away.
Speaker 13 It's a window into what is possible when humanity is put to the test.
Speaker 3 We're going to always be hit with disasters.
Speaker 3 But a disaster don't mean
Speaker 3 that it has to destroy hope.
Speaker 3 Without hope, this world will never be a better place.
Speaker 6 What was amazing for me is over and over and over again, this extraordinary joy shone out of people's faces, came out of their accounts because they'd found something that's missing in the disaster of everyday life.
Speaker 6 When everyday life is alienating, is meaningless, is commodified, is fragmented. They'd found a deep sense of immediacy, of social connection, of purposefulness.
Speaker 6 That's something I think we crave all the time.
Speaker 2 We've got hundreds and hundreds of studies done by sociologists and anthropologists since the 1960s and time and time again they've shown that actually what you get in a crisis situation is an explosion of altruism.
Speaker 2 So people start helping each other on a massive scale.
Speaker 6 It's not all about the war of each against each.
Speaker 6 about the selfish gene and the struggle for survival.
Speaker 6 In so many ways, at so many levels, throughout evolution, throughout life on Earth, you see collaboration, cooperation, often even between species as well as within species, and we know that's what it takes to survive.
Speaker 4 Today, it's really easy to believe that we live on a thin veneer of society. We're constantly being bombarded by bad news, by an onslaught of apocalyptic foreshadowing.
Speaker 4
It's become trendy to joke about the coming end of the world. And of course, this isn't completely unfounded.
Climate change is an existential threat. There's misinformation, runaway capitalism.
Speaker 4 But really, who does it serve when we're all swimming in this toxic soup of pessimism, hopelessness, and despair? Which wolf in us does it feed?
Speaker 4 Is this way of thinking going to make things better or paralyze us and keep things just the way they are?
Speaker 2 I've always believed in the power of utopian thinking.
Speaker 2 Every milestone of civilization, the end of slavery, democracy, equal rights for men and women, these were all utopian fantasies once, until they happened.
Speaker 2 That's why I think that history is actually the most subversive discipline of all the social sciences, because history shows us that things can be different. They don't have to be this way.
Speaker 2
We can change them. We have to believe in the power of hope.
If you believe in hope, if you're actually hopeful for the future, then you know you got to do something.
Speaker 4
I grew up in the 1990s, an era where popular culture promoted indifference. It was hip to not care.
It was a way of showing everyone that you see people clearly for what they are.
Speaker 2 Bad.
Speaker 4 But what if that was wrong? What if seeing the world for what it is means being optimistic about humanity? What if optimism is actually what's punk rock?
Speaker 13 That's it for this week's show. I'm Randab dir Fattah.
Speaker 4 I'm Ramteen Arab Louis, and you've been listening to Through Line from NPR.
Speaker 13 This episode was produced by me and me and Lawrence Wu, Julie Kane, Anya Steinberg, Yolanda Sanguini, Casey Minor, Christina Kim, Devin Katayama, Olivia Chilcoti, Yordanos Tesfazion.
Speaker 4 Fact-checking for this episode was done by Kevin Vogel.
Speaker 13 Thank you to Neil Strickland, JC Howard, and Laurent LaSablier for their voiceover work.
Speaker 4 Thanks also to Micah Ratner, Rachel Seller, Taylor Ashe, Tamar Charney, and Anya Grundman.
Speaker 13 This episode was mixed by Josh Newell and Robert Rodriguez. Music for this episode was composed by Ramteen and his band Drop Electric, which includes Anya Mizani, Naveed Marvy, Sho Fujiwara.
Speaker 4 A quick note for the episode. We did reach out to Professor Philip Zimbardo to talk about the Stanford prison experiment, but he said he was unable to do the interview.
Speaker 13 And finally, if you have an idea or like something you heard on the show, please write us at throughline at npr.org.
Speaker 4 Thanks for listening.
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Speaker 23 Farmer Tanner Pace shares why he believes it's important to care for his land and how he hopes to pass the opportunity to farm onto his sons.
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