Ideology vs. Reality, Endlessly

Is this the core issue to rule them all? Since the survival of humanity seems to be in the balance?

Item’s today:

  • How the Supreme Court’s anti-LGBTQ case should never have been brought;
  • How the rise of the religious far right in Greece reflects the same priorities of basic human nature as those of the far right in the US;
  • Recalling a 2019 book’s description of humanity’s “three natures”;
  • And items about how apologizing makes you look weak; a witch hunt in Tennessee; and about liberal bias in the media as a right-wing myth.
  • Today’s YouTube music: Philip Glass’s Symphony #5, his greatest work.

Let’s start with this, further commentary about the Supreme Court case in which no one had actually asked the designer to do a gay website. There was no standing.

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Human History and World History: Two Perspectives

  • Carl Sagan on human history as “a slowly dawning awareness that we are members of a larger group” and how conservatives counter this;
  • Peter Turchin about his theory of world history and how he identifies the US as a plutocracy.

Let’s begin with this, a passage by Carl Sagan from his 1980 book COSMOS Continue reading

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Conservative “Intellectualism,” and Fear

Today:

  • A long article about “conservative intellectuals”;
  • How my attention to politics, especially to conservative antics, is actually all about science fiction, and its aspirations;
  • A couple items about the Supreme Court case that did not involve an actual gay person requesting a website.

I’m focusing on this first item today, which makes perfect sense given the understanding of human evolution and the basis of human morality in the ancestral environment, what I’ve been calling Savannah morality. Conservatism is never about basic principles that allow for adapting to changing circumstances, accommodating other people, or thinking things through to reach updated conclusions based on new evidence or changing circumstances; it’s always about basic principles to preserve the status quo, to shore up ancient verities that are never questioned, verities that made sense in the tribal environment, but which they don’t realize have become inoperative, even dangerous, in the modern global world.

Salon, Mike Lofgren, 1 Jul 2023: There’s no such thing as a conservative intellectual — only apologists for right-wing power, subtitled “From Burke to Buckley to Patrick Deneen, we’ve seen a 200-year history of defending the indefensible”

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The Supreme Court’s Conservative Rollback

Topics today:

  • This week’s Supreme Court decisions on affirmative action and discrimination against gays;
  • My wondering why such discrimination against, say, mixed-race couples, and people of other religions, isn’t also OK (or maybe it is?)
  • Republican hysteria about immigrants, whom they would “bomb”;
  • The long-noted influence of billionaires on Republican policies;
  • A pointer to a collection of SF links that I posted today at Locus Online

The big news in recent days has been results of several cases heard by the Supreme Court this term, and of course they were decided to the preferences of the conservative majority. Predictably. It’s always, to me, an indictment the entire system of law, that everyone supposedly reads the same laws and yet comes to conclusions reflecting their preconceived political biases. Always.

NY Times, Darren Walker, 30 Jun 2023: Repeal of Affirmative Action Is Only the Beginning
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Recent Headlines

Let’s round up some recent headlines, with minimal comments and quotes.

LA Times, LZ Granderson, 29 Jun 2023: Column: Sure, people are moving to Texas. But not for the reasons Gov. Greg Abbott claims

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Conceptions of Aging, and of Traveling

  • The South Korean tradition of aging is giving way to the tradition of the rest of the world;
  • The many ways traveling is problematic;
  • And the idea of virtual traveling.

Here’s a fascinating example of how different cultures think differently about the world, in this case about time and age.

CNN, 27 Jun 2023: South Koreans become younger overnight after country scraps ‘Korean age’
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Stomping the Floor and Deafening Applause

Let’s see how my thesis of yesterday might inform some of today’s news.

  • How Republicans don’t want to solve problems, they want to stomp the floor to protest people they feel threatened by;
  • How Republicans define crime;
  • Shifting the goal posts over Hunter Biden;
  • GOP targets researchers of misinformation; why would that be?
  • How Muslims and Ethiopian Orthodox parents also object to LGBTQ content.

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Savannah Morality and Conservative Values

  • Thinking about the morality of primitive humans living on the Savannah, tens of thousands of years ago — apparently the basis for conservative morality unto this day;
  • How DeSantis, authoritarian, is worse than Trump;
  • How MAGA women reject modern options in preference to Savannah morality, which makes them happier.

I’m growing more and more fascinated by the idea of “Savannah morality,” the protocols of survival in the ancestral environment of tens of thousands of years ago, when humans lived in small tribes on the Savannah, resources were scarce, rival tribes were demonized, infant mortality was high, sexual expression or behavior that was not about having more babies and expanding the tribe was condemned to the point of death, and powerful leaders were venerated over principles.

So much of modern conservative morality seems simply explained as appealing to those primitive notions; human nature hasn’t had time to evolve to adjust to the modern environment. Yet, ever since humans settled down and pursued agriculture, 12,000 years or so ago, those notions have gradually become obsolete, or inoperative as scales have expanded, or have been superseded by other, democratic and humanistic principles more suitable to a global culture. As humans have expanded across the planet, we’ve all become obliged to get along with one another, and individuals have increasingly been able to express themselves in many ways, especially sexually, without being suppressed by tribal values, since obsessive population growth is no longer necessary, is even counterproductive.

And science in just the past few centuries has revealed that the various outlandish myths of tribes around the globe are mostly false.

Conservatives don’t want to hear it. The protocols of base human nature, evolved in the ancestral environment, still largely prevail among many people; other people recognize that these intuitive values are inappropriate in the modern world. The former are those we call conservatives.

I’ll think more about this. (No doubt someone has a better term for this core idea that “Savannah morality.”) (And as an aside, that human nature evolved in a different environment from our own explains most, if not all, of the psychological biases — motivated thinking, and so on — that people are prone to.) For now some examples.

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Salon, Kirk Swearingen, 25 Jun 2023: Why the right is so terrified of “woke”: There are truths it just can’t face, subtitled “Conservatives didn’t want to hear about white privilege. So they abandoned reality and joined the orange man’s cult”

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Trip Report: Preservation Park and the Locus Awards

No blog post yesterday; I was busy from about 2pm to around 8pm attending one day of the Locus Awards Weekend (this link might expire soon) in downtown Oakland, about 10 miles down the hills from our house.

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Summer Solstice; Reality and Illusions

  • The summer solstice is a consequence of basic facts about the Earth and the solar system, which apparently few people understand;
  • Another example of how debates are usually pointless, including political debates;
  • Another take on the false idea that people were better in the past;
  • And how the MAGA movement’s doomsday fears may simply anticipate its own demise.

The Summer Solstice as an example of how some people understand reality, and others simply ignore it.

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Vox, Brian Resnick, 20 Jun 2023: The summer solstice is Wednesday: 7 things to know about the longest day of the year, subtitled “Why do we have a summer solstice, anyway?”

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