TEMPO and HUP

A Blog for Civil Debate on Political Philosophy

A Blog for Civil Debate on Political Philosophy

Guns, again.

May 25, 2022 by Alan Bernstein Leave a Comment

For obvious reasons, I have decided to re-circulate the comments I posted in 2018 after the shooting in Parkland, FL.

March 24, 2018. The shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, and the subsequent March for Our Lives underline the need for sanity in improving the use of guns in the U. S.  Opponents of gun regulation will undercut discussion of this hot topic using a blanket reference to the Second Amendment and three well-known slogans. These talking points appear to be self-evident, but careful examination shows they don’t stand up. If properly understood, this time they should not prevent well thought out reforms.Continue Reading

Elon Musk, Putin, and MDM

April 29, 2022 by Alan Bernstein Leave a Comment

A Guest Essay by Jonathan Beck

Elon Musk’s Hostile Takeover of Twitter. Why give Megaphones to Megalomaniacs?

Public opinion is malleable. It’s molded. Shaped by op-ed (“opinion-editorial”) pieces from accredited journalists, elected or aspiring politicians, popular pundits. Also “guest opinions” from academic experts and religious leaders. Also paid “influencers” on social media. And unpaid commenters arguing on social media with boundless energy and unfettered passion. And limitless unchecked facts.

Where do they get their information? And what are they trying to do with it? For whose benefit?

In a dictatorship public opinion doesn’t matter. Under monarchy it begins to matter, and starts to be subject to censorship and control.

Democracy is based on freedom of speech and freedom of the press – that means public opinion is crucial for wielding power. And for the public’s protection against those who wield it against the public good. Pseudo-democracy is based on the semblance of free speech and the simulacrum of a free press. Before computers and the internet, public opinion in democratic regimes was more easily shaped by an accredited press informed by authoritative information structures.

Now, the accredited press is called elite and fake. “Mainstream” used to mean “credible, generally accepted, believed by most people” – people in the mainstream of society, not at the edges or fringes but in the mainstream. Now the term “mainstream media” is used pejoratively with the connotation “contrary to what we’re being told, but we know better, we know that what they’re telling us is probably not true.”

The U.S. government has a new agency for Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security, CISA. Its job is to monitor and counter MDM: “CISA’s Mis-, Dis-, and Malinformation (MDM) team is charged with building national resilience to MDM and foreign influence activities. Through these efforts, CISA helps the American people understand the scope and scale of MDM activities targeting elections and critical infrastructure, and enables them to take actions to mitigate associated risks.”

To wit: Putin’s war, driven and supported by MDM.

But what about MDM at home? The U.S. has a ways to go to catch up with Europe. Last Saturday (4-23-22) the European Union reached agreement on major legislation to curb negative impacts from social media sites and other digital platforms. Targeting Amazon, Google and Meta,

the Digital Services Act would, among other things, compel services including Facebook, Google, Twitter and others to crack down on the spread of disinformation on their platforms and to reveal how their algorithms recommend content to users. The DSA would also prohibit certain kinds of ads on the platforms, such as targeted ads aimed at children or tailored to people’s ethnicity or sexual orientation. “With the DSA we help create a safe and accountable online environment,” European Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said in a statement. “Platforms should be transparent about their content moderation decisions, prevent dangerous disinformation from going viral and avoid unsafe products being offered on market places. With today’s agreement we ensure that platforms are held accountable for the risks their services can pose to society and citizens.

Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter ended up agreeable to management. Less hostile than it first appeared. Opinion in the U.S. remains divided on that matter. Left and center are opposed. Voices on the right say it’s all right. A logic-deficient op-ed in today’s Washington Post (4-28-22) tries to argue against Obama’s defense of content-moderation on Twitter and others. WaPo columnist Jason Willick wonders “If voters can be so easily manipulated by exposure to a political figure’s false claims, then why does the democratic system deserve such a strenuous defense in the first place?” How crazy is that. Who believes that if a thing is not perfect, it’s not worth defending? It’s like saying, “If the human body is so easily subject to cancer, why does it deserve such strenuous attempts to defend it?” Cancerous tumors also result from misinformation, misinformation at the cellular level – mutations caused by mistakes during cell division or DNA-damaging agents in the environment. Mutations can be harmful, beneficial, or have no effect. Just like items in the press and on social media. But doesn’t it make better sense to counter harmful misinformation and eliminate the lethal occurrences, rather than saying “don’t regulate, just let it all hang out”? Willick and his ilk need to understand that “false information” is no less dangerous than faulty reasoning. The U.S. needs an E.U.-style approach to MDM foreign and domestic.

January 6 Sedition Leader Exposed

March 18, 2022 by Alan Bernstein Leave a Comment

These days, the expression “conspiracy theory” is almost synonymous with “nonsense.” Nonetheless, conspiracies do exist, and new evidence has just emerged of a conspiracy behind the January 6, 2021, attack on the nation’s Capitol. In the New York Times of March 14, 2022, Alan Feuer reported evidence uncovered by prosecutors of one conspiracy leader who urged the attackers on. That person is Enrique Tarrio, then leader of the Proud Boys, who played a crucial role (or thought he could) in the effort to reverse the 2020 election. Tarrio’s past is a checkered one. After being arrested in 2012, he worked as an informant for the FBI in drug, gambling, and human smuggling cases. In 2014 his cooperation with law enforcement was brought forward presumably to mitigate sentencing for his own crimes. By 2015, however, his loyalties had shifted from the FBI to the Proud Boys, a far-right, all male, militia style activist group dedicated, they say, to Western Chauvinism. They participated in the Unite the Right demonstration in Charlottesville VA, on August 11-12, 2017. Tarrio became the group’s leader in 2018.

To appreciate his role in the attack on the Capitol, we must back up a bit.

In the morning of January 6, demonstrators erected a scaffold and a noose on the Mall. By 1:30 PM, assailants overwhelmed badly outnumbered police attempting to protect the Capitol. At 2:12, one attacker broke a window allowing hundreds of armed insurgents to enter. Some chanted, “Hang Mike Pence!” That could not have seemed an idle threat in view of the scaffold outside. At 2:13, Capitol police moved the Vice-President from the House chamber to safety. At 2:24, Trump tweeted: “Mike Pence didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done,” that is, to reject the ballots submitted by the Electoral College which, if counted, would give Joe Biden victory. Calling Pence a coward could only have encouraged the Capitol’s invaders. The situation continued to deteriorate. At 2:26, Senator Tommy Tuberville told Trump on the phone that he (Tuberville) could no longer stay in the chamber; it was being evacuated. Then, at 2:38, Trump issued a cover-up tweet to the rioters: “Please support our Capitol Police and Law Enforcement. They are truly on the side of our Country. Stay peaceful!” Nonetheless, at that point (2:41), Tarrio used a Parler social-media account to give his orders. According to Rachael Levy of the Wall Street Journal his words were: “Proud Of My Boys and my country…. Don’t ***ing leave.” “His boys” were the Proud Boy rioters, and others intent on disrupting the counting of electoral ballots.

It took over a year for prosecutors to reveal how clearly Enrique Tarrio supervised the attack of the far-right Proud Boys. These were the same militia-style activists whom Trump had ordered during the presidential debate with Biden on Sept 29, 2020, to “stand back and stand by.” Then, back in action on January 6, Tarrio ignored Trump’s plea to stay peaceful, and instead commanded the rioters to hold the building. There was nothing spontaneous about his message. Indeed, Feuer’s article reports on a document federal prosecutors have found entitled “1776 Returns.” It outlines plans for January 6 and calls for the occupation of six House and Senate buildings and the Supreme Court. These plans did not remain fantasy. Unexploded bombs were found concealed in satchels outside both the House and Senate Office Buildings. Whoever wrote this just-revealed document, it outlines a plan for a government takeover that made its way to a person calling shots more explicitly than the then president on that fateful day. Participants in the plan were to occupy the designated buildings and conduct sit-ins there after a “signal from lead.” They were then to “storm” the buildings. Enrique Tarrio was not, himself, in Washington on January 6. He had been arrested days earlier for activities during the December, 2020, protests that vandalized Black Lives Matter symbols after a pro-Trump rally. After being charged with the possession of two high-capacity rifle magazines, he was subsequently ordered out of the capital as part of an arrangement for his release. That hardly removed him from a position of influence.

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY: Goal and Slogan

March 5, 2022 by Alan Bernstein Leave a Comment

                                                                        Spirit of ’76 (bit.ly/3sMbRqg)

Every year, on the Fourth of July, I read the Declaration of Independence. Last year was different because, with increasing acuity, critics have argued that our country was established not on freedom, but on subjection. They justifiably accuse us of slaveholding and genocide. We have contrived rationalizations to explain away these crimes: religion, destiny, civilization, and even whiteness. Some among us are more guilty of these wrongs, or of defending them, than others, but even so they taint us. In 2021, as I read, I asked what, in our foundation, can help us correct our errors and build a more humane future.

Independence Hall (bit.ly/35yDwSC)

Consent of the governed. If a community springs from the consent of the governed, there is no subjection. The governed give their consent through their representatives. The better —the more equal— the representation, the warmer the consent, the stronger the government and therefore the community. History shows that class, race, gender, ethnicity, religion, have subverted equal representation and therefore consent of the governed. Removing these barriers would improve our community.

Pursuit of happiness. The context that bred this phrase gives it remarkable power. The dominant opponent of monarchy in the turmoil of late seventeenth-century England was the philosopher John Locke. In building his philosophy, Locke proclaimed the fundamental right of all men to life, liberty, and property. The Declaration of Independence has a similar phrase, but Thomas Jefferson changed “property” into “the pursuit of happiness.” Why? Jefferson fathered 6 children with Sally Hemmings, “his” enslaved woman, much his junior. That a slaveowner would change “property” to “the pursuit of happiness” marks a revolution in empathy. Locke’s “property” is inert; it turns persons into things — property. But happiness is a goal of living beings even if held in bondage. Jefferson’s adjustment gave our country an agenda.

The present threat. Highlighting these phrases is not mere flag-waving because, today, anti-democratic elements attack them directly. In many state legislatures, Republican majorities reduce voting rights and insert Republican poll administrators with, potentially, the ability to reverse election outcomes as Charles M. Blow has articulated in the NYTimes. (Please see Update 1, below). Moreover, some Republicans at all levels of government encouraged, participated in, and now defend the January 6 insurrection to overturn the election of 2020.  In short, the followers of former president Trump seek to overthrow our democratic system to install their leader, a man who distinguished himself by his capricious despotism. “No one knows the system better than me,” he declared, “which is why I alone can fix it.” “I alone”! These people prefer tyranny to democracy.

Democracy makes us thrive. Born of a revolution to escape tyranny, America has thrived on the expansion of democracy. The federal government outlawed slavery during the Civil War. The Fourteenth Amendment promised due process and equal protection under the law to all persons. Through the Nineteenth Amendment, women gained the vote in 1919.Translated into contemporary American English, this evolution of Jefferson’s ideal becomes equal opportunity. The pursuit of happiness is simply not possible without equal opportunity guaranteed by equal protection under the law.

The law of the land. Equal opportunity is not a new phrase or a newly discovered goal, but it is time to renew our commitment to it. Equal opportunity is a cure for systemic racism, unjust disparity in wealth, and all that stems from ignorance. Perhaps no aspect of our national life is more crucial than Benjamin Franklin’s ideal of free, quality, public education. The landmark Supreme Court decision, Brown v. Board of Education, asserts: “Where a State has undertaken to provide an opportunity for an education in its public schools, such an opportunity is a right which must be made available to all on equal terms.” Opportunity on equal terms is the law of the land. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 further guaranteed equal opportunity in employment. Examples in the area of housing and gender rights such as same-sex marriage are moving in the same direction and must be encouraged. There is still work to be done.

Build the core. Because the right of all to equal opportunity is self-evident, all Americans should endorse it with the same fervor as the Declaration of Independence. Besides the rightness of this goal, I suggest we adopt the phrase as a political slogan. In a country where independent voters hold the balance of power, “equal opportunity” will strengthen our political center. It will increase the general standard of living without the excesses of socialism and the benefits of free enterprise without the excesses of monopoly capitalism.

Not socialism. Equal opportunity provides resources, education, and options to all without government-imposed uniformity because opportunity limits uniformity. Just as equality promotes education for all, opportunity fosters entrepreneurship. Opportunity is a talent scout. It seeks the standouts. It is pro-business but anti-monopoly. Opportunity advances invention, creativity, and startups while equality prevents those who have made it big from accumulating excessive power: monopolies in business and corruption in government. “Equality” and “opportunity,” therefore, check each other. Success should be available to all, but not to the point where great power can limit access to others. We do not erect a ladder for the most talented to climb only to watch them remove it.

More than individuals. Some might say this program overemphasizes government and community. Freedom, they argue, inheres only in the individual. Such people are like the man who refuses to participate in a bucket brigade. “Why?” he asks. “My house is not on fire.” Individual rights are indeed indispensable, but they are only safe when all agree, mutually, to protect them. If we can only protect ourselves as individuals without laws, with no share in making the laws, and without government to enforce them, we collapse.

Social balance and the free market. I mean this essay to apply the principle of checks and balances — precisely as the constitution opposes the branches of government or the anti-establishment clause opposes the freedom of religion clause in the First Amendment. The Founders knew those tensions would persist, but they trusted they could be managed civilly, politically, by debate. I intend the same for the conflict between equality and opportunity. Some will favor one tendency over the other, and democratic debate is required to regulate these policy differences. But there is also a market mechanism. We are not all equally industrious, practical, intelligent or creative. Some will rise and others will not, but that should be okay because equal opportunity provides a helping hand, fresh education, and start-up loans —investment, provided that the system is neither weighed down at the bottom by inertia nor closed at the top by monopolists. That is the beauty of equal opportunity. If well managed by those whose consent it governs, it is as fair for those below as for those above.

This formula may seem overly abstract, this goal unattainable. I can only reply that, without a destination, there is no path.

Here is Charles M. Blow’s op-ed, attached. Blow CM – Seven Steps to Destroy a Democracy – NYT

For more along these lines, see my post of April 25, 2019, “Tackling Socialism.”

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MY POSTS

  • Guns, again.
  • Elon Musk, Putin, and MDM
  • January 6 Sedition Leader Exposed
  • EQUAL OPPORTUNITY: Goal and Slogan
  • Inertia Hobbles New England’s Energy Transition
  • Texas School Bill Hinders Education
  • A Loss For Democrats? I Think Not!
  • Thought Control in the U.S. Today
  • The Religious Right Invents Religious Rights
  • Collusion Collision
  • No Surprise
  • The Barr-Trump Monarchy
  • Not Too Nice
  • Shortchanged !
  • Substantive Wrongs
  • Static Action
  • Race: How We Got Here
  • Sanctuary for Immigrants
  • Conscience and Citizenship
  • Tackling Socialism
  • The Amygdala Between Kindness and Cruelty
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