Why I’m a Conservative, Part I

Bill Maher, who has identified (and been identified) as a typical Hollywood Liberal for most of his career, has, in recent years, felt the need to explain why he sometimes makes fun of Woke ideas and Woke ideology.

His explanation is pretty good. He says something like:

“They [the Woke mob] accuse me of abandoning the cause in recent years. Not true. What has happened is that the center of Liberal consciousness had drifted to the extreme left. My values and beliefs haven’t changed. Theirs have.”

I take that to be a fair and honest description of Maher’s personal experience. And when I first heard it, I liked it so much that I thought about using it as a response to friends and family members that accuse me of having suddenly become a “Conservative” (i.e., Fascist, Racist, Misogynist, Homophobe, etc.).

But then I realized that, unlike Maher, my political, economic, and social views have changed. And that’s because, when I was younger, my opinions were based on what I knew back then – which was, in terms of making adult decisions, next to nothing.

Work, for example. From the age of six, I had chores that I was obliged to do. And I had my first job (on weekends and holidays) at the age of twelve. So, by the time I was a senior in high school, I had a great deal more experience than most of my classmates in working hard to make extra spending money. But I had no experience with the kind of serious financial obligations I would be taking on as an adult – to meet my own needs as well as the needs of my future dependents.

I began working full-time when I was 18 and have worked full-time ever since. And during those years, I learned a great deal more about making money. I also, very gradually, learned to make smarter choices in the way I managed that money to chart a better and safer future for myself and my family.

This is what we do – what we are programmed to do. It is how we survive and prosper in an unforgiving world. It is how we propagate our species.

This takes me back to the assumption behind both the criticism of Bill Maher and his defense – that there is something good about maintaining one’s ideas, views, and values as time passes. Think about it. It’s a completely dumb idea. Having the same ideas, views, and beliefs at 50 that you had at 20 is not virtuous. It’s a form of willful stupidity.

And this takes me to my current thinking. I don’t feel ashamed of abandoning so many of my younger beliefs and ideas. I feel good about it. I feel like what is happening in both my rational and emotional brain parts is what nature intended.

Becoming conservative as one ages is good for the individual, the social and work environments one lives in, for one’s particular DNA, and ultimately for the survival of the species!

The Three Stages of Learning 

At every stage (and facet) of life, there are three levels of learning: ignorance, knowledge, and wisdom.

* Ignorance gives one the ability to believe in and be stirred into doing the most incredibly brave and stupid things.

* Knowledge gives one the ability to teach and lead the ignorant.

* And wisdom allows one to teach and lead the knowledgeable.

We are all born ignorant. We are also born with an insatiable attraction to knowledge. Every major stage of life involves learning countless thousands of wonderous things and acquiring countless thousands of small, sometimes unconscious, physical, verbal, and mental skills. This is essential for not just survival, but success in every realm of human experience.

Wisdom comes from knowledge. Wisdom is about understanding the limits of knowledge and the danger of certainty. Wisdom is about realizing and remembering how many bits of certain knowledge one had at some point that turned out be untrue – or at least not as universally true as one had imagined.

Wisdom is a critical component of group intelligence – perhaps the most critical component, because it allows the group to try and fail, but live to another day.

In case you’re wondering where I’m going with this, I am not going to make the argument that political Conservatives are wise and political Liberals are unwise.

What I’m saying here is that whatever world one finds oneself in, there is always a tension around important decisions – between those advocating for quick and significant action, and those that pull back on the reins.

In Part II of this essay, I’ll give you some examples of how these three levels of learning work their way into just about every social institution and just about everything we do.

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Conspiracy Update: The Election Fixing Plan Is in Full Swing

I almost can’t believe they’ve made this move so blatantly and so soon.

I’m talking about the Biden administration’s recent announcement that it was going to grant “temporary legal status” to hundreds of thousands of “undocumented” Venezuelans that have entered the US since Biden and Harris opened the borders in 2020.

The purpose, they say, is to make these people “eligible to work.” Huh? What has that got to do with anything? Illegal immigrants have no problem finding work in the US, so long as they are willing to work as unskilled laborers. And even if finding work was a problem, what’s the rationale behind giving 300,000 to 400,000 Venezuelans work permits but not the other +/- 7 million undocumented immigrants that crossed our southern border during the same period. What’s wrong with Argentinians? Or Salvadorans? Or Haitians. Or Iranians, for that matter?

It makes no sense.

Unless you subscribe to the theory I’ve been pushing since they opened the border so widely: This isn’t about kids in cages. Nor is it about people legitimately seeking asylum. (At best, that represents less than 5% of those that cross the border.) This is about a plan hatched before Biden was elected to flush in 10+ million, mostly poorly educated, mostly Latin Americans into the US, make them legal, and get them voting during the 2024 election.

Click here.

 

The “One-Government” Solution to Pandemics: Smart or Scary? 

Last Wednesday, on September 20, the UN hosted one of three high-level meetings on health with WHO officials attending. The publicized topic: “Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness, and Response.”

That sounds like exactly what a global, peace-seeking organization should be doing. Right?

I thought so until I read the objectives. Here are some of them:

* Coordination and governance at the highest political levels

* The fair, equitable, and timely sharing of benefits arising from the use of pathogens [and] sequences with pandemic potential

* Digital transformation of health systems; big data

* Monitoring and accountability

* Countering misinformation and disinformation

* More immunizations

So, how does that sound to you? Smart or scary?

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The Great Taki on the War in Ukraine

“What’s frustrating as hell,” writes Taki in his latest essay, “is the inability, or unwillingness, of Uncle Sam to stop the slaughter.”

Click here to read the entire thing.

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An Amazing Conversation

Listen to this conversation between David Pakman of CNN and Dennis Prager of Prager U. Pakman is a Liberal. Prager is a Conservative. They are discussing some of the hottest issues that are separating Liberals and Conservatives today. And yet, by talking about what is reasonable instead of what is ideologically correct, they find common ground.

I can’t remember hearing any political discussion this hopeful since… well, in a long time.

Click here.

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Quick Bites: The Cost of the Hollywood Walkouts, Remote Work Trends, Short Stories, a Crazy Stat, and a Quiz About Orchestras
  1. The crazy and growing cost of Hollywood’s strikes. Analysts say the writers’ and actors’ strikes have cost California’s economy $5 billion so far, affecting not just the entertainment industry, but caterers, dry cleaners, transport companies, and more. Click here.
  2. Remote work is here to stay. That is the opinion of many. And that has been my opinion since the beginning of the COVID shutdown. I’m not so sure anymore, because of the current, very aggressive, push on the part of some large companies to re-establish the old in-office standard. While that is working itself out, the HubSpot blog has published a report on the remote work trends to watch in 2023 and beyond. Click here.
  3. 3. Do you read short stories? If so, you may enjoy these ideas about what makes it so worthwhile. Click here.
  4. Gun violence in America. I’m not entirely sure if the logic employed here is solid. I want to think about whether the conclusion derives from the facts. But the facts are interesting. Click here.
  5. Test your knowledge of orchestras. (I got 18 out of 21 on this one.) Click here.
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From JM re Good Deal or Dangerous Political Gambit in the Sept. 22 issue: 

“The General has three stars. He should understand the programs his service promotes.

“We not only look weak we are weak.

“Did you ever read about in the beginning of WWII the turnover rate of Generals. Many were canned, and not only at the beginning. During peacetime, soldiers were promoted politically. When it came time to lead in war, the deficient leaders were sacked promptly. Even, so it cost lives for them to show how poor they were at their position.”

My Response: I didn’t know that. I’d like to think that the senior staff of our military were (and are) seasoned and wise… I suppose there are politics at play.

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