If Only The Stooges and Goons Revolt…Or Weren’t Stooges And Goons After All!
by Michael Farrell
As a counter to the GOP’s inquisition of climate scientists, let us remember that in the last year or so, UC Berkeley physicist Richard Muller re-examined all the temperature data from the NOAA, East Anglia Hadley Climate Research Unit, and the Goddard Institute of Space Science sources. Even though Muller started out as a skeptic of the temperature data, and he was funded by the Koch brothers and other oil company sources, he carefully checked and re-checked the research himself. When the GOP leaders called him to testify before the House Science and Technology Committee last spring, they were expecting him to discredit the temperature data showed real change. Instead, Muller shocked his GOP sponsors by demonstrating his scientific integrity and telling truth to power: the temperature increase was real, and the scientists who had demonstrated climate was changing were right.9
This is the essence of the scientific method at its best. There may be biases in our perceptions, and we may want to find data that fits our preconceptions about the world, but if science is done properly, we get a real answer, often one we did not expect. That’s the true test of when science is giving us a reality check: when it tells us something we do not want to hear, but is inescapable if one follows the scientific method and analyzes the data honestly.
Thomas Henry Huxley said it best over 150 years ago: “Sit down before fact as a little child, be prepared to give up every preconceived notion, follow humbly wherever and to whatever abysses nature leads, or you shall learn nothing.”–Donald Prothero, Professor of Geology, Occidental College and Cal-Tech
This month’s edition of E-Skeptic has a great article by Dr. Prothero about the interseces of faith, politics and science, and based on his discussion I’m kind of convinced that we have a fascinating problem — when the three collide, bet against whichever has the greatest value and truth. In the article, Denialist Demagogues and the Threat to Science, Prothero makes the point repeatedly, that there are whores amongst us who will sell out as well as dupes and those unwilling to accept science and the scientific method. Rick Perry has famously commented that four semesters of biochemistry made a pilot out of him; thing is, even that “misunderestimates” his level of ignorance. It’s not that the man is stupid — he is willfully ignorant.
This seems to be par for the course for the right this cycle, and probably should be on the minds of most of us. When confronted by facts, theories, hyposthesis, evidence that they do not disagree, they proclaim along with the choirs of angels and saints that it’s a mystery and the Lord will provide. Since I know more than a few conservative atheists, that seems a bit disingenuous, so they proclaim a conspiracy which then, on examination, turns out to be a combination of right wing PR combined with whoreish behavior by a few and eye on the prize hypocrisy by others combined with a degree of malign, self-serving calculation.
Professor Prothero cites Paul Krugman on what the current reality is and where the stakes lie. It is worth considering…“But the odds are that one of these years the world’s greatest nation will find itself ruled by a party that is aggressively anti-science, indeed anti-knowledge. And, in a time of severe challenges — environmental, economic, and more — that’s a terrifying prospect.”
Now, I am a middle-aged white man without children who doesn’t have severe upper respiratory symptoms. I don’t expect to live long enough to really suffer from client change. The only dog I have in this fight is that nurtured by my being a member of society and having a sense of ethical responsibility to my neighbors and to those who will come after me. For people who know better to blur the lines on this issue, and so many others, proves that not all self-interest is enlightened and that greed and ignorance can trump science and good will…if we let it.
Now, Jefferson felt that the need for a free press to ensure an informed electorate and thus gain a reasonable chance to get the best results from a democratically elected college was critical. The press today is not free — it costs a lot of money and as a result, since the cost of production outweighs by far the profit from the sales of copies and on-line subscriptions, whether it’s Gannett, McClatchey, Murdoch or the Schulzbergers have to be concerned about not pissing off their alien overlords, the people who buy the advertising. Since the press includes TV, radio and blogs it gets even more complicated. Rachel Maddow, for example, had a mutually respectful and and rational conversation with two of McCain’s key staffers, Steve Schmidt and Nicole Wallace about a controversial topic — the Palinator. However, the Maddow show is a rare exception. (Frankly, I’m amazed that people like Huntsman,Wallace and Schmidt are still Republicans. It’s like people in Italy being tied to Soccer teams from birth…) People yell at each other, and only those able to outscream the other can be heard. You can decide who is actually speaking what they think based on some sort of objective reality as opposed to fantasy, greed or calculation by how quizzical and bemused their expression and the calmer their response, until they get frustrated and then either get funny or furious. Or both…If you can continue to not be overwhelmed by these bozos, you can be heard, but it can be hard. It seems to me at times that despite the best efforts of informed journalists, principled academics and commentators, and excellent thinkers who strive to be heard, our fate depends on the Till Eulenspeigel’s amongst us. That’s probably not the worst defender, but when satire is all that stands between the polity and the deranged, insane and barbaric things can get dicey quickly.
It would be nice if it was just hard science. It’s not. Economics, foreign policy, and so on — doesn’t matter. A rational person’s response to this really can only be “Are you fucking insane or are you fucking kidding me!” Or both…doesn’t matter. Budgets are not just about spending, they’re about what we plan to do with our country, not our money. Or your money…what do you have to pay to be part of the country after we figure out what it needs to be is a totally different question. Either money for the rich or schools, culture, infrastructure, national defense, keeping promises — you know, all those things that the Founders expected would happen as the union became more perfect. Instead, we have Rand Paul coming out in favor of letting pipelines explode; he’s already come out in favor of lets methane do it’s things and kill coal miners. Boehner and Kantor et al are starting to bear a striking resemblance to Ozimandias prior to the statuary phase of that Republican leaders’s career. If I hear another right wing clown say that we need to reduce taxes and cut spending to reduce the deficit and not leave our children a mountain of debt, I think we take them on a tour of places where nobody bothered to do the right thing because it was politically expedient or violated their totalitarian faith — in Marx, or Hitler, or Caesar. We can leave your children — remember, I’m in this for the laughs — a reasonable debt and a functioning commonwealth, or we can leave them…Zimbabwe.
Oddly, let’s let Percy Bysshe Shelley have the last word.
I met a traveller from an antique land Who said: “Two vast and trunkless legs of stone Stand in the desert. Near them on the sand, half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown and wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command tell that its sculptor well those passions read which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things, the hand that mocked them and the heart that fed. And on the pedestal these words appear: `My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings: Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!’ Nothing beside remains. Round the decay of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare, the lone and level sands stretch far away”. Amen, brother.
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Posted by Michael Farrell on Sep 29 2011, With 0 Reads, Filed under Corruption, Editors Picks. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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Great piece. Sometimes it feels like anyone who believes in rational, unbiased analysis is akin to Fred Leuchter exposing the Holocaust scam.
Couple of relevant points — I suspect that the “client” change malapropism was probably just that. Typing slower than my mind moves. It happens with me often. Joys of Adult ADD. I never could proofread worth a damn.
There is a problem. The community needs to fix the problem somehow for the common good. How exactly does the community do it? Taxes are the price for civilization. I’d like to see more money devoted to things like research and fielding of items. Innovation across the board with seed money provided by Uncle Sam and us. Patented by the US. Royalties and such paid to the US. But, that’s my perspective; there may be a different way to do it.
Bernie Sanders had a comment tonight on Current about the need to reward and focus the financial system on support of the productive economy. Most of the money in Wall Street is chasing it’s own tail — derivatives, stock speculation, short and long selling. None of this crap provides capital to do things. If you want innovation, production and value funded by the private sector, making the financial instruments far less attractive might do that — the money has to go someplace.
Sit down before fact as a little child, be prepared to give up every preconceived notion, follow humbly wherever and to whatever abysses nature leads, or you shall learn nothing.
Mike, can you not see this nonsense conflates the the empiricism of facts with a denial of hypothetical reasoning and some mumbo-jumbo about mystical abysses? What’s childlike is accepting this occult witch’s brew of irrationalism deifying nature, which, judging by the metaphoric use of “abysses” doesn’t bode well for those who’d follow the dictates of Huxley’s scientism.
Dan, I think you’re confusing Huxley’s abysses with Nietzsche’s abyss — rather different concepts I suspect. While the word is generally metaphoric, Nietzsche’s concept was fraught with despair, angst and dread. Huxley was optimistic — if you follow the scientific method and adhere to the facts, you’ll get someplace worth getting to from the point of view of knowledge and truth. Ignoring the data is a way of avoiding the trip into the unknown — Huxley’s abyss — but ultimately leads the thinking person to confront Nietzsche’s…which we do a lot any way, but it’s better to do so because of awareness as opposed to discovery your own bad faith.
Thanks, and all well and good regarding the suitability of applying the scientific method to the study of the natural world. When science steps into the affective, metaphysical world, however, it loses its authority by direct inference from its self-imposed confinement to what can be observed, quantified and measured. The point I was trying to make is that we need to be vigilant toward those who would use the eminent prestige of science as a pretext to speak about matters in which they have no qualifications, putting the tools of science and technology into the hands of occult and sinister enemies of mankind. Science has nothing to say about what man ought to do, cannot distinguish between good and evil, virtue and vice, and it’s a safe bet those who claim it can will turn out to be the slave masters and not benefactors of mankind.
The scientific method is a good way of defining what is; often social sciences like poly sci and economics tend to ape physical sciences, which I think is just the academic form of penis envy. Social sciences need to look to the outliers to get an idea of what can work going forward. If it’s a math issue, math is generally pretty straight forward in the area of economics — that’s why looking at CBO estimates is very helpful in terms of figuring out what can work. However, science should not be the arbitrator of right or wrong; ethics and morality are principle-based but the needs to be a lot of discussion, thought and reflection. Or, what the hell, you can just wing it. I think Prothero and my point would be to not just wing it. Not liking reality is not justification in any system of morality to refusing to accept reality. In making ethical choices which are political choices to some extent, we need to be as objectively aware of what really is as we can be if we want to be correct in our course of action. Good luck with that, of course, in our current situation. I suspect Seneca wasn’t too terribly surprised when Nero caused his death…but, he knew in advance that he was supporting and enabling a madman. The Republicans overwhelmed by the Tea Party knew that they were dealing with, legitimatizing and enabling a fringe movement based on feelings a lot like what’s going on with the crowds doing the Occupy Wall Street thing. They just thought that the tea party could be controlled…they end up going from ranting about pulling the plug on grandma to hearing the mob applaud letting people die in hospitals solely for lack of insurance. Well, only the fool troubles his own house, so he will inherit the wind…an argument made in Scopes v. Dayton. Which we seem to be re-living…
But, what if that’s the point? The so-called “globalists” (actually the handful of financiers that operate the worldwide central banking scam) have made the point in print that they want America (and every other nation) to give up sovereignty to a globalist central government (operated by themselves of course). What if the astonishing ignorance of each successive American administration is carefully nurtured by the bankers (through their control of finance which gives them secondarily the control of the big media) so that eventually the hapless American people will be induced to accept governance from abroad as the price of survival?
Intelligent people (ie those who cannot be bought or otherwise controlled) are kept out of the political system by control of the finances that make successful elections possible. Morons and psychopaths can be induced, one way or another, to make insane choices that will eventually destroy the nation to the benefit of nobody but the banksters. Meanwhile the masses, dumbed down to drooling stupidity, will do whatever they are told to do by the Judas Goats they have “elected” to office.
Ah, but the bankers wouldn’t do that, would they? Hmmph. History says otherwise. The prize is now beyond trillions. They have trillions already. 600 trillion in assets (estimated). What comes beyond trillions? I don’t even know. Gazillions? What would the 30 do for gazillions?