The Daily News

  • The range of politics reflects the range of human nature;
  • Posts without much comments about military tribunals, hacking the economy, Jeanine Pirro’s black and white worldview, how the Qatar jet deal is Biden’s fault, Paul Krugman on sadistic zombies, and how China will dominate.
– – –

Most of the news on a day to day basis consists of illustrations of how politics works, and how politics reflects the conflicts between different kinds of thinking. Political conflicts are seldom rational disputes about the effects of this or that policy; they’re conflicts between fundamentally different views of the world, and how it should work. These views in turn reflect the range of human nature, which at one end is anchored into the tribal, hierarchical, intuitive way of life that humans existed in for hundreds of thousands of years, and on the other is anchored by the (relatively) cosmopolitan, egalitarian, rational approach to life that has enabled humanity’s expansion across the globe, and which is increasingly necessary for the world’s peoples to get along, not to mention being honest about our apprehension of the real world, apart from superstitions and religion.

Actually, a fair portion of the news on a day to day basis is about catastrophes and crime, incidents that in the big picture are irrelevant, but which people love to hear about. This, I’ve come to conclude, is another reflection of base human nature, which is primed to detect threats and to respond to tribal violence. Even in the modern world, they are itches that humans need to have scratched, if only vicariously. Thus the prevalence of violence and crime in movies and TV; thus the existence of organized sports, as sublimated warfare, as the persistence of a zero-sum game mindset. In sports, one team wins, the other loses. In human history, that can’t have been true, or we’d all still be living in caves.

Progress, the expansion of options, is by definition the triumph of non-zero sum games throughout human history.

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With these high thoughts in mind, I will only link a few of today’s interesting articles, without pondering through them too much.

JMG, 19 May 2025 (from The Daily Beast): Trump Posts Call For Obama To Face “Military Tribunal”

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Salon, Heather Digby Parton, 19 May 2025: Trump is trying to COVID hack the economy, subtitled “The White House prepares to falsify data and cook the books in order to sell their schemes to the American people”

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Washington Post, Erik Wemple, 19 May 2025: Jeanine Pirro’s 10 most astounding quotes, subtitled “By the unique standards of Trump’s merit system, the former Fox News commentator has paid her dues.”

I.e., about her black and white worldview.

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New Republic, Edith Olmsted, 19 May 2025: Trump’s Qatar Private Jet Is Now Somehow Biden’s Fault, subtitled “Donald Trump’s treasury secretary managed to rope Joe Biden into a wild new theory.”

It’s always the other guy’s fault.

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Paul Krugman, 19 May 2025: Attack of the Sadistic Zombies, subtitled “The GOP budget is incredibly cruel — and that’s the point”

Krugman published a book, Arguing with Zombies: Economics, Politics, and the Fight for a Better Future, back in 2020, and he’s used the term “zombies” to refer to Republican policies that evidence have shown don’t work. Like trickle-down economics.

This post is just the latest example.

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And this is becoming increasingly clear. Do most Americans notice? Or care?

NY Times, Kyle Chan, 19 May 2025: In the Future, China Will Be Dominant. The U.S. Will Be Irrelevant. [gift link]

Posted in Human Nature, Politics | Comments Off on The Daily News

GOP/conservatives and the Rich; and the Countryside; and Star Wars

  • The GOP tax bill will hurt lowest earners and help the rich (of course!);
  • NYT’s Jamelle Bouie on Republican hypocrisy and the countryside;
  • Trek v. Wars, and how Wars reveals conservatives’ authoritarian fantasies.
– – –

NY Times, Tony Romm, 16 May 2025: G.O.P. Tax Bill May Hurt the Lowest Earners and Help the Richest, subtitled “Even though most Americans may see lower taxes, Republicans’ spending cuts could outweigh those benefits and leave some worse off.”

May? May? It’s always happened like that in the past. That’s why some from the left criticize NYT for being too accommodating.

As Representative Jason Smith commenced a marathon session this week to consider a sprawling and expensive Republican tax package, he took special care to emphasize his party’s commitment to “hard-working Americans.”

“Pro-growth tax policy will shift our economy toward one that serves them, not the wealthy and well-connected,” Mr. Smith, the Missouri lawmaker who leads the House’s top tax panel, proclaimed.

But the proposal he is trying to get to President Trump’s desk ultimately tells a more complicated story. The Republican tax plan may offer only modest gains to everyday workers, according to a wide range of tax experts, and some taxpayers may actually be left in worse financial shape if the bill becomes law.

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For example.

NY Times, Jamelle Bouie, 17 May 2025: Republican Hypocrisy Reaches Into the Countryside

President Trump won his second term in office with the overwhelming support of rural America.

Not only was overall turnout up in the nation’s rural counties, but Trump won many of those areas by more than two-to-one. And while it is a little too much to say that Trump’s dominance with rural voters delivered him the White House, it is true that without this over-performance, his path to victory would have been harder.

Given the importance of rural voters to his political coalition — and that of any Republican who hopes to follow in his footsteps — you might assume that Trump would prioritize the interests of rural voters. This is, after all, what you’re supposed to do in a democracy: reward your supporters for their support.

Not so for Trump and his Republican allies in Congress. If anything, their agenda is calibrated to devastate rural America.

Consider the budget proposal now making its way through the House of Representatives. To pay for their $3.8 trillion tax plan, which includes possibly trillions in tax cuts and extensions for the wealthiest Americans, Republicans want to cut $700 billion from Medicaid and other federal health programs. If passed into law, these cuts — some which come in the form of work requirements for Medicaid — could cause as many as 8.6 million Americans to lose their health insurance.

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And this. I’ve never been a Star Wars fan — it struck me as juvenile space opera, from the first time I watched the first film — while Trek instilled in me an idealism about the future at an early age, and which I’ve never abandoned. In both cases, I have not followed up on the subsequent TV series and movies. Especially since Trek has veered away from the point of the original series. (There’s a narrative pattern here: adaptations usually dilute the premise of the original in favor of themes more palatable to the masses. Just consider the original novel FRANKENSTEIN compared to the many, many adaptations and sequels by others.

Mother Jones, Sam Van Pykeren, 16 May 2025: How Star Wars Reveals Conservatives’ Authoritarian Fantasies, subtitle: “Republicans are gunning for their own galactic empire. And they’d blow up a planet—or this country—to make it happen.”

Running late this afternoon, or I’d explore this in detail.

Posted in conservatives, Culture, science fiction | Comments Off on GOP/conservatives and the Rich; and the Countryside; and Star Wars

86 Hypocrisy, Our Puritan Legacy, and Belief in God

  • 86 47, and 86 46;
  • The GOP’s new anti-porn bill, and the US’s puritan legacy;
  • Richard Dawkins on belief in god.
– – –

I almost thought this would be too trivial to mention, except that Heather leads last night’s column with it, and there’s a further salient point she doesn’t mention.

Letters from an American, Heather Cox Richardson: May 16, 2025.

MAGA world is performing over-the-top outrage over a photo former Federal Bureau of Investigation director James Comey posted on Instagram, where he has been teasing a new novel. The image shows shells on a beach arranged in a popular slogan for opposing President Donald J. Trump: “86”—slang for tossing something away—followed by “47”, a reference to Trump’s presidency.

Using “eighty-six” as either a noun or a verb appears to have started in the restaurant industry in the 1930s to indicate that something was out of stock. It is a common term, used by MAGA itself to refer to getting rid of somebody…until now.

MAGA voices are insisting that this image was Comey’s threat to assassinate the president. Trump got into the game, telling Brett Baier of the Fox News Channel: “that meant assassination. And it says it loud and clear…. [H]e’s calling for the assassination of the president…that’s gonna be up to Pam and all of the great people…. He’s a dirty cop.” Trump’s reference to Attorney General Pam Bondi and law enforcement paid off: yesterday, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said that the Department of Homeland Security and the Secret Service are investigating Comey. He showed up voluntarily at the FBI headquarters in Washington, D.C., today for an interview.

I’ve heard ’86’ before as slang for throw away or toss out, but never as ‘assassinate.’ But the ironic, hypocritical thing here — that further salient point — is that there’s been a market for “86 46” merchandise, like shirts, for years:

Were those assassination threats too?

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What are these people thinking?

Slate, Luke Winkie, 17 May 2025: What’s the Deal With the GOP’s Bizarre New Anti-Porn Bill?

You may have heard that earlier this week, the Republican-controlled Congress floated a piece of legislation that would effectively ban all pornography in the country. That would be a significant incursion on the First Amendment, and a mammoth victory for America’s freshly emboldened Christofascist front. But what does this bill really argue? Is a full-blown porn ban legally feasible? And most important, how did we end up in a place where such a regressive policy is culturally palatable? Let’s break it down.

Questions and answers. For example:

I still feel a little queasy about it though, given how the country is backsliding on all sorts of personal liberties.

Fair enough. I definitely can understand why the bill is making headlines: MAGAdom has made a sharp prudish turn over the past few years, itself informed by a larger anti-sex, anti-pleasure current across party lines. While Mike Lee is not the shrewdest operator in his caucus, it isn’t hard to imagine the Republican Party someday taking up a more serious federal fight against porn. (After all, a comprehensive ban on adult material was a fixture of Project 2025, which, so far, has been the core schematic of the second Trump administration.) We’ve already seen the opening salvos of this struggle: 17 states have blocked porn browsers, and most of them are in the South.

One thing mainstream media almost never does (and right-wing media *never* does) is wonder if there are movements like this in other countries, especially other Western liberal nations, those who’ve been the US’s allies for decades. My explanation for this, in the US, is our prudish, puritan legacy, grounded in the Old Testament. Which forbids any number of activities that would not lead to reproduction in the ancestral environment, at a time when infant mortality was high. And so the existential dread of parents learning their child is gay: because that would foreclose grandchildren. (Even though that’s not strictly true anymore.)

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Today on Richard Dawkins’ Substack.

The Poetry of Reality with Richard Dawkins, 16 May 2025: Do you believe in God?

Subtitled “This article is an excerpt from Outgrowing God: A Beginner’s Guide (2019) where Richard Dawkins explores the foundations of religious belief, particularly focusing on whether religion is necessary for morality and understanding the world.” (I summarized the book here.)

It begins with the correct response.

Do you believe in God?

Which god?

Because only the extremely homebound or naive person is unaware that there are other religions and other gods; that these religions and gods are all mutually inconsistent; and only the presumptuous or arrogant person believes that the religion they grew up with is the correct one because it is theirs. Few people, it seems, are smarter than that, and reach the correct conclusion.

Thousands of gods have been worshipped throughout the world, throughout history. Polytheists believe in lots of gods all at the same time (theos is Greek for ‘god’ and poly is Greek for ‘many’). Wotan (or Odin) was the chief god of the Vikings. Other Viking gods were Baldr (god of beauty), Thor (the thunder god with his mighty hammer) and his daughter Throd. There were goddesses like Snotra (goddess of wisdom), Frigg (goddess of motherhood) and Ran (goddess of the sea).

It goes on and on.

For those of us not homebound or naive or arrogant, we tend to dismiss the religious believers in a couple ways. One is that religion is a cultural tradition, like cuisine, and is mostly harmless, just as flat-earthers are. (They are *not* harmless when they begin imposing their scruples on all of society, like MAGA current is trying to do, wanting to forbid books and behaviors they think their God disapproves of. This has been a theme of history.) And the other is that most religious people these days don’t actually believe all the supernatural claims of their religious books; they just need that communal identity of like-minded believers as a kind of group solidarity. This is not intellectually honest, but it’s understandable, given human nature. Only a few us can think past the protocols of human nature, to understand why religious beliefs came to exist, to understand why discoveries in recent centuries about the objective world show those beliefs to be false, and why believers refuse to accept them.

My summary of the book on this page included this:

For anyone open to rethinking their childhood beliefs in the light of humanity’s centuries-long examination of the real world, of the universe, this is a good starting point.

Of course, this applies only to people who actually care about the real world; most don’t, and are happy to conform to their communities.

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Politics, Religion | Comments Off on 86 Hypocrisy, Our Puritan Legacy, and Belief in God

Supreme Court, Christian Nationalists, Afrikaners

  • Amanda Marcotte on how the Supreme Court has been captured by far-right conspiracy theories;
  • How the simplest explanation for what’s going on, on several fronts, is basic white supremacy;
  • About Russell Vought;
  • Trump’s morality and his rationale for accepting Afrikaner “refugees”.
– – –

Once again: ideology vs. reality.

Salon, Amanda Marcotte, 26 May 2025: “A court captured by far-right conspiracy theories”: How the GOP drove the Supreme Court off a cliff, subtitled “In her new book ‘Lawless,’ law professor Leah Litman chronicles the collapse of reason at the highest court”

An interview, with this intro by Marcotte:

“Strict Scrutiny” co-host Leah Litman has the profile of a person who, in previous eras, would seem like a defender of the Supreme Court. She’s a law professor at the University of Michigan and once worked as a law clerk for former Justice Anthony Kennedy. In recent years, she’s become one of the most outspoken critics of how the current iteration of the nation’s highest court has abandoned good faith readings of the law, basic legal reasoning, and even facts in pursuit of a far-right agenda. In her new book, “Lawless: How the Supreme Court Runs on Conservative Grievance, Fringe Theories, and Bad Vibes,” Litman chronicles the decline of this once-venerated institution. She spoke with Salon about her book and how recent cases suggest the court is getting even more unhinged in this second Donald Trump administration.

They discuss the case in which Sam Alito felt he was oppressed by a children’s book called UNCLE BOBBY’S WEDDING. We mentioned this back on April 23rd.

Litman:

I don’t know whether to laugh or to cry. The justices keep providing me with so much content and so much material after I finished the manuscript. It perfectly reflects this notion of conservative grievance: the idea that social conservatives, religious conservatives, all the core parts of the Republican constituency, are the real victims. And there’s no discrimination except against white evangelical Christians. That worldview was on display.

During the same oral argument, you had Neil Gorsuch insisting that the book “Pride Puppy” involved a sex worker who was into bondage. If you read the book, there is a woman wearing a leather jacket, and she’s at a Pride parade. Neil Gorsuch took from that and insisted, no, the book actually involves bondage and sex workers.

They are addled by their prejudices.

The Supreme Court has been running on these fast and loose characterizations of the facts for a while. We all can have a good laugh at the idea that “Uncle Bobby’s Wedding” is a personal attack on people who don’t believe in marriage equality. But the uncomfortable reality is that a conspiracy theory-laden universe is in full swing at the Supreme Court. It’s a court captured by far-right conspiracy theories. That worldview interferes with their assessment of the law, their assessment of the facts, and their ability to engage with reality.

Is this about the Christian nationalist agenda? Or is it larger than that?

I think it is larger than that. I agree that one of the ideas they are most committed to is that conservative Christians are the victims of a society that doesn’t share their views. But they are also very committed to the idea that white conservatives accused of racial discrimination are very put upon. That idea has inflected a lot of their jurisprudence on voting rights. This term, they are hearing another Voting Rights Act case that asks them to say it’s actually unconstitutional racial discrimination for states to try to ensure that black voters are represented in districting. It’s super transparent in the cases of religion, but it’s definitely present in other areas of law as well.

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Sometimes these things are simpler than the lawyers make them out to be. In the past few days, we’ve had a Supreme Court hearing on birthright citizenship, and we’ve had Afrikaner “refugees” welcomed into the United States, whose views sound just like MAGA. The simple underlying truth is that white people are refugees and should be welcomed into the country, while brown people are illegal immigrants or criminals or terrorists and should be deported, without due process. It’s a white supremacist agenda.

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Russell Vought. What is his agenda exactly? It seems that a democracy with separation of powers is interfering with his authoritarian goals. Which happen to include Christian nationalist goals.

The Atlantic, McKay Coppins, 16 May 2025: The Visionary of Trump 2.0, subtitled “Russell Vought is advancing a radical ideological project decades in the making.”

Opening para’s:

The opening act of Donald Trump’s second term was defined by the theatrical dismantling of much of the federal government by Elon Musk and his group of tech-savvy demolitionists. Everywhere you looked in those first 100 days, it seemed, Musk’s prestidigitation was on display. Look there—it’s Elon in a black MAGA hat waving around a chain saw onstage at the Conservative Political Action Conference. Look here—it’s Elon introducing Fox News viewers to a teenage software engineer nicknamed “Big Balls” whom he’d hired to help slash the government. The performance had a certain improvised quality—pink slips dispersed and then hastily withdrawn, entire agencies mothballed overnight—and after a while, it started to feel like a torqued-up sequel to Trump’s first term: governance replaced by chaos and trolling.

But that version of the story misses a key character: Russell Vought.

Then:

Vought’s agenda includes shrinking the government, but it goes deeper than that. His vision of state power would effectively reject a century of jurisprudence and unravel the modern federal bureaucracy as we know it. A devotee of the so-called unitary executive theory, he wants to see the civil service gutted and repopulated with presidential loyalists, independent federal agencies politicized or eliminated, and absolute control of the executive branch concentrated in the Oval Office.

It’s no surprise that

He grew up in Trumbull, Connecticut, with a devout family who sent him to a private Christian school and Bible camp in the summers.

And:

Vought has expressed pride in his record of pushing boundaries in ways that unsettle less dogmatic Republicans. Whereas many religious conservatives distance themselves from the “Christian nationalist” label, Vought wears it proudly. At a Heritage event, he sarcastically derided some of the Cabinet officials in Trump’s first term, whom he described as “a bunch of people around him who were constantly sitting on eggs and saying, Oh my gosh, he’s getting me to violate the law.”

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What is the Trump’s morality? A pointless question; he has no morality beyond self-interest. This is about the Afrikaner “refugees.”

Washington Post, Dana Milbank, 16 May 2025: This is what happens when we have a morally lost president, subtitled “What’s needed more than anything at this moment is to make our leaders moral again.”

The Trump administration showed the world its true colors this week. Or, more accurately, its true color.

The president has halted the admission of refugees, including those who helped the U.S. military in Afghanistan and those fleeing war in Sudan and Congo. But he has made one exception: White South Africans.

With details. In fact:

But under the country’s “expropriation” law, no land has actually been taken from the Afrikaners, who are 7 percent of the population but own most of South Africa’s farmland. They face high levels of violence, but Black South Africans face even higher levels in what has been one of the world’s most violent countries for some time.

It’s hard to see this refugee policy, and the exception for Afrikaners, as anything but an assertion of white supremacy.

Posted in conservatives, Morality, Politics, Religion | Comments Off on Supreme Court, Christian Nationalists, Afrikaners

The Plane. George Saunders. Lying. And AI spam.

  • Will begin posting more about science fiction; see previous post;
  • That Qatari plane is a white elephant they’ve been trying to dump for years;
  • A piece by the novelist George Saunders about the firing of the head of the Library of Congress;
  • Kyle Mantyla at Right Wing Watch about how Christian Nationalists lie;
  • How the Trump administration is canceling grants to study misinformation;
  • And a note about how some of the spam comments I get to this blog are obviously written by AI.
– – –

I need to get back to posting reports of the science fiction I’ve been reading, not just reports of nonfiction. (I don’t call these posts “reviews”.) I read four sf novels in April, and seven back in October; I just posted about one, and I’ll write the rest up here soon.

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So it seems that Qatari 747 they want to gift Trump (when did ‘gift’ become a verb?) is something of a white elephant that they haven’t been able to get rid of. So why not let Trump pay the maintenance costs?

Newsweek, 15 May 2025: Qatar’s Gift to Trump Is Unsold Plane It’s Been Trying to Dump for Years

Meanwhile, US security analysts are forecasting that it will take $1 billion to take the plane apart and put it back together to meet security standards. And will take years. But such a win! Right MAGA fans?

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The most striking piece today. By the author of LINCOLN IN THE BARDO.

NY Times, guest essay by George Saunders, 13 May 2025: George Saunders: Shame on the White House

If the White House wants to fire the librarian of Congress, it can. But it was interesting to have recently had the experience of meeting this dynamic, dedicated person, Carla Hayden, and feeling so proud that she was our librarian of Congress, then reading the White House’s sloppy, juvenile rationale for her dismissal; it gave me a visceral feeling for just how diseased this administration really is.

I was the recipient of the Library of Congress’s Prize for American Fiction in 2023. Dr. Hayden struck me then as energetic, engaged and utterly dedicated to the work of the library. One of the things Dr. Hayden and I bonded over was the idea that knowledge is power, that in a democracy, the more we know, the better we are.

The White House, tossing out nonsense from its meager box of repetitive right-wing auto-defenses, claimed on Friday that Dr. Hayden had, “in the pursuit of D.E.I.,” done “quite concerning things.” Did it name those things? It did not. It couldn’t have. Putting aside the basic idiocy of being against that position (“What, you value diversity? You think things should be equitable? And that all should be included?”), members of the administration now use “D.E.I.” as a sort of omni-pejorative, deliberately (strategically) leaving its exact meaning vague.

Fact-checking, and as I’ve noted before:

The White House also stated, with an inaccuracy that would be comic if it weren’t so sickening, that Dr. Hayden put “inappropriate books in the library for children.” The librarian of Congress doesn’t put books into the library. And presumably, the American people benefit from having access to the widest possible collection of books. Even those American people who are children, who, after all, have parents to decide what is inappropriate.

And then the point about reality, and honest engagement with truth, which seems to be beyond the comprehension of MAGA and the current administration.

In the real world, the world of cause and effect, when we tear down the best among us and provide bogus reasons for why we did it, reality will eventually come for us. To behave honorably requires that we be in contact with the truth, to be able to supply honest answers to simple questions. If the White House wanted to part ways with Dr. Hayden, why couldn’t it, without insulting her groundlessly, do so, and then (truthfully) say why? One wonders.

The firing of Dr. Hayden and the inane dissembling that followed represent a kind of diabolical Opposite Day phenomenon: An exceptional person is stupidly tossed aside, and to come up with an explanation, the administration turns to its patented Random False Rationale Generator.

Who again are the people who support this administration?

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This is analogous. Why do they constantly lie? I think I know why.

Right Wing Watch, Kyle Mantyla, 14 May 2025: Rob McCoy Spreads False Christian Nationalist History

Kyle seems to be the go-to person for stories like this, on the RWW site.

As Right Wing Watch has noted in the past, one of the defining characteristics of Christian nationalist activists is a willingness to misrepresent history, as time after time they spread blatant falsehoods in defense of their right-wing ideology

One of the most egregious offenders is Christian nationalist and Trump cultist pastor Rob McCoy, who has a history of making demonstrably false statements about the Founding era, as he did during a recent episode of his “Faith Forward” podcast.

McCoy—who has long urged conservative Christians to get more involved in politics and himself served on the city council in Thousand Oak, California, for several years only to resign in oppositionto the state’s COVID-19 restrictions—has deep ties to Christian nationalist activists Dan Wilks, David Lane, who attends McCoy’s church, and Charlie Kirk, whom McCoy was instrumentalin transforming into a full-blown Christian nationalist.

During his recent podcast, McCoy and his co-hosts were discussing efforts to post copies of the Ten Commandments in public schools across the country. McCoy insisted that such efforts were perfectly constitutional because, he said, “in the Northwest Ordinance, you couldn’t become a state in the union unless you taught the Bible in schools.”

The Northwest Ordinance required nothing of the sort.

Why do they lie? Because they’re about maintaining a consistent story about their tribe, their culture, in its opposition to the threatening, dangerous outer world. The idea of a cultural story or history that is consistent with objective reality is a irrelevant to them.

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Again, analogously. Misinformation is irrelevant and dangerous to one’s cultural stories, including the modern ones. Make fake news great again.

NY Times, Steven Lee Myers, 15 May 2025: Trump Administration Cancels Scores of Grants to Study Online Misinformation, subtitled “Federal agencies say that by axing the funding they are protecting the First Amendment. Critics see it as stifling scientific inquiry into sources of harmful online content.”

he Trump administration has sharply expanded its campaign against experts who track misinformation and other harmful content online, abruptly canceling scores of scientific research grants at universities across the country.

The grants funded research into topics like ways to evade censors in China. One grant at the Rochester Institute of Technology, for example, sought to design a tool to detect fabricated videos or photos generated by artificial intelligence. Another, at Kent State University in Ohio, studied how malign actors posing as ordinary users manipulate information on social media.

Officials at the Pentagon, the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation contend that the research has resulted in the censorship of conservative Americans online, though there is no evidence any of the studies resulted in that.

Well, maybe that’s because conservatives are the ones spreading the misinformation, which seems obvious to so many of us.

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I get lots of spam to this blog, much of it in Cyrillic text, and almost never any legitimate comments. Among the spam comments are a few that are obviously AI generated. Here’s an example of a comment two days ago, after I posted about the Tim Urban book WHAT’S OUR PROBLEM?, that I’d mentioned once before in December.

It’s interesting that you came back to the book months after first mentioning it—there’s something about Urban’s work that tends to linger like that. Looking forward to reading your deeper take, especially on how the book balances depth with accessibility.

And the sender is someone with API in their name; obviously I won’t reproduced it. Notice how the message seems to relate to my post, without really saying anything.

If you are a real person, check out my blog and post a comment.

Posted in Conservative Resistance, conservatives, Lunacy, Politics | Comments Off on The Plane. George Saunders. Lying. And AI spam.

John Scalzi, WHEN THE MOON HITS YOUR EYE

(Tor, March 2025, 323pp)

John Scalzi is one of the most popular of current science fiction writers, even as he’s not regarded, I think, as a *serious* sf writer by the critics or even readers. He’s entertaining, often humorous or even snarky, and he reworks ideas from traditional sf. His most popular works include a series of space opera novels that began with his first, OLD MAN’S WAR, and a pseudo-parody of Star Trek called REDSHIRTS. He writes in a classic sf mode: take a premise, and see where it goes.

John Scalzi’s latest is, like his two previous novels (THE KAIJU PRESERVATION SOCIETY and STARTER VILLAIN), a lot of fun, superficially lightweight but with some deep undercurrents. All three books have wacky premises — an alternate Earth with flying dragons, and talking cats, in the earlier books — that nevertheless play them out cleverly and honestly.

Here the premise is right on the dust jacket: the moon has turned to cheese. What could that mean exactly? Would Scalzi play it for laughs, or do some honest extrapolation. How would this be discovered? Would Scalzi take into account whether or how this would change the moon’s orbit? Would its brightness change? And so on and so on. These are actually the things I thought about as I began the book.

So yes, Scalzi takes all that into account, fairly quickly in order to get it out of the way. And how is this transformation discovered? How does the story begin? When staff at a museum holding one of the chunks of rock returned by the astronauts who landed on the moon looks different. They open the case… and notice the sample’s smell.

That’s just the beginning of a book that shows how a skilled and savvy science fiction writer can take a premise, even a frivolous one like the one here, and wring out it of it every possible implication: its affect on many different kinds of people, its metaphysical significance, its cultural impacts.

The story follows various characters — those museum staff, people in the white house, astronauts in Houston whose mission are abrupt cancelled, a retired philosophy in small town Oklahoma, a megalomanic (Elon-Musk-style) billionaire who tries to evade NASA and fly to the cheese moon himself, a writer of popular science books, Hollywood screenwriters pitching stories, even the staff of two rival cheese shops in Madison, Wisconsin — as events unfold.

(Getting slightly spoilery from here on.)

Scalzi’s especially good at imagining these various situation and characters, as they react to the major development of the book: as the moon, now composed of cheese, which is softer than rock, begins to collapse in on itself; it heats up and shoots cheese-blob geysers into space, one of which is set to hit the Earth in two years. So now society takes stock and begins to tremble to a halt. What’s the use of doing anything if everyone will be dead in two years? A young writer can’t finish her novel with so little time left. A former rock star in Hawaii prepares to kill himself. A preacher in a small church in Iowa speaks honestly, for once. More than in his earlier books, Scalzi manages to vary his tone and play scenes out from the perspectives of these different characters, modulating from humor to pathos.

We have to wonder, as the book goes on, if there will ever be an “explanation” for why the moon turned to cheese in the first place. Alien intervention, perhaps?

Not really. Instead, we get a new surprise, which I won’t spell out, but which may or may not provide an answer. And it anchors the book to concerns of the present 21st-century moment in a way that most of his books are not. How do we know what we know? How do we know we aren’t being tricked? Would people in a future post-apocalyptic world believe there were ever such things as airplanes? Scalzi’s conceit here is very clever, and it satisfies without providing any clean “explanation.” It allows Scalzi to have his premise, and eat it too.

Posted in Book Notes, science fiction | Comments Off on John Scalzi, WHEN THE MOON HITS YOUR EYE

Current Politics as Reflections of Human Nature

  • My daily routine;
  • How Trump would be king and end the rule of law in America, and how this is understandable given base human nature;
  • Paul Krugman on the existential threat of climate change, that conservatives deny or simply do not understand;
  • How the Supreme Court is driving a return to patriarchy, and the conservative drive to preserve the best traditions of the past, which turn out to be tribalistic, pre-Enlightenment, ideas.
– – –

Most of my days are split into three segments. In the mornings after breakfast I spend up to an hour checking some two dozen websites that I check virtually every day, from Slate and Salon and The Atlantic, to Joe.My.God and Jerry Coyne and Big Think, to OnlySky and Right Wing Watch and File 770, plus Facebook and Gmail. From them I collect notable items as links in a running Word document (used to be in Wordpad).

Then I go about my day, working sfadb.com or reading books or writing bits of my own book, or going on walks or hikes and making trips to the supermarket. The parts about books concern issues more abstruse and intellectual and fundamental than the scary vagaries of politics.

And near the end of the day I return to the links I collected in the morning, review them and decide what to write up in the day’s blog post. Most of the time, lately, it’s about the current American political scene. Not every day. But again today.

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Not news, but it would be irresponsible not to keep pointing this out.

The Atlantic, J. Michael Luttig, 14 May 2025: The End of Rule of Law in America, subtitled “The 47th president seems to wish he were king—and he is willing to destroy what is precious about this country to get what he wants.”

The president of the United States appears to have long ago forgotten that Americans fought the Revolutionary War not merely to secure their independence from the British monarchy but to establish a government of laws, not of men, so that they and future generations of Americans would never again be subject to the whims of a tyrannical king. As Thomas Paine wrote in Common Sense in 1776, “For as in absolute governments the king is law, so in free countries the law ought to be king; and there ought to be no other.”

Donald Trump seems also not to understand John Adams’s fundamental observation about the new nation that came into the world that same year. Just last month, an interviewer from Time magazine asked the president in the Oval Office, “Mr. President, you were showing us the new paintings you have behind us. You put all these new portraits. One of them includes John Adams. John Adams said we’re a government ruled by laws, not by men. Do you agree with that?” To which the president replied: “John Adams said that? Where was the painting?”

When the interviewer pointed to the portrait, Trump asked: “We’re a government ruled by laws, not by men? Well, I think we’re a government ruled by law, but you know, somebody has to administer the law. So therefore men, certainly, men and women, certainly play a role in it. I wouldn’t agree with it 100 percent. We are a government where men are involved in the process of law, and ideally, you’re going to have honest men like me.”

And earlier this month, a television journalist asked Trump the simple question “Don’t you need to uphold the Constitution of the United States as president?” Astonishingly, the president answered, “I don’t know.” The interviewer then asked, “Don’t you agree that every person in the United States is entitled to due process?” The president again replied, “I don’t know.”

This is not a man who respects the rule of law, nor one who seeks to understand it.

Once again, this is understandable through acknowledgment of base human nature, which is tribal and authoritarian, on the one hand, and the systems humans have invented in recent centuries to overcome those primitive impulses in order to build a society bigger than a tribe, a society that fairly deals with many more people than would be in a single tribe. Driven by the expansion of humanity around the world, and the practical necessity of rival tribes needing to get along with one another.

For the almost 250 years since the founding of this nation, America has been the beacon of freedom to the world because of its democracy and rule of law. Our system of checks and balances has been strained before, but democracy—government by the people—and the rule of law have always won the day. Until now, that is. America will never again be that same beacon to the world, because the president of the United States has subverted America’s democracy and corrupted its rule of law.

Until Trump exits public life altogether, it cannot be said either that America is a thriving democracy or that it has a government “of laws, not of men.”

A very long article about how things are falling apart, American ideals are falling apart, under Trump. The evidence is all there; yet so many people refuse to see it, or don’t care.

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Existential threats are still out there, despite Trump and MAGA denialism.

Paul Krugman, 14 May 2025: Is This the Year We Doom Civilization?, subtitled “We may be losing our last, best chance to limit climate change”

On Monday House Republicans released the final parts of their proposed tax and budget bill — and it’s the stuff of nightmares. As Bobby Kogan of the Center for American Progress documents, the bill would impose the largest cuts to Medicaid and SNAP — the program formerly known as food stamps — in history. Millions of low-income Americans would lose health coverage; millions would go hungry. Many of those suffering would be children.

The purpose of these cuts, sadism aside, would be to partially offset the cost of huge tax cuts for the rich — cuts that would still explode the budget deficit. The cruelty is mind-boggling. In fact, I have both a suggestion and a prediction for major media organizations: I’d like to see them do focus groups with ordinary voters, describing these plans. My prediction, based on what we’ve seen in the past, is that many voters will simply refuse to believe the policy descriptions, insisting that elected officials can’t possibly be that vicious.

But they can be and are.

Making the point that the oil and gas industries spend much more to support Republican candidates than Democratic ones. While alternative energy mostly supports Democrats.

This is, in my worldview, the inability of conservatives to consider long-term consequences, and to prioritize anything that will make them lots of money before the next election. It’s a pattern that happens over and over again.

Why does MAGA hate renewables? They consider them woke because they help fight climate change, which they insist is a hoax. And they’re cleaner than burning fossil fuels, which means that they aren’t manly.

It’s all kind of funny — or would be if it weren’t so tragic.

At this point there’s no legitimate way to deny that man-made climate change is an existential threat. According to researchers at NASA — whose work is, of course, on the chopping block — 2024 was the warmest year on record. But the politics of climate action have always been extremely difficult. The threat isn’t always obvious, since there are still cold days; it’s global, not local; and it’s long-term, with the big payoffs to doing something decades in the future.

Again, there’s that tribal mindset about manliness, and the inability to understand long-term thinking. Do conservatives not realize the consequences of climate change on their grandchildren? Apparently not.

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Conservatives aren’t about preserving the best traditions and ideas of the past, as they claim. As I’ve mentioned before, they’re about restoring the traditions and ideas that preceded the Enlightenment, the Scientific Revolution, and the rules of law as enshrined in the US Constitution. They strive to return to a tribalistic way of life. (Well, I suppose they do think that way of life as being the best of the past.) This is the inescapable allure of evolutionary human nature.

Slate, Leah Litman, 13 May 2025: The Supreme Court’s Radical Right Turn Is About Restoring Patriarchy, Plain and Simple

This is an excerpt from Litman’s book Lawless: How the Supreme Court Runs on Conservative Grievance, Fringe Theories, and Bad Vibes

As it happens — I am only just now making the connection — she was a guest on this morning’s KQED Forum show, which I listened to with half-attention as I was updating my sfadb.com site. I remember thinking how well-spoken she was, and does she have a book? Without realizing I’d collected the link to this Slate piece an hour before.

(Why is Ryan Gosling in the photo collage? It took me a moment. The Barbie movie! Patriarchy! I thought it was a brilliant movie; others, of course, hated it.)

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Enough for today. I always have more collected links than I have time to post. But at some point I have to return to my core mission.

Posted in Conservative Resistance, conservatives, Human Nature, Morality, Personal history, Politics | Comments Off on Current Politics as Reflections of Human Nature

We’re Living in an Age of Regression

  • In Trump’s America, it’s every parent and child out for themselves;
  • Who decides who’s Christian? The government?
  • Fox News says the Qatari bribe to Trump is fine because FDR gave three planes to the Saudis… 80 years ago;
  • Robert Reich responds to RFK Jr. about Trump and oligarchs;
  • And Günter Wand conducts the apocalyptic finale of Bruckner’s 8th.
– – –

Another sign of the regressive nature of Trump and MAGA. There is no society; we’re all a bunch of self-interested individuals in competition with each other. Tribalism. So much for the dreams of the Founders.

NY Times, guest essay by Pepper Stetler, 11 May 2025: In Trump’s America, All Parents and Children for Themselves

For almost 50 years, parents of students with disabilities have relied on federal oversight to ensure that their children receive a fair education. But under the proposed budget, money earmarked for the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) comes with a promise to limit the federal government’s role in education and provide states with greater flexibility, which could mean drastically reducing oversight of how states use that money.

To me and many other parents of the 7.5 million public school students in the country served by IDEA, Mr. Trump’s efforts to eliminate the Department of Education and potentially just give IDEA funding directly to the states is our worst nightmare.

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Who decides? That was the point of keeping religion out of government, and vice versa.

The Atlantic, Elizabeth Bruenig, 12 May 2025: Who Counts as Christian? subtitled “A new initiative will necessitate that the Trump administration makes difficult judgment calls about the faith.”

During his campaign, Donald Trump told Christian supporters that if he became president, they would never have to vote again, because “we’ll have it fixed so good.” Now he’s trying to follow through on his promise by establishing a task force charged with “eradicating anti-Christian bias.” But Christians shouldn’t conclude that this new commission will necessarily defend their interests, let alone fix it “so good.” Eliminating anti-Christian bias will require the task force (and thereby the government) to rule on what exactly constitutes authentic Christian belief and practice—not a straightforward determination to make, nor one that should be entrusted to the Trump administration.

With examples that suggest Christians should be let off the hook for violating laws that anyone else would be arrested for.

This passage is striking, for revealing how quickly a social trend can happen.

There was a time when American Christianity and the liberal state were less frequently in conflict because Christianity was so overwhelmingly dominant in society. But the recent decline of Christianity has changed that. In 1980, more than 90 percent of Americans identified themselves as Christian; today, only 62 percent say they’re followers of Christ. And though recent research suggests that the long-term decrease in Christian affiliation may have halted, the story of the past half century of American Christianity must be read through the lens of these gradual losses and their consequences. The faith no longer has the near-total sociocultural hegemony over American life that it once enjoyed; largely gone are the days of routine prayers and Bible readings in public schools, the suspension of commerce on Sundays, and the broad assumption that whoever you happen to meet will almost certainly be Christian.

Nothing is stable in human affairs. Oh, maybe for a few hundred years, or even a couple thousand. While reality endures.

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More about that Qatari plane. Bribe.

Media Matters, Matt Gertz, 12 May 2025: Fox’s comically pathetic spin for a foreign government gifting Trump a $400 million plane

Because it isn’t the first time a government has given away a plane. It happened 80 years ago!

“Well, Brian, it’s not the first time we’ve had airline diplomacy in the region,” Tomlinson replied. “Let’s go back to after the Yalta Conference, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt gifted three airliners to the Saudis to kickstart Saudi airlines. So this has happened before.”

That Tomlinson had to go back 80 years to identify a point of comparison, only to come up with something so absurdly off-base, is pretty damning.

See previous post summarizing a portion of that Tim Urban book. This is the attorney spin, with Fox acting like Trump’s attorney: It’s their job to win, nothing can alter their allegiance, and they know their conclusion in advance.

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Robert Reich, 13 May 2025: The single stupidest statement about Trump ever made, subtitled “RFK Jr. doesn’t just kiss Trump’s derriere. He lies through his teeth.”

It begins:

RFK Jr.: “Elizabeth Warren or Robert Reich saying that President Trump is on the side of the oligarchs, there has never been a president more willing to stand up to the oligarchs than President Donald Trump.”

Friends,

I can take only so much sycophantic bullsh*t from Trump’s Cabinet, but When RFK Jr. says there’s never been a president more willing to stand up to the oligarchs than President Donald Trump, I’ve got to respond.

It’s the oligarchy that put Trump into the presidency. He’s doing their work.

A half-century ago, when America had a large and growing middle class, those on the “left” wanted stronger social safety nets and more public investment in schools, roads, and research. Those on the “right” sought greater reliance on the free market.

But as power and wealth have moved to the top, everyone else — whether on the old right or the old left — has become disempowered and less secure.

Today the great divide is not between left and right. It’s between democracy and oligarchy.

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Democracy and the rule of law are *hard*. Humans are inclined to fall back to default human nature, in which tribes were led by authoritarian leaders, and the myths of each tribe were their common reality.

(Similarly: science fiction is hard; fantasy is easy. Science is hard; religion is easy. And so on.)

It’s remarkable that humans, living in tribes in an ancient environment, managed to developed cognitive skills that have enabled us to think new things beyond rote survival. How did this happen? Bronowski suggested it was a series of climate changes. Change, throughout history, is what has driven evolution.

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The final movement of Bruckner’s 8th has been described as a vision of the apocalypse.

Channeling, perhaps, Jim Svejda, about his description of this movement. As it happens, my set of Bruckner symphonies are those released in the ’70s and ’80s by EMI, conducted by Günter Wand. Who here is, obviously, much older. Perhaps alarmingly so.

Bruckner’s symphonies are like cathedrals. All very similar, but each one slightly different, and the later ones steadily more grand.

Posted in authoritarianism, Conservative Resistance, Culture, Decline, Evolution, Human Nature, Human Progress, Music | Comments Off on We’re Living in an Age of Regression

Tim Urban, WHAT’S OUR PROBLEM?, post 1

(Wait But Why, 2024, 584pp, including 112pp of characters, acknowledgements, notes, bibliography, and bio)

I wrote about this book back in December, before deciding to buy it. Which I did despite some cautionary signs: it’s apparently self-published, it’s enormous, it’s expensive ($50), the only blurbs are by semi-celebrities like Lex Fridman, Andrew Yang, and Elon Musk (!). Worse, upon seeing the actual book, there’s *no index!*. Perhaps a consequence of its being self-published. (Though there are nearly 100 pages of detailed notes, keyed to the main text by page numbers.) On the other hand, he has a “long-form” blog and did a popular TED talk a while back and has some 600K followers.

Also, as I said in that previous post, the topics in the book that I could see via the Amazon preview are very similar to topics I’m interested in on this blog, if perhaps somewhat simplified and popularized, via all sorts of colorful line-drawings and cartoons.

Last month I read about the first 130 pages, then set it down for a while. There’s actually enough of substance in the book so far that I wanted to summarize the beginning before continuing on. The first hundred pages defines his terms, so to speak. And lays out his plan.

*

Introduction: The Big Picture

Beginning with this striking diagram:

In several books read recently there has been the idea of a “base” human nature, one that evolved over hundreds of thousands or even millions of years in the ancestral or Savannah environment, optimized for tribal life, in contrast to a more “advanced” or “cosmopolitan” human nature, one arguably more suitable to the global society humans have created in which once isolated tribes have become forced to deal with one another, many learning how to do so for their mutual benefit. But this can’t be quite right. The implication that some higher form of human nature has ‘evolved’ can’t be true because there hasn’t been time, over the past few thousand years, for such evolution to take place. (If I implied such a thing myself, that was an error.) More likely the situation is that there is a range of human attitudes — think Haidt and others — that amounts to built-in diversity. That range served well in the ancestral environment, given the range of different situations that occurred then. But now the environment has changed, misaligning those two ranges. And so there now many people not comfortable living in the modern environment.

Moving on. Author identifies the problem.

1, Technology is exponential. For most of history one year was like the next. Not true for the past couple ‘pages’ in our book. The last page is very different from all those before—chart, p4.
2, More technology means higher stakes. It means more good times, but also badder bad times. We’ve had world wars and now climate change. The pace of change keep dizzying.
3, My society is currently acting like a poopy-pantsed four-year-old who dropped its ice cream. It seems we’re not getting more mature; we’re getting more childish. We’re going backward in wisdom.

Ch1, The Ladder

The author identifies dueling takes on human nature, analogous to the takes by Jonathan Haidt, Daniel Kahneman, Joshua Greene, George Lakoff, and others. My paraphrases.

The PRIMITIVE MIND is “a set of coded instructions for how to be a successful animal in the animal’s nature habitat.” p14. The coder is natural selection. Occasional bugs make this software better. An animal’s software is actually optimized for the environment of its ancestors, which is OK as long as the environment changes very slowly. But humans, very quickly, have created a new environment called civilization. While our brains are optimized for our old habitat. Like moths thinking a streetlamp is the moon.

There’s also a HIGHER MIND, which can think outside itself and self-reflect and get wiser with experience. P16. It can see the world as it is, and try to behave accordingly. The primitive mind takes care of eating and sleeping, which higher mind is fine with, when it makes sense. When primitive mind takes change, you drift over into a no-sense zone. Like giving into temptation to buy a bag of candy. In the ancient world there was no processed food.

Then: the tug of war between these two minds can be represented as a four-step Ladder, p19.

  • Higher mind in control
  • Higher mind has the edge
  • Primitive mind has the edge
  • Primitive mind in control

Higher mind doesn’t mind the primitive mind having its fun, but when primitive mind is riled up, it fills the mind with smoky fog, dulling the consciousness, and higher mind. We become shortsighted and small-minded, petty, given to hypocrisy; our worst selves.

From these author developed an Idea Spectrum, a way to depict the range of opinions on a particular topic. The Higher Mind knows that humans are often delusional, and tries to learn more to become less ignorant. Primitive Mind disagrees; it’s concerned with beliefs that generate survival behavior, whether or not they’re true. And these are acquired in early life from family and community, and treat them as sacred objects. Higher Mind seeks truth; Primitive Mind seeks confirmation of existing beliefs. The four rungs on the Ladder correspond to four ways of forming beliefs.

(These are depicted with various diagrams. I’ll just summarize in words.)

Rung 1: Thinking like a scientist. You start with “I don’t know” and follow evidence wherever it takes you. You form a hypothesis: gather information, evaluate information (largely about knowing who to trust, and mastering the art of skepticism), then puzzle together a hypothesis. Express this idea publicly, and get responses. They’d welcome being wrong. (Quote from Adam Grant in Think Again). They search for the humility sweet spot between arrogance and insecurity, p28. Knowing all beliefs are subject to change by changing times or new evidence. It’s hard to do all this.

Rung 2: Thinking like a sports fan. Now you have a goal in mind, and are subject to motivated reasoning. And confirmation bias. This is Primitive Mind at work. You alternate between ‘can I believe it?’ for confirmation, and ‘must I believe it?’ when hearing dissent. You tend toward the arrogant side of conviction; it feels good to think that you are right. Once your motivation passes your interest in truth, you’re in ‘Unconvinceable Land’ where people can’t be persuaded by any amount of evidence. Religion, ideology, dogma.

Rung 3: Thinking like an attorney. It’s their job to win, and nothing can alter their allegiance. You don’t start at point A, you start at B, knowing your conclusion. In the real world a courtroom hosts both sides of a case, not just one. Attorneys will never admit a point and consider that they’re wrong.

Rung 4, Thinking like a zealot. Their sacred ideas are precious babies to be adored and protected. Challenges to their beliefs are taken as personal insults. The is the Primitive Mind on overdrive. Zealots live in simple, crisp, black and white worlds.

These four can be grouped into high-rung thinking and low-rung thinking. Each of us is a mix.

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That’s only through page 37. What I like about the book is that he starts with basic principles — his primitive mind and higher mind — and extrapolates them into a range of behaviors of people. A bit like building up a geometry from postulates.

Further topics in this long book include “liberal games” (that is building systems of rules to manage primitive impulses, like the US Constitution was intended to do), the downward spiral of tribalism, the rise of the golem (i.e. the Republican party since the 60s), social justice, colleges, society, and ideas about how to change course. Here’s the author’s diagram of the book:

Posted in Book Notes, conservatives, Culture, Human Nature, Human Progress | Comments Off on Tim Urban, WHAT’S OUR PROBLEM?, post 1

Palace in the Sky, For the One

  • Several items today about the Trump administration’s acceptance from Qatar of a $400 million luxury 747, for Trump’s personal use;
  • How Trump shrugs off intelligence briefings; he knows what he knows because he’s smart;
  • How the story of a woman who struggled to get a job at NASA was taken down, and then she was fired, because DEI;
  • Another take on why the current administration is defunding the investments into technology and innovation that have made America great.
  • And so, it’s hard to be unaware that Americans are living in a fading nation.
– – –

The latest example of egregious behavior by Trump that most of the MAGA folks don’t care about is the gift by Qatar of a $400 million tricked-out Boeing 747, to serve as Trump’s Air Force One stand-in. Presidents aren’t suppose to get big gifts like this. It’s in the Constitution: the Emoluments Clause. But clearly Trump and MAGA do not care about the Constitution. And the right lawyers can justify anything.

ABC News, 11 May 2025: Trump administration poised to accept ‘palace in the sky’ as a gift for Trump from Qatar: Sources, subtitled “The luxury jumbo jet is to be used as Air Force One, sources told ABC News.”

In what may be the most valuable gift ever extended to the United States from a foreign government, the Trump administration is preparing to accept a super luxury Boeing 747-8 jumbo jet from the royal family of Qatar — a gift that is to be available for use by President Donald Trump as the new Air Force One until shortly before he leaves office, at which time ownership of the plane will be transferred to the Trump presidential library foundation, sources familiar with the proposed arrangement told ABC News.

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Slate, Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern, 12 May 2025: Donald Trump’s Corruption Reaches New Heights, subtitled “His ‘flying palace’ scheme could not be more brazen.”

Attorney General Pam Bondi—whom Trump also evidently gets to use and keep for life—told ABC news that Trump’s top White House lawyer, David Warrington, had determined this gift is “legally permissible” because it is being directed to the United States Air Force and will then be transferred to Trump’s presidential library foundation. (Bondi herself formerly received $115,000 a month to lobby on behalf of Qatar.) These very real, very serious lawyers also determined that acceptance of the plane does not constitute a bribe because the gift does not hinge on an official act. Bondi provided a legal memorandum addressing all of these issues to the White House counsel’s office last week, after Warrington asked her about the legality of the Pentagon accepting a massive palace in the sky. The memo has not yet been released to the public, quite possibly because its reasoning would fall apart upon even the slightest independent inspection.

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The Bulwark, William Kristol, 12 May 2025: A Garish, Outlandish, Stunningly Corrupt Act, subtitled “Trump wants Qatar to gift him a shiny new Air Force One because he thinks the Emoluments Clause is for suckers.”

I’m old enough to remember when this was a republic. A proud republic. We were proud to be different from the principalities and powers of the old world. We were confident of our superiority to the hereditary aristocracies and monarchies that had dominated political life everywhere on the globe, and that still did in many places.

In those older and simpler days we spoke of and even believed in republican virtue.

… [[ details about emoluments ]] …

How naïve we were back then.

Now, the president of the United States is boasting of receiving as a gift a luxury Boeing 747-8 plane from the Qatari royal family. The plane will be upgraded to serve not as the Air Force One but as his Air Force One, since it will only be available for use by the government of the United States during his time in office. It will then revert to him—well, nominally to his presidential library, but it will of course be totally at his disposal—after he leaves office.

Trump responds to critics about how the plane is “FREE” and “The Dems are World Class Losers!!!”

This is the voice of old-world autocracy. Those who take seriously the constraints and requirements of republican government are fools. Those who care that our republican government not be dependent on foreign states, that our elected leaders not take favors from foreign princes, they are losers.

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Slate, Fred Kaplan, 12 May 2025: The Free Plane Trump Wants to Accept Might Just Be a Trojan Horse, subtitled “The violation of ethical norms isn’t the only jaw-dropping part of this deal.”

Air Force One is equipped with everything that a president needs in the air—all the communications gear, intelligence files, and other top-secret paraphernalia that he or she would have on the ground. And of course, all the aides traveling along would have their phones as well.

One can only wonder how many listening devices and cybertools the Qataris will plant inside that plane before turning it over to the White House.

Recalling the US embassy in Moscow that the Russians offered to build, back in the 1970s, with the same problem.

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JMG, 12 May 2025: MSNBC: Trump Has Long History Of Lying About Planes

Quoting Steve Benen at MSNBC

In Donald Trump’s first term, the president cultivated an unexpectedly amusing list of incidents related to airplanes. I actually maintained a list, documenting a curious array of stories in which the Republican suggested that F-35s are literally invisible, whined about the complexity of piloting, referenced F-52s that didn’t exist outside of video games, complained to members of Congress that the emir of Kuwait’s plane was bigger than his, and (among other things) got caught lying about Japan buying U.S. fighter jets and lying about Finland doing the same thing. In his second term, the news at the intersection of Trump and planes is far less funny.

Trump lives in a fantasy world.

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Conservatives, including Trump, know what they know, and don’t need any new “information.”

MSNBC, Maddow Blog, Steven Benen, 12 May 2025: Trump reportedly shrugs off intelligence briefings he needs, but doesn’t want, subtitled “In his first term, the president blew off intelligence briefings that he needed to govern. The problem is even worse in his second term.”

Beginning with Kash Patel.

It’s worth emphasizing that different presidents have approached these briefings in different ways. George W. Bush received intelligence briefings on a nearly daily basis. Barack Obama received briefings roughly every other day, but he was known to be a voracious reader of the written President’s Daily Brief (often referred to as the PDB). Joe Biden received an in-person briefing once or twice a week, but like Obama, he was also known to read the PDB briefing book.

Trump, meanwhile, reportedly doesn’t read the PDB, and if the Politico report is accurate, he’s receiving in-person briefings roughly once every 10 days.

Broadly speaking, a couple of angles are worth keeping in mind in response to reporting like this. The first is probably obvious: Trump is dealing with serious national security challenges — war in Ukraine, a crisis in the Middle East, China expanding its global influence, domestic security threats, et al. — and the United States is being led by an incurious former television personality who desperately needs — but apparently isn’t getting — valuable information that would lead to better decision-making.

Less obvious, however, is the pattern: The problem isn’t just that Trump is avoiding intelligence he needs; the problem is made worse by the fact that Trump has always avoided intelligence he needs.

During his transition process in 2016, for example, Trump skipped nearly all of his intelligence briefings. Asked why, the Republican told Fox News in December 2016, “Well, I get it when I need it. … I don’t have to be told — you know, I’m, like, a smart person.”

Sigh. Dunning-Kruger. And even so, smart is not well-informed. He’s an idiot.

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More about the current administration’s cruelty (which is the point, said Adam Serwer).

Michael Swanwick posted this on Facebook today, with this comment:

This woman went from extreme poverty–she lived under a bridge for three years–to a job at NASA. They put up a page celebrating her determination to get an education and then a position. Then the administration decided that since she was a black woman, that was DEI, and took down the page. And then they fired her.

Space.com, Josh Dinner, 12 May 2025: NASA celebrated this employee’s story of resilience, then tried to scrub it from the internet. Then fired her., subtitled “It feels like everything that I worked for has been taken down little by little.”

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And one more about the current administration tearing down what has made the US great. (Are they agents of a foreign power intent on taking America down? Or mindless penny-pinchers heedless of anything but short-term consequences?)

Washington Post, opinion by Bina Venkataraman, 12 May 2025: RIP American innovation, subtitled “Why destroy the funding that made the United States a leader in technology and invention?”

Whether they are geeks in garages or eggheads in university labs, American entrepreneurs have built their ideas and fortunes on the back of basic research supported by taxpayers, who then reap the rewards. It’s not an accident of geography or artifact of culture that the United States has bred some of the best inventors of the 20th and 21st century. The hidden engine of the country’s illustrious track record has been the grants given to academic researchers by federal agencies that the U.S. DOGE Service has been decimating and that President Donald Trump proposes to shrink catastrophically in the next budget.

Concluding, many paragraphs later,

There is no plainer betrayal of the MAGA promise to restore the nation’s storied past than to destroy this legacy of invention. What we’re losing is far more important, however, than the pride one felt being part of that America. We’re losing the country’s future.­

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It’s by now hard to be unaware that we’re living in a fading nation. And it’s hard to imagine how this might reverse itself.

Posted in authoritarianism, Conservative Resistance, Culture, Decline, Politics | Comments Off on Palace in the Sky, For the One