The Arrogance of the Devout

  • Texas inserts Bible readings into public school instruction, only some of them related to literary works;
  • Adam Roberts reviews Disclosure Day, with insights similar to my own;
  • Gubbins: Dismal turn-out for Trump’s rally; right-wing paranoia about Dems.
– – –

Salon, CK Smith, today: Texas mandates Bible readings and Christian-infused curriculum in public schools, subtitled “Education board decision fuels debate over where teaching about religion ends and religious instruction begins”

Texas has become the first state in the nation to require Bible passages as part of its statewide public school reading curriculum after the Republican-controlled State Board of Education approved sweeping new social studies standards Friday.

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Human Nature and American Self-Esteem

  • Another story about a European loving his American experience, and also how Americans need this kind of validation;
  • Brief items about Trump Derangement Syndrome, the demonization of Anthony Fauci, how Christian Nationalist candidates should conceal their agendas, and why there are no migrants from Norway;
  • A longer piece about “post-liberalism,” which to me fails to take the long view;
  • More brief items from Paul Krugman about Pete Hegseth’s undermining of the military, and The Conversation about why people avoid bad news.
– – –

Another perspective about this; a German tourist loves America.

Slate, Alex Kirshner, yesterday: Freddy’s Big Adventure, subtitled “A German man’s World Cup road trip has turned him into an unlikely folk hero—and exposed how desperate Americans are for proof that their country is great.”

European tourists having a great time in America have been a recurring bit on my social media feeds lately, and perhaps on yours too. They’re driving on interstates. They’re trying ranch dressing. They’re eating at Taco Bell. But nobody has been a bigger sensation than a German man who goes by @FreddyLA7 on X. Freddy has gone megaviral for being a really good tourist and getting lots of fun gifts along his journey to watch the German soccer team (and others) all across North America.

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Assessing Disclosure Day

  • National Review is offended by the film’s presumption to redefine “the Judeo-Christian ethic that formerly ruled Hollywood — making it a global, cultural superpower…”;
  • Vox on how faith and UFOs go hand in hand;
  • Slate on how Spielberg’s films are about “high strangeness”;
  • My take: road trips and action sequences, with a sprinkling of old spice.
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Let’s revisit some of those items I saved about Steven Spielberg’s latest film, Disclosure Day, and see if we can figure out why some religious folks have taken such offense. The ones I posted earlier were on June 13th, followed by my quick take after seeing the movie on June 20th.

Meanwhile, I should say, I re-watched most of Close Encounters of the Third Kind over the past week, in sections, trying to lure my reluctant partner into watching it. What impresses me about that film are the visuals. The skies filled with spooky lightening-like lights. The bright lights of the little alien ships pursing the cop cars, and the ones luring the boy Barry outside his house. I still don’t buy the appearance of the mothership from behind(?) Devil’s Tower, when it should have been seen descending from above. But let’s move on.

Let’s start with this item from a conservative publication.

National Review, Armond White, 12 Jun: Disclosure Day: An Unequal Sequel, subtitled “Spielberg betrays the movies — and himself”

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As Others See Us

  • How World Cup tourists are impressed by the US;
  • And an earlier piece about tourists were impressed by San Francisco, in both cases despite right-wing apocalyptic propaganda;
  • Amanda Marcotte on why MAGA buys Trump’s reflecting pool hoax;
  • Hegseth reverses the vax mandate ban, and fires another top general;
  • MAGA falls for satire;
  • Todd Starnes doubles down on tribalism;
  • Alan Greenspan admitted he was wrong: takes by Roger Lowenstein and Robert Reich.
  • And John Williams: Schindler’s List.
– – –

People are, inevitably, most concerned about their personal lives, without needing to be aware of the outside world. To some extent this piece reveals the psychological bias that leads many people to think life is worse off today than it was in some imaginary glorious past. And it reveals how outside perspective are quite at odds with the apocalyptic take that Trump and MAGA have on America’s big cities, which borders on bigotry.

Washington Post, opinion by Jim Geraghty, yesterday: What’s America really like? Ask the World Cup tourists., subtitled “Foreign soccer fans marvel at features of U.S. life we take for granted.”

Sometimes it takes outsiders, seeing us with fresh eyes, to remind us of who we are and what we have.

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William MacAskill, WHAT WE OWE THE FUTURE

(Basic Books, August 2022, 333pp, including 83pp of acknowledgements, appendices, figure credits and data sources, notes, and index)

This book, which I read shortly after its publication in 2022, is by a young Oxford philosopher who is at the center of the Effective Altruism movement. The other book on that theme that I read about the same time is LONGPATH by Ari Wallach (review here) which IIRC mentions MacAskill only once, while this MacAskill book doesn’t refer to Wallach at all (while both refer to a core group of other writers, like Nick Bostrom ). Don’t know if that means anything.

I put off writing up this book because struck me as a bit overly earnest. Even tendentious. Almost trying too hard. Actually, I got that impression from the encyclopedic end notes, more from the text, which is straightforward. Set that aside for now.

At the same time I don’t disagree with any of the fundamental perspectives here. Thinking about the future, appreciating the extent of humanity’s past and potential future, looking at the big picture, is what science fiction is all about, and what most people never think about.

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Trump’s Self-Created Crises

  • Robert Reich on four messes that Trump created;
  • Items about Hegseth undoing military progress; Tim Barton cites a quotation that doesn’t exist; the news spy chief fires intel experts; Trump’s preoccupation with the number 22; Nancy Mace thinks transgenic means transgender;
  • Revisiting Frank Ocean’s “Pyramids”.
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More family obligations yesterday.

\

It’s ongoing. It was avoidable.

Robert Reich, today: The Green Algae President: How He’s Handling Four Messes He Created, subtitled “The mess at the Reflecting Pool as a metaphor for his many other messes”

Referring to the Reflecting Pool on the National Mall, Minnesota governor Tim Walz commented on X: “Found an imaginary problem, said only they could fix it, didn’t listen to experts, hired buddies who grifted millions, failed miserably, bragged how great it went. The entire Trump presidency in a nutshell.” (Walz could have added: “blamed others for his failure, conjured up a conspiracy, then prosecuted them.”)

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Neil deGrasse Tyson, TAKE ME TO YOUR LEADER

Subtitled: Perspectives on Your First Alien Encounter
(Simon & Schuster/Simon Six, May 2026, 226pp, including 28pp of acknowledgements, notes, index, and image credits)

This latest by Tyson is irreverent and casual, even lightweight, in the way Tyson’s books often are, though the topics addressed are weighty. It’s analogous to a book I wrote up here three months ago called DO ALIENS SPEAK PHYSICS? by Whiteson and Warner, which also considered topics about aliens, and had several corresponding chapters. (Review here.)

It’s timely that this book came out a bit before the new Spielberg movie, which purports to reveal (yet again) the truth about aliens visiting the Earth. I wonder if Tyson will ever comment on it; I suspect he wouldn’t buy it for a moment.

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Disclosure Day, Initial Take

  • First reaction to Disclosure Day, with a link to David Brin’s reaction; then noting the film’s religious themes, its appeal to empathy, and its allusions to past Spielberg films;
  • How the reflecting pool fiasco is emblematic of Trump’s strategy: hire loyalists, not experts, and when things go wrong, blame Democrats, and saboteurs;
  • Banning flu vaccines leads to more flu cases, who could have known?
  • Why not ban all books?
  • A mundane example of how capitalism works: when auto break-ins decline, auto glass repair businesses suffer.
– – –

No post here yesterday because we attended a late-afternoon showing of Disclosure Day that pre-empted my usual blog-post-writing interval.

Quick take. It’s a well-made movie, sometimes thrilling and sometimes touching, about a race to disclose or suppress information the US government has accumulated for decades about alien visitations, abductions, spaceship crashes, and whatnot. That is, it takes all the conspiratorial ‘evidence’ for alien visitations at face value and tries to rationalize why the government would be suppressing it. In fact, my understanding is that most of this ‘evidence’ has long been discredited. But Spielberg wants us to believe, as he clearly does.

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Memories of Green

  • Trump’s surrender;
  • Trump can’t sell his lies in Versailles;
  • Why people see scientists as oddballs;
  • Vangelis’s “Memories of Green.”
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Some of us have memories of the before time. Before all this.

The Bulwark, Jonathan V. Last, today: Trump Admits Surrender, subtitled “There were no alternatives.”

President Trump’s G7 remarks yesterday were striking because they represented the administrations first candid appraisal of the Iran war since bombing commenced. For months, every single member of the administration, from Trump on down, has insisted that everything was going great.

Followed by a list of how things were going great, and then a list of opposite things that yesterday “the president essentially admitted.”

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Reflecting Pool Fiasco

  • How the reflecting pool fiasco is emblematic of Trump’s manner of government;
  • Facebook’s AMV about how the reflecting pool is a miniature Anthropocene;
  • Why Trump keeps talking about voter fraud: he has specific ideas about the kind of people who should rule and those who are mere subjects;
  • Noting a piece on what might happen if AI is fed religion.
– – –

This may seem a tempest in a teapot, a relatively incidental matter compared with wars in the Middle East and whatnot, but it’s making lots of news in the past couple days, and the incident seems to represent the broad manner in which Trump is leading the government. Trump emptied the reflecting pool, had the bottom painted blue (apparently in the naive assumption that the water would then look the same blue) by a no-bid contractor who had once resurfaced a pool at one of his properties. What could go wrong?

The Guardian, yesterday: Algae thwart Trump’s $14.2m attempt to turn reflecting pool ‘American flag blue’, subtitled “Green algae have proliferated amid warm weather after Lincoln Memorial pool renovation turning water green”

The New York Times, 15 Jun 2026: Trump Ordered ‘American Flag Blue’ for the Reflecting Pool. It’s Green Again., subtitled “Algal blooms have hit the site, between the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument, after a $14.2 million repair project.”

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