Yes, stereotype, self-confidence, and exposure are the only possible explanations to STEM having the wrong kind of nerdiness. I can't think of any other possibilities.
The documentary does look like fun.
Assistant Village Idiot
30 Years On, I think that “Postliberal” sums it up best
Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Inefficiency
I recall a friend who retired 20 years ago, laughing at himself about how easy it was to waste time. "I get up to lunchtime," he related "and I've been busy all morning. But when I come to list what I've actually gotten done, I find that I only went downtown and put gas in the car. Took up my whole morning."
I suspected even then he might be right. I have been erratic about efficiency all my life, able to work magic in ridiculously short periods, then just kind of wander around until it's too dark to mow the lawn. I have actually gotten much better at organising myself rather than relying on deadlines that others have put on me in these last 20 months of semi-retirement.
Yet it is still nothing like what it was. I got home early, and was to cook dinner. A granddaughter was slated to come over at 5:45. There were two calls to make, a little email correspondence, some eyedrops to put in. I sailed through it briskly, proud of steps I eliminated by combining small tasks. It then occurred to me that I used to do all this, plus supervise two children changing and starting homework, get some house task such as the lawn or laundry done, read an open book in spurts and duck out for a cigarette every half-hour.
I suspected even then he might be right. I have been erratic about efficiency all my life, able to work magic in ridiculously short periods, then just kind of wander around until it's too dark to mow the lawn. I have actually gotten much better at organising myself rather than relying on deadlines that others have put on me in these last 20 months of semi-retirement.
Yet it is still nothing like what it was. I got home early, and was to cook dinner. A granddaughter was slated to come over at 5:45. There were two calls to make, a little email correspondence, some eyedrops to put in. I sailed through it briskly, proud of steps I eliminated by combining small tasks. It then occurred to me that I used to do all this, plus supervise two children changing and starting homework, get some house task such as the lawn or laundry done, read an open book in spurts and duck out for a cigarette every half-hour.
The Truman Show World
Or maybe "The Matrix" would be more accurate. I'm not that conversant.
Part of me feels some obligation to weigh in on the accusations against Brett Kavanaugh. Because of both profession and interest, I do know something about the reliability of memory, and of trauma memories in specific. I do know something about trauma and the range of behaviors people show afterward. I know less, though still more than average, about people lying and being evasive. Being the Assistant Village Idiot, I am also at least better than average at noticing simple things (though still not good enough); in particular, things that do not fit together. Why did various actors do X and not Y? Readers might expect me to weigh in on such matters, in hopes of sorting things out for themselves. Or at least that’s what we tell ourselves. In reality, most of you have already formed an opinion of what is most likely true, what is inconclusive, and what is false. Inconclusive often does not last long in the human mind. We have to make an effort to stand back and hold pieces aloft and separate, or we just automatically move to one story or another. We must fit everything into a story. We can decide to say that something is simply unknown and unlikely to ever be known, and thus put irresolution to bed, but this takes more effort.
I refrain now because my knowledge is general, and we have moved beyond that. Had I been paying attention the first 24 hours I might have provided value-added by posting on the general questions, which would help others move toward More Likely/Less Likely. Even at that, I would not have been able to provide anyone with answers. General knowledge on such topics involves on-the-one-hand, on-the-other-hand discussions. Women who have been in similar circumstances usually do X; but not all women do. Some women do Y or Z. Memories are usually reliable in this circumstance, but unreliable in that circumstance. We are beyond that because this is now a specific accuser, who we can discover information about. What “women usually do” is much less of an issue. It is a mere indicator, not real evidence for this day and time.
Of the many things that bother me, the failure to recognize this distinction may be at the top. A letter from 65 women who knew Brett Kavanaugh when he was young, asserting that he was an unfailing gentleman, is minor evidence that his character is inconsistent with this action. A similar letter from the opposite POV, asserting that Brett was a known problem when he had a few drinks in him would likewise be minor evidence that such things were possible. Neither would be proof, but they have some value. The letter signed by 200 women who went to this woman’s school, spanning years both before and after the alleged incident in question and noting that it feels like their experience, is not in the same category. It is worse than useless, because it stirs up people into thinking that this is germane. The question before the Senate, and thus before the country, is not a referendum on whether men in general are likely to do these things or women in general are likely to misrepresent them. The same would be true of a counter-letter signed by 200 males from Kavanaugh’s school asserting that Holton girls have been making false accusations for years and they’re sick of it. In both cases it’s irrelevant, even if true. Even if all 200 women had bad experiences, even if all 200 men had been falsely accused, it tells us nothing about this case.
Why, then, are we so quick to make real individual events into abstracts, into referenda whether our particular prejudices are the true ones and those other people’s prejudices untrue? My suggestion is that everyone who does this should be ineligible from participating in further discussion. This is not occasional. It seems to occur even in everyday conversation. If you talk about statistical associations between single parenthood and some pathology, single parents immediately rise to defend their child, who is not actually being discussed. It's an every-issue thing. But I know some really nice gay people. My cousin married a black man, and he has a good job. I knew this kid who went to Christian school who was the biggest druggie in town.
There is something so automatic about this that I have to believe it is hard-wired and completely usual, despite its illogic. While I think it is related to intelligence, or at least the ability to think abstractly, I can give you plenty of examples of very bright people who do it anyway. The ability to consider people statistically does not guarantee the performance of it.
Athletes and entertainers complain that fans don't always get that they are real people with real feelings. We treat them like things. I have only a little sympathy with this idea. It's their job to be mythological. They wouldn't have jobs if that didn't happen. Yes, sometimes it is reasonable to break the fourth wall and look at their lives. But that is actually only a version of being a mythological figure. Because the rules of each sport are arbitrary and different people could have been the heroes with very minor changes, being a hero is their real job, not shooting a basketball. To be good at being a hero requires intense focus on the arbitrary skill, so they have to act as if it has intrinsic value.
The same is not true for political figures and people with real power. Expecting them to be enactors of our myths is extremely dangerous. (Though I suppose it has been going on so thoroughly for so many thousands of years that it can't be that dangerous. We not only survive it, it may actually be an optimal strategy not only for the rulers but for the ruled. Worth an evening's thought, I think.) They are not part of our Truman Show, put there as props/characters to illustrate the dramas in our own heads. Yet we seem unable to refrain from seeing them that way. They can send us to war, starve us, jail us, ruin or enhance our lives in a thousand ways, but we are determined to see them primarily as figures who prove or disprove our theories about how life is to be lived. Their symbolism matters more to us than their reality.
Because Kavanaugh does not seem to be rabidly pro-choice enough and might allow some slight modification to the status quo there are women, even conservative and libertarian women, who are shaken to their core that all gains for women and progress are imperiled. There are conservatives, especially religious conservatives who are likewise petrified that he is actually a squish and will sell them down the river at the first opportunity. Very primitive stuff is in play here. Even Ann Althouse is talking about this as "Justice Kennedy's seat" and relating that immediately to abortion. It's not Justice Kennedy's seat, it belongs to the American people. She is not usually the person who you have to say "get a grip" to.
We're crazy. We're all just insane. Unable to think abstractly enough to consider important issues objectively, we retreat to the mountain people hating the city and the city people hating the mountain.
Cross-posted at Chicago Boyz.
Part of me feels some obligation to weigh in on the accusations against Brett Kavanaugh. Because of both profession and interest, I do know something about the reliability of memory, and of trauma memories in specific. I do know something about trauma and the range of behaviors people show afterward. I know less, though still more than average, about people lying and being evasive. Being the Assistant Village Idiot, I am also at least better than average at noticing simple things (though still not good enough); in particular, things that do not fit together. Why did various actors do X and not Y? Readers might expect me to weigh in on such matters, in hopes of sorting things out for themselves. Or at least that’s what we tell ourselves. In reality, most of you have already formed an opinion of what is most likely true, what is inconclusive, and what is false. Inconclusive often does not last long in the human mind. We have to make an effort to stand back and hold pieces aloft and separate, or we just automatically move to one story or another. We must fit everything into a story. We can decide to say that something is simply unknown and unlikely to ever be known, and thus put irresolution to bed, but this takes more effort.
I refrain now because my knowledge is general, and we have moved beyond that. Had I been paying attention the first 24 hours I might have provided value-added by posting on the general questions, which would help others move toward More Likely/Less Likely. Even at that, I would not have been able to provide anyone with answers. General knowledge on such topics involves on-the-one-hand, on-the-other-hand discussions. Women who have been in similar circumstances usually do X; but not all women do. Some women do Y or Z. Memories are usually reliable in this circumstance, but unreliable in that circumstance. We are beyond that because this is now a specific accuser, who we can discover information about. What “women usually do” is much less of an issue. It is a mere indicator, not real evidence for this day and time.
Of the many things that bother me, the failure to recognize this distinction may be at the top. A letter from 65 women who knew Brett Kavanaugh when he was young, asserting that he was an unfailing gentleman, is minor evidence that his character is inconsistent with this action. A similar letter from the opposite POV, asserting that Brett was a known problem when he had a few drinks in him would likewise be minor evidence that such things were possible. Neither would be proof, but they have some value. The letter signed by 200 women who went to this woman’s school, spanning years both before and after the alleged incident in question and noting that it feels like their experience, is not in the same category. It is worse than useless, because it stirs up people into thinking that this is germane. The question before the Senate, and thus before the country, is not a referendum on whether men in general are likely to do these things or women in general are likely to misrepresent them. The same would be true of a counter-letter signed by 200 males from Kavanaugh’s school asserting that Holton girls have been making false accusations for years and they’re sick of it. In both cases it’s irrelevant, even if true. Even if all 200 women had bad experiences, even if all 200 men had been falsely accused, it tells us nothing about this case.
Why, then, are we so quick to make real individual events into abstracts, into referenda whether our particular prejudices are the true ones and those other people’s prejudices untrue? My suggestion is that everyone who does this should be ineligible from participating in further discussion. This is not occasional. It seems to occur even in everyday conversation. If you talk about statistical associations between single parenthood and some pathology, single parents immediately rise to defend their child, who is not actually being discussed. It's an every-issue thing. But I know some really nice gay people. My cousin married a black man, and he has a good job. I knew this kid who went to Christian school who was the biggest druggie in town.
There is something so automatic about this that I have to believe it is hard-wired and completely usual, despite its illogic. While I think it is related to intelligence, or at least the ability to think abstractly, I can give you plenty of examples of very bright people who do it anyway. The ability to consider people statistically does not guarantee the performance of it.
Athletes and entertainers complain that fans don't always get that they are real people with real feelings. We treat them like things. I have only a little sympathy with this idea. It's their job to be mythological. They wouldn't have jobs if that didn't happen. Yes, sometimes it is reasonable to break the fourth wall and look at their lives. But that is actually only a version of being a mythological figure. Because the rules of each sport are arbitrary and different people could have been the heroes with very minor changes, being a hero is their real job, not shooting a basketball. To be good at being a hero requires intense focus on the arbitrary skill, so they have to act as if it has intrinsic value.
The same is not true for political figures and people with real power. Expecting them to be enactors of our myths is extremely dangerous. (Though I suppose it has been going on so thoroughly for so many thousands of years that it can't be that dangerous. We not only survive it, it may actually be an optimal strategy not only for the rulers but for the ruled. Worth an evening's thought, I think.) They are not part of our Truman Show, put there as props/characters to illustrate the dramas in our own heads. Yet we seem unable to refrain from seeing them that way. They can send us to war, starve us, jail us, ruin or enhance our lives in a thousand ways, but we are determined to see them primarily as figures who prove or disprove our theories about how life is to be lived. Their symbolism matters more to us than their reality.
Because Kavanaugh does not seem to be rabidly pro-choice enough and might allow some slight modification to the status quo there are women, even conservative and libertarian women, who are shaken to their core that all gains for women and progress are imperiled. There are conservatives, especially religious conservatives who are likewise petrified that he is actually a squish and will sell them down the river at the first opportunity. Very primitive stuff is in play here. Even Ann Althouse is talking about this as "Justice Kennedy's seat" and relating that immediately to abortion. It's not Justice Kennedy's seat, it belongs to the American people. She is not usually the person who you have to say "get a grip" to.
We're crazy. We're all just insane. Unable to think abstractly enough to consider important issues objectively, we retreat to the mountain people hating the city and the city people hating the mountain.
Cross-posted at Chicago Boyz.
Monday, September 17, 2018
The Bible Project
This will be adult studies for the fall, into the winter. We watched the following video, though one could start in other places. They've got lots. The Bible Project is a non-profit animation studio.
Sunday, September 16, 2018
New World Record
Taking well over a minute off the world record is an amazing leap. The runners who dominate this and all distance events, are not all Kenyans, but are all from the Great East African Rift. While they train hard, very hard to reach this level, it is mostly training to beat other Kenyans, Ethiopians, and the occasional Tanzanian, Eritrean, or Sudanese. The Japanese do well, and Americans are making a resurgence under Salazar, a former marathoner who is now a coach. But Rift Valley runners still outpace everyone.
Yes, of course it's genetic, related especially to slow-twitch muscle fibers and narrow ankles on long calves. Other advantages, such as lung capacity or oxygen processing can also be genetic, so it doesn't mean that one group will always dominate. But the Kenyans dominate, as they do in other distance events, especially the 3000 meter Steeplechase. The current world-record holder, running for Qatar, was born in Kenya.
Yes, of course it's genetic, related especially to slow-twitch muscle fibers and narrow ankles on long calves. Other advantages, such as lung capacity or oxygen processing can also be genetic, so it doesn't mean that one group will always dominate. But the Kenyans dominate, as they do in other distance events, especially the 3000 meter Steeplechase. The current world-record holder, running for Qatar, was born in Kenya.
Friday, September 14, 2018
Immigration
I have written on this before, but I come back, just for clarity. Christians can talk a lot of nonsense when they get rolling sometimes.
Two stories:
There was a continuing drama in one of my college dorms, of
a boy who had flunked out/dropped out after the first semester but didn’t want
to go home. He wanted to continue to
hang out at college. One of his friends took him in, letting him sleep in his
dorm room and keep some of his stuff there. The story had complications of
girlfriends, money, and medical conditions, but the major complication was that
the real roommate was less enthused about the arrangement, and became
progressively less enthused as the semester wore on. I admit I only heard one
side of it, but that’s the summary. The friend had wanted to be generous, and
gave to someone in need. However, the room was not his room but the college’s,
though he was renting it in some sense. The college had rules forbidding
this sort of arrangement. Not that anyone enforced those rules much, but they
were there. More directly, the dorm room
was not “rented” to one person, but to two. The friend, taking in the ex-student,
was giving away something that was not entirely his. The original roommate had an equal stake.
I started working at the state psychiatric hospital not long
after my intense, born-again, hangin’ with the Jesus Freaks experience. (Which was pivotal and good for me, by the
way, don’t get me wrong. I write it humorously but not dismissively. They taught me much.) I was viewing Scripture in a new light, in terms of
simple and literal obedience. The Bible
says to give to those who ask, so give to those who ask. Not all state hospital
patients were constant beggars, but a fair number were, especially for cigarettes
or money for coffee. It’s easy to be critical, but they didn’t have many ways
of getting even a little money. It was also not uncommon then for smokers to
bum off each other in a pinch – you just kept an eye out for guys who were
always receivers and never givers in those exchanges.
At the hospital – none o’ that. No cigarettes, no money
given. The reasoning was sound. Not only were some of them on behavior plans
whereby they could earn cigarettes or money, so keeping them on that strictly
was part of treatment, but there was a more general type of treatment. We didn’t want to train people to
be beggars if they were going to be living in the community. They, more than
other people, needed to not offend their neighbors, passers-by, possible
landlords or employers. I don’t know that we fixed things much. We didn’t make things worse, at least. So I learned the
command to give might not be absolute.
Let me head in the other direction. There is a simple, straightforward way of
interpreting Scripture that I think is not only valid, but may be best for our
own spiritual improvement and being Christ in the world. Those who ask,
get. Those who have need, receive. If God has put someone at your door, or in
your neighborhood, or somehow in your orbit, then maybe that’s your job, no
questions asked. If the US government
disagrees, well, obedient Christians have a long history of doing things
governments don’t like. That approach is much closer to that of the early church. It just is, there’s not much way around that.
However, the early church had little earthly power. They weren’t called to make administrative
decisions affecting many people. They
may have had difficult decisions,
within the churches or in their immediate sphere, but they didn’t rule over
much in the secular world. Therefore, we don’t have much example of what they
would have done, and the words of Jesus, Peter, and Paul do not address such
questions directly. Whatever conclusion
we come to about charity, it is a conclusion,
based on our understanding, the teaching of others, and hopefully, the Holy
Spirit. If we take examples from the OT about how strangers should be
entertained – and I think we should – then we are also stuck with the examples
where YHWH encouraged his people to be, uh, really
unkind to other tribes. We don’t actually have much scriptural example of
what Israel was supposed to do when lots of other people wanted to migrate in.
There were traders, occasional strangers, and invaders. That’s pretty much what we have to go on.
When one is a ruler or administrator, what you have charge
of is not yours by ownership. It belongs
to others, perhaps collective others.
The ruler of the city may be legitimately empowered to decide when to
fight, when to bribe, and when to surrender. Yet the city is not his – though
until very recently in human history the effect was usually the same. He
administers, he does not own. Like a steward, he holds in trust.
You can take the position that "I am the administrator, in some sense assigned by God, and I am going to be generous with the goods of my people. We will give to all who ask, we will be generous to the poor to the point of impoverishing ourselves." I can picture a Christian administrator taking that approach, even when ruling a secular state. I can't prove to you that this is not the right thing. I may be clouded by the secularism of my country and my era. Just to mention, however, that such an approach could also be applied to social issues with equal fairness. That may dampen the enthusiasm of those who were ready to jump on that bandwagon.
The lines seem messy when government is representative. The
government holds administrative power in trust for the people. No, wait, the government holds administrative
power in trust for God, who put it there.
Except, what if only some of the people believe in God? Well, it’s still
God’s - Scripture says. Or if the
government isn’t godly, do we give to who they say, or not? What about trying
to influence the government? We can do
that, right? Who owns this city?
Those discussions are book-length and more, and I am not any
better equipped than any other citizen to decide what is best. I just want it
to be clear that there is a difference between giving away what is clearly
yours, such as your money, your house, your food, and giving away things that
belong to other people, or to the people as a whole. (Like citizenship. Or Medicaid. Or voting.) Immigration
has an effect on the employment opportunities of people here, especially young
people, and more especially black, Native, and Hispanic young people. (That’s just one
thing immigration affects, BTW.) A representative government seeks to balance
the need to protect those jobs with whatever cultural or long-term needs we
have - to express our generosity, stimulate growth, and contribute to world
stability. Any government might do that well or do that poorly. If an individual Christian, or a church, or a
denomination decides that the government is not being generous enough, they
have freedom to give away their own stuff, even if it pisses off the government
(“You are not licensed”) or their
neighbors (“You’re encouraging more people to come”). What they aren’t empowered to do is give away
other people’s stuff.
If you want to run a refuge, accepting all at your building
downtown regardless of ability to pay or legal status, you can do that, not
just in an emergency but all the year round. Feed ‘em. Hire nurses to be there 24-7. If the people
you serve are here legally, then all of us, through the government, have signed
off on services they are eligible for. But
when you refer illegals to government services, you are giving away other
people’s stuff, that you don’t have any authority over. If those people take
low paying jobs nearby then you have given away some black teenager’s job. Once
you start giving away other people’s stuff, even at several removes, then you
have a responsibility to enter the conversation about balancing. If you give
away a room in your house, your husband and children are affected. You may be empowered to administer what is
given away, but they have given up something, and you are supposed to balance that.
You might feel great about the little girl smiling about the new life she has
in America, or at least, feel better because no one is showing you pictures of
sad little girls anymore. But you don’t see the sad girl who can’t get a job,
or if you do, you blame someone besides yourself for that. One side is highly
visible, and made highly visible. The
other side is almost invisible, but it is just as real. If you want to go small
picture charity, that’s respectable. It may even be the proper simplicity for a
Christian no longer involved in the powers of the world and just being Christ
in the Street. But when your small
picture is actually photographs and reports from somewhere else, then you have
entered the big picture and have to think in terms of balancing claims. You
can’t have that both ways.
Here’s the rant:
There are churches, or movements within churches, who
advocate that America should take in more refugees, or illegals. It is fair to
ask how many are they currently supporting, whether they can take on
any more, and to multiply that over the other churches they are associated with
that they think will join them. Oh. You aren’t actually supporting any refugees
yourself? You aren’t paying for
interpreter services, and rent, and food, and medical care, or beating the
bushes to find someone who will donate those?
You aren’t bringing them to job interviews and making sure they have a
ride to work? The special needs kids with complicated problems – that’s just on
the school district, right? Oh. I see. Well that's quite different then. Who is you are addressing with your political proposal? Asking for a friend.
So you yourself aren’t actually doing much, just sending a
visitor or an advocate once in a while. But you’re sure that somebody somewhere
will be able to figure all this out if we just take more. You’ve decided you need to be America’s
conscience, because America is rich, especially those other people, and you
have mind-read that their motives for not signing on are evil. Your fantasy that we are all doing these
wonderful things together is mostly just saying there’s plenty of other
people’s money. Said The Pieman to Simple Simon: "First show me your money."
I’ve done refugee resettlement. It’s really hard. Somebody has to go over
more than once a day to teach English, take them shopping, register for school,
call employers, get them to doctors, help them find countrymen, so you usually
need a dozen people for about six months (plus a collection of individuals for single favors), and then gradually back off. For one family. I’m not doing much of anything now except
sending money to a refugee church nearby. Maybe I should – maybe Jesus put them
in my lap and I’m denying it. But at least I’m not going to the signup sheet
and writing in your name. So I’d appreciate it that you not write in my name
because you think Jesus told you to.
Thursday, September 13, 2018
Online IQ Tests
Sometimes I wish my sidebar would say "If you fall for taking this test your IQ is less than 100?" Admittedly, we all fall for things sometimes. It's an odd thing. Did you know that gullibility isn't in the OED?
Farewell To Masks
We used to hear a lot about masks, and how bad they were,
back in the 1970’s. I wrote a bad folk-rock song about it, actually. Must have
been more than one, but I am not going to traumatize myself by trying to
remember. Shudder. There were plays
about it. Art exhibits. Posters. Serious discussions at church youth
group, at least if you were Congregationalist. We all wear masks. It’s all a mask, covering up her real desire to
(whatever). He knows how to put on the mask. We shouldn’t hide behind our
masks, we should try to be more authentic people.
I saw a little poster about those masks on the patient art
board here at the hospital. I realized that I hadn’t seen this sentiment for a
long time. I don’t know when it went out of fashion. Some poor patient here has got
time-warp. There’s no cure for
that. Once you’ve got time warp, you
have it forever.
I felt a surge of gratitude that we are now spared this
nonsense. We learned that masks are
often just expressions of politeness, or adulthood, or assigned role. Being authentic is too often a synonym for
rudeness or narcissism. It is related to another phenomenon which is also
mercifully less fashionable now, the idea that we have to “get everything out”
in order to free ourselves up and achieve psychic wholeness. My son needs therapy. He has all this anger inside that he needs to
get out. No, no, he gets that anger
out just fine. It’s keeping it in we
need to work on here.
Trump may have masks, but I’m thinking WYSIWYG. Aren’t his opponents (and even some of his
friends) suggesting they’d be happier if he had more masks and didn’t say what
he’s thinking quite so much?
Okay, now I’m getting irritated
thinking about other politicians and masks.
I wish I’d never brought this up.
You’re welcome, for ruining
your day too.
Branchings, and Alt-History
I’d like to continue that alt-history from the previous post, not for any important lesson, just for amusement. If Trent Lott doesn’t squelch the impeachment and Bill Clinton is removed or is convinced to resign, what next? The claim at the time that most Americans did not want Clinton removed was technically true, but misleading. About 60% thought that, but almost a third of those were only “somewhat opposed,” and another 10% were “moderately opposed.” The numbers varied depending on the wording of the polling. That was also true in the other direction that some who favored removing him were pretty mild about it. In an alt-history replay, there would be a motivated core of Democrats who would have been unhinged about it, with wild accusations of fascism. Oh wait. That happened anyway, so that doesn’t much matter. But some of the moderates or not-paying-attentions or emotion-based voters would have felt a bit sorry for Gore, and want to give him a chance, or whatever. I suspect he would have won in 2000, because it wouldn't take much of a swing. 9-11 happens on his watch, as does the recession. As his term is seen as something as a continuation of the Clinton terms, more blame goes toward the Democrats, and especially the Clintons because of that. OTOH, there was popular sentiment for the US to do something strong in response to 9-11, and Gore would have likely done something. Even Tom Friedman was saying we had to hit somebody. Whether it was wise or foolish, Americans rally around their president at such times, and Gore might have gained more support than he lost. If he didn’t “hit someone,” he might be resented for that. Hard to say; and without knowing exactly what he would have done, harder to project forward.
But the Republicans would be more likely to nominate McCain in 2004 if anything military was either happening or people thought should be happening (Sarah Palin was then ex-mayor of Wasilla, chairing the commission that watched over the oil and gas fields; not a VP possibility), and the Clintons might be dead in the water for good. Or maybe not. If Gore botched things, or was even perceived to have done so, the Clinton true believers could have put out the platform that these terrible responses would never have happened under Clinton, and we’d better elect Hillary right away. I think McCain wins either way.
The reader is welcome to propose alternate scenarios. No penalty. Except I will find you completely unconvincing, of course.
But the Republicans would be more likely to nominate McCain in 2004 if anything military was either happening or people thought should be happening (Sarah Palin was then ex-mayor of Wasilla, chairing the commission that watched over the oil and gas fields; not a VP possibility), and the Clintons might be dead in the water for good. Or maybe not. If Gore botched things, or was even perceived to have done so, the Clinton true believers could have put out the platform that these terrible responses would never have happened under Clinton, and we’d better elect Hillary right away. I think McCain wins either way.
The reader is welcome to propose alternate scenarios. No penalty. Except I will find you completely unconvincing, of course.
1998-2018
When the Democrats of the US Senate would not even walk across the street in 1998 to look at the evidence that Bill Clinton was a rapist, I vowed to myself “I will not vote for any Democrat for 20 years, unless they were too young or politically uninvolved at this moment. This level of dishonesty is a bridge too far.” I later learned that it was Trent Lott* who put the fix in, but that still didn’t absolve them in my eyes. I haven’t had many temptations in the last two decades. When one Republican governor was pretty seedy I just left that line blank. (I usually leave at least one line blank. I don’t have high standards – these are politicians we are talking about, let’s get real – but some people do fall beneath even my minimal requirements.) I actually had grudging approval of John Lynch by the end. It was amusing when people wondered in 2016 whether I disapproved enough of Trump to vote for Hillary. That would be a maximum level of irony that human brains cannot safely attempt.
The 20 years will be up after this election. I don’t think it changed things much on a practical level, but sometimes it’s nice to make promises to yourself and follow through on them just to remember what you were thinking then. It ties pieces of one’s life together.
*No theory I have heard seems convincing to me. Unwillingness to call out corruption to protect himself or others comes closest. The alt-history would then be that Gore likely wins in 2000, so the 2000-2002 recession falls in his lap, as does 9-11. Too many possible branchings after that, but it’s interesting.
The 20 years will be up after this election. I don’t think it changed things much on a practical level, but sometimes it’s nice to make promises to yourself and follow through on them just to remember what you were thinking then. It ties pieces of one’s life together.
*No theory I have heard seems convincing to me. Unwillingness to call out corruption to protect himself or others comes closest. The alt-history would then be that Gore likely wins in 2000, so the 2000-2002 recession falls in his lap, as does 9-11. Too many possible branchings after that, but it’s interesting.
First-in-the-Nation Primary
Fifteen minutes after the November elections, the campaigning will start with a vengeance here. It came around so fast I didn't notice. There has already been stealth campaigning and lining up allies, probably starting fifteen minutes after the last election. Candidates pretend to be just wandering around looking for moose and eating in diners. They speak at Rotary clubs and business organisations about favorite causes. Oh wait. You guys are having the primary up here sometime, right? (Facepalm) I had completely forgotten that.
November 6th at midnight the mask comes off. I don't think Republicans are going to be running against Trump, even if they can't stand him. So it will be wall-to-wall Democrats, whose main theme will be how much they hate Trump even more than the others.
I want to put up signs at the borders and at the airport
ATTENTION DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY CANDIDATES
WE KNOW YOU HATE TRUMP
WE GET THAT
TELL US SOMETHING ELSE
ANYTHING ELSE
November 6th at midnight the mask comes off. I don't think Republicans are going to be running against Trump, even if they can't stand him. So it will be wall-to-wall Democrats, whose main theme will be how much they hate Trump even more than the others.
I want to put up signs at the borders and at the airport
ATTENTION DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY CANDIDATES
WE KNOW YOU HATE TRUMP
WE GET THAT
TELL US SOMETHING ELSE
ANYTHING ELSE
David Warren on Chastity
I often like Warren, though he can be a bit of a snob. The positive side of that is having standards and caring about culture. Our faults are usually just our strengths taken too far. He is forceful but not rude here. He relates the vow of chastity to that of poverty, and shows their relation. Quite brief. Packed solid.
Tuesday, September 11, 2018
Benedict Option Update.
I was surprised. The class I will be co-leading will not be until winter. I am still pushing my way through The Benedict Option, weeks later. It just doesn't grip me. I have to force myself to stay with it for more than a few paragraphs at a time, and avoid going back to it. Apparently the good gujys in the Catholic hierarchy disagree with me.
Monday, September 10, 2018
25%
BSKing over at Graph Paper Diaries referenced an interesting study in her What I'm Reading September 2018 post, concerning tipping points in social conventions. I could link to the study directly, but I want you to see her discussion, plus her answer to my question in the comments. You can get distracted and read her other stuff there if you want. I'll wait.
Her caveats are important. It was an artificial situation, and the 25% may not hold on something people cared about more deeply. The intensity of either the minority or the majority about something like gay marriage, going to war, or toppling statues might move the number up or down considerably. Also, the tested subjects were WEIRD - Western Educated Industrialized Rich and Democratic - as social-science test subjects usually are. (They are usually college students, and so young, non-military, and single with no children as well.)
Yet let us pretend, just for the moment that something like this is true. A determined minority of only 25% can flip the group opinion. Consider something like the TEA Party. It seems to have approached that number and had influence but didn't quite flip the GOP everywhere. It did flip it in some places (and Trump may have been more beholden to that than we have credited). The Tea Party rose up to the tipping point and then receded slightly. They might have been doomed to just fade out, election by election. Until...Donald Trump's supporters may have been very much this 25% phenomenon. A lot of people who eventually voted for The Donald didn't like him much at first. They were okay with a Jeb or a Rubio, though not excited. They may have relished the thought of watching Carly Fiorina debate Hillary Clinton, or wanted to go to a more-conservative, don't-care-if-he's-annoying Ted Cruz. But almost no one was sold out for any of those. Trump's supporters, though few, were sold out. It simmered for a while, with Trump getting something in the neighborhood of that 25% in various primaries, enough to win, though a majority still opposed him. Eventually the 25% moved the other 75%. Bernie almost did the same thing with the Democrats. He would have, actually, if they weren't so corrupt and had their thumb on the scale for Clinton. The sold-out-for-Bernie crew was over 25% of the Dems, I think.
I'll wait again while you chew over that and think whether it's right so far. Does the committed 25% move the majority? Does it work even at high levels when everyone cares more? I submit that something like this happened with gay marriage and other social changes. The few cared deeply on either side, but neither hit 25%. Many Americans were opposed, but not so deeply that they put it top of their list. Eventually the highly committed change side hit 25%., and the flip happened fast.
I think the most effective of activists have a sense of when their committed minority might hit 25%, and know when to push their chips to the center of the table. Martin Luther King Jr comes to mind. He was persuasive, but others were as well. There were instances of injustice ripe for protest, but they were there five years before, ten years before. He was the one who knew it was time. Similar things might be said of Lenin, of Patrick Henry or Sam Adams, of Hitler. Maybe they were just lucky, yet I think they had a sense of sudden urgency, recognising the times. From my list one can see that this can be used for good or ill.
An important side note: those true believers are usually not corrupt. They might become so later, but they burn with a purer fire. You don't have to pay them, they show up for free. Some Nazis looted art treasures and even the gold fillings of the teeth of Jews. Others would scrupulously account for every pfennig, not to take anything not authorised.
So...what is happening with the Democrats right now? The minority - I think a near-insane group - are rising up as if they think they may be the 25%. They don't consciously think of it that way, certainly. They have been there simmering for as long as I can remember. The 1960's left included the Weather Underground and the Chicago Seven, but they didn't reach 25% of any party. The other liberals, who were not like that but welcomed the more radical brethren and kept their criticism mild, decided to go mainstream instead, and slowly take over one political party and some institutions. The 1960's split into two groups, the lesser one just simmering, hoping for a break.
The social liberalism of the high-tech crowd may have caught the Chuck Schumers and Bill Clintons by surprise. They were still hunkered down for the long battle. But Obama was a transitional figure. While he was mostly from the mainstream left, the descendant of JFK, Mayor Daley, Al Gore, there were also roots reaching more deeply into radicalism, to Bill Ayers and Jeremiah Wright. He disavowed them with a nod and a wink. Now the whirlwind is upon us, with the left eating its own. After all the table-pounding and posturing, they always came back into the fold for the votes, and listened to the politicos who said "We won't die on this hill, because we can take the next one and live." I think that is disappearing.
Republicans exult, hoping that this spells the final dissolution of the unstable alliances that have been the Democratic Party since 1958 - if not in 2018, then soon, very soon. I am not so encouraged. I think insane people taking over a major party is frightening. To counter that this has already happened with Trump and the Republicans is to completely miss the point of what Trump is. Do not listen to what he says. Look at what he does. He speaks like a radical, but acts within the mainstream. He is something like a mirror of Bill Clinton, who won elections by (brilliantly) trashing conservatives but whose actions were center-left. The radical minority arising among the Democrats has been 10% of them for five decades. If they reach 25% of the party it will not be good for America, whatever happens in elections.
Cross-posted at Chicago Boyz
Her caveats are important. It was an artificial situation, and the 25% may not hold on something people cared about more deeply. The intensity of either the minority or the majority about something like gay marriage, going to war, or toppling statues might move the number up or down considerably. Also, the tested subjects were WEIRD - Western Educated Industrialized Rich and Democratic - as social-science test subjects usually are. (They are usually college students, and so young, non-military, and single with no children as well.)
Yet let us pretend, just for the moment that something like this is true. A determined minority of only 25% can flip the group opinion. Consider something like the TEA Party. It seems to have approached that number and had influence but didn't quite flip the GOP everywhere. It did flip it in some places (and Trump may have been more beholden to that than we have credited). The Tea Party rose up to the tipping point and then receded slightly. They might have been doomed to just fade out, election by election. Until...Donald Trump's supporters may have been very much this 25% phenomenon. A lot of people who eventually voted for The Donald didn't like him much at first. They were okay with a Jeb or a Rubio, though not excited. They may have relished the thought of watching Carly Fiorina debate Hillary Clinton, or wanted to go to a more-conservative, don't-care-if-he's-annoying Ted Cruz. But almost no one was sold out for any of those. Trump's supporters, though few, were sold out. It simmered for a while, with Trump getting something in the neighborhood of that 25% in various primaries, enough to win, though a majority still opposed him. Eventually the 25% moved the other 75%. Bernie almost did the same thing with the Democrats. He would have, actually, if they weren't so corrupt and had their thumb on the scale for Clinton. The sold-out-for-Bernie crew was over 25% of the Dems, I think.
I'll wait again while you chew over that and think whether it's right so far. Does the committed 25% move the majority? Does it work even at high levels when everyone cares more? I submit that something like this happened with gay marriage and other social changes. The few cared deeply on either side, but neither hit 25%. Many Americans were opposed, but not so deeply that they put it top of their list. Eventually the highly committed change side hit 25%., and the flip happened fast.
I think the most effective of activists have a sense of when their committed minority might hit 25%, and know when to push their chips to the center of the table. Martin Luther King Jr comes to mind. He was persuasive, but others were as well. There were instances of injustice ripe for protest, but they were there five years before, ten years before. He was the one who knew it was time. Similar things might be said of Lenin, of Patrick Henry or Sam Adams, of Hitler. Maybe they were just lucky, yet I think they had a sense of sudden urgency, recognising the times. From my list one can see that this can be used for good or ill.
An important side note: those true believers are usually not corrupt. They might become so later, but they burn with a purer fire. You don't have to pay them, they show up for free. Some Nazis looted art treasures and even the gold fillings of the teeth of Jews. Others would scrupulously account for every pfennig, not to take anything not authorised.
So...what is happening with the Democrats right now? The minority - I think a near-insane group - are rising up as if they think they may be the 25%. They don't consciously think of it that way, certainly. They have been there simmering for as long as I can remember. The 1960's left included the Weather Underground and the Chicago Seven, but they didn't reach 25% of any party. The other liberals, who were not like that but welcomed the more radical brethren and kept their criticism mild, decided to go mainstream instead, and slowly take over one political party and some institutions. The 1960's split into two groups, the lesser one just simmering, hoping for a break.
The social liberalism of the high-tech crowd may have caught the Chuck Schumers and Bill Clintons by surprise. They were still hunkered down for the long battle. But Obama was a transitional figure. While he was mostly from the mainstream left, the descendant of JFK, Mayor Daley, Al Gore, there were also roots reaching more deeply into radicalism, to Bill Ayers and Jeremiah Wright. He disavowed them with a nod and a wink. Now the whirlwind is upon us, with the left eating its own. After all the table-pounding and posturing, they always came back into the fold for the votes, and listened to the politicos who said "We won't die on this hill, because we can take the next one and live." I think that is disappearing.
Republicans exult, hoping that this spells the final dissolution of the unstable alliances that have been the Democratic Party since 1958 - if not in 2018, then soon, very soon. I am not so encouraged. I think insane people taking over a major party is frightening. To counter that this has already happened with Trump and the Republicans is to completely miss the point of what Trump is. Do not listen to what he says. Look at what he does. He speaks like a radical, but acts within the mainstream. He is something like a mirror of Bill Clinton, who won elections by (brilliantly) trashing conservatives but whose actions were center-left. The radical minority arising among the Democrats has been 10% of them for five decades. If they reach 25% of the party it will not be good for America, whatever happens in elections.
Cross-posted at Chicago Boyz
Everything Old Is New Again - Wyman Edition
My son tweeted this with the quote: "Kohl’s models are going with “handsome version of David Wyman’s outfits from 1983-2018”
This is essentially true. Okay, it's Kohl's. And it is clearly the older gent, not the current fashion look, but still...
If you wait long enough, you come back into fashion.
Then there is the song with that name. There are half-a-dozen YouTubes of this, but I chose the one most appropriately ridiculous, with Anne Murray (who sings it best) saying "...like the way we Nova Scotians throw a party, right?" My grandfather moved down from Nova Scotia, and yeah, this would be about the wildest party he could have imagined, yeah: The wives crammed together at repurposed school-lunch tables, dressed in churchwomen's banquet best, the men stuffed amazingly into penguin suits with standard Kiwanis choreography. Anne Murray was either hurting for gigs, or a very nice person doing a favor for a friend. Still, the voice is there. Homage to Grandpa Wyman's people. Let it be known that his son dressed better than he did, and I dressed better than that. We have generation over generation improvement here.
I just watched this three times running, caught between irony and nostalgia. There is a double "everything old" quality about this, because this is the sort of annual banquet entertainment I remember from my youth.
This is essentially true. Okay, it's Kohl's. And it is clearly the older gent, not the current fashion look, but still...
If you wait long enough, you come back into fashion.
Then there is the song with that name. There are half-a-dozen YouTubes of this, but I chose the one most appropriately ridiculous, with Anne Murray (who sings it best) saying "...like the way we Nova Scotians throw a party, right?" My grandfather moved down from Nova Scotia, and yeah, this would be about the wildest party he could have imagined, yeah: The wives crammed together at repurposed school-lunch tables, dressed in churchwomen's banquet best, the men stuffed amazingly into penguin suits with standard Kiwanis choreography. Anne Murray was either hurting for gigs, or a very nice person doing a favor for a friend. Still, the voice is there. Homage to Grandpa Wyman's people. Let it be known that his son dressed better than he did, and I dressed better than that. We have generation over generation improvement here.
I just watched this three times running, caught between irony and nostalgia. There is a double "everything old" quality about this, because this is the sort of annual banquet entertainment I remember from my youth.
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