Hope Must Conquer Fear in Politics
Princess Leia shows us why hope is crucial for a liberty-oriented way of life.

Hope means different things, depending on who you ask. Some say hope is inherent to the way someone carries himself in the face of adversity. Others think of hope as a form of superstition, an unfounded belief that everything will be alright in the end. The more cynical among us call hope outright foolishness or naivete. During the COVID-19 pandemic, our capacity to find hope has been regularly tested by lockdowns, the false promises of bureaucrats and the public health establishment, the devastation to people's livelihoods, the death toll, and the crushing depression that comes with all the above. People could be forgiven for losing sight of hope that the pandemic will ever end.
Politics, too, certainly has a lot of people feeling hopeless. President Joe Biden's victory over Donald Trump in the 2020 election spurred a mob to storm the Capitol to try to stop the certification of the election. You could call the incident many things, but at its core, January 6 was an act of desperation by people who lost hope in democracy, in our constitutional processes, and in self-government. You don't expose yourself to federal criminal charges for fun. You do it because you've embraced the lie of "The Flight 93 Election."
Hope is how you look beyond the trials of the moment to what comes after. It's what pushes an activist to stand alone on a street corner with a sign bearing a slogan, carrying with it a belief that one person might be moved enough by it to join the cause. Hope is why we vote. Virginia Governor–elect Glenn Youngkin faced the monumental challenge of flipping a blue state that Biden won by 10 percentage points. Did Youngkin spend his final days campaigning saying that, unless he won, the state's election system was "rigged" or that the vote would be "stolen"? No, because hope was enough.

One of my favorite champions of hope in the realm of fictional revolutionary politics is Princess Leia of Star Wars. She's got a treasure trove of quotes on the subject that illuminate just why a politics rooted in hope, not paranoia and doom, is exactly what our culture needs right now. Her hope is firm as stone, resolute, and grounded in truth. It's a model for the kind of hope we need in order to defend liberty. In my upcoming book, How the Force Can Fix the World, I explain why this matters for preserving not only our society and way of life, but our personal happiness as well.
Leia's Impossible Hope
Grand Moff Wilhuff Tarkin was never going to spare Alderaan. When Princess Leia misled him about the location of the rebel base in Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope (1977), naming the mostly desolate world of Dantooine as the location of the base, Tarkin had already planned a murderous demonstration of the Death Star's power for all the galaxy to see. Alderaan was Leia's home. Her parents and fellow rebels, Bail and Breha Organa, were on Alderaan when Tarkin gave the order for the massive orbital space station to fire on the planet. Millions upon millions of lives were snuffed out in an instant. The Death Star, which the Rebellion had risked everything to stop, was now fully operational. Tarkin, whose faith in the Death Star was rooted in the cynical goal of solidifying the Galactic Empire's hold on power through absolute fear, had made his move and put all his chips on that belief.
He was wrong. I've always marveled watching A New Hope and taking note of Princess Leia's poise and resoluteness throughout that original film. While Luke Skywalker is a beacon of hope to audiences in his own way, Leia strikes me as unique. After escaping the Death Star with Luke, Han Solo, and Chewbacca, it's Leia who comforts Luke for his loss of Obi-Wan Kenobi. He looks shattered. Leia, on the other hand, having just lost everything in the most literal sense, remains as motivated as ever. She has the eye of the tiger from start to finish.
What Our Future Vision Says About Us
We've been living through some seriously dark days during the pandemic. It's no surprise that mental health professionals are seeing an unprecedented spike in anxiety, depression, and suicides across multiple age groups and demographics. Political systems were strained before the pandemic even began. Populist movements and authoritarian leaders have risen across the globe and chipped away at the democratic consensus that has defined the post–World War II order. In the United States, political violence has flared to levels not seen since the tumultuous 1960s.
No one expected to see a pandemic, riots, and an attack on Congress. This isn't the future I dreamed of. Maybe you grew up believing mankind would be in space by now, living like The Jetsons or even blasting through hyperspace like Han Solo aboard the Millennium Falcon to new and exciting worlds. The lack of sci-fi technology becoming reality can be kind of demoralizing. We thought we'd have flying cars, but instead we got curbside pickup at Starbucks.
It's easy to forget that things are getting better all around us in ways that are hard to see. Since my birth in 1989, income per person in the United States has risen 67 percent, life expectancy is up 4 percent, and food supply has increased by 7 percent. When my father was just a boy, mankind was putting its feet on the moon for the first time; today we're making huge strides toward manned missions to Mars. Heck, the robotic rovers we've sent to Mars in recent years have uncovered proof that there used to be water on that distant red planet. Once the question was, "Is there life out there in the stars?" Now we've moved on to a new question: Where is that life?
There's a scene in A New Hope with Luke standing in the desert at dusk, watching the twin suns of Tatooine set on the horizon. It's one of the most enduring moments of Star Wars from generation to generation. Luke is just a lonely dreamer looking out on the world and believing there must be more to it than what he can see. Luke is all of us at that moment. It doesn't matter if you're Elon Musk, risking a fortune on a new space shuttle to make it to Mars, or if you're a young girl living in a cramped Chicago apartment with five siblings and a dream of making it big in Hollywood, lifting your family out of poverty in the process.
Maybe this is hope, or maybe it's the American dream. These things go hand in hand.
Hope Beyond Hope Can Be Poisonous
Hope is a lot of things. It can be personified, objectified, or embodied in places, faith, and prose. But the most simple definition for hope is that it's to want something you can have, at least in theory. I want very badly to have the Jedi power of levitating objects and moving them around my house with my mind, but I don't have hope of achieving such a thing, nor should I, even in theory. It's not within the realm of possibility. But what if I watched enough YouTube videos made by weirdos living in their mothers' basements, telling me beyond a shadow of a doubt that I'm wrong, and this power is in fact attainable? All I'd have to do, according to these armchair wizards of the web, is watch enough of their videos and wire them some money. There's a good chance that at some point you'll become bitter and angry. After all, someone sold you false goods, hope beyond hope.
This is what happens to Anakin Skywalker when he is told by a supposed friend, Chancellor Palpatine, about the power to control life and death that is known only to the Sith. Anakin, suffering from visions of his wife Padme dying in childbirth, is lured in by a twisted kind of hope we might understand as an intergalactic spin on the snake-oil salesman who travels from town to town hawking miracle cures that almost certainly will let the buyer down.
Just as hope can push the likes of Princess Leia forward through a tragedy like the destruction of Alderaan, hope can also move a desperate and loving husband to spend the last of his savings or sell the house to get that cure from the roving snake-oil salesman. It's not unlike the snake oil hawked by politicians who say all our problems will be solved if we just give them votes and power, warping the minds of people who go to great lengths to follow them. There is a light and dark side to everything.
In the Christian tradition, hope sits alongside faith and charity as one of its core virtues and guiding lights. The notion that God would send his son to mankind in order to deliver them from sin and by extension, damnation, is a significant dose of hope for a people in need of redemption. Absent that guiding light and the possibility of salvation, you'd have masses of people mired in endless cycles of guilt and despair.
Hope here is more than a feeling. It's not something that washes over you and leaves like an emotion. As a virtue, it's something you discover and hold on to for dear life, despite everything the world will throw at you. Hope is the life vest. Hope is the parachute when you've jumped out of a plane. It's like faith. You can become a person who is hopeful (and positive), or you can become cynical, someone who is predisposed to see the worst in people and in the future.
Even worse, absent hope you can devolve into nihilism, a particularly toxic kind of hopelessness rooted in the belief that nothing matters. Most people aren't born this way. It's a learned behavior and one increasingly popular with young people and lauded throughout our popular and political culture. Throughout Star Wars, audiences understand rightly that the Empire is an incredibly evil and morally bankrupt regime. With this being crystal clear, would-be rebels have a choice to make in how they make their stand against the Empire. It's not good enough to simply oppose it. To win, the Rebel Alliance has to do three things: First, let the people of the galaxy know they're not alone in feeling angry about the state of things. Second, let people know that the Empire can actually be beaten. Third, paint a picture of a better future.
The Rebel Alliance does all of these things. In our own world, the majority of successful movements and political campaigns do so as well.
There are more than a few nihilistic factions in American politics today competing for the public's attention and loyalty. Whether they wear black masks or don red hats, the message is the same: The future is bleak and nothing matters. We know this isn't true. While humanity is messy, we're living in the best time in human history to be alive, even during the pandemic. There's a great deal of cause for hope, even as we face down the twin fears of uncertainty and disorder.
As Leia said in Star Wars: Episode VIII – The Last Jedi, "Hope is like the sun, if you only believe in it when you can see it, you'll never make it through the night."
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You mean like the totally-not-Culture-War fears like White Supremacists, Insurrection, Unvaxxed subhumans, chants in support of racecar drivers, and of course the Bad Orange Man himself?
Sadly, fear is what sells TV add time. "We're all gonna DIE! News at 11:00" Think of all the crises you have heard about that have just sort of wandered off and disappeared. We were all going to freeze to death in the 1970s, starve to death in the 1980s, run out of oil in the period from about 1920 to the present, and, worst of all since 2000, NOT run out of oil. SARS would get us all. Nazis - actual NAZIS - are all around us, ready to strike any moment, just as soon as the thirty or so can get together and decide on the right time.
TV entertainment plots sell the same fears.
It pays, so will never go away.
Which is what drives the unholy symbiosis between politics and media - both thrive on fear.
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The Empire did nothing wrong!
This reminds me of John Gardner's sympathetic Grendel that told the Beowulf epic from the side of the monster.
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If the Republic was so great, how come the First Order took over so soon?
And why were they called the First Order if they came after the Republic and after the Empire and after the original Republic?
I blame Lucas' poor writing and then Kathleen Kennedy's inept leadership of the franchise for all of that nonsense.
You say that like a black man doesn't conceptually belong in a white-clad army of stormtroopers, led by officers in black leather trenchcoats, marching under a red-white-and-black banner fighting for what is, chronologically in universe, the third order.
> how come the First Order took over so soon?
Disney, that's why. They wanted a reboot but the Empire was gone so they invented a new one so they could have A New Hope Part Deux.
Back when it was still cool to Resist.
They wanted a reboot but the Empire was gone so they invented a new one so they could have A New Hope Part Deux.
Yep - this is about as much thought as went into it. We are talking J. J. Abrams here.
It's always harder to build something new than to tear down the old.
But the real world answer is Disney rehashing story beats in disregard of the lore, legacy, and coherence of the property.
Shit in one hand, hope in the other. See which one fills up first.
Even worse, absent hope you can devolve into nihilism, a particularly toxic kind of hopelessness rooted in the belief that nothing matters. Most people aren't born this way. It's a learned behavior and one increasingly popular with young people and lauded throughout our popular and political culture.
Sarc lampoons himself once again.
I know what you're holding in both hands and it isn't hope.
You wish.
"...BACON! a whole...damn plate! And then I usually drink my dinner!"
https://youtu.be/u05gAMMazWY
FREE PLUG! FREE PLUG!
Great ad for a book disguised as an article.
Absolutely convinced me to not buy the book.
Sorry! I didn't mean to reply to myself!
FREE PLUG! FREE PLUG!
Leia is the Ilhan Omar of the Star Wars trilogy.
Won't know for sure until we explosively eject Omar into the vacuum of space and she comes back.
Fetch my largest privately-funded launch platform!
Yes sir, Mr. Musk!
That'd be on grant I'd gladly see Musk issued.
If it's on a Gummint grant, it wouldn't be privately funded.
"'The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by an endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary."
I find your hope that Mencken didn't know what he was talking about to be foolishly naive.
Speaking of hope, this is a bit of an old story, but I ran across this last night while reading NPR's explainer on "Let's Go Brandon" to their audience.
I wonder how they define "journalist" and "activist"?
Party affiliation.
Fuck Be Unto Mark Zuckerberg!
President Joe Biden's victory over Donald Trump in the 2020 election spurred a mob to storm the Capitol to try to stop the certification of the election.
Trump, much like bin Laden, stoked the wild anti-democratic fervor of his acolytes enough for them to attack the foundation of the USA.
Misdemeanor disorderly conduct.
LOL
As if terrorism and murder and treason charges aren't entirely deserved. Trust me, they're coming.
#1/6WasWorseThan9/11
No wonder they felt it necessary to shoot first, ask questions later.
More than once, in fact.
Again I want to thank you for warning us 5 days in advance of the SECOND INSURRECTION BY RIGHTWING EXTREMISTS on 9 / 18. Literally saved my life by convincing me not to leave home.
I'm sure the Biden Administration will be charging the perpetrators with treason or something comparably severe.
#9/18WasWorseThan9/11
turd lies. It's all turd does. turd is a pathological liar, too stupid tp remember which lie he told a minute or two ago and not nearly bright enough to understand we all know he's a congenital liar.
If turd posts something which isn't a lie, it's a mistake on his part.
turd lies; it's what he does, and you don't have to look far to see that.
He literally said walk over to the Capitol and peacefully protest.
Sounds like "being a rational human fucking being" to me.
Despite being twins, one was an adult and the other was a juvenile.
The Republic was a corrupt, slave trading society with continuous inter planetary wars.
I am unclear on what exactly the Empire did to make this *worse*. Clearly the Republic had essentially no grass roots support.
This point has been made before. The only thing "bad" about the Empire was that was too centralized in an single emperor. We really don't see anything bad from the Empire itself, just from individuals like Vader. So yeah, Vader is bad, but how does that make the Empire bad? Why was the Republic good? We are never told, not even those atrocious three movies that shows the rise of the Empire.
The same can also be said of the Lord of the Rings. Why was Mordor bad and Gondor good? The latter was clearly a feudal society, the books just never showed the serfs toiling in the dirt. The Shire was good, we could see that, but we don't seen how Gondor is good or how Mordor is bad.
"But there are orcs!" Yeah, so?
The same can also be said of the Lord of the Rings. Why was Mordor bad and Gondor good? The latter was clearly a feudal society, the books just never showed the serfs toiling in the dirt. The Shire was good, we could see that, but we don't seen how Gondor is good or how Mordor is bad.
"But there are orcs!" Yeah, so?
I'm with you on Star Wars, but there is something to be said for the Jedi not iniating aggression and openly negotiating/trading with even deplorables on their own terms. However, for LOTR, both in the books and the movies it's clear that, even relative to serfs toiling in the dirt, Sauron is evil.
Admittedly, the Capital of Mordor being called 'Mount Doom' could suggest an impartial narration, but if you discount factual narration, there's literally nothing you can't make up, including the toxic nihilism Kent warns of.
I mean the whole plot mcguffin- the One Ring enslaves people. Sauron invades the lands of his neighbors. Of course that is evil.
Is tbe World of Man as pure as the driven snow? Of course not THAT is one of the books’ enduring themes. Evil lives in man and he cannot fight existential evil without banishing that which lives within him.
Well, there was the whole "destroy entire planets in one shot" if they don't tow the lion to the Empire's marching orders.
Which seems counterproductive, wiping out taxpayers en masse like that.
This.
The Empire moved from Napoleon to Hitler in a single shot.
And violated the laws of physics, allowing the survivors to see multiple planets a varying number of light years away all at the same time.
But physics were already different in that galaxy, since people could travel faster than light and not age more slowly than the people who weren't traveling with them.
Seems to me the Empire brought order and consistency. The Republic was wishy washy and corrupt. The Rebels were dirty, stinking insurrectionists who ran around killing innocent people and blowing shit up.
Nihilists... fuck me...
Some folks trust in reason. Others trust in might. I don't trust in nothing, but I know it comes out right. ~~Robert Hunter / Bob Weir
Leia was cool as a cucumber throughout.
Wha?
What a stupid article from a stupid “journalist”.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1HeWcY5GVlQ
Should have been linked in the article (or below it).
Lets go Heaton!
The author of this article and the book isn't really a libertarian. I tried listening to his podcast a while back and it put me off withing ten minutes.
Scientific American weighs in on the JEDI
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/why-the-term-jedi-is-problematic-for-describing-programs-that-promote-justice-equity-diversity-and-inclusion/
Or, as Obi Wan warned:
“Luke, you’re going to find that many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view.”
Every time a science journalist writes the word "problematic" they should be automatically booted hard in the nuts (or box).
Anyone who uses the terms "Diversity, Inclusion and Equity" should be kicked hard in the nuts.
At least if you use the term in that order and as an anagram it makes sense.
Vaccinating your small children is becoming a cult.
In the coming second American Civil War, which side are you on?
The prospect of a second American Civil War may seem wildly unlikely, or not even logistically feasible. But if it were to happen, such an outcome would not be based on empirical facts, reality or the complexities and nuances of public opinion polls.
A large percentage of Republicans and the larger white right actually believe that they are in an existential struggle for survival against Black and brown people and "illegal aliens" who want to "replace them," sinister "secularists" who want to outlaw Christianity, "critical race theory" aimed at brainwashing their children, a "liberal media" that deliberately lies to them, and a cabal of "elites" and "socialists" who are treasonous and determined to destroy the "real" America.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/in-the-coming-second-american-civil-war-which-side-are-you-on/ar-AAQjmXF?ocid=msedgntp
turd lies. It's all turd does. turd is a pathological liar, too stupid tp remember which lie he told a minute or two ago and not nearly bright enough to understand we all know he's a congenital liar.
If turd posts something which isn't a lie, it's a mistake on his part.
turd lies; it's what he does, and you don't have to look far to see that.
It's a cult. Senator asks director of CDC very basic question on science regarding natural immunity. She could have said several things, any one of which may be true, partially true, or false.
Examples:
Natural immunity is bullshit, no one believes in it any more.
Natural immunity isn't good enough.
Natural immunity is good enough, but we don't have the tracking data to prove it out, so get vaccinated.
Natural Immunity is a Trump conspiracy theory.
Natural Immunity is a Russian disinformation campaign.
But her answer out of the gate?
"Our stance is everyone should get vaccinated"
CDC employees are not required to get a vaccine.
GAO report has no coordinated response to get people back to work in the federal work force.
This wasn't a bad segment. Surprised by Forbes on this one.
Sen Murray sits unmasked, but when she gets up, she picks her mask up which had been lying on the table. Is that sanitary, is that sterile?
It's a cult.
Hope, the quintessential human delusion. Simultaneously your greatest strength and your greatest weakness.
-The Architect.
Sorry but if this book is as well reasoned as this article, it will be as sloppily written as Episodes 1 - 3.
The author puts up this construction of hope as a cure for our ills. But only the right hope you see. When “red hat” voters have an aspiration like “Make America Great” again, that’s the wrong type of hope, see? But the protestor on the side of the road? Oh he’s got authentic hope in spades. He hopes that his sign will inspire others to join his cause. Is it a different type of hope if the sign says, “eat the rich”? Or is it all good as long as they are earnest enough in their hope?
That is really never made clear by the author. Indeed his magical Hopium seems to be whatever is necessary to make his point. A person engaging in approved behavior? They gots hope. Bad behavior? Not really hope.
This is what happens when you go looking to Star Wars for deep meaning. For all that made Star Wars great, it was not deep themes. It is a thoroughly shallow series that constantly contradicts itself and never considers the ramifications of the concepts it briefly introduces.
Nothing illustrates this further than the Author’s attempt to make Leia into something other than a mcguffin to move the plot along. The author admires her steadfastness in persevering the destruction of her home planet. But I see that as bad writing. We have no dialogue or anything to indicate her turmoil or “hopiness”. We have her going “noooo!” And then she never mentions it again. She is there to give Tarkin someone to gloat to. To give Han some humble pie. To give Luke some awkward incest moments. To give everyone medals at the end. If you see hopefully resolve in her handful of lines, it is because you are projecting.
And this is what I foresee the author’s book being. Just a bunch of “Chicken Soup for the Soul” moral tales projected onto Star Wars in an attempt to find depth where none exists.
This is as dumb as those wanting to make Jedi a real religion.
It's a kids movie inspired by the old serials of the 30s to 50s
All of those misogynist, racist Virginia voters who voted for Winsome Sears to be Lt Gov must have thought they were voting for a man with long hair and a great tan. 🙂
All I could think of when reading the first half of the article was, "Awwwww! Aren't Millenials so cute!"
Unfortunately, it only went down hill from there.
Hope Must Conquer Fear in Politics
Princess Leia shows us why hope is crucial for a liberty-oriented way of life
In my upcoming book, How the Force Can Fix the World, I explain why this matters for preserving not only our society and way of life, but our personal happiness as well.
In the Christian tradition, hope sits alongside faith and charity as one of its core virtues and guiding lights. The notion that God would send his son to mankind in order to deliver them from sin and by extension, damnation, is a significant dose of hope for a people in need of redemption. Absent that guiding light and the possibility of salvation, you'd have masses of people mired in endless cycles of guilt and despair.
Neither Princess Leia nor "The Force" nor God nor Jesus Christ either exist or ever existed except in people's imaginatìons, M'Lady! *Tips Fedora multiple times*
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I agree hope is certainly better for tricking voters into supporting you. Machiavelli was talking about geopolitics, not representative democracy.
Otherwise, no. Hope is at best a self-fulfilling prophecy. It's a mental placebo. What will be, will be.
What individuals do within the laws of the Natural Universe can be also. No Spernatura God or "Force" required.
Supernatural, that is. Smartphne keyboards are within the Natural Universe and can be a barrier.
Jesus loves you, evangelical atheist who felt the need to shoehorn that in.
Then it is unreciprocated.
In case you hadn't noticed from the entire free-plug article, it is Steven Kent that is trying to shoehorn Christianity and Star Wars fiction into Libertarianism.
Leia also showed that women in space don't wear bras. Not that I'm complaining.
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