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?
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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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How This Is All About Science Fiction

  • This blog isn’t about conservatives and the religious; it’s about people believing things that aren’t true, about tribalism and hypocrisy, and how human nature reduces everything into binaries.
  • With numerous examples;
  • And about how Trump didn’t win the Nobel Peace Prize.
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Let me expand on something from yesterday. I compile many items in this blog that might be taken as criticizing political conservatives, or the religious. But those are meta-categories, if you like. What I’m actually attentive to are items that fall into roughly three categories, something like these:

  1. Things that people believe that are objectively not true. These include items about flat earthers and the connection between vaccines and autism. And, frankly, about “prophets” who get messages from Charlie Kirk in heaven.
  2. Examples of human behavior that illustrate tribalism and hypocrisy. These are typically items at odds with the principles of the Enlightenment, the US Constitution, even of the New Testament. Examples include Christians who seem far more eager to quote Leviticus than Jesus, and much political behavior.
  3. Examples of how human nature tends to sort everything into binaries: black vs white, good vs bad; and how many people are hostile to, or simply don’t perceive, intermediate positions, such as (as I’ve said) shades of gray, or even colors. And the inability to foresee long-term consequences.

Off hand those are the three main groups. Today I’m going to compile a bunch of JMG and similar items, and match them up with the three principles above. Continue reading

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Stages of Wisdom

Here’s something I don’t explicitly acknowledge very often, though I think I’ve mentioned it before. There is a substantial portion of humanity made up of clear-thinking people, people who understand at an early age why community and religious myths exist, and why they don’t conform to the reality of the universe. These are the people who have thought around and through those stories and learned to deal with the world as it is. They are the ones who have built our modern technological civilization. But the next stage of wisdom is to realize that since those stories *do* exist, they serve a cultural purpose that is functional and cannot be denied, and that have to be lived with.

But by substantial, I think, maybe 10%. I’ve gone into length about this before and won’t do so again right now. And perhaps I am wrong.

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But this is why it’s fascinating for me to compile so many instances of irrationality. “Humanity cannot bear very much reality” according to T.S. Eliot. (Updated here on 10Oct) If I seem to be tearing on conservatives, it’s not because of any animosity toward conservatives per se; it’s because the people who believe things that are not objectively true, that are instead downright absurd, the people who fail to live up to the ideals of whatever documents — Bible, Constitution — they claim to venerate in preference for behavior easily explainable through an understanding of primitive human nature as it evolved over millions of years in humanity’s ancestral environment, those people claim to be conservatives. And it’s examples of those beliefs and behaviors that fascinate me, not criticizing any one group of people. There’s a distinction here. Still, it’s useful to look upward once in a while, and not downward.

So let’s skip the JMG examples for today. There are many of them every day. Let’s find a piece about the big picture.

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Comments from Facebook; What the Conversion Therapy Case is About

  • Recalling the Nazi rallies in left-wing areas of Germany;
  • How the Nazis based their policies on segregated America;
  • How right-wingers admit “it’s harder to discredit the left because the left is almost always telling the truth”;
  • Conservative justices imply queer kids are born hating themselves;
  • The Supreme Court fights over whether medical expertise actually exists;
  • Conservatives want to talk to other peoples’ kids in order to shame them about sex.
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Today, I resolved the issue with SFADB on the Locus server, as detailed in posts on Facebook.

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Ramez Naam quoting Lee J. Carter.

The history of Nazis holding rallies in left-wing areas of Weimar Germany, instigating street fights, and then telling the press that only they could save Germany from the “violent communists” seems like an important thing for people to be studying right now.

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How Tribal Loyalty Overrides Evidence of Incompetence

  • How MAGA will never accept “I told you so”:
  • Robert Reich on why Trump keeps dismantling agencies;
  • Short items about overthrowing the government, primitive morality, yet another prediction of the rapture, Biblical morality to justify the killing of black men, the idea of firing 500K federal workers, the scam of “ethical IVF”, and phony AI songs in tribute to Charlie Kirk.
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This first piece aligns with one of my core provisional conclusions: you can’t change people’s minds with evidence. Most people are driven by loyalty to their tribe.

Caption: “President Trump’s deployment of federal agents to Portland doesn’t create its own reality. There is no crisis to justify this response. (Spencer Platt / Getty Images)”

LA Times, Robert Repino, 7 Oct 2025: As Trump’s reign implodes, tell MAGA ‘I told you so’

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MAGA Retribution?

  • News today about a South Carolina judge, who had ruled against Trump, who saw her house burned to the ground;
  • How ICE goons welcome their jobs;
  • Trump’s lies about murders in Portland, and Osama Bin Laden;
  • Robert Reich on how Trump sees truth only on TV.
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The crazy news today, reported even on NBC TV this morning, is that the home of a South Carolina judge who ruled against Trump exploded Saturday and burned to the ground. MAGA had been doxing her.

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Seriously, MAGA would do this? It’s not hard to believe.

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Shades of Autism

  • Andrew O’Hehir at Salon describes Trump’s war on reality, concerning Venezuela;
  • Bits from JMG about Democrats, the Pope, a debate trophy named for Charlie Kirk; how Trump lies about Portland burning to the ground; and how the GOP doesn’t want children to know that bisexuals exist;
  • And a long piece about whether the Autism spectrum should be split apart.
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A familiar theme, noted yet again.

Salon, Andrew O’Hehir, 5 Oct 2025: Trump’s phony war on Venezuela — and his larger war on reality, subtitled “Why is Trump attacking Venezuela? All the usual reasons: Wounded pride, limitless greed and conspiracy theories”

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