Thought for the Day: 12 September 2015

Way back in the 1980s, while driving around town to deliver lectures deploring the lack of political awareness among the comatose masses, MIT professor Noam Chomsky stumbled across sports talk on his car radio. He marveled at the deep knowledge and intelligence that Chuckie in Attleboro or Gladys in Melrose brought to bear on their favorite teams and players. After all, these were the same ordinary Americans whose talk about international affairs or domestic problems Chomsky considered “at a level of superficiality that’s beyond belief.” Yet callers to sports radio, Noam in Cambridge realized, “have their own opinion and they conduct intelligent discussions. It’s an interesting phenomenon. I don’t think that international affairs or domestic politics are much more complicated.”

In other words, if people applied the same intelligent scrutiny and research to public policy questions as they did to sports, Team USA might be doing a whole lot better. Chomsky concluded that Americans don’t apply their sports smarts and passion to politics and public policy because they don’t believe it will change anything; they feel they might as well focus on something fun.

– from Garry Emmons, “Sports Superfans, Deflategate Obsession and America’s Collective I.Q.

Thought for the Day: 2 September 2015

Both [Sanders and Trump] are calling for a political revolution, Sanders even more directly than Trump. But there are different kinds of political revolutions and they are fueled by different kinds of momentum. There are political revolutions of the considered spirit and political revolutions of the raw appetites. There was the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia and there was the Committee of Public Safety in Paris. If the people caught up in the revolution are very lucky, the second form of revolution does nothing except add urgency to the first form. If they’re not lucky, the appetites overwhelm the spirit, and heads of all kinds begin to fill all kinds of baskets.

Charlie Pierce

Thought for the Day: 5 August 2015

On the upcoming GOP presidential candidates debate:

So, here’s who made the the cut:

Businessman Donald Trump
Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee
Former surgeon Ben Carson
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz
Florida Sen. Marco Rubio
Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie
Ohio Gov. John Kasich

Or, put another way, three former governors, one sitting governor, one former US senator, one sitting US senator and the only woman in the field were aced out of starting positions at the Republican Goat Rodeo by a revival tent huckster, an openly batshit doctor and a thug-tempered carnival barker with a comb-over.

Congratulations, GOP.  I’m sure, somewhere in the Great Beyond, Abraham Lincoln and Dwight Eisenhower are looking down upon you…

…and trying to figure a way to nuke the entire party from orbit.

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