Government Suppression, and Dr. Noc

  • CBS, now controlled by a Trump acolyte, pulled a story from last night’s 60 Minutes at the last moment;
  • Dr. Noc on Facebook, a new reliable source;
  • Short items about Trump’s favorite excuse, Republicans again taking credit for funding due to Biden, Trump’s antipathy toward wind farms, why Denmark’s vaccine schedule won’t work in the US, and how Christians resist following civil law.
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The big news today is how CBS just pulled a story from last night’s 60 Minutes, a story that criticized the Trump administration’s deportment policy, at the last minute. Because control of CBS has been given over to a Trump supporter. Something similar is also happening at CNN, apparently. Because the Trump-supporting billionaires are buying up the big, formerly independent, media outlets.

NY Times, 21 Dec 2025: 60 Minutes’ Pulled a Segment. A Correspondent Calls It ‘Political.’, subtitled “Sharyn Alfonsi, a ’60 Minutes’ correspondent, criticized the network’s decision to remove her reporting from Sunday’s edition of the show.”

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Steven Pinker, ENLIGHTENMENT NOW, post 5

Subtitled “The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress”
(Viking, Feb. 2018, xix+556pp, including 102pp of notes, references, and index.)

Posts about this book: Post 1; Post 2Post 3Post 4; Post 5. Expanded below.

Part I of this book outlined the ideas of the Enlightenment; Part II showed how those ideas worked. Part III defends the three other themes of this book against surprising enemies.

This post covers two of the three chapters in Part III.

The chapter on Reason addresses questions of why, since we *can* reason, we are so easily led into folly. Not so much from ignorance as affiliations with religions or other ideologies, and motivated reasoning, in-group thinking. Conservatives seem to doubt progress is even desirable, let alone possible; the certainties of traditional Christendom are preferable; Pinker rejects this resoundingly. But the left too rejects caricatures of certain ideas. Key idea: the test of empirical rationality is prediction. Some pundits are always wrong. And conservative politics is increasingly know-nothing. How to improve reasoning powers? Teach critical thinking, but it has to be hands-on teaching.

The chapter on Science exalts it as “the proudest accomplishment of our species.” Why the disdain, even from intellectuals? The fear of ‘scientism,’ the idea that science can have anything to say about CP Snow’s second culture, the humanities. But the practices of science are designed to make up for the flaws of individual human beings, and to rely on two key ideas: the world is intelligible, and we allow the world to tell us whether our ideas about it our correct. Most people are happy to accept the practical benefits of science, but reject science’s implications about the lack of truth of the world’s traditional religions and cultures — with quotes of two long paragraphs about what we know about the world through science, how many traditional ideas, from fate and karma to answered prayers, simply aren’t true, and how this underlying scientific understanding of the world necessarily grounds our approach to morality and our responsibility to take care of ourselves and our planet. With final comments about how science is treated in academia, how opponents resist quantification in favor of intuition, and how ideas of E.O. Wilson’s consilience offer more hope than the pre-Darwinian, pre-Copernican worldviews of people like Leon Wieseltier.

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An Antebellum Constitution, Christianity, and Christmas

  • Adam Serwer on how conservatives want an Antebellum Constitution;
  • David French on why Christianity is a dangerous faith;
  • Nicholas Kristof and Bart Ehrman on what Jesus would think of Christmas 2025.
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Undoing progress and dragging us back to the past.

The Atlantic, Adam Serwer, 21 Dec 2025: Conservatives Want the Antebellum Constitution Back, subtitled “The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments are in trouble.”
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Steven Pinker, ENLIGHTENMENT NOW, post 4

Subtitled “The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress”
(Viking, Feb. 2018, xix+556pp, including 102pp of notes, references, and index.)

Here are the remaining ten chapters in the long middle section of the book that focuses on Progress. Some of these update topics from BETTER ANGELS, and remind of us to take statistical approaches to safety, terrorism, and so on. Beware headlines; look at the data. Overall, liberal values are spreading around the world. The chapter on Knowledge has two great quotes about the value of education and the awareness of one’s place in the world. Two chapters consider, if things have gotten so much better, why aren’t we happier? And concludes that the evidence we’re unhappy is unpersuasive, and the reason we’re not happier is due to humanity’s gradual maturity in an ever-more complex world. A chapter on existential threats finds most such risks unlikely. And a chapter on the future of progress worries about two threats: economic stagnation, and the rise of authoritarian populism, on the latter point specifically addressing the danger Trump represents to all the good news from the previous chapters. Recommendations: rely on the resilience of the American system; recognize that Trump voters are of the lower classes with low educations, who are older and more religious. So avoid polarizing rhetoric, and fix the election system. There will always be setbacks, but there’s a dialectic that nevertheless moves us forward.

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Frogs, Religion, the Ballroom, Bigotry, and Dictators

  • Trump’s relative isolationism: big frog in a small pond.
  • The obvious reasons people are walking away from organized religion;
  • Short takes on the White House ballroom, surging bigotry on the right, and Trump’s alignment with history’s worst dictators.
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Count on Fareed Zakaria for some perspective.

Washington Post, Fareed Zakaria, 19 Dec 2025: Trump’s doctrine is ‘Make America Small Again’, subtitled “A hemispheric focus makes little sense for a global economic and military giant.”
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Kindergarten Anthropology, and Ordering Things Into Existence

  • A Facebook response to the question of where morality comes from;
  • Franklin Graham admits that God is a God of War;
  • Trump thinks he can order nuclear fusion into existence, and order a Moon landing in 2028.
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There are groups on Facebook that I don’t actually follow, but whose posts I keep seeing because I tend to click on those kinds of posts, and of course Facebook notices. Here’s such a post today, that I think worth quoting.

It goes to the question, where do your morals come from if not from God? Or Bible? Or Ten Commandments? I’ve commented on this idea many times, noting especially that people do not, in fact, have to look up their list of rules to know whether something is bad or not (they know it intuitively), and that people in nations that do not follow the Bible or Christianity are not, in fact, immoral or amoral. And furthermore, that politicians are obsessed with posting the Ten Commandments in schools while completely ignoring the many things Jesus said.

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Steven Pinker, ENLIGHTENMENT NOW, post 3

Subtitled “The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress”
(Viking, Feb. 2018, xix+556pp, including 102pp of notes, references, and index.)

Here are the first seven of the 17 chapters in the long middle section of the book.  The first one about “Progressophobia,” covers a range of familiar reasons from cognitive psychology why people think the past was better than the present, and the present is a mess.  Topics about life, health, sustenance, etc., are addressed simply by looking at the data (as in the later Rosling book, reviewed here). Then come two topics, inequality and the environment, about which I’m not as sanguine, in 2025, as Pinker was in 2017 when he was writing this book. As even-handed as Pinker tries to be, since he wrote the Trump administrations have steadily tried to make everything worse.

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Documenting My Reading; Holiday Shopping; and Tr*mp

Infrastructure note: I’ve updated all the pages under the “Nonfiction Books” tab in the menu above. I set up those pages a year ago, in December 2024, and updated a few of them in May 2025, and now have updated all them this month. The link on the main tab in the menu takes you to those books recently blogged (not necessarily recently read). There are, of course, other books recently read that I haven’t yet blogged about and so are not captured in these pages.

My plan is to finish updating these pages in the next few weeks, extending alas into the new year (I thought I might finish by this month), and then turning my attention to the SF Reviews tab, and building it up similarly. Because that’s where I’m going: to consider SF novels and stories in light of the modern understanding of the world. And documenting them all, as a start.

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And I did my annual trip to the shopping centers and malls for Christmas. (Walnut Creek, Emeryville, 4th Street in Berkeley; not all today.) My conclusion: it’s easier to buy stuff online. Once in a while shopping in a physical store provides some inspiration, but that didn’t really happen today. And the things I was actively looking for, I could not find. I came home and ordered more stuff online.

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Another Trump performance with his TV speech last night, then the shock and bewilderment: how has America comes to this?

Salon, Heather Digby Parton, 18 Dec 2025: Trump’s primetime speech was a master class in gaslighting, subtitled “The president’s false claims about economic conditions are the latest indication that he’s in serious trouble”

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Do People Actually Believe the Things That They Say?

  • Timothy Snyder on Elon Musk, responsibility, and displacement;
  • Adam Lee how on how, despite abortion bans, rates of abortion have gone up;
  • Short items on racism, dual citizenship, dismantling climate research, promoting violence, and snitching and scapegoating.
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Stepping out a bit to a larger issue of human psychology.

Timothy Snyder on Substack, 16 Dec 2025: Enemy Aliens and (Freudian) Displacement, subtitled “One way to think about billionaires and borders”
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Steven Pinker: ENLIGHTENMENT NOW, post 2

Subtitled “The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress”
(Viking, Feb. 2018, xix+556pp, including 102pp of notes, references, and index.)

The first three chapters of this book are crisp summaries of themes shared with two or three dozen other books I’ve read and posted about here; this book is at the center of a Venn diagram of all of them. Basic ideas of reason and science, of humanism and morality; how the human mind’s ancient legacy is ill-suited for the modern world; the expansion of the circle of empathy for others; the later ideas of evolution, entropy, and information; how life and evolution are possible in zones of order despite long-term entropy; the intuitive and simplistic thinking that derives from our ancient biases, including motivated reasoning; how people would rather think they are right than know what is true; how rules and norms emerged to allow true beliefs to emerge. And then why challenges to Enlightenment values emerged, from the Romantic movement with Rousseau, to religious faith and nationalism, to notions that civilization is in decline or is merely boring compared to the glories of the past.

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