Thursday, February 13, 2025

"Be Cruel"

This is the sort of people President Trump is dealing with in the Russian government. From an article in the Wall Street Journal (paywall):
In the weeks after Russia invaded Ukraine, the head of St. Petersburg’s prisons delivered a direct message to an elite unit of guards tasked with overseeing the influx of prisoners from the war: “Be cruel, don’t pity them.” Maj. Gen. Igor Potapenko had gathered his service’s special forces at the regional headquarters to tell them about a new system that had been designed for captured Ukrainians....

Normal rules wouldn’t apply, he told them. There would be no restrictions against violence. The body cameras that were mandatory elsewhere in Russia’s prison system would be gone.

Those meetings set in motion nearly three years of relentless and brutal torture of Ukrainian prisoners of war. Guards applied electric shocks to prisoners’ genitals until batteries ran out. They beat the prisoners to inflict maximum damage, experimenting to see what type of material would be most painful. They withheld medical treatment to allow gangrene to set in, forcing amputations.

Three former prison officials told The Wall Street Journal how Russia planned and executed what United Nations investigators have described as widespread and systematic torture. Their accounts were supported by official documents, interviews with Ukrainian prisoners and a person who has helped the Russian prison officials defect.
Needless to say, this is not only an unambiguous violation of the Geneva Conventions it is pure evil. Not only has Russia under Vladimir Putin targeted Ukrainian civilians, including children, with their missiles, not only have they removed thousands of Ukrainian children from territory they've captured and sent them deep into Russia to be raised as Russians, but they've committed untold atrocities against combatants.
Russia has a long history of cruelty in its prison system, reaching back to the earliest decades of the Soviet Union, when Joseph Stalin created labor camps for those deemed dangerous to Soviet rule. In recent decades, Russia has taken some steps to improve conditions, such as separating first-time offenders from the rest of the prison population, and some regions have introduced body cameras for guards after years of campaigning by human-rights groups....

While dealing with Ukrainian prisoners of war, they were tasked with working with local prison guards to direct the POWs’ activities. They interpreted Potapenko’s instructions at that March 2022 meeting as a carte blanche for violence, said the two former guards. They pushed their mistreatment of Ukrainians to a new level with the belief that they had the permission of their leadership, said one of the former guards.

While on duty, the guards wore balaclavas at all times. Prisoners were beaten if they looked a guard in the eye. Those measures, along with the month-long rotations, were taken to make sure individual guards and their superiors couldn’t be recognized later, said one of the former officers....

Pavel Afisov, who was taken prisoner in the city of Mariupol in the initial months of the war, was among the first Ukrainian prisoners detained in Russia....

He said beatings were the worst when he was transferred into new prisons. After arriving at a penitentiary in Russia’s Tver region, north of Moscow, he was led by guards into a medical examination room and ordered to strip naked. They shocked him repeatedly with a stun gun while shaving his head and beard.

When it was over, he was told to yell “glory to Russia, glory to the special forces” and then ordered to walk to the front of the room—still naked—to sing the Russian and Soviet national anthems. When he said he didn’t know the words, the guards beat him again with their fists and batons.

The violence served a purpose for the Russian authorities, according to the former guards and human-rights advocates: making them more malleable for interrogations and breaking their will to fight. Prison interrogations were sometimes aimed at extracting confessions of war crimes or gaining operational intelligence from prisoners who had little will to resist after they suffered extreme brutality....

The former guards described a staggering level of violence directed at Ukrainian prisoners. Electric shockers were used so often, especially in showers, that officers complained about them running out of battery life too fast.

One former penitentiary system employee, who worked with a team of medics in Voronezh region in southwestern Russia, said prison guards beat Ukrainians until their police batons broke. He said a boiler room was littered with broken batons and the officers tested other materials, including insulated hot-water pipes, for their ability to cause pain and damage.

The guards, he said, intentionally beat prisoners on the same spot day after day, preventing bruises from healing and causing infection inside the accumulated hematoma. The treatment led to blood poisoning and muscle tissue would rot. At least one person died from sepsis, the officer said.

Many of the guards enjoyed the brutality and often bragged about how much pain they had caused prisoners, he said.

Ukrainian former POW Andriy Yegorov, 25, recalled how guards at a prison in Russia’s western Bryansk region would force prisoners to run 100 yards through the hallway, holding mattresses above their heads. The guards stood to the side and beat them in the ribs as they ran by.

When they got to the end of the hall, they would be forced to do sit-ups and push-ups. Each time they came up, the guards would punch them or hit them with a baton.

“They loved it, you could hear them laughing between themselves while we cried out in pain,” he said....
The sadism of people who would do this to other human beings is truly Satanic. It reminds me of the words of Richard Wurmbrand, a Lutheran pastor, who spent years ina communist prison in Romania in the late 40s and early 50s. Wurmbrand wrote in his book Tortured for Christ that,
When a man has no faith in the reward of good or the punishment of evil, there is no reason to be human. There is no restraint from the depths of evil that is in man. The Communist torturers often said, “There is no God, no hereafter, no punishment for evil. We can do what we wish. I heard one torturer say, “I thank God, in whom I don’t believe, that I have lived to this hour when I can express all the evil in my heart.” He expressed it in unbelievable brutality and torture inflicted on prisoners.
The Wall Street Journal's account continues:
Two of the longest-held prisoners of war, both Afisov and Yegorov spent around 30 months in the Russian prison system before they were finally released in a swap that brought them home on Oct. 18. Yegorov found out during his medical checkup following the exchange that he had five broken vertebrae....

After returning home, Afisov resisted sleep for days, fearing it could turn out to be a dream and he would wake up back in prison. “Then whenever I finally trusted myself enough to fall asleep all I had was nightmares,” he said.

The former prison officials were preparing to start new lives when they spoke with the Journal. They are now living in undisclosed locations and have had to cut off contact with people they had known all their lives. One of them said he had always been a Russian patriot and never wanted to live anywhere else but Russia. But after the war began, he said, he couldn’t stay in the country or remain silent. He said giving testimony to the ICC was one way to work toward justice.
One wonders how much of this the Russian people are aware of. Do they know what their leaders do? Would they care if they did know? Did seventy years of atheistic communism dull their consciences to the point of turning them into moral zombies? These are the same questions people asked seventy-five years ago of the German people when the atrocities of the Nazis came to light.

After the 20th century, the horrors of 9/11 and October 7th in this century, and the atrocities committed by the Russians in their war against Ukraine, it's hard to believe those who tell us that humanity is making moral progress.

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Democracy Dies in Darkness

The Washington Post's slogan "Democracy Dies in Darkness" has been amplified throughout the culture by self-congratulatory liberals ever since the WaPo adopted it in 2017, but today liberals are in a quandary. It's the progressive left and their Democratic allies who are seeking to turn out the lights and conceal in darkness the mischief and corruption their friends in executive agencies have been fomenting over the past several decades.

As the Trump administration, through its Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), seeks to shine a spotlight into the dark recesses of the Washington bureaucracy we're being treated to the spectacle of diehard resistance from the left.

This turnabout of "principle" by the left is something we should all be used to by now. There was a time when Democrats stood for the little guy and against the corporate fat cats. Today they're bankrolled by the fat cats and as numerous commentators have observed, they no longer give a rip about the little guy.

Gerard Baker points out in a column at the Wall Street Journal (paywall) that the Democrats have chosen to bankroll illegal migrants over American citizens, to give criminals a pass while ignoring victims, to pretend that men who think they're women should be allowed to compete in sports against girls, and to bow to the demands of powerful teachers' unions over the interests of children and the parents who pay the teachers' salaries.

Is it surprising then that Democrats would endeavor to hide from scrutiny the unconscionable waste of taxpayer dollars by government bureaucrats who deviously funnel the little guy's resources into their pet projects such as earmarking $15 Million for "Contraceptives and Condoms" in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan?

They argue that what Trump's doing - saving the taxpayers money by eliminating waste, fraud, and unnecessary jobs - is unconstitutional, but this argument is hard to credit. Article II of the Constitution clearly states that the executive power shall be vested in the President of the United States. These agencies are all executive branch agencies, so aside from completely eliminating a department established by Congress, the president is pretty much free to do as he pleases in managing them.

The left also objects to the work undertaken by DOGE on the flimsy basis that Elon Musk is un-elected, but so are the bureaucrats who are channeling these multimillion-dollar grants to the most dubious recipients. Which is better, un-elected bureaucrats secretly wasting our resources, often in support of causes that are antithetical to the interests of the United States, or an un-elected watchdog exposing their corruption?

They complain that Musk's army of investigators are mere 18 to 25-year-olds who have no experience and no business rooting about in the records of agencies like USAID. This is a very odd objection for the left to make since it was Democrats who led the fight to get 18-year-olds the right to vote, arguing that if they were old enough to fight in a war they were old enough to vote. Well, if they're old enough to fight in a war then why aren't they old enough to ferret out the waste and abuse in our governmental agencies?

In a parenthetical comment Baker says,
A word about those teenagers: Funny how the left is so outraged about kids barely out of college marching into buildings along Constitution Avenue to investigate the misuse of government budgets. They cheered as hordes of little Maoists straight out of Ivy League schools took over tech companies, media organizations and the entire marketing departments of corporate America in the past decade to subject the rest of us to the iron rule of woke ideology.
He closes with this:
Whether or not it succeeds in dramatically reducing the size of government, the paramount virtue of this exercise is the exposure of the hegemony in our system of a political class that sees itself as immune from popular accountability. Government is supposed to exist for the people, but the DOGE process has laid bare what we have long suspected—that at scale, it exists first and foremost to further the interests of the permanent bureaucracy and their like-minded friends who dominate almost all our major institutions.

That’s why Democrats are so upset about the exercise: It is the most serious challenge to the control their people have long exercised, irrespective of election results and the popular will.
Yes, that and the fact that the revelations DOGE is bringing to our attention are likely to deeply embarrass a lot of powerful people.

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

Abandoning Religion, Embracing Superstition

There's an odd phenomenon apparently unfolding among millenials. As belief in God declines, belief in the efficacy of astrology is growing.

In other words, there's evidently a longing among young adults for transcendence, for something more than what materialism can offer them, but unwilling to return to the religious beliefs of their forefathers, they've been casting about among the occult for something else to serve as a substitute.

Denyse O'Leary wrote about this phenomenon some time ago at Mercatornet.

She noted that polls reveal belief in astrology at about 25% of the population in North America and Britain and that superstitious beliefs in general, e.g. belief in ghosts and witches, are increasing especially among liberal-minded young adults. Indeed, top liberal websites like Buzzfeed, Bustle and Cosmo feature much more superstitious content than do conservative sites.

Moreover, an education in science is no proof against an inclination toward superstition:
[I]nterestingly, “sciencey” types who lack scepticism about Darwin are often superstitious, despite the longstanding dismissal of occult beliefs from science.

The 2003 study, done at a British science fair, found that twenty-five percent of the people who claimed a background in science also reported that they were very or somewhat superstitious.
She closes with these observations:
Superstition feeds on itself. Like a drug habit, it at once satisfies and creates an appetite for more -- in this case, an appetite for occult knowledge, as opposed to transparent knowledge. That appetite can affect a person's perception of everyday reality.

It’s not science that holds superstition in check in Western society. It’s traditional Western religion, which insists on transparent truths (truths that all may know) and forbids attempts at occult, secret truths.
It's puzzling that people who scoff at the possibility of miracles and the existence of a supernatural God are nevertheless open to the possibility of an occult world of ghosts and demons, etc. Why is the latter any more plausible than the former?

The early twentieth century British writer G.K. Chesterton once said that, "When people cease to believe in God they don't believe in nothing, they believe in anything." Perhaps we're seeing evidence of the truth of Chesterton's claim in the twenty first century.

Monday, February 10, 2025

The Last Universal Common Ancestor

An article by Dirk Schulze-Makuch at Big Think tells us that researchers now believe that life originated very quickly after the earth cooled enough to allow the necessary molecules of life to form and to coagulate into cells. The age of the earth is estimated to be approximately 4.5 billion years, the moon is believed to have formed about 100 million years after the earth did, and new calculations put the origin of life at about 4.1 to 4.33 billion years ago.

This means that the first living cell, the Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA) of all living things, arose very quickly - in a space of about 200 million years. The article goes on to explain why a brief window for the origin of life is significant and the strange theory being resurrected to explain it:
While the exact dating of LUCA might seem unimportant to many readers — what’s a few hundred million years in the grand scheme of things? — the timing has far-reaching implications. If Moody and colleagues are correct, it means life arose extremely rapidly, almost as soon as our planet became habitable.

According to our present knowledge, Earth formed about 4.56 billion years ago, and the Moon formed (violently) about 100 million years later. That leaves a very short interval, maybe just 200 million years or so, before the first living cells appeared. Moody’s team also found that this early life was already quite complex, encoding about 2,600 proteins, comparable to modern bacteria. It even had a primitive immune system that defended it from viruses.

Can the appearance of life really be that rapid, something like the inflationary phase of the Universe right after the Big Bang? That’s certainly faster than most of us previously thought. And if it happened that fast, shouldn’t it be relatively easy to decipher the steps life took to develop?

Yet we still have no real handle on how all the functional components came together. We don’t even know for sure in which type of environment life originated. Maybe it was near “black smoker” hydrothermal vents, but it could also have been in ponds, tidal flats, or other locations. We just don’t know.
There are two important admissions in the above excerpt. Not only does recent research indicate that life arose amazingly fast, scientists don't have any idea how it could have done so. The level of complexity of the first cell, the LUCA, is so high that to think it came about through random chance and the laws of chemistry alone requires an enormous faith in the power of serendipity.

Philosopher of science Stephen Meyer writes about the difficulties involved in any naturalistic theory of the formation of the first life in two excellent books, The Return of the God Hypothesis and his earlier, perhaps more technical work, Signature in the Cell.

To put it in layman's terms, the chances of those 2600 proteins forming along with the instructional material encoded in nucleic acids, along with a membrane to encase them all, along with the ability to replicate itself is somewhat like imagining that all the minerals necessary to build a computer were scattered across the surface of the earth and that the action of natural forces like sun, wind, lightning, etc. acting over a span of 200 million years, somehow produced a fully functional computer along with the operating software necessary for it to work properly and also with the capacity to replicate itself.

The inconceivable improbability of such a feat places a severe strain on the credulity of many scientists so some of them, in order to avoid the conclusion that a transcendent intelligence designed the LUCA, are resorting to a theory called panspermia:
The breathtaking speed with which life appeared on Earth opens the door to another intriguing possibility known as “panspermia” — the idea that life originated on some other planet and arrived here inside meteorites. It’s an old idea, usually dismissed because it appears statistically very unlikely.

I agree with that evaluation if the incoming meteorite came from outside our Solar System: Traveling through interstellar space for eons would likely sterilize any life forms due to harsh radiation. What’s more, any object arriving from so far away would be much more likely to fall into the Sun or Jupiter due to their much stronger gravitational pull.

But it’s a different story if a life-seeding meteorite came from Mars. It’s entirely plausible that life arose on the Red Planet independently. Our two worlds formed at about the same time, but Mars cooled much faster than Earth, and the geological record suggests that, shortly after its formation, the planet was habitable with plenty of water.

Without a large moon to violently interrupt its early years, the life-starting window on Mars was actually longer than it was on Earth. And because Mars has lower gravity, rocks blown off its surface by asteroid impacts escape the planet more easily, to be hurled into the inner Solar System — toward Earth. The hundreds of Martian meteorites already discovered on Earth are proof of that.
Even naturalistic scientists keep drifting back to the idea that life on earth required an intelligent agent to at least get it started. Here's Schulze-Makuch:
As long as we’re speculating, we might also consider another theory known as “directed panspermia.” More than 50 years ago, Nobel laureate Francis Crick (co-discoverer of DNA) and Leslie Orgel suggested that a highly advanced extraterrestrial civilization could have seeded Earth on purpose, exposing our planet to the first primitive cellular life, which, after gaining a foothold, would evolve to become more complex and even intelligent.
He acknowledges that the panspermia hypothesis has some serious problems, however:
As intriguing as the panspermia hypothesis may be, indications still point to life getting its start right here on Earth, considering, for example, the similarity of Earth’s primitive oceans to the interior of microbial cells in terms of elemental abundances (cells are essentially bags filled with salt water!). In any case, if life did indeed begin somewhere else and arrive rather than arise on Earth, we still don’t know how it happened.
Here's a question I have about all this: Suppose panspermia is ultimately found to be scientifically untenable. Where does that leave a scientist whose entire worldview is predicated on a naturalistic explanation of the origin of life?

Saturday, February 8, 2025

Confusing Moderates and Conservatives

New York Times columnist David Brooks once undertook to describe the distinctive characteristics of political moderates but managed instead to give a pretty good description, inadvertently, of political conservatives.

He listed eight ideas which, he writes, moderates tend to embrace. In fact, for the most part he's describing political conservatives. Of the eight traits Brooks discusses three are ideologically neutral but five are actually characteristics which define conservatives. Wherever he uses the term "moderate" the reader can more accurately, I think, substitute "conservative." Here are the five in boldface with my comments:

1. Politics is a limited activity. Zealots look to the political realm for salvation and self-fulfillment. They turn politics into a secular religion and ultimately an apocalyptic war of religion because they try to impose one correct answer on all of life. Moderates believe that, at most, government can create a platform upon which the beautiful things in life can flourish. But it cannot itself provide those beautiful things.

Government can create economic and physical security and a just order, but meaning, joy and the good life flow from loving relationships, thick communities and wise friends. The moderate is prudent and temperate about political life because he is so passionate about emotional, spiritual and intellectual life.

This is precisely why conservatives argue incessantly for limited, decentralized government and for more autonomy for communities and families, what Edmund Burke called the "little platoons" of society.

2. In politics, the lows are lower than the highs are high. The harm government does when it screws up — wars, depressions — is larger than the benefits government produces when it does well. Therefore the moderate operates from a politics of skepticism, not a politics of faith. He understands that most of the choices are among bad options so he prefers steady incremental reform to sudden revolutionary change.

Conservatives are not opposed to change, but they are opposed to change simply for the sake of change. All change should be tempered by experience and traditions which have proven themselves reliable guides over long periods of time. Conservatives are very suspicious of revolutions, whether political, cultural or social. Sudden, rapid change rarely makes things better and very often makes them worse.

3. Truth before justice. All political movements must face inconvenient facts — thoughts and data that seem to aid their foes. If you try to suppress those facts, by banning a speaker or firing an employee, then you are putting the goals of your cause, no matter how noble, above the search for truth. This is the path to fanaticism,....

For just these reasons conservatives are the strongest advocates of free speech and the free flow of ideas in our culture. Those who prohibit or restrict this freedom, or who suppress facts such as the Hunter Biden laptop, etc. are taking us down the road to Big Brother totalitarianism.

4. Partisanship is necessary but blinding.....Moderates are problematic members of their party. They tend to be hard on their peers and sympathetic to their foes.

This helps explain why conservatives have been such a thorn in the side of their congressional leaders for the last decade or so, and why some conservatives were until recently among President Trump's strongest critics. The Democratic party has until this last election been disciplined and unified largely because it has no conservatives in it.

5. Humility is the fundamental virtue.....The more the moderate grapples with reality the more she understands how much is beyond our understanding.

Precisely because of the humility Brooks describes, conservatives tend to be skeptical when authorities in various fields speak apodictically about phenomena like climate change, covid immunity, biogenesis, morality, religion, and what's best for our children. Conservatives often suspect that neither we nor they know enough to warrant their certainty.

Brooks finishes with this:
Moderation requires courage. Moderates don’t operate from the safety of their ideologically pure galleons. They are unafraid to face the cross currents, detached from clan, acknowledging how little they know.
In fact, the people who must have courage today are those who stand against the Zeitgeist, who are legally hounded for their political and religious beliefs, who are shouted down in the university, who are threatened with violence and who lose their jobs, businesses, friends, and even family because of their beliefs.

Few of these folks today are moderates, they're almost all conservatives.

Friday, February 7, 2025

What Is a Christian Nationalist?

One of the allegations sometimes leveled against politically conservative Christians by their opponents is that they are "Christian nationalists."

So, is that a bad thing? It depends on what one means by it.

An article a couple of years ago at MSN.com reported on a piece in the Washington Post that addressed Christian nationalism and in which the Post tried to clarify what's meant by the term. Christian nationalism, according to the Post, is "an ideology that says Christianity is the foundation of the United States and that government should protect that foundation."

If that's what we're to understand by "Christian nationalism" it seems rather innocuous.

A lot of people believe that the foundational principles of the United States, the freedoms included in the first amendment, for example, are rooted in a Judeo-Christian worldview, and that the founders, whether or not they were Christians themselves, were heavily influenced by the Christian culture in which they lived.

Indeed, the concept of liberty and justice for all is, historically speaking, a uniquely Christian idea, and the claim that Christianity influenced the founding of this nation is clear to anyone who has read their Tocqueville.

Most people believe, moreover, that government should protect that foundation by protecting the principle of religious liberty.

So, if that's all Christian nationalists, believe then almost anyone who is a Christian in the U.S. would be ab defino a Christian nationalist.

But further along in their column the Post adds a twist that subtly alters the definition:
As part of our research, we examined the percentage of Americans who, over the past 15 years, said they agree or strongly agree with this Christian nationalist statement: “The federal government should declare the United States a Christian nation.”
So now they appear to implicitly define a Christian nationalist as one who wants the federal government to officially declare the U.S. to be a Christian nation.

Here we should balk.

It's one thing for a citizen to acknowledge that the U.S. was founded on Christian principles and to expect the government to protect the principles upon which the nation was founded, the principles contained in all of our founding documents. It's quite another for a citizen to hold that the federal government should declare the U.S. to be officially Christian.

It's hard to picture specifically what such a declaration would even mean in practice. Would it entail making Christianity a state religion, a circumstance which our founders, for good reason, explicitly sought to avoid?

As the founders knew from Europe's experience, state religions can be oppressive, and receiving state favoritism often corrupts the religion.

However much Christianity influenced our founding it seems unwise at this stage in our history, a stage in which there's far more religious diversity present in our population than was present 250 years ago, to formally declare the U.S. to be officially a Christian nation.

Nevertheless, if ever a conservative Christian is called a Christian nationalist the Christian would do well to ask his or her interlocutor what they understand a Christian nationalist to be. Quite probably the accuser won't be able to answer.

Thursday, February 6, 2025

If Democrats Wish to Save Their Party

Peggy Noonan, writing at the Wall Street Journal (Paywall), has a succinct message for those Democrats who wish to return from the political wilderness in 2026 and 2028:
A word to Democrats trying to figure out how to save their party. The most eloquent of them, of course, think the answer is finding the right words. We need to talk more like working people, we need Trump’s touch with popular phrasing.

The answer isn’t to talk but do. Be supple. The Trumpian policies you honestly support—endorse them, join in the credit. If you think violent illegal immigrants should be removed, then back current efforts while standing—firmly, publicly—on the side of peaceful, hardworking families doing no harm and in fact contributing. Admit what your party’s gotten wrong the past 15 years. Don’t be defensive, be humble.

Most of all, make something work. You run nearly every great city in the nation. Make one work—clean it up, control crime, smash corruption, educate the kids.

You want everyone in the country to know who you are? Save a city.
She's right. Every major city in the U.S is run by Democrats - Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, Baltimore, New York - and most of those cities are a disgrace. Mayors like Brandon Johnson in Chicago and Karen Bass in Los Angeles have demonstrated a stunning ineptitude in managing their cities. Taxes are high, the streets are filthy, corruption is ubiquitous, residents are afraid to leave their homes at night, and the teachers' unions block every common sense attempt to improve their schools. If given the opportunity many of those who live in these cities would move out.

Noonan's also correct that if Democrats want people to vote for them they should demonstrate that they have the ability to govern our cities. They should forget about DEI, pronouns, and "resistance" to Trump and fix the problems that people actually care about.

Fixing urban problems, however, takes talent, intelligence, and a free market economic philosophy unburdened by stultifying bureacracy, an exaggerated concern for environmental and LGBTQ sensibilities, and counterproductive commitments to racial and gender quotas. It requires that people at every level of city management hold offices on the basis of both competence and integrity with no regard to their race, gender, or sexual orientation.

Given those requirements, and given the ideological stranglehold the progressive left has on the Democrat party, it's very doubtful that the Democrats will anytime soon demonstrate that they have the ability to fix our cities.

Wednesday, February 5, 2025

The USAID Brouhaha

There's much weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth among Mr. Trump's political opponents over his decision to transfer USAID (United States Agency for International Development) to the State Department and to shut down many of its programs.

There also seems to be some confusion among casual observers as to what USAID is. It's not an agency that dispenses aid to the world's hungry poor. Rather it's an agency that sends taxpayer dollars to various left-wing causes around the globe.

The Free Beacon's Adam Kredo explains why the Trump administration is attempting to rein it in:
As the Trump administration works to shrink the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and place it under the State Department's umbrella, congressional Democrats have argued that the move "endangers lives and undermines U.S. national security."

But away from funding for lifesaving medicines like HIV drugs, funding that is exempt from the State Department's broader foreign aid freeze, USAID has spent millions in taxpayer cash on left-wing priorities like climate activism—and bankrolled groups linked to Palestinian terrorism.

The agency's career staffers have battled the administration's 90-day freeze on foreign funding, seeking exemptions that would funnel tens of millions of dollars to agency bureaus that cover issues like "environmental justice" and "LGBTQI+ Inclusive Development," the Washington Free Beacon reported.

The Trump administration responded by putting scores of those staffers on administrative leave....[Secretary of State Marco Rubio] said that the State Department will not gut foreign aid altogether, but rather cut "programs that run counter to what we're trying to do in our national strategy."
Kredo give us some examples of the sort of USAID programs Rubio intends to cut:
  • $1 Million To make disabled Tajikistanis 'Climate Leaders'
  • $1 Million for foreign DEI programs, including 'Indigenous Language Technology' in Guatemala
  • Nearly $100K to a Palestinian activist group whose leaders hailed the murder of an American
  • $1 Million to a Hamas-linked charity
  • $15 Million for 'Contraceptives and Condoms' in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan
Kredo elaborates on each of these at the link. Other examples of similar abuse of taxpayer money can be found here and here. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt reads off a few more for the benefit of the press:
It should be mentioned, too, that the money sent to fund these recipient groups does not come directly from tax revenues. Rather the government adds to our multi-trillion dollar debt by borrowing the money it sends to the Taliban so that they can buy condoms.

Some USAID programs are worthwhile and Rubio assures us that these will be continued under the aegis of the Stae Department. Jim Geraghty lists a number of good causes in his Morning Jolt column, but there has to be responsible oversight to separate the good from the ridiculous.

That oversight has been missing at USAID so there's been no serious attempt to ensure that the money goes to worthwhile causes or even to the people and groups it's earmarked for. For instance, money that's sent to a charity in Gaza to help people suffering from the ravages of war may well be going to equip Hamas fighters, but apparently no one at USAID knows where it winds up.

It's gratifying that we now have an administration in place that intends to be better stewards of our resources than the previous administration had been.

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

Nietzsche Vs. Aristotle

Most ethical systems in our contemporary world can probably be subsumed under the names of either the Greek philosopher Aristotle (d.322 B.C.) or the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche (d. 1900). Aristotle thought that human beings had a telos, that there was something that man was for, a purpose or an end, for which he was on the earth.

Virtuous acts for Aristotle were those which helped men achieve their telos. The good life was a life which conformed to the cardinal virtues - prudence, temperance, fortitude, justice - which Aristotle argued were objectively right to live by.

Nietzsche, on the other hand, denied that there was any overarching purpose to being human and therefore there was no objective moral right or wrong. Morality was all a matter of perspective. It's a matter of how we see things, a matter of individual subjective preference.

Thus the ubermensch or overman creates his own values. He rejects the "slave moralities" of theism and embraces the "master morality" of the Promethean man. This is what makes men great, and great men define their own good.

Neither Aristotle nor Nietzsche believed in the existence of a personal moral law-giver, which fact makes for an odd state of affairs.

Aristotle's telos makes no sense unless the purpose or end of mankind is somehow conferred upon man by a transcendent moral authority. Otherwise, how does man come to be endowed with a purpose? Where does such a purpose come from? If there's no personal law-giver or telos-giver then neither humanity nor individual men have any purpose, and the "virtues" that Aristotle touts are just arbitrary conventions.

Nietzsche, on the other hand, is correct that in the absence of a transcendent, personal law-giver what constitutes a virtue is just a subjective bias. On Nietzsche's subjectivism the virtues extolled by the Nazis are no more wrong nor right than those embraced by St. Francis of Assisi. They're just different.

If theism is true, however, if there actually is a God who creates man and endows him with a telos, then the moral law and the classical virtues really are objective and obligatory.

So, the way the theist sees it, Aristotle, by denying a transcendent, personal God, was inconsistent but nevertheless right about there being objective moral duties, and the atheist Nietzsche was consistent but wrong in his denial of objective moral right and wrong.

Only if theism is true, the theist believes, can one be both consistent and right about the existence of objective moral virtues and duties.

Saturday, February 1, 2025

Iron Beam

National Review's Jim Geraghty has an informative column on why we need President Trump's "Iron Dome" anti-missile defense system. He writes that,
On Monday, President Trump signed an executive order calling for the creation of an “Iron Dome for America.”

Mitch Kugler, who has worked on missile-defense policy and programs in the U.S. Senate and the defense industry since starting on the SDI program in 1988, wrote in our pages Tuesday that Trump’s order “calls for the application of the incredible advances in American technology since 1999 — among other things, increased and miniaturized computing power, reduced launch costs, and the application of sundry other commercial advances to national security needs — to finally make it a priority to put defenses in space; that’s where they will be most capable against longer-range threats.”

It is worth noting that Israel’s Iron Dome system is designed to shoot shorter-range incoming rockets, which are slower and traveling through the atmosphere, not intercontinental ballistic missiles.

Built by Raytheon Missiles & Defense teams with Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, Iron Dome is considered the most advanced and effective missile-defense system in the world. It is also one of the most expensive missile-defense systems in the world: “Each battery has radar, control equipment, and 3-4 missile launchers (each with 20 missiles) and costs $37 million to 50 million depending on how many missiles it is shipped with . . . if the computers predict a rocket coming down in an inhabited area one (or often two to be sure) $50,000 Tamir guided missiles are fired to intercept the rocket.”

According to Raytheon, “Ten Iron Dome batteries protect the citizens and infrastructure of Israel, with each battery comprising three to four stationary launchers, 20 Tamir missiles and a battlefield radar. Each of the batteries can defend up to nearly 60 square miles.”

You can do the math on that: Ten batteries protecting 60 square miles is 600 square miles.

Israel’s total landmass is more than 8,000 square miles, and each coast of the U.S. is hundreds of thousands of square miles. But when it comes to air defense, countries prioritize population centers and critical infrastructure, and the Iron Dome batteries are designed to only fire at rockets projected to hit a vulnerable area; it doesn’t go chasing after every rocket, if the likely landing area is unpopulated desert.
Depending on the kind of system that Mr. Trump envisions, it could be very expensive, although the cost of not building it could be catastrophic. An alternative to using only missiles is to employ a "layered" approach that includes lasers.

The laser component is called "Iron Beam" by the Israelis. Here’s how the Israeli manufacturer Rafael describes the system:
IRON BEAM is a 100kW class High Energy Laser Weapon System (HELWS) that is expected to become the first operational system in its class. It quickly and effectively engages and neutralizes a wide array of threats from a range of hundreds of meters to several kilometers. Engaging at the speed of light, IRON BEAM has an unlimited magazine, with almost zero cost per interception, and causes minimal collateral damage.

Complementing RAFAEL’s IRON DOME, it can be integrated with a range of platforms and can become part of any multilayer defense system.
Israel has said that Iron Beam should be integrated within the existing Iron Dome system “within a year.”

Unfortunately, the U.S. lags far behind in developing such systems. Even so, a laser system would be far less expensive than a system based on interceptor missiles. Maybe we could get the Israelis to sell it to us.

Anyway, Geraghty has more on the topic at the link. Toward the end he adds this: "Every dollar spent on missile defense seems like a waste, right up until the minute a missile is fired at you. Then you wish you had spent a whole lot more." Indeed.

Friday, January 31, 2025

Deportation Resistance

There's something odd about the resistance that some countries are trying to erect against American deportation of their citizens who've come here illegally. Repeatedly we've been told that these immigrants are hard workers who make a valuable contribution to American society and that America is better off for having them in it.

That's doubtless true for many of them, but then why is it that when Mr. Trump tries to fly them back to their country of origin the leaders of those countries refuse to accept them?

First Mexico refused to cooperate, then Columbia, and now Haiti. Leaders of the first two countries have since been persuaded by Mr. Trump that they should reconsider, which they quickly did and have subsequently declared that their initial refusals were something of an April Fools joke they played on their own public.

Haiti's interim president, Leslie Voltaire, is pleading with Pope Francis to help him because Mr. Trump's promise to send back most of the 1.5 million Haitians would be "catastrophic" for the country which is already reeling from anarchy and violence.

It's not clear that all of these 1.5 million Haitians are in the country illegally, but even so, why would Mr. Voltaire not want these his citizens, many of whom are doubtless among the most enterprising of his country's population, to return to Haiti where they can do some good for their fellow Haitians?

If the deportees are such an asset to the U.S. wouldn't they a forteriori be an asset to their home country? Why don't the leaders of these countries want their own hard-working citizens returned so that they can work to improve their native land? Perhaps there are at least two reasons:

1. They're lying to us about the quality of the migrants: Many, maybe most, migrants are in fact poor and unskilled and are thus a drain on services provided by governments that are already under financial stress. Sending them off to the U.S. is a kind of social safety valve that eases the pressure on the government to provide care for these people.

Furthermore, a not insignificant percentage of the migrants are criminals and otherwise undesirable ne'er-do-wells that their home countries are glad to be rid of. The leaders of those countries are more than happy to make their thugs our problem.

2. They're own economies benefit to some extent from "remittances" sent back from the U.S. by those migrants who find work here but who may not have opportunities in their home countries to be productive.

In either case, the benefit to the U.S. from Mr. Biden's "no border" policy is dwarfed by the costs to American citizens. Mr. Trump was elected largely because he promised to put a stop to the insanity of the last four years, and he seems so far to be following through on the promise.

Thursday, January 30, 2025

18 Trillion Feet

One of the marvels of our bodies' engineering is the compactification of DNA in each of the three trillion or so nucleated cells each of us possesses. DNA has been called the most efficient information storage device known to man and the following six minute video explains why.

As astonishing as the storage of our genetic code is the video hardly scratches the surface of the multiple layers of complexity involved. There are entire systems of proteins devoted to unraveling the double helix, reading off the code, repairing errors, replicating the code, integrating the epigenome, and more.

See here for some additional details.

One of the most amazing examples of this bio-complexity is the ability of DNA to "make sense" at several different levels of structure. To see what I mean, imagine you read a paragraph in a book in which each word is read sequentially. The paragraph will have a meaning.

Now suppose you only read every third word and found that the paragraph still made sense but had a completely different meaning. That's how DNA works. Depending on where along the strand the "reader" begins it codes for different proteins and traits. (See here for a fuller explanation)

This is so baffling that many investigators doubt that there can be any naturalistic explanation and believe it points instead to an intelligent programmer who somehow designed the system.

In any case, watch the video and ask yourself how blind purposeless processes could have produced the ability to achieve this degree of compaction purely by chance.

Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Teleportation and Personal Continuity

Imagine that you're a crew member of the Starship Enterprise and are voyaging to another galaxy. Imagine, too, that you're a philosophical materialist who believes that all that exists is matter and energy.

When you arrive at your destination you're teleported to the surface of a planet. This process involves the total disintegration of your body on the Enterprise and instant reassembly out of completely different atoms on the surface of the planet.

Star Trek Teleporter



Assume that the reassembled person (RP) has all the memories and knowledge that you did before being disintegrated. Is RP really you?

If materialism is true, it's hard to see how it could be since RP is made of completely different material stuff than you were.

If you say that the material stuff has the same form as it did before being disintegrated you're adopting a kind of Aristotelian/Thomist view of the soul, which materialists would find offensive.

If you say that you have a mind that survives the disintegration process then you're again renouncing materialism because you're positing the existence of an immaterial substance, i.e. a mind or soul, that's an essential part of your being.

So, what is it that makes RP the same person as you? Memories? If it's memories how many of your memories must you retain in order for RP to be you? Every day we lose many of our memories. Can you remember word-for-word a conversation you had yesterday or the day before? Probably not.

Nor can you remember much about yourself from ten years ago, so what percentage of your memories must you retain for RP to be you? If memories give us our personal identity then an amnesiac or an Alzheimer's sufferer would be a different person than before losing his or her memory.

Besides, it's not clear in any case that our memories are material or physical. Perhaps the brain stores electrons or chemicals on neurons which somehow get translated into a recollection, but those electrons aren't the memory itself any more than an inflamed nerve is identical to the sensation of pain.

When you remember your mother's face you have a picture or image of her face, but the image is not electrons or chemicals in neurons. It's arguably something immaterial.

Perhaps you might say that you and RP are the same person because the genetic code inscribed on your DNA would be the same in both of you, but identical DNA would only mean that RP was a clone of you. It doesn't mean that RP would actually be you. Moreover, identical twins have identical DNA but they're not the same person.

It seems that the materialist has to assume that you have ceased to exist and that RP is not you but a new person very similar to you. Either that or they need to acknowledge that materialism needs to be rejiggered somehow.

Maybe, though, there's another option. Maybe materialism is just false and there's actually something immaterial about us that makes us who we are. Perhaps we have a soul that bestows upon us our identity and which is unaffected by the teleporter.

One more question: Suppose an exact replica of you appears on the planet but you do not disintegrate on the Enterprise. Which one is you? Could you and RP be the same person having a single soul but possessing two distinct bodies? Could it be instead that your soul splits betwen the two bodies such that now there really are, at least momentarily, two of you?

I'll leave you to wrestle with that scenario on your own.

Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Why Does the Left Oppose Trump's Border Policy?

President Trump is making good on his promise to close the border and deport those who are here illegally, especially those who have a criminal record in their country of origin or have committed crimes since they've been here (other than illegally crossing our border).

The left strenuously objects to these measures. They tell us that it's uncompassionate to deny people the opportunity to live in this country. They tell us that under Biden and Mayorkis the border was secure and that immigrants are all good people just trying to make an honest living. They tell us that it's cruel to separate families by sending parents back while the children, who may be U.S. citizens, remain.

They insist that a wall won't work and that it's somehow inhumane. The pope himself weighed in on how awful it is for the U.S. to use a wall to exclude people, apparently forgetting that the Vatican is enclosed in one of the most massive walls in the world and that no one without a special clearance is allowed to stay there.

The Vatican Wall
None of the left's arguments against the Trump policy is very convincing.

They say that they think it morally repugnant to keep the needy out of the country, but I have little doubt that every person who makes this argument locks the doors to their homes and cars to keep people out who might otherwise benefit from having access to what's inside. If we have an obligation to let whomever wishes to come into the U.S. and enjoy the benefits of our welfare system, schools, hospitals, etc. why do we not have an obligation to keep the doors to our homes open for the same reason, albeit on a smaller scale?

If the immigration of eleven million people into the U.S. is viewed by the left with approbation why do they object so vociferously to the movement of a few hundred or a few thousand Israeli settlers into the West Bank? What's the significant difference? And if the left is concerned about families being separated why don't they encourage illegal aliens who are parents of U.S. citizens to take their children back to their countries of origin with them?

The reasons given for opposing President Trump's border initiatives are so flimsy that one may be forgiven for thinking that there's some other reason in play that they'd rather not acknowledge. I probably shouldn't speculate about what that reason might be, but it's quite possible that they see so many millions of immigrants as potential citizens and voters who'd likely be inclined to vote for the party they credit with allowing them to come in.

This may not be the reason that all on the left oppose closing the border and deporting illegals but do a thought experiment: Suppose it was demonstrably the case that once granted citizenship these immigrants would overwhelmingly vote Republican. Do you think the Democrats would still stand firm against a border wall and deportation?

Another reason some on the left, particularly the Marxists and their fellow-travelers, are eager to keep the flood of illegal immigration coming is because they embrace something called the Cloward-Piven Strategy. This is an argument put forward by two Columbia sociologists in the 1960s that the nation could be brought to its knees by overloading its institutions. Burden the schools, hospitals, law enforcement, etc. with so many people, especially poor people, and the whole capitalist system would collapse under the weight.

Cloward-Piven may well be behind a lot of the support on the left for open borders. In any case, it appears that President Trump is not a fan and neither is his border czar Tom Homan, and right now they're the ones whose opinion counts.

Monday, January 27, 2025

Scientism and Nice Nihilism

In Alex Rosenberg's The Atheist's Guide to Reality the author unabashedly promotes a scientistic view of knowledge. "Scientistic" does not mean "scientific," rather it describes a view based on "scientism" which is the view that science is the only guide to truth about the world and human existence. If a claim cannot be demonstrated empirically, using the tools of science, then it's not something that we can know, and in fact is not something we should even believe.

In Rosenberg's view physics "fixes all the facts" about what is and what can be reasonably believed. This is sometimes called "physicalism."

Not all scientists are scientistic or "physicalists," many of them hold that there are truths about the world that science is not equipped to discover, truths about justice, rights, beauty, and morality, for example, but Rosenberg thinks it's neither good science nor good epistemology to hold beliefs about these things.

Rosenberg is no dummy. He's the chairman of the philosophy department at Duke University and demonstrates in his book a considerable breadth of learning. He also strives to be rigorously consistent. Given his belief that physicalism is the correct way to understand reality it follows that there is no God, no miracles, no soul or mind, no self, no real meaning or purpose to life, no meaning to history, no human rights or value, no objective moral duties - only what he calls a "nice nihilism."

By "nice nihilism" Rosenberg means that nature has fortuitously evolved in us a tendency to treat each other well despite the fact that doing so is neither a moral duty nor morally "right." That, for the one who embraces Rosenberg's scientism, is the only glimmer of light in an unrelentingly dark world and even this little glimmer is beset with problems.

Here's one: If our niceness is the product of impersonal undirected processes then it cannot have any moral purchase on us. That is, it can be neither right nor wrong to be "nice." Some people are and some aren't, and that's the end of the matter.

Evolution has also evolved behaviors that are not "nice." If we're the product of evolution then there's really no way to morally discriminate between "niceness" and rape, torture, lying, racism, etc. All of these behaviors have evolved in our species just as niceness has and we have no basis for saying that we have a moral duty to avoid some behaviors and embrace others.

In other words, on scientism, there are no moral obligations and nothing which is wrong to do.

Rosenberg admits all this, but he thinks that we need to bravely and honestly face up to these consequences of adopting a scientistic worldview and a scientistic worldview, in his mind, is the only intelligent option in a world in which there is no God.

I think he's right about this, actually, and argue in both of my novels In the Absence of God and Bridging the Abyss (See the links at the top of the page) that the consequences outlined in The Atheist's Guide to Reality do indeed follow from atheism. The atheist who lives as if none of these consequences exist is living out an irrational delusion, most likely because he can't live consistently with the logical and existential entailments of what he believes about God.

A belief or a worldview that entails conclusions one cannot live with, however, stands in serious need of reexamination.

Saturday, January 25, 2025

The Not-So-Dark Ages

A lot of high school and even college students are taught that the historical period roughly from the fall of Rome to the 15th century was a time of intellectual stagnation with little or no scientific or technological progress.

The alleged ignorance that descended over Europe during this epoch has caused it to be called the "Dark Ages," a pejorative assigned to the Middle Ages by historians of the 18th century hostile to the Church and desirous of deprecating the period during which the Church wielded substantial political power.

Lately, however, historians have challenged the view that this epoch was an age of unenlightened ignorance. Rodney Stark has written in several of his books (particularly, his How the West Won) of the numerous discoveries and advancements made during the "dark ages" and concludes that they weren't "dark" at all.

The notion that they were, he argues, is an ahistorical myth. Indeed, it was during this supposed benighted era that Europe made the great technological and philosophical leaps that put it well in advance of the rest of the world.

For example, agricultural technology soared during this period. Advances in the design of the plow, harnessing of horses and oxen, horseshoes, crop rotation, water and wind mills, all made it possible for the average person to be well-fed for the first time in history.

Transportation also improved which enabled people and goods to move more freely to markets and elsewhere. Carts, for example, were built with swivel axles, ships were more capacious and more stable, and horses were bred to serve as draught animals.

Military technology also made advances. The stirrup, pommel saddle, longbow, crossbow, armor, and chain mail eventually made medieval Europeans almost invincible against non-European foes.

Similar stories could be told concerning science, philosophy, music, and art, and thus the view espoused by Stark that the medieval era was a time of cultural richness is gaining traction among contemporary historians who see the evidence for this interpretation of the time to be too compelling to be ignored.

This short video featuring Anthony Esolen provides a nice summary:

If someone in your presence refers to the "Dark Ages" you might ask them what it was about them that was so dark.

Friday, January 24, 2025

Our Amazing Universe

Recent studies have confirmed that the cosmos in which we live is in the grip of an accelerating force called dark energy which is causing the universe to expand at ever increasing speeds. This is bizarre because gravity should be causing the expansion, generated by the initial Big Bang, to slow down. Nevertheless, all indications are that it's accelerating. Science Daily has the story:
A five-year survey of 200,000 galaxies, stretching back seven billion years in cosmic time, has led to one of the best independent confirmations that dark energy is driving our universe apart at accelerating speeds.

The findings offer new support for the favored theory of how dark energy works -- as a constant force, uniformly affecting the universe and propelling its runaway expansion.

"The action of dark energy is as if you threw a ball up in the air, and it kept speeding upward into the sky faster and faster," said Chris Blake of the Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, Australia.

Dark energy is thought to dominate our universe, making up about 74 percent of it. Dark matter, a slightly less mysterious substance, accounts for 22 percent. So-called normal matter, anything with atoms, or the stuff that makes up living creatures, planets and stars, is only approximately four percent of the cosmos.
This last point is a fascinating detail. All that we can see with our telescopes makes up only 4% of what's out there. The rest is invisible to us because it doesn't interact with light the way normal matter does.

Here's another interesting detail. We don't know what the cosmic dark energy is, but we do know that its density is fine-tuned to one part in 10^120. That means that if the value of the density of this mysterious stuff deviated from its actual value by as little as one part in 10^120 a universe that could generate and sustain intelligent life would not exist. That level of precision is absolutely breathtaking.

Add to that the fact that the mass density, the total mass in the universe, is itself calibrated to one part in 10^60, and it is simply astonishing to realize that a universe in which life could exist actually came into being.

Imagine two dials, one has 10^120 calibrations etched into its dial face and the other has 10^60.

Now imagine that the needles of the two dials have to be set to just the mark they in fact are. If they were off by one degree out of the trillion trillion trillion, etc. degrees on the dial face the universe wouldn't exist. In fact, to make this analogy more like the actual case of the universe there would be dozens of such dials, all set to similarly precise values.

Here's another example courtesy of biologist Ann Gauger. Gauger quotes philosopher of physics Bruce Gordon who writes that,
[I]f we measure the width of the observable universe in inches and regard this as representing the scale of the strengths of the physical forces, gravity is fine-tuned to such an extent that the possibility of intelligent life can only tolerate an increase or decrease in its strength of one one-hundred-millionth of an inch with respect to the diameter of the observable universe.
To which Gauger responds,
That is literally awesome. That 1/10^8 inch movement is the same as 0.00000001 of an inch, or about the width of a water molecule, in either direction compared to the width of the observable universe. That is an incredible amount of very fine-tuned order — the relationship between the strong nuclear force and the gravitational force has to be that precise for stars and planets to form, and the elements that are necessary to support life.

Just one water molecule’s width compared to the width of the whole universe — if the ratio were just a little too little, stars’s lives would be cut short and there would be no time for life to develop; too much and everything would expand too fast, thus preventing star and planet formation.

No wonder fine-tuning is called one of the best evidences for intelligent design. People have proposed ways around the challenge, mainly to do with the multiverse hypothesis. But there are so many other instances of fine-tuning and design perfect for creatures like us that it begins to look like a genuine plan.
So how do scientists explain the fact that such a universe does, against all odds, exist? Gauger refers to the assumption held by some that there must be a near infinite number of different worlds, a multiverse. If the number of universes is sufficiently large (unimaginably large), and if they're all different, then as unlikely as our universe is, the laws of probability say that one like ours must inevitably exist among the innumerable varieties that are out there.

The other possibility, of course, is that our universe was purposefully engineered by a super intellect, but given the choice between believing in a near infinity of worlds for which there's virtually no evidence and believing that our universe is the product of intentional design, a belief for which there is much evidence, guess which option many moderns choose.

The lengths to which people go in order to avoid having to believe that there's something out there with attributes similar to those traditionally imputed to God really are quite remarkable.

Thursday, January 23, 2025

Belief Doesn't Always Require Evidence (Pt. II)

I closed yesterday's post with the assertion that just as it would be foolish to expect Ellie Arroway or Kirsten Powers to discount their experiences because they can't empirically prove that they had them, so, too, it's foolish of skeptics to think that the only warrant for belief in God is the ability to provide objective, physical evidence that the belief is true.

Yet the alleged lack of evidence for theism has long been one of the most popular reasons adduced for the refusal to accept it. As the 20th century philosopher Bertrand Russell famously said when asked what he would tell God were he to stand before Him after his death and be asked why he never believed, Russell declared that he would simply tell God that "there wasn't enough evidence."

The 19th century writer W.K. Clifford insisted that “It is wrong always, everywhere, and for anyone to believe anything upon insufficient evidence,” and the 20th century philosopher Antony Flew, before his conversion to theism, wrote that,
If it is to be established that there is a God then we have to have good grounds for believing that this is indeed so. Until or unless some such grounds are produced we have literally no reason at all for believing; and in that situation the only reasonable posture must be that of either atheism or agnosticism.
Theists contend that notwithstanding the skeptic's claim that there's not enough evidence to support a belief in God, the evidence is substantial and indeed, overwhelming.

It's not to the purpose of this post to recount that evidence here, but doubters are urged to read philosopher of science Stephen Meyer's latest book Return of the God Hypothesis to get an idea of why many theists believe the evidence is indeed dispositive for anyone who's not already dead set against it.

What is to the purpose in the present post, though, is to show that the demand for evidence before belief is warranted is very selective. What I mean is that religious skeptics often believe a lot of things for which they not only don't have evidence but for which evidence may not even be theoretically possible.

Here are some examples:
  1. Memory beliefs (I believe I had a dream last night.)
  2. Belief that we have (or don't have) free-will.
  3. Belief that logical axioms are true and self-evident (If A then not ~A.)
  4. Belief that there are an infinity of other universes.
  5. Belief that every event has a cause.
  6. Belief that nothing can cause itself.
  7. Belief that life arose in some "warm little pond." (Darwin)
  8. Belief that life is the product of material causes only.
  9. Belief that justice is right and cruelty is wrong (What evidence justifies this or any moral belief?)
  10. Belief that there is a past, present, or future.
  11. Belief in the principle of cause and effect.
  12. Belief that "the cosmos is all there is, ever was, or ever will be" (Carl Sagan).
  13. Belief that evidence is necessary to warrant belief (Is there any evidence to support this belief?)
If skeptics hold these beliefs even though there's no empirical evidence for any of them, why is it thought to be a legitimate criticism of theists that they believe in the existence of God, especially since, as I mentioned above, there's lots of evidence that God exists?

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Belief Doesn't Always Require Evidence (Pt. I)

It's not uncommon to hear religious believers criticized for holding beliefs they can't empirically demonstrate to be true, or at least probably true. The critic assumes that if no scientific evidence can be adduced in support of the belief then it's mere superstition.

This was in fact a popular view among skeptical philosophers from about 1870 to about 1980, and is still trotted out and dusted off every so often today. It's a view called evidentialism, and philosopher Alvin Plantinga has a great deal of fun dismantling it in his book titled Warranted Christian Belief.

Indeed, since Plantinga's book came out philosophers are much more shy about using this argument against religious believers, but others unfamiliar with the philosophical literature are not so reticent.

Plantinga asks,inter alia, why our beliefs should be considered guilty until proven innocent. Why should beliefs not be counted innocent until proven guilty?

He wonders, too, why a person of sound mind, convinced in her heart that God exists, and who has never been confronted with an antitheistic argument that she found compelling, should be required nevertheless to suspend her belief until she has acquired overwhelming evidence that her belief is true.

Suppose, for instance, that you were accused of a crime. There's substantial evidence against you and little that you can offer to offset it. Even so, you're convinced you're innocent. You know you're innocent. You can't explain the contrary evidence, but it doesn't matter. You just know you didn't commit the crime. Should you, despite this assurance, acknowledge anyway that you're guilty because you can't present an argument to explain why you're certain of your innocence?

Many people believe in God on the basis of a totally subjective experience that they can't document or prove but which leaves them with an assurance that they could not deny even were they so inclined. The experience of former atheist Kirstin Powers, a liberal journalist, provides us with a good example. She writes:
Then one night in 2006, on a trip to Taiwan, I woke up in what felt like a strange cross between a dream and reality. Jesus came to me and said, "Here I am." It felt so real. I didn't know what to make of it. I called my boyfriend, but before I had time to tell him about it, he told me he had been praying the night before and felt we were supposed to break up. So we did. Honestly, while I was upset, I was more traumatized by Jesus visiting me.

I tried to write off the experience as misfiring synapses, but I couldn't shake it. When I returned to New York a few days later, I was lost. I suddenly felt God everywhere and it was terrifying. More important, it was unwelcome. It felt like an invasion. I started to fear I was going crazy.
You can read her full account of her experience at the link.

There's a scene in the movie Contact, which was based on a book by atheistic astronomer Carl Sagan, in which the character played by Jodie Foster, a scientist named Ellie Arroway, is part of an experiment in which she's transported to the center of the galaxy. However, upon her return she's unable to offer any evidence that she actually left earth.

None of the data collected by her colleagues from her transporter confirm that the experiment worked. Yet she's convinced that she actually experienced all that she claims to have experienced.

Is she justified in holding that belief? If her belief is the product of properly functioning cognitive faculties belonging to an accomplished scientist not given to imaginative flights of hysteria, is what she says in the following exchange with an interrogator discredited by her inability to present empirical evidence?
Michael Kritz: "Wait a minute, let me get this straight. You admit that you have absolutely no physical evidence to back up your story."
Ellie Arroway: "Yes."
Michael Kitz: "You admit that you very well may have hallucinated this whole thing."
Ellie Arroway: "Yes."
Michael Kitz: "You admit that if you were in our position, you would respond with exactly the same degree of incredulity and skepticism!"
Ellie Arroway: "Yes!"
Michael Kitz: [standing, angrily] "Then why don't you simply withdraw your testimony, and concede that this "journey to the center of the galaxy," in fact, never took place!"
Ellie Arroway: "Because I can't. I... had an experience... I can't prove it, I can't even explain it, but everything that I know as a human being, everything that I am tells me that it was real! I was given something wonderful, something that changed me forever... A vision... of the universe, that tells us, undeniably, how tiny, and insignificant and how... rare, and precious we all are! A vision that tells us that we belong to something that is greater than ourselves, that we are not, that none of us are alone! I wish... I... could share that... I wish, that everyone, if only for one... moment, could feel... that awe, and humility, and hope. But... That continues to be my wish."
Ellie Arroway, in Sagan's telling of the tale, had what amounts to a religious experience. Sagan clearly wants us to believe that her experience was veridical and that she's warranted in believing her experience was veridical despite the lack of proof, or even of any objective evidence.

But if that's so, why are Christians faulted, by folks just like Sagan, for believing in God on the basis of a subjective assurance similar to that possessed by Arroway?

Indeed, far more people have had an experience like Kirstin Powers had than have had an experience like Ellie Arroway. If Arroway is justified in believing that she actually encountered a different world why would people like Powers not be similarly justified?

Just as it would be foolish to expect Ellie Arroway or Kirsten Powers to discount their experiences because they can't empirically prove that they had them, so, too, it's foolish of skeptics to think that the only warrant for belief in God is the ability to provide objective, physical evidence that the belief is true.

More tomorrow.

Tuesday, January 21, 2025

The End of the Biden Administration

It'll come as no surprise to readers of Viewpoint that I'm not sorry to see Joe Biden and his administration leave Washington. What kind of president Donald Trump will be, I can't predict, but he can hardly do worse than Mr. Biden.

Mr. Biden's administration was deeply disappointing, although no one who's been paying attention over the course of the last sixteen years should've been surprised at this. Mr. Biden has demonstrated himself throughout that time to be a venal, unprincipled man whose chief concern was himself and his family.

Mr. Biden has corrupted the executive offices he's held, allowing his family to peddle influence abroad to enrich themselves and then awarding them "pre-emptive" pardons on his way out the door to protect the family from accountability.

Moreover, his administration's attempt, at Mr. Biden's behest, to destroy Donald Trump through criminal indictments that would never have been brought against anyone else has besmirched trust in American legal institutions. Not only has this "lawfare" been brought to bear against Trump but also against many of his associates and some ordinary people who on January 6th were guilty of nothing more serious than trespassing on federal property.

He campaigned on bringing us together, on being a unifier, but he repeatedly disparaged ordinary citizens who disagreed with him, implying that they were "fascists" and at one point explicitly calling them "garbage."

The outgoing president was not only personally corrupt, he was lawless in other ways as well. He refused to obey the law requiring him to control the border, he refused to heed the judgment of the Supreme Court which ruled that his plan to pay off student loans was unconstitutional, and he absurdly announced last week that he was declaring the ERA to be constitutional and the law of the land.

His Attorney General's use of the FBI to harass ordinary citizens at school board meetings, branding those concerned parents as terrorists for expressing angry opinions at those meetings, was a disgrace, as was the DOJ's harassment of pro-lifers, and the pressure the Biden administration applied on social and other media to restrict the circulation of opinions at odds with the administration's narratives.

Mr. Biden and his aides lied to us repeatedly about matters great and small. Among the former were Mr. Biden's insistence that he would never pardon his son, that he never talked to his son about his business dealings, that Donald Trump called Neo-nazis "good people" after Charlottesville, and that Mr. Biden himself was cognitively sound. Anyone who offered a contrary opinion, as did special prosecutor Robert Hur, was smeared in the media.

The Biden administration coddled the progressive left and their most absurd ideological conceits such as DEI in general and the trans ideology in particular. The administration and the party have been congenial to some of the most vicious antisemitism we've seen in this country since the 1930s, and they also did enormous damage to our economy by trying to impose their green energy agenda on businesses and consumers and by restricting our ability to drill for fossil fuels.

Ironically, the Biden administration's commitment to green energy, particularly offshore wind energy, is endangering the Right whale and has caused the deaths of countless migratory birds.

Reckless infusions of trillions of dollars into the economy drove inflation up over 20% during the Biden presidency and caused mortgage rates to jump from 2.8% to over 7% which has erected a huge impediment to young first-time home buyers.

Mr. Biden's disastrous Afghanistan pullout and his ridiculous talk about how a minor incursion by Russia into Ukraine wouldn't be so bad encouraged Vladimir Putin to launch a massive invasion in 2022. Biden's reluctance to give needed military supplies to both Ukraine and Israel has prolonged both of those conflicts, needlessly increasing the death toll. He released billions of dollars to Iran when that terrorist state was all but moribund from the Trump sanctions. The infusion of cash allowed the Iranians to get back on their feet, finance more bloodshed in the Middle East, and accelerate toward their goal of achieving a nuclear weapon. Meanwhile, at home, our own military preparedness and recruitment have been allowed to wane.

Finally, it's doubtful that Mr. Biden, who spent 40% of his time in office on vacation, was even the person running his administration. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson has said that when he asked the president why he signed an executive order freezing the exports of natural gas crucial to Europe Mr. Biden was unaware that he had in fact actually done so.

I can't think of any positive accomplishment for which President Biden will be remembered, and he may well be regarded by future historians as perhaps the worst president of the modern era. It's hard to feel regret - at least it is for me - that he and his associates are no longer in charge.