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.
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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.
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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.
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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!

\

NY Times, editorial board, 5 Aug 2025: This Isn’t Governing. It’s a Tantrum.
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Economics and Flipping the Board

  • How Trump is economically illiterate;
  • Personal aside about buying my first car in 1982;
  • Wondering again if humanity has hit a conceptual limit;
  • For example: Trump claims prices have been cut by 1500%;
  • An essay by George A. Akerlof asks, “What Do We Do When the President Acts Like a 5-Year-Old?”
  • With thoughts about how conservatives mistrust the “deep state.”
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I never took an economics course in college. But most of what I’ve learned about everything, except for the relatively basic matters of physics, chemistry, math, and music, that I learned in college, I’ve learned on my own in adulthood, over the past 45 years. And I’ve read lots of essays, even a few books, about economic subjects and how opinions split along political lines (i.e. fact- vs ideologically-driven). These days I trust Paul Krugman and Robert Reich on economic matters.

NY Times, guest essay by Steve Rattner, 4 Aug 2025: Our President Is Economically Illiterate
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We’re Living in a World of Mad Hatters

  • David Brin on the red state/blue state divide;
  • The authors of a report about the 2016 election set the record straight, to correct Tulsi Gabbard, and all the Fox News coverage of her;
  • Tom Nichols on the latest Trump distraction — the nuclear sabre;
  • More about the administration’s forbidden words;
  • How other nations who have suppressed real economic data have worked out;
  • And my comments from Facebook on Saturday about the new Hofstadter book.
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Let’s lead with another comment by David Brin on Facebook, saying something he’s said before, many times, on his blog. He’s commenting about another post with this graphic from Emelie Rose Barg.

David Brin on Facebook 3 Aug 2025

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Undermining and Discrediting

  • More about Trump’s firing of the head of Bureau of Labor Statistics, with responses at Slate, from David Brin, The Atlantic, PolitiFact, Heather Cox Richardson, and Robert Reich;
  • How Trump is now extorting UCLA;
  • How Trump had references to his impeachment removed from the Smithsonian.
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Where we are.

Slate, Nitish Pahwa, 1 Aug 2025: Yes, Trump Firing the BLS Commissioner Is Bad. Really Bad., subtitled “Her agency told the truth about Trump’s floundering economy. That was more than the aspiring autocrat could tolerate.”
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Creeping Totalitarianism

  • Trump fires the messenger of bad news about his economy, while Paul Krugman anticipates cooked books;
  • The Corporation for Public Broadcasting is shutting down;
  • And Amanda Marcotte on the idea of religious proselytizing in the workplace.
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Shooting the messenger.

CNN, 1 Aug 2025: Trump fires labor statistics chief over weak jobs numbers, subtitled “The president accused her, without evidence, of manipulating the numbers for ‘political purposes’”

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All Things Pass, America Too, It Seems

  • The Atlantic’s Ross Andersen on how every scientific empire comes to end, with historical precedents;
  • E.J. Dionne Jr. about the drop in murder rate, speculating why;
  • Quick bits about religion as a mental disorder, how praying for the intervention of angels never works, and the amorality of ICE, who abduct people while leaving all their property, trucks and even dogs and cats, on the road, for anyone to take.
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America too is passing. And not due to some historical tide. America is abdicating. But in the long run, humanity will prevail, and America’s abdication will not matter.

The Atlantic, Ross Andersen, 31 Jul 2025: Every Scientific Empire Comes to an End, subtitled “America’s run as the premiere techno-superpower may be over.”

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The Outright Denial of the Scientific Consensus About Climate Change

  • Trump’s EPA now denies the worldwide scientific consensus about climate change;
  • The history of Trump’s fake history;
  • How Trump wins by suing institutions for absurd amounts and settling for relatively trivial amounts;
  • How Europe took Trump for a ride;
  • Robert Reich on what Trump thinks he’s doing;
  • And stories about the white-supremacist settlement in Arkansas.
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I mentioned this yesterday (posted this morning) but this is a big deal and deserves more notice. Let’s see, we’ve cancelled the insurance policies, taken out the smoke detectors, and now we’re tearing off our slate roof in favor of one with wood shingles. Because we don’t want any woke regulators telling us what kind of roofs we should have on our houses. Never mind the wildfires due to climate change, which we refuse to believe in.

NY Times, 29 Jul 2025: In Game-Changing Climate Rollback, E.P.A. Aims to Kill a Bedrock Scientific Finding, subtitled “The proposal is President Trump’s most consequential step yet to derail federal climate efforts and appears to represent a shift toward outright denial of the scientific consensus.”
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TV, Juan Crow, Facts and Nonexistent Things, Alfred Schnittke

  • Trump trusts only TV;
  • Heather Cox Richardson on how Republicans are digging into positions that are contradicted by facts;
  • How the Trump administration’s “Juan Crow” echoes “John Crow”;
  • More nonexistent things that can be banned;
  • Short items about disabling hurricane satellites, passing weather control bills, a CBS bias monitor, and revoking greenhouse regulations;
  • Alfred Schnittke’s Trio Sonata.
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Well, we already know he doesn’t read. Or attend daily briefings.

The Atlantic, David A. Graham, 28 Jul 2025: The Only Information Source Trump Trusts, subtitled “The president responds more to mass media than to the substance of underlying events.” [gift link]

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