Totally irrational nonsense
The revulsion they're sensing on the other side of these conversations is most of the time not real.
But the contempt is. They may not understand half the issues they're railing against but they know when someone is talking down to them. If we don't hold their specific viewpoint in contempt (killing unborn children is a sin), we likely hold their rationales or the means by which they uphold their beliefs in.
Contempt, revulsion, dismissal.....whether you support any of these beliefs or not, appreciate that this is how they've felt marginalized in American society. Don't try to look at the statement "they hate our freedoms" or "war on Christianity" for their literal meaning. The statements are irrational and factually incorrect but the places they come from are real. The secularization of America, deemphasizing religious moral mandates in the law, religious plurality, "Happy Holidays" instead of Merry Christmas.....that amounts to a war in their minds. The fact there are people out there standing in a circle shouting "Death to America" still to this day is validation enough for the belief they hate
something about us.
I watched a TED talk a month or two ago from a former member and leader of a white supremacist group, who went from preaching hate to trying to get people out of the movement. Along with all the usual "vulnerable youth" stuff, one of this big take aways is that you have to talk to people, have to. Even the worst people with the vilest ideologies. If you in any way want to change someone's point of view you have to talk to them, consistently, regularly and start breaking down barriers. Yeah, the shit average people say in the heat of the moment is absurd and possibly misguided. But they are still people. And even under the most hate filled white supremacist troll ass wipe is a person. I know it sounds touchy feely and I'm not saying it changes much. But lately it's like the more ridiculous things people say, the
more I want to talk to them, not
less. Not to berate them or educate them or shame them, even though I have that impulse. But just to make them talk through what they believe and feel to another living human being face to face. That is the only way you can really open people up.
Your generation is fucked in the head.
To be fair though, how many times has our generation said "the baby boomers fucked this all up with their shortsightedness, privilege and greed. And they won't acknowledge any of it. The hell is wrong with them?" Just to keep this all on an even keel.
And in this guy's case, he was so far out of his depth that the simple statement of "we have a thing that says what our rights are and we don't get to pick and choose" was too much for him to handle. Listening to ideology is a process, just like I was saying above. Whether you're trying to convince someone of something or literally trying to brainwash them, it takes time and what someone calls brainwashing versus educating varies a lot on their exposure to it.
Being exposed to different ideas is asking your morality to function like a muscle. At first its tight and painful to the slightest stimuli but with repeated exposure, it gets looser, more flexible, more adaptable. Many people probably don't have that many serious political conversations in their lives, just a lot of "yep ahuh" circle jerks.