Friday, September 25th, 2015
Stephan: I am absolutely appalled at the willful ignorance that is the central hallmark of many national political figures. Even more alarming is that these people are in public office or have reason to aspire for office because they represent and reflect the views of enough people in their district or state to win office. That the Republican Party is putting forward as Presidential candidates people like Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, Ben Carson and the rest I take to be a clanking alarm bell telling us that our democracy is dying.
And I think all this has to be seen in the context that nine Republican billionaires actually auditioned these people, and that that was simply absorbed into the political body and is now business as usual. It reminds me of the Roman empire where rich people purchased gladiator slaves so they could fight them until they were killed in coliseums that were sited across the empire. It must be an enormous ego trip to have enough money buy elections in the most powerful country in the world.
The Koch brothers/Scott Walker coupling, and his failure as a candidate, is being generally parsed by the corporate media as a cautionary tale that even with money you may not win. I don't see it that way. I read it as: with enough money you can buy influence so the leverage point is no longer money but taste.
Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson
In a speech delivered in 2012, Ben Carson said the big bang theory was part of the “fairy tales” pushed by “highfalutin scientists” as a story of creation.
Similarly, Carson, a noted creationist, said he believed the theory of evolution was encouraged by the devil.
“Now what about the big bang theory,” said Carson at speech to fellow Seventh-day Adventists titled “Celebration of Creation,” about the theory for the origin of the universe.
“I find the big bang, really quite fascinating. I mean, here you have all these highfalutin scientists and they’re saying it was this gigantic explosion and everything came into perfect order. Now these are the same scientists that go around touting the second law of thermodynamics, which is entropy, which says that things move toward a state of disorganization.
“So now you’re gonna have this big explosion and everything becomes perfectly organized and when you ask them about it they say, ‘Well we can explain this, based on probability theory because if there’s enough big explosions, over […]
Ben Carson is supposedly educated in science, biology, life, even truth. Yet apparently he willfully flaunts his ignorance (with all due respect to the ignorant) in the face of fact thus casting aside all credibility in lieu of common decency and knowledge.
What I find astonishing is that, despite his level of education, Carson either doesn’t recognize or doesn’t care that he is spouting the sort of lunatic caricatures of actual scientific models normally associated with backwoods, bible-belt hicks who refer to the third grade as their senior year.