Lily Salter's Blog, page 200

December 24, 2017

Lorde pulls planned concert in Israel due to pressure from anti-Israel groups

People Waving the Flag of Israel

(Credit: Getty/Rawpixel)


The New Zealand singer Lorde has cancelled a planned concert in the Israeli city of Tel Aviv due to an outcry from fans who are critical of that country’s human rights record.


The news of Lorde’s cancellation came from the concert producer Naranjah, according to The Jerusalem Post. The company released a statement saying that they “sadly” needed to announce that she had cancelled her appearance and that Lorde would explain more about the situation on Twitter. One of Naranja’s founders, Eran Arieli, asked Lorde’s Israeli fans to forgive her in a Facebook post on Sunday and argued that it was  “naive to think that an artist of her age would be able to face the pressure of appearing in Israel.” He also denounced “the army of globalists and anti-Semites” who he blamed for pressuring Lorde.


The source of the initial outcry was a tweet by Lorde last week that listed a series of planned concerts in Russia and Israel.



MOSCOW

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Published on December 24, 2017 13:55

All Donald Trump wants for Christmas

Donald Trump; Santa Hat

(Credit: Getty/Saul Loeb/artisteer/Salon)


I was walking through Target, snatching up doll babies and action figures for an East Baltimore toy drive. It’s my favorite part of the holiday season, having the chance to help buy toys for children who may have not received any gifts. Everybody deserves to open up something during the holidays, right?


Like most people who aren’t clever enough to order online and just pick up their merchandise, I waited behind at least a dozen holiday shoppers in line to check out. The couple in front of me — two lanky 40-somethings — went on and on about Trump being the Grinch who stole Christmas. I didn’t butt into their conversation, but I disagree. Trump isn’t the Grinch, he’s always happy — you can tell from his tweets, which he punctuates with exclamation points of joy. Plus, right now he’s high off the Republican Congress passing his tax bill, making him the greatest President ever, in his opinion.


And to prove this happiness to my fellow citizens, I’m going to share President Trump’s letter to Santa — or at least what I think it would say. (Read it in Trump Voice for desired effect.)


Dear Santa,


First, I’d like to say that you are very very tired, and really sad. I’ve been writing to you for over 65 years and you have yet to respond. This will be my last attempt until my next attempt.


Listed below are things I need, and what I deserve. I expect to receive everything in a timely manner.


The Wall. I’d like a beautiful wall, a strong tall wall seasoned with the best, only the best, anti-MS-13 repellent. Please make Mexico pay for it.


For Donald Jr., a “No Snitching” tattoo across his chest. Please don’t let my namesake, who has a very good name, be a rat.


Trade Mike Pence for Vladimir Putin. Pence blinks too much and it’s weird, he is tremendously not fun.


No taxes for the top 1 percent. They work too hard at making America great, they shouldn’t have to pay taxes and under me they won’t, only the poor deserve that.


Lock Hillary up. She’s crooked, she lost, she’s a very bad hombre, throw away the key.


A Robert Mueller scandal. Put some fun in his life, he thinks about me too much.


Melania, my wife, she’s very beautiful, you know, finally a ten in the White House. She’s very classy. She doesn’t care about my tax plan. She’s reading to sick kids, you know how I feel about germs, so if my daughter Ivanka, she’s very beautiful, very successful, if she could spend more time in my office reading to me and less time with Jared and his lawyers that would be really really nice.


Framed portraits of Barack Obama, Sean Hannity and Vladimir Putin. What can I say, they complete me.


An apology from LaVar Ball and a thank you from LaVar Ball for being his biggest inspiration and saving his son.


An edited version of my personal taxes from the years 1970-2016. I’m really really tired of people asking about them.


An end to fake news. It’s time for the failing New York Times to really fail, and CNN and the very bad people of liberal media to be tucked away and hidden like my taxes. Take that loser Alec Baldwin, washed-up Meryl Streep and the failing Rosie O’Donnell as well.


Santa, you are very fat and very old, but very responsible and valued by me, only I can value you. I think you can pull this off, and if you do I’ll be a tremendous boy in 2018. If not, you will continue to be really sad.


Make America Great Again,


Your President, Donald J. Trump



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Published on December 24, 2017 12:30

Meet your 2018 fitness goals with these wireless earbuds

earbuds3-stack

Got a fitness goal in mind for 2018? These FRESHeBUDS Pro Magnetic Bluetooth Earbuds can help power you through your toughest workouts, with an advanced model that makes strides over previous versions.


These lightweight buds are comfortable, wire-free and weather-proof — meaning they’ll outlast sweat, mask the sound of traffic on your runs, and fit snugly in your ears — whether you’re trying out a new cardio routine or yoga sequence.



With an enhanced battery life, these buds automatically pair with your phone when pulled apart so you don’t have to go through any setup and last for six hours of playtime. Even better, they’ll recharge in just 90 minutes — they’ll turn off when placed together, and turn on when pulled apart.


No more excuses this year: usually these FRESHeBUDS Pro Magnetic Bluetooth Earbuds are $119.95 — but you can get them now for $29.95, further reduced from the original sale price of $39.99, or 75% off the original price.


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Published on December 24, 2017 00:00

December 23, 2017

Joan Walsh will move to CNN after MSNBC contract not renewed

joan_walsh_92y2


Joan Walsh, a political analyst on MSNBC, and former editor in chief and columnist of Salon, revealed on Saturday that her contract with MSNBC had not been renewed. She had been with the network for 12 years.


Walsh shared the news with nearly 299,000 fans on Twitter, shedding more light on what happened.


“I learned Friday night they are not renewing. I’ve given my heart and soul to the network, from the George W. Bush years through today. I’m proud of the work I did,” Walsh said on Twitter. “Yes, it’s Christmas weekend. I was baking pies with my daughter, who is home for the holidays, when I got the news. It didn’t feel too good. But all of your support helps, a lot. I’m grateful to the people who have fought for me.”


A few hours later though, she revealed that she’ll be heading to CNN in 2018.


I am overwhelmed by the support I've received today from all of you. And I'm thrilled to tell you I'll be heading to @CNN in the new year. Thanks to everyone who made this happen. A Christmas miracle.


— Joan Walsh (@joanwalsh) December 24, 2017




A spokeswoman at CNN confirmed to the New York Times that Walsh will be joining as a commentator.


When news first broke about Walsh’s unexpected departure many people took to Twitter to voice their opposition, like Katie Couric, who used the hashtag #KeepJoanWalsh.


Ugh. Love Listening to Joan. #KeepJoanWalsh ❤️ https://t.co/w4ZTT1O7R6


— Katie Couric (@katiecouric) December 23, 2017




More women shared their stories about how Walsh played a significant role in their careers, noting it was a strange time for MSNBC to let go of a leading feminist voice.


Many women citing @joanwalsh as an early champion; I’m among them. She encouraged me to write from feminist perspective more than a decade ago as an editor @salon. Strange time for MSNBC to jettison someone who’s long been committed to making space for & promoting other women.


— Rebecca Traister (@rtraister) December 23, 2017




@joanwalsh led Salon at a time when many of the young female journalists working for her were finding our voices and learning critical leadership skills. Joan pushed us and championed us. As @rtraister notes, it’s an odd moment for @msnbc to let go of a leading feminist voice.


— Lori Leibovich (@lorileibovich) December 23, 2017




I'm one of many people – WOMEN – who benefited from @joanwalsh's mentorship, wisdom and support. The reason this is getting so much traction is that it's a travesty (and feels like a slap in the face to women at this time, frankly). https://t.co/xiguflQN26


— Rachel Sklar ❄️ (@rachelsklar) December 23, 2017




In a statement, according to the New York Times, MSNBC called Walsh “a key voice on MSNBC for years” and cited an annual review as the reason for not renewing her contract.


“Every year we review our paid contributors list across the ideological spectrum,” the statement said. “Unfortunately we couldn’t renew Joan, but she and her distinct perspective will still be invited on our shows.”



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Published on December 23, 2017 19:49

An NFL star’s tragic death reminds us of brain aneurysms’ toll

NFL Offseason What to Watch Football

(Credit: AP Photo/Michael Ainsworth, File)


The late NFL tight end Konrad Reuland and baseball Hall of Famer Rod Carew became forever linked when Carew, who needed a new heart, received Reuland’s. Reuland suffered a brain aneurysm on Nov. 26, 2016 and died two weeks later. Medical experts and sports historians believed it to be the first heart transplant operation between two major league athletes, and the story of Reuland’s gift and Carew’s recovery touched the hearts of fans across the country.


Reuland’s decision just a few months earlier, as a 20-something who appeared to be the very picture of health, to check the organ-donor box on a driver’s license form, changed not only the course of Carew’s life but those of two other people who received Reuland’s liver and kidney. Carew, who played for the Minnesota Twins and California Angels and ended his career with 3,053 hits, received the other kidney. Carew had suffered a major heart attack in 2015 and had been placed on a waiting list for a heart transplant.


Carew, whose jersey number was 29, did not know at the time of his surgery on Dec. 16, 2016 that he was receiving Reuland’s heart, and Reuland’s family did not know who the recipients of the 29-year-old’s organs would be. Reuland died Dec. 12, 2016.


But Mary Reuland, Konrad’s mother, figured out the connection between Carew and her son a few weeks later. She had read about the lifesaving heart transplant that Carew received four days after Konrad’s death, and several people had asked her if she thought Carew could have been the recipient. Curious, Mary Reuland called the organ donation network, which matched Konrad’s heart to Carew. She learned that her son’s heart was in fact the one that saved Carew’s life. The families met less than three months later, and Mary Reuland listened with a stethoscope to her son’s beating heart inside Carew’s chest.



Rod Carew and Mary Reuland, Konrad’s mother, at a news conference in Anaheim, Calif. in April 2017.

AP Photo/Chris Carlson



As a medical professional and sports fan, I was deeply moved by these events. But as a neurosurgeon who specializes in brain aneurysm, I was deeply pained at the news of how Reuland lost his life: Reuland suffered a ruptured brain aneurysm after lifting weights. He had been with his family for Thanksgiving, and they were decorating their home for Christmas. Reuland didn’t live to see the holiday. He had brain surgery in late November to try to repair the burst aneurysm. Just two weeks later, he succumbed in a way all too familiar to me.


There is no evidence that brain aneurysm is related to traumatic brain injury. So how is it, many may wonder, that a young athlete in phenomenal shape could suddenly develop a deadly condition?


From out of the blue


An aneurysm is a weak spot on the wall of an artery.



An aneurysm occurs in a weak spot in the wall of an artery. Sometimes, that weak spot expands, almost like a water balloon.

Designua/Shutterstock.com


The Brain Aneurysm Foundation estimates that 6 million people, or one in 50, have an unruptured brain aneurysm. Aneurysms can be detected by imaging, but screening imaging is not recommended unless there are symptoms or there is a strong family history of brain aneurysms. Over time, the weak spot expands almost like a water balloon. If it keeps expanding, it will eventually reach a breaking point and burst. The causes are largely unknown. Some may be hereditary.


Aneurysms can form anywhere in the body, but brain aneurysms occur in the blood vessels of the brain, usually at the base. Aneurysms tend to form at branching points where blood vessels diverge.


Brain aneurysms affect young and old, rich and poor, those with a family history of aneurysms and those without.


They typically strike without warning, and 50 percent of the time prove fatal, throwing families into shock and sudden grief. Four out of five people who suffer a brain aneurysm have no family history of it. There is some indication in the research that smoking puts you at higher risk, and that aneurysms disproportionately affect women.


But no one knows for sure what causes brain aneurysms, which affect up to 5 percent of Americans and result in 30,000 cases of ruptured aneurysms each year.


Symptoms of a brain aneurysm include headaches, double vision, vision changes, seizures or other neurological changes.


The real problem occurs when the aneurysm ruptures.


Patients with a ruptured aneurysm experience bleeding in the brain called subarachnoid hemorrhage, which is a type of stroke. Such patients may feel an overpowering “thunderclap” headache. They may die suddenly or be found comatose. When a patient has a ruptured aneurysm, we try to treat it so that it doesn’t rupture again. If it ruptures a second time, there is an 80 percent chance of death.


A devastating disorder


The statistics for this devastating disorder are grim: When a brain aneurysm ruptures, there is a 15 percent chance of death before even getting to a hospital. Of those who survive, there is a 30 to 50 percent chance of permanent disability, ranging from severe brain damage to more mild cognitive difficulties. Many are unable to return to work.


Current research in the field of cerebral aneurysm points to inflammation as a possible cause for aneurysms to arise. Here at the University of Florida, my laboratory is investigating the role inflammation may play in the development of aneurysms.


My laboratory is studying how the dynamics of blood hitting those blood vessel branching points at the base of the brain can cause inflammation. We are examining how inflammation causes weakening of a blood vessel, which we believe causes the aneurysm to develop.


We are also studying different types of inflammatory cells that cause aneurysms to rupture, so that we may work toward a goal of developing a drug treatment to fight those inflammatory cells. We are studying cytokines, or molecules that send signals, control the activities of cells and recruit those inflammatory cells to the weak part of the blood vessel. We are investigating ways to treat aneurysms by turning inflammation on or off.


While my team vigorously pursues that work in the lab, here is what I see at the hospital: patients who come in with “the worst headache of my life” – who literally had no foreshadowing of what was to come. In those cases, the aneurysm may have already ruptured.


Patients diagnosed with an unruptured aneurysm often learn of it incidentally. Maybe they came in for double vision or headaches. Maybe it was cranial nerve palsy, or, in rare cases, a seizure.


Patients with an aneurysm may undergo surgery. This involves opening the skull and pinching off the aneurysm with a metal clip. Or they may receive endovascular treatment, in which I thread a small tube through an artery in the leg all the way up to the brain to fill the inside of the aneurysm with soft packing wires called coils or place a stent, a metal mesh tube.


Every day, I see the devastating consequences of this mysterious and tragic condition.


It not only affects individuals. It affects families. It affects communities.


My goal is to identify the cause – and to pursue preventative and therapeutic treatments.


Brian Hoh, M.D., Professor of Neurosurgery, University of Florida


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Published on December 23, 2017 18:00

Trump’s reported atrocious rants about immigrants revealed in new report

Donald Trump

(Credit: AP/Jorge Silva)


Donald Trump has been anything but secretive about his racist beliefs from his frequent anti-muslim tweets to, most recently, calling immigrants “the worst of the worst” in a speech to FBI graduates. But a new report in the New York Times shares more incredibly disturbing details about what he’s, as described in the report, allegedly “grumbled” behind closed doors in the White House.


It all started in June, according to the report, when Trump “stormed” into the Oval office, “plainly enraged” about how many foreigners had come into the country since January. According to officials who attended the meeting, or were briefed on it, Trump reportedly read aloud from a document which listed how many immigrants got visas to enter the U.S. in 2017.


The report detailed the following sequence of events that he allegedly read as he made his way down the list:


“More than 2,500 were from Afghanistan, a terrorist haven, the president complained.


Haiti had sent 15,000 people. They “all have AIDS,” he [Trump] grumbled, according to one person who attended the meeting and another person who was briefed about it by a different person who was there.


Forty thousand had come from Nigeria, Mr. Trump added. Once they had seen the United States, they would never “go back to their huts” in Africa, recalled the two officials, who asked for anonymity to discuss a sensitive conversation in the Oval Office.”



As the meeting continued, according to the report, former Secretary of Homeland Security, John F. Kelly, and Secretary of State, Rex W. Tillerson, tried to interrupt and explain to Trump that many “many were short-term travelers making one-time visits.” This led to the blame falling on Tillerson though, according to the report. Eventually, Kelly reportedly asked everyone in attendance to leave the room because it got too heated.


The Times contacted the White House press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, about the alleged derogatory statements during the meeting which she denied on Saturday.


“General Kelly, General McMaster, Secretary Tillerson, Secretary Nielsen and all other senior staff actually in the meeting deny these outrageous claims,” she said in the statement. “It’s both sad and telling The New York Times would print the lies of their anonymous ‘sources’ anyway.”


According to the report, a few participants in the meeting told Times reporters that they didn’t recall the president using words “AIDS” or “huts.” But the two officials, according to the report, who recalled the event to The Times, “found them so noteworthy that they related them to others at the time.”



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Published on December 23, 2017 17:48

What to say to your kids after “The Last Jedi”

Star Wars fans

Star Wars fans waiting for the premiere of "Star Wars: The Last Jedi" (Credit: AP/Joel C Ryan)


Common Sense Media


Star Wars fans who are eager to catch up with Rey, Finn, Poe, and the other characters from The Force Awakens are sure to love Star Wars: Episode VIII The Last Jedi, which picks up right where the last movie left off. The epic middle installment of the current trilogy has thrilling sci-fi action, as well as several strong female characters, notable diversity within the Resistance, and strong messages of courage, teamwork, hope, and loyalty — all of which gives families plenty to talk about. Try these topics/questions to get started:



Talk about the violence in Star Wars: Episode VIII The Last Jedi. Do scenes of explosions and space battles affect you differently than those of close-up, one-on-one lightsaber duels and killings? Why do you think that is? What makes more of an impact: violence or loss? Why? How does this movie handle both topics?
Who are the movie’s heroes? How are they role models? Do they demonstrate courage and teamwork?
How is diversity — and the lack thereof — used to indicate the values of the opposing sides of the conflict in the Star Wars series? Why is it notable that the First Order has very little diversity, while the Republic has a lot of it?
Did you notice the strong female characters in the movie? How has the world of Star Wars changed in this respect since the original trilogy (or even the prequels)?
Talk about the themes from the previous movies that repeat themselves here. Why are issues of good vs. evil, mentorship, etc., so important to this series? How do they play out on-screen?

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Published on December 23, 2017 17:00

This “cool black girl” is gone

Hands

(Credit: Getty/Salon)


“I have a tattoo of a Confederate flag,” my date tells me. I look up from my coffee in disbelief.


In his defense, he says it sheepishly, like he’s confessing something he knows he should be ashamed of.


In my defense, he says it at all like he’s asking for an absolution I should never grant.


I stutter, and he rushes on, assuring me he was from Texas and got it out of Texan pride, not any other association. I don’t ask why he didn’t just get a Texas flag tattoo.


He promises me that he has only used the “n-word” once in his life, when he was young, and his mother slapped him so hard he never used it again. I don’t ask if the fear of being slapped is still the only reason he doesn’t use it.


He prefers dating black women; he says this like it’s a compliment. I don’t ask if they prefer dating him, or if when they see his tattoo under his shirt they recoil.


He looks at me and levies the accusation that I fear most in moments like this: “I feel like you’re treating me like I’m racist.”


A few years ago, Gillian Flynn popularized the concept of the “cool girl” in her novel “Gone Girl,” where she explained the unrealistic social expectations that women were supposed to fit into in order to be desirable to men — one that required they embrace sports, unhealthy food and casual sex, abhor commitment and above all else conform to conventional standards of beauty.


Black girls have our own version of the cool girl. The cool black girl is urban but not hood. She’s down enough to use slang her white friends will want to poach, but won’t embarrass them by sounding too black. She’s willing to date white men, but is unbothered when they don’t want to date her. She’s unflinchingly patient and endlessly supportive of the white women around her. And above all else, she never — ever — makes a white person feel uncomfortable about race.


I used to be the coolest black girl.


Accusing someone of racism — particularly when that person is saying things that make them sound racist — is the cardinal sin for a cool black girl. So I dig deep into my cool black bag of tricks and bond with him over an obscure TV show. We laugh. It’s no longer awkward, at least not for him. It had already become incurably awkward for me, but that’s OK. Cool black girls are, after all, still black girls, which means we’re stronger than everyone else. We can take it.


He texts me after that date, and maybe it’s the expectation in that text that we would hang out again or the three texts that followed the first, showing he didn’t even suspect maybe I was ignoring him. As though there were no reason that I may reject him. Maybe it was just me.


I lose my cool.


“I don’t think I was clear enough — the tattoo for me was a dealbreaker. I take you at your word that the flag doesn’t mean anything racist to you. But that’s all it means to me,” I text back.




He is offended and shoots back that he can’t “believe [he] is being judged for something he did 20 years ago.”


“Well, then I’m sure it’s my loss,” I respond. I’m not sure he gets that I’m being sarcastic, and that makes me laugh.


It’s freeing to commit a cardinal sin and realize the punishment feels better than years of virtue ever had. For being the cool black girl, I had been rewarded with the Sisyphean task of making insecure white people feel better about race and the hollow satisfaction of investing in the comfort of people who clearly weren’t invested in my own. The penalty for failing to be the cool black girl was not having to be one.


It gets easier after that. I stop trying so hard to avoid offending people with suggestions they have offended me. I stop using racial self-deprecation to indulge “ironic” senses of humor. I stop laughing when it’s not funny or nodding when it doesn’t make sense. I stop playing the defendant when they want to play the devil’s advocate — allowing them to intellectually experiment on me with their worst arguments, leaving themselves unscathed and richer for the exercise and me, diminished. I stop making them feel better for making me feel worse.


I don’t become unrecognizable. I continue to forgive good faith missteps and let intentions count for a lot, even when they’re accompanied by inelegant wording. But the cool black girl is gone. She doesn’t leave all of a sudden, in a fit of rage. I don’t cut her out of pictures. We outgrow each other, and we both know it, too. It’s a conscious uncoupling. She takes the toaster, and I wish her well. She calls sometimes, but I don’t answer. I don’t miss her.


After Charlottesville, a friend asks if I believe everyone who marched to protect Confederate statues is racist. I think of my date and his tattoo and his indignation and my coffee. Had he been racist? Do I care?


My friend wonders if maybe it’s possible to bring some of those people to our side if they don’t feel so attacked.


I tell him I can’t bring myself to care about their feelings, and he is surprised by my reaction. He’s an old friend. I used to be cooler when he knew me well.


I believe in grace for people who are imperfect allies and generosity for those interested in learning but haven’t yet. But I no longer believe the comfort of white men is more precious than my own. They brought weapons. They clearly don’t mind if we feel attacked.


It’s not that I think allegiance to a Confederate flag or monument automatically makes someone racist. It’s that I don’t care whether they are or not. It’s a dealbreaker for me. Maybe that makes me cavalier — or cool. Maybe my friend is right, and some of them could be brought to our side if people like me invested energy in making them feel less judged and more welcome. But since I don’t, they stay on their side.


I’m sure it’s my loss.


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Published on December 23, 2017 16:30

How “globalization” became a modern-day insult, and why it’s important

Jobs Report

(Credit: AP Photo/Vincent Yu)


TheGlobalist“Globalization” is the modern-day piñata. It is readily assigned responsibility for our own, very human lack of proper action and understanding.


The human need to assign blame

Assigning blame in that fashion has a very definite advantage. It helps us cope and deflect from ourselves. We can pretend to “understand” the world and have a “sovereign” judgment.


But (ab)using globalization in that manner is a cheap shot. It actually distracts from our own inability to live up to our responsibilities.


In that sense, the guilt-trip referral to globalization is just the latest manifestation of earlier forms of guilt-tripping – whether called “capitalism,” “the state” or “society.”


In the end, what we cannot fess up to is human imperfection and our collective inability to comprehend an ever more complex world, with ever more stakeholders, stake claimers and challengers.


Abbreviating the universe

We all live by myths and legends. They abbreviate the universe for us. That is a crucial contribution to maintaining the emotional and mental stability that allows us to function.


Neuropsychologists remind us that the brain is a refined instrument for discarding stimuli, forgetting disturbing facts, selecting what is useful from a flood of information. Some of this is programmed by nature, some we program ourselves over the course of a lifetime.


This sifting process occurs at all levels. It is not restricted to the mundane practicalities. It operates as well in regard to the meanings we attach to persons, things and events.


This last faculty is at the heart of what enables us to form societies and to create the cultures integral to them.


Selecting and categorizing the perceptions of our senses and conscious mind sustains our core understandings of what we are. It also gives meaning of our existence along with our relationship to the order of things.


Mental myopia

At the same time, a very large number of people function with extreme mental myopia. That is to say, the world around them looks fuzzy — except for persons and things close to them.


Signals emanate from their surroundings, but they lack clear definition. They are received serially, either as discrete bits of unfiltered data or placed unconsciously in a crude framework of explication.


We tend to stew in a rough amalgam of half-baked ideas, simplistic versions of some ideology and salient personal events. The net effect may well be that most people are not much different from their fellows in earlier ages.


Individuals at sea

On the plus side, we are literate, have access to infinitely more sources of information and personally encounter more aspects of the social universe. That said, our mental apparatus, as well as our emotional resilience for making sense of what we encounter has not improved commensurately.


Moreover, the desire to more fully comprehend may be weak for reasons stemming from the assault on an ever-fragile sense of self by a plethora of stimuli.


Hence, the compulsion to insulate oneself from a complicated, confusing environment is strong. So is the inclination to order it in narrow, stereotypical terms as necessary.



We find it far easier to recognize and accept fresh insight into others than into ourselves. “They” are part of the external world than we can objectify to a degree.


How much affect we feel toward others does have a bearing on our openness to better understanding of who they are and our confidence evaluating their conduct.


Capable of self-examination?

Dispassion about our own identity and qualities is a completely different matter. After all, self-examination requires us to be at once subject and object.


The essence of our being, and the pivot of our behavior, falls into existential doubt. The very act of reflection, of inner scrutiny, by itself changes who we are in some way, to some immeasurable degree. That is discomforting.


We are designed to forget as much as to remember — for good reason. Among the brain’s functions is to sift what is relevant and useful from the rest. If we did not routinely do so, our mind and emotions would be overwhelmed by a kaleidoscope of data, ideas and images.


Purposeful behavior would be impossible. This filtering process does not necessarily involve insulating ourselves from the world around us. However, a narrowing of the aperture through which it registers on our consciousness does occur.


It is reinforced by the multiple processes of socio-cultural conforming. Often, it is related to aging. In a world like ours, there is an incongruity between the extraordinarily numerous and varied stimuli and a steady narrowing of the slit through which they enter our awareness.


Cultivated insularity

A cultivated insularity is the cause. An insularity that has little if anything to do with introspection as self-reflection.


The genius of organized society lies in sustained accomplishments that are far beyond the capacities of the flawed and limited individuals who compose it.


Vital to its doing so are similar ways of understanding the environment: social, physical and cosmological. This shared ‘truth’ about the world and how it operates underlies the shared norms and expectations that govern routine social intercourse.


The individual and the collectivity are both served. The latter achieves necessary coherence and congruence among its members.


Individuals acquire a set of meanings by which to make sense of a universe that they have very little native ability to comprehend. They also are blessed with the solidarity of their fellows that reinforces learned truths while succoring them.


Only truly exceptional persons can find adequate intellectual and emotional sustenance without being deeply enmeshed in social relations. That is to say, to depend on society for no more than the meeting of practical needs.


The consequences for how we experience ‘truth’ are far reaching. One is the central place of social institutions — formal and informal, comprehensive and parochial — in mediating between the individual and his surroundings.


Encounters with reality

We are not free agents in our encounters with reality. We lose that agency through the course of our socialization and acculturation.


Some regain a portion of it by way of the arts and intellectual exertion. Even in those domains, we remain prey to fad and fashion, to the seduction, encouragement and validation of schools, tendencies or movements.


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Published on December 23, 2017 16:29

New report: more Americans are OK with ‘happy holidays’ greeting

Donald Trump; Santa Hat

(Credit: Getty/Saul Loeb/artisteer/Salon)


Donald Trump had two promises he wanted to keep this holiday season—one, passing the GOP tax bill, and two, ending the so-called “War on Christmas.” Albeit the latter is a sentiment he proclaimed during his 2016 campaign, he brought it back into the spotlight to kick off the holiday season in November.  


“I told you that we would be saying ‘Merry Christmas’ again,” Trump said to a crowd of supporters at the St. Charles Convention Center where he gave a speech on taxes.


Since then, Trump has continued to say the greeting, essentially using it as an insult to political correctness (even though technically “Merry Christmas” never left the White House). Despite Trump’s best attempt to pick a petty fight, a recent Pew Research study on the religious aspects of Christmas shows that an increasing number of Americans don’t mind being greeted with a non-denominational holiday greeting like “happy holidays.”


“A growing share of Americans say it does not matter to them how they are greeted in stores and businesses during the holiday season – whether with ‘merry Christmas’ or a less-religious greeting like ‘happy holidays,’” the report explains.


According to the report, 52 percent said that a business’ choice of holiday greeting doesn’t matter to them; however, 32 percent said they do still prefer to be greeted with “Merry Christmas.” Nearly a decade ago though, and in 2012, the split was “roughly equal.”


Overall, Pew Research suggests this progression is part of a larger trend, one in which multiple religious aspects of Christmas are overall on a decline in America. This could be the repercussion of a larger national trend, explained in a separate Pew Research study, which claims that more Americans are “spiritual but not religious.”


This reported decline isn’t a huge concern to some though.


“When asked directly, most respondents in the new poll say they think religious aspects of Christmas are emphasized less in American society today than in the past. But relatively few Americans both perceive this trend and are bothered by it,” the report says.


What’s even more interesting, and perhaps less surprising, is that the split in greeting preferences is indeed a partisan issue. The study found “clear divisions along party lines in questions about the way Christmas is observed in American culture.”


Nearly half of those who said they preferred to hear “merry Christmas” identified with or leaned toward the Republican Party, compared to the 19 percent of Democrats. Conversely, 61 percent of Democrats, or those who associated with blue-party lines, said it didn’t matter to them how they were greeted. Only 38 percent of Republicans agreed.


The inclusive holiday greeting debate has historically been a point of focus for many U.S. presidents, which perhaps most ironically, started with Republican president Dwight Eisenhower who first wrote “Season’s Greetings” on his card.



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Published on December 23, 2017 16:25