- Jerry Coyne on Harvard vs the US government and the idea of “viewpoint diversity,” with a response by Steven Pinker;
- Why do conservatives think themselves under-represented in academia? Because they promote ideas that are not true;
- Will there ever be a new consensus? History is moving in a very different way from the standard science fiction vision.
- Robert Reich on the two tipping points for becoming a dictatorship;
- Short takes about federal employees being told to snitch on people with Pride flags; yet another Christian wanting to impose “don’t say gay” on every classroom in America; how “Made in America” dreams are a fantasy; and a ludicrous conservative claim that fluoridated water causes autism.
A long-running theme here, and in American politics, is that conservatives think themselves under-represented in academia. Don’t send your kids to college, the MAGA folks especially say, or they will be become “indoctrinated” [meaning educated] and become lefties. My short explanation of this was at the end of yesterday’s post. Today, Jerry Coyne covers the recent kerfuffle between the Trump Administration and Harvard. The former wants to impose — on a private university — all sorts of ideological guidelines, or else lose government funding for research. This isn’t about the nature of the research, it’s about ideological indoctrination. Harvard must think proper thoughts, and conduct themselves in a way the government approves of, or else. Harvard responded admirably.
Jerry Coyne, 15 Apr 2025: Administration to Harvard: Fix yourself; Harvard to Administration: STFU
What caught my eye was this one point, in the government’s list of demands, as summarized by Coyne.
• Harvard is to commission an external body to audit the university for viewpoint diversity. Though they’re not clear what “viewpoint diversity” means, it’s obvious that they want more conservative points of view and fewer professors pushing pro-Palestinian points of view
Viewpoint diversity sounds harmless enough, but only at first glance. In fact, there are things that are true, and things that are not. Conservatives usually want, in the name of “viewpoint diversity,” to promote things, in the name of ideology or religion, that are not in fact objectively true. (Like intelligent design, or trickle-down economics.) And so Steven Pinker, a psychologist at Harvard, has this pithy response:
Steven Pinker, a prominent Harvard psychologist who is also a president of the Council on Academic Freedom at Harvard, said on Monday that it was “truly Orwellian” and self-contradictory to have the government force viewpoint diversity on the university. He said it would also lead to absurdities.
“Will this government force the economics department to hire Marxists or the psychology department to hire Jungians or, for that matter, for the medical school to hire homeopaths or Native American healers?” he said.
Once you start, where do you stop? Should flat-earthers teach geology? Or do you just let universities do what they do without dumb government officials thinking they know better? Because America is becoming an authoritarian police state.
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Stepping out toward the bigger picture. (The image is deliberately faded.)
OnlySky, Jonathan Kassel, 15 Apr 2025: MAGA and the questionable judgment of history, subtitled “Even on the rosy assumption that this era ends, we will never see the return to relative consensus that was once possible.”
Once again, history is moving toward a future very different from the idealistic science fiction futures of a unified planet, never mind a planet unified with those of other intelligent civilizations in some kind of Federation. (Of course an obvious observation is that consensus isn’t possible where “viewpoint diversity” is imposed in the way described above.)
The writer begins:
There is a dream, now resident in many blue heads, of a time in the future when the current insanity is fading in the rear view. The verdict of history is in. Donald Trump and his populist movement are recognized by an overwhelming supermajority of Americans as a cancer and a cautionary tale. It has happened to other toxic political figures and cultural moments, like Nixon and Watergate, brought into clear focus by the passage of time.
That isn’t going to happen this time, at least not in the same way.
The dream has less to do with Trump himself than with those around us—the fathers and sisters and friends and neighbors body-snatched by this virus, people we thought we knew. We want to hear them say they were wrong, that they don’t know why they didn’t see it before, but they’re back.
When a few of these are amplified in the media: [ video inserted here ] ……accompanied by comments about face-eating leopards, you could be forgiven for thinking you’ve had a taste of our future.
Probably not.
Don’t expect the MAGA folks to realize they were wrong and apologize. Here we go again:
Social identity theory notes that individuals derive part of their self-concept from the groups they are part of. Very strong identification with a group can lead to favoring in-group members and discriminating against out-group members. In political contexts, this can result in polarization, where individuals adopt the norms and values of their political group, leading to deep divisions and resistance to opposing viewpoints. This generates a deep revulsion to the idea of leaving, what psychologist and deprogrammer Steven Hassan calls “phobia indoctrination.” Months or years spent defining yourself as a member of the group and learning to revile and pity those on the outside makes it painful to exit. Those who manage it tend to do so quietly.
Same ideas as in Ariely’s MISBELIEF, reviewed here.
The article goes on to recall Nixon, discuss the media, politics, and the questionable judgment of history. And here’s the lesson of this piece.
[H]istorical consensus depends on institutional trust and shared facts. In an era where universities, journalists, and historians are dismissed as ideologically compromised by wide swaths of the population, no such consensus is possible. Trump’s presidency — and post-presidency — will be remembered in fundamentally different ways depending on which epistemic community one belongs to. For some, he is a would-be authoritarian who attacked democratic norms and tried to overturn an election. For others, he is a persecuted outsider fighting a corrupt system. These two narratives are mutually exclusive and yet coexisting.
Of course this begs the question: was there *ever* an era of relative consensus? Arguably no, and arguably there’s one now more than ever before. It’s just not as unified as some had always imagined. Arguably no, because throughout most of human history, we were divided into isolated social groups, whether tribes or nations, and have only recently become a global culture. And arguably yes, because today, virtually all nations trade in American dollars, and speak English, and share to some extent a common culture.
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How do we tell when if we’ve become a dictatorship?
Robert Reich, 14 Apr 2025: The two tipping points for when we officially become a dictatorship could occur this week
1. The first way the Trump regime clearly becomes a dictatorship is by directly defying a Supreme Court order.
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2. The second way we officially become a dictatorship is if the Trump regime can accuse any American citizen of being so dangerous as to justify being sent to a foreign prison, without any independent court review of the regime’s evidence.
Here we are.
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Quick takes.
Salon, Amanda Marcotte, 15 Apr 2025: Marco Rubio’s hunt for “anti-Christian bias” is creeping theocracy, subtitled “In a new war on federal workers, State Department employees are told to snitch on people with Pride flags”
Subtitle is the point here.
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Vox, Ian Millhiser, 15 Apr 2025: The Supreme Court threatens to bring “Don’t Say Gay” to every classroom in America, subtitled “An influential Christian right law firm asks the justices to impose an impossible burden on teachers.”
Again, Christians imposing their tribal “values” on the entire population.
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Boing Boing, Ellsworth Toohey, 15 Apr 2025: Why “Made in America” dreams are a galaxy-brain-stupid fantasy
Manufacturing veteran Molson Hart just dropped a 14-point manifesto explaining why America’s latest “bring the jobs home” scheme is economic suicide dressed up as patriotism.
The problems? Pour yourself something strong — there are fourteen of them. America’s supply chains are weaker than a gas station coffee, our workforce can’t do basic math, and our infrastructure makes a Jenga tower look stable. That’s three down, eleven more problems to go.
The 14 points are at the link in the excerpt. Basic issue: the world has changed, times have changed, and you can’t go back.
Unless we change course pronto, we’re about to discover what happens when magical thinking meets economic reality. Spoiler alert: Reality wins every time.
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One more, which is example of how conservatives, without any evidence whatsoever, relying on personal anecdotes, or *a* personal anecdote, claim nonsensical conclusions about things they don’t like (and don’t understand).
JMG, 15 Apr 2025: GOP Rep Blames Autism On Fluoridated Water
They live in a fact-free, delusional world.
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Listening to Shostakovich the past two weeks.