The sting in the Rose Garden:
How Dominic Cummings changed the rules of debate while his oblivious audience nodded along (thread) 1/12
Towards the end, Cummings says this: “I accept, of course, that there is room for reasonable disagreement about this.” 3/12
This looks like a generous admission of uncertainty, an acknowledgement of conflicting demands, and an olive branch towards critics. He adds “of course” to make it sound even more like an innocent and everyday acceptance of the difficulties of his position. 4/12
Once we accept this statement, as has everyone did on the day and in subsequent debate (including @bbcnickrobinson interviewing Matt Hancock on @BBCr4today this morning (2:18:31), there is no way out. Cummings’ position is unchallengeable. 6/12 https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m000jgfl
It works like this. We have agreed that there is room for reasonable disagreement. Therefore any ‘reasonable’ disagreement cannot be decisive, as there is room for it without changing position. Any ‘unreasonable’ disagreement, however, is as unimpressive as it always was. 7/12
The only other options are to agree or to say nothing – both of which accept Cummings’ position. 8/12
So no amount of disagreement, reasonable or not, can change the situation as offered by Cummings. What he has achieved, in relation to his own position, is to dismiss reason (and presumably its trusty sidekick logic) from the field of play. 9/12
The double-bind communication paradox was first noticed by anthropologist and systems thinking pioneer Gregory Bateson and his colleagues at the Mental Research Institute, Palo Alto California in the 1950s. 10/12
I had no idea on Sunday afternoon that Dominic Cummings was about to employ it to hoodwink us all into suspending logic and reason from interfering with his family adventures. 11/12
I hope that by shining a light onto his sleight of hand I can make journalists, interviewers, commentators and citizens more aware of what is being done, and how, in our name. 12/12 ENDS
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