Most Beliefs Aren’t About What’s Real, They’re About Conforming to Tribal Mythology

  • Three more core principles today, illustrated by an essay by a “former creationist” and how she found “following the science” clashed with her culture — and how this conflict is born of ancient biology;
  • How universities would like to teach how to think;
  • Paul Krugman on the Trump administration’s undermining American expertise, the latest play being the charge for H-1B visas;
  • Robert Reich on how the Trump administration “no longer has the smarts to publish facts”;
  • And JMG items. No, Kat Kerr did not ascend to Heaven to see God and Charlie Kirk.
– – –

Here’s a piece, apropos of the debut of the TV miniseries mentioned in the first paragraph, that illustrates three more core themes, or principles.

1, Honest appraisal of the evidence for disputed topics in science, from evolution to climate change to the global Earth to the efficacy of vaccines, is overwhelming that the consensus views on these topics are correct.
2, Rejection of or resistance to these conclusions is driven by any of various psychological biases, mostly the need not to challenge one’s community and its beliefs.
3, You can’t expect anyone to be convinced, or to change their minds, just by showing them the evidence and expecting them to understand it.

(And this is why ‘wisdom’ is a personal project, as I’ve said, and not the result of any group activity taking place in a sports stadium, a religious congregation, or a concert hall.)

Washington Post, Ella Al-Shamahi, 22 Sept 2025: I’m a former creationist. Here’s why ‘follow the science’ failed., subtitled “The moment I finally admitted that Darwin was right didn’t feel liberating. It felt like grief.”
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A Core Theme: The Mismatch of Human Nature

One of the emerging themes on this blog over the years is the idea that human nature evolved over millions of years to enable survival in an ancestral environment that most people no longer live in. In my own reading the idea of an actual human nature appeared first, e.g. in EO Wilson’s ON HUMAN NATURE and Stephen Pinker’s HOW THE MIND WORKS and THE BLANK SLATE, along with examination in modern culture of the consequences of the tendencies of that base human nature. Later came books that identified how those tendencies are increasingly unsuitable in the modern environment; e.g. tribalism/racism is a hindrance to large groups working together to fight existential threats. And even later came writers who distinguish between two, at least, poles of human nature, or expressions of human nature: one that clings to base tendencies (tribalism, et al), and another that is comfortable adjusting to the modern world. It’s not there’s any evolution going on here (not in 10,000 years); it’s that the diversity of human nature allows different groups reaching different conclusions to settle out in different directions. These are things I’ve pieced together myself over the past decade, without having read any general book or textbook on psychology.

But here’s piece in The Guardian that I saw linked today on Facebook that seems to summarize the entire issue in ways that have probably been common among evolutionary psychologists for decades.

The Guardian, Alex Curmi, 21 Sep 2025: How modern life makes us sick – and what to do about it, subtitled “From depression to obesity, the concept of ‘evolutionary mismatch’ can help foster self-compassion and point the way to a more rewarding existence”

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More Cautionary Traits

  • How the right sees enemies everywhere;
  • How Trump depicts immigrants as monsters;
  • Remember what Charlie Kirk said about Simone Biles?
  • Brief items;
  • NYT’s Ross Douthat tries to explain the conservative principles behind the Kimmel suspension.
– – –

 

Perhaps a synonym for conservative, in the sense of the political attitude, might be cautionary. For the moment.

The New Yorker, Jonathan Blitzer, 20 Sept 2025: Seeing Enemies Everywhere

Subtitle: The government’s working definition of “hate speech” now seems to include anything that offends Donald Trump personally—including late-night comedy.

The right seems to think that criticizing Charlie Kirk’s positions is the equivalent of “celebrating” his death.
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How Transgenders Trigger Conservatives

  • Two truths of Trumpists: nothing is ever their fault, their obsession with contamination;
  • Heritage wants to designate trans people as terrorists;
  • Republicans seem to have no principles except protecting the tribe: once they defended free speech, now, not so much;
  • Heather Cox Richardson on how Trump defines anyone he doesn’t like as “Democrats”;
  • Ted Cruz worries about FCC’s threats against ABC, but still approves of Jimmy Kimmel getting fired;
  • How Trump seems more concerned about his new ballroom than the death of Charlie Kirk.
– – –

Some psychological traits are considered to be conservative, others progressive, even though the individual traits themselves don’t necessarily have much to do with one another.

NY Times, opinion by Lydia Polgreen, 19 Sept 2025: The Fallout From Charlie Kirk’s Killing Reveals Two Truths of Trumpism [gift link]

This is about Charlie Kirk’s killing, the right’s hysteria about transgender people, and how these two things have come together.
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And Now It’s Jimmy Kimmel

  • Jimmy Kimmel pulled off air for comments about Charlie Kirk;
  • With comments by Adam Serwer and Zack Beauchamp;
  • And how a huge business deal is behind this;
  • NYT in 1939 describing how Joseph Goebbels did the same thing.
– – –

And so the authoritarian playbook continues. Latest victim: late-night TV host Jimmy Kimmel. (Whom I’m aware of though I’ve never watched his show.)

Salon, Heather Digby Parton, 18 Sept 2025: Jimmy Kimmel is the latest casualty in Trump’s war on media, subtitled “POTUS and his henchmen are intent on bringing the left to heel”

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MAGA and the Charlie Kirk Cult

  • Apparently “leftist” means not demonizing gays and transgender people, as Christians do;
  • How Charlie Kirk’s discourse favored conflict, not informed debate;
  • Some MAGA guy wants to perhaps kill 500,000 people in response to Charlie Kirk’s murder;
  • And Karoline Leavitt thinks an earthquake in Utah is a sign of God’s anger over the killing of Charlie Kirk.
– – –

 

So I gather that Utah Governor Cox and others in the GOP have concluded that the suspect in the Charlie Kirk killing exhibited “leftist ideology” simply because his posts on social media indicated that he supported gay rights and was living with a person undergoing gender transition. That is, being leftist means not hating gays and transgender people as much as MAGA conservatives do. That’s it. All other policies irrelevant.

Oh, and Bill Donohue, of the Catholic League, implicitly equates Charlie Kirk’s views with those of Christianity, at JMG: Donohue: “Kirk Was Killed Because He Was Christian”. Glad to clear that up.

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You have all these people (not just on the right) extolling how Charlie Kirk reached out to students by debating substantial issues. But he didn’t do that at all.

The Atlantic, David A. Graham, 16 Sept 2025: The Irony of Using Charlie Kirk’s Murder to Silence Debate, subtitled “The conservative activist couldn’t have risen to prominence without robust free speech.”

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Delusional, or Lying

  • The DOJ deletes a study showing that most domestic violence is from the right;
  • Trump et al knew this, but still pursue vengeance against the left;
  • The attorney general thinks hate speech is not covered by free speech;
  • The vice president endorses Charlie Kirk’s views;
  • How the idea of transgender people (and gays) shatters conservatives’ simplex thinking;
  • How conservatives use the word “evil”;
  • And a few JMG items.
– – –

Once again, as in most of my posts, these items aren’t about politics, per se. They’re about the limits and limitations of human nature, from which we may never escape. And the future of humanity is what science fiction is about.

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First, this afternoon:

404 Media, 16 Sept 2025: DOJ Deletes Study Showing Domestic Terrorists Are Most Often Right Wing

Subtitled “Following Charlie Kirk’s assassination and the Trump administration’s promise to go after the ‘radical left’ a study showing most domestic terrorism is far-right was disappeared.”

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Splits, Hypocrisy, and Bad-Faith Arguments

  • Firing people who quoted Charlie Kirk;
  • Items from JM about an arrest for “mocking” Charlie Kirk, how Kirk’s killer was “brainwashed” by college; how MTG wants to break up he US; how smart people don’t like Trump; Trump claims 300 million people died from drugs last year; and how all critics of Charlie Kirk should be fired;
  • Quoting David Gerrold about Kirk and his killer; Peter Coyote on Kirk’s record;
  • And how Kirk’s “prove me wrong” challenges were mostly stunts.
– – –

The themes today are about the continued demonization of “the Left” despite the identification of the Charlie Kirk shooter; and how the Right (as did Kirk) claims to valorize “free speech” while quelling anyone who says anything not nice about Charlie Kirk.

Boing Boing, Rob Beschizza, 1 Sep 2025: Washington Post fires black woman who quoted what Charlie Kirk said about black women

Conservatives and Republicans are virtually unanimous in calling for censorship, firings and even imprisonment for those criticizing or quoting Charlie Kirk after his death. As many of them cast themselves as “free speech” absolutists, the temptation is to accuse them of hypocrisy. But that would honor the false notion that they are failing to live up to standards they hold in good faith. The Kirk aftermath shows that they never believed any of it: speech is to them a prerogative. They have the freedom of it; others will hold their tongues.

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Jerry A. Coyne: FAITH VS. FACT, post 5 and last

Subtitled “Why Science and Religion are Incompatible”
(Viking, May 2015, xxii + 311pp, including 46pp of acknowledgements, notes, references,and index)

(Earlier: post 1; post 2; post 3; post 4)


Comments first this time:

The final chapter of this book asks, why does it matter? Whether science and religion are incompatible — or whether people reject fact in favor of faith?

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So Many Villains

  • More to the transgender-roommate story?
  • Media Matters summarizes the situation up to a couple days ago;
  • Despite the right’s affirmation of free speech, they are compiling lists of people critical of Charlie Kirk, and getting them fired;
  • How SF/F writer Catherynne M. Valente turned up on such a list retweeted by Elon Musk.
– – –

Well so there *is* something to the Charlie Kirk-killer transgender-roommate story! Still not a lot of detail. One could well say, so what? The right will be happy they found someone to blame that justifies their existing animosity. But why would this, or any other incident, implicate transgender people in general, any more than it would implicate young white males in general? That’s not how conservative psychology, which is prone to prejudice against entire groups, works, of course. And it’s not that surprising that something turned up in the suspect’s situation that conservatives could pin blame on, since there are so many things conservatives don’t like. (Including, for some, Mormons.)

NY Times, 14 Sept 2025: Kirk Shooting Suspect Held ‘Leftist Ideology,’ Utah Governor Says

Subtitle: “Gov. Spencer Cox said the suspect had been ‘radicalized,’ and noted he had a romantic partner who is transitioning from male to female who is cooperating fully with investigators.”

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