Pragmatic politics focused on the public interest for those uncomfortable with America's two-party system and its way of doing politics. Considering the interface of politics with psychology, cognitive science, social behavior, morality and history.
Etiquette
DP Etiquette
First rule: Don't be a jackass.
Other rules: Do not attack or insult people you disagree with. Engage with facts, logic and beliefs. Out of respect for others, please provide some sources for the facts and truths you rely on if you are asked for that. If emotion is getting out of hand, get it back in hand. To limit dehumanizing people, don't call people or whole groups of people disrespectful names, e.g., stupid, dumb or liar. Insulting people is counterproductive to rational discussion. Insult makes people angry and defensive. All points of view are welcome, right, center, left and elsewhere. Just disagree, but don't be belligerent or reject inconvenient facts, truths or defensible reasoning.
A Washington Post article published today, Trump floats idea of delaying the November election, a power granted Congress, as he ramps up attacks on voting by mail, comments:
President Trump on Thursday floated the prospect of delaying the November election, as he ramped up his attacks on mail-in voting, claiming without evidence that its widespread use would be a “catastrophic disaster” that could lead to fraudulent results.
“With Universal Mail-In Voting (not Absentee Voting, which is good), 2020 will be the most INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history,” Trump tweeted. “It will be a great embarrassment to the USA. Delay the Election until people can properly, securely and safely vote???”
WaPO goes on to point out that Constitution gives congress the power to regulate the “time, place and manner” of elections. Only congress can change that. The constitution does not grant the president any power to change anything about elections. The constitution also specifies that a president’s term ends on Jan. 20 in the year after a presidential election, i.e., Jan. 20, 2021 in this case.
The president was unclear about how the election would be moved, either by congress according to the constitution or by unconstitutional executive order. If by congress, the chance of that happening is nil. If by executive order, the US would enter a period of intensified constitutional crisis relative to what it is now.
As usual, the idea was floated in a Tweet. The tweet came after a government report showed the U.S. economy shrank 9.5% from April through June. That is the largest quarterly decline since data began to be published by the government 70 years ago.
Given the president's bitter animosity to voting by mail (70 attacks since late March), it is reasonable to assume that he will intensify his efforts to throw the election into chaos in any ways he can. By doing that he can create false grounds to attack the legitimacy of the outcome if he loses.
This election is probably going to be ugly and messy.
Emotions can be real killers, sometimes literally.We all have them and some of us are in much better
control of our emotions than others.I’d
say the level of control depends on how one is wired. Some have pretty short fuses.Others, it takes some serious doing to get
them all riled up to the point of finally reacting negatively.It’s all in the person.
Where do emotions come from?What is their ultimate source? Does it go deeper than our wiring?
Just to take a trip down Philosophical Lane, according to the theists, God is the fundamental source of
who we are as a species, and further that humanity was created in “His” image.Atheists would, of course, disagree.But no matter your religion/non-religion, we all
know of the God creation narrative.And
the bigger, overarching idea of “God the Entity” is as ubiquitous and
cross-cultural as the oxygen we collectively breathe.
Whether you’re a denying agnostic atheist like me, a practicing
theist of whatever stripe, or somewhere in-between, the idea of God is
universally known.And the going (common)
idea is that God (e.g., First Cause) made us who and what we are; whether
crawling up from the evolutionary primordial slime, or as a full-blown, packaged
and ready-to-go human being.(Work with
me here on this, hardcore atheists/theists. This is not yet the question. ;)
Sooo, back to our emotions, that got me fantasizing and
thinking about how great it would be to be able to “play God” and wipe out all those
nasty emotions.So here it is… your
opportunity to play the role of God:
For argument’s sake, you, as God, get to un-contaminate
humankind with one negative emotion.You
only get to pick ONE, that’s the caveat.So which one would it be?Would
it be, for example, greed, hatred, jealousy, anger, envy, other?Is there one overarching negative emotion
that would “take care” of the others, all in one fell swoop?
Your challenge: Play along with this hypothetical.What emotion, as God, would you fix/undo?
The 24 minute video below describes how a scientist (astrophysicist), Jeff Hester, who is not an expert in infectious diseases or epidemiology analyzes the CODIV-19 data coming from the CDC (Centers for Disease Control) up until July 16, 2020 and then by the HHS (Health and Human Services) thereafter.
Hester has peer-reviewed publications, e.g., this one about the Crab Nebula. He worked on the team that helped repair the Hubble space telescope. He was a tenured professor at Arizona State University. He is now a public speaker, 'Thought Partner' (whatever that is) and whatnot.
The reason Hester focused on July 16 is that it is the date the president required COVID-19 data to be sent to HHS for analysis and reporting, thus removing the CDC as the main federal data analysis and reporting agency. At the time of the transfer, various people were suspicious that the move to HHS was for the purpose of tampering with the data for political purposes.
Based on Dr. Hester's analysis, and assuming it is correct, it looks like the president has required that HHS manipulate the data for political reasons. Two main caveats are that (1) this is one person's analysis and it has not been peer-reviewed by experts, and (2) Hester is not an expert and thus not able to assess whether there are legitimate reasons for the inflection in the data beginning on July 16 that a non-expert might not be aware of.
The reason I am posting this is because of the stark change in data that occurred starting on July 16. It is hard to understand why the data would change so drastically the day that HHS started doing the analysis and reporting. It could be that HHS is doing a different kind of analysis but if I recall correctly, HHS claimed it was doing the same analysis that CDC did (can't find a link to that).
For people who do not want to watch the video, three screen shots below summarize the gist of what his analysis shows.
Screen shots
On July 16, the US infection rate stopped increasing sharply
and it flattened off
The curve flattening happened only in states that voted for Trump in 2016
Trump has corrupted data before and lied to try to get away with it
Thanks to Larry Motuz for bringing this video to my attention.
Arizona patriots protesting in May against the tyranny
and horror of social defenses against COVID-19
The New York Times reports on data from various experiments and anecdotal observations strongly suggesting that wearing a face mask could have two major beneficial effects for the mask wearer.
First, wearing a mask appears to reduce the number of new COVID-19 infections in uninfected people compared to people who do not wear a mask
Second, wearing a mask appears to reduce the number of viruses uninfected people take in and that postulated reduced virus dose (inoculum) appears to correlate with new infections being both significantly milder and less commonly lethal
Those two tentative hypotheses are not backed by enough evidence to make them proven to the normal standard of statistical confidence for ‘proven’ conclusions concerning infectious diseases. Nonetheless, evidence from various kinds of experiments and observations all strongly suggest that both of these observations are in fact true.
The evidence
At a basic level, common sense suggests that the first benefit is very likely true. That is because infected people who wear masks have been proven to reduce the number of uninfected people they infect. The only way to explain that is to postulate that masks trap some of the viruses that infected people shed into the air. If that is true, and it undoubtedly is, then there is no reason to believe that a mask an uninfected person is wearing would not also trap some viruses in the air, thereby reducing the virus dose and the likelihood of becoming infected.
“Some indirect data has been accumulating from people as well. Researchers have tentatively estimated that about 40 percent of coronavirus infections do not produce any symptoms. But when some people wear masks, the proportion of asymptomatic cases seems to skyrocket, reportedly surpassing 90 percent during one outbreak at a seafood plant in Oregon. Wearing a face covering doesn’t make people impervious to infection, but these trends of asymptomatic cases could suggest that masks lead to milder disease, potentially reducing hospitalizations and deaths.
Particularly compelling, Dr. Gandhi said, is the data from cruise ships, which pack big groups of people into close quarters. More than 80 percent of those infected aboard Japan’s Diamond Princess in February — before masking had become common practice — came down with symptoms, she noted. But on another vessel that left Argentina in March, and on which all passengers were issued surgical masks after someone onboard came down with a fever, the level of symptomatic cases was below 20 percent.
The idea that face coverings can curb disease severity, although not yet proven, ‘makes complete sense’, said Linsey Marr, an expert in virus transmission at Virginia Tech. ‘It’s another good argument for wearing masks.’”
Once again, all of this points to at least two unhappy things. First, wearing a mask during the pandemic should have nothing to do with politics in any way. The fact that it is political for tens of millions of Americans shows an unforgivable failure of political leadership mostly (~90%) by the president, the GOP in congress and some GOP governors and state politicians. Instead of being politically neutral, our self-centered narcissist president and some (most?) GOP politicians are simply incapable of dealing rationally with the pandemic.[1] Their ideology betrays and blinds their minds to reality and reason.
Second, the presidential and GOP failure in putting politics over science and rationality has needlessly cost tens of thousands of lives and trillions of dollars. All of these people should be impeached, removed from office, prosecuted for criminal negligence, fined into bankruptcy and imprisoned for at least 15 years. After all, that is just being fair and balanced.
Footnote:
1. A NYT article today describes a planned school reopening in Georgia: “In-person classes without a mask requirement are scheduled to begin on Friday in Jefferson, worrying some parents, students and teachers as the state confronts the coronavirus. .... An online petition created by two Jefferson High seniors calling for a mandatory-mask rule has garnered more than 600 signatures. But a competing petition demanding that masks remain a choice for students has attracted more than 200 signers, some of whom have left comments that underscore the politicized nature of the disagreement. ‘Only liberals can get rona and I’m not a liberal’, wrote one, using a slang term for the coronavirus. ‘TRUMP2020 no mask fo me.’”
In some places, the politics of COVID-19 has gone from merely grossly incompetent to stupid and literally lethal. The rigid ideology and savage tribalism of most of conservative and populist American politics is mostly responsible for this colossal stupidity and the misery, deaths and costs it imposes on everyone. The ideologues who instigate this sort of anti-mask stupidity are responsible for the consequences of their acts.
Some of these patriots are going to get their wish --
unfortunately, they are going to kill some innocents as they
joyfully exercise their freedom to live and die free
(that freedom includes the freedom to kill innocents via stupid behavior)
Bayesianism, inductive reasoning and level of confidence
As discussed here before, being bayesian about reality and beliefs is a very good mental habit to have, especially for complicated and messy subjects like politics. Simply put, being bayesian means changing the degree of confidence a person has when they become aware of information they were not aware of before. That includes reasoning or logic. The new information can make the bayesian person’s confidence in a belief increase, decrease or even change if it is sufficient. In essence, the bayesian person is a more or less open minded person. That trait is usually accompanied by a mindset that tends toward rationality somewhat more compared to the person’s closed minded counterpart or doppelganger.
As all of us critical thinkers know, forming beliefs about most things involve inductive thinking and some degree of uncertainty in the belief. In politics, important but inconvenient facts, truths and reasoning are often hidden, distorted or denied as lies or nonsense. When that happens, as is usually the case, it is necessary to form beliefs with out important or necessary information. Sometimes we have to make guesses about what reality is using a some variable amount of circumstantial evidence or reasoning. That makes the belief uncertain to some extent.
I sometimes express some of my beliefs in terms of level of personal confidence as a percent, e.g., 60% confident the belief is true. Certainty in belief means 100% confidence in the belief. With politics, messy as it is, sometimes certain beliefs turn out to be false. That can happen if information is hidden, not known to the person and/or the person’s reasoning is flawed. Complicating this is the fact that beliefs often are based on subjective values and there is no single correct belief, e.g., abortion is morally acceptable or it is not.
Degrees of confidence: A person’s degree of confidence in a belief or opinion varies. It can range from ‘maybe’ to ‘more likely than not’ to ‘probably true’ to ‘certainly true’ or certainty. Certainty in belief means a person is 100% confident in the belief or opinion, while maybe tends to mean some range of likelihood or degree of confidence such as ~35-49%. More likely than not means a possibility or level of confidence of at least 50%. With politics, messy as it is, sometimes certain beliefs turn out to be or are false. Sometimes ‘probably not’ type beliefs turn out to be or are true.
Trump, Putin & treason
One of the things in the 2016 election that I found deeply concerning was the possibility that the president could be working with or maybe even for Putin. There was enough circumstantial evidence for me to form a belief that maybe the president was working with or for Putin and was thus a traitor (~35-49% possibility). After all, his campaign operatives had been caught trying to set up a secret line of communication with Putin or his operatives. Why do that?
There was other circumstantial evidence as well. For example, it was also known or suspected that the president (1) laundered money for Russian mobsters and kleptocrats, (2) was a serial business failure with six bankruptcies in his resume, (3) refused to show his tax returns, falsely claiming he could not because they were under audit, (4) was immoral in his personal life (e.g., Stormy Daniels) and broke campaign finance law to hide that fact, (5) the president’s businesses did a great deal of business with Russian mobsters, and (6) was and still is a chronic liar. I also believed the president was a tax cheat (~90% confident), which explained why he hid his tax returns.
In the 2016 election (Politifact)
After the election, various things raised my level of confidence that the president was working with or for Putin to probably doing so (~60% likelihood). For example, (1) phone calls between him and Putin were not made public and no US officials were present to hear what was being discussed (this is unprecedented), (2) the president denied that Russians attacked the US election, taking Putin’s word for it that Russia had nothing to do with the 2016 election, (3) he publicly sided with Putin against US intelligence agency findings of major Russian interference in the election, (4) he fights tooth and claw in court to keep his tax returns hidden, (5) the Mueller report clearly showed that he obstructed justice at least four or five times to try to stop the investigation of Russian interference in the election, (6) the president solidified his track record as immoral and a chronic liar (100% confidence level) and a crook (99% confidence level), (7) he expresses publicly admiration for tyranny and tyrants including Putin, (8) constant authoritarian rhetoric and behaviors, e.g., attacking the press, and (9) secret phone calls with Putin that coincided with the president taking actions that Putin was wanted ever since he took power, e.g., withdrawing US troops from Germany. We only find out about the phone calls not from the president but from Putin. There could be more phone calls we will probably never know about and we will never know what was discussed in any of them (~95% likelihood).
The following 4 minute interview with Timothy Snyder, author of the book On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons From the Twentieth Century (book review here) has raised my belief that the president is a traitor (~98% confidence level). If one looks at what the president is doing from Putin’s point of view, the president is an incredibly useful operative because of his power, deep immorality and other bad personal traits.
Why would the president betray the US and its domestic and international interests? Because he is a crook and a liar, extremely thin-skinned and vindictive, deeply immoral, deeply corrupt, a tyrant wannabe, controllable, and mentally unsound to the point of being completely unfit for office, e.g., he is a self-centered narcissist. Putin has powerful tools at his disposal. Putin can bribe, blackmail and manipulate the president because he is simply not very bright. If the president owes enough money to Russians and they can call in loans and/or show evidence of tax evasion, that could bankrupt him once more and/or subject him to criminal prosecution. If there is evidence of other bad behaviors, e.g., the pee pee tape, Putin can “leak” it just like he leaked damaging evidence against Clinton in the 2016 election.
It appears to me that Putin holds the power here. It is not clear that the president can refuse what he is told to do, and apparently what he is already inclined to do.
In May, the AP reported that the CDC had released detailed guidelines on reopening the economy, but the Trump administration buried the report and wanted it to never be released. In a May 6 article, Trump administration buries detailed CDC advice on reopening, the AP released a portion of the report that provided seven flow charts for reopening various parts of the economy, including schools, child care facilities, churches and restaurants and bars. The charts for school, workplaces, church and restaurant and bar reopenings are shown below.
From the charts, it is perfectly clear why the president did not want the public to see the CDC report or the flow charts. They are devastating. They make clear how poor the federal response has been compared to what real, non-political experts recommended back in May. In all seven areas of the economy, the very first guideline is the same: Is the (school, church, workplace, etc.) in a community no longer requiring significant mitigation? If the answer is no, then in all cases the recommended action is do not reopen. If the answer to the first guideline is yes, then for school reopenings, 13 more guidelines need to be met before a school or facility can be reopened and monitored.
At present, few or no schools are in a position to reopen. The president's recent push to force schools to reopen is not just sabotage of the US response to the pandemic. It is treason.
Apparently, due to AP reporting of the leaked flow charts, the president ordered the CDC to release the full report. To minimize public notice about the report, the release was not accompanied by a press release. The president felt a need to minimize the public's knowledge of the contents of the report.
“White House spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany said Friday that the documents had not been approved by CDC Director Robert Redfield. The new emails, however, show that Redfield cleared the guidance.
This new CDC guidance — a mix of advice already released along with newer information — had been approved and promoted by the highest levels of its leadership, including Redfield. Despite this, the administration shelved it on April 30.
As early as April 10, Redfield, who is also a member of the White House coronavirus task force, shared via email the guidance and decision trees with President Donald Trump’s inner circle, including his son-in-law Jared Kushner, top adviser Kellyanne Conway and Joseph Grogan, assistant to the president for domestic policy. Also included were Dr. Deborah Birx, Dr. Anthony Fauci and other task force members.”
The president and McEnany were clearly lying about the status of the CDC report to provide a false excuse for why it was not made public. Remember Ms. McEnany’s first press briefing? She said “I will never lie to you.” That was a lie.
The president’s sabotage gets even worse
Within the last few days, multiple sources reported that new CDC guidance on school reopening that was radically different from the guidance that leaked to the public and was then released in May. The ensuing confusion was predictable. It turned out that the White House edited the guidance to water it down, but released it as a CDC document to make school reopenings seem at least plausible on advice from experts.
In this political document, the White House suggested that schools keep students in small groups, with one teacher staying with the same group all day. It also suggested using outdoor spaces and planning for what to do when someone in a school tests positive, e.g., contact tracing. A July 24 New York Times article, C.D.C. Calls on Schools to Reopen, Downplaying Health Risks, commented that “the agency’s statement followed earlier criticism from President Trump that its guidelines for reopening were too ‘tough.’”
Digression - personal rant: That NYT reporting was nonsense. The new guidelines were from our heartless, self-serving president and his political enabler goons, not the CDC public health experts. The title should have been explicit that the document was from the president, not the CDC, i.e., The President Calls on Schools to Reopen, Downplaying Health Risks. This exemplifies why I consider the professional mainstream media to generally be doing grade D or D- level work when it comes to dealing with our corrupt, treasonous, chronic liar president. The MSM keeps giving the president passes that he does not deserve. The MSM still has not learned its lesson from 2016.
A July 25 article by the Washington Post, more accurately titled, Confused by CDC’s changing guidance on school reopening? Here are recommendations from experts not pressured by the White House: “The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week issued new guidance on how schools can reopen safely for the 2020-21 school year — and, as it turns out, some of it was edited in the White House. That could help explain why there is little discussion about the risks of returning to school buildings, which President Trump has been demanding for a few weeks.”
Clearly, that is sabotage by a president who has no concern for anything other than his re-election. Public health and needless sickness and deaths are of no concern to this president, except to the extent they are obstacles to re-election. The heartless cruelty of this extremely dangerous man is on full display to see for anyone willing to look.
A segment from Rachael Maddow on this matter is shown below.
Of interest in Maddow’s segment is the graph shown below. That data makes it clear that the US response has been and still is a failure. The president and the GOP leadership deserves all reasonable responsibility for the incompetence and failures, the thousands of needlessly lost lives and the needless economic losses that run in the trillions.