In the twentieth century, many people looked ahead and saw high-tech solutions to high tech problems. In the twenty first century, we have the high tech solutions, but as Tom the Dancing Bug points out, many low tech problems still leave us stumped.
The future ain’t what it used to be
Posted by acilius on July 7, 2010
https://losthunderlads.com/2010/07/07/the-future-aint-what-it-used-to-be/
Time to speak out for sexual freedom
Earlier today I was catching up with the latest of the fascinating discussions that always go on in the comment threads at Alison Bechdel’s Dykes to Watch Out For blog. In response to a topic that had come up, I began writing a comment that was far too long to appear in a comment queue. So I cut most of it, and pasted it below.
One commenter linked to this Newsweek story titled “The Anti-Lesbian Drug,” about a project that a scientist named Dr Maria New is currently conducting. Another commenter, who is personally acquainted with Maria New, protested that Dr New is not at all the sort of person to try to invent an “anti-lesbian drug,” and gave reason to believe that her work has been caricatured. Here is the comment I posted there:
@Alex K #73: I’m perfectly willing to accept that Maria New’s research may have been distorted in the press. The standards for science coverage generally seem to be pretty low, even when no hot-button social issue is at stake. When right-wingers see a chance to twist the work of a female or minority researcher so that it sounds like something that supports their agendas, all restraint goes out the window.
Whether Dr New ever contemplated developing an “anti-lesbian drug,” the Newsweek article Calico links in #67 and the reactions it reports go to something I think about all the time. Lots of same-sexers and allies seem utterly certain that a scientific explanation of the biological basis of homosexuality will be a great blow to homophobia. Yet it seems obvious to me that nothing of the kind will happen. On the contrary. Homophobes will take that news as confirmation of their idea that homosexuality is a disease. That will be bad enough; what is vastly worse is the likelihood that they will be armed with drugs with which they can “treat” that “disease.”
Every time this comes up I have a very strong sense that I know just what’s going to happen, and it is horrible. So I’m writing a post on my own blog about it, because I don’t want choke up this thread with a long essay. Suffice it to say, I’m worried.
Here’s what I cut out:
Today, people who disapprove of homosexuality may make the same-sexers in their lives miserable by insisting that they should turn themselves into heterosexuals by some more or less magical process of willpower. They may push them into various flagrantly bogus imitations of psychotherapy. Or, they may resort to violence against them. I doubt that any of these approaches has ever turned a homosexual into a heterosexual. Each of them, however, has turned living people into corpses, whether directly from violence or indirectly in the suicides and addictions to which they sentence many of their targets. To oppose these methods, same sexers and their allies need not discuss sexual morality. We can simply appeal to the common decency that recoils from bullying and embraces life.
Looking ahead, it seems to be just a matter of time before biologists and anthropologists identify some physiological processes that are associated with an increased rate of homosexuality and other processes that are associated with an increased rate of heterosexuality. It’s hard to imagine that behaviors as widespread and persistent throughout human cultures as same-sex attraction and the construction of social identities built around that attraction could fail to have a biological basis that explains at least part of their prevalence. When these processes are identified, the people who now support antigay bullying will see an opportunity to develop methods that will in fact achieve the goals their current strategies so consistently fail to meet. They will demand that pharmacologists develop drugs that suppress processes associated with an increased rate of homosexuality and promote processes that are associated with an increased rate of heterosexuality. And sooner or later, this demand will be supplied.
If society makes as much progress in coming to terms with the rights of same-sexers and the dignity of their relationships in the next 40 years as it has in the last 40 years, then perhaps by 2050 the world will be ready for an explanation of the physiological factors that contribute to sexual orientation, gender identity, and related social phenomena. In that future, there wouldn’t be much demand for heterosexualizing drugs, and a definite stigma against anyone who promoted them.
But that isn’t the way things are in 2010. Public opinion surveys in the USA still consistently show that about one American in three believes that there should be criminal penalties for consenting adults who have same-sex sex in the privacy of their homes. Billions of people around the world support violently heterosexist religious and political groups. In the current climate, the first company to produce a viable drug to ensure prospective parents heterosexual offspring would make immense profits, probably well into the trillions of dollars. For all that Dr Maria New and other self-respecting scientists might refuse to be part of the research that will produce that drug, they won’t be able to stop any number of others from joining in the contest, not when the prize is so fantastically lucrative.
What happens once the heterosexualizing drugs are on the market? If the world is like it is now, same-sex attraction will soon carry not only the stigmas already imposed on it, but also the stigma of low social class. If the drugs are not paid for by public-sector insurance, as they likely would not be in countries where there are enough pro-gay forces to keep governments from endorsing them, then homosexuality will become a badge of poverty. In those cases, parents who refuse on principle to use prenatal drugs to impose the standard sexuality on their prospective children can expect children who do turn out to be same-sexers to beg them for whatever treatments are available at their age. Where the drugs are available to all, such parents can expect their own peers, and therefore their children’s peers as well, to regard them as neglectful and unfit. Again, the children are likely to beg the parents for treatments rather than join in their disgrace.
As heterosexualizing drugs become more effective, homosexuality will become less common. That means that those same-sexers who remain will be less likely to find each other, less likely to come out, less likely to jolt the people who care about them into stopping for thought. As unsatisfactory as the world of 2010 may be for millions of same-sexers, it may well seem a paradise compared with the world that is coming. A world where homosexuality is not only seen as a disease, but as a disease of the past, is likely to look with incomprehension on the idea of sexual freedom.
My view, therefore, is that those of us who do not want to see a world where a standardized sexuality is routinely imposed on children should move now to increase social acceptance of same-sexers and of others who do not comply with that standardized sexuality. Time is running out.
Posted by acilius on July 6, 2010
https://losthunderlads.com/2010/07/06/time-to-speak-out-for-sexual-freedom/
A place for everyone
Laws against prostitution are usually supported by people who want to help women break free of men who are coercing them into that line of work. When one asks why it is that such laws usually include criminal penalties for the very women they are supposed to help, the answer is often that only when police and prosecutors have such penalties to use as threats can they be sure that women will turn against their exploiters.
In practice, those laws often seem to have the opposite effect. Arrested, a woman needs money to make bail. If she is under the influence of a pimp, she will likely call him or an associate of his. Labeled a criminal, she will find it no easier than it was before the police picked her up to find other employment. So, the law which may have been advertised as a way of helping her find a way out of prostitution may in its actual operation push her deeper into it. The law marks prostitution as her place and acts to keep her in that place.
What reminded me of this was a column by Katha Pollitt in the 14 June 2010 issue of The Nation. Pollitt does not mention prostitution, but mentions a set of proposed laws that seem to be designed to work the same way: bills pending before the French and Belgian parliaments that would prohibit Muslim women from wearing headscarves, face veils, or other garb traditional to women of their persuasion. Like laws against prostitution, these bills are marketed as means to pry women loose from men who are coercing them into a demeaning way of life. Also like those laws, the bills include penalties against the women themselves. Pollitt expresses the fear that men who are in fact coercing women who live with them into covering up more than they would like would respond to a ban by keeping them from going out at all; surely this fear is well-founded. Moreover, whether a woman wears the veil freely or under compulsion, the threat that if she does go out the police will arrest and search her, then take the men of her family into custody and threaten her with criminal sanctions unless she gives information against them will hardly convince her that France is her home and the Franks are her ancestors. Quite the contrary, I should think; with such a threat looming in the background, even a woman who would not have been likely to cover up otherwise might feel herself a traitor to the only community that really wants her unless she does put on traditional Muslim attire.
In the same issue, a number of experts argue that the direction education policy has been taking in the USA in the last 20 years has been gravely counterproductive. I only wanted to note one of these, by Linda Darling-Hammond of Stanford University’s education school. Darling-Hammond looks at the country-by-country league tables for average student achievement in various subjects, pointing out that American students were not performing especially well in 1989 and that their average performance has been declining ever since. In some subjects, the decline has been steady, in others catastrophically rapid. Meanwhile, American schools have become more thoroughly segregated by race, the number of subjects offered has shrunk, and the prison population is booming. Darling-Hammond not only points out these evils; she also gives examples of countries where the same years have seen movement in the opposite direction. While the current system tends to lock students into whatever social position they inherited from their parents, Darling-Hammond argues that it is still possible for public education to open doors for social mobility.
Movement from one social status to another often comes in tandem with physical movement from one place to another. A review of a couple of books about African American history, under the title “Movement and Rootedness,” discusses ways in which the theme of migration has reshaped thinking about that subject in recent years. It includes a quote from scholar Ira Berlin: “The history of the United States rests upon movement, and then embrace of place.” The new scholarship on which the review focuses finds ways in which African Americans managed to embrace some places that would strike most of us as quite unembraceable. While the integrationist story that has been the academic orthodoxy since the 1960s tends to reduce African American history to the relationship between African Americans and whites, so that relationships among African Americans are pushed into the shadows, the new scholars want to find out what sort of communities African Americans built for themselves even during the grimmest days of slavery and Jim Crow.
Posted by acilius on May 29, 2010
https://losthunderlads.com/2010/05/29/a-place-for-everyone/
Designed to fail
The June 2010 issue of the ultra-conservative Chronicles magazine contains this paragraph, in a column by Philip Jenkins:
The concept of “designed to fail” was formulated back in 1979 in an influential study by leftist scholar Jeffrey Reiman entitled The Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Prison. Following Marxist theory, Reiman argued that the goal of the criminal-justice system was not to suppress crime but to promote and sustain acceptable levels of social misbehavior, with the aim of enhancing the power and resources of official agencies. Crime, in short, is useful, even essential, for the preservation of state power. Reiman was not postulating a conspiracy theory but exploring the dynamics of agencies charged with tasks that were literally impossible. Yet rather than being discredited or disheartened by their failures, agencies stood to benefit mightily from them and actively sought out still more absurdly quioxotic challenges. They were in a no-lose situation.
This description reminds me of an idea I’ve sometimes tried to express. In a representative democracy, political power is in the hands of the electorate, yet the electorate consists almost entirely of people who are in no position to know what the state is doing. If the government undertakes a program meant to discourage certain crimes, the most the majority will now about this program is that it represents a campaign to fight crime. Even if this program is an absolute success in rational terms, and entirely eliminates the crimes it was aimed at discouraging, the public will observe that other crimes still go unchecked. The electorate, therefore, will count the program as a failure.
Because of these disparate perceptions, advocates of increased state power find themselves in a position to appeal simultaneously to political insiders and to the public at large. Insiders may respond to the fact that the program succeeded in its actual goals, and support future programs to pursue other goals. The public at large will focus on the program’s imagined failures, and demand a more aggressive program to make good on promises that they suppose the first program to have made. As a result, the degree of police authority and other sorts of bureaucratic domination tends to ratchet ever upward as a representative democracy develops. When this idea first popped into my head a while back, I thought of labeling it “the authoritarian spiral.” I was disappointed to find that political scientist Ian Loader had already coined the phrase “authoritarian spiral,” with another meaning, a few years before. So I started calling it “the authoritarian ratchet effect,” which is admit not at all catchy.
To prevent this ratchet effect from transforming a representative democracy into a despotism, I call for a revival of direct democracy. People who are actively involved in drafting, approving, and carrying out particular laws are likelier to have an idea what can reasonably be expected of those laws than are people whose only involvement in that process is the right to cast one vote out of 100,000,000.
Posted by acilius on May 29, 2010
https://losthunderlads.com/2010/05/29/designed-to-fail/
Forgiveness again
One of our favorite bloggers, fotb Maggie Jochild, has posted a terrific essay which she was kind enough to say resulted from thinking spurred by a post I put up a couple of days ago. My post was a fumbling attempt to say something useful about what it might be like to forgive someone who has hurt you in ways you still don’t fully understand. Maggie’s essay, titled “Forgiveness as a Radical Way of Life,” addresses that same question with real learning and with powerful examples drawn from her own experience.
Posted by acilius on May 28, 2010
https://losthunderlads.com/2010/05/28/forgiveness-again/
The Atlantic, June 2010
Several interesting pieces this time:
How the private sector could build railways again, and save neighborhood life in the USA in the process
Mark Bowden explains the Conficker worm and the threat it may represent to computers on and off the internet.
A piece on the revival of some centuries-old recipes for mixed drinks at fashionable bars in London. The “shrub” sounds alarming, but might be delicious.
There are lots of witchcraft trials in the Central African Republic; here‘s an attempt to see the bright side of that state of affairs.
Benjamin Schwarz isn’t impressed with the “New Urbanism,” and tries to dismiss the reading of Jane Jacobs’ works that has inspired many in that movement.
Michael Kinsley adds a column to the already enormous amount of coverage given to the political movement known as the “teabaggers.” This paragraph contributes something of value to the discussion:
“I like what they’re saying. It’s common sense,” a random man-in-the-crowd told a Los Angeles Times reporter at a big Tea Party rally. Then he added, “They’ve got to focus on issues like keeping jobs here and lowering the cost of prescription drugs.” These, of course, are projects that can be conducted only by Big Government. If the Tea Party Patriots ever developed a coherent platform or agenda, they would lose half their supporters.
I suspect Kinsley is right and “Big Government” is needed to keep jobs in the USA and lower the cost of prescription drugs, but the big government we actually have doesn’t seem to be geared to accomplishing either of these goals. Quite the contrary, in fact.
James Parker tries to find something interesting to say about pop star Lady Gaga. I don’t think he succeeds, but I do think that it’s a waste that someone who is not a drag queen has monopolized the name “Lady Gaga.”
Posted by acilius on May 28, 2010
https://losthunderlads.com/2010/05/28/the-atlantic-june-2010/
What is forgiveness? What is not forgiveness?
A friend said that she’d been having nightmares. She knew why. It was the birthday of a man who had been important to her. He treated her brutally, viciously. Years after their last encounter, years after his death, she is still finding more ways that his abuse has hurt her. Each discovery of another complication hits her like a fresh injury. It’s as if he is still attacking her. She asked what forgiveness would look like in a situation like hers. What would it mean, exactly, for her to forgive him?
I didn’t get to know her until after this man was dead. I don’t know the first thing about their relationship. So the only answer I could possibly offer to her question would be a purely abstract one. Since I have no background in psychology, that abstract answer would not be grounded in science. I don’t want to babble, but maybe I can come up with something helpful to say.
Often when we think of forgiveness, we think of a single event, a single act that resolves a conflict once and for all. That clearly isn’t possible for someone in the situation my friend finds herself in. She never knows when she will find another wound. So whatever forgiveness is for her, it can’t be a single act. It has to be an ongoing process.
In the course of the conversation, a famous line from Hannah More came up: “Forgiveness is the economy of the heart… Forgiveness saves the expense of anger, the cost of hatred, the waste of spirits.” If an abstract discussion of the nature of forgiveness would be helpful, perhaps we could use that line as a test. In the first place, More (or the character in her play) seems to be saying that forgiveness benefits the forgiver. That makes sense of my friend’s interest in the idea of forgiving the man who hurt her. He’s dead, after all; what she does won’t affect him one way or the other.
Second, to qualify as forgiveness my friend would have to save herself “the expense of anger, the cost of hatred, the waste of spirits.” The story of a once-for-all act of forgiveness can end with this savings. An ongoing process in which a person copes with one loss after another sounds like it would be a very demanding thing to keep going. Could it also be “the economy of the heart” in More’s sense?
I wondered what else one could say, again at the abstract level available to those of us who weren’t there and don’t know what happened between my friend and the man who wronged her. My near-total ignorance of psychological science keeps me from forming an intelligent opinion about the theories of Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, but it doesn’t keep me from thinking of her terminology, no more than my ignorance of what happened to my friend keeps me from trying to come up with something helpful to say to her about it.
You may or may not remember Kübler-Ross’ name, but I suspect you’ve heard of one of her ideas. In her 1969 book On Death and Dying, Kübler-Ross analyzed the process of grieving into five stages: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance.
“Acceptance” was Kübler-Ross’ term for the period when a person facing an irreversible loss has dissolved all the aggressions and fantasies that have driven his or her first reactions to the loss. This is a quiet period in which the person comes to terms with the new reality and prepares to make the most of it. This would seem to fit Hannah More’s description of forgiveness.
It strikes me that three of the other stages might be mistaken for forgiveness. Denial, bargaining, and depression might all leave a person calm while someone who has done him or her wrong goes unpunished. But they do not meet Hannah More’s test. While they may not involve anger or hatred, they do restrict the person’s emotional and cognitive life. If a person tries to stay in one of those stages longer than necessary, it will not represent the economy of the heart, but a vast and ever-growing expense.
Kübler-Ross did not regard the first four stages as disposable; one cannot go directly to acceptance of a major loss. There are inner battles everyone who suffers an irreversible loss must fight. Those battles may not always come according to the plan of campaign the five stages of grief model lays out, but to believe that one can simply come to peace with an irreversible loss without going through such battles is to engage in magical thinking.
If we identify forgiveness as a function of acceptance, then we can see that injunctions to forgive can get in the way of growth towards forgiveness. A person who believes that s/he must grant forgiveness immediately might try to stay in denial rather than deal with anger, or might turn his or her aggression inward and plunge ever deeper into depression.
So, if my friend has to go through the whole grieving process every time she finds another wound, her “ongoing process” of forgiveness is going to be a way of life.
Posted by acilius on May 27, 2010
https://losthunderlads.com/2010/05/27/what-is-forgiveness-what-is-not-forgiveness/
Steve Sailer contradicts himself
Regular readers of this blog know that I often read Steve Sailer’s site, and that I disagree more or less violently with everything I find there. One of the things that interests me about Sailer are the many ways in which he contradicts himself. Indeed, a person with nothing better to do could follow Sailer’s output and publish a daily feature called “Steve Sailer Contradicts Himself.” Usually he’s fairly subtle about his self-contradictions; in this old post, I gave one of my favorite examples.
Recently, Sailer contradicted himself far more obviously than usual. On Monday, he mocked the US media for spending time covering Rand Paul’s views on the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Dr Paul is the Republican nominee for US Senate from Kentucky, and the son of Congressman Ron Paul (no word yet on how he is related to 1990s TV personality RuPaul.) Sailer’s summary of this coverage is as follows: “assuming the country got into a giant time machine and went a half century back into the past — would Senate candidate’s Rand Paul’s position on laws on the public accommodations portion of the 1964 Civil Rights Act be a good thing or not.”
The very same post includes a newspaper article quoting Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia explaining some recent cases about the use of civil service tests in hiring and promoting municipal firefighters. The Supreme Court handed down rulings in these cases that appear to contradict each other. In the second of these rulings, Scalia wrote for a unanimous Court that the problem was at the heart of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, and that it can be solved only if Congress revises that law.
So, the USA may not have to get “into a giant time machine” and travel back to the early 1960s in order for a potential US Senator’s views on the 1964 Civil Rights Act to be relevant. All nine justices of the Supreme Court just demanded that Congress reopen the law; if Rand Paul is a member of the upper house when that reopening takes place, it is quite likely that he would be in a position to change it, perhaps substantially.
Posted by acilius on May 27, 2010
https://losthunderlads.com/2010/05/27/steve-sailer-contradicts-himself/




