"It's like these guys take pride in being ignorant." Barack Obama finally said it.
Though a successful political and electoral strategy, the Right's stand against intelligence has steered them far off course, leaving them -- and us -- unable to deal successfully with the complex and dynamic circumstances we face as a nation and a society.
American 15-year-olds rank 24th out of 29 countries in math literacy, and their parents are as likely to believe in flying saucers as in evolution; roughly 30 to 40 percent believe in each. Their president believes "the jury is still out" on evolution.
Steve Colbert interviewed Georgia Rep. Lynn Westmoreland on "The Colbert Report." Westmoreland co-sponsored a bill that would require the display of the Ten Commandments in both the House of Representatives and the Senate, but, when asked, couldn't actually list the commandments.
This stuff would be funny if it weren't so dangerous.
In the 2004 election, nearly 70 percent of Bush supporters believed the United States had "clear evidence" that Saddam Hussein was working closely with al Qaeda; a third believed weapons of mass destruction were found in Iraq; and more than a third that a substantial majority of world opinion supported the U.S.-led invasion, according to the Program on International Policy Attitudes at the University of Maryland. The political right and allied culture warriors actively ignore evidence and encourage misinformation. To motivate their followers, they label intelligent and informed as "elite," implying that ignorance is somehow both valuable and under attack. Susan Jacoby confronts our "know-nothingism" -- current and historical -- in her new book,
The Age of American Unreason.
A former reporter for the Washington Post and program director of the Center for Inquiry-New York City, Jacoby is the author of five books, including Wild Justice, a Pulitzer Prize finalist, and
Freethinkers: A History of American Secularism
. Her political blog,
The Secularist's Corner
, is on the Web site of the Washington Post.
Terrence McNally: Have things gotten worse? How were things different as you were growing up?
Susan Jacoby: Well, I have just been told that all of my memories of growing up are wrong, because memory is absolutely inaccurate. It's only a "narrative."
I'll give you an example of how stupid this country has become. I'm one of the village atheists on Faith, a panel sponsored by the Washington Post and Newsweek. In a recent post I wrote that when I was 7 years old, I was taken by my mom to visit a friend who had been stricken by polio and was in an iron lung. Polio has basically been eradicated, but I grew up when polio was still a real threat to children, before the Salk vaccine.
This childhood friend had been playing and running only three weeks before, and now he was in an iron lung. And I asked my mom, "Why would God let something like that happen?" And to her credit, instead of giving me some moronic answer, my mother said, "I don't know."
After posting this on Faith, I received an e-mail saying, "All childhood memories are unreliable. We construct narratives to justify what we now think."
Of course it would be stupid if I'd said I became an atheist at the age of 7. But I hadn't said that, only that I remembered this childhood experience as making me begin to question what I'd been taught. The whole tone of the e-mail was that nobody's memory about anything could possibly be accurate -- no fact could possibly be true.
TM: That doesn't sound like a typical evolution doubter. It sounds like an attack on rationality from a rational person.
I liked your response to: "All childhood memories are unreliable. We construct narratives to justify what we now think."
Of course they aren't complete narratives of childhood and have been filled in - duh. The point of telling a narrative is usually to explain what we've learned since then or the significance of the event that we now know. So I just roll my eyes and mutter "intellectual twit" whenever I hear someone say that quote above. So there is such a thing as being so intellectual that they come across as rude or for lack of a better word - a butthead.
Rob
Cygnus Graduate Thinker
Joined: Mar 26, 2008
Posts: 525
Posted:
Mon Aug 18, 2008 2:12 am
There is a fine line between being intellectual and being a smart aleck. The problem is that most Americans fail to distinguish.
_________________ К чёрту вечность, какой в ней прок?
zacherystaylor Post Noob
Joined: Jul 07, 2008
Posts: 58
Posted:
Thu Aug 21, 2008 12:47 pm
What we need is education reform and media reform.
The media can be used as a very powerful education tool or a very powerful indoctrination tool. Unfortunatly it is being used mostly to indoctrinate.
A system should be set up where both the people and the scholors hold the media acountable. This won't be easy but if noone trys it won't happen.
What we have now is a media for the corporations by the corporations and of the corporations.
As for your child hood memory even if it isn't exactly right there are millions more similar stories. The point you make is valid.
_________________ If you don't teach children to think rationally when they are young they might get a mental illness called religion.
There are no Good Gods only Good Dogs.
http://www.geocities.com/zacherystaylor/culttactics.htm
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