Thursday, December 4, 2025

#338 / Eat Your Phone

 


That advice to "Eat UR Phone" comes from the Lamp Club, which The New York Times describes as "part of a growing ecosystem of 'neo-Luddite' groups across the country that encourage people to transform their relationship to technology. Other groups include the Luddite Club, APPstinence and Breaking the (G)Loom — organizations that, for the most part, were started not by parents wishing their teens would get off their devices but by the teens themselves, who fault phones for fraying human connections as well as accelerating inequality and climate change."

If you'd like to follow up (and if The Times' paywall policies permit), you can get additional information about these "non-Luddite" groups from an article authored by T.M. Brown, and published in The Times on October 30, 2025. Online, the title of Brown's article is, "They’ve Come to Free ‘the iPad Babies.’ I have learned from the article that there are now more than two dozen Luddite Clubs in North America, from Ithaca, N.Y., to Irvine, California. 

Those who read my blog on any sort of a regular basis (and I certainly do encourage that) will know of my personal skepticism and distrust of some of our most modern technologies - so-called "artificial intelligence" definitely being included. For about ten years, I taught a course at the University of California at Santa Cruz called, "Privacy, Technology, And Freedom." The basic idea of the course was to get students (persons whom Brown apparently calls the "iPad Babies"), to think about whether "technology" is going to result not only in a loss of "privacy," but also in a loss of "freedom." I admit to being happy to learn that some young people are spontaneously starting to question where our modern technologies are taking us (and without the benefit of some aging, adjunct professor telling them there's a problem).

Want to think some more about this topic? Here's another article worth reading (paywalls permitting, of course): "Brave New World Dept.: Information Overload - Inside The Data Centers That Train A.I. And Drain The Electrical Grid." The article is by Stephen Witt, and it appeared in the November 3, 2025, edition of The New Yorker. Witt's article describes where we are, and where we seem to be going, with respect to the construction of mammoth "data centers." Consider Witt's New Yorker article an extensive followup to my blog posting yesterday, but note, too, that our concerns should not be limited to the finite nature of the water and other resources that are being diverted to support data centers. Ultimately, it is the nature of our human reality that is really at stake, as Witt makes clear in this ending to his article:

Robots are everywhere in China. I saw them stocking shelves and cleaning floors at a mall. When I ordered food to my hotel room, it was delivered by a two-foot-tall wheeled robot in the shape of a trash can, with the voice of a child. I opened my door, nonplussed, to find it standing in front of me, decorated with an ersatz butler’s outfit and chirping in Mandarin. A hatch on the front of the robot popped open, and a tray of noodles slid out. The machine chirped again. I took my food, the hatch closed, and the robot wheeled away. I stood there for a time, holding the tray, wondering if I would ever talk to a human again.

Image Credit:

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

#337 / Anthropic

 


I am not a fan of AI - "Artificial Intelligence." The way I see it, AI invites us to forego efforts to develop, augment, and extend our own "real" intelligence, proposing, instead, that we should use a computer program which claims to be able to do whatever we want to do both quicker and better than we could do it for ourselves. Want a birthday sonnet for your beloved? Why waste your time trying to write one? AI can pump out some options in less than a minute. 

If we want to maintain and improve our thinking, we actually need to think for ourselves. That's my belief, anyway (that's what I think), and I, therefore, have almost no patience for the idea that there are some real benefits to AI. 

A number of my friends disagree, and I do concede that mobilizing a computer program to do our thinking for us does have some attractions. One of my friends told me that his AI companion is like a "tutor," providing assistance to him throughout his day. Relying on an AI "tutor" to provide guidance to us is virtually certain, in my mind, to diminish our own capacity, individually (and ultimately collectively), to think for ourselves. The way I see it, the longrun impacts of AI are pretty horrendous. You can see that I am truly not a fan of AI. 

That said, and having just outlined my personal views about AI, let me give a shout out to Anthropic, one of the companies working tirelessly to develop ever more sophisticated and capable versions of artificial intelligence. I want to refer you, specifically, to an article that was published in the Saturday/Sunday, September 20-21, 2025, edition of The Wall Street Journal. That article focused, mainly, on Anthropic's CEO, Dario Amodei, and how his political and other views clash with those of the Trump Administration. The front page article, by Berber Jin and Amrith Ramkumar, is titled this way, online: "A Tech CEO’s Lonely Fight Against Trump."

Probably, you need to be a subscriber to get access to the article. If that's true, and the link I have just provided gets you nowhere, here are a few excerpts that cheered me up, at least a little bit, about the nation's love affair with Artificial Intelligence:

Amodei joined OpenAI shortly after it was founded as a nonprofit, then left in 2020 after clashing with Altman, its chief executive, over safety to start Anthropic. He is a believer in the earn-to-give movement, and committed to donating 80% of his founding stock to charity alongside his co-founders—a stake now worth billions of dollars. 
A vegetarian since childhood, Amodei, now 42, often dotes on the chickens he keeps in a coop in his backyard, outfitted with a camera so he can watch over them. His Slack profile picture shows him smiling with a stuffed panda, and his office has a stuffed animal Amodei fondly calls “the wise octopus.” 
He is also the AI CEO most vocal about the technology’s potential to end civilization, warning that there is a 10% to 25% chance that AI goes rogue and unleashes planetary chaos. Around the start of Trump’s first term, Amodei warned in an AI presentation to industry colleagues that giving Trump control of powerful AI would be dangerous, and compared him in a slide to Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin. 
Amodei chose not to release an early version of Claude in the summer of 2022, fearing that it would start a dangerous technology race. Some Anthropic employees also indicated in a Slack poll they didn’t want to release the chatbot for the same reason. OpenAI released ChatGPT a few weeks later, forcing Anthropic to play catch-up. Amodei said he doesn’t regret the decision....
Amodei supported a 2023 executive order that put guardrails around the country’s best models and backed restrictions on chip exports to prevent countries like China from developing cutting-edge AI.... 
Amodei publicly warned in late May that AI could destroy about half of all entry-level white-collar jobs, countering the administration’s message about AI benefiting the economy (emphasis added).

Replacing humans with machines is not, in my view, a good idea. And there are lots of other problems that come along with AI, too, at least as it is now being developed. Those negative impacts specifically include how its inordinate power demands are likely to make it harder to deal with Global Warming, and how they will, most likely, also undermine agriculture and destroy our precious water resources. 

If humans are going to pursue AI (I continue to vote "not in favor"), we ought to have skeptics in charge of the effort!


Image Credit:

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

#336 / Blueprint



An article in The New Yorker, written by Nicholas Lemann, and dating back to October 28, 2024, outlined a kind of "blueprint" for a successful industrial policy, giving credit to then-President Joseph Biden. The word "blueprint" was not, actually, used. That's my way of understanding the article. 

Lemann's article is titled, "Bidenomics Is Starting to Transform America. Why Has No One Noticed?" If you are a subscriber to The New Yorker, I think there will be no problem getting to the article by clicking the link. If you are not a subscriber, a paywall may well prevent you from reading the article. I hope it doesn't. I think the article is well worth reading, not only for the background it provides on some very significant economic legislation, but also because I think the article suggests a new (and better) way for our federal government to relate to our economic life. Here are a couple of key paragraphs:

Bidenomics upends a set of economic assumptions that have prevailed in both parties for most of the past half century. Biden is the first President in decades to treat government as the designer and ongoing referee of markets, rather than as the corrector of markets’ dislocations and excesses after the fact. He doesn’t speak of free trade and globalization as economic ideals. His approach to combatting climate change involves no carbon taxes or credits—another major departure, not just from his predecessors but also from the policies of many other countries. His Administration has been far more aggressive than previous ones in taking antitrust actions against big companies. 
What would you call these policies? One apt label might be “post-neoliberal,” a term that does not resonate at all with the public. Another way of thinking about Biden’s approach is through terminology devised by the political scientist Jacob Hacker: it rejects redistribution as a guiding liberal principle, in favor of “predistribution,” an effort to transform the economy in a way that makes redistribution less necessary (emphasis added).

Rephrased, what Lemann is saying is that it is possible for the federal government (on behalf of the people of the United States) to outline what kind of economic conditions we want, and then to use the economic and other powers of the federal government to shape the economy to achieve that vision. Biden is no longer the president, but perhaps we can we learn something from what he did when he was.

In essence, what this article suggests is that the people of the United States should not let key policy decisions be made by individual economic actors (very often corporations, or "private equity") whose aims are, of course, to benefit themselves. Instead, the idea is for the federal government, on behalf of us all, to decide what sort of economy we want, and then to use federal power to direct the corporations to achieve it. For those who are not fans of former president Biden, please let me be clear that this idea is independent of the credit given to Biden in Lemann's article.

Who comes first, the people or the corporations? Lemann is saying that we have always assumed that the corporations come first, and that we, then, take governmental action to react to, and perhaps "correct," what corporations do. 

Why don't we just tell them what to do in the first place? That's the idea. That's a kind of "blueprint" for an economic and industrial policy that is completely different from what we have taken for granted in the past. 

Sounds like a very good idea to me! Now, can we do it? We can sure start trying! 


Monday, December 1, 2025

#335 / Some Recent Correspondence

 


The picture above, gleaned from an official City of Santa Cruz website, shows a proposed high-rise residential development on Pacific Avenue, which is the city's main downtown street. This proposed development would wipe out The Catalyst, a revered and longtime music venue, where some of America's greatest bands and performers have played. 

The Catalyst has its own Wikipedia entry, which identifies it as a "nightclub," echoing The Catalyst's own self-description. Click the link for a partial list of some of the bands and performers who have appeared there. Here's what The Catalyst looks like now: 




Justin Cummings, the County Supervisor who represents most of the City of Santa Cruz, and who lives just a few blocks away from The Catalyst, has commented on Facebook that this proposal is "completely unacceptable!!!" Cummings further commented that the proposed development, if approved, "would also get rid of the Starving Musician [a store that sells musical instruments]. Unbelievably disgusting and definitely not affordable. We need to not just let the City know how horrible of an idea this is, but also let our state reps know that we’re fed up with not having control over development in our community."

It appears, based on a recent Facebook message from a local resident, addressed to me, that Cummings is not alone in his distress about what is being proposed at 1009-10ll-1015 Pacific. Here is that message to me, and my response: 

Gary, regarding the proposed 1009, 1011, 1015 Pacific Ave project - this unmitigated unsustainable development bypassing sensible planning in our town is becoming absurd. No parking, water, fire or other infrastructure considered in planning. How do we effectively oppose this and the other similar undesirable and unwise developments? Got ideas? What can I do - besides complain to the council which I’ve found to be pointless?

oooOOOooo 

My Reply: 
I have no easy answer. What is needed is a combination political/legal effort - a group, meeting in real life each week, getting appropriate legal assistance and then electing new Council Members, filing lawsuits as needed. Maybe this latest travesty will galvanize that kind of effort, as the City effort to turn Lighthouse Field into a shopping center/condo/ hotel development, with a Convention Center as the come on, did way back in 1972! 
All good wishes.
Gary A. Patton, Attorney at Law
 
My answer to the distraught email above, in fact, is my basic political advice to all who want to regain control over their politics - advice which reflects my own, personal experience. 

In 1972, I was hired to provide legal advice and assistance to the Save Lighthouse Point Association (and quickly became just a "member," not a hired gun). A relatively small group of people [15-20], meeting each week, in person, outlined a complete political and legal strategy, and "Saved Lighthouse Field." I'll end this blog posting with a picture of Lighthouse Field today, to remind everyone of what would have been lost, except for the work done by the Save Lighthouse Field Association. 

Without those political and legal efforts, here is what would now be found on Lighthouse Field: (1) A high-rise hotel, like the Dream Inn; (2) A massive shopping center, equivalent in size to the Rancho Del Mar Shopping Center in Aptos; (3) Condominium apartments [I think 100 or so] for the wealthy; (4) Seven acres of blacktopped parking lots; and (5) a "Convention Center." 

The City Council and the County Board of Supervisors were, at least at the start, unanimously in favor of this proposed development of Lighthouse Field. No elected official was on the scene to make a statement like the one that Justin Cummings has made about the "Let's Wipe Out The Catalyst With Another High-Rise Apartment Building Proposal." 

To "Save Lighthouse Field," the community had to act. And we did. I was proud to be part of the effort, which included an initiative measure that I wrote, approved by City voters in June, 1974, withdrawing the City's land from the proposed development. The brand-new California Coastal Commission voted down the entire development proposal, soon thereafter, and then local elected officials, and our state representatives, made sure that this incredibly valuable coastal property was purchased and made into a State Park. 

Lighthouse Field (see it pictured below) was saved by one of those "small groups" that Margaret Mead talked about. I agree with Margaret Mead (and pay attention to the very last part of what she says. That's perhaps the most important part, and I'll bold it in the quote below). 

If Santa Cruz residents don't like what their City officials are doing (and I, personally, don't like what they're doing - and doubt that that the majority of voters do, either) then I advise those concerned to employ the Margaret Mead remedy (and I'm willing to call it the "Lighthouse Field" remedy, too). That, in my opinion, is only way we can change what's happening. A small group. Meeting in person. Meeting every week. Taking the initiative, politically. Never giving up. You can't do it with "online" protestations! 

Here's that Margaret Mead quote:

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has.
And here is that promised picture of Lighthouse Field, today - a past (and still present) gift to this community that the community gave to itself: 



Image Credits:
(2) https://crown.ucsc.edu/student-life/creative-corner/  
(4) https://fisherelectricinc.com/service-area/

Sunday, November 30, 2025

#334 / A "Grab Bag" Of A Book




I have mentioned Frederick Buechner before - for instance, on Sunday, September 14, 2025, citing to his book, Listening To Your Life. I have also previously mentioned Buechner's book, A Room Called Rememberon October 15, 2023. On that occasion, though, I didn't provide you with a picture of the book. Now, you've got one!

I picked up A Room Called Remember at one of the Little Free Libraries that abound in my hometown of Santa Cruz, California. That's the book that got me started on Buechner. Buechner identifies A Room Called Remember as "a grab bag, a handful of sermons preached at places like Harvard, the Pacific School of Religion, the Congregational Church of Rupert, Vermont, and one that has never been preached anywhere at all ("A Room Called Remember")..."

In that never-preached sermon, which is the first chapter in the book, Buechner reports on a dream he once had, one of the rare ones, he says, that "wake you up with what I can only call its truth." The mystery of dreams like that, Buechner says, are their power to let you "glimpse a truth truer than any you knew that you knew..."

The "truth" that Buechner reports on, in A Room Called Remember, is the truth that no matter how fallible and failing we are, we can always remember and recapture those times and moments in the past when we somehow did receive guidance and support that was beyond our own competence and capacity. The "Room Called Remember" can always be reentered, and we will, as we do remember those times when we did not fail to live up to our hopes and expectations, be reconnected with the power that assisted us then, and that sustains us in all things. 

I have had that kind of experience, myself. Buechner is asserting that we all have, and that we can all reenter that  "Room Called Remember." 

In times like those in which we are now living, when both despair and desperation so often seem to surround us, and to overhwhelm us, let us not forget that we can find access to the power that has sustained us and emboldened us before - that can and will sustain and embolden us, always. There is a place to go, at the very time when we need to fortify ourselves, again, with a power that the Bible says can be called out as the "peace of God, which surpasses all understanding." It's a "Room Called Remember." So, let's not forget!

I wrote a note in the copy of A Room Called Remember that I found in one of those Little Free Libraries. My handwritten note said, simply, "A wonderful book!"

If you can stand some "religion," I am recommending that book to you.

Saturday, November 29, 2025

#333 / Wanna Bet?

 


Today's blog posting can be relatively short and sweet. Well, maybe not all that "sweet." How about relatively short and sour?

Jonathan V. Last, a journalist and editor of The Bulwark, an online newsletter that reports on politics and culture in America, wrote a Substack blog posting on September 24, 2024, that was titled as follows: "Robot Gamblers Are Making People Poor." That blog posting is worth reading in its entirety, though I am providing you with the gist, right here. In short, here is what Last has to say: 

Robots have taken over online gambling and they’re transferring wealth from uneducated poor people to corporations and wealthy hustlers. This is not something society should allow. 
Start with poker. 
I linked to a Bloomberg story yesterday about a Russian bot operation that grew to devour the world of online poker. It’s really long and maybe you didn’t read it, so the relevant points are:
  • If you play online poker, there’s a good chance the “people” you’re playing against are bots. 
  • These bots are significantly better at poker than most of the best professionals. 
  • So your money gets siphoned in two directions: The bots (who are controlled by a third party) win most of your money while the online poker site takes a percentage of all the action (this is called the rake).
How prevalent is this dynamic? Vitaly Lunkin, a professional poker player, told Bloomberg, “I believe there is no clean game online.” 
Sounds bad, right? Normal people who don’t know better show up to play poker online and discover that they can’t win because they’re getting pantsed by robots. 
But the full story is actually worse. 
As the bots began taking over, online poker sites noticed that IRL human players quickly got turned off by losing so much, so quickly. This hurt the poker sites, because remember: They make their money from the rake. They need people playing. 
So these poker sites started hiring the companies that built the bots—as consultants. These consultants were then paid to optimize the behavior of the robots so that human players would be allowed to win just often enough to keep them playing. 
In other words: The online poker websites paid the robots’ owners to slow down the rate of siphoning so that the human marks wouldn’t realize they were getting scammed. 
The word you’re reaching for is “predatory.”

I frequently inveigh against life in the "online world." One major reason to limit our involvement with anything that comes to us "online," including "politics," is that the world that has been created online is emphatically not a "common world" like the "Human World" that we have created within the "World of Nature" - a human world that we still might think of as "real life." 

The online world is a world that is of, by, and for the giant corporations, and of, by, and for their private owners (think Elon Musk) who make it seem like it's part of the "public sphere." It's not. 

As Jonathan Last is telling us, that online world is rigged!


Friday, November 28, 2025

#332 / On Not Betraying America's Heritage

 

 
William Galston, who writes a weekly "Politics & Ideas" column in The Wall Street Journal, and who holds the Ezra K. Zilkha Chair in the Brookings Institution’s Governance Studies Program, claims that "Antisemitism Betrays America's Heritage." Is there any doubt about that? The brouhaha that has surrounded Tucker Carlson's decision to host Nick Fuentes in a sympathetic online interview - Fuentes being an outspoken and apparently unrepentant anti-semite - is what prompted Galston's column. 

While I totally agree that we must be be resolutely opposed to anti-semitism, wherever and however it may develop and display itself, what I found most impactful in Galston's column was not his opposition to anti-semitism, per se, but rather his clarity about what constitutes that "American Heritage" that Galston wants to protect, and that is challenged by any acceptance of anti-semitism. 

Galston says that there is an American "creed," and then goes on to say that "if we hold fast to it even when expediency counsels compromising it, we cannot go wrong. If we abandon it, we sign the death certificate of republican government and ordered liberty.”

What is that "creed" that Galston finds so precious - and so essential? It is "the civic principles of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States ... the conviction that each and every member of the human family, irrespective of race, ethnicity, religion, or anything else, is a creature fashioned in the very image of God, is ‘created equal’ and ‘endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights.’"

"It isn’t blood and soil that makes us Americans," says Galston. "It isn’t our European heritage; nor is it Christianity." [Galston, here, is taking a shot at J.D. Vance, our current Vice President, without calling him out by name, since Vance has claimed that these are, in fact, an essential feature of our "heritage"]. "No," says Galston, "America is what Lincoln declared it to be at Gettysburg, which is why the latest outbreak of antisemitism is a test, not only for conservatives, but for all Americans." 

Galston is urging that we all "highly resolve," as Lincoln put it, that a "government of the people, by the people, [and] for the people, shall not perish from the earth."

This American "creed" is being challenged today. It is being challenged daily, and from the very summit of our government - by our current Vice President, and by our current President, as well. 

The proposition that the United States shall be governed by "a government of the people, by the people, and for the people" has been placed at risk, and Galston is right that we stand close to a point at which America's heritage may be betrayed. This was part of my Thanksgiving Day comment yesterday, too. Bears repeating!

We are each being called and tested. Let us be sure we don't fail our test!

https://www.wsj.com/opinion/antisemitism-betrays-americas-heritage-3fd6d3d1

Thursday, November 27, 2025

#331 / American Heritage

  

 
That picture, above, seems right for Thanksgiving - at least to me! A "Happy Thanksgiving" to any and all who may be reading this blog posting!

The image comes from a "Guest Essay" published in The New York Times on October 21, 2025, and authored by Leighton Woodhouse. I am reproducing the entire essay below. The essay outlines, and then objects to, the idea that our nation's "founders" are best understood as "Protestant, largely English-speaking, Northwestern Europeans," and that our nation had a “founding ethnicity,” as just described, and that "those who come from such a heriditary background are, in some spiritual sense," more American than those who do not come from such a lineage. The essay goes on to note that those who have conjured up such a "founding ethnicity," also believe that "the dilution of that pure American stock by mass immigration has made the country less culturally unified." 

The Times' essay didn't explicitly include "White" in its listing of the characteristics of that hypothetical "founding ethnicity," but let's make clear that this racial category, if unstated, is definitely another characteristic that that must be considered part of such a "founding ethnicity," for those who advance that idea.

Woodhouse makes clear that America did not begin with a "founding ethnicity." It began (and continues) to be a nation founded upon its "diversity." Here is his summary: 

The United States isn’t exceptional because of our common cultural heritage; we’re exceptional because we’ve been able to cohere despite faiths, traditions and languages that set us apart, and sometimes against one another. The drafters of the Constitution tried to create that cohesion by building a government that could transcend our divisions.

When the Declaration of Independence proclaims that it is "self-evident" that all persons have been "created equal," that does not mean that we are the same. The opposite is the case. We are, all of us, different, which is precisely why we must demand to be, and and must be recognized to be, all of us, equal

Today, particularly, but every day, let us give thanks for that, and let us realize that it is for this reason, precisely, that the United States has been, and continues to be (despite the efforts of our current president and his supporters to reverse this understanding) a beacon of hope for a divided world. 

oooOOOooo

The Right-Wing Myth of American Heritage

October 21, 2025
By Leighton Woodhouse

Mr. Woodhouse is a documentary filmmaker and the author of the newsletter Social Studies.

In 1764, perhaps 200 largely Irish settlers from Pennsylvania’s back country rode to Philadelphia to confront a government they despised. The angry country folk, who had already slaughtered a group of peaceful Indians in their outrage, blamed the English Quakers who had long run the colony for the attacks they had endured in previous years from Indian raiding parties. Expecting mob violence, many of the Quakers abandoned the pacifism they were famous for and picked up muskets. The colony was spared from potential civil war only by the diplomacy of Benjamin Franklin.

Instead, a war of pamphlets ramped up, one that had been giving voice to the toxic stew of grievances held by the wide mix of ethnic and religious groups in the middle colonies.

There were pamphlets that accused the Quakers of taking secret satisfaction in the slaughter of Irish and German settler families at the hands of the Indians, and that called for Quakerism to be “extirpated from the face of the whole earth.” In the reverse direction, Irish Ulster Presbyterians were described as “Ulceration” “Piss-brute-tarians.” Franklin himself referred to the Irish settlers as “Christian white savages” and Germans as “Palatine boors” who refused to assimilate or learn English.

This was the state of relations between European settlers on the brink of the American Revolution. It’s a history that is inconvenient to the latest ideological project of the nativist right.

True Americans, proponents of this emerging patriotic mythology believe, are the cultural descendants of founders who were united by a shared system of values and folkways even more than by an Enlightenment political creed of equality, liberty and democracy. Those founders were Protestant, largely English-speaking, Northwestern Europeans. Those who can trace their bloodlines to that group, which one essay describes as a “founding ethnicity,” are, in some spiritual sense, deemed more American than those who cannot. And the dilution of that pure American stock by mass immigration has made the country less culturally unified.

It’s a sentiment that’s been warmly welcomed in the Trump administration.

White asylum seekers would be favored over nonwhite ones under White House proposals to stanch the flow of refugees recently reported by The New York Times. The proposals explicitly aim to counteract growing diversity in America, which the Trump administration regards as a destabilizing cultural force.

“The sharp increase in diversity,” documents submitted in connection with the proposals say, “has reduced the level of social trust essential for the functioning of a democratic polity.”

The Department of Homeland Security has likewise hinted at its distaste for modern American diversity, posting on X about our country’s “heritage,” accompanied by paintings of the founding fathers and cloying images of westward expansion, between videos glorifying mass deportations. One of them was reposted by the “white advocacy” website American Renaissance under a single word: “Endorsed.”

The word “heritage” has taken on a special significance on the right, with the rise of the notion of “Heritage Americans,” those of Protestant faith and Anglo-European ethnicity or culture who can trace their lineage to the early days of our republic. (Some who use the term include Black descendants of slaves in the category.)

Vice President JD Vance appears to share the belief that there is something uniquely authentic to this group of Americans. Attacking leftists who he said demand that Americans adhere to a set of liberal principles, Mr. Vance told the Claremont Institute, “I think the people whose ancestors fought in the Civil War have a hell of a lot more claim over America than the people who say they don’t belong.”

The message echoed Mr. Vance’s acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention last year, where he scorned the conception of the United States as a country built on a creed. “America is not just an idea,” he intoned. “It is a group of people with a shared history and a common future. It is, in short, a nation.”

But the mythology these conservatives are spinning is historically delusional. Americans have never been “a group of people with a shared history.” The founding fathers were an assortment of people from different histories and backgrounds who coexisted — often just barely — because they didn’t have any other choice but to do so. This was true even within the British majority; Puritans and Quakers alike were banished from Anglican Virginia, Quakers were hanged in Massachusetts, and English colonists in New England and the Tidewater region sided with and in some cases fought for opposing sides of the English Civil War. America was a nation that emerged in spite of itself.

In his book, “Our Savage Neighbors: How Indian War Transformed Early America,” the Rutgers historian Peter Silver describes how the various groups of colonists responded to the diversity they unwillingly found themselves within, not with cultural assimilation but with its opposite. Quakers became chauvinistic, displaying their virtue-signaling plainness of dress ostentatiously and disowning one another for marrying outside of the denomination. Lutherans fretted about replenishing their stock of German-speaking ministers, lest their children be lost to vulgar English ways. Irish Presbyterians renewed their covenant with God, an act of rejection of “the abominations of the age and place in which we live.”

In embracing old orthodoxies, they were no different from second- and third-generation young Americans today celebrating their Mexican, Korean, Somalian or other ancestries, or for that matter, immigrant parents despairing that their children would rather play video games than worship at the mosque or respond to them in English when addressed in their parents’ native tongue. The disorientation of pluralism inclines people to cling to the things that make them distinct. It’s exactly what the right is doing today.

Mr. Vance’s idealization of his own Appalachian, Scots-Irish ancestry is the same reflex American colonists showed when they presumed their own ancestral traditions to be bulwarks of purity against the rising tide of cultural chaos around them.

Even as he praises his wife, the daughter of Indian immigrants, Mr. Vance, like other nativists, refuses to acknowledge that cultural diversity, with all of its prejudices and conflicts, is in fact the through line of American history. The United States isn’t exceptional because of our common cultural heritage; we’re exceptional because we’ve been able to cohere despite faiths, traditions and languages that set us apart, and sometimes against one another. The drafters of the Constitution tried to create that cohesion by building a government that could transcend our divisions.

If the colonies had been a monoculture, the achievement of the founders would have been far less remarkable. It is the very rejection of the pretense that one group deserves some kind of privileged status, that has made us, in Mr. Vance’s words, “in short, a nation.” It is what it means to be American.


Wednesday, November 26, 2025

#330 / You Are Contaminated

 


David Wallace-Wells has written an opinion piece for The New York Times. The hard copy version of the headline on that opinion piece reads this way: "The World Is Now Unavoidably Toxic." Click the link just provided, and you will (perhaps) be able to read Wallace-Wells' article. That presumes, of course, that you can avoid a possible paywall. Those who have a library card from the Santa Cruz City-County Library System can get free access to The Times. If you are a person who could obtain such a library card, think about signing up!

Online, the title on Wallace-Wells' opinion piece is shorter than the hard copy version. It reads as follows: "You Are Contaminated." The image above accompanies the online version.

I was struck, as I read Wallace-Wells' piece, that the "contamination" he describes is, essentially, all derived from human-made materials. You can think "plastics" as a shorthand descriptor. 

We are imperiled, in other words, because we have not been willing to "make do" with the world into which humans have been born. Longtime readers of my blog postings know about my "Two Worlds Hypothesis." We live, most immediately, in a world that we, human beings, create ourselves. Ultimately, however, we live in the "World of Nature," or the "World That God Created," to use another way of describing it. 

We have not been satisfied to live within the limitations of the "World of Nature," and because we haven't, we are now "contaminated" (and, perhaps, "unavoidably").

Would it be possible, even now, to start redesigning our human civilization (the world that we create) in a way that would, actually, reject the enticing idea that we should be able, ourselves, to manufacture the realities upon which our civilization depends?

As I like to point out, in the world that we create, "anything is possible," including a decision to forego the temptation to find human-created substitutes for what the "World of Nature" makes available.

If we don't want the Earth, and our own bodies, to be "unavoidably contaminated," then we need to avoid the temptation to try to build a human-created world that replaces the "World of Nature." 

Anything really is possible! We could do that!

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

#329 / Shadow Docket; Stalling For Time

   

 
An article in a recent edition of the San Francisco Chronicle explained how "The Supreme Court’s ‘Shadow Docket’ Is Empowering Trump’s Agenda." The article is worth reading, but I am betting that non-subscribers probably won't be able to use that link to read the article. Thinking that is likely to be the case, here's the main point:

While federal trial courts have dealt Trump setback after setback, his administration has routinely requested that the Supreme Court step in to provide emergency relief from those rulings. These cases are what have come to be known as the “shadow docket.”

Many of the Supreme Court decisions made on the "shadow docket" have permitted the president to do things that the lower courts have found to be either illegal or unconstitutional (or both). But as is noted in the article, "the shadow docket doesn’t involve a final decision on any issues — it merely allows matters to proceed until the case is fully briefed and argued in the future." 

In other words, the "shadow docket" produces only "temporary" decisions. They are, in a very real way, a technique used by the Supreme Court to "stall for time." Really, it should be the Congress, not the Court, that takes prompt and effective action when the president directs federal employees to something that is either directly contrary to existing law, or when the president tells federal agencies to do something that can only be authorized by Congress - and hasn't been. Of course, the Congress isn't doing that. The "shadow docket" decisions by the Court are - giving the Court the benefit of the doubt - a way to allow Congress to do its job, in the face of illegitimate activity by the Executive - and then the Congress isn't, in fact, doing what our laws and the Constitution require.

Furthermore, just to make it all perfectly clear, instead of maintaining the "status quo ante," the Supreme Court has been using the "shadow docket" to permit Trump's agenda to go forward, so "federal workers lose their jobs, migrants get sent to countries where they are in danger and Social Security records — yours and mine — fall into the hands of inexperienced 20-something Elon Musk groupies who made up much of the DOGE workforce."

The Supreme Court's "stall," by way of the "shadow docket," is letting our current president act like HE is the one who gets to decide everything. That isn't the way our system is set up to work. Shame on the Court - for sure - but shame on Congress, too!

And what about those people who tell the Congress what to do (at least when our system of government is operating as it is supposed do, as is set out in the Constitution)?

Well, that would be US! Shame on us if we sit back and watch, and don't take effective action to countermand illegal and unconstitutional governmental actions, as prescribed by our current president. 

Let's all make sure we exercise our authority next year, to insist upon a Congress that actually does what WE want! A Congress that will insist that the Executive only does what is authorized by law, and that is consistent with Constitutional limitations on executive power. 

Think we might manage that? No one to blame but ourselves, if we don't.

https://www.sfchronicle.com/opinion/openforum/article/supreme-court-trump-shadow-docket-21194831.php

Monday, November 24, 2025

#328 / The Serviceberry: Where To "Store Our Meat"

  

The picture above is of Robin Wall Kimmerera Potawatomi botanist, an author, and the director of the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment at the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry. 

I first heard about Kimmerer by reading a "By The Book" column in The New York TimesClick right here to get access to that column, and to find out what Kimmerer considers to have been "the best book she ever received as a gift." Clicking right here will take you to a story in The Times that will tell you more about Kimmerer, and about one of the books she has authored, Braiding Sweetgrass. Please note, you may have to surmount a paywall to read either of these articles in The Times

Regular readers of my blog postings may or may not remember that I have already written about the "best book" that I, personally, ever received as a gift. Click here for that. No paywall should defeat that inquiry!

My blog posting today was stimulated by something Kimmerer wrote in her most recent book, The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World. This book was first published in Emergence Magazine, so you don't actually have to buy the book to find out what Kimmerer wants to say about  that topic. Instead, you can just click right here

In the article I just linked, "The Serviceberry," Kimmerer says this: 

The words “ecology” and “economy” come from the same root, the Greek oikos, meaning “home” or “household”: i.e., the systems of relationship, the goods and services that keep us alive. The system of market economies that we’re given as a default is hardly the only model out there. Anthropologists have observed and shared multiple cultural frameworks colored by very different worldviews on “how we provide for ourselves,” including gift economies. 
As the berries plunk into my bucket, I’m thinking about what I’ll do with them all. I’ll drop some off for friends and neighbors, and I’ll certainly fill the freezer for Juneberry muffins in February. This “problem” of managing decisions about abundance reminds me of a report that linguist Daniel Everett wrote as he was learning from a hunter-gatherer community in the Brazilian rainforest. A hunter had brought home a sizable kill, far too much to be eaten by his family. The researcher asked how he would store the excess. Smoking and drying technologies were well known; storing was possible. The hunter was puzzled by the question—store the meat? Why would he do that? Instead, he sent out an invitation to a feast, and soon the neighboring families were gathered around his fire, until every last morsel was consumed. This seemed like maladaptive behavior to the anthropologist, who asked again: given the uncertainty of meat in the forest, why didn’t he store the meat for himself, which is what the economic system of his home culture would predict. 
“Store my meat? I store my meat in the belly of my brother,” replied the hunter.

Are we "in this together," as I frequently claim? If we are, then I'm thinking that some revisions to our current economic systems are called for. In fact, they're long overdue! 

 
Image Credit:

Sunday, November 23, 2025

#327 / Go On Your Way, Accordingly

 

It was St. Augustine of Hippo, pictured above, who inspired (I believe) one of my favorite Bob Dylan songs. The whole text of the song is below, and you can listen to Dylan sing it if you click the link to the title. 

I love that last and very powerful verse, but I think my favorite lines may be these: "Go on your way accordingly, but know you're not alone."

Knowing (and truly believing) that we are "not alone" is an inestimable gift. In times of tribulation and trouble (and here we are), we do need to persevere. That's on us, but I do believe that Dylan is right. We are not alone! This is, of course, a "statement of faith," appropriate for a Sunday, and may my personal statement of faith, right here, be as a blessing to all who hear of it!

And listen to Dylan's song, if you don't already know it!

I dreamed I saw St. Augustine
Alive as you or me
Tearing through these quarters
In the utmost misery
With a blanket underneath his arm
And a coat of solid gold
Searching for the very souls
Whom already have been sold

“Arise, arise,” he cried so loud
In a voice without restraint
“Come out, ye gifted kings and queens
And hear my sad complaint
No martyr is among ye now
Whom you can call your own
So go on your way accordingly
But know you’re not alone”

I dreamed I saw St. Augustine
Alive with fiery breath
And I dreamed I was amongst the ones
That put him out to death
Oh, I awoke in anger
So alone and terrified
I put my fingers against the glass
And bowed my head and pride

Copyright © 1968 by Dwarf Music; renewed 1996 by Dwarf Music

Saturday, November 22, 2025

#326 / Tucker Carlson Tells The Truth?

 

 
Does Tucker Carlson "tell the truth"? Well, not always, I'd say - and I am no fan of Tucker Carlson. However, let me quote something Carlson apparently did say, recently. Presuming that we can trust an article published in the November 17, 2025, edition of The New York Times, here is a statement by Carlson that I would count as "true": 

Instead of U.S. policymakers attending to domestic challenges like skyrocketing housing costs and a crumbling health care system, [Carlson] said, “We’ve spent the last 80 years administering a global empire. It’s commanded a massive percentage of our attention and money. That’s the core problem, which no one wants to say.”

If we were to start cataloging things that we ought to be working on, as citizens of the United States of America (and I, personally, am starting to make a list of those things - my personal suggestions, to be addressed when our current president is no longer in a position to command our attention and to distract us from the real challenges facing the nation, and facing the entire world, too), coming up with a way to deal with the issues raised by Carlson's statement, just quoted, would be up near the top of the list.

Postscript: 
The fact that I can feature and commend a statement by someone with whom I  usually disagree is perhaps a reminder that another thing we should all be working on is to find common ground, not differences, as we all face, together, some truly daunting challenges.