Slop

  • Essays about AI slop, and how this endangers objective truth;
  • Trump is tearing down the East Wing of the White House, after he said he wouldn’t;
  • Responses to Trump’s poop video;
  • Paul Krugman on Trump’s loss of touch with reality;
  • How to deal with everyday religious platitudes;
  • Short items about how believers twist the Bible, and the Constitution, to their ends; and how those Young Republicans stiffed a NY hotel restaurant bill… just as Trump has done.
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I’ve heard this word, referring to certain gratuitous examples of AI-generated video, a few times. But today comes not one but two thoughtful essays on the subject. (Not to mention Trump’s puerile video a few days ago, to which the world might also apply.)

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NY Times, guest essay by Bobbie Johnson, 19 Oct 2025: What Is Sora Slop For, Exactly?

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The Need for Community

  • An essay about how humans raised children in villages, throughout most of history;
  • Another essay about how Gen Z-ers are drawn to conservative Christianity, not because it’s in any way true, but because of that same need for community;
  • Heather Cox Richardson on Trump’s gross video, and the ideas of American government that are being lost;
  • Paul Krugman’s theory on the MAGA attacks;
  • Brief items about “Democrat programs,” how MAGA reactions to the No King marches proved the protesters right; and brief items about Adam Serwer, Dinesh D’Souza, MAGA objectors to No Kings, an attack in San Leandro, Chip Roy, communism, and national parks.
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Curiously, there are aspects of what we are calling base human nature, that which evolved over hundreds of thousands of years in the ancestral environment, which modern conservatives resist, at least in the US.

NY Times, guest essay by Louise Perry, 14 Oct 2025: It’s Not Normal to Raise Children Like This (gift link)

By “normal” she means what has been common throughout most of human history, going back millennia. And still exists in some enclaves. Beginning:

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So Again, How’d those No Kings Protests Go?

  • Photos, why the fanciful costumes, why Republicans should be afraid of who’s protesting; Heather Cox Richardson; Robert Reich;
  • And Republicans, who are either in denial, are obtuse, or are cynically playing to their base;
  • And arrests? A couple three, of [MAGA] women threatening the protestors;
  • (And I’m not mentioning Trump’s scatological video posted this morning. This is where we are, and I continue to be astonished that his fans don’t care.)
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The Atlantic, 19 Oct 2025: Photos: More ‘No Kings’ Protests Across the U.S.

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With some insight into the tactics of funny costumes.

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No Kings vs. Reality

  • Trump pardons George Santos, of course;
  • The “No Kings” rhetoric from the Republicans, and the results today;
  • With some thoughts about conservative thinking;
  • Jamelle Bouie;
  • Lunatic: MTG still obsessed about weather control;
  • Science: how humans perceive only a tiny bit of reality.
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Today began thusly:

NY Times, 17 Oct updated 18 Oct 2025: Santos Is Released After Trump Commutes His Sentence, subtitled “George Santos’s lawyer said the disgraced former congressman was freed from a New Jersey prison around 10 p.m. on Friday. He served less than three months on his fraud conviction.”

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Moral Collapse, or Moral Immaturity?

  • Has MAGA’s morality collapsed, or has it always been this way — immature?
  • With references to that hierarchy of morality, and Peter Singer’s expanding circle of morality;
  • Karoline Leavitt says Democrats are made up of “Hamas terrorists, illegal aliens, and violent criminals.”
  • Andrew Egger at The Bulwark spells it out: Trump and his fans live in a world of black and white;
  • Another preemptive attack on “No Kings” rallies as being un-American;
  • How Trump’s crypto scandal is bigger than Teapot Dome and Watergate (while his fans don’t care);
  • Shorts items about a Christian Nationalist defending slavery, stupid things people say about Antifa, Trump’s innumeracy about his Venezuelan boat strikes, and how the autism spectrum is too broad.
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The Atlantic, George Packer, 17 Oct 2025: The Depth of MAGA’s Moral Collapse, subtitled “How we got to ‘I love Hitler.'”

A nice summary of recent events.
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Some People Hate

  • The Young Republicans in those chats were not kids;
  • Republicans excuse their vile comments while demonizing anyone who has said anything less than adulatory about Charlie Kirk — whose opinions were equally vile;
  • Short items about demons, civil rights, mammals, lies, God’s vengeance, antifa, and health care premiums;
  • Robert Reich on how he is 10 days younger than Trump, but actually years younger, because he doesn’t hate;
  • And another attempted generalization about conservatives and liberals.
  • And another episode in my series about “the most beautiful music in the world”: Zbigniew Preisner’s “Dawn”.
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First, following up on the Young Republicans story yesterday.

Politico, 15 Oct 2025: Vance downplays group chat messages: ‘Kids do stupid things, especially young boys.’, subtitled “The vice president called the texts ‘edgy, offensive jokes.'”
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Art and Conservatives

  • How a Christian Right talk show failed, and how MAGA’s fake Super Bowl halftime show is “pitifully out-of-touch with pop culture”;
  • Thoughts about how conservatives have no sense of humor, and how conservatives dominate talk radio;
  • Personal thoughts about resistance to change and Heaven, and the idea of Heaven, and how life is a progression of changes;
  • News yesterday about how Young Republicans trade racist chats, and how  Republican politicians defend them, or don’t care;
  • Crispin Sartwell asks about woke and MAGA censorship, which is worse?
– – –

Granting there may be certain psychological and political themes that distinguish the ‘right’ and the ‘left,’ why would these extend to matters of art?

I noted a piece a couple weeks ago about Christian music, and how lame it is. The writer, Amanda Marcotte, commented,
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And How Science Fiction Is Both a Symptom and a Solution

  • Further thoughts on how science fiction informs current social ills;
  • Republican doublethink about “No Kings” rallies;
  • Columbus Day, and Trump’s veneration of Columbus vs the realities of history;
  • Heather Cox Richardson’s perspective on Columbus, and the origin of Columbus Day.
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And now to close the loop, at least tentatively for now.

Three days ago I offered three categories which describe most of the posts here on political or religious matters. These are mostly observations, but they are derived from principles of evolutionary psychology and the observation that human nature evolved in a very different environment than the one we live in today. The three: people believe things that are objectively not true; much of human behavior illustrates tribal behavior, not enlightenment behavior; and people tend to sort everything into binaries, preferring simplicity to complexity.

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How All This Is Reflected in Science Fiction

  • The three themes of my essay;
  • Items about the Pope, Trump firing black officials, MAGA’s presumption of carrying out the “Lord’s work,” how the Trump administration has quietly reinstated many of the CDC staffers it recently fire, how Trump thinks Biden was president on Jan. 6th, and how Watergate was an “illegal hoax.”
  • NY Times essay about binary thinking;
  • Washington Post essay about irrational thinking.
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Time to circle around from the themes of the past two posts, to some conclusions I’ve reached about how the limitations of human nature (including the limitations of our senses) influence what might be presumed to be the relative objectivity of science fiction.

These are the three key themes of that essay I wrote for Gary Westfahl, for a book that’s coming out any week now, called Reimagining Science Fiction: Essays on 21st Century Ideas and Authors (McFarland). These three themes are how the consequences of our human nature, influenced by the limitations of human experience, can undermine science fiction.

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And How This Is All About Reality, and the Future of Humanity

  • Quotes from E.O. Wilson and Brian Cox;
  • Comments about existential threats, base human nature, MAGA, and woke;
  • More examples, like yesterday’s;
  • A report from Nicholas Kristof, who lives in Portland;
  • How Trump isn’t responding to crises, he’s constructing them;
  • Final thoughts about how MAGA isn’t concerned about law and order, they just use “law and order” to expel people they don’t like, in service of tribalistic goals.
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Let us begin today by recalling this famous quote by E.O. Wilson (which I mentioned back in June):

The real problem of humanity is the following: We have Paleolithic emotions, medieval institutions and godlike technology. And it is terrifically dangerous, and it is now approaching a point of crisis overall.

Next, this quote by English physicist Brian Cox, a sort of heir to Carl Sagan (and who was once in a rock band), which popped up on my Facebook feed today.

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