Brooks’ source

Brooks: “My analysis begins with a remarkable essay that Jonathan Rauch wrote for National Affairs in 2018 called “The Constitution of Knowledge.”
https://www.nationalaffairs.com/publications/detail/the-constitution-of-knowledge

Some excerpts from Rauch:


On any given day, of course, we won’t all agree on what has or has not checked out. The speed of light is widely agreed upon, but many propositions are disputed, and in some cases, such as man-made climate change, there is even a dispute about whether the proposition is in dispute. The community that lives by the standards of verification constantly argues about itself, yet by doing so provides its members with time and space to work through their disagreements without authoritarian oversight.

The results have been spectacular, in three ways above all. First, by organizing millions of minds to tackle billions of problems, the epistemic constitution disseminates knowledge at a staggering rate. Every day, probably before breakfast, it adds more to the canon of knowledge than was accumulated in the 200,000 years of human history prior to Galileo’s time.

Second, by insisting on validating truths through a decentralized, non-coercive process that forces us to convince each other with evidence and argument, it ends the practice of killing ideas by killing their proponents. What is often called the marketplace of ideas would be more accurately described as a marketplace of persuasion, because the only way to establish knowledge is to convince others you are right.

Third, by placing reality under the control of no one in particular, it dethrones intellectual authoritarianism and commits liberal society foundationally to intellectual pluralism and freedom of thought.

Together, these innovations have done nothing less than transform our way of living, learning, and relating to one another. But they have always had natural enemies. One, an ancient parasite, has recently mutated into something like an epistemic super-virus.

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How’d your Thanksgiving go?

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The Rotting of the Republican Mind – David Books in the NYT

Ed Note: Do you agree with David Brooks in this essay? I can’t help but think of the college educated guy I met in San Diego with his MAGA hat on. He said, “What’s not to like?! We got our tax cuts, our Supreme Court Justices, a chance to overturn abortion rights and less government restrictions in business!” I think the pro-Trump votes are complex. I agree that the alt-right lives in a disinformation bubble, but it’s not the whole story. For some, the conservative agenda is fulfilled, despite the background of craziness.

In a recent Monmouth University survey, 77 percent of Trump backers said Joe Biden had won the presidential election because of fraud. Many of these same people think climate change is not real. Many of these same people believe they don’t need to listen to scientific experts on how to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

We live in a country in epistemological crisis, in which much of the Republican Party has become detached from reality. Moreover, this is not just an American problem. All around the world, rising right-wing populist parties are floating on oceans of misinformation and falsehood. What is going on?

Many people point to the internet — the way it funnels people into information silos, the way it abets the spread of misinformation. I mostly reject this view. Why would the internet have corrupted Republicans so much more than Democrats, the global right more than the global left?

My analysis begins with a remarkable essay that Jonathan Rauch wrote for National Affairs in 2018 called “The Constitution of Knowledge.” Rauch pointed out that every society has an epistemic regime, a marketplace of ideas where people collectively hammer out what’s real. In democratic, nontheocratic societies, this regime is a decentralized ecosystem of academics, clergy members, teachers, journalists and others who disagree about a lot but agree on a shared system of rules for weighing evidence and building knowledge.

This ecosystem, Rauch wrote, operates as a funnel. It allows a wide volume of ideas to get floated, but only a narrow group of ideas survive collective scrutiny. “We let alt-truth talk,” Rauch said, “but we don’t let it write textbooks, receive tenure, bypass peer review, set the research agenda, dominate the front pages, give expert testimony or dictate the flow of public dollars.”

Over the past decades the information age has created a lot more people who make their living working with ideas, who are professional members of this epistemic process. The information economy has increasingly rewarded them with money and status. It has increasingly concentrated them in ever more prosperous metro areas.

While these cities have been prospering, places where fewer people have college degrees have been spiraling down: flatter incomes, decimated families, dissolved communities. In 1972, people without college degrees were nearly as happy as those with college degrees. Now those without a degree are far more unhappy about their lives.

People need a secure order to feel safe. Deprived of that, people legitimately feel cynicism and distrust, alienation and anomie. This precarity has created, in nation after nation, intense populist backlashes against the highly educated folks who have migrated to the cities and accrued significant economic, cultural and political power. Will Wilkinson of the Niskanen Center calls this the “Density Divide.” It is a bitter cultural and political cold war.

In the fervor of this enmity, millions of people have come to detest those who populate the epistemic regime, who are so distant, who appear to have it so easy, who have such different values, who can be so condescending. Millions not only distrust everything the “fake news” people say, but also the so-called rules they use to say them.

People in this precarious state are going to demand stories that will both explain their distrust back to them and also enclose them within a safe community of believers. The evangelists of distrust, from Donald Trump to Alex Jones to the followers of QAnon, rose up to give them those stories and provide that community. Paradoxically, conspiracy theories have become the most effective community bonding mechanisms of the 21st century.

For those awash in anxiety and alienation, who feel that everything is spinning out of control, conspiracy theories are extremely effective emotional tools. For those in low status groups, they provide a sense of superiority: I possess important information most people do not have. For those who feel powerless, they provide agency: I have the power to reject “experts” and expose hidden cabals. As Cass Sunstein of Harvard Law School points out, they provide liberation: If I imagine my foes are completely malevolent, then I can use any tactic I want.

Under Trump, the Republican identity is defined not by a set of policy beliefs but by a paranoid mind-set. He and his media allies simply ignore the rules of the epistemic regime and have set up a rival trolling regime. The internet is an ideal medium for untested information to get around traditional gatekeepers, but it is an accelerant of the paranoia, not its source. Distrust and precarity, caused by economic, cultural and spiritual threat, are the source.

What to do? You can’t argue people out of paranoia. If you try to point out factual errors, you only entrench false belief. The only solution is to reduce the distrust and anxiety that is the seedbed of this thinking. That can only be done first by contact, reducing the social chasm between the members of the epistemic regime and those who feel so alienated from it. And second, it can be done by policy, by making life more secure for those without a college degree.

Rebuilding trust is, obviously, the work of a generation.

Posted in Essays, Politics | 1 Comment

The history of Thanksgiving didn’t begin with the pilgrims

November 25, 2020 Heather Cox Richardson Nov 26

It doesn’t feel like much of a Thanksgiving this year. Lots of chairs are empty, either permanently, as we are now counting our coronavirus dead in the hundreds of thousands, or temporarily, as we are staying away from our loved ones to keep the virus at bay. Lots of tables are empty, too, as Americans are feeling the weight of an ongoing economic crisis. Rather than being unprecedented, though, this year of hardship and political strife brings us closer to the first national Thanksgiving than any more normal year.

That first Thanksgiving celebration was not in Plymouth, Massachusetts. While the Pilgrims and the Wampanoags did indeed share a harvest feast in fall 1621, and while early colonial leaders periodically declared days of thanksgiving when settlers were supposed to give their thanks for continued life and– with luck—prosperity, neither of these gave rise to our national celebration of Thanksgiving.

We celebrate Thanksgiving because of the Civil War. Southern whites fired on a federal fort, Fort Sumter, in Charleston Harbor in April 1861 in an attempt to destroy the United States of America and create their own country, based not in the American idea that “all men are created equal,” but rather in the opposite idea: that some men were better than others, and had the right to enslave their neighbors. In the 1850s, convinced that society worked best if a few wealthy men ran it, southern leaders had worked to bend the laws of the United States to their benefit. They used the government to protect slavery at the same time they denied it could do any of the things ordinary Americans wanted it to, like building roads, or funding colleges. In 1860, northerners elected Abraham Lincoln to the presidency to stop the rich southern slaveholders from taking over the government and using it to cement their own wealth and power. As soon as Lincoln was elected, southern leaders pulled their states out of the Union to set up their own country.

For their part, Lincoln and the northerners set out to end the slaveholders’ rebellion and bring the South back into a Union in which the government worked for people at the bottom, not just those at the top. The early years of the war did not go well for the Union. By the end of 1862, the armies still held, but people on the home front were losing faith. Leaders recognized the need both to acknowledge the suffering and to keep Americans loyal to the cause. In November and December, seventeen state governors declared state thanksgiving holidays. New York Governor Edwin Morgan’s widely reprinted proclamation about the holiday reflected that the previous year “is numbered among the dark periods of history, and its sorrowful records are graven on many hearthstones.” But this was nonetheless a time for giving thanks, he wrote, because “the precious blood shed in the cause of our country will hallow and strengthen our love and our reverence for it and its institutions…. Our Government and institutions placed in jeopardy have brought us to a more just appreciation of their value.”

The next year Lincoln got ahead of the state proclamations. On July 15, he declared a national day of thanksgiving, and the relief in his proclamation was almost palpable. After two years of disasters, the Union army was finally winning. Bloody, yes; battered, yes; but winning. At Gettysburg in early July, Union troops had sent Confederates reeling back southward. Then, on July 4, Vicksburg had finally fallen to U. S. Grant’s army. The military tide was turning. President Lincoln set Thursday, August 6, 1863, for the national day of thanksgiving. On that day, ministers across the country listed the signal victories of the U.S. Army and Navy in the past year, and reassured their congregations that it was only a matter of time until the United States government put down the southern rebellion. Their predictions acknowledged the dead and reinforced the idea that their sacrifice had not been in vain, as Lincoln himself did just three months later in the Gettysburg Address. In October 1863, President Lincoln declared the second national day of thanksgiving. In the past year, he declared, the nation had been blessed. In the midst of a civil war of unequaled magnitude and severity, he wrote, Americans had maintained their laws and their institutions, and kept foreign countries from meddling with their nation.

They had paid for the war as they went, refusing to permit the destruction to cripple the economy. Instead, as they funded the war, they had also advanced farming, industry, mining, and shipping. Immigrants had poured into the country to replace men lost on the battlefield, and the economy was booming. And Lincoln had recently promised that the government would end slavery once and for all. The country, he predicted, “with a large increase of freedom,” would survive, stronger and more prosperous than ever. The President invited Americans “in every part of the United States, and also those who are at sea, and those who are sojourning in foreign lands” to observe the last Thursday of November as a day of thanksgiving. The following year, Lincoln proclaimed another day of thanksgiving, this time congratulating Americans that God had favored them not only with immigration but also with the emancipation of formerly enslaved people. “Moreover,” Lincoln wrote, “He has been pleased to animate and inspire our minds and hearts with fortitude, courage, and resolution sufficient for the great trial of civil war into which we have been brought by our adherence as a nation to the cause of freedom and humanity, and to afford to us reasonable hopes of an ultimate and happy deliverance from all our dangers and afflictions.”

Lincoln established our national Thanksgiving to celebrate the survival of our democratic government. Today, more than 150 years later, President-Elect Joe Biden addressed Americans, noting that we are in our own war, this one against the novel coronavirus, that has already taken the grim toll of at least 260,000 Americans. Like Lincoln before him, he urged us to persevere, promising that vaccines really do appear to be on their way by late December or early January. “There is real hope, tangible hope. So hang on,” he said. “Don’t let yourself surrender to the fatigue…. [W]e can and we will beat this virus. America is not going to lose this war. You will get your lives back. Life is going to return to normal. That will happen. This will not last forever.” “Think of what we’ve come through,” Biden said, “centuries of human enslavement; a cataclysmic Civil War; the exclusion of women from the ballot box; World Wars; Jim Crow; a long twilight struggle against Soviet tyranny that could have ended not with the fall of the Berlin Wall, but in nuclear Armageddon.” “It’s been in the most difficult of circumstances that the soul of our nation has been forged,” he said. “Faith, courage, sacrifice, service to country, service to each other, and gratitude even in the face of suffering, have long been part of what Thanksgiving means in America.” “America has never been perfect,” Biden said. “But we’ve always tried to fulfill the aspiration of the Declaration of Independence: that all people are created equal….”

Biden could stand firmly on the Declaration of Independence because in 1861, Americans went to war to keep a cabal of slave owners from taking control of the government and turning it into an oligarchy. The fight against that rebellion seemed at first to be too much for the nation to survive. But Americans rallied and threw their hearts into the cause on the battlefields even as they continued to work on the home front for a government that promoted the common good. And they won. I wish you all a peaceful holiday.
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How many people are allowed for that turkey dinner?

Thanks to Frank C. for this light touch on a subdued holiday.

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Learning to yodel – Maria Von Trapp teaches Julie Andrews

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What stage are you in this pandemic?

Thanks to Sue H.!

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Running while black in Seattle – new hope

by Kurt Streeter in the NYT. Thanks to Mike C. for sending this in.

SEATTLE — The bloom of the Black Lives Matter signs. That is what my son and I saw as we jogged through our mostly white neighborhood. Everywhere we looked, we could see what felt like change.

The signs were on front lawns, attached to trees, displayed in windows, stapled to telephone poles.

There was also a flag that displayed a clenched fist, Black and bold. A fence with huge letters that spelled a single word: Ally. A nearby building was painted with the name George Floyd.

It was summer, hot and dry in our Seattle neighborhood, where I am among the few Black homeowners — and one of the few Black joggers — in a community of roughly 40,000 not far from downtown.

Though this is a place that leans left politically, visible displays of support for Black human rights have been scarce. But then Floyd died in Minneapolis after a white police officer pinned him to the ground, knee upon neck. As the country heaved in protest over racism that stretched back four centuries, something changed where we live — on the surface, at least.

Like Black joggers across the country, we saw the burst of supportive flags, placards and murals. They gave some comfort to a guy like me, unsure and anxious about our place in a community we enjoy. I could not stop wondering what it all meant.

“Never in a million years would I have thought we’d see this,” I told my son as we finished up a three-miler one day. “Never.”

He replied with the cleareyed directness of a 9-year-old. “But Dad, where were all those signs before? It’s crazy that it took someone dying to have this happen.”

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Remembering the inflatable bra

Thanks to Gordon G. Stories like this are being preserved by Storycorps

Posted in Aging Sites, Humor | 1 Comment

Is that the right answer?

Thanks to Sybil-Ann!

When Forest Gump died, he stood in front of St. Peter at the Pearly Gates.

St. Peter said, “Welcome, Forest. We’ve heard a lot about you.” He continued, “Unfortunately, it’s getting pretty crowded up here and we find that we now have to give people an entrance examination before we let them in.”

“Okay,” said Forest. “I hope it’s not too hard. I’ve already been through a test. My

momma used to say, ‘Life is like a final exam. It’s hard.’ “

“Yes, Forest, I know. But this test is only three questions. Here they are:

1) Which two days of the week begin with the letter ‘T’?”

2) How many seconds are in a year?

3) What is God’s first name?”

“Well, sir,” said Forest, “The first one is easy. Which two days of the week begin with the letter ‘T’? Today and Tomorrow.”

St. Peter looked surprised and said, “Well, that wasn’t the answer I was looking for, but you have a point. I give you credit for that answer.”

“The next question,” said Forest, “How many seconds are in a year? Twelve.”

“Twelve?” said St. Peter, surprised and confused.

“Yes, sir. January 2nd, February 2nd, March 2nd …”

St. Peter interrupted him. “I see what you mean. I’ll have to give you credit for that one, too.”

“And the last question,” said Forest, “What is God’s first name? It’s Andy.”

“Andy?” said St. Peter, in shock. “How did you come up with ‘Andy’?”

“I learned it in church. We used to sing about it.” Forest broke into song, “Andy walks with me, Andy talks with me, Andy tells me I am His own.”

St. Peter opened the gate to heaven and said, “Run, Forest, Run!”

❤💙💛💜💚

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When wine should be thrown out

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Yes, it’s a strange appendage

Nine of the weirdest penises in the animal kingdom: don’t miss the leopard slug video at the end! Click the link above for the full article. Ann M.


The flatworm engages in penis fights!
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A responsible neighbor

Thanks to Mike C. – Construction worker at the Frye towers using a magnet to remove possible stray nails that fell into the street. A truly responsible construction company.

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Calm down

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

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First Hill News

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How would you like to be remembered?

This is from a website called accidentaltalmudist.org

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Sign of the times

Thanks to Mike C.

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Christmas dinner with the family !

Thanks to Sybil Ann!

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The eagle builds a home

From a friend of Al MacR.

The sun peaked out for a couple of hours in West Seattle yesterday morning, and I was fortunate enough to witness some of our local eagles continue with their nest fortification activities. With the addition of some of the larger branches, the nest is becoming more of a full-on fortress. It is truly inspiring to see their unyielding efforts. Here’s to everyone pushing worthwhile projects forward today! Much love, good humans

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A frightened owl was rescued Monday after being found in the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree, days after it had been chopped down upstate.

Thanks to Linda W. – “Only in New York!”

By Nick Garber, Patch StaffVerified Patch Staff Badge
Nov 18, 2020 2:43 pm ET|Updated Nov 18, 2020 10:01 pm ET
The Saw-whet owl was spotted Monday by Jason Ramos (left) within the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree, and brought upstate to Ravensbeard Wildlife Center in Saugerties.
The Saw-whet owl was spotted Monday by Jason Ramos (left) within the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree, and brought upstate to Ravensbeard Wildlife Center in Saugerties. (Courtesy of Ellen Kalish)

MIDTOWN MANHATTAN, NY — On Monday afternoon, Ellen Kalish got a call from a woman she didn’t know, asking if her husband might be able to donate an owl to Kalish’s wildlife rehabilitation center.

“I told her yes, we’ve been specializing in birds of prey for 20 years and I’d be happy to take an owl,” recalled Kalish, the founder and director of Ravensbeard Wildlife Center in Saugerties, New York. Then she asked the woman where her husband worked.

The answer, it turned out, was Rockefeller Center — where the caller’s husband had just helped transport this year’s Christmas tree from Oneonta in upstate New York down to Midtown Manhattan, where it was installed Monday.

“I said yes, bring him up, we’ll give him an exam, make sure he’s OK, and take it from there,” Kalish said.

(Courtesy of Ellen Kalish)

On Tuesday, Kalish met the couple in New Paltz, where they handed over the tiny bird — an adult Saw-whet owl, among the smallest in all of North America. She’s nicknamed it “Rockefeller.”Subscribe

Realizing the hungry critter hadn’t had anything to eat or drink since the tree was cut down Saturday, Kalish brought the owl home, where it gulped down water and devoured a number of frozen mice.

The owl is set to receive X-rays during a vet appointment later Wednesday afternoon, to ensure that none of its bones were broken during the Christmas tree’s three-hour trip to the city, or while the 11-ton spruce was being hoisted into place Monday at Rockefeller Center

After that, Kalish said, “We’ll release him right here in Saugerties.” Adult Saw-whet owls migrate and rarely stay in one place, Kalish explained, meaning there’s no need to release it back in Oneonta, which is about two hours west.

“It doesn’t really matter where we release him — he’s going to go wherever he wants,” she said.

A Rockefeller Center spokesperson said in a statement: “We inspect each branch of the tree individually before it’s wrapped, but birds sometimes can find their way into it on the journey.”

Kalish’s Facebook post recounting the lucky find had racked up more than 2,500 shares by Wednesday afternoon — no surprise, she said, given that people are craving a bit of good news amid this year’s turmoil.

“I just felt like I needed to share it,” she said. “Especially in these times.”

Posted in Animals, Holidays, Nature | Comments Off on A frightened owl was rescued Monday after being found in the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree, days after it had been chopped down upstate.

This is how it is

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

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Compostable wrappings

From Mike C. and the climate impact sub-committee. Poster created by Al MacRae!

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A Conversation with Ta-Nehisi Coates, Sexually Speaking with Dr. Ruth, How Music Connects Us with Meklit Hadero

Thanks to Ann M!

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University of Washington     THE GRADUATE SCHOOL // OFFICE OF PUBLIC LECTURES     600x300_marketo_UWPLmugs_winter.jpg     Hello from the Office of Public Lectures!  We are so excited to share our exciting winter speaker line up — including Ta-Nehisi Coates! And as an added feature to his event, through a partnership with the University Book Store, we are also offering you a free copy of his book The Water Dancer. Quantities are limited so be sure to sign up here to get yours! And be sure to check out who’s on the winter line up and register today!       WINTER LECTURES       1200x1200_COVIDintro_winter.jpg Coexisting with COVID-19
Thursdays, Jan. 7, 14 and 21 • 6:30 p.m. PST • Livestream
Coexisting with COVID-19 returns for three more installments this January! Hanson Hosein talks with local experts about where we’re at (January 7), making art during a pandemic (January 14), and how kids are dealing with COVID-19 (January 21).       Ruth Westheimer_300x300.jpg Sexually Speaking: An Evening with Dr. Ruth
Tuesday, Jan. 26 • 6:30 p.m. PST • Livestream
Sex and relationship questions on your mind? Join us for an evening with behavioral therapist, sexpert and Alzheimer’s caregiving authority, Dr. Ruth Westheimer on January 26. Moderated by UW Sociology professor, Dr. Pepper Schwartz.       Meklit Hadero_credit John Nilsen_300x300.jpg How Music Connects Us: Belonging, Wellbeing, and Sonic Lineage 
Thursday, Feb. 4 • 6:30 p.m. PST • Livestream
In partnership with Meany Center for the Performing Arts, musician and activist Meklit Hadero will explore how music knits people and communities together on February 4.       Patty Hayes_300x300.jpg The COVID-19 Pandemic and the Impacts of Systemic Racism
Tuesday, Feb. 9 • 6:30 p.m. PST • Livestream
Patty Hayes, Director of Public Health for Seattle and King County, talks COVID-19 and the impacts of systemic racism on February 9.       Ta-Nehisi Coates_300x300.jpg A Conversation with Ta-Nehisi Coates
Tuesday, Feb. 16 • 6 p.m. PST • Livestream
Award-winning author and journalist Ta-Nehisi Coates will be in conversation with UW Communications professor, Dr. Ralina Joseph on February 16. (Limited Reservations!)     Be sure to mark your calendars for these upcoming dates and secure your registration today for our January or February livestreams! And remember, these livestreams are free for your viewing pleasure from the comfort of your home right here in Seattle or halfway around the world.   Register Here   UW Home The Graduate School Public Lectures   Be Boundless / For Washington, For the World   FacebookTwitterInstagram        Contact Us
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Take Ten – a star studded look at loss

Coming on December 10th there is a free program definitely worth watching. Click here to register and watch Atul Gawande among many other speakers.

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Unpaid babysitters

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

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Go to page 2 for many more!

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