Friday, May 28, 2004

Compassion? What is this compassion you speak of...

Oy. In The Reverse Robin Hood, a small report on Bush's budget plans from the Center for American Progress, we learn that the White House is coming out of the closet. They are dropping any pretense of being compassionate conservatives by announcing their plans to gut social spending. Education, Head Start, Veterans Health Care, programs for women, children and infants...all get the knife. Oh well, this is an administration that sees struggling americans as a good thing.

Who you callin a lefty?

For all who cry bias over the SCLM (So Called Liberal Media), check out this recent report of National Public Radio's sources and guest lists, journalists and sources, How Public is Public Radio?.

NPR is presented in the mainstream media as hopelessly liberal and this jusdgement is echoed endlessly through the conservative echo chamber. But FAIR's study of 2,334 quoted sources, featured in 804 stories, NPR’s general news sources, the think tanks NPR relies on most frequently, and its list of regular commentators reveals something quite different. Guess what? NPR skews right.

Someday you too can vote...

Now here's an interesting little tidbit for election watchers. The Miami Herald reports that Many voters not yet back on rolls.

TALLAHASSEE - With less than six months to go before the presidential election, thousands of Florida voters who may have been improperly removed from the voter rolls in 2000 have yet to have their eligibility restored.

Somehow I don't think Jeb is all that motivated to return 20,000 potential democrats to the lists of registered voters.

Ex-republicans welcome here..

Finally, a high profile Republican makes a moves to the center. David A. Catania, a Gay Bush Pioneer and a national delegate, has left the GOP because he opposes the President's proposed constitutional amendment to ban Gay Marriage. Catania publicly stated that he would not support Bush in the upcoming election and was summarily stripped of his status as a national delegate.

It really stumps me why any gay person would want be a member of the GOP in the first place. Why join a party that despises you? Of course, I am niether gay nor Republican, so I don't hold out much hope for enlightenment. I understand financial conservatism, small government, strong defense, and lack of entitlements, that's why I am a democrat. Perhaps we will see a welcome influx of moderate ex-Republicans who can't stomach the extreme social agenda the GOP leadership is cramming down the throat of the nation. One can dream...

Thursday, May 27, 2004

If you only care about the lies of your opponent, you don't care much about the truth.

This is the season when liars come out to play. It's election time. Before November, almost half a billion dollars will be spent trying to get us to vote one way or the other. Responding to this onslaught of campaign propaganda simply exhausts the soul. How many messages do we face every day? How often do we simply accept the truth of something we hear without question, without evaluation?

Somebody in a position of apparent "authority" says something in a factual manner - a newscaster, an alleged witness, a pundit, an advertisement, an author - and we swallow it whole. Maybe it plucks at the edges of our conscience or fits neatly within the framework of our prejudices, but somehow it lodges in our brains as "true" and we believe it. Usually, the information we digest supports an existing worldview. We prefer one news show over another. We read certain magazines in search of facts that support our positions. The conclusions we reach very rarely alter the foundation of beliefs on which our worldview rests. Because most of us live our lives according to our worldviews, propaganda that enforces it is very easy to accept and propaganda that challenges it is very difficult to detect and debunk. We act as our very own "Spinmasters."

If this is the case, how are we to determine what is true and what is not? Since we are in the middle of sawing our house in half in this year's national War of the Roses, it strikes me that answering this question and then putting the program into action is a rather patriotic thing to do - even if it shakes our worldviews a bit. We can all do our part to dial down the chainsaw by doing a little critical thinking and then agreeing that we will not knowingly pass on slander, half-truths and general crap to our friends and neighbors.

What is "Critical Thinking?" I like this definition from the Clinical Epidemiology & Evidence-Based Medicine Glossary:

The disciplined ability and willingness to assess evidence and claims, to seek a breadth of contradicting as well as confirming information, to make objective judgments on the basis of well supported reasons as a guide to belief and action, and to monitor one’s thinking while doing so (metacognition). The thinking process that is appropriate for critical thinking depends on the knowledge domain (e.g.: scientific, mathematical, historical, anthropological, economic, philosophical, moral) but the universal criteria are: clarity, accuracy, precision, consistency, relevance, sound empirical evidence, good reasons, depth, breadth and fairness.


Hmmm. Let's look at those final words again, and then look at a case study. Again, "...the universal criteria are: clarity, accuracy, precision, consistency, relevance, sound empirical evidence, good reasons, depth, breadth and fairness."


Case Study: Swiftboat Veterans for Truth. This group of swift boat veterans maintain that John Kerry's leadership in the anti-war movement makes him unfit to be president. The group has also accused the Democratic leader of exaggerating the extent of his injuries so he could be awarded medals for courage and win an early release from his overseas tour. Do these accusations pass the critical-thinking sniff test? Yes and no.


The first accusation passes, but it is not fact-based and is therefore not really debatable. The swiftboaters believe Kerry betrayed his fellow servicemen with his testimony in 1971 in which he said American soldiers committed war crimes. Mr. Kerry has since said that he would phrase things differently as a mature adult than he did 32 years ago as a young man. If you believe that Kerry's opinion disqualifies him from the presidency, then that is your opinion. However, it cannot be disputed that he had and has the right to testify about his opinions in any way he so chooses. He was also far from alone in his opposition to the Vietnam War. It is a far stretch to equate his anti-war stance with an anti-veteran stance.


What are more troubling are the accusations about Kerry's war record. There is no logical connection between the legitimacy of Kerry's war record and his subsequent activism in the anti-war movement. No matter how much one may disagree with Kerry's thinking after the war, one cannot dispute the fact that he did serve, and by all accounts, served honorably and bravely. If we accept service records as empirical and fair evidence of his service, then Kerry's are in direct contradiction to the accusations of the Swiftboat Veterans. In fact many of the current accusations are made by the same chain of command that approved his glowing reviews and medals. Why the switcheroo?


That would speak to "good reasons." The "reasons" behind the attack are 100% political. Though they present themselves as non-partisan, Swiftboat Veterans for Truth is organized and funded by the GOP and features some enemies of Kerry, notably John O'Neill and Merrie Spaeth, that date back to Nixon.


But what about the accuracy of the allegations? Did Kerry really exaggerate the extent of his injuries in order to win medals? Is it really possible for Kerry to engineer a war event and falsely earn all those medals? How many of the accusers were actually on Kerry's boat? What do the men with whom he served say?


The allegations appear to be false at worst and gross distortions at best. Is it really conceivable that Kerry had the doctors, nurses, and entire chain of command in his pocket? Could he wound himself, then work the system to produce a Bronze Star, a Silver Star and three Purple Hearts. It's not likely. At least that is beyond the level of debate in which I am willing to engage. Further, none of the Swiftboat Veterans for Truth were on the boat with Kerry. Even though O'Neill authored an OP-Ed in the Wall Street Journal entitled, "I was on Mr. Kerry's boat in Vietnam. He doesn't deserve to be commander in chief" it is for the reader to discover that Mr. O'Neill served on the same boat as Kerry but at different times. He took command of Kerry's boat after Kerry had been discharged under the "wounded three times and your out" rule. Is that "accurate and fair?" Um. No.


Why haven't any of Kerry's shipmates joined the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth? With the exception of one, all of his shipmates give him high marks for courage and bravery. In fact, some of the veterans with whom Kerry served, including the gentleman whose life Kerry saved, appear in one of Kerry's ads. When you give a job reference, do you give the reference of the people who worked in the same company but in a different location, or worked there after you quit? Or do you give the reference of the people with whom you actually worked?


Finally, as a matter of conviction, I believe that such flimsy, obviously politically-motivated accusations about one veteran's combat service impugns all veterans, including the men and women doing the country's hard business in Iraq and Afghanistan right now. No matter what you’re political convictions or your opinion about Kerry's post-war opinion, the evidence (military records, testimony of those with whom he served, medals) discredits the ugly charges laid before us by the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. So do us all a favor, dear reader, and don't pass them on.




Tuesday, May 25, 2004

It's Tuesday, it must be Echo day

Allow me to point you to a very moving article, by an online acquaintance. Jonathan Hayes is a New York City Medical Examiner and a long time member of Echo, an old, New York-based online community of which I am also a member. Jonathan writes about how watching the beheading of Nick Berg affected him in the context of processing bodies after 9.11.

Another Echo member has taken gonzo, self-funded journalism to the extreme and founded one of the must-read blogs of our day. Readers contributed $15,000 so Christopher Albritton could go Back to Iraq and offer an independent view of our nation's struggle there. For a small, objective port in the storm of mainstream propaganda, you might check it out.

Monday, May 24, 2004

Break out the hats and horns

No matter what the outcome of the general election in November, it must be said that the old Chinese curse is true for all of us: We certainly do live in interesting times. As a case study in how a huge democratic society handles enormous internal pressures, the next six months will be very instructive. The run up to the two national conventions, then the events themselves should make for really, really good reality TV.

First the Democratic National Convention will happen in July. Kerry may or may not accept the nomination. Personally, I hope accepts the nomination in Boston. I think it will be seen as a too legalistic and manipulative, another dumb Republican talking point. He will have to spend the money he saves to reverse the damage he incurs. So John, please, my mom is a national delegate from Minnesota. Let her nominate you. Then accept. You'll look good doing it. I mean, what are you going to do for a finale? “Thanks for traveling all this way to make me an offer…Lemee think about that for a month or so.” Have some faith.…Accept! The money will come.

Of particular interest to me is the GOP Convention in NYC. The Dark Star is alighting in Manhattan for 4 days. Guaranteed they will attempt to fold the site of the World Trade Center collapse into a mass branding operation the likes of which the world has not witnessed. They will spew out talking points. Image-control initiatives will seduce us with flag after flag after flag. Hand-to-heart politicians will burrow into bibles. All of it will confound and stupefy the average thinking person who knows that, gosh, behind all the smoke and mirrors the Repubs are using America to attack America.

That alone would merit a good look. But this convention, arguably the most seminal political gathering since the democratic convention in Chicago 1968 (I was 7), will not happen in a vacuum. What will be especially fascinating is the size and scale of the protests that will happen along side it. Word on the street is that the NYC PD is preparing for 500,000 protesters over the 4-day period. That's if the City approves any permits. It will happen anyway. They might as well start issuing the paper. In an especially creative move, some groups plan to infiltrate the ranks of convention volunteers. And then there is the general knowledge that Republicans are outnumbered by Democrats in NYC by 5 to 1. That is giving convention organizers a long pause.