The meme here is from a reader whose point is that Nikki Haley switches positions on important topics as easily as the wind shifts directions.
Hate to say it, but: obviously.
This forms an interesting dichotomy between her and politicians like Bernie Sanders, whose position of things like abortion rights, universal healthcare, quality education, etc., will not change a millimeter, regard of public opinion.
Most Americans, and to a lesser degree, most living in the rest of the world, are frustrated by how long it’s taken the U.S. justice system to arrest Donald Trump for one (or several) of the crimes he committed while in office, or especially, in the period of time post the election during which he tried in earnest to overthrow the United States federal government.
Are we close to getting into the “car chase seen,” as suggested here? Maybe.
Robert Heinlein was one of the “big three” American science fiction writers of the 20th Century, along with Arthur C. Clark and Isaac Asimov. Like so many others of my (baby-boomer) generation, I loved his Stranger in a Strange Land.
On many matters, however, I disagree with him; at left is one.
Until recently, elementary school text books made it clear to young readers that the United States was a “melting pot,” meaning that immigrants from all around the globe could come here looking for a better life. Of course, that was not a guarantee that all would be immediately accepted–quite to the contrary. (more…)
What the popular novelist and playwright Kurt Vonnegut wrote here is one interpretation of our need for religion, and I regard him as one of the most astute observers of human civilization.
Yet I submit the the principal driver of religion is fear. People who are terrified of death, or even chaos, need to believe in a celestial big brother to keep them from danger.
The rest of us would prefer to live in a universe that actually makes sense, and we accept that if that universe is indifferent to our well-being, as it most certainly appears to be, so be it.
As tensions between China and the United States rise, U.S. military equipment is flooding into Southeast Asia, in places like the Philippines, Okinawa, Australia, and Guam.
To many of us, this military build-up defies common sense. To the degree that China feels threatened, the probability of war increases, and vice versa.
As novelist Margaret Halsey said, “The crucial disadvantage of aggression, competitiveness, and skepticism as national characteristics is that these qualities cannot be turned off at five o’clock.”
I could be wrong, but I don’t think many people today accept what Arthur C. Clark said here. I would guess that even the most pious folks out there recognize that there are atheists who are morally good, who live lives of kindness, honestly, and decency.
As with most aspects of religious, however, the devout tend not to examine this subject too closely. If they did, they’d find themselves in the position that Bertrand Russell laid out in his talk (later transcribed and made available as an essay) “Why I’m Not a Christian.” (more…)
From The Independent: ‘That can’t be good’: Elon Musk and Rupert Murdoch spark reaction by sitting together at Super Bowl.
There are so many tragedies every day, all around us. Some are localized and are barely worth noting. Others are huge, in terms of scope, duration, and overall impact on human civilization.
I would argue that Elon Musk’s turning out to be a despicable human being is an example of the latter. I would say that about anyone worth $200 billion who chose not to address climate change or world hunger but decided to make the world (at least the United States) a more hateful and ignorant nation, by supporting Fox News and Donald Trump.
As much as I’d like to see strict gun control laws here in the U.S., driving down the stats on gun-related massacres is probably a more complicated issue.
In particular, Canada (and most of the rest of the world) has a culture where other people actually matter.
The rugged individualism that many Americans feel as the core of our society has, when coupled with hate and ignorance that is being programmed into us by the right-wing, “anti-woke” media, morphed us into a nation where we’re far more concerned about our own “rights being taken away” than we are about the rights of our kids to grow up without their bodies being riddled with bullets.
If the United States is going to elect a president with extreme right-wing values, it might as well be Nikki Haley, who appears not to have all the same criminal sociopathic characteristics as Donald Trump.
I don’t want to be part of such a world either, but at some level, it’s forced upon us.
If you had wanted to bet me 10 years ago, that by 2023, almost half of American voters would favor a party that makes fun of caring and decent people, you would have gotten some very long odds from me.
Of all the aspects of the anti-woke GOP that I find most nauseating, one of which is the prohibition against teaching our kids about systemic racism. In fact, I would submit, as others have as well, that forbidding teachers from exposing children to the idea of systemic racism is the best proof that systemic racism is an extremely powerful force in our lives.