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Devastated
Comments
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@Eggcelsior - coolest picture you've posted man, by far."I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat -
"Too bad all the people who know how to run the country are busy driving cabs and barbecuing." - George Burns
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@Eggcelsior that is a great pic. Would love to be on that bird. And it's a nice view from your helipad.Henderson TN. 1 large BGE, 1 Webber Gasser (recently seems to have converted into a warming oven)
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Neonate. ...you mean a baby?Green egg, dead animal and alcohol. The "Boro".. TN
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@Eggcelsior I've said it before, I couldn't do what you do. That baby brings this whole thing into perspective. If you have kids, that's hard to think about.
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E=mc2. It's that simple. Smoke plus protein = love . Helicopter is so cool!!Sandy Springs & Dawsonville Ga
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Really cool...but it reminded me of this!!Eggcelsior said:
Here is a shot of a MSP medevac getting ready to fly a neonate to Children's National for open heart surgery.
Just a hack that makes some $hitty BBQ.... -
@cazzy it's been many years, but Airwolf? I loved that show and I'm old enough to have watched it originally.
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Airwolf! I loved that show as a kid."I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat -
Hell yeah...Airwolf was the ****. I actually would hate to watch it again now because it would totally ruin the memories. CGI was terrible back then. I remember showing my daughter Superman and it was terrible.theyolksonyou said:@cazzy it's been many years, but Airwolf? I loved that show and I'm old enough to have watched it originally.
Equally bad are some modern flicks:
Rock transforms into a scorpian. Wow
https://youtu.be/RYHaarxQTFk
Or how bout Pierce Brosnan riding a tidal wave:
https://youtu.be/6w6FV8P7HXg
Just a hack that makes some $hitty BBQ.... -
So you got a list by of quotes from mostly kooks talking outside their field on their own, and a couple of editorials, and making those seem equal to an accepted scientific theory that's been studied, vetted and analyzed in the age of super computers. Brilliant.henapple said:
______________________________________________I love lamp.. -
America dumbs down
The U.S. is being overrun by a wave of anti-science, anti-intellectual thinking. Has the most powerful nation on Earth lost its mind?
Jonathon Gatehouse May 15, 2014480
9532
Bill Pugliano/Getty Images
South Carolina’s state beverage is milk. Its insect is the praying
mantis. There’s a designated dance—the shag—as well a sanctioned tartan,
game bird, dog, flower, gem and snack food (boiled peanuts). But what
Olivia McConnell noticed was missing from among her home’s 50 official
symbols was a fossil. So last year, the eight-year-old science enthusiast wrote to the governor and her representatives
to nominate the Columbian mammoth. Teeth from the woolly proboscidean,
dug up by slaves on a local plantation in 1725, were among the first
remains of an ancient species ever discovered in North America.
Forty-three other states had already laid claim to various dinosaurs,
trilobites, primitive whales and even petrified wood. It seemed like a
no-brainer. “Fossils tell us about our past,” the Grade 2 student wrote.
And, as it turns out, the present, too. The bill that Olivia inspired
has become the subject of considerable angst at the legislature in the
state capital of Columbia. First, an objecting state senator attached
three verses from Genesis to the act, outlining God’s creation of all
living creatures. Then, after other lawmakers spiked the amendment as
out of order for its introduction of the divinity, he took another
crack, specifying that the Columbian mammoth “was created on the sixth
day with the other beasts of the field.” That version passed in the
senate in early April. But now the bill is back in committee as the
lower house squabbles over the new language, and it’s seemingly destined
for the same fate as its honouree—extinction.
What has doomed Olivia’s dream is a raging battle in South Carolina
over the teaching of evolution in schools. Last week, the state’s
education oversight committee approved a new set of science standards
that, if adopted, would see students learn both the case for, and
against, natural selection.
Related: Does America really care about Boko Haram?
Charles Darwin’s signature discovery—first published 155 years ago
and validated a million different ways since—long ago ceased to be a
matter for serious debate in most of the world. But in the United
States, reconciling science and religious belief remains oddly
difficult. A national poll, conducted in March for the Associated Press,
found that 42 per cent of Americans are “not too” or “not at all”
confident that all life on Earth is the product of evolution. Similarly,
51 per cent of people expressed skepticism that the universe started
with a “big bang” 13.8 billion years ago, and 36 per cent doubted the
Earth has been around for 4.5 billion years.
The American public’s bias against established science doesn’t stop
where the Bible leaves off, however. The same poll found that just 53
per cent of respondents were “extremely” or “very confident” that
childhood vaccines are safe and effective. (Worldwide, the measles
killed 120,000 people in 2012. In the United States, where a vaccine has
been available since 1963, the last recorded measles death was in
2003.) When it comes to global warming, only 33 per cent expressed a
high degree of confidence that it is “man made,” something the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
has declared is all but certain. (The good news, such as it was in the
AP poll, was that 69 per cent actually believe in DNA, and 82 per cent
now agree that smoking causes cancer.)
If the rise in uninformed opinion was limited to impenetrable
subjects that would be one thing, but the scourge seems to be spreading.
Everywhere you look these days, America is in a rush to embrace the
stupid. Hell-bent on a path that’s not just irrational, but often
self-destructive. Common-sense solutions to pressing problems are
eschewed in favour of bumper-sticker simplicities and blind faith.
In a country bedevilled by mass shootings—Aurora, Colo.; Fort Hood,
Texas; Virginia Tech—efforts at gun control have given way to ever-laxer
standards. Georgia recently passed a law
allowing people to pack weapons in state and local buildings, airports,
churches and bars. Florida is debating legislation that will waive all
firearm restrictions during state emergencies like riots or hurricanes. (One opponent has moved to rename it “an Act Relating to the Zombie Apocalypse.”)
And since the December 2012 massacre of 20 children and six staff at
Sandy Hook Elementary School, in Newtown, Conn., 12 states have passed
laws allowing guns to be carried in schools, and 20 more are considering
such measures.
The cost of a simple appendectomy in the United States averages
$33,000 and it’s not uncommon for such bills to top six figures. More
than 15 per cent of the population has no health insurance whatsoever.
Yet efforts to fill that gaping hole via the Affordable Health Care
Act—a.k.a. Obamacare—remain distinctly unpopular. Nonsensical myths
about the government’s “real” intentions have found so much traction
that 30 per cent still believe that there will be official “death
panels” to make decisions on end-of-life care.
Since 2001, the U.S. government has been engaged in an ever-widening
program of spying on its own—and foreign—citizens, tapping phones,
intercepting emails and texts, and monitoring social media to track the
movements, activities and connections of millions. Still, many Americans
seem less concerned with the massive violations of their privacy in the
name of the War on Terror, than imposing Taliban-like standards on the
lives of others. Last month, the school board in Meridian, Idaho voted
to remove The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by
Sherman Alexie from its Grade 10 supplemental reading list following
parental complaints about its uncouth language and depictions of sex and
drug use. When 17-year-old student Brady Kissel teamed up with staff
from a local store to give away copies at a park as a protest, a concerned citizen called police. It was the evening of April 23, which was also World Book Night, an event dedicated to “spreading the love of reading.”
If ignorance is contagious, it’s high time to put the United States in quarantine.
Americans have long worried that their education system is leaving
their children behind. With good reason: national exams consistently
reveal how little the kids actually know. In the last set, administered
in 2010 (more are scheduled for this spring), most fourth graders were
unable to explain why Abraham Lincoln was an important figure, and only
half were able to order North America, the U.S., California and Los
Angeles by size. Results in civics were similarly dismal. While math and
reading scores have improved over the years, economics remains the
“best” subject, with 42 per cent of high school seniors deemed
“proficient.”
Related post: Why the ice bucket challenge is bad for you
They don’t appear to be getting much smarter as they age. A 2013
survey of 166,000 adults across 20 countries that tested math, reading
and technological problem-solving found Americans to be below the
international average in every category. (Japan, Finland, Canada, South
Korea and Slovakia were among the 11 nations that scored significantly
higher.)
The trends are not encouraging. In 1978, 42 per cent of Americans
reported that they had read 11 or more books in the past year. In 2014,
just 28 per cent can say the same, while 23 per cent proudly admit to
not having read even one, up from eight per cent in 1978. Newspaper and
magazine circulation continues to decline sharply, as does viewership
for cable news. The three big network supper-hour shows drew a combined
average audience of 22.6 million in 2013, down from 52 million in 1980.
While 82 per cent of Americans now say they seek out news digitally, the
quality of the information they’re getting is suspect. Among current
affairs websites, Buzzfeed logs almost as many monthly hits as the Washington Post.
The advance of ignorance and irrationalism in the U.S. has hardly
gone unnoticed. The late Columbia University historian Richard
Hofstadter won the Pulitzer prize back in 1964 for his book Anti-Intellectualism in American Life, which
cast the nation’s tendency to embrace stupidity as a periodic
by-product of its founding urge to democratize everything. By 2008,
journalist Susan Jacoby was warning that the denseness—“a virulent
mixture of anti-rationalism and low expectations”—was more of a
permanent state. In her book, The Age of American Unreason, she
posited that it trickled down from the top, fuelled by faux-populist
politicians striving to make themselves sound approachable rather than
smart. Their creeping tendency to refer to everyone—voters, experts,
government officials—as “folks” is “symptomatic of a debasement of
public speech inseparable from a more general erosion of American
cultural standards,” she wrote. “Casual, colloquial language also
conveys an implicit denial of the seriousness of whatever issue is being
debated: talking about folks going off to war is the equivalent of
describing rape victims as girls.”
That inarticulate legacy didn’t end with George W. Bush and Sarah
Palin. Barack Obama, the most cerebral and eloquent American leader in a
generation, regularly plays the same card, droppin’ his Gs and dialling
down his vocabulary to Hee Haw standards. His ability to
convincingly play a hayseed was instrumental in his 2012 campaign
against the patrician Mitt Romney; in one of their televised debates the
President referenced “folks” 17 times.
Related reading: The hard truth about Tim Hortons
An aversion to complexity—at least when communicating with the
public—can also be seen in the types of answers politicians now provide
the media. The average length of a sound bite by a presidential
candidate in 1968 was 42.3 seconds. Two decades later, it was 9.8
seconds. Today, it’s just a touch over seven seconds and well on its way
to being supplanted by 140-character Twitter bursts.
Little wonder then that distrust—of leaders, institutions, experts, and those who report on them—is rampant. A YouGov poll conducted last December
found that three-quarters of Americans agreed that science is a force
for good in the world. Yet when asked if they truly believe what
scientists tell them, only 36 per cent of respondents said yes. Just 12
per cent expressed strong confidence in the press to accurately report
scientific findings. (Although according to a 2012 paper by Gordon
Gauchat, a University of North Carolina sociologist, the erosion of
trust in science over the past 40 years has been almost exclusively
confined to two groups: conservatives and regular churchgoers.
Counterintuitively, it is the most highly educated among them—with
post-secondary education—who harbour the strongest doubts.)
The term “elitist” has become one of the most used, and feared,
insults in American life. Even in the country’s halls of higher
learning, there is now an ingrained bias that favours the accessible
over the exacting.
“There’s a pervasive suspicion of rights, privileges, knowledge and specialization,” says Catherine Liu, the author of American Idyll: Academic Antielitism as Cultural Critique
and a film and media studies professor at University of California at
Irvine. Both ends of the political spectrum have come to reject the
conspicuously clever, she says, if for very different reasons; the left
because of worries about inclusiveness, the right because they equate
objections with obstruction. As a result, the very mission of
universities has changed, argues Liu. “We don’t educate people anymore.
We train them to get jobs.” (Boomers, she says, deserve most of the
blame. “They were so triumphalist in promoting pop culture and demoting
the canon.”)
The digital revolution, which has brought boundless access to
information and entertainment choices, has somehow only enhanced the
lowest common denominators—LOL cat videos and the Kardashians. Instead
of educating themselves via the Internet, most people simply use it to
validate what they already suspect, wish or believe to be true. It
creates an online environment where Jenny McCarthy, a former Playboy
model with a high school education, can become a worldwide leader of
the anti-vaccination movement, naysaying the advice of medical
professionals.
Most perplexing, however, is where the stupid is flowing from. As
conservative pundit David Frum recently noted, where it was once the
least informed who were most vulnerable to inaccuracies, it now seems to
be the exact opposite. “More sophisticated news consumers turn out to
use this sophistication to do a better job of filtering out what they
don’t want to hear,” he blogged.
But are things actually getting worse? There’s a long and
not-so-proud history of American electors lashing out irrationally, or
voting against their own interests. Political scientists have been
tracking, since the early 1950s, just how poorly those who cast ballots
seem to comprehend the policies of the parties and people they are
endorsing. A wealth of research now suggests that at the most
optimistic, only 70 per cent actually select the party that accurately
represents their views—and there are only two choices.
Larry Bartels, the co-director of the Center for the Study of
Democratic Institutions at Vanderbilt University, says he doubts that
the spreading ignorance is a uniquely American phenomenon. Facing
complex choices, uncertain about the consequences of the alternatives,
and tasked with balancing the demands of jobs, family and the things
that truly interest them with boring policy debates, people either cast
their ballots reflexively, or not at all. The larger question might be
whether engagement really matters. “If your vision of democracy is one
in which elections provide solemn opportunities for voters to set the
course of public policy and hold leaders accountable, yes,” Bartels
wrote in an email to Maclean’s. “If you take the less ambitious
view that elections provide a convenient, non-violent way for a society
to agree on who is in charge at any given time, perhaps not.”
A study by two Princeton University researchers, Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page, released last month,
tracked 1,800 U.S. policy changes between 1981 and 2002, and compared
the outcome with the expressed preferences of median-income Americans,
the affluent, business interests and powerful lobbies. They concluded
that average citizens “have little or no independent influence” on
policy in the U.S., while the rich and their hired mouthpieces routinely
get their way. “The majority does not rule,” they wrote.
Smart money versus dumb voters is hardly a fair fight. But it does
offer compelling evidence that the survival of the fittest remains an
unshakable truth even in American life. A sad sort of proof of
evolution.
Get Maclean’s on Next Issue—Your gateway to the world’s best news stories. Sign up for a FREE trial.
______________________________________________I love lamp.. -
I would rather light a candle than curse your darkness.
-
That was courtesy Sardonicus. It seems the level of intellectual curiosity is being supplanted on this thread by pictures of Obama eating watermelon and dunking basketball. I doubt most will care to read it. But there it is.
______________________________________________I love lamp.. -
Way too many words. I'm drinking on an unforseen overnighter in DC.nolaegghead said:America dumbs down
The U.S. is being overrun by a wave of anti-science, anti-intellectual thinking. Has the most powerful nation on Earth lost its mind?
May 15, 2014
480
9532
South Carolina’s state beverage is milk. Its insect is the praying mantis. There’s a designated dance—the shag—as well a sanctioned tartan, game bird, dog, flower, gem and snack food (boiled peanuts). But what Olivia McConnell noticed was missing from among her home’s 50 official symbols was a fossil. So last year, the eight-year-old science enthusiast wrote to the governor and her representatives to nominate the Columbian mammoth. Teeth from the woolly proboscidean, dug up by slaves on a local plantation in 1725, were among the first remains of an ancient species ever discovered in North America. Forty-three other states had already laid claim to various dinosaurs, trilobites, primitive whales and even petrified wood. It seemed like a no-brainer. “Fossils tell us about our past,” the Grade 2 student wrote.
And, as it turns out, the present, too. The bill that Olivia inspired has become the subject of considerable angst at the legislature in the state capital of Columbia. First, an objecting state senator attached three verses from Genesis to the act, outlining God’s creation of all living creatures. Then, after other lawmakers spiked the amendment as out of order for its introduction of the divinity, he took another crack, specifying that the Columbian mammoth “was created on the sixth day with the other beasts of the field.” That version passed in the senate in early April. But now the bill is back in committee as the lower house squabbles over the new language, and it’s seemingly destined for the same fate as its honouree—extinction.
What has doomed Olivia’s dream is a raging battle in South Carolina over the teaching of evolution in schools. Last week, the state’s education oversight committee approved a new set of science standards that, if adopted, would see students learn both the case for, and against, natural selection.
Related: Does America really care about Boko Haram?
Charles Darwin’s signature discovery—first published 155 years ago and validated a million different ways since—long ago ceased to be a matter for serious debate in most of the world. But in the United States, reconciling science and religious belief remains oddly difficult. A national poll, conducted in March for the Associated Press, found that 42 per cent of Americans are “not too” or “not at all” confident that all life on Earth is the product of evolution. Similarly, 51 per cent of people expressed skepticism that the universe started with a “big bang” 13.8 billion years ago, and 36 per cent doubted the Earth has been around for 4.5 billion years.
The American public’s bias against established science doesn’t stop where the Bible leaves off, however. The same poll found that just 53 per cent of respondents were “extremely” or “very confident” that childhood vaccines are safe and effective. (Worldwide, the measles killed 120,000 people in 2012. In the United States, where a vaccine has been available since 1963, the last recorded measles death was in 2003.) When it comes to global warming, only 33 per cent expressed a high degree of confidence that it is “man made,” something the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has declared is all but certain. (The good news, such as it was in the AP poll, was that 69 per cent actually believe in DNA, and 82 per cent now agree that smoking causes cancer.)
If the rise in uninformed opinion was limited to impenetrable subjects that would be one thing, but the scourge seems to be spreading. Everywhere you look these days, America is in a rush to embrace the stupid. Hell-bent on a path that’s not just irrational, but often self-destructive. Common-sense solutions to pressing problems are eschewed in favour of bumper-sticker simplicities and blind faith.
In a country bedevilled by mass shootings—Aurora, Colo.; Fort Hood, Texas; Virginia Tech—efforts at gun control have given way to ever-laxer standards. Georgia recently passed a law allowing people to pack weapons in state and local buildings, airports, churches and bars. Florida is debating legislation that will waive all firearm restrictions during state emergencies like riots or hurricanes. (One opponent has moved to rename it “an Act Relating to the Zombie Apocalypse.”) And since the December 2012 massacre of 20 children and six staff at Sandy Hook Elementary School, in Newtown, Conn., 12 states have passed laws allowing guns to be carried in schools, and 20 more are considering such measures.
The cost of a simple appendectomy in the United States averages $33,000 and it’s not uncommon for such bills to top six figures. More than 15 per cent of the population has no health insurance whatsoever. Yet efforts to fill that gaping hole via the Affordable Health Care Act—a.k.a. Obamacare—remain distinctly unpopular. Nonsensical myths about the government’s “real” intentions have found so much traction that 30 per cent still believe that there will be official “death panels” to make decisions on end-of-life care.
Since 2001, the U.S. government has been engaged in an ever-widening program of spying on its own—and foreign—citizens, tapping phones, intercepting emails and texts, and monitoring social media to track the movements, activities and connections of millions. Still, many Americans seem less concerned with the massive violations of their privacy in the name of the War on Terror, than imposing Taliban-like standards on the lives of others. Last month, the school board in Meridian, Idaho voted to remove The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie from its Grade 10 supplemental reading list following parental complaints about its uncouth language and depictions of sex and drug use. When 17-year-old student Brady Kissel teamed up with staff from a local store to give away copies at a park as a protest, a concerned citizen called police. It was the evening of April 23, which was also World Book Night, an event dedicated to “spreading the love of reading.”
If ignorance is contagious, it’s high time to put the United States in quarantine.
Americans have long worried that their education system is leaving their children behind. With good reason: national exams consistently reveal how little the kids actually know. In the last set, administered in 2010 (more are scheduled for this spring), most fourth graders were unable to explain why Abraham Lincoln was an important figure, and only half were able to order North America, the U.S., California and Los Angeles by size. Results in civics were similarly dismal. While math and reading scores have improved over the years, economics remains the “best” subject, with 42 per cent of high school seniors deemed “proficient.”
Related post: Why the ice bucket challenge is bad for you
They don’t appear to be getting much smarter as they age. A 2013 survey of 166,000 adults across 20 countries that tested math, reading and technological problem-solving found Americans to be below the international average in every category. (Japan, Finland, Canada, South Korea and Slovakia were among the 11 nations that scored significantly higher.)
The trends are not encouraging. In 1978, 42 per cent of Americans reported that they had read 11 or more books in the past year. In 2014, just 28 per cent can say the same, while 23 per cent proudly admit to not having read even one, up from eight per cent in 1978. Newspaper and magazine circulation continues to decline sharply, as does viewership for cable news. The three big network supper-hour shows drew a combined average audience of 22.6 million in 2013, down from 52 million in 1980. While 82 per cent of Americans now say they seek out news digitally, the quality of the information they’re getting is suspect. Among current affairs websites, Buzzfeed logs almost as many monthly hits as the Washington Post.
The advance of ignorance and irrationalism in the U.S. has hardly gone unnoticed. The late Columbia University historian Richard Hofstadter won the Pulitzer prize back in 1964 for his book Anti-Intellectualism in American Life, which cast the nation’s tendency to embrace stupidity as a periodic by-product of its founding urge to democratize everything. By 2008, journalist Susan Jacoby was warning that the denseness—“a virulent mixture of anti-rationalism and low expectations”—was more of a permanent state. In her book, The Age of American Unreason, she posited that it trickled down from the top, fuelled by faux-populist politicians striving to make themselves sound approachable rather than smart. Their creeping tendency to refer to everyone—voters, experts, government officials—as “folks” is “symptomatic of a debasement of public speech inseparable from a more general erosion of American cultural standards,” she wrote. “Casual, colloquial language also conveys an implicit denial of the seriousness of whatever issue is being debated: talking about folks going off to war is the equivalent of describing rape victims as girls.”
That inarticulate legacy didn’t end with George W. Bush and Sarah Palin. Barack Obama, the most cerebral and eloquent American leader in a generation, regularly plays the same card, droppin’ his Gs and dialling down his vocabulary to Hee Haw standards. His ability to convincingly play a hayseed was instrumental in his 2012 campaign against the patrician Mitt Romney; in one of their televised debates the President referenced “folks” 17 times.
Related reading: The hard truth about Tim Hortons
An aversion to complexity—at least when communicating with the public—can also be seen in the types of answers politicians now provide the media. The average length of a sound bite by a presidential candidate in 1968 was 42.3 seconds. Two decades later, it was 9.8 seconds. Today, it’s just a touch over seven seconds and well on its way to being supplanted by 140-character Twitter bursts.
Little wonder then that distrust—of leaders, institutions, experts, and those who report on them—is rampant. A YouGov poll conducted last December found that three-quarters of Americans agreed that science is a force for good in the world. Yet when asked if they truly believe what scientists tell them, only 36 per cent of respondents said yes. Just 12 per cent expressed strong confidence in the press to accurately report scientific findings. (Although according to a 2012 paper by Gordon Gauchat, a University of North Carolina sociologist, the erosion of trust in science over the past 40 years has been almost exclusively confined to two groups: conservatives and regular churchgoers. Counterintuitively, it is the most highly educated among them—with post-secondary education—who harbour the strongest doubts.)
The term “elitist” has become one of the most used, and feared, insults in American life. Even in the country’s halls of higher learning, there is now an ingrained bias that favours the accessible over the exacting.
“There’s a pervasive suspicion of rights, privileges, knowledge and specialization,” says Catherine Liu, the author of American Idyll: Academic Antielitism as Cultural Critique and a film and media studies professor at University of California at Irvine. Both ends of the political spectrum have come to reject the conspicuously clever, she says, if for very different reasons; the left because of worries about inclusiveness, the right because they equate objections with obstruction. As a result, the very mission of universities has changed, argues Liu. “We don’t educate people anymore. We train them to get jobs.” (Boomers, she says, deserve most of the blame. “They were so triumphalist in promoting pop culture and demoting the canon.”)
The digital revolution, which has brought boundless access to information and entertainment choices, has somehow only enhanced the lowest common denominators—LOL cat videos and the Kardashians. Instead of educating themselves via the Internet, most people simply use it to validate what they already suspect, wish or believe to be true. It creates an online environment where Jenny McCarthy, a former Playboy model with a high school education, can become a worldwide leader of the anti-vaccination movement, naysaying the advice of medical professionals.
Most perplexing, however, is where the stupid is flowing from. As conservative pundit David Frum recently noted, where it was once the least informed who were most vulnerable to inaccuracies, it now seems to be the exact opposite. “More sophisticated news consumers turn out to use this sophistication to do a better job of filtering out what they don’t want to hear,” he blogged.
But are things actually getting worse? There’s a long and not-so-proud history of American electors lashing out irrationally, or voting against their own interests. Political scientists have been tracking, since the early 1950s, just how poorly those who cast ballots seem to comprehend the policies of the parties and people they are endorsing. A wealth of research now suggests that at the most optimistic, only 70 per cent actually select the party that accurately represents their views—and there are only two choices.
Larry Bartels, the co-director of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions at Vanderbilt University, says he doubts that the spreading ignorance is a uniquely American phenomenon. Facing complex choices, uncertain about the consequences of the alternatives, and tasked with balancing the demands of jobs, family and the things that truly interest them with boring policy debates, people either cast their ballots reflexively, or not at all. The larger question might be whether engagement really matters. “If your vision of democracy is one in which elections provide solemn opportunities for voters to set the course of public policy and hold leaders accountable, yes,” Bartels wrote in an email to Maclean’s. “If you take the less ambitious view that elections provide a convenient, non-violent way for a society to agree on who is in charge at any given time, perhaps not.”
A study by two Princeton University researchers, Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page, released last month, tracked 1,800 U.S. policy changes between 1981 and 2002, and compared the outcome with the expressed preferences of median-income Americans, the affluent, business interests and powerful lobbies. They concluded that average citizens “have little or no independent influence” on policy in the U.S., while the rich and their hired mouthpieces routinely get their way. “The majority does not rule,” they wrote.
Smart money versus dumb voters is hardly a fair fight. But it does offer compelling evidence that the survival of the fittest remains an unshakable truth even in American life. A sad sort of proof of evolution.
Get Maclean’s on Next Issue—Your gateway to the world’s best news stories. Sign up for a FREE trial.They/Them
Morgantown, PA
XL BGE - S BGE - KJ Jr - HB Legacy - BS Pizza Oven - 30" Firepit - King Kooker Fryer - PR72T - WSJ - BS 17" Griddle - XXL BGE - BS SS36" Griddle - 2 Burner Gasser - Pellet Smoker -
______________________________________________I love lamp..
-
"Too bad all the people who know how to run the country are busy driving cabs and barbecuing." - George Burns
-
-
-
"Too bad all the people who know how to run the country are busy driving cabs and barbecuing." - George Burns
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I just feel the need to be totally transparent at this point, I am not an engineer. That is all.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER -
Kidding, right?nolaegghead said:"illegal administration"? Is that hyperbole or just code for "black president"?New Albany, Ohio -
It doesn't take most libs long to throw that BS line out there.
=======================================
XL 6/06, Mini 6/12, L 10/12, Mini #2 12/14 MiniMax 3/16 Large #2 11/20 Legacy from my FIL - RIP PitBoss Navigator 850G 11/25
Tampa Bay, FL
EIB 6 Oct 95 -
grege345 said:
So Im an **** because I have to learn the new way too? How bout when I look at his math and ask why not just do it this way? His reply is the teacher explained it this way and to do these steps to get the answer. My reply is I dont know that way I learned it a different way. Of course the way I learned makes sense to me but confuses him. So not to step on the toes of the teacher and further confuse my son I stay out of it and let the teachers do what they get paid to do. Teach! So you can go **** yourself and tell your dad if he wants me to help do his job maybe he can help me with bridge footings this weekend. So sick of this fuckin threadEggcelsior said:
My dad is a teacher. He hates it because of parents who are morons and think school is a daycare complain that little Johnny and Sally don't understand it. The parents don't have the wherewithall to help their kids with schoolwork and it's NEVER the kid's fault for being a dumbass. Ignorance breeds fear.henapple said:I know several teachers...my daughter being one...they hate that sh+t. It's stupid.
Firing up the BGE in Covington, GA -
No. If it was a puppy or kitten, I could have said baby. In medical terms, neonate is an infant human in the first month of life. Layman may use baby.henapple said:Neonate. ...you mean a baby? -
So you are calling us layman...well screw you!Large and Small BGECentral, IL
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thetrim said:It doesn't take most libs long to throw that BS line out there.
You sure you mean "most"? Do you mean "some", maybe?'Cause I'm sure you're aware of the fallacies of generalizations, right?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lx7dqRBdvTYSee?
"Too bad all the people who know how to run the country are busy driving cabs and barbecuing." - George Burns -
Be careful, man! I've got a beverage here.
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In this context, layman="not a medical professional". Lighten up! You need to get laid, man.saluki2007 said:So you are calling us layman...well screw you!
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