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POLEMICS: POWER PARADOX – By ShafT

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According to the renowned Historian, Liberal Philosopher and Statesman Lord Acton (1834-1902) of Great Britain “power tends to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely”.

In like manner, I would observe equally power tends to intoxicate; absolute power intoxicates absolutely.

Power tends to toxify; absolute power toxifies absolutely.

Power is delusive , slippery and transient. Many similar  adjectives are associated with power.

The point: power in whatever quantifiable amount, configurations  or matrix available at the disposal of the beneficiaries ultimately is ephemeral and deceptive typically. Power can be even injurious on the bearers if exercised without caution and restraint.

These identifiable anomalies constitute the paradox inherent in the contexts of the seducing propensities and proclivities of power. Regrettably, seducton of power is a potent source of concern to many. Seduction or seductive force of power can be misleading and disastrous.

History is replet with human follies and misadventures in the course of exercises of power and the terrible outcomes and consequences. Examplars include: Hitler as German leader; Idi Amin of Uganda; Saddam Hussein of Iraq; et al. Based on this sampling, the issue definitely is a univerasl problem.

These episodes collectively comprise some of the the darkest moments and tragedies of human societies with reference to obssesive quests and possessions of power and vulgar dispensations thereof. Unfortunately, these mistakes are being repeated today, as surely it would be repeated in the future in different human societies. What a tragedy!

In the contexts of the fore stated propositions, supported by available and accurate historical instances, humans are portrayed as objects controlled by POWER but not POWER controlled by humans as expected ideally.

This perplexing roles reversal in terms of Power acting negatively  on humans defines and signifies the critical importance of the subject: Power Paradox.  Discovery of this intriguing or strange paradoxical man-power relationship continues to agitate the minds of scholars and arouse research interests accordingly.

These inferences on power derive from mass of available evidence gathered by keen observers or watchers of power in action and in mis-action dating back to ancient times. Contemporary scholars or writers in various disciplines in the course of many scientific research  studies conducted provide ample evidence/proof of mankind’s susceptibilities to the negative influence of power irrespective of the socio-politico environments studied or period of time in the contexts of historical perspectives.

Careful reading/study and sober reflections on   the compelling lessons found in the following classic research experiments can be of immense benefits to the persons entrusted with power as well as the victims or potential victims of the absurd misuse of instruments of power in countless forms.

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*Polemics*, believes unmistakably thorough understanding of the essence and judicous or proper applications of power can help our societies move on the right tracks and thereby avert avoidable mistakes associated with misconceptions of power especially by the incumbent political elite class/corps and prospective leaders in the political or other spheres.

Herein in is the full text of the discourse as expertly chronicled and presented by USA based Nigerian Professor and Researcher:

I was one of seven professors who facilitated a leadership training in my university here in Georgia for local government chairmen from a major Nigerian southwestern state. In the course of the training, I adverted to a January 13, 2018 column I wrote about how power literally damages the brains of people who wield it and causes them to be dissociated from reality.

A few of the chairmen at the training initially said they “rejected” what I said “in Jesus’ name.”But the more I expounded the research on the psychology of power, the less resistant they became. In the light of the interest it excited among these local power wielders, I thought I’d share a revised version of the column for the benefit of other people in power.

Almost everyone I know wonders why people in power change radically; why they become so utterly disconnected from reality that they suddenly become completely unrecognisable to people who knew them before they got to power; why they get puffed-up, susceptible to flattery, and intolerant of even the mildest, best-intentioned censure; why they appear possessed by inexplicably malignant forces; and why they are notoriously insensitive and self-absorbed.

Everyone who has ever had a friend in a position of power, especially political power, can attest to the accuracy of the age-old truism that a friend in power is a lost friend. Of course, there are exceptions, but it is precisely the fact of the existence of exceptions that makes this reality poignant. As the saying goes, “the exception proves the rule.”

Abraham Lincoln once said, “Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man’s character, give him power.” Look at all the power brokers in Nigeria—from the president to your ward councilor—and you’ll discover that there is a vast disconnect between who they were before they got to power and who they are now.

Also look at previously arrogant, narcissistic, power-drunk prigs who have been kicked out of the orbit of power for any number of reasons. You’ll discover that they are suddenly normal again. They share our pains, make pious noises, condemn abuse of power, and identify with popular causes. The legendary amnesia of Nigerians causes the past misdeeds of these previous monsters of power to be explained away, lessened, forgiven, and ultimately forgotten. But when they get back to power again, they become the same insensitive beasts of power that they once were.

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So what is it about power that makes people such obtuse,

self-centred snobs? It turns out that psychologists have been grappling with this puzzle for years and have a clue. Dacher Keltner, a psychology professor at the University of California Berkeley, extensively studied the brains of people in power and found that people under the influence of power are neurologically similar to people who suffer traumatic brain injury.

According to the July/August 2017 issue of the Atlantic magazine, people who are victims of traumatic brain injury are “more impulsive, less risk-aware, and, crucially, less adept at seeing things from other people’s point of view.” In other words, like victims of traumatic brain injury, power causes people to lose their capacity for empathy. This is a surprising scientific corroboration of American historian Henry Adams’ popular wisecrack about how power is “a sort of tumor that ends by killing the victim’s sympathies.”

The findings of Sukhvinder Obhi, a professor of neuroscience at McMaster University, in Ontario, Canada, are even more revealing. Obhi also studies the workings of the human brain. “And when he put the heads of the powerful and the not-so-powerful under a transcranial-magnetic-stimulation machine, he found that power, in fact, impairs a specific neural process, ‘mirroring,’ that may be a cornerstone of empathy,” the Atlantic reports. “Which gives a neurological basis to what Keltner has termed the ‘power paradox’: Once we have power, we lose some of the capacities we needed to gain it in the first place.”

Take Buhari, for example. Before 2015, he was—or at least he appeared to be—empathetic. He supported subsidies for the poor, railed against waste, thought Nigerians deserved to buy petrol at a low price because Nigerian oil was “developed with Nigerian capital,” and so on. He even said foreign medical treatment for elected government officials was immoral and indefensible, and wondered why a Nigerian president would need a fleet of aircraft when even the British Prime Minister didn’t have any.

Nothing but power-induced brain damage, which activates narcissism and loss of empathy, can explain Buhari’s dramatic volte-face now that he’s in power. This fact, psychological researchers say, is worsened by the fact that subordinates tend to flatter people in power, mimic their ways in order to ingratiate themselves with them, and shield them from realities that might cause them psychic discomfort.

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“But more important, Keltner says, is the fact that the powerful stop mimicking others,” the Atlantic reports. “Laughing when others laugh or tensing when others tense does more than ingratiate. It helps trigger the same feelings those others are experiencing and provides a window into where they are coming from. Powerful people ‘stop simulating the experience of others,’ Keltner says, which leads to what he calls an ‘empathy deficit.’”

Researchers also found out that excessive praise from subordinates, sycophantic drooling from people seeking favours, control over vast resources they once didn’t have, and all of the staid rituals and performances of power conspire to cause “functional” changes to the brains of people in power. On a social level, it also creates what Lord David Owen, a British neurologist-turned-politician, called the “hubris syndrome” in his 2008 book titled In Sickness and in Power.

Some features of hubris syndrome, Owen points out, are, “manifest contempt for others, loss of contact with reality, restless or reckless actions, and displays of incompetence.” Sounds familiar? You can’t observe Buhari’s governance—or, more correctly, ungovernance—in the last four years and fail to see these features in him.

But it’s not all gloom and doom. Powerful people can, and indeed do, extricate themselves from the psychological snares of power if they so desire. Professor Keltner said one of the most effective psychological strategies for people in power to reconnect with reality and reverse the brain damage of power is to periodically remember moments of powerlessness in their lives—such as when they were victims of natural disasters, accidents, poverty, etc.

They should also have what American journalist Louis McHenry Howe once called a “toe holder,” that is, someone who doesn’t fear them, expects no favors from them, and can tell them uncomfortable truths without fear of consequences.

Winston Churchill’s toe holder was his wife, who once wrote a letter to him that read, in part, “I must confess that I have noticed a deterioration in your manner; and you are not as kind as you used to be.” Was Aisha Buhari performing the role of a toe holder when she publicly upbraided her husband in the past? I doubt it.

Her disagreements with her husband are often opportunistic and self-serving. They are triggered only when her husband’s puppeteers in Aso Rock limit her powers to nominate her cronies for political positions and to dispense favours to friends and family.

Another potent way to reverse power-induced brain damage is to periodically get out of the protected silos of power and solitarily observe the quotidian interactions of everyday folks—their humour, laughter, fights, etc. — without the familiar add-ons of power, such as aides, cameras, security, etc. This helps to stimulate the experiences of others and restore empathy.

This is particularly important in Nigeria because power, at all levels, is almost absolute and unaccountable.

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Editor’s Note

Polemics is a regular Column created and managed by ShafT.

Original articles on pertinent subjects verging on the advancement or wellbeing of the polity are welcome for consideration and publication on the platform. An article to merit consideration for publication shall be assessed to be balanced, objective, and from credible source.

Readers feedbacks or responses on published items are encouraged and highly appreciated.

Contact: 09066092077. WhatsAPP or SMS ONLY.

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