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5 elements of toxic legalism

Updated: 3 days ago

“Take responsibility. Be rational. Keep it simple. Relieve your pain. Take a stand.” What’s wrong with these? Everything!

 

These snippets all point to the problem of “toxic legalism”. Toxic legalism is when you

put flexible laws ahead of the inflexible needs,

which such laws exist to serve. This occurs in at least five dimensions, covered below.


 

5 elements of toxic legalism with child holding up five fingers and 'wearing a shirt reading 'STOP'
The less a law fits its purpose to serve needs, the more we risk slipping into 'toxic legalism'.

Which do you believe as more accurate?

No one is literally above the law.

OR

No one's impactful actions are beyond the reach of agreed upon responses to our needs, but the needs themselves sit above laws as they occur before any law was ever codified.


Anankelogy establishes a natural need as an objective fact. The less your needs resolve, the less you can objectively function. And the more predictably you will suffer pain. Objective needs are inflexible needs; they cannot be readily changed to fit the demands of laws.


By contrast, anankelogy recognizes human laws as arbitrary legal fictions. The more we obey laws more than respond to needs out of love, the more our wellness suffers. Arbitrary laws are flexible laws; they can be readily changed to fit our inflexible needs.


There are at least five ways the original purpose of laws can slip into toxic legalism.

Toxic legalism can be defined as prioritizing subservience to laws or to social norms over serving the needs for which they exist. Anankelogy recognizes each of these elements as a level of functioning, or of your level of wellness.


 

MORAL DEFUNCTIONS

MORAL REFUNCTIONS

hyper-individualism

psychosocial holism

hyperrationality

vulnerable honesty

overgeneralizing

relevant nuance

discomfort avoidance

discomfort embrace

adversarialism

mutuality


The law exists to impersonally convey each other’s needs. Taken to extremes, it devolves into something ignoring our needs, or worst. Too much law sinks into what anankelogy recognizes as toxic legalism.

 

quote by Solzhenitsyn about legalistic societies

 

Each toxic element starts out innocent enough, trying to address some need. Then slips into problems when misapplied. Instead of helping our needs, it dangerously undermines our needs.

 

Anankelogy considers such hindrances to our needs as defunctions. Which gets corrected by what anankelogy calls refunctions.

 

Need-response exists as a new profession to help us restore our functioning. Need-response gets us back to resolving needs to improve each other’s wellness. Laws do not resolve needs; properly motivated people do.

 

In short, toxic legalism presents these five dangers. Need-response counters each one in ways no one else even tries.



This starts with something good. The law emphasizes personal responsibility to act appropriately. Authority compels your responsibility toward the rights of others.

 

Too personalized, and we slip into overlooking the external limits constraining compliance. That easily morphs into toxic legalism. Taken to extremes, this actually undermines our personal and shared responsibilities.

 

Toxic legalism tends to overemphasize personal responsibility at the neglect of other’s responsibility toward you. This tends to leave your needs unaddressed. You might solely blame yourself for the resulting pain, which risks trapping you in more pain.


This affects your psychosocial orientation (PO).

Unresolved needs can pull you into hyper-individualism.


This starts with something good. The law checks your irrational behaviors if reacting on your feelings. Rational-legal authority checks your impulses toward others.

 

Too rational, and we slip into guarding our vulnerabilities even from ourselves. That easily sinks into toxic legalism. Taken to extremes, this actually undermines rationality.

 

Toxic legalism bends toward rationalizing in ways that enable you to hide your vulnerable feelings. You expect your rational arguments to be socially safer than exposing your less defensible emotions. So you cover your emotions with slick sounding arguments.


This points to your vulnerability orientation (VO).

Unresolved needs can pull you into hyperrationality.


This starts with something good. The law tends to be vague to apply to various situations. Laws remain flexible to apply to a wide array of situations.

 

Too vague, and we slip into overgeneralizing that overlooks relevant specifics of our affected needs. That easily slides into toxic legalism. Taken to extremes, this actually undermines the intended flexibility of the law’s vagueness.

 

Toxic legalism persuades you avoid any details that risk rejection. Coalitions stick around widely agreed upon generalizations. You also might prefer to avoid uncomfortable specifics. You perhaps generalize for relief from pain.


This affects your relational orientation (RO).

Unresolved needs can pull you into overgeneralizing.


This starts with something good. The law tends to be impersonal to avoid favoritism. Laws are best kept impartial, to treat all equally.

 

Too impersonal, and we slip in avoidance of the natural discomfort of our bodies warning us of real threats. That easily devolves into toxic legalism. Taken to extremes, this actually undermines impartiality.

 

Toxic legalism has you avoiding discomfort and avoiding others, to the point of remaining painfully alienated. You slip into isolation to avoid having to deal with others. Until you find your seclusion painfully lonely.


This impacts your easement orientation (EO).

Unresolved needs can pull you into alienating avoidance.


This starts with something good. The law opposes lawbreakers to ensure respect for others. Facing social sanctions for disrespecting others proves a powerful motivator.

 

Too adversarial, and we slip in mutual hostilities and defensiveness that shuts down needful cooperation. That easily shrinks into toxic legalism. Taken to extremes, this actually undermines critical opposition to questionable actions or ideas.

 

Toxic legalism normalizes premature opposition to others. Slight disagreements expand into mutual hostilities. Common ground gets overlooked to indulge in side-taking. You oppose another’s needs who oppose yours, locking you into mutual adversarialism.


This shapes your conflict orientation (CO).

Unresolved needs can pull you into adversarialism.



Consider the makeup of the adversarial justice system.

  1. Hyper-individual: When confronted by law enforcement, externalities get patently ignored.

  2. Hyperrational: Authority patently ignores your vulnerably felt needs.

  3. Overgeneralizing: Adjudication easily neglects the many specifics involved in a situation.

  4. Avoidant: Adjudication offers relief for the winning side, not a path toward removing pain.

  5. Adversarialist: You are pitted against another, with little if any effort to identify or address the needs on all sides.

 

Now consider the makeup of polarizing politics.

  1. Hyper-individual: Politics reduces you to an atomized rational decisionmaker, blaming you for poor ballot options.

  2. Hyperrational: You’re supposed to rationally find answers, rationalizing unresponsiveness.

  3. Overgeneralizing: Coalitions rely on avoiding specifics that could evoke disagreement.

  4. Avoidant: Politics tend to keep you alienated from each other, to avoid relating with each other on a more personal level.

  5. Adversarialist: You are pitted against another, with little if any effort to identify or address the needs on all sides.

 

Need-response counters all of these elements, with the refunctions listed above. And raises the standard with universal principles, or “character refunctions”. Moreover, need-response raises the standard from the law’s harm reduction norm to loving one another—to properly honoring the needs of others as you would have them honor your own. Which can more easily result in more resolved needs, less pain to cope with, and greater overall wellness.



Your responsiveness to toxic legalism

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