20110224

competitiveevolution

Twisted overlap: those who warn that acceptance of evolution would lead to everyone giving in to dog-eat-dog competition and self-interest, and those who warn that prosperity and "economic freedom" require everyone to give in to dog-eat-dog competition and self-interest.

20110218

essentialtruth

History is identity, identity is history; there is no essence.

20110212

dempartytrad

""The tradition of the Democratic Party is: be more liberal than the Republican Party on domestic matters. Not too liberal, but more liberal. On matters of foreign policy, don’t be much different at all." --Howard Zinn, 2009 interview with Dave Zirin

The think tanks that drive Republican policy have realized for at least 20 years that Democratic policy is only defined relative to Republican policy, that Republicans could move arbitrarily far to the right and the Democratic Party would follow.

20110210

abusedpledgeletter

Abuse of the Pledge

This past Monday I attended a public debate at the Salt Lake City Library. I won't go into who was there or why, it's tangential to my point and you can easily find it if you like.
Most of the event was interesting and engaging, and most of the participants showed to have some common ground on critical moral points. However, early on one side chose to invoke the Pledge of Allegiance. This was not done at the opening of the whole event, but was instead reduced to a stunt during that speaker's assigned time.
I started to stand along with many in the audience, but it was bluntly obvious what this speaker was trying to do. Not being especially fond of loyalty oaths nor mandated spiritual rituals, I chose to keep my seat. My commitment to the ideals of America is not a tool for public speakers to score points over.
My suspicions of the speaker's intentions were confirmed when, as expected, his side later tried to use people's response to the Pledge to divide the audience and call support to that side.
The Pledge of Allegiance was written in 1892 (slightly altered, since then) by Francis Bellamy (a socialist, if that matters) with the purpose of inspiring a sense of unity among the diverse peoples and classes of the country (though his own sentiments were less than perfect).
Some act as if the Pledge has magical significance, so that anyone with the 'correct' sentiment will be overwhelmed with the need to speak it, but no one is ever actually required to take part. If a child were drowning in a nearby pool, you obviously would not take part. When Liberty is drowning in a nearby pool, you should not take part. When demagogues invoke the Pledge against the spirit of unity, as a stunt to test in-group loyalty and divide people into Us and Them, that is an excellent reason not to take part.
Years ago, I fixed the Pledge in my own heart. Here is my Pledge:
I pledge my allegiance to the Constitution of the United States of America, and to the ideals to which it aspires, Liberty and Justice for All.
_________

The event was a debate on immigration issues between United for Social Justice and the Utah Minutemen. I may have more to say on that later.
This was a letter submitted to the Salt Lake Tribune today. They'll edit it, of course, though I know I've seen printed letters longer than their word limit. I'm at least a hundred over. I hadn't seen the limit 'til after I sent it.

20110203

achoice

The fundamental moral choice is to value something rather than nothing.

denyskeptic

The skeptic applies doubt to everything, including especially oneself. Denialists apply doubt only to reaffirm their committed selves.

Denial of climate change, like denial of evolution, is heavily concentrated within the United States, and therein heavily concentrated among those aligned with or influenced by a particular political faction.

Do not honor denialists by calling them skeptics. I'd feel reluctant applying the word skeptic to lots of people, including myself.

20110126

letnotutbeaz

Daily Herald story
Deseret News story
Couldn't find anything on ksl or sltrib.

I was glad to be one of the I'd say 150+ people who braved the descending cold to be on the steps of the Utah State Capitol building. Though I can't help seeing chants from a meta perspective, sometimes shouting along, but often just amused by them.

Good speakers, though not always the best speeches. Each speech cycled to hit the same key phrases, which works as a kind of poetic rhetorical mnemonic, but i'ts a bit on the blunt side.

I signed up for United for Social Justice's mailing list, though for the time being I work during their meeting times. I'm leery of the other group there, the UVU Revolutionary Student Union. Their main organizer is clearly bright, passionate, and dedicated, but they go out of their way to specifically say they're not closed to those who believe in violence.

Ideally, I like the idea of open borders. In a free world, anyone should be able to live where they like. Practicality should consist not in lamenting the impossibility of the ideal while reinforcing its opposite, but in working incrementally to make the reality more like the ideal.

Nations are an occasionally useful fiction. Fixed borders are a more recent and philosophically suspect notion. The borders of a place were the vague area where a power couldn't reliably project its control.

It's ironic and hypocritical to blast the people coming to our shores and borders when what drives them here is economic situations often imposed on their home countries by our corporations, our strategic doctrines, and our Department of State.

Our laws need to be reformed to make legal immigration easier, and yes, amnesty will need to figure into that. Stricter enforcement of bad laws won't fix a broken system. Strict enforcement of disrespected law undermines respect for the rule of law.

20110125

newcentrismanditsdiscontents

I read this and thought it needed some spreading around. Of course, I've already demonstrated my tendency to align with Lakoff, he says what needs to be said about the language and philosophy behind political positions, and the political positioning behind political language.

The "New Centrism" and Its Discontents, by George Lakoff

On another note, I'm going to try to adjust my web2.0 usage. Since this blog feeds my facebook anyway, I'll try to put any non-slice-of-life thoughts here first, not reassembled here later.
HTML is more flexible, anyway.
 
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