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Between reason and fantasy, to the media the truth is in the middle

I glanced at the front page of the New London Day’s Perspective section and there was an article titled “Biologist who Challenges both Evolution and Religion”. (I have despaired of finding a link on the Day’s website, but you can read it here, where it originally appeared in the Times). Where, I thought, had they managed to find this figure of fantasy, a Broderesque man in the middle between the two extremes of reason and irrationality? This person, I thought, must be a crackpot of a truly unique variety.

As soon as I started actually reading, my preconceptions were dashed. The man in question was Richard Dawkins. I had already read the article, which itself is unobjectionable, when it originally appeared in the Times. But the Day authored headline rankled. I have read many, if not most, of Richard Dawkins’ books of popular science. No reasonable person can say that he “challenges” evolution. He has stoutly defended it for scores of years. The fact that he has suggested different ways of looking at the evolutionary process (e.g., “The Selfish Gene”) and that he takes part in debate within the community of evolutionary biologists, does not change that fact in the least. To say he challenges evolution is like saying the Pope challenges religion because he’s not a Protestant. Lest anyone say I quibble, bear in mind that many people merely scan most articles in the newspaper, so the headline may be the only thing they read. A casual, uninformed reader might conclude, or have the view reinforced, that there is reason to doubt both evolution (not so) and religion (for sure), just as they are encouraged to doubt the reality of global warming by the careful balancing of mountains of scientific evidence with the opinions of deep thinkers such as Michelle Bachmann and Rick Perry.

To the media in this country, the truth always lies in the middle between any two extremes, and by placing Dawkins in the non-existent middle between reason and faith, the person of little brain who wrote this headline no doubt intended to compliment Dawkins. There’s been no real harm done to Dawkins, but this is yet another illustration of the harm that the media does to rational discussion in this country by defining truth as the mid point between two contrary positions. In real life, the truth rarely occupies that point. It’s made worse, of course, by the media’s willingness to let the political and religious right constantly shift one end of the argument ever farther to the right, to the point where the “moderate” position on so many political issues would have been considered extreme a few decades ago.

I do want to modify one point I made above. I said the media defines truth as the mid point between two contrary positions, no matter how crazy one of those positions might be. It might more accurately be said that the media defines that midpoint as the point that should be occupied by “serious people”, like the people who shilled for the Iraq War and are now seriously invested in the proposition that deficits and inflation are, despite all evidence, our primary economic problem. Truth, in other words, is irrelevant. A false moderation is all.

A crime prevented

We here in Groton held a fundraiser last night, to raise money for the upcoming off year elections. It was a “celebrity” auction. Folks got to bid on items donated by politicians, etc., including stuff from Malloy (green tie), Blumenthal (not-green tie), Nancy Wyman (print), Chris Murphy (lunch), Joe Courtney (poster) and Denise Merrill (scarf). My wife, who organizes these things, was afraid there’d be a dearth of bidders, but in fact pretty much everything was bid up way over any actual value it might have had, with Blumenthal’s tie bringing in a monstrous (for us) sum. This was no doubt helped by the thin man’s presence, which we all much appreciated. I should mention that Nancy Wyman made it too, but she couldn’t stick around to watch her item auctioned off. It was, beyond a doubt, the most successful fund raiser our chronically impoverished committee has ever held. A pain in the neck for me, however, since I’m the treasurer, and the rules are opaque. How, for example, do you determine the fair market value of a used tie?

By far the most crucial auction of the evening was Malloy’s tie. A union loyalist, who made literally thousands of calls on Dan’s behalf last year, and who shall remain nameless for reasons that will become obvious, entered into a spirited bidding with the wife of a local blogger. She made her intentions clear: if she won, she was going to use the tie to throttle Dan, as she is not a happy camper after his treatment of the unions. Most of us suspected (hoped?) that she was engaging in hyperbole. Happily, we shall not find out, as her hopes were frustrated by determined counter bidding. It was for her own good. The tie will be among my Christmas presents, though I am assured that it won’t “count” against my proper ration of Christmas booty. I do not now, nor have I ever, considered a tie to be a proper Christmas present. Toys for Christmases past, toys for Christmas present, toys for Christmases yet to come. Meantime, Dan is safe.

Friday Night Music

Well, I’m really scraping the bottom of the back catalogue here, though I actually like both of these songs, and both of them were giant hits back in the long ago. They seem similar, in a way. Arrived at through some youtube stream of consciousness browsing. I always wrote these women off as one hit wonders, but at least according to youtube they went on to post one-hit careers of a sort. In fact, Merrilee Rush is apparently still at it, or was recently, singing the (for its time) risqué Angel in the Morning. I’m informed by Wikipedia that this song was offered to Connie Francis, who turned it down because she was afraid it would hurt her image, and since Merrilee’s first hit version, it’s been recorded countless times. My recollection is that it spent a lot of time on the charts. Looks like she’s still having a good time singing it.

The video quality on this one is poor, and it may be lip synced (against the rules, normally), but it’s the best I could find. Gale Garnett singing We’ll Sing in the Sunshine.

Rick Perry comes close to speaking

I know this is unfair to the girl from South Carolina, who after all is not running for president, but I couldn’t resist.

The Order of the Universe has been restored

The Red Sox are blowing another season. I feel like I’m 28 years old again.

Willard back on top?

According to Talking Points Memo, Willard is on the rise:

Mitt Romney is on the rebound in Republican primary polls. And there’s increasing polling evidence that he’s by far the stronger candidate against President Obama.

Looks like there’s a pattern developing. The new guy or gal comes in and wins their hearts, but he or she always has issues, so the Republicans go back to Willard. I’d say he’s more or less inevitable, unless someone else who is somewhat sane enters the race. That, of course, leaves room for one of the crazies to sneak in. Two high profile sane candidates (sorry Huntsman, Obama neutralized you years ago) might just split the rational (relatively) vote. Those voters may still be a majority in the Republican party, but if so, they’re a slim majority. Split them, and Rick or Michelle might still slip in. Or Sarah, in whom I still have hope.

Elizabeth Warren speaks

Send this lady some money.

If I were Scott Brown, and I thank my good fortune I’m not, I would be very scared of this lady. I would also avoid a debate.

The big question was what kind of a campaigner she would be. Just watching this, I think those concerns can be set aside. She’s way too smart to win in Texas, but she ought to do swimmingly in Massachusetts.

Who would have thunk?

Every once in a while you see something that is not only pretty neat in its own right, but just makes you feel good about your fellow man. For some reason this story, which I guess is making the rounds, gave me a real good feeling when I read it:

As fanciful as it may sound at first, gamers on Foldit, a crowdsourced, online protein folding simulator from the University of Washington, actually managed to solve a longstanding problem in AIDS research that has vexed scientists for more than a decade. And they did so in about 10 days.

Three players in particular were able to build upon each other to establish the most accurate model to date of an elusive protease enzyme in the AIDS-like Mason-Pfizer monkey virus.

“People have spatial reasoning skills, something computers are not yet good at,” said Seth Cooper, co-creator of Foldit and a researcher at UW Department of Computing Science and Engineering, in a statement. “Games provide a framework for bringing together the strengths of computers and humans.”

The article brought this cartoon to mind. Maybe these parents were right after all.

Count the Stupid

The following letter actually appeared in this morning’s New London Day, and no, I don’t think it was intended as parody:

Is The Day becoming socialist?

Even though I buy The Day every day, I enjoy reading it on the Internet early each morning. Now I can only read 10 articles The Day considers premium articles before being forced to subscribe.

I’d like to know who in their right mind came up with this idea of telling people what they can and can’t read on the Internet.

It’s no wonder your readership is going down the tubes. I’ll be damned if I’m going to pay twice for less.

Robert Jones Groton

If you are counting the stupid, you need to know that unlimited access to the Day’s site is included with a subscription to the paper.

It looks like the only things we don’t call socialism in this country are the few things that are somewhat socialistic: Social Security and Medicare.

UPDATE: Wow! My wife just saw an article about some tea party guy who called John Boehner a Socialist. I guess it’s become an all purpose, content free term of derision.

Obama’s education agenda

This is something that was under my radar, so I pass it along in case it’s escaped notice generally. In the current New York Review of Books Diane Ravitch reviews two books, one of which is Class Warfare, by Steve Brill, in which Brill argues that union busting and charter schools, among other right wing wet dreams, are the answer to all that ails the American educational system. Income disparities, etc., have nothing to do with it you see. The evidence all points the other way, of course, but since when has that stopped any American political movement designed to benefit the elites? This kind of elitist thinking is par for the course, so it comes as no surprise. What did come as a surprise, to me, at least, was the fact that Obama is so heavily invested in advancing this elitist agenda.

Ravitch relates that a number of our Wall Street overlords have adopted education as their pet cause, presumably aiming to do to it what they have done to the economy. Part of the strategy is to complete a hostile takeover of the Democratic party, since they already own the Republican party:

In 2005, the financiers formed an organization called Democrats for Education Reform (DFER) to promote ideas such as choice and accountability that were traditionally associated with the Republican Party. They set out to change Democratic Party policy, which in the past, as they saw it, was in thrall to the teachers’ unions and was committed to programs that funneled federal money by formula to the poorest children. DFER used its bountiful resources to underwrite a different agenda, one that was not beholden to the unions and that relied on competition, not equity.

While it was easy for the Wall Street tycoons to finance charter schools like KIPP and entrepreneurial ventures like Teach for America, what really excited them was using their money to alter the politics of education. The best way to leverage their investments, Brill tells us, was to identify and fund key Democrats who would share their agenda. One of them was a new senator from Illinois named Barack Obama, who helped launch DFER at its opening event on June 3, 2005. The evening began with a small dinner at the elegant Café Gray in the Time Warner Center in New York City, then moved to Curry’s nearby apartment on Central Park South, where an overflow crowd of 150 had gathered.

DFER also befriended Congressman George Miller from California, the powerful leader of the Democrats on the House Education and Labor Committee. DFER supported Cory Booker, who eventually became mayor of Newark. A DFER fund-raiser produced $45,000 for Congressman James Clyburn, “the most influential member of the Congressional Black Caucus,” who returned home to South Carolina to champion tuition tax credits and charter schools. Brill writes that DFER sent a memo to the Obama team immediately after the presidential election, naming its choice for each position. At the top of its list, for secretary of education, was Arne Duncan.

As Ravitch points out, none of the elitist solutions have worked, including the so called “No Child Left Behind Act”, which should more properly have been titled the “No Public School Left Standing Act”. The act, which legislated perfection but failed to even try to give schools the tools or funding to achieve it, mandates the destruction of failing schools, the numbers of which are rising as the time for achieving perfection draws near. The Obama administration’s solution is about as right wing and contrary to reason (am I being redundant there?) as they come:

The Obama administration has offered to grant waivers from the onerous sanctions of NCLB, but only to states willing to adopt its preferred remedies: privately managed charter schools, evaluations of teachers on the basis of their students’ test scores, acceptance of a recently developed set of national standards in reading and mathematics, and agreement to fire the staff and close the schools that have persistently low scores. None of the Obama administration’s favored reforms—remarkably similar to those of the Bush administration—is supported by experience or evidence.

Perhaps this explains Obama’s tepid response to the teacher union busting going on in Wisconsin and Ohio, among other places. It’s hard to tell, because his response to all manner of right wing outrages has been pretty tepid, but it’s certainly lines up with what appears to be his agenda.