Children, Adults Who Think Like Children, and Adults Who Don’t

  • Trump doesn’t need to keep his promises because he’ll just claim that he has, and blame his enemies when it’s obvious he has not;
  • How the threat of government shutdown reveals the Republicans as the party of “no”, recalling William F. Buckley;
  • In Louisiana, don’t say vaccine;
  • How to reduce crime via proven solutions, and not prayer.
– – –

 

NY Times, Frank Bruni, 19 Dec 2024: What if Trump Doesn’t Need to Keep Any of His Promises?

Short answer: all Trump has to do is tell his fans that he *has* kept his promises, and they’ll believe him. Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Politics, Psychology, Religion | Comments Off on Children, Adults Who Think Like Children, and Adults Who Don’t

So Are We to Live in an Authoritarian Oligarchy?

  • The un-elected Elon Musk seems to be running the country this week;
  • How the Drone Panic reveals a need to believe, in *something*.

So not only is our incipient administration authoritarian, it’s authoritarian and being run by an oligarch!

NY Times, 19 Dec 2024: Elon Musk Flexes His Political Strength as Government Shutdown Looms, subtitled “The world’s richest man led the charge to kill a bipartisan spending deal, in part by promoting false and misleading claims about it.”
Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Politics, Psychology, Religion, Supernatural | Comments Off on So Are We to Live in an Authoritarian Oligarchy?

Psychological Underpinnings

  • The drone panic is about human psychology;
  • So is the fear of vaccines.
– – –

 

Once again, the drone panic is not about drones.

NY Times, Zeynep Tufekci, 19 Dec 2024: How to Make the Drone Panic So Very Much Worse

The writer begins by recalling a similar panic from decades ago that I only recently heard about.
Continue reading

Posted in Politics, Psychology | Comments Off on Psychological Underpinnings

Tim Urban, Out of Left Field

  • About a writer I’d never heard of, Tim Urban, and his book, and their connection to Luigi Mangione;
  • The psychological motivations of the drone alarmists.
– – –

NY Times, David Wallace-Wells, 18 Dec 2024: Can Anyone Make Sense of Luigi Mangione? Maybe His Favorite Writer. (gift link)

Luigi Mangione of course is the guy implicated in the murder of the UnitedHealthcare CEO in New York City a few weeks ago. Continue reading

Posted in History, Psychology, Social Progress | Comments Off on Tim Urban, Out of Left Field

Notes from Inside the Universe

  • Vox answers questions about the drones;
  • A piece by Rahm Emanual inspires my own thinking about how much it matters which party is in power, every election cycle;
  • Trump wants to expel immigrants but is happy to hire them;
  • Nancy Mace is worried that the drones might be coming from “outside the universe”;
  • Once again about vaccines, safer than they have ever been.

One more piece about the drones, from Vox, which fancies itself a site that “explains” things. (Curiously, it’s filed under “politics.”)

Vox, Li Zhou, 17 Dec 2024: What’s up with all these drone sightings?, subtitled “The 7 biggest questions, answered as best we can.”

Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Lunacy, Science | Comments Off on Notes from Inside the Universe

The Drones! The Drones!

First let’s finish the second Robert Reich item we began yesterday. Then the drones.

Robert Reich, 13 Dec 2024: America’s four stories (Part 2)
Continue reading

Posted in Culture, Politics | Comments Off on The Drones! The Drones!

Fear, Outrage, and Paranoia

I’ve been curious, but have never been sufficiently tempted, to watch or listen to right-wing media for any period of time. These two pieces confirm my impression that most of its content is about fear and outrage. Fear of a complex world conservatives don’t understand, outrage that nobody does anything about it. They just want to make it all go away, and presumably are pleased that Trump seems intent on dismantling most of the government, and making all those icky immigrants disappear. (Which of course he won’t be able to do.)

This short AlterNet piece, ‘Alternate reality’: What happened when an NYT reporter immersed himself in far-right media, posted Dec 13, summarizes this much longer NYT piece:

NY Times, Stuart A. Thompson, 13 Dec 2024: I Traded My News Apps for Rumble, the Right-Wing YouTube. Here’s What I Saw.

The writer watched 47 hours of video on Rumble for this article, beginning two weeks after the election
Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, History, Lunacy, Politics | Comments Off on Fear, Outrage, and Paranoia

American Narratives

  • Infrastructure note;
  • Robert Reich on America’s four stories;
  • Heather Cox Richardson on how Trump has no apparent plan for governance.

Infrastructure note. I’ve installed an initial set of theme pages under the “NF Reviews” menu item above, which appear as items in a drop down menu. All the titles on the main page are on one (and only one) of the theme pages, though many of them straddle one or more of the nominal ten themes. I’ll figure out some way of cross-referencing them.

\\

Robert Reich has a couple long posts this week titled “America’s four stories” and how Republicans have done better aligning themselves with them than the Democrats have. Haven’t read them yet. But at a glance I’m fascinated in that the four stories represent a kind of American mythology of how the world is and how Americans are supposed to behave. American behave as if these stories are truths handed down from on high, but of course they’re only *stories*, narratives, derived from the circumstances of where Americans came from and what they did when they got here — and other nations and cultures surely have different stories.

Robert Reich, 12 Dec 2024: America’s four stories (Part 1), subtitled “Trump has offered extreme versions. The Democrats stopped offering them at all.”

Continue reading

Posted in Narrative, Politics, Website Issues | Comments Off on American Narratives

Pretty to Think So

One of my running themes — here on this blog, in the reviews I’ve written of SF novels and stories in recent years, in my essay for Gary Westfahl awaiting publication, and in my book if I manage to write it — is that some of the ideals and presumptions of even the best science fiction of the 20th century are turning out to be totally wrong. The standard examples are: there are plenty of reasons to think that ESP, telepathy, precognition, all of that, is bunk, mere wishful thinking based on infantile perceptions of the world; and notions of easy interstellar travel that beg questions about how such travel will take place (given physics), and whether there are actually habitable planets out there we can just drop in on and build a colony. The principle reason here is that science has advanced greatly over the past century. Some of what science fiction might have legitimately speculated about 70 years ago is now out of bounds, if we’re being honest. (An earlier example: hollow Earth.) These presumptions persist in pop sci-fi — TV and movies, especially including Trek and Wars — and of course they appeal to the popular imagination in exactly the same way all those psychological biases do, that lure us into magical thinking and conspiracy theories. It’s fun to watch spaceships zooming from planet to planet in 5 minutes, and pretty to think it might be possible with technology advanced enough, but it’s unlikely to ever happen.

A few science fiction writers have realized this, the standard example, again, being Kim Stanley Robinson’s 2015 novel AURORA. But pop sci-fi, and even many published works, still attract more readers by appealing to intuitively thrilling but discredited notions.

Here’s an example of a scientist pointing out problems with one traditional science fiction, and pop sci-fi, presumption.

Big Think, Adam Frank, 11 Dec 2024: Galactic civilizations may be impossible. Here’s why., subtitled “The problem for galactic-scale civilizations comes down to two numbers.”

Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Politics, science fiction | Comments Off on Pretty to Think So

Or for Worse

We took both our cars into the indie BMW shop we’ve been going to, for routine maintenance. In my case, I needed my car to be ship-shape before driving down to LA in a couple weeks.

\

Infrastructure note. In parallel with similar tasks on sfadb, I’ve spent some time in the past couple weeks updating and databasing my Nonfiction Reviews page, what you get when you click on “NF Reviews” in the menu bar above. I’ve added a couple three dozen descriptions for books I’ve blogged about the past couple years, and added stubs for other titles I’ve read but not yet blogged about. Next, I think, I’ll create subpages by theme (like the one for Math that’s already there), maybe a page listing recently read books chronologically, and maybe a listing just the highest rated (five *) books. And then, similar overhaul of the SF Reviews and other reviews pages. This is quite research; it’s more like, organizing my notes as part of research…

\\\

Time, Sam Jacobs, 12 Dec 2024: 2024: The Choice: Donald Trump

For 97 years, the editors of TIME have been picking the Person of the Year: the individual who, for better or for worse, Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Human Nature, Politics, Website Issues | Comments Off on Or for Worse