Saturday, December 30, 2006
Recommended : Qassams Fired on Central California
There are those who see war crimes in every accidental civilian death that accompanies the actions of Western armies. Strange that they don't seem to see such war crimes in the deliberate and planned random civilian killings by the terrorists, or those NGOs and states that support and arm them.
Friday, December 29, 2006
Pseudo-science and intelligent design
For real scientists, the theory of evolution is simply the best guess we have now that seems to fit the evidence. No doubt it is wrong in some details, if not wholly, but as more evidence accumulates and alternative theories get tested whatever errors there are will eventually get sorted out. Scientists are humble (well, most of them are) about what they think they know, and willing to change their minds and adjust their theories on the basis of new evidence.
Believers in creation science, however, think God has revealed the truth to them, and they are just trying to cherry-pick the evidence to support what they already believe to be true and give it some respectability. There is no evidence that would change their minds (well, maybe if God herself spoke to them….).
Followers of creation science and intelligent design are like peddlers of fad diets – they cite evidence that supports their product but carefully ignore the greater body of evidence that wouldn’t support it.
If we in America are foolish enough to force our schools to teach our young people this sort of religion-based pseudo-science, we will deserve the unpleasant consequences of letting ignorance rule our lives.
Wednesday, December 27, 2006
Moral hazards
If the government will take care of me in my old age, why should I save money now for my retirement? If welfare will pay my bills, why should I work? If hospital emergency rooms have to treat everyone, regardless of ability to pay, why should I spend money on insurance? If colleges give scholarships on the basis of need rather than aptitude, why should I put any money aside for my children’s college bills? If government policies make it hard to fire me, why should I try to excel in my work?
But the situation is far worse than that. Such programs are unsustainable in the long run. These days the demographics (an aging population) work against us. So having lured people into depending on the government instead of their own foresight and efforts, we will someday (perhaps soon) have to pull the rug out from under them because we can no longer afford to maintain these programs. That is the real immorality of such programs!
Remember, the road to hell is paved with good intentions…….
Sunday, December 24, 2006
Recommended: High Anxiety
It has always seemed to me that Israel isn't treated evenhandedly in the US or the world press, or by the international community. Not that Israel hasn't made some mistakes, just like every other nation. But the number of times, for example, that the UN has tried to condemn Israel for some action while completely ignoring the Arab attack that provoked that action shows the one-sidedness of much of the world on this subject.
Saturday, December 23, 2006
Our worst nightmare….
Now change the word Muslim to Christian and you can begin to understand how some of the rest of the world sees us. We are some other people's worst nightmare.
Think about it. These days we fit that description a little too close for comfort.
Friday, December 22, 2006
The importance of assimilation
If this persists, these European countries face a difficult, divisive and dangerous future. Such enclaves, usually with very high rates of unemployment, become nurseries for breeding dissatisfaction, radical movements, and revolution.
We in
Language is one of the key factors here. We certainly ought to encourage immigrants to maintain their own language as a second language if they want to. Far too many Americans speak only one language as it is. But we ought to have one and only one common nationwide official language to bind us as a nation. Well-meaning attempts to give Spanish or other languages equal official standing are, in the long run, dangerous and lead to the sort of separatist problems
America
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Pans narrans, the storytelling chimpanzee
In The Science of Diskworld II: The Globe the authors introduce “narratvium”. Narrativum is an element in Diskworld that gives events their story. Humans love stories. In fact, human minds organize everything into a story, or narrative imperative. That’s what, for example, feeds conspiracy theories. Something awful happens and there doesn’t appear to be any reason for it, so we construct a plausible conspiracy theory to explain it, and then believe our theory because it is so logical and believable (just as we constructed it). We organize everything about our lives and our world into plausible stories, filling in the gaps with assumptions and changing or forgetting the inconvenient parts that don’t fit so that the story hangs together and is believable, whether it is true or not. Stewart and Cohen wryly suggest our species ought to have been named pans narrans, the storytelling chimpanzee.
Why is this observation important? Because in fact there is always a great deal we don’t know or understand about the world and events around us, so the stories we create are always wrong to some degree, if not wholly. But because they hang together so well, just as we fashioned them, we tend to believe them anyway.
But what is important here is that we should always be aware that just because we have constructed an appealing and plausible story about something, that doesn’t mean it is correct. In fact, given the fallibility and limited knowledge of humans, it probably is at best a very rough approximation to the truth and at worst completely off the wall. It’s a well known trick in the intelligence field to feed one’s opponents misinformation as a plausible story – the strength of this approach is that if one’s opponent detects any inconsistencies in the story, they are very likely to simply adjust the story in their minds to fit their preconceptions, rather than to question the whole story. And con men know that a good story is an essential tool to drawing in the mark.
Tuesday, December 19, 2006
Are we a Christian nation?
A lot of people think that, though most aren’t as boorish and insensitive as that man.
If Catholics eventually outnumber Protestants are they prepared to have the government acknowledge the Pope’s control over government policy? I doubt it.
If secularists eventually become the majority are they prepared to have church’s tax-exempt status revoked? I doubt it.
If those who are pressing for more religion in government would just step back and think about it, they would recognize that separation of church and state protects their religion just as much as it does other religions, and they would be foolish and shortsighted to abandon that protection.
Sunday, December 17, 2006
Teachers and survival
Look at the African countries where war has disrupted the passing of cultural knowledge for a generation or two. Whole cultures are disappearing, and the children who are left (often abducted and forced to fight in one of the armies) are feral. It could happen to us too.
Could you, starting from scratch, make even the simplest, commonest thing on your desk? Could you make a paper clip, for example? Do you understand the metallurgy required to make the metal? Do you understand the geology required to find the ores, or the mining engineering required to mine them, or the chemical engineering required to smelt and refine them, or the mechanical engineering required to make the tools to draw the wire and bend it to shape, or the electrical or mechanical engineering required to provide the power for these processes? And how much more complex are antibiotics and automobiles and computers and radios and printing presses and electric generators and rubber and plastics and ……
Could you, starting from scratch and with no tractors, no iron tools, no oil-based fertilizers or pesticides, no fancy packaged seeds, grow and store and prepare enough food year in and year out for yourself and your family, summer and winter? Could you keep them warm and clothed just with what you could grow or hunt without a rifle or factory-made bow? Could you keep them healthy and nurse them back from illness just with what you can grow or find growing wild?
Our civilization’s infrastructure is now dependent upon tens or hundreds of thousands of specialties, each of which takes years to master. Fail to pass all those specialties on to the next generation and we promptly die back to small, ragged, starving bands lead by the nearest thug.
If we really thought about it, we would encourage our best and brightest people to teach the next generation, give them the best infrastructure support we can, pay them handsomely and accord them the highest status, because the future of our whole civilization depends on them.
At higher levels of education (college and beyond), we do this reasonably well. But for the very critical early years, up through high school, we entrust this vital task to underpaid, overworked people endlessly hassled by bureaucracy (No Child Left Behind), manipulated by unions, and used as pawns by politicians and school boards. And as a result something like half our high school graduates can’t even make change correctly or identify our country on a world map, let along master the more advanced skills needed to keep our civilization going.
Clearly we have our priorities wrong!!
Friday, December 15, 2006
Asymmetric warfare
We constrain our military and intelligence forces to operate within civilized rules of engagement. Our opponents feel no such compunction. We wouldn’t use a nuclear or biological weapon on them. They will happily use such a weapon on us if/when they get their hands on one. We worry about the civil rights of our prisoners; about whether it is legal or moral to sleep deprive them during interrogation. They use electric drills on their prisoners and don’t worry about the legalities.
Our opponents have hardy any economy to speak of, but that doesn’t matter because we ourselves fund their war for them with our addiction to their oil and drugs, and our generous aid programs. We give them many billion each year, which they use to feed and arm themselves, to spread their recruiting messages worldwide, and to wage the crucial media war.
Our opponents have hardly any indigenous technology to speak of, but that doesn’t matter because we ourselves provide them with cell phones and internet connections, computers and weapons, and all the technology training they need in our finest schools.
Our opponents care enough about their mission to die willingly for it. Their have little to lose and (they passionately believe) much to gain by dying for the cause. We agonize over every death, and as Vietnam proved, our public has little tolerance for even low casualty rates among our troops. Our opponents believe, perhaps rightly, that as soon as we lose a few soldiers, we will withdraw. We have given them enough evidence in recent years to support that belief, and we may be about to give them more in Iraq.
Our opponents are content to battle us for decades, even centuries. Our public has a short attention span, and cannot seem to pursue any political goal consistently for more than a few years. Our opponents think in terms of generations. We think in terms of quarterly reports.
We have an open and free society. They don’t, but they have learned well how to exploit our openness and freedom and use it effectively against us. We can’t reach their people on their media, but they can and do use our media to manipulate our public.
Our opponents use media consistently to advance their cause and spread their message and rally their supporters. We use the media to nitpick and criticize and denigrate our own government and humiliate our troops. If one of their suicide bombers deliberately kills 50 civilians, our media report it as a simple fact. If one of our tank shells accidentally kills a couple of children, our media reports it with the maximum of heart-sob guilt overtones. If the New York Times finds out about something effective the intelligence community is doing, they don’t hesitate to publish it and render it ineffective, since that sells more newspapers. Some of our media might as well be on their payroll. We haven’t lost the ground war yet, but we lost the media war a long time ago.
Demographics is on their side. Although America’s birthrate is holding (just barely) at replacement rate, much of Europe has birthrates well below replacement rate, and so their indigenous populations are declining precipitously even while their Muslim immigrant populations are exploding. Soon enough some of our important European partners will have Muslim majorities in their governments and will turn against us.
In the end, I fear we will lose because, while we were a strong determined society in World War II, over the past few decades we have grown soft, hedonistic, and purposeless, preoccupied with liberal niceties and legalities, while our opponents are tough, passionate about their cause, and focused, and far more pragmatic.
Wednesday, December 13, 2006
A crying need for real statesmen
The Democrats, to the extent they are anything at all these days, seem to be in the grip of the loony left, who would still like to emulate the “postmodern” welfare states of Europe so that we too could have permanent high unemployment, slow growth, low worker productivity, high taxes, terrible health service, a wildly expensive cradle-to-grave welfare system, millions of pages of bureaucratic regulations on everything, and immigrant riots in the streets every Saturday. Not an appealing alternative.
Of course underneath the public disagreements the two parties are really pretty much alike. Both have colluded to gerrymander their congressional districts so that they can face as little opposition as possible. Both are on the take big time from lobbyists, though only a few are crass enough to take outright bribes to store in the freezer. Neither party is willing to step up and make hard choices. Both will promise anything the focus groups say will win them an election, whether they could deliver or not. Neither in recent times seems to have been able to field a presidential candidate I would buy a used car from.
Politics has never been easy or clean anywhere in the world – there is too much power and money involved. But if there was ever a time when we needed a few real statesmen to emerge, this is it.
We face really, really serious problems, like the Medicare and Social Security icebergs that look likely to bankrupt us, like the massive national debt we have accumulated that puts us at the mercy of our enemies if they decide to stop buying our bonds, like our economy’s overdependence on petroleum from volatile parts of the world, and I am sure you can think of a dozen more.
In the face of this, we certainly need something better in leaders than either political party has shown us yet.
Monday, December 11, 2006
The clash of civilizations
The Middle East’s core problem is that they are stuck in the middle ages culturally, but with access to modern technology. They are still ruled by religious leaders or hereditary autocrats. The populace is still mostly poorly educated, and driven by age-old feuds and hatreds and tribal loyalties and mythologies. Populations are exploding but opportunities for jobs and the self-esteem that goes with jobs are not.
Some Middle East nations got a one-time bonus. They got oil. If their leaders had been wise, they would have used all the bonus wealth to educate their people and move their nations into the modern age. Instead they have mostly squandered it, and when the oil runs out (soon enough) they will be back where they started, except with more people than they can feed.
This is not a war between Christianity and Islam. Islam is just a handy lever for ambitious leaders in the Middle East to manipulate a credulous and restless population to their own ends, which is mostly about gaining and holding power. And modern technology – cell phones, TV, the internet, modern weapons – just expand their reach.
If we divert ourselves into thinking this is about religion, we miss the point, and the counter-policies we develop will be ineffective.
Thursday, December 7, 2006
Mental child abuse
In our first world culture at least, we strongly disapprove of physically abusing children – starving them or sexually exploiting them or severely beating them. Try that in
So how come we let people mentally abuse our children in the name of religion? How come we let them terrify our little children with images of hellfire and damnation? How come we let them implant guilt feelings and feelings of unworthiness and sinfulness into our children that will haunt them for the rest of their lives? How come we let them teach our daughters that they are less important than our sons? How come we let them teach our children that there are questions they don’t dare ask and thoughts they don’t dare explore?
If we were good parents we wouldn’t allow people do this to our young children. It’s wrong. It’s child abuse!