Nostalgia Bias, and Christian Intolerance and Hypocrisy

  • Trump’s worldview is stuck in 1989;
  • Thinking the 1990s were better than today is nostalgia bias;
  • D.C. is not the hellscape Trump claims it is (of course);
  • More about that annoying busybody who opposes gay marriage and has nothing better to do than to try to impose her religious scruples on the entire nation;
  • More about the Christian nationalist who thinks women shouldn’t have a right to vote, with perspective from Heather Cox Richardson;
  • How the leader of the Family Research Council thinks we will be fine, fine, under a [Christian] dictatorship;
  • And an essay at The Atlantic suggests Trump fans might eventually rebel against his incompetence.
– – –

Trump seems stuck in 1989. (Is that when America was last Great?)

Slate, Ben Mathis-Lilley, 12 Aug 2025: Man Whose Mind Is Trapped in 1989 Orders Military to Crush the Concept of Homelessness, subtitled “What is the National Guard supposed to do here? Shoot the zoning laws?”
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Music as Language

  • John McWhorter on Bruce Springsteen, and my own takes;
  • About modern music.

I mentioned that I had a couple thoughts about music recently. The first is inspired by this piece:

NY Times, John McWhorter, 7 Aug 2025: Springsteen Isn’t Who I Thought He Was [gift link]

McWhorter is a Columbia University linguist, who often writes about trends in English language usage. Here he admits that he only recently got around to listening to Bruce Springsteen, really listening. He begins:

From a distance I have always found Bruce Springsteen interesting, especially in his current incarnation as a committed populist straddling the line between his own politics and those of his many MAGA fans. But his set-to last spring with President Trump, who called him “overrated” and “not a talented guy,” made me realize how very little of Springsteen’s music I have ever really engaged. I must come clean and say that I just never got it.

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Short-Term Thinking As the Problem, As I’ve Been Saying

  • Ben Rhodes at NYT on the perils of short-term thinking;
  • A Facebook comment about intellectual loneliness;
  • And how Trump is lying about crime in DC in order to, what? distract from the Epstein crisis? Or show random totalitarian power?
– – –

Another big substantial piece, like yesterday’s about stagnation, that speaks to one of my recurring themes.

NY Times, guest essay by Ben Rhodes, 11 August 2025: How Short-Term Thinking Is Destroying America [gift link]

(Title at homepage link: “We’re Trapped in Trump’s Reality. This Is How We Escape it.”)

The writer begins by discussing the new film “Eddington,” and how it “captures the American tendency to live obsessively in the present.” I haven’t seen the film, so I’ll skip his discussion of it, and cut to the chase.
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Nevil Shute: ON THE BEACH

(First published 1957. Edition here: Vintage International, trade paperback, February 2010, 312pp)

And here’s the next in a group of apocalyptic novels I read in June, following Butler’s PARABLE OF THE SOWER and Frank’s ALAS, BABYLON (review review here.) This is the most famous of the three, mainly because there was a fairly high-end 1959 movie based on it, starring Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, and Fred Astaire, among others. I saw that movie long ago, though not recently; we couldn’t find it streaming anywhere (though we watched a more recent, 2000, TV version instead, which was OK.)

This has some similarities with the Frank novel, though its setting and timeline are different. Continue reading

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MAGA and Cultural Stagnation

  • Long piece by Mike Lofgren at Salon about how we got from the 1960s to here; how we’re in an era of stagnation;
  • My brief thoughts about how this might apply to science fiction;
  • Tim Callahan at Skeptic spells out why holy relics and holy places are fiction;
  • With comments about how many many people reached his conclusion early on, and my wondering if we’ll ever get beyond this.
  • And a teaser about the nature of music, items to be posted tomorrow.
– – –

This is more than another piece about Trump’s gold kitsch White House. The writer is looking for a deep explanation of how we got to this state, saying there have been “surprisingly few retrospective analyses that seek to describe how and why our country lurched into its present state.” Actually I think I’ve seen quite a few, it’s just that there’s no consensus among them.

Salon, Mike Lofgren, 9 Aug 2025: How did we get from the ’60s to Trump’s kitsch White House?, subtitled “Our culture turned on itself, stagnated and went rancid — that’s how”

Quite apart from the fact that 20 years ago, almost none of our supposed thought leaders foresaw that the United States would slide into a fascist-style dictatorship by 2025, there have been surprisingly few retrospective analyses that seek to describe how and why our country lurched into its present state.

Endemic racism is often put forward as a rationale. …

Long piece. Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Music, Politics | Comments Off on MAGA and Cultural Stagnation

Trump the Bully Seems to Be What Many People Want

  • David Remnick of The New Yorker on Trump the Bully;
  • Heather Cox Richardson on Trump promises not kept;
  • Trump’s escalating racist attacks on Black Americans;
  • How Fox News feeds anti-immigrant propaganda to its audience;
  • Trump’s gold kitsch White House;
  • More about that pastor, praised by Hegseth, who thinks women shouldn’t have the right to vote.
– – –

 

The New Yorker, David Remnick, 3 Aug 2025: The Politics of Fear, subtitled “As a Presidential candidate, Donald Trump made his world view plain: there was “us” and there was “them.” Once he was in the White House, the fear factor would prevail.”

(Which is to say, the most simplistic kind of tribal morality.)

Trump was, from his formative years, a spoiled bully. Continue reading

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No Policies, No Principles, Just “Deals”

And Threats. And Extortion. And Lies.

  • A quote from Bertrand Russell;
  • Trump wants to win the Nobel Peace Prize, while making wars worse and threatening countries around the world;
  • Heather Cox Richardson on the motives behind the idea of changing how the census works;
  • Hegseth promotes a pastor who would criminalize gay sex, end voting by women, and ban non-Christian faiths;
  • Changing minds: Hundreds of weather service employees hired back; Trump fires the IRS chief he just hired 2 months ago;
  • Backing off: Smithsonian restores language about impeachments, mostly;
  • Trump took credit for “Operation Warp Speed,” which involved mRNA vaccines against Covid, and now shrugs as RFK Jr. shuts down research on mRNA vaccines;
  • Extortion against UCLA;
  • America is now the outlier in the world recognizing the danger of climate change;
  • No one is claiming that America has the best health-care system in the world anymore.
– – –

 

Let’s begin with this quote from Bertrand Russell

A habit of basing convictions upon evidence, and of giving to them only that degree of certainty which the evidence warrants, would, if it became general, cure most of the ills from which the world is suffering. But at present, in most countries, education aims at preventing the growth of such a habit, and men who refuse to profess belief in some system of unfounded dogmas are not considered suitable as teachers of the young.

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Then we can pivot to the daily news, full of more evidence that the current party in power ignores evidence, defies education, and clings not so much to dogma (e.g. from the Constitution or the Bible) as the raw pursuit of power and the tribalistic demonization of people they don’t like.

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The Real Government Plots Against Reality

  • Government plots to suppress vaccines, and the effects of climate change;
  • With my speculation about conservative motivations;
  • Heather Cox Richardson on how, despite concerns for the budget, conservatives are willing to spend millions and millions to deport people they don’t like;
  • Trump’s deflection from the Epstein case is like the Barbra Streisand Effect;
  • Another aspect of the conservative mindset is the veneration of the Confederacy;
  • As predicted: war against UCLA;
  • A mid-decade census? What is the point?
  • And how Republicans think if they’ve won by 51%, they have license to rewrite the rules (i.e. gerrymander) so they’ll never lose again. I don’t think that’s how the system is supposed to work.
– – –

 

I was saying yesterday how for years conservative conspiracy theorists have floated imaginary evidence, or misunderstood real evidence, to impugn the government, or Democrats, with plots against them — claims of reality that don’t synch with the way they think the world works, or should work. In the Trump era, however, actual conspiracy theories and plots are plain as day, and the conservatives are just fine with them — because they’re in the support of their own worldview, which is driven by anti-scientific, religious mythology.

Here’s a quote first:

There’s a weird little trick to living longer. It’s one that influencers won’t tell you; after all, there’s no way to earn a commission on it. It can be found tucked in the back of CVS, or even at any regular old doctor’s office. It’s expensive, but you may very well be able to get it for free. The government increasingly—staggeringly, stupefyingly—doesn’t want you to know about it.

It’s this:

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Mendacity, Stupidity, or Both; and Arvo Pärt

  • Speculations about yesterday’s observations;
  • Stupidity and mendacity: removing parts of the Constitution from government websites;
  • American science withdraws; RFK Jr doesn’t believe in mRNA vaccines;
  • Hegseth and academic mediocrity;
  • America has defunded one of the smartest beings on the planet;
  • And an example of Arvo Pärt’s striking early music, and Tintinnabuli.
– – –

Following up on the previous post:

Now, why would this be? I tend to fall back on some notion of how the human mind, a product of evolution in a world that now virtually no longer exists, was primed for survival, not understanding of the real world. Survival for thousands or even millions of years meant increasing levels of cooperation, in small tribes and larger and larger communities. Knowing whether someone was on your side — loyalty — meant more than anything, certainly more than fealty to the real world, because there was no understanding of the real world outside of mundane circumstances of survival.

And that worked fine, more or less, for all that time. As the species grew and spread itself across the planet tribes became differentiated, mostly through random evolutionary processes (except for skin color, which was adaptive), and both tribalism and competition for resources led to increased conflicts among tribes. Now, in the modern world, we’re all increasing dependent on each other, both because no one state or nation can maintain the infrastructure of the technological world all by itself, and because global, existential, problems exist that cannot be solved by any one state or nation. Climate change, the threat of nuclear war, global pandemics, even perhaps AI. Those who would withdraw from the world into their own nationalistic or religious shell are abandoning responsibility for humanity’s future, retreating into a dead-end past, and undermining their own survival in the long run.

But there’s a bit more. Continue reading

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Their Make-Believe World

  • Trump’s tantrum;
  • His own version of reality;
  • Assaulting reporting, statistics, and the historical record;
  • Ordering an independent office to become as big a liar as he is;
  • Every accusation is a confession;
  • The “Russia Hoax” is whatever he says it is;
  • Lying about due process for immigrants;
  • Headlines about entitlement, gerrymandering, decreasing crime, and cutting vaccine research.
– – –

The running theme here, not just today but for months and years, is that conservatives, especially the MAGA variety, have mistrusted people outside their tribe as either elites or dangerous immigrants, have mistrusted the government because they don’t understand its complex systems, have not “believed” in science because its findings contradict their religious myths, and so on. When reality seems to intrude on their stories, they blame conspiracy theories by outsiders, and they point to imaginary evidence, or misunderstanding of real evidence, as justification.

Yet lately, ironically, when there’s so much blatant evidence of their own elected officials lying and defying reality and ignoring the Constitution they claim to venerate, they’re just fine with it!

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NY Times, editorial board, 5 Aug 2025: This Isn’t Governing. It’s a Tantrum.
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Posted in authoritarianism, Conservative Resistance, conservatives, Culture, Decline, Human Nature, Lunacy, Politics, Religion | Comments Off on Their Make-Believe World