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UNDERNEWS

Undernews is the online report of the Progressive Review, edited by Sam Smith, who covered Washington during all or part of one quarter of America's presidencies and edited alternative journals since 1964. The Review, which has been on the web since 1995, is now published from Freeport, Maine. See main page for full contents

November 10, 2009

FLOTSAM & JETSAM: POLITICS IN A TIME OF MYTH

Sam Smith

Although America's politics is increasingly being driven by myth - witness the stunning decline in those who believe that global temperatures are rising - the media, academia and political activists tend to act primarily with dismay and disgust or to satisfy themselves by labeling the myth followers wing nuts. Serious consideration of this huge factor in American life is largely absent.

Little time is spent on how to educate people on a complex or scientific matter, to help them deal with probabilities as well as certainties, or how best to convince rather than merely to condemn.

Here's a thought for starters: Bring together journalists, philosophers, pollsters, historians, anthropologists and activists to put the matter on the table. Begin with the premise that myth is normal in any culture; it even has important healthy functions. But what happens when, as now, myth gets out of hand? What causes this? How do we stop myth from being self destructive? How, metaphorically, do we return safely from Jonestown to the First Baptist Church down the street?

If there were such a conference - or, better, a series of conferences - here are some of potential topics:

What causes myth to change its role in the same culture?

How important are different segments of the culture in this: education, religion, media, political campaigns etc?

How does this shift reflect a failure to understand basic things like the variations in a multi-year chart of global temperatures? What can be done about this?

How do we raise the understanding of probability in dealing with such matters? For example, I often use the poker analogy in dealing with the environment, emphasizing such points as considering the stakes as well as the odds.

What is the best response to cynically created mythology such as the idea in the recent Maine campaign that gay marriage would damage heterosexual marriage or endanger children?

What is the media's responsibility in handling such issues and how could it do it better?

What are effective ways to move someone from myth to reality?

To what extent does the over-complexity of solutions (or of their administration) - i.e. the healthcare bills - contribute to mythology? Is the lesson that we should more often break such solutions into smaller, more comprehensible parts?

To what extent does burying questionable items in a complex solution - i.e again the healthcare bills - contribute to mythology and undermine support?

To what extent does the establishment's tendency to say "Case closed" on matters with continuing doubt work against reality and spur myth? For example, the World Trade Center attack was certainly not likely the creation of George Bush, but that doesn't eliminate unanswered questions about what happened in government before the attack or about the construction of the towers. To act as though it does seems to encourage, rather than eliminate, myth. This happens over and over, often because the government wants to put a matter aside and the media is too willing to help.

How can we teach honor for unanswered questions without embellishing them with unsupported theoretical conclusions?

The government often has a two track goal: solve a problem and appear that it is solving it. Often, the latter effort - as in the case of swine flu - can work against the former. You can test this out by trying to discover precisely how many people have died after taking the vaccine. I could find only one report, a minute number in a Chinese sample. But government public relations types don't think like that. The want everything to appear far more rosy and far more certain than it may actually be. How do we deal with this?

What do history and anthropology tell us about myth and how it helps and damages a culture?

And that's just for starters. The important thing is to start, to recognize that myth is not something you change by name calling but by dealing with it as a force as real and important in its own way as climate change. And something that may severely damage our approach to such issues as climate change because we forget in this scientific and technological age that not everything that matters can be easily measured.

5 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Climate change is natural. Study the Sun cycles and you will find its now waning and thus its getting cooler. The politics behind this are all designed to give more regulatory power over every single fact of human life. Its people control and ultimately population control. The British are now proposing personal carbon accounts that we will be limited to and presumabel be penalized if we go over. CO2 is NOT POLLUTION! It does not cause warming. Let's address the real pollution causes - of which there are no controversies - PCB's, prescription drugs and rocket fuel in drinking supplies, factory farms, loss of coral reefs, etc. I just can't fathom why people don't see through this scam by bureaucrats and paid off, herdlike scientists who go along.

November 10, 2009 8:38 PM  
Anonymous Boffin said...

Climate change hysteria serves for the Left the same purpose as terrorism servers for the Right: scaring the population into giving up their freedom, rights, and wealth to the government.

November 10, 2009 9:43 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

9/11 was a False Flag to inject "democracy" into the hostile regimes of the middle-east to prepare for the coming one world communist global government, aka The New World Order.

Whether you like it or not, the truth is the truth. Have a good day.

November 11, 2009 8:04 AM  
Blogger Peanut Butter said...

Regardless of whether global warming is a myth or not, we as a race should be conducting ourselves as though it is a fact. The solutions to curbing the "myth" of global warming make the planet an inherently better place to live.

November 12, 2009 12:47 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

You will have what you call myth, and some might call healthy skepticism, as long as you have: "While Massachusetts recipients of federal stimulus money collectively report 12,374 jobs saved or created, a Globe review shows that number is wildly exaggerated."
A dishonest, grasping government inspires and deserves disbelief. It is a matter of fact that the world is warming. The cause is not known. As long as you have dishonest "bureaucrats and paid off, herdlike scientists who go along," you will have myth, or what I would call "healthy skepticism" about the claims of those known to be liars. --wam

November 12, 2009 8:49 AM  

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