Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Perfection as the enemy of progress -- From my 2018 Facebook post

I don't want to live in a world where only perfect people's contributions are accepted. (And where the definition of perfection is fluid and changeable.)

 

I don't want to live in a world where only perfect people's contributions are accepted. (And where the definition of perfection is fluid and changeable.)

 






I don't want to live in a world where only perfect people's contributions are accepted. (And where the definition of perfection is fluid and changeable.) 

Great art can be created by not-great people. Great literature can be created by flawed souls. Great legislation can come from not-great individuals. All forward progress of civilization stops when the process of reaching for new and better is frozen by the fear of error; when moments of clarity are denied based on the struggles that preceded them.

 In this great demand to remove Chuck Close portraits from art museums and rethink displaying Picasso's work, remove Confederate monuments, etc., where does it stop? If we are to be consistent, we must next remove all Catholic churches.

 

 

 

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

The Natural Gas wars of 2023

...  a useful reminder that the inexorable march of government mandates, the endless effort by our rulers to enforce their “scientifically” unchallengeable dogma on what they see as a population of ignorant drudges, can be resisted.

How the Gas Stove in Your Kitchen Became a Symbol of Freedom

The left framed its latest crusade as a ‘right-wing culture war.’ We’ve seen this pattern many times.

“Give me smoothly regulated gas-flow cooking capability or give me death!” has a flaming blue ring to it. But it lacks somehow the peal of urgency, the alarm of existential threat our stone-kiln-firing predecessors could adduce to fuel their noble cause.

Still, the little victory secured last week over the forces of progressive technocratic authoritarianism is significant in its way—even if it may prove only provisional and someday in a bleak, electrified future, our Vikings and Kenmores are eventually prised from our cold, dead hands.

The small triumph chalked up for common sense and normality is so rare these days it’s worth celebrating in itself. It’s also a useful reminder that the inexorable march of government mandates, the endless effort by our rulers to enforce their “scientifically” unchallengeable dogma on what they see as a population of ignorant drudges, can be resisted.

More than that, the way the episode played out last week has been an instructive exercise in how modern society advances, how the ascendant left is the locomotive force behind our culture and politics. We evolve today through the imposition from above of new rules and dogmas—as if that is a stable, natural process and any attempt to resist it is ignorant, reactionary extremism.

You can tell this from the way in which much of the media reported on the attempted gas-stove grab.

As conservatives—and, much of the apolitical public—began to raise their voices against Commissar Richard Trumka Jr.’s diktat declaring war on gas stoves, the media took up the familiar narrative.

“How Gas Stoves Became a Right-Wing Cause in the Culture Wars” explained Time Magazine.

An unelected official proposes some indefensible new regulation in the name of “science” that materially and adversely affects the lives of tens of millions of Americans—and it is somehow another front opened by the “right wing” in their “culture wars.”

It happens all the time. You can frame a good deal of the political and cultural evolution of the country in the past few decades in this way: The left elites compel adherence to their latest ideological orthodoxy and anyone questioning it is waging culture war. It happened with same-sex marriage, the idea that sex is independent of biology, the proposition that all white people are racist, the assertion that the planet is burning. All started out as intellectual hobbyhorses of the left fringe and quickly wound up being examples of the “far right” trying to impose its will.

This fits the wider narrative of our ruling intellectual classes: that it is the conservative side of the political spectrum that has gone extreme, that all our contemporary political woes—hyperpartisanship, divisiveness, the extremism of our political discourse—can be traced to the Republican Party’s jumping off the right of the ideological diving board into the deep end of fanaticism.

Yet the 2022 Gallup Poll Social Series, an annual survey of thousands of Americans, found new confirmation that it is the Democratic Party, not the GOP, that has moved toward the extreme in the past few decades and in the process has driven much of the cultural agenda.

Last year Gallup found that the percentage of Democrats who identify themselves as politically liberal rose by 4 points, to 54%, a new high, with 36% declaring themselves moderate and only 10% conservative. In 1994, the proportion of Democrats identifying as liberal was 25%. In 2010 it was 40%.

Over the same period the proportion of registered Republicans who identify as conservative has only edged up—from roughly 60% in the 1990s to 72% in 2022. Most others identify as moderate.

“Increased liberal identification among U.S. Democrats has occurred across all demographic categories,” writes Lydia Saad, director of social research at Gallup, commenting on the survey. “But that shift has been particularly pronounced among White Democrats.”

Since Democrats now seem heavily to favor the illiberal imposition of many of their notions, it might be time to retire the term “liberal” in describing them. But the sharp swing to the left is clear.

Some of these ideological changes do, it’s true, become quickly embedded in wider public support. Gay marriage is the obvious example. But most don’t. Resisting them, like resisting assaults on our kitchen appliances, isn’t extremism. It’s patriotism.

Conflict

 I avoid corporate-produced news as much as possible - but when I glance through what's being reported, it's clear to me we have a problem in our society which I believe is a failure of skill in conflict resolution.


Conflict is NOT a problem - it's part of life. We each have unique perspectives so will not initially see things the same way. The difference can be a strength if we are prepared to share and discuss and broaden our perspective. Not all conflicts can be resolved - but each can be acknowledged and explored and accepted.

When the nation turned to rule by consensus, acknowledgement of and respect for minority point of view suffered. There is no one way of looking at things - and it's impossible to know which is "RIGHT." With humility, one proceeds with best available analysis at the moment, knowing that as other information comes to light, that analysis may change.

Children need to be taught that conflict does not necessitate resolution - but invites exploration of differences. Our society has a responsibility to model / teach how to handle conflicts without pulling out a gun and "winning" through domination.