Will Humanity’s Cognitive Limitations Lead to the End of Human Civilization?

  • Belief in unfounded health care claims about solar energy; how so many people believe unproven claims about raw milk and vaccines;
  • How the Trump administration is ending the EPA and paying to cancel wind farms;
  • Chris Barkley on Trump’s 7-step process to avoid answering difficult questions;
  • And another reflection on The Last of the Mohicans and its score.
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Has humanity reached a saturation point? Has society, and technology, become so complex that the average person cannot understand it and so resorts to simplistic, false, explanations for things?

  • Salon, Anna Clark, today: Unfounded health claims are powering a solar backlash
  • Subtitle: Solar restrictions popping up across the US “often rooted in misinformation or unfounded fears”
  • Comment: Fear of progress, i.e. change. “To some, in Michigan and beyond, this growth feels dangerous. They pressure public officials to stop, stall or otherwise complicate new solar projects with an array of arguments that now go beyond just land use to include public health.”

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Thus, simpleton Republicans deny technological advances and shut down investigations into science. More tearing down by this administration of what smarter people before them have built.

  • NY Times, today: How the Trump Administration Ended Independent Science at the E.P.A. [gift link]
  • Subtitled: The agency’s prestigious research office spent decades doing scientific work insulated from political pressure. Now it’s being dismantled.
  • Quote: “For more than a half-century, a prestigious scientific arm of the federal government did groundbreaking research aimed at saving American lives. It studied fertility, asthma, wildfires, drinking water, climate change and myriad other health threats.In just one year, it has been almost completely dismantled.”

  • NY Times, today: Trump Administration Will Pay More Energy Firms to Cancel Wind Farms
  • Subtitle: In exchange, the companies will invest in oil and gas projects, echoing an earlier deal with the French energy giant TotalEnergies.
  • Comment: This is moronic: the oil and gas is polluting the planet, and they will eventually run out. Solar and wind power are forever. But Republicans are short-term thinkers.

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I can’t resist posting this, even if the provenance is dicey: Jonathan Seay (who?) via Turning Point USA (really?) via Chris Barkley (a Facebook friend and science fiction fan), on Facebook today. Because it’s what we see all the time. Maybe not every single time, but this is his pattern. This displays *his* cognitive limitations.

Jonathan Seay: “Every single time Trump is asked a question — any question — he runs the exact same 7 steps. In the exact same order. Without exception.

STEP 1 — KILL THE QUESTION
(First thing every time — make the question itself the problem.)
“That’s a stupid question.” / “Fake news.”
STEP 2 — KILL WHO ASKED IT
(Destroy the source so the question has nowhere to stand.)
“Your ratings are terrible. Nobody watches your network.”
STEP 3 — INSERT HIMSELF
(Every topic. Every time. Without fail. It always lands here.)
“Nobody has ever done what I’ve done.”
STEP 4 — SCALE IT TO THE BIGGEST CLAIM POSSIBLE
(Not good. Not great. The greatest. Ever. In history. Every single time.)
“More than any administration — by far.” / “Nobody has ever had crowds like I’ve had — in history, for any country.”
STEP 5 — UNNAMED PEOPLE AGREE
(Faceless. Countless. Unverifiable. Always there.)
“Smart people are saying it. Great people. A lot of people.”
STEP 6 — VAGUE THREAT
(Something bad will happen. Never specified. Always implied.)
“All hell will break out.” / “They know it. Believe me.”
STEP 7 — LOOP BACK TO HIMSELF
(Different words. Same destination. Formula complete.)
“It’s been an amazing period of time. Page after page of accomplishments.”

The question was never answered.

The formula just ran.

Go back and watch any clip.

Any year. Any topic. Any reporter.

Count the steps.

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Music/movies: We rented from Amz the movie The Last of the Mohicans last night, in part because Y had never seen it, and in part for me to hear the score in context. ( I don’t think I’ve ever seen the movie again since its original release.) It’s a difficult movie to summarize; there’s a lot of running around (from the opening moments) and it’s something about the French Indian War, with various kinds of tribal alliances, filmed in North Carolina, and the movie’s plot centers on the romance plot. With many dramatic scenes, including some of people falling off cliffs. Still, it’s a thrilling score.

Note that the idea of a tribe dying down to its last member is a convenient historical myth, as explained by Annalee Newitz in one of her books, reviewed here.

Music. Listening to Philip Glass’s Kepler perhaps for only the second time. Will comment about it later.

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Decline, Human Nature, Movies | Comments Off on Will Humanity’s Cognitive Limitations Lead to the End of Human Civilization?

Is Reality a Hoax or a Conspiracy? No.

  • Many items about the apparent assassination attempt last night at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, and how many people on social media detected signs of a staged attack;
  • Why posting the Ten Commandments in classrooms doesn’t work, as conservatives think it should;
  • Jerry Coyne explores evidence about whether reality has a liberal bias, and my take on that;
  • Listening again to Philip Glass & Robert Wilson’s Monsters of Grace.
– – –

Within an hour or so of my finishing yesterday’s post, which ended about how many people, even Trump supporters, think the 2024 assassination attempt was staged, another apparent assassination attempt occurred at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, in of course Washington DC. And while mainstream news coverage is fairly uniform, Facebook (and elsewhere on the internet, apparently), has been full of speculations and even claims that it was staged.

First, links to some reasonably consistent coverage, remarkable because many of these news correspondents *were there*! All of these posted today or late last night.

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An Assortment of Current Events

Trying to catch up on numerous items from recent days, briefly.

MAGA and confederates • Firing the National Science Board • A Texas court defies the Supremes about posting the ten commandments • America’s moral code • The new Navy Secretary believes in witches, but he’s loyal to Trump! • Both Trump and the Pope are compromised • RFK and Trump triple-down on their phony percentage calculations • Democrats should bring back USAID • Michio Kaku thinks some mysterious deaths of scientists is a big deal, while a writer for the Atlantic thinks it’s a statistical illusion • The Indiana Lt Gov. thinks Democrats are led by demons • Ben Shapiro thinks posting the ten commandments in schools isn’t theocracy • Trump wants to rename Mt Kilimanjaro, for himself • DeSantis bans climate change efforts • A revealing photo of women’s tennis champions • More examples of deep superstition in the guise of religious belief • And how some of Trump’s base thinks his 2024 assassination attempt was staged.

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  • Washington Post, today: Trump ousts National Science Board members
  • Subtitle: Members of the independent board that guides the National Science Foundation said they received a notice from the White House that their positions were being terminated.
  • No reason given. More tearing down, now of what has been a useful, nonpartisan agency since 1950. Who is Trump actually working for?

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Change For the Better, vs. Sunk Cost

  • John McWhorter: Don’t pronounce the T in ‘often’;
  • How an American living abroad realizes the problems with America;
  • Why we’re stuck with a religious calendar.
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My favorite pet peeve.

NY Times, John McWhorter, yesterday: What’s Better Left Unsaid

(I made this point in one of my earliest (and shortest) posts on this blog)

People without enough to do like to find unnecessary rules for English speakers. I discussed dangling modifiers last week. In that vein, let’s do “often.”

Many think it should be pronounced “off-ten” rather than “offen,” or at least feel better saying “off-ten.” But why, when we don’t pronounce “listen” as “lis-ten”?

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Posted in Conservative Resistance, Culture, Religion, Science | Comments Off on Change For the Better, vs. Sunk Cost

Another Example of the Endless, Fruitless, Search for Proof of God

  • No, there isn’t any new evidence that God exists;
  • Clannad and The Last of the Mohicans.
– – –

Noted from last month. What could this mean?

The Atlantic, Elizabeth Bruenig, 26 Mar 2026: The Evidence That God Exists, subtitled “Searching for scientific proof for faith misunderstands faith.”

You can see the writer establishing some wiggle room with her subtitle.

I grew up in a faithful Methodist household in deep-red Texas during the George W. Bush years, when the political sway of evangelicals was at its zenith. At the same time, evangelists of a robust atheism—figures such as the biologist Richard Dawkins, the critic Christopher Hitchens, and the neuroscientist Sam Harris—toured the country offending salt-of-the-earth Americans with their contempt for religious belief.

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Dismantling Modern Civilization in Favor of Intuitive Superstitions and Religious Verities

  • Those looking to ancient Greece to justify their current warmongering are getting their history wrong;
  • Parody and reality about Hegseth relaxing flu vaccine requirements for the military;
  • The CDC is suppressing a report on the efficacy of the Covid vaccines;
  • Calls for “Biblical masculinity,” whatever that is;
  • Short items about the worst president in US history; removing support for immigrant kids to learn English; how actual data shows the success of Bidenomics; a book review on what North Korea’s cult of personality owes Christianity; and how moon denialists are using AI to fake Artemis footage, without irony.
– – –

Is this an in inescapable cycle? This seems to be the trend in the US.

Warmongers always look to earlier warmongers for justification. As if childish behavior justifies lifelong childish behavior.

NY Times, guest essay by Stewart Patrick, who “directs the Global Order and Institutions Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.”, 19 Apr 2026: The Warmongers Are Getting History All Wrong

Members of the Trump administration have been channeling their inner Thucydides, paraphrasing the Greek historian’s aphorisms about the pitiless realities of power in a world of self-interested nations.

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Myths That Endure, and Conservatives

  • Who are these young Republicans who find MAGA insufficiently radical?
  • Myths that endure: utopia, invisibility, magic, the immortal soul;
  • Trump is going to read the Bible, out loud??
  • How Pro-Trump avatars are infecting social media;
  • The evidence for the Trump’s administration’s engaging in insider trading;
  • That Kash Patel article in The Atlantic;
  • Peter Gabriel: Passion: With This Love.
– – –

Catching up on a few days.

The New Yorker, Antonia Hitchens, 6 Apr 2026: How the Internet Fringe Infiltrated Republican Politics, subtitled “Inside the battle for the post-MAGA G.O.P.”

Caption on photo: “The crowd at an event for James Fishback, a Florida gubernatorial candidate, who, like many other young conservatives, considers MAGA insufficiently radical.”

Long, 30+ screens. Not going to read it all. My thought: who are these kids to have learned to be very selfish (and/or racist, etc.) at such a young age? What do they want? Let’s see if I can spot anything.

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The Origins of Conservative Values

  • MAGA wants more teen births (!), with reflection on why most human societies postpone children until adulthood;
  • How Red State restrictions against abortion only stopped the lifesaving ones;
  • Two items about Pete Hegseth and his Christian Nationalist leader, and guns.
  • And how Republicans are always ready, fearing an ever-dangerous world, to spend more on defense.
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More examples today of how conservative “values” are the priorities of primitive tribes, especially those living on the verge of extinction in the ancestral environment. Promote expansion of the tribe; fear others.

Salon, Amanda Marcotte, today: MAGA wants more teen births. It won’t work, subtitled “Teen birth rates are at historic lows — and young women want to keep it that way”

There used to be a consensus on both the left and right that it was best to wait for adulthood to have kids. But some conservatives are rethinking this view, and Republicans are now drifting toward open complaints that teenage girls aren’t having enough babies.

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Everything Bad Is Due to Progressivism! (says Clarence Thomas)

  • Reactions to Clarence Thomas’s speech blaming everything he doesn’t like on progressivism — and Hitler and Stalin too! A standard conservative screed.
  • The Project Hail Mary soundtrack.
– – –

What kind of contorted logic is going on here?

Slate, Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern, 17 Apr 2026: Clarence Thomas Gave a Speech Blaming Progressivism for Hitler. It Was Mostly Just Sad.

Justice Clarence Thomas gave a rare public address on Wednesday that started as a benign celebration of the Declaration of Independence before devolving into a bitter attack on progressivism, steeped with grievance, bad history, and self-regard. In the speech, delivered at the University of Texas at Austin, Thomas blamed progressives for the worst crimes of the 20th century, insisting that “Stalin, Hitler, Mussolini, and Mao” were all “intertwined with the rise of progressivism,” as was “racial segregation,” “eugenics,” and other evils. The justice also bemoaned the “unfair criticism and attacks” that he and other tellers of truths must withstand as the price for courageously “not budging” on their principles.

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Changing Minds

  • The World Bank thinks better of free-market absolutism;
  • For some, every thing the least bit unusual is *meaningful*.
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A couple non-political items today.

The Atlantic, Rogé Karma, 16 Apr 2026: A Pillar of the Economics Establishment Admits That It Was Wrong, subtitled “In a new report, the World Bank thinks better of its old free-market absolutism.”

For anyone or any institution to admit they were wrong, to have learned from evidence, is progress. And rare. Note “simple”:

How does a country get rich? For decades, the economics establishment generally agreed on a simple answer: Embrace free markets and avoid “industrial policy”—state-led efforts to shape what an economy produces—at all costs. No institution embodied this viewpoint, widely known as the “Washington Consensus,” quite like the World Bank. Established in 1944 to provide low-interest loans to developing countries, the bank soon became the intellectual center of development economics. In the 1990s, it took a hard stance against industrial policy, turning the concept almost into a taboo.

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