APOCRYPHAL ROAD CODE by Jared Randall

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Nov 222011
 
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[Easy to predict. The GOP lets the sequestration proceed because it figures it can circumvent all but a few of the defense cuts. It has Obama's defense secretary, the indomitable Leon Panetta, already wailing about how hard any cuts will be on the poor, poor military. It's a foregone conclusion that Obama will fold on the promise to block any attempt to circumvent the trigger if it has to do with either keeping taxes low for the wealthy (I mean, on middle class families) or keeping the wealthy folks' (who fund both his reelection bid as well as those of his prime competitor) imperial forces in the field protecting their financial interests. So, you can bet that the December legislative session will see a prolonging of the entirety of the Bush tax cuts along with some guarantee that the sequestration military cuts will not happen. Bit by bit, the military cuts will be uncut. After all, we desperately need to invade Iran (or will, soon enough)...]

Spencer Ackerman is betting that the defense cuts triggered by Super Committee’s failure will never be implemented: Stopping sequestration probably won’t have to wait until the next election. Already, Republican legislators are preparing bills t … http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/andrewsullivan/rApM/~3/LJUHSgmZS4Y/will-congress-defuse-the-trigger.html Shared via my6sense,

Aug 162011
 
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[The folks over at Reason.com are feeling their oats right now. They seem to think they have the whole political thing figured out. They apparently think they have Reason behind them.

However, they beg so many questions and leave unquestioned so many assumptions that there's no way I can respond to it all in the brief slice of time I have, in this one moment. You see, I'm one of the millions of Americans who stand to lose and keep losing greatly because of the types of policies they describe, which have been enacted and may be enacted because of the petty-bourgeois assumptions they make. It's thinking like this that will have us all living in the United Corporations of Someplace That Used to be Called America.

Most glaring is their glamming onto the Tea Party movement as somehow independent, as somehow not plutocrat-funded and coerced, as somehow not primarily far right-wing republican and tending to fascism -- in other words, as exactly the opposite of the centrism they claim is supposedly going to save us.

(And just for the record, the MoveOn.org crowd makes a similar mistake, thinking that now the plutocrat class is turning its back on the Tea Party. A more nuanced view sees our present politics as an argument between two halves of the ruling class. Just as not all of corporate America was behind the Tea Party, so not all of corporate America is turning against it. A large part of corporate America continues to drive the TP, in fact.)

Next most glaring is their using examples like AT&T/MCI and Macey's as examples of all the good news coming our way. Rather, these are examples of hurtful monopolies that have lessened the diversity of consumer options, lost American jobs, and put ever more control in the hands of powerful corporate executives. That MCI went bankrupt does not mean its structures and organization ceased to exist. In fact, it was swallowed by corporate giants that continue to swell beyond any good sense. This is a symptom of exactly what's wrong with our system, not an example of positive social evolution.

In short, left unquestioned and purporting to speak for "the middle," the folks at Reason are anything but reasonable and an example of a groupthink that just wants to be the next Republican Party. Why would recently wakened voters want that?

Can we even say that a substantial number of voters have truly wakened from the corporate plutocratic sham games that drive our politics? This question has not yet been established in the positive for this thinker. If anything, articles such as this one from the makers of Reason.com tell me that no, we're not there yet, but read for yourself....]

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/viewpoints/articles/2011/08/13/20110813independents-voters.html

Jun 042011
 
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The article in question admits (which is the only way I can put it — admits) that we in America have been in recession essentially since 1999, as measured by manufacturing job losses. The financial crisis of 2008 is only an extension of the acute bleeding of jobs overseas that began after the H.W. Bush-Clinton years, i.e., NAFTA and trade agreements with China.  It remains to be seen if we’ve really put this job loss behind us.

When the dotcom bubble burst, and with 9/11 on its heels, a housing bubble and wars were the economic answers to the growing crisis, but all of this just set up an even worse situation that we now are living through.

The current response is only more of the same: propping up an exploitative and destructive system that benefits those in power — and I don’t mean government leaders, but the true power brokers of global capitalism. It is increasingly clear that elected officials are pawns in the game. A president or a majority leader might be a knight or a rook, maybe a bishop. You’ll rarely glimpse the queen and king in the background, which I would liken not to individuals but multidirectional composites of the driving forces of the system itself.

As one who worked in retail warehousing during the time when manufacturing jobs really started taking a hit, it was mind-boggling how nearly everything being sold in retail went from a balance of sources to almost exclusively Chinese in origin, almost with a snap of the fingers and with few exceptions, like household chemicals. We, the workers who moved goods from point A to point B, we saw it. Yes, we were selling more than ever before, but it wasn’t being made by us.

We all saw the massive shedding of manufacturing jobs and especially that within the heavy industries. Mills and foundries closed down, buildings lay dormant. What manufacturing remained was increasingly light-industrial, less and less the processing of raw materials which is considered by some the backbone of any manufacturing base.

Much of the work that remained amounted to assembling in America what had largely been produced elsewhere. Much of it was the mere moving of the vast increase in foreign-made goods from ship to truck to warehouse to big box store.

I expect, though I can’t claim expert knowledge, that any numbers economists use to show U.S. manufacturing production increases during this period are fuzzy numbers, counting one-and-a-half times what really came from overseas. Such a thing serves the narrative of bankers and corporate empires, but it simply does not reflect the reality on the ground that Midwesterners know firsthand.

Those jobs are not coming back, and we know where they went. Not machine labor and increased efficiencies, but cheap, foreign labor often under poor conditions allowing for an unfair competitive advantage drew jobs from Americans. I don’t write that as one who is against trade between peoples but as one who is against exploitation. Yes, it caused a prosperity boom in the short term, but the long-term effect is more exploitation of people’s lives both abroad and at home.

It is this system we are currently engaged in — not fixing — but retaining. Keeping it from imploding and/or exploding. There is no fixing it. It is what it is. It produces inequities by its very nature. That’s why there’s no one really to blame. Accusations of greed are only scapegoating tactics in the name of retaining the system.

Current debates center on whether or not to be more or less humane about these inherent inequities, on how much should be shared with the little people to keep things from sparking, and a smart capitalist knows that inhumane capitalism risks revolutionary upheaval.

By this standard, Obama is among the smarter capitalists. You can extrapolate who the dumb ones might be. Indeed, the next election is all about who are the smartest capitalists in the bunch.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/post/manufacturing-collapse/2011/06/01/AGTFhSGH_blog.html

Oct 312010
 
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 The following is a paper I researched and wrote during my undergrad days at Western Michigan University. I am posting it now, before the 2010 mid-term elections, because I think it applies closely to the present situation of American politics in which pundits of every stripe and creed make extravagant claims they support with neither researched facts nor closely analyzed theories nor yet with anything remotely close to authoritative personal experience. Their ideas go unchecked and predigested into the ether where unsuspecting minds simply take it in as long as the pundit in question supposedly alligns with one’s pre-selected political stance–in other words, as long as the pundit claims the same enemies as the listener.

For those who don’t know, a little background on Father Charles Coughlin may be necessary to strengthen the connection between then and now. Father Coughlin was a Catholic priest who took to the radio airwaves after the Great Depression hit. He thought to give hope to the downtrodden, and by most accounts he did so, but he also rode roughshod over the fields of conspiracy and ignorant bigotry. As long as it sufficed to strengthen his position against the current villain in his sights, he would take an even worse villain’s words (even Hitler and Mussolini) as support without a moment’s pause to reflect. Usually, the first villain was not a villain at all but merely someone who had openly disagreed with him or whose politics were on the other end of the political spectrum from Coughlin. 

386px 1934 Protocols Patriotic Pub 193x300 Background on a Demagogue, Pattern of Today’s Pundit

The Protocols of the Elders of Zion

Coughlin’s appeals were primarily emotional. His “proofs” were dot-to-dot sequences made up of ill-researched and incomplete “facts” gleaned from popular propoganda. His theories were often impracticable and ignorant of the finer details that make up such topics as economics, global finance, and foreign relations. He swayed his audience primarily by the methods of demagoguery, namely: he used labels as epithets to discredit his detractors, which simultaneously assured that his audience (who would of course not want to make themselves worthy of the same label) would shy away from even listening to opposing ideas; he put motivations into his opponents’ mouths that they did not in fact espouse; he pushed the logic of opposing arguments to absurd extremes never intended by those who came up with the arguments; he relied on dubious written works and unverified reports to support his claims (his reliance on the Protocols of the Elders of Zion being an example from the later years of his influence); and so on.

In short, he sounded very much like any number of political pundits on the airwaves today. It is important, therefore, that we consider carefully the rhetorical methods being used by those we listen to. If their rhetorical methods are either unsound or downright dishonest, as Coughlin’s were, the information they give us will certainly be incomplete and misleading. In particular, the “easy fixes” currently being trumpeted by rabble-rousers on the right are unrealistic at best, destructive at the worst, and echo Coughlin’s own methods. Just as with Fr. Coughlin’s attempts to influence American politics, these fixes will not truly fix anything. Disillusionment will follow, I predict, just as it followed Coughlin’s own populist political movement of the 1930′s.

Why do I think so? Well, it seems clear from polling data that many if not most of those who support the Republican/Tea Party initiative do so more out of angst for the party in power and not because they really believe their proposals to be better. In other words, we are about to experience a typical mid-term election swing away from a party that has gained both the presidency and both houses of congress, and such large swings are typically followed by yet another reaction of disillusionment directly related to the magnitude of the swing that caused it (history as witness).

Those who remain undisillusioned even after the mixed results that will come after the looming Republican/Tea Party victory will, I predict, become more delusional than ever due to their continued rationalization of what are irrationally derived positions. There will be another enemy, another villain who will catch their fury for failures that in actuality reflect our society as a whole–Republican and Democrat and everything in between. It will be the blame game that Coughlin used all over again, the same game that right-wing pundits have been peddling for two decades, and what has it accomplished?

Demagoguery makes for large audiences but causes more damage than good. That folks are attracted to such a voice is understandable. Just like in Coughlin’s day, there are a lot of people who feel they have no voice of their own. When they hear someone in the media expressing thoughts they may have had themselves, of course they are attracted to it. We all are attracted to people who profess to think like we do. However, there is a flip side to the right to broadcast one’s views, and that is the responsibility to speak truly and equitably without misleading your audience.

Correspondingly, there is a need for audiences to realize the type of exchange that is going on when they listen to political pundits. Pundits make use of invented ”personalities” just like your favorite Hollywood actor does. The person you hear and/or see and (if you are not careful) come to implicitly trust is at least partially a fabrication — always. I maintain that folks should avoid the implicit trust provoked by such ”personalities.” Don’t just swallow what may later show itself a bitter pill.

Why? Read on.

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Father Coughlin: Cut from a Pattern of Catholic History 

by Jared Randall 

Father Coughlin, radio priest and rabble-rouser in the 1920′s and 30′s, is mostly studied in the context of politics. Most researches have given little specific attention to his roots in the Catholic tradition. However, much that is valuable to understanding Coughlin and his contradictions lies in a knowledge of those roots. To fully appreciate the conditions that allowed his popularity, one must explore the workings of the Catholic hierarchy and the history of Catholic social teaching. 

Much of the controversy surrounding Father Coughlin lies in a misunderstanding of the Catholic hierarchy. Those outside the Catholic tradition expect the pope and bishops to silence an outspoken priest who pokes his nose too far into politics. For instance, when Father Coughlin called Roosevelt a “liar” and “betrayer” in his speech to the Townsend Convention of 1936, many people expected the Vatican to act. Sheldon Marcus writes: 

Coughlin’s speech also set off a furious chain reaction of queries on the position of the Vatican in tolerating such attacks on the President of the United States. Although it had stated publicly, in June of the same year, that Coughlin’s activities had not violated canon law, the Vatican viewed them with consternation. Direct Vatican intervention in disciplining Coughlin was ruled out for the moment because that was considered to be the responsibility of his bishop. The Vatican also pointed out that before any action was taken regarding the disciplining of an American priest, the matter would first be referred to the Apostolic Delegate in Washington, D.C. [1]

Mr. Marcus vaguely outlines the workings of the Catholic hierarchy. Firstly, the pope, while responsible for the general direction of the Church, does not often speak out on specific matters of behavior. As Gustave Weigel, S. J., puts it, “In a period of perfect calm where there is no attacking storm, the popes do not speak, for there is no necessity…. the popes will never fail to teach if the problems are more than local.” He also writes, “In the primate [pope] dwells the fullness of episcopal power, and all bishops share it with him. Altogether they have no more than he has and he alone has all that they have.” So Catholic power and policy flows from the pope to the bishops, and it is the bishops who are expected to take action except when the issue becomes widespread.[2]

Now the question becomes one of understanding Coughlin’s bishop. The simple answer is that Bishop Michael Gallagher of the Detroit diocese supported Coughlin all along. Gallagher consistently defended Coughlin’s speeches, claiming them to be without “heresy” and explaining that “Father Coughlin in his addresses is advocating the principles set down by Leo XIII and Pius XI. He is perfectly justified in doing that.”[3] By appealing to the teachings of previous and current popes, Coughlin made it difficult for anyone in the Catholic Church – the Vatican or the Apostolic Delegate in Washington – to openly rebuke him, especially when he had the sanction of his bishop.  

It is evident that Father Coughlin was not the first among many brethren to speak out about society, although one might think it from reading his biographies. A long list of Catholic social teachers stretches into the past behind him, providing a rich legacy in which he resides. Though many in the Catholic Church would doubtless want to distance themselves from him, Coughlin openly acknowledged his predecessors. He often quoted and referred to the papal letters of Popes Leo XIII and Pius XI as justification for his pronouncements.[4]  
  

Pope Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum, or “The Condition of the Working Classes,” was a culmination of Catholic social teaching given in 1891. It was especially important as a document that eclipsed and refined the varied and localized social teachings of the past 150 years and strengthened them by virtue of papal pronouncement. James Healy, S.J., provides more than a glimpse of this background in his The Just Wage. Subtitled “A Study of Moralists from Saint Alphonsus to Leo XIII,” Healy reveals the often imprecise and generalized nature of Catholic social teaching through a rigorous comparison of documents from 1750-1890:  

We can see that whatever general principles dictate the amount of a just wage, they are such as are difficult to apply. This diffidence about the details of economic questions is in the best tradition of the really learned theologians.[5]  

Healy’s statement clearly applies to Coughlin, whose “basic social philosophy was that of the papal encyclicals.” As Tull writes, “A point too often ignored, however, is that the popes were extremely vague as to the methods to be employed in achieving the cherished but ever-elusive ideal of social justice.” Coughlin was thus following the example of his predecessors with his vagueness concerning the application of his theories and policies.[6]  

Coughlin’s training for the priesthood began at St. Michael’s College, Toronto, in 1903, when he was thirteen years of age. It is reported that he “had difficulty in economics.”[7] Coughlin was clearly influenced by Catholic teachings that related to economic questions, but, ironically, the economic theories he espoused were often berated by those who had more knowledge in applying those theories – even Catholics. Father Parsons of the Jesuit weekly America wrote in 1935 that the priest was advocating “doubtful economic legislation” and that, “He is now offering plans based on monetary theories which, to say the least, are untried.” Parsons reasoned through the possible effects on Coughlin’s followers:  

If people begin to look for prosperity and justice in some easy magic of monetary reform, the long hard job of social justice in the factory will be overlooked and that will be tragic.[8]  

At face value, this “easy magic” is exactly what the long trend of Catholic social teachers relied on, and Coughlin was no different. His rhetoric often focused on easy cures.[9] Healy’s study sheds light on this aspect of Catholic teaching. He notes a general ignorance of or only partial reliance on economic theories by the Catholic moralists. Rather than accomplishing their mission of providing moral analysis, “most of the authors erred on the opposite extreme, for they failed to give moral direction on economic theories which profoundly affected moral decisions.”[10] In other words, they neither evaluated the theories of economists on the basis of their moral properties nor expounded on the moral truths that should guide theorists and politicians alike. The “authors of the last [19th] century […] were convinced of some opinion’s universal acceptance, simply because they saw books only from a particular religious family or from a limited geographical area.”[11] They pushed their espoused theories rather than evaluating them, an error of which Coughlin was consistently found guilty.[12]  

The following from Healy’s study could almost be a description of Father Coughlin. It places him firmly within the sweep of Catholic social teaching:  

[…] the moralists had a static concept of society […].What explanations can be offered for so general a divorce from reality? Perhaps the seminary training was partly responsible: men who have lived in sheltered communities, away from their families since the early age of ten or twelve, can easily miss the experiences which would have helped them to appreciate the conditions under which so many people earned their daily bread. The books available for students may also have encouraged this divorce from the contemporary scene: the revered masters were, of course, the old masters; and at their best the old masters dealt with the concrete circumstances of a bygone age. It is only too easy for a student to become engrossed in old controversies and to imagine that the world of his books is the world actually around him. This it cannot be, unless the books are written recently by people in touch with the facts.[13]  

From this we can pull at least two observations that apply to Father Coughlin and link him to his predecessors. 1) The social teachers taught general principles but applied them to an older era of human experience. The outcome was a skewed and not quite practicable form of the principle. 2) The social teachers were ignorant of the circumstances of the common people.  

These observations clearly apply to Coughlin, who was quick to espouse any idea that strengthened his views. While Father Coughlin was initially motivated by real experiences with needy people during the depression,[14] his descent into anti-Semitism and radical ideology was increasingly detached from the plight of the common man and was fueled rather by “old controversies” and realities “from the world of his books,” such as The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, the writings of Irish clergyman and theologian Denis Fahey, and Nazi propaganda.[15]  

It is hard to dismiss Father Coughlin as only a political demagogue who happened to be a Catholic priest. It seems more accurate to think of Coughlin, first, as Catholic priest and social teacher, and, second, as political demagogue, an outgrowth of his intention to “[restore] principles which have been shelved by that new type of radical who identifies prosperity with the international regime of a plutocracy.”[16]  

By most accounts, Father Coughlin began his public career by speaking out for the little people, whether his ideas were right or not. He thought he could “lead the nation out of its dilemma” after the Depression hit.[17] It was after the death of Bishop Gallagher in 1937 that Coughlin’s descent into the manias of anti-Semitism and Nazism took over as he tried to find “an issue” by which he might recover his 1936 political losses.[18] He seemed to have found it in 1938 when Social Justice published the phony Protocols of the Elders of Zion in supposed proof of his allegations of a Jewish conspiracy to take over the world through the financial system.[19]  

Interestingly, Bishop Gallagher may have been both the source and moderator of this extremism. Both Father Coughlin and Bishop Gallagher were Irish in descent, as their names imply. As Sheldon Marcus writes, the pages of Coughlin’s journal, Social Justice, increasingly:  

[…] emphasized hostility to Great Britain and support of most of Germany’s policies. Page after page of the weekly now commented on and criticized British policies and actions. Such criticisms may be partly attributed to the hostile attitude of many militant Irishmen – an attitude that had been shared by both Coughlin and Bishop Gallagher.[20]  

Coughlin’s superior after Bishop Gallagher’s death, Archbishop Mooney, preferred to leave Coughlin to himself after one unsuccessful attempt to rein in his rhetoric.[21] Not until 1942 did Mooney succeed in silencing him.[22]  

It is because of Coughlin’s extremism that his legacy is viewed as a negative one. Early on “he had urged the reevaluation [sic] of the gold dollar and the restoration of silver,” but “did not recommend a means of putting this in effect.”[23] Perhaps he helped society by giving a popular radio voice to public sentiment and economic theories. Such public debate enhances the workings of the American system of government. Surely this was in line with the tradition of Catholic social teachers and their preaching on general moral principles – a natural, technology-enhanced function of the clergy.  

If he had been more aware of his role as “surrogate spokesman” and stayed within it by not taking his detractors so personally – if he had not lashed out at every perceived threat to his cause and taken his followers with him as if his ideas were the only possibility for the salvation of America – his legacy might be quite different today.[24]  

~ ~ ~

Bibliography  

Carpenter, Ronald H., Father Charles E. Coughlin: Surrogate Spokesman for the Disaffected. Westport: Greenwood Press,1998.  

George, Henry, The Condition of Labour: An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII. London: The Henry George Foundation of Great Britain, 1934.  

Father Coughlin’s Radio Sermons, October, 1930–April, 1931 (collected) (Baltimore: Knox and O’Leary, 1931), 8, 137. This volume is available at the Western Michigan University Archives and Regional History Collection.  

Fremantle, Anne (Ed.), The Papal Encyclicals in Their Historical Context. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1956.  

Healy, James, S. J., The Just Wage, 1750-1890: A Study of Moralists from Saint Alphonsus to     Leo XIII. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1966.  

Marcus, Sheldon, Father Coughlin: The Tumultuous Life of the Priest of the Little Flower. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1973.  

Tull, Charles, Father Coughlin and the New Deal. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1965.  


Notes  

1. Marcus, Sheldon, Father Coughlin: The Tumultuous Life of the Priest of the Little Flower (Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1973), 120.  

2. Fremantle, Anne (Ed.), The Papal Encyclicals in Their Historical Context (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1956), 11-12. This note refers to the introduction by Gustave Weigel, S. J.  

3. Tull, Charles, Father Coughlin and the New Deal (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1965), 47.  

4. Father Coughlin’s Radio Sermons, October, 1930–April, 1931 (collected) (Baltimore: Knox and O’Leary, 1931), 8, 137. This volume is available at the Western Michigan University Archives and Regional History Collection.  

5. Healy, James, S. J., The Just Wage, 1750-1890: A Study of Moralists from Saint Alphonsus to Leo XIII (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1966), 9.  

6. Tull, Father Coughlin and the New Deal, 61.  

7. Marcus, Father Coughlin: The Tumultuous Life, 14-15.  

8. Tull, Father Coughlin and the New Deal, 97-98.  

9. Ibid., 242. Tull writes: “A close examination of Coughlin’s monetary and economic theories reveals that his most serious error was to consider nationalization of currency a panacea for economic problems.”  

10. Healy, The Just Wage, 469-470.  

11. Ibid., 471.  

12. Tull, Father Coughlin and the New Deal, 41-43.  

13. Healy, The Just Wage, 469.  

14. Tull, Father Coughlin and the New Deal, 61.  

15. Carpenter, Ronald H., Father Charles E. Coughlin: Surrogate Spokesman for the Disaffected (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1998), 114-126.  

16. Father Coughlin’s Radio Sermons, 138.  

17. Marcus, Father Coughlin: The Tumultuous Life, 30-31.  

18. Tull, Father Coughlin and the New Deal, 243.  

19. Ibid., 193.  

20. Marcus, Father Coughlin: The Tumultuous Life, 198-199. From information taken from the General Records of the Department of State indicating that “Bishop Gallagher’s ‘whole career has been an example of rabid anti-British feeling.’” See note on Marcus, p. 257. For predecessor case that mirrors Coughlin’s own and connects to the Irish Land League see Henry George’s The Condition of Labour: An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII (London: The Henry George Foundation of Great Britain, 1934). In its introduction the case of Reverend Dr. Edward McGlynn is discussed, a New York priest who was excommunicated for supporting the theories of Henry George and his candidacy for mayor of New York. McGlynn was subsequently reinstated in 1892 after George’s letter was read by Pope Leo XIII. Among other things, the letter showed a fundamental similarity between the Pope’s encyclical, Rerum Novarum, and Henry George’s own theory of the single tax.  

21. Tull, Father Coughlin and the New Deal, 179-185.  

22. Ibid., 236; Marcus, Father Coughlin: The Tumultuous Life, 216.  

23. Carpenter, Father Charles E. Coughlin: Surrogate Spokesman, 85-86.  

24. [Ibid., 9] The author sets up his argument that Coughlin was a “surrogate spokesman” for those who had no public voice during the Depression era.

Mar 192010
 
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Just because definitive empirical evidence for macroevolution (evolution from one species to another) has not been found does not mean that such evidence does not exist nor that it will not be found. It does not mean that macroevolution is untrue and impossible. Just because you’ve never seen gold does not mean that it does not exist. There are theoretically possible elements (speaking chemistry now) we have yet to physically discover, but that does not mean they do not exist, only that they must be rare if they do exist.

Al of this does mean that those who claim macroevolution is empirically verified are not being honest and reasonable. We have yet to actually see it happen or to have undeniably discovered it in the fossil record. It may be the going theory, but it has not be verified and so our eyes should be open for other possibilities.

Likewise, those who claim that macroevolution cannot be a scientific possibility are speaking without empirically-based reason to back them, because there is evidence to show that it COULD be true. In either of these cases you risk sounding idiotic to those who have thought these issues through and haven’t been drinking the kool-aid offered by the most vocal proponents of the two most often quoted sides of the debate, both of which are frequently willing to say anything in order to win converts.

(Kool-aid in American discourse? Oh yes, lots of it. Health care next, anyone? icon wink Are evolution and God cohabitable ideas?)

It is much more reasonable to consider the material origins of the world an ongoing and open question. Notice, I said material origin, not the immaterial origin or first cause in which, or rather Whom, Christians profess to believe.

If you hold to a literal 6-day creation it becomes logical to say that macroevolution is untrue and impossible, but your logic is based on faith and your interpretation of scripture, not on empirical evidence as concerns science.

This should cause you pause before you go debating macroevolutionary science in empirical terms. There should be a little disclaimer dangling from your forum posts and a little charity extended to those whose faith allows for the possibility. You also have some hard empirical evidence to hurdle, as you probably do not believe microevolution can occur, and there is simply no way to get around its existence (the natural selection of dark-colored moths during Pittsburgh’s heaviest steel-producing days is evidence enough) and the subsequent realization that macroevulotion could be physically possible.

You should also remember that all things are possible with God. If you believe God is the source of the universe and all life in it, and if it happens to be true that all species did evolve from one single cell, then is it not possible that the God you believe in was responsible for setting in motion a habitat for that one cell and is also responsible for the biological mechanisms necessary for its evolution to take place?

Would this make God somehow less powerful in your mind? I think it should not. It would mark God as very patient and overwhelmingly, even intimately concerned with the physical needs of his creation, hands-off and yet empowering, as many of us wish our parents had been. There is no challenge to faith here, only to your particular faith, which is based on a particular reading of scripture. Even the scientist has faith in his theories, after all.

Such a God would not be human, perhaps, which is why it could very well be the divine truth of the matter. We humans like the idea of snapping our fingers and things just happen. That, to us, speaks of omnipotent power, and it is a good thing that none of us possess it. But perhaps true power is shown in restraint and overwhelming patience and also in concern for that which is lower and less able to care for itself.

Scientists tell us that the requirements for life to exist according to their evolutionary models demand coincidence upon coincidence to the point of being miraculous (I’ve even heard scientists use that term).

Maybe we should stop fighting the idea tooth and nail and agree with them — it IS miraculous, however it happened, and the piece of the puzzle they keep failing to turn up is peculiarly God-shaped, whether macroevolution turns out to be the material method or not.

(For the article that prompted this tirade, click this link to The Blackbird Press)

Mar 162010
 
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A current article on the website version of Yale Alumni Magazine adds another two bits to what has become an ongoing debate: are eBooks, and electronic media in general, the wave of the future, or do they represent the end of civilization? The article “Psychology of the bookplate: Why book owners mark their literary territory with personalized art” comes down decidedly on the side of those who decry the publishing world’s ongoing attempt to move book publishing into electronic formats.

Among other observations, the author notes:

“For centuries, books were precious. The first book printed with movable type, the Gutenberg Bible, was and is an object of veneration, and even three centuries later, books (as opposed to pamphlets) were artisanal productions. Samuel Johnson’s famous Dictionary of the English Language, published in 1755, initially sold at a rate so low it was reissued in affordable weekly installments. Books retained scarcity value for almost another century, until the era of the nineteenth-century “dime novel,” the throwaway precursor of today’s paperback.”

Hmmm, that’s an interesting one. Let’s sit on our stump and think about that one for a moment.

So, books were precious. –Yes, we can agree with that to a point, except that we would add that printed books were in a sense less precious than the previous technology: manuscripts copied by hand.

Previous to the printing press, unless you could find your desired source manuscript and either had the ability (and penmanship) to write it out legibly or knew someone who could copy it for you (or more likely had the prestige to procure the loan of the source manuscript and the wealth to hire a scribe) you could not own the world’s great treasures in writing. Fairly wealthy merchants could likely afford no more than a sparse collection of time-consumingly copied volumes.

Even after the printing press the truly wealthy and powerful continued to pay for hand-copied manuscripts for some time. When they bought a printed book, they wanted it to resemble a manuscript. Why? Because they preferred the lavish thought that someone had written every letter just for them. This was loving the book as luxury object, not necessarily loving it for what it held between its covers.

But isn’t it often said that the printing press made books available to the masses for the very first time? That it took the book from being a commodity owned by the few to an object of communication accessible to all? Well, yes, actually, I think I remember hearing that somewhere.

So Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary wasn’t a big seller — big surprise! — but that doesn’t change the fact that the printing press gradually changed the sheer amount of reading material available to people of less means. And ironically enough, a lot of people didn’t like it. Debates raged about the evil effects of allowing just anyone to read books.

(Click here for some background on manuscript culture. Also, don’t forget Plato’s assertion that writing itself would destroy the human capacity for remembering and erode our ability to discern mere information from understanding. If you’re of the same opinion, we’ve already gone way beyond the pale! But don’t forget that Plato was one of the most prolific Greek writers/poets of his day….)

Perhaps Mr. Alex Beam (and everyone else who keeps taking up the same depressed eBook chant) should rather ponder the irony that his own article appears in electronic format and is readable only because web publishers have decided on a single code (or medium) to display websites, namely, HTML. Perhaps he should remember that HTML only came to be the standard for websites over a period of years of debate and development, a period not dissimilar from the current period of eBook debate and development, much of which turns fundamentally on what code should be used and who owns that code.

In further irony, Mr. Beam’s article links to a slideshow of Yale’s catalog of old bookplates. Yes, in full electronic glory, here are artifacts that would not be available for you and I to peruse from afar without that damned internet (do check them out — they are the true interest of his article; he should spend more time celebrating them in full). And by the way, the eBook promises a similar encyclopedic enrichment of content beyond what the printed book can offer.

So now that we’ve sat and thought on it, why is Mr. Beam so uncomfortable? Perhaps he, like many of us, senses how up in the air the eBook phenomenon is. Change is coming, but what will it look like?

We all sense the restless fingers of large corporations vying for market dominance. Names like Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Apple, etc., haunt the dreams of both writers and publishers. Corporations seeking intellectual property rights by which to profit from are the kit in the caboodle, the qualitative difference-makers between today’s upstart eBook industry and the upstart print industry of the past.

If print culture had to overcome the whims and prejudices of wealthy and powerful individuals of church and state, eBook culture has to vie with the profit-seeking drive of huge corporations who already have a tight grip on distribution and marketing forces, not to mention the political ears of those in power. The point Mr. Beam brings up is actually better related to the question of open-source versus strictly licensed software — say, Firefox versus Internet Explorer or Linux versus Windows.

Open source allows users to play around and make their added marks of ownership, while a closed system of strict licensing like that put in place by Amazon’s Kindle is designed to ensure one corporation’s exclusive control at all levels. But even open source applications end up more like the bookplates about which Mr. Beam waxes sentimental and of which one might critically say that they were an avenue for those who were not authors to take some imagined ownership of a thing they did not produce.

When I download an add-on theme for Firefox, do I somehow think I’m responsible for it and that it truly reflects me? Apparently I do, and this point of Mr. Beam’s is well-taken, if not carried far enough.

And so Mr. Beam ought to ask, what is the eBook equivalent to the bookplate? How about the equivalent to scrawling in the margins and turning down corners (for those of us who do that sort of thing)? Will it let me access my Facebook and Twitter accounts with little excerpts and my own annotations? These are some of the questions potential eBook readers care about, and the answers that more than a few readers will demand of eBooks before the printed book has any chance of being supplanted on a large scale. But solve some of these technical issues, and watch out world!

There is no question that the eBook format, properly executed, has many advantages over print.

For students and for those who want to reduce their physical footprint in a world going mobile, eBooks may be the best thing since sliced bread.

For authors, the potential to get their works into the hands of an increased audience at a reduced price is an attractive possibility, with the increased audience more possible all the time and the reduced price less likely.

No doubt there will be perceived wins and losses on all sides of the equation, but for now, most of us still treasure our favorite printed books and always will, and many of us will nonetheless be taking the eBook plunge in the near future.

One only hopes that we treasure books for the right reasons: the content, that of the best human thought and feeling passed on to posterity. For while I agree with Plato that many who read books don’t possess an ounce of understanding, it is possible that the printed word can preserve little paths to the understanding we all need.

And Plato of all persons wanted his words remembered and understood just as he laid them down, whether on clay tablets or scrolls or an iPad screen he maybe could not have imagined.