The Next Electric Car, Ctd

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/57/VW-T1b-Bus-Normalausf%C3%BChrung-Fr.jpg

(photo courtesy Wikipedia)

Volkswagen must have been listening to the same muse, according to Plaid Zebra:

Re-launching the hippy-bus seems too good to be true—is it possible that [VW board member] Neusser is just getting our hopes up? Unfortunately the new electric model of the hippy-classic is still a concept car, and releasing it to the masses depends largely on manufacturing cost. As Outsideonline points out, the company has a track record of teasing hippy-bus diehards with promises of re-initiating the VW factory lines with updated versions of the classic vehicle, including the 2001 Retro Microbus and 2011 Bulli. Still, it’s worth noting that neither of these versions hold a candle to the original design. If Volkswagen does revive the old bus from the dead, we can only keep our fingers crossed that it maintains the original aesthetic, rather than slapping the VW logo on a Yaris and trying to make it cool, like the aforementioned 2011 concept.

Wait.  What original aesthetic?  Heh.  Of course, if you already have a hippy-bus, you can make it EV all on your own:

The EV West Air Cooled Volkswagen Type 2 Starter Kit is perfect for those looking for a professional fit and finish on the drive components, but are willing to build and install their own battery system. This easy bolt in AC motor and controller system was designed to have a minimal vintage look so it blends in well with your air cooled classic.

This dude will tell you how.

Knock-on Effects

As previously noted, laboratory chimps have been classified as an endangered species by the US Fish and Wildlife Service, as reported by Nature:

The new rule will bar most invasive research on chimpanzees. Exceptions will be granted for work that would “benefit the species in the wild” or aid the chimpanzee’s propagation or survival, including work to improve chimp habitat and the management of wild populations.

Now Deborah MacKenzie at NewScientist (5 September 2015, paywall) reports that the new rule, in combination with laboratory fears of bad publicity, may hurt … wild chimps:

AN ANIMAL welfare victory in the US may prove to be a conservation catastrophe in Africa. Tests of a promising oral Ebola vaccine that could protect wild apes may be abandoned this month when a ban on the use of chimpanzees in biomedical research comes into force.

An outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus has swept across west Africa over the past 17 months, killing more than 11,000 people. Humans are not the only great apes at risk. The virus has killed chimps elsewhere in Africa, and, according to estimates by Peter Walsh at the University of Cambridge, the virus has wiped out a third of the world’s gorillas, leaving the western lowland gorilla critically endangered.

The animals require different vaccines than humans, and more testing as access to chimps is always limited.  She reports that testing on the wild populations is possible – but very, very difficult.  Up until now, captive chimps have been used, but the era of relatively free testing is coming to an end:

Research that benefits chimps will still be permitted. Walsh’s vaccine research meets that criteria, but there is unlikely to be anywhere to carry it out. None of the labs currently housing chimps for research has applied for a permit. Walsh thinks they fear that the negative publicity will jeopardise other, more extensive work with monkeys.

And so the exceedingly difficult problem of politics may doom the wild chimp population.  Do we chase this problem or that problem?  Which will revolt the public more?”  Rather than, “Which is more important?”

It would be interesting to put the onus on the conservation campaigners.  “Which project do you think is most important, and why?”  The ruckus would be both entertaining and instructive.  MacKenzie finishes with:

… Walsh thinks it will require captive chimps. “Disease is now a major threat to the survival of our closest relatives,” says Walsh. “It is immoral not to intervene if possible.” It is ironic that liberating chimps from labs could make that harder.

Belated Movie Reviews

Caesar and Cleopatra, starring Claude Rains and Vivien Leigh, was a fascinating movie in that it didn’t depend so much on plot as on the acting of the two leads.  Vivien succeeded admirably at irritating the living crap out of me most of the time; her personal matron / servant / assassin, Ftatateeta (say that fast 5 times), as portrayed by Dame Flora Robson, was creepy as all get out; and the supporting cast, including an exceedingly tall Stewart Granger (later of Scaramouche fame), were excellent.

But the standout was Rains.  His Caesar gets all the best lines, and he speaks them with a wisdom and amusement that is most engaging.  Whoever wrote his lines gave him insights (if insights they are) that were most surprising and had me nodding in surprise; perhaps they were false, yet they engaged the thought processes, as did his delivery of them.

It’s worth a watch, if you can stand Vivien’s Cleopatra.  Whether she’s good or bad is a matter of personal taste, I suspect; but if you don’t like Caesar, well, you’re just not Roman enough.

The Human Enterprise and Measuring the Parts, Ctd

Continuing my train of thought on categorizing human culture, it’s easy to observe unease when the practices of one sector penetrate the proper operating area of another sector.  For example, bribery in the public sector, which is the act of buying political influence, is the intrusion of private sector practices into the public sector.  In the United States it’s particularly frowned upon, if possibly widespread; in other nations the distinction may not be quite so strongly expressed.  In the health sector, there’s certainly a general unease as the demands of private-sector efficiency in the pursuit of profit conflicts with the doctor-patient relationship.

Out of Saudi Arabia comes a report from AL Monitor on an intrusion into the religious sector:

The Saudi leadership boasts about its efforts to welcome the pilgrims and expand the area where they can perform their annual ritual, the quality of the health services it offers and, most important, the safety and security of pilgrims.

However, the moment a Muslim decides to make the pilgrimage, he is at the mercy of the commercialization of this religious duty. From visa fees imposed by the Saudi government to transportation and accommodation charges, pilgrims are a source of income to both the Saudi government and service providers. The Saudi government prefers to call pilgrims “guests of God,” but these guests pay a high price. It takes some Muslims a lifetime to save for this important journey; many may never have enough resources to make it. Others can be banned for political reasons.

A Saudi micro-economy has flourished around the annual pilgrimage, but that is often overlooked when the Saudi leadership boasts about its services to pilgrims. From small hotel owners to global chains owned by entrepreneur princes such as Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, revenues from the pilgrimage have always been an important source of income.

No doubt some folk would see charging the pilgrims whatever the traffic will bear as only just and right; but the purpose of the religious sector, whatever it may be, is not that of the private sector, and so the unease justifiably exists.  We see this in the United States as well, and have for a long time, from the televangelists of 30 years ago culminating in the “prosperity churches” resulting in controversy and unrest in the faith community.

This unease does suggest the inappropriateness of permitting the practices of one sector to intrude into another.  The enrichment of preachers, often followed by the incompetent financial management of the gains comes right to mind.  The use of competition in the health sector has been rejected by most of the First World because of its tendency to waste resources and erode important relationships.

But I think it would be a mistake to confuse practices with purposes.  For example, the religious (or philosophical, if you prefer) sector has as one purpose the inculcation of an ethical system in the populace, and there is little doubt that this is efficacious for the community as a whole.

I think it’s worth experimenting with considering the natural practices and purposes of each sector and how they can be insulated from each other.  Insulation is probably worth a book, at the least, since perfect cultural insulation is both impossible and possibly inimical.  Each sector has a role; they all support each other; some intrusion is necessary.  However, firewalling may be possible.  An example might be a single payer health system, to insulate the doctors and patients from the practices of the private sector; yet, keep in mind that some of the greatest health sector advances would be impossible without the services of the private sector.  Conundrums do appear using this approach; does it mean the approach is invalid?  A topic to be explored.

End to End

Nicholas Weaver at Lawfare describes his little side project to listen in on unencrypted Internet traffic:

The Intelligence Community has a concept, NOBUS, or “Nobody but Us”, to describe unique capabilities they possess which our adversaries can’t employ against us. I may defend the effectiveness of bulk surveillance and attack, but these tools are anything but NOBUS.

About a year and a half ago, mostly for my own entertainment, I started a small hobby project. I previously argued in a talk that the primary NSA Digital Network Intelligence flow was conceptually straightforward, a blend of Network Intrusion Detection (NIDS), big-data analytics, packet injection, and malcode. Yet this was at the time an academic pontification, without a system to back it up; there was some doubt in the audience.

So I got out my credit card, bought a small computer, a network tap, and some zip-ties, and got to work. The goal was “bulk-surveillance in miniature”, a system implementing the primary NSA capabilities on 100 Mbps networks, including easily searchable bulk recording, user identification, cookie tracking, packet-injection attacks, and a web interface.

“NOBUS” blinks red lights at me as the sort of thing an ingrown community might come up with; to me, you always assume the other guys are right on your heels.  But what do I know?  So Nicholas gives us the technical details of putting together a simple listening package, and ends with Bruce Schneier‘s wisdom on the subject of a secure Internet:

We need to act like every open wireless network or hotel in the Washington area is potentially compromised.  And with the low cost of such installation, it doesn’t even need to remain the realm of foreign intelligence services.  How much money could criminals make with such systems?

At this point, it doesn’t matter if the NSA disappeared tomorrow.  The precedents are now well established. After all, if the US can target NATO allies with bulk surveillance and attack-by-name, who can’t do the same to us?  And I personally believe the US has more to lose than we have to gain.

The only robust defense against Internet surveillance is universal encryption, as cleartext traffic represents not just an information leakage but an exploitation vector.  Because what is the opposite of NOBUS?  How about a homework assignment.

Blind Opposition, Ctd

Treehugger continues to follow questions of opposition to adjusting for climate change.  First, Margaret Badore reports on the work of InfluenceMap:

The UK-based non-profit InfluenceMap gave Koch Industries and Duke Energy failing marks, as did Philips 66 and the Asian energy company Reliance Industries. Using data aggregation, analysis and original research, InfluenceMap grades major global corporations on their influence on climate change policies, in an effort to understand how corporate influence is holding back climate progress.

Google, Unilever and Cisco Systems came out ahead in InfluenceMap’s ratings, however no company earned a grade above a “B.” Chevron and BP both earned “E-” grades. Comcast and 21st Century Fox earned “E-” grades as well, making them the lowest ranking media companies. You can see the full list here.

Some companies are understandably irritable over the matter.  There’s roughly 100 companies on the corporate list currently, mostly gargantuan-sized organizations which therefore possess a great deal of influence.  Google is currently at the top of the heap, rated a B.  InfluenceMap has a separate list for trade organizations (roughly 30), which they label “Influencers“.  They do even less well than do the corporations, with the best rated a C-; ALEC, the provider of ready-made legislation to state legislators and previously mentioned here, where Google resigned from the organization, and here, sits at the plumb bottom of the list.  I wonder how many incumbents and contenders would twitch if you asked them to promise not to use ALEC.

At the other end of the spectrum, Sami Grover reports that utilities and power grid operators see the future as being green.

While utilities used to fret about the challenges of too much intermittent, distributed power, Kahn talks to Ted Craver, CEO of Edison International Inc—parent of Southern California Edison—who expects most of his new power to come from rooftop solar on his customers’ homes and buildings. The era of the big, centralized powerplant—says Craver—is probably in decline. Due to a combination of cheaper renewables, better storage options and more sophisticated software being used to balance demand with supply, Craver sees the future of his industry looking more like eHarmony or eBay than the traditional utilities we have come to know and, well…know.

A Tale of Three Backdoors

Nicholas Weaver @ LawFare gives us the story of three security backdoors:

Telephone systems also have a backdoor thanks to CALEA (the Communications Assistance to Law Enforcement Act).  Although CALEA doesn’t mandate any particular technology, it mandates that switches support wiretapping, so any phone switch sold in the US must include the ability to efficiently tap a large number of calls.  And since the US represents such a major market, this means virtually every phone switch sold worldwide contains “lawful intercept” functionality.  Yet this capability doesn’t just find use in law enforcement.

In the “Athens Affair” beginning in 2004, some unknown entity compromised Vodafone Greece.  This team of skilled attackers surreptitiously enabled the lawful intercept functionality on Vodafone’s switches and then used their backdoor access to wiretap the cellphones of prominent Greek politicians and NGOs, including both the Minister of Defense and the Prime Minister.

We need to assume that, if someone can perform such an attack against Vodafone, others can (or already have) used the same strategy against Verizon or AT&T.  So in the CALEA backdoor we have introduced a weakness into our telephone systems which attackers can exploit with significant national security implications[.]

That’s just one of the backdoors.

I’ll note, as a software engineer, that many systems have sections of code that – like junk DNA (it’s a loose analogy, actually, but I like the phrase) – are no longer used nor useful, and no longer updated.  They are conceivably vulnerabilities, if someone understands how to manipulate them.  Why do they exist?  Commercial pressures.  While some software engineers conceive of programming as an artistic form, and many more have that temperament, it’s gotta be a rare company that’ll pay to have someone go through code just to clean it up.  An artist who conceives of the system as a whole and finds the unused material aesthetically repulsive would do this; an engineer who, perhaps, doesn’t have quite the vision, and certainly not the motivation, will move on to the next project.

I surmise that working on such a backdoor – minus any associated ethical problems – would be a fascinating exercise in positive feedback.  Nicholas notes:

We have a difficult enough time building secure systems without backdoors, and the presence of a backdoor must necessarily weaken the security of the system still further.  With the dreadful history of backdoors, its little wonder most security professionals believe building backdoors right is practically impossible.

Animals and Personhood, Ctd

The two chimps that started this thread (tone down the snark, please), Hercules and Leo of Stony Brook University, have been denied personhood.  The Nonhuman Rights Project (NRP) has responded:

The Nonhuman Rights Project has filed a Notice of Appeal to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, First Judicial Department, from a decision and order in “Hercules and Leo” case on August 5, 2015, denying a petition for a writ of habeas corpus.

The chimps themselves are now entering retirement, reports The Statesman:

Newsday reported on Friday that Susan Larson, an anatomical sciences professor at Stony Brook, said that Hercules and Leo will retire from Stony Brook research and leave the university by September. However, Steven Wise, a lawyer who is the president and founder of the Nonhuman Rights Project, said his group will go forward with an appeal and will file action against the university if the chimps are not released to a sanctuary.

This caught my eye as I glanced through the legal material:

 In any event, the petitioner [NRP] denies that it seeks human rights for the chimpanzees.  Rather, it contends that the law can and should employ the legal fiction that chimpanzees are legal persons solely for the purpose of endowing them with the right of habeas corpus, as the law accepts in other contexts the “legal fiction” that nonhuman entities, such as corporations, may be deemed legal persons, with the rights incident thereto.

Trying to get their foot in the door.  I suppose this explains why my proposal that Apple be given the next open Supreme Court opening has not been taken seriously.

Blind Opposition

Derek Markham @ Treehugger.com highlights the latest dubious project from extremist elements in the fossil fuel industry:

You’re either with us or against us, according to the Western Energy Alliance’s social media campaign.

The Western Energy Alliance (a misnomer, as the only energy industries it lobbies for are oil and natural gas) would like us to believe that the future of energy is black and white, and that either you side with all of those pesky activists and environmentalists who want us to go back to the dark ages by giving up all fossil fuels and depriving everyone of health and happiness, or you side with the oil and gas companies and want the evil guv’ment to lift all of the profit-robbing regulations from the industry.

“Eliminate fossil fuels! We hear it all the time. Sounds easy, right? Then pledge to live fossil fuel free for a week and see what it’s really like.”

The group just launched a ridiculous social media campaign, called the Fossil Fuel Free Challenge, in which it gives participants two choices, both of which are disingenuous and short-sighted, and then backs up both choices with hyperbole and dishonest characterizations.

“Fossil fuels permeate our lives. Our campaign provides us the opportunity to show those who oppose responsible oil and natural gas development that they would be poorer, sicker, less educated, colder in winter, and hotter in summer while generally leading a dull and deprived life. But for anyone who thinks life is better without fossil fuels, then we challenge you to go one week without them.” – Tim Wigley, president of Western Energy Alliance

The cited website is simple-minded and irresponsible.  It fails to properly characterize the situation in which pollution has become a serious problem, fossil fuels contribute to global warming, and we have more problems with the oceans becoming the sink for used plastics.

But let’s deconstruct the website.  If you agree with the WEA’s position, then they say,

Yeah, fossil fuels make modern life possible! They allow us to be healthier and lead more productive lives.

This is a bit of weasel wording.  It is, in fact, true that the energy provided by fossil fuels has greatly improved life – but notice how my wording differs from their wording.  By separating energy from the source – fossil fuels – we differentiate the requirement (energy – although, yes, this can be ameliorated through conservation) from the optional part – fossil fuels.  With this clarification we can then easily understand that it’s energy, currently provided by fossil fuels, which provides the good times – not fossil fuels in and of themselves.

Naturally, the pollution emitted while processing and burning fossil fuels is not mentioned on the website.  This is a failure of responsibility.

And if you choose to take their challenge, they happily point out how fossil fuels pervade our lives:

For five days don’t use any product made from, delivered using or operating on oil, natural gas or their associated products. That means staying clear of anything that uses gasoline, oil or natural gas. Even electricity, plastics, rubber and synthetic fibers are to be avoided.

Which is irrelevant – because the technologies which will permit fossil free living fall into the categories of not invented yet, not fully developed, or not fully distributed.

They are engaged in advocacy for their position, and I have no doubt they’d plead this to be their right.  Here’s the problem: the processes and results of their work poisons the environment and the citizenry, and yet they make no mention of it.  It would be perfectly fine to continue this work while stating that they fully support / invest in the development of replacement technologies, because it’s obvious that we are not yet ready to fully transition from fossil fuels to alternative technologies.  It’s even fine to have a long term plan to continue production, albeit in reduced form, because some usages will no doubt be impossible to replace (but never bet against an engineer).

Instead, they are attacking the alternatives.  It may be speculative, but (and note how this echoes the very first point in this post) I think they have permitted their pursuit of money to divert themselves from the pursuit of prosperity.  Think about it: Possession of money is just the ability to buy things.  Prosperity is the entire package: enough money, good health, healthy environment, happy neighbors, good standing in the community, all those things which comprise a good life.  The employees & owners of WEA, in essence, are driving away from themselves many of the elements of a good life through this advertising campaign.

And that’s a sad statement on corporate morality.1


1I speculate that Behavioral Economics might play into that mindset, better known as “I have a hammer, and thus everything is a nail.”

The Political Environment

Along with the Australian turn of the worm came news of the political environment of their Liberal Party, which is more conservative than liberal.  From news.com.au comes this:

THE Liberal Party faces the threat of a civil war if Malcolm Turnbull replaces the hero of 2013, Tony Abbott.

The so-called base of the party despises the man from Sydney’s eastern suburbs. Their hostility will bar them from giving him a smooth entry to the Prime Minister’s office.

The term “the base” is not accurate. In no way are its members the foundation of the party.

It’s simply a name for the ultra conservative minority, a few shards of reactionary thought urged on by right wing Liberal Party agitators in the media.

But they know how to hate and will not want to give up their sense of entitlement to dictate to other Liberals which they believe they gained when Mr Abbott rolled Mr Turnbull in 2009.

It’s rather dismayingly familiar, isn’t it?  The conservatives engaging in denial of science, as evidenced in this reproduced blog entry of the new PM of Australia, courtesy The Sydney Morning Herald:

Now politics is about conviction and a commitment to carry out those convictions. The Liberal Party is currently led by people whose conviction on climate change is that it is “crap” and you don’t need to do anything about it. Any policy that is announced will simply be a con, an environmental figleaf to cover a determination to do nothing. After all, as Nick Minchin observed, in his view the majority of the Party Room do not believe in human caused global warming at all. I disagree with that assessment, but many people in the community will be excused for thinking the leadership ballot proved him right.

Conservatives set great store by the past, by definition.  After all, the actions of the past have carried them (& us) to our current positions, and if those positions are prominent and prosperous, then might it seem logical to consider those actions, and by extension the principles precipitating those actions, to be of a positive and salubrious nature.

If I may be excused, it even crosses my mind that the slave-owners of the American South will fit this pattern.

The difficulty with this general position (I do not confine myself to the slave-owners, nor even equate them to conservatives, if only to stem an immediate outcry of abuse), however, has to do with the quality of principles.  Quite often principles are considered immune to the vagaries of chronological change; that is, principles take on an eternal glow of effusive rightness.  Academics, professional and amateur (I should place myself in the latter class, I’m sure), congregate around the principles, engaging not only in praise, but in explanation, although often the explanations are ill-placed, assume constant contexts, and are often more of the quality of rationalization, which, although not fundamentally of an egregious nature, will in most specific instances indeed turn out that way.

Let’s apply these observations.  Conservatives believe their articulated principles have brought us to current prosperity; all well & good.  They believe them eternally correct.  Now the mud begins to surge up the ankles and into the boots, because our context constantly changes.  A “principle”, which I shall place in those quotes to indicate this dubious quality, may be finely applicable in one context, while completely improper in another.  Let’s take an example:  Libertarians, especially those new to the club, often rage against regulations in the areas of pollution, environment, zoning, and several other categories.  Why?  Because they can go back in history and point at some specific example and cry, “See?  There was no need for regulations then; and now we’re so much better off, so why should we promulgate this regulation now?”  (This is often followed by prolonged, learned, and – occasionally, not always – incoherent discussions to support their point.)

But they fail to qualify and compare the relevant contexts.  A century, two centuries ago, populations were far smaller, so that even if a large percentage of the population engages in some activity causing, say, pollution, nature can simply absorb the pollution with little impact.  Compare to today’s 8 billion people (or, more precisely, the local population density in the specific scenario), and nature may now be ill-prepared for the onslaught.  And then, given the increase in energy availability, general scientific knowledge, etc, and now our ability to generate pollution is greatly increased; the toxic materials we now generate have a potency much greater, in many cases, than any seen before.  Simply consider the by-blow of a nuclear power plant.

But – like most folk, and I do not wish to suggest any condemnation – these conservatives wish to live their lives by principles, preferably those transmitted to them by their forefathers.  They see them as good, and as eternal.  An attack on a principle is, in essence, an attack not only on themselves (for by adhering to a set of principles, they become part of their person), but on their heritage and ancestors.  By suggesting impropriety on the part of their ancestors, they are told that their entire bloodline is soiled, while they still feel they are adhering to good & right principles – often of a divine nature, which simply works as gravel in the gears of reason.

Thus, the conservatives deeply married to their principles will cry out their rage, their way of life is imperiled by the wastrel liberals.  They are deadly serious about this, just as much as their opponents value their own principles.  These principles are currently assuming the mobility of a mountain: it only moves at the beckoning of God.  Thus we see outré conclusions which the good extremist conservative is forced to attain, given the narrow corridors his principles have forced him to traverse: monstrous conspiracies by scientists, scientists whose entire goal is to study reality; assertions of various scandals where the worst that a reasonable person might think is that an unfortunate error has occurred; etc.

And, just to complicate the situation, certain instigators take to the media to increase their rage even more. These instigators are not liberals, but fellow conservatives, or at least carpetbaggers set to enrich themselves on the oil slick of anger of the conservatives.  The resulting cacophany serves to obscure the discussion, to hobble truth, and to slow necessary adjustments to human society.

The role of the Internet needs little explanation.  However, by contrast, this does throw some light on an old-fashioned, denigrated, and almost forgotten role from the pre-Internet days: that of the gatekeeper.  In the days when self-publishing was a difficult, though not impossible, proposition, the gatekeeper was that person who had the power to choose who could be published by the large industrial concerns in all of the traditional media areas: TV, radio, and print.  For those who failed the sometimes arbitrary, self-interested tests ordained by those gatekeepers, the gatekeepers were of dubious societal worth; but, in hindsight, it’s becoming clear that they also served to filter extreme views from widespread distribution.  Today, when the gatekeepers are now consigned to Pandora’s Box, we now see the spectacle of Rush and his ilk, a sad case indeed.

And now I see a report of the same problem in Australia.  Is this the future of the democracies?  To be plagued by extreme views endorsed by citizens who do not have the time to become educated in the myriad issues facing the nation?  We all face this problem.  Personally, on some issues I’m simply neutral; on those susceptible to scientific analysis, I defer to genuine analysis, while paying attention to sources devoted to vetting and evaluating same (see Skeptical Inquirer); and some I am forced to use “common sense”, a rather dubious appendage, I’m sure, of which I try to maintain a proper skepticism.

And yet, I do not think that only democracies are doomed to bear these people.  Consider the plight of Iran, discussed here at an earlier date, where the hardliners of the conservative party threaten those attempting to move the party forward, and accuse them of apostasy in the context of the Islamic Revolution.  Just as the Internet permits the incursion of liberal views, it also permits the circulation of extremist views – and lends itself to organization.

Things have no moral quality in and of themselves (see here and here), but they can enable moral acts, i.e., acts with a moral dimension (are there any without?).  Including, apparently, the Internet.

In God We Trust vs. E Pluribus Unum

This essay is part of the Pillar series.  Please follow the link in the menu to discover the nature of this series.

*      *       *

To the reader who might wish to assert the United States of America is a Judeo-Christian nation, or some similar sentiment, I must admit to a reaction of a nature similar only in that it is nearly fundamental to my temperament, and automatic in its reaction; otherwise, it is in complete variance to the reader’s thought, or rather, feeling.  My immediate reaction is: the United States is secular.  But such must yield to more considered reflection, which, when indulged upon, yields a conclusion stronger yet: the United States MUST, for her survival, her honor, her very nature, be secular.

The news sphere crackles with incidents of relevance, such as the Idaho legislators who refused to attend a legislature’s invocation involving a Hindu prayer, or the massacre of minority or disfavored populations in Iraq by ISIS forces (here and here).  How do these disparate events link to the question at hand?  Read on, dear reader …

Definitions

We might begin by asking, what does it mean to say we, the United States, are secular?  Or, alternatively, to be of any religious nature, as a Mormon might dispute the Baptist’s assertion to a traditional Christian nature, or a Presbyterian’s view might differ from a Catholic’s concept.  The most useful conception may be to suggest that, while we may acknowledge and respect the First Amendment, it is well known that we are founded on a Christian view of the world, and that, really, all positions of importance are reserved for Christians, and where the government law and the Bible clash, well, we all know the Bible should be paramount.

Such a view prevails through a noticeable fraction of the populace, and suffices to our purposes.  It is to this view I find myself opposed.

The First Amendment

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof …

It is best to begin with the weakest part of my argument, and from there build to the crescendo, so the beginning will be the basic law.  I say weakest, for it is settled law, but without, at this juncture, basic justification.  There is nothing new to the interested reader; I reiterate this basic part of our governmental structure, not only to fulfill the rote requirements of discussing an Amendment, but to point out that this part of our governmental structure, and in fact our culture, is beyond the reach of majority whim.  We are a Constitutional Republic, which means we recognize that sometimes majority opinion will be wrong, that it can be variable, that it can blow about like a leaf on the wind.  This amendment reminds us that the coercive power of the State should never be utilized with respect to this most variable of subjects, for reasons yet to be explored.  The Amendment is our bulwark against the waywardness of the day, as first one sect and then another gains power in the focus of the Nation.

But why concern ourselves with such matters?  Surely, the opposed reader might murmur in all sincerity, we’re all Christians here!  At this juncture, it might be best to ask those whose concerns on these matters have shaped our Law, as they gave it deep thought, given the examples that befell their ancestors.

The Founders

It all begins with the Founding Fathers, of course.  They penned the weighty documents shaping our lives; they gave long and deep thought and debate to every line of our Constitution.  Why did they make the decisions we deal with in our lives?

We might learnedly argue over the intentions of the Founders – putative statements vs. implied intentions, close textual analyses, even documents of dubious character imputed to those who would, in all reality, find the content of said documents repulsive: such is the emotional turmoil our Founders can roil in the breasts of both their contemporaries and the political warriors of today.

But let us take a different tack.  The approach mentioned in the previous paragraph exists oddly without context, as if those who fought both physically and intellectually for the soul of the nation were mere heads floating in nutrient broth; so let’s build a reasonable context and then ask how the Founders would react to it.

Society

What is the purpose of society?  To glorify God?   Kill the enemy?  Restore some former glory?  Each of these positions may have its advocates, but I believe they are vain, shallow, and unworthy of the serious searcher.

I propose it’s self-perpetuation; without that, nothing else matters.  As a whole, societies exist today to exist tomorrow.  This implies member replacement and expansion, commonly (but not always) achieved through reproduction; given an already adequate supply of folks, a relatively low average rate is necessary assuming an otherwise conducive context.  Raising one’s offspring while ducking, say, a spray of mustard gas from the murderous tribe next door is not congruent with any unrisible definition of ‘conductive context’.

So let’s examine “conducive context”, not from our modern viewpoint where we can relax amongst our cornucopia of plenty and raise our individual blood pressures arguing over political and epistemological fantasies, whilst peeling grapes or removing buns from our Quarter Pounders, but from the viewpoint of Colonial America, circa 18th century.  The Founders, faced with very real conundrums as the Country advanced beyond the victory over the English Monarchy, had diverse religious roots, but what was their knowledge and experiential base?  What informed their decisions, beyond the requirement of a conducive context?
English History

The European settlers of the area which later became the initial thirteen states making up the new country of The United States of America were, by and large, English expatriates, or their descendants, men & women whose experience with English events was, at its most distant, third hand; more often, it was second hand or even personally witnessed.  It is entirely reasonable to suppose this culture, this history, informed the choices of the Founding Fathers who helped form the legal, formal frameworks on which the United States rests.  A brief history of the relevant times, visceral as it will be, will serve to inform the skeptical reader of the knowledge, formal and informal, acquired through schooling and popular play (such as that of Wm. Shakespeare) available to those who sought to create a new country.

Henry VIII (reigned 1509 – 1547)
A period of civil unrest began with Henry the VIII’s famous break with Roman Catholicism and his founding of the Anglican Church; concomitant with this act was the attachment of England to the Anglican Church.  One of the primary immediate results was the Dissolution of the Lesser Monasteries Act of 1536 (the remainder were dissolved in 1542), a law which stirred up resentment in northern England.  20,000 to 40,000 rebels rose up against the law, but were dispersed when

“Henry VIII promised the rebels he would pardon them and thanked them for raising the issues [certain acts Henry had passed] to his attention. [Robert] Aske told the rebels they had been successful and they could disperse and go home.”

Alas, the promise was merely convenient; when more violence occurred, the leaders and 200 of the followers were rounded up and executed.

Noteworthy in 1540 was the death by burning of three men accused of religious heresy, in that they preached Lutheranism, these being Robert Barnes, William Jerome and Thomas Garret.

Scotland was invaded, with hopes of imposing Anglicanism on the then-Catholic Scots; it ceased with the death of the Scottish King but then resumed, with the destruction of Edinburgh, when the Scots reneged on the treaty that had been imposed upon them.

Henry felt he ruled purely by the Grace of God, and the kingdom was often near bankruptcy, at war, and suffering from civil strife.

Edward VI (1547 – 1553)

The son of Henry VIII, adherent to the new Church of England, became King at age nine and never held true power; this was held by the Privy Council.  In his short reign religious difficulties continued.  The war on Catholic Scotland was uninterrupted, and the Scots’ alliance with Catholic France made the fighting bitter; witness the utter destruction of Edinburgh and a network of English garrisons, although the dream of uniting England with Scotland was not achieved.

The Prayer Book Rebellion broke out in 1549 in Devon and Cornwall, when religious services were ordered to be performed in English.  Catholic sympathizers were executed, prisoners had their throats slit, and the usual battlefield atrocities were committed.  5500 died amidst the chaos.

Church properties continued to be converted to Royal and private purposes, embittering Catholic priests and laity alike.

Queen Jane (9 days in 1553), Queen Mary (1553 – 1558)

Jane, Protestant cousin of Edward, was Queen for several days before the Privy Council discovered its 3000 man army faced a 20,000 man army supporting the Catholic Mary, daughter to Henry. Some supported Mary for religious reasons, others because of their detestation of the Privy Council, and so Jane was deprived of the throne, and later her life, due to her religion.

Queen Mary, Catholic ruler of Anglican England, aka Bloody Mary, proclaimed that no one would be imprisoned or executed because of their religious inclinations, yet did exactly that; reversed most of the policies enacted by her father and brother; and burned at the stake more than 280 Protestants during her tenure, using the newly passed Heresy Acts.  The executions were considered cruel even by her own, yet Mary persevered; thus the chalice of Catholicism in England came to be poisoned.

Like her father, she felt she ruled by the Grace of God.

Elizabeth I (1533 – 1603)

Elizabeth I, Protestant, and last of the Tudors, succeeded Mary upon her death, and England once again became Anglican as she (under the guidance of counselors) introduced the Elizabethan Religious Settlement, which dismantled “Popery”. Known as “Good Queen Bess,” her long reign was relatively quiet for our purposes, once the official religious designation of England had been switched; this was pursued for both personal (she was raised Protestant, unlike her sister) and practical reasons (being illegitimate in Catholic eyes made being Queen impossible).  Still, the Rising in the North, a Catholic attempt to install Mary, Queen of Scots, on the English throne, did result in the executions of 750 of the imprisoned Catholics, plus the general disorder of a revolt.

She also faced the vexing problem of the Catholic Irish:

Crown forces pursued scorched-earth tactics, burning the land and slaughtering man, woman and child.

Then came the 9 Years War, an Irish revolt.  Even for Good Queen Bess, generally thought to have believed faith was personal, religious cruelty was not entirely absent.  Still, one must observe the general positive view of her reign and the correlation with religious tolerance.

James I (1603-1625)

James I, of the House of Stuart, King of Scotland, and son of Mary, Queen of Scots, succeeded Elizabeth after charming her into naming him successor, despite her execution of his mother.  He was the eponymous sponsor of the King James Version of the Bible, adherent to the Church of Scotland (Presbyterian), and, later, the Church of England, and the author of two books on the theological basis of kingship.  During his reign The Gunpowder Plot occurred, the attempt of a Catholic group to destroy the King and Government of England; a possible motivation was the failure of James to relax prohibitions on English Catholics.  Unfortunately, greater misfortunes were then visited on the Catholics, including an Oath of Allegiance, which could be demanded of any Catholic and included denial of the Pope’s authority over the King: a distressing requirement.  The Puritans, founded during Elizabeth’s reign, registered objections to various religious practices; James initially required conformity from them, but later softened his stance somewhat.  His reign was, perhaps, relatively quiet.

Charles I (1625 – 1649)

Charles I, son of James I, was deposed by the English Civil War.  He strongly believed in the divine right of Kings, and such was his downfall – actions contrary to Parliament, including imprisoning members so they could not vote, and continued support for a Duke of Buckingham who failed at many important missions, angered Parliament.  Various acts of taxation, alliance, and war, all informed by his belief in divine right, eventually led to the famous revolt, his beheading, and the rise of Oliver Cromwell to prominence.  “Princes are not bound to give account of their actions,” Charles wrote, “but to God alone.”

Within the religious realm, his sympathy with Arminianism upset Puritans & Calvinists alike; preachers were restricted; unpopular policies insisted upon; High Courts used to prosecute dissenters; the convicted, even gentlemen, were subject to harsh penalties.  His homeland of Scotland rejected his attempts to spread Anglicanism to Scotland, instead opting for the Presbyterianism of the Church of Scotland.

Oliver Cromwell (1653 – 1658)

After the execution of Charles I, Lord Protector Cromwell executed most of the garrison and some of the inhabitants (3500 people) of Drogheda in Ireland after the successful Siege of Drogheda of 1649.  Cromwell, fervently anti-Catholic, wrote

I am persuaded that this is a righteous judgment of God upon these barbarous wretches, who have imbrued [sic] their hands in so much innocent blood and that it will tend to prevent the effusion of blood for the future, which are satisfactory grounds for such actions, which otherwise cannot but work remorse and regret.

Once Ireland had been subjugated, Catholicism was banned; 50,000 people deported; his name, even today, is a curse for what his religious leanings did to the country.  The same is not true of Scotland, which, after defeat, was largely left alone, if occupied.

The American colonies, too, were unbothered, except Cromwell restrained his Puritan colleagues in their attempt to usurp control of Maryland Colony from Catholic Lord Baltimore.

As Lord Protector he was somewhat more tolerant; he invited the Jews to return to England after banishment 350 years earlier (mostly to convert them and hasten the End Days), and in general advocated for a tolerant national church.

His son, Richard, succeeded him as Lord Protector, but resigned after less than a year and did nothing of consequence to this summary. The country then returned to monarchy.

Charles II (1660 – 1685)

An advocate of religious tolerance, he was overruled by Parliament, which passed bills that required office-holders swear allegiance to the Church of England, making the Book of Common Prayer the official book of the Church of England, and prohibitions on religious assemblies except those under the auspices of the Church of England; later, when it came to light that his presumptive successor was Catholic, Parliament attempted to exclude him from succession; the effort failed through the machinations of the King.

Sadly, a hoax propagated by one Titus Oates caused an uproar:

The Popish Plot was a fictitious conspiracy concocted by Titus Oates that between 1678 and 1681 gripped the Kingdoms of England and Scotland in anti-Catholic hysteria.[1] Oates alleged that there existed an extensive Catholic conspiracy to assassinate Charles II, accusations that led to the executions of at least 22 men and precipitated the Exclusion Bill Crisis. Eventually Oates’ intricate web of accusations fell apart, leading to his arrest and conviction for perjury.

To his credit, Charles never believed the hoax, but he was unable to restrain those who found the plot credible.

James II (1685 – 1688)

King of England, Ireland, and Scotland (James VII), a convert to Roman Catholicism, succeeded his brother, Charles II.  While advocating for relaxation of restraints on Catholics, he called for the persecution of Presbyterian Covenanters in Scotland; on the other hand, he authored the Declaration of Indulgence, one of the earliest moves toward religious freedom in Great Britain (for it applied to Scotland as well).  This caused an uproar for both religious and legal reasons, as it suspended an act of Parliament.  This came to naught as his will was voided by the Glorious Revolution which terminated his reign: the successful invasion of William of Orange.

Mary II and William III (1689 – 1694 [Mary], 1702 [William])

At the invitation of Protestant nobles, William of Orange invaded England and defeated his father in law, James II; James was permitted to escape from custody, but would never be King again.  William and Mary then ruled England, but with the recognition of an English Bill of Rights, limiting monarchical power, defining Parliament’s rights, and focusing on individual rights.  During their reign there was remarkably little conflict of a religious nature, only an Act of Parliament barring Roman Catholics from the throne, passed when William and Mary failed with regard to heirs.

Anne (1702 – 1714)

Anne, a Protestant despite her father, James, being Catholic, was the last of the Stuarts.  She favored the Anglican church and dismissed Whig politicians from office, as they were most likely to be Catholic, but other than that there was little religious controversy, nor civil disturbances.

George I (1714-1727)

George, first of the Hanoverian dynasty, Lutheran, also Elector of Hanover, was not entirely popular; “James the Pretender” attempted to overthrow him, beginning in Scotland, but failed quickly.  While some executions followed, George’s response was moderate.  As King of Germany, his attention was split; in England, he was considered wooden and distant; Europeans considered him enlightened.  Little of religious affiliation occurred; nor did violence.

George II (1727-1760)

The son of George I, Elector of Hanover, faced rebellion led by Bonnie Prince Charlie, but the end result, the execution of many of the rebels after their defeat at Battle of Culloden, appears to be the result of foreign influence and political considerations, despite George being Lutheran and Charlie Catholic.

Other Wars

During this same period, roughy 1500 – 1770, England was involved in a number of wars, most of which had at least the excuse and instrumentality of religion.  The religious underpinnings of Catholic vs Protestants were doubtless apparent to witnesses and combatants alike, and, if the clerical personnel involved manipulated the followers, this would have come to light.

On Their Own Continent

A little known part of the history of the United States is the period when it functioned as a confederacy, 1781-1789; during this period, many of the States had a religious component to their Constitutions, as documented by the Library of Congress.  A very quick review of the activity during this short period is sadly reminiscent of the history of England.  Virginia:

The Parson of the Parish [accompanied by the local sheriff] would keep running the end of his horsewhip in [Waller’s] mouth, laying his whip across the hymn book, etc. When done singing [Waller] proceeded to prayer. In it he was violently jerked off the stage; they caught him by the back part of his neck, beat his head against the ground, sometimes up and sometimes down, they carried him through the gate . . . where a gentleman [the sheriff] gave him . . . twenty lashes with his horsewhip.”

This abuse of Swearin’ Jack Waller, a reformed gentleman, by the Anglicans favored by Virginia is also described here and here.

Another incident in Virginia:

David Barrow was pastor of the Mill Swamp Baptist Church in the Portsmouth, Virginia, area. He and a “ministering brother,” Edward Mintz, were conducting a service in 1778, when they were attacked. “As soon as the hymn was given out, a gang of well-dressed men came up to the stage . . . and sang one of their obscene songs. Then they took to plunge both of the preachers. They plunged Mr. Barrow twice, pressing him into the mud, holding him down, nearly succeeding in drowning him . . . His companion was plunged but once . . . Before these persecuted men could change their clothes they were dragged from the house, and driven off by these enraged churchmen.”

Such incidents contain two-fold dangers: to the States’ peace & prosperity, as the individual attentions of the citizenry is focused not on matters of survival and prosperity, but instead upon those which, we will see, are of an unverifiable nature, to the waste of that scarce energy; and more importantly, to the sects involved: their reputations are impugned, and the vulgar tastes of the sects’ members are tantalized, basted in the hatred of another’s arbitrarily selected tenets in favor of one’s own tenets – of perhaps equally dubious plausibility.

But the nadir of these attitudes centers on the confusion of the divine with the world, the struggle for the control of the State.  In this contest lies the seed of corruption, the diversion of the attention of the contestants from the contemplation of proper behavior (and less tangible matters), thus encouraging dubious activities to take place.  Worse, given the primacy of religion, the contestants may conclude that the importance of victory justifies almost any possible action. This sad path most often terminates in tragedy and dishonor.

In the end, in an unfortunately lost reference, when the State regulation of religion was ended by the Constitution and Bill of Rights, at least one clergyman expressed relief and, in his analysis, concluded the overt influence of religion over the States’ governments had been a burden and mistake.  As one laid claim over the other, the other sadly influenced the first in directions not salubrious to its intentions.

Historical Summary

Few societies are trouble-free, and indeed such a society may be considered empty of the yeast necessary for the progress permitting continued competition and survival with other societies. But as any parent will espouse, violence and uproar is not a conducive context for the raising of the next generation.  As we see in the summaries, the Founding Fathers had a rich history of the problems of mixing religion and secular rule, gathered from their own experience as well as that of their immediate forefathers in England.  Not that religion is necessarily always a source of evil in our world, but it often acts as a multiplier for men’s intemperance, greed and foolishness.  The benefit of one’s faith, the belief that one is blessed or sanctioned by the divinity, induces men to assume compliance when reality dictates opposition; indeed, religion often requires vast seas of certainty in the face of something for which there is no proof at all (a subject to be discussed momentarily) and leads some to such rock-like certainty that any who do not agree, to the least degree, are castigated and relegated to undesirable realms, metaphorically and sometimes physically as well.

In this very quick survey of English history, themes should become apparent: correlation of religious uproar with divine certainty; correlation of tolerance with civil peace.  Correlation is not causation; quick surveys are not deep research.  But these give the impressions gained from years of reading and observing.  And this is just a portion of what the Founding Fathers experienced, the stories they knew – along, of course, with the reasons why many of them were in America, even as colonists: to escape religious persecution.  This survey gives the operationality for that persecution, and begins to hint at the best form for mitigating, if not completely abolishing, such strife from a new society.

The Meaning of Faith

Wherein we elaborate upon the basis of the certainty of the member of the sect, and how it should impact the honest thinker.

*     *     *

This word, faith, we use to indicate our belief in something without proof– this is definitional, incontestable. If there was final, legitimate (or objective) proof that some divinity existed, even were it beyond our comprehension, then the only debate would be between those who accept the proof, and those very few to whom admission of that reality was repugnant. Faith would not play into the matter; of sects, there might only be one, or perhaps a very few. Instead, the least bit of attention will yield recognition of a thousand sects or more, each finding some facet, large or small, to differentiate themselves from the next, from the most xenophobic to the most inclusive.  All are included within perhaps a dozen distinct religions, almost all vying with each other; within each, sect confronting cult confronting orthodoxy confronting heterodoxy– a history of disagreement leading to confrontation, sometimes terminating in horrific consequences. Witness any number of notorious battles in Western Europe alone: murders, massacres, and instances of mayhem, all associated with religious differences. The rare religion really practicing tolerance often finds itself persecuted. Such a sect is the Bah’ai, one of whom I knew for a short while many years ago. Yet, this is not to accuse religion of being the source of strife; to my mind, it is merely a lens that focuses a fundamental facet of mankind into something yet larger, crueler, meaner: that combative nature necessitated by the bloody claw of Nature.  But to return to the point at hand, we use faith, or lack thereof, to justify our own belief in the degree of truthfulness of a particular religious system.

A key implication must then come to the fore – if there is no proof, then there can be no objective certainty, only subjective certainty.  If this is so, then the serious inquirer must ask: how can I be so certain I am right, when the wellspring of certainty consists of dogmatic training, intuition, long traditions, and the bonds of my many friends?  To be sure, a forcefully held opinion can be quite daunting, reinforced by the lungs and black looks of the holder; yet, without objective facts – and those have not been found by searchers with the best of intentions – they remain only opinions, dependent on nothing more than intuition.

Beware the approbation of the crowd: the opinions of the many, be they honestly and forcefully held even by friends, still remain arbitrary opinions in the absence of objective facts.  They have not found the font of truth, but only (but not merely) the comfort of supporting opinions, of belonging, and sharing an important tie.

Perhaps the adherents of these various religions have found success in the course of their lives, however success may be defined. But to use that as a logical justification for the truthfulness of their religious claims – and, worse, the fallaciousness of their theological rivals’ claims – is a logical error called post hoc ergo propter hoc, or “after this, therefore because of this.” But in the absence of objective fact, drawing a conclusion concerning the nature of divinity, even that it exists, is a fool’s errand.

It is not inappropriate to wonder about those folks for whom the truthfulness of a religious system is less than primal; often, those whose exposure has been to a single such system from which they have benefited fail to question the truthfulness of the system; or their circumstances do not permit such investigations; or their temperament is such that it is more important to belong than it is to pursue the truth.  For those students of science, their existence is unsurprising, for survival is an important facet of existence, and while knowing the deep truth about any number of things is not instrumental to survival, membership in a group may greatly enhance survival potential.  Particularly for homogenuous groups, such an attitude is understandable.  Again, though, this would be to mistake adherence for proof, for objective truth.  They adhere, but for reasons peculiar to circumstance, have no particular insight into the final reality.

Before the summation regarding Faith, it is necessary to ask: what if we continue, regardless of the intellectual barriers heretofore erected, to be rock-solid in our certainty and to apply it in our government – to proclaim a theocracy as advocated by a few?  I refer you to the English History, or at least its summary: the observation that confidence in one’s knowledge of the Divinity leads, tragically, to the disregard of those of one’s fellows who fail to adhere to one’s precisely formulated views: deprivation of equality, of property, of decision, and of life; the creation of chaos, of a society inhospitable to all but those most orthodox in today’s orthodoxy, and those few doomed when tomorrow’s orthodoxy differs from today’s.  Does the reader doubt this?  These very scenarios play out to this very day; attestations appear on the television news with appalling regularity.  A retreat to the refuge of ‘Christianity’ merely begs the definition of Christianity, along with a murmur of ‘good luck’; a claim to modernity results in references to the barbaric actions of the various sects of Islam, the various sects of the Jews, and, at the very least, the words of the sects of the Christians, murmured, perhaps, into their beards. And forget not the fanatical acts of Warren Jeffs‘ group of Mormons, the Jim Jones cult, and even the activities of certain Amish groups!  All done in the name of some solitary divinity; all done in the pursuit of temporal power.

So, to our summary: “Faith” is a dangerous word.  It rationalizes any action, any assertion, because it is not subject to any restraint; the daring may use it to achieve their darkest desire, and very dark that may be.

And yet: Faith is also a path to a possibly better future.  Faith comes in many forms, as mundane as faith that our fiat money will continue to be accepted within our nation, to faith that our neighbors will continue to do what is right, to the wondrous, everyday fact of altruism, that mysterious habit of the good to hold out a hand to someone who needs help, regardless of their nationality, their color, their station, their cleanliness, their location.  To Americans at their best, show them someone in true need, assaulted by random Nature, and the American will stick out a mitt, haul the unfortunate to their feet, and help them get started; all with the Faith that this is the right thing to do, that some day that altruism will somehow be repaid to them.  For those of us who think they are realists – and I often include myself in that number – there is a great blind spot that goes with that philosophy, and it is this: no, that cannot be done.  It is not realistic.  We cannot split our camp into two, the tigers will eat us.  Can’t be done.

Sometimes those with Faith get eaten.  And sometimes those with Faith are the leaders to the next great step on our journey.  Here I use the word faith loosely, as simply attempting some great feat without any assurance of achieving same, of risking all, and achieving all, on scant anything but that it will turn out.  Realists hardly do that.

And, finally, in all true Faith there must lurk a tiger of its own: Doubt.  The sincere, clear-eyed believer, to achieve such a description, must forever be aware that Faith means belief without proof, and honesty then must beget doubt.  The doubt need not be crippling, but must be honestly acknowledged and given its due; the believers’ behavior should be moderated toward those not entirely consonant in their belief systems. For the important point of doubt is this: perhaps your potential opponent is Right, and you are Wrong.  Or you are both Wrong.

Or maybe the Atheist is right.

Obligations on Sects

Given the political position and intellectual attributes ascribed to many deities, it is important to understand the obligations inherent upon a sect contemplating existing within a governmental system intent on blindness toward the claims made by the sect.  In the United States, a sect may operate freely unless it abridges any secular law imposed by the State; as the State is prohibited from making laws with respect to religion, the sect may consider all laws to be secular and must be in compliance with all.  To take an extreme example, if a sect (perhaps of Mayan derivation, as an example) believes that blood sacrifice of the sect’s enemies on its altars is a divine requirement, then they should be aware of the State’s prohibitions on homicide, and either modify their deity’s requirements, or choose not to reside in the United States.

Since violent conflict is generally prohibited by modern societies, a wise sect will draw an important lesson: mutual respect.  Respect burnishes reputations; spite, distaste, and hatred tarnishes it.

Immigration

It is perhaps not as well acknowledged as it should be, but the heart-blood of the United States has always been its immigrants.  They are often brave, for they have left their homes, even if forced; they are intelligent, for they learn ways alien to them and become comfortable in our land, as do their children; and they are innovative, because the mental walls we construct for ourselves do not apply to them, and so they may view a problem in a very different way.  Doctors, scientists, engineers, artists: they have brought their genius, their energy, their all, and have made the United State prosper.  Their names are Legion, and need not be repeated here.  All have come and flourished in this land of the free.

Land of the free, repeat it softly, and let that famous phrase circulate in your head for a moment.  We have seen the morbid result of the explicit control of government by those of a religious bent, by well-meaning men & women convinced of the favor of their divinity, at the application of laws written by a subjective mind but proclaimed to be of a divine nature – but subject to no confirmation, and, even worse, no debate, with results scarce needing repeating: repression, offense, hatred, loathing, murder, extinction.

Empathize with our worthy immigrants- possessors of energy, talent, and motivation:  they see one country, full of welcome, of guarantee of a lack of religious strife; they see another country, where sect rages against sect, where bodies appear in the morning to the grief of their loved ones, and a sad whirlwind of vengeance sets in.  Which country should they pick to ensure the safety of their children?  Should my valued reader, possibly an urger of divine control of the United States, still select that which would bring chaos to the United States, and divert the resourceful immigrant from this soil?

Conclusion

In review and summary …

The founding of the United States of America marks the coming together of a unique assemblage who decided they needed to live together in peace in order to survive a hostile world.  Instructed in the ways of man by the history of their former home country, and thus realizing the necessity of surviving disagreements between citizens who are members of various sects, none of which could proclaim with certainty their grasp of any truth, they deliberately ejected religion from a central position within government structures in order to minimize the disorder a resolutely religious party might bring, and to enshrine that decision in the Bill of Rights.  For those who doubt the wisdom of such a result, one might only consult the recent history of such countries as Saudi Arabia and other theocracies, or for that matter aspiring organizations such as ISIS, and the conditions, repressions, and, in extremis, horrors visited upon those religious minorities out of favor with a theocratic ruler.

This removal of religion from the source of worldly power permitted those of a religious bent to return their attention to the central focus natural to their vocation: the spiritual development of their fellows.  By the same token, however, it becomes necessary that some slight subjection of the sect to the State becomes necessary; restrictions on activities are rare, but in the face of compelling State interest, required.

Thus, one of the most religious countries of the Western World is, in fact, secular: the governing laws are indifferent to the sects citizens might have chosen, and that indifference should remind those adherents that Faith implicitly teaches Doubt: we cannot know, but only hope, and through that lack of objective knowledge, we know that others may be more right than ourselves.  Given that great mystery, we should not live in suspicion, hatred, loathing, or any other such adjective belonging to a dread realm, but rather in respect, trust, and a shared faith that, by having freedom of (or from) religion, by being secular, we are the stronger for it.  To be anything else is to risk being torn asunder by our divisions, to fall from the high path into the fire, to fail the school of history as well as the heart-stopping lessons of today.

In the Founders time, a few dozen sects fled to the New World for a new home.  Today we are home to hundreds, with relationships so diverse as to span the entire spectrum, from close alliance, to anger and hatred, and even murder.  If the government of the United States were to descend into some divine alliance, then it’s power would be used to assert the dominance of the sect, much to the discouragement of all those other sects.

And this is why our demanding thesis, that the United States has been, is, and must remain secular, is true. The alternative is neither glorious nor honorable. It is only chaos.

E Pluribus Unum.  There is no other answer.

(Completed with the help of Arts Editor Deb White and Wikipedia.)

It’s Capitol Furniture

The State of Minnesota is trying to discover what happened to some of the original furniture that was designed for the state Capitol.  If you have ornate benches, rolltop desks, etc, perhaps they’ll buy them back from you.  From MPR:

When architect Cass Gilbert drew up his plans for the state Capitol, he also designed much of the furniture he wanted inside it, including ornate benches, desks, tables and light fixtures.

But that was more than 100 years ago, and things tend to get misplaced.

Now, as the $309 million restoration of the building moves toward a scheduled 2017 completion, state officials are trying to round up some of the missing items or find companies that can recreate them. Gilbert designed many of the nearly 1,600 original pieces. The fate of about half of the original furniture remains a mystery.

Australia & Science, Ctd

Prime Minister Tony Abbott of Australia is no longer PM, as he’s ousted by former communications minister Malcolm Turnbull.  While CNN reports this is primarily about leadership style and economics, this will also have an impact on Australia’s climate change policy.  He did not agree with Mr. Abbott’s policies, as enunciated in a blog post, reproduced by The Sydney Morning Herald (the original is no longer available, although Turnbull’s blog remains here), subtly entitled, “Abbott’s climate change policy is bullshit“:

… as we are being blunt, the fact is that Tony and the people who put him in his job do not want to do anything about climate change. They do not believe in human caused global warming. As Tony observed on one occasion “climate change is crap” or if you consider his mentor, Senator Minchin, the world is not warming, its cooling and the climate change issue is part of a vast left wing conspiracy to deindustrialise the world.  Now politics is about conviction and a commitment to carry out those convictions. The Liberal Party is currently led by people whose conviction on climate change is that it is “crap” and you don’t need to do anything about it.

The Guardian reports,

He has spoken out in defence of climate scientists, whose work has been derided by many of his colleagues and even by Maurice Newman, the chairman of Abbott’s business advisory council, who believes the world may have entered a cooling phase.

“It is undoubtedly correct that there has been a very effective campaign against the science of climate change by those opposed to taking action to cut emissions, many because it does not suit their own financial interests, and this has played into the carbon tax debate,” Turnbull said in a speech in 2011.

“Normally, in our consideration of scientific issues, we rely on expert advice [and] agencies like CSIRO or the Australian Academy of Science, are listened to with respect. Yet on this issue there appears to be a licence to reject our best scientists both here and abroad and rely instead on much less reliable views.”

So this sounds like a leader with some respect for the science of climate change.  But what sort of guy is Mr. Turnbull?  The Guardian also covers this question:

A few weeks after Brendan Nelson beat him for the dog-days job of leading a demoralised Liberal Party after its 2007 election loss, Malcolm Turnbull called Nelson’s new chief of staff Peter Hendy.

“Turnbull told me that my job was to get Brendan to resign in the next few weeks because Brendan was hopeless and he would damage the Liberal brand so much that by the time he, Turnbull, took over, the next election would no longer be winnable,” Hendy told me in 2009. “He called Nelson personally with the same message.”

Turnbull was in such a tearing hurry to fulfill his unshakeable belief that he should lead the Liberals, and the nation, that first term opposition did not daunt him, nor party room defeat, nor the normal parameters of self awareness.

He’s been leader of the Liberal Party before, so he has some experience in that department.  Now to see how Australia’s energy and climate change policies change.

Kim Davis, Ctd

Miranda Blue @ Right Wing Watch reports that the situation has become rather more intense:

The Oath Keepers, the anti-government “Patriot” group that mounted an armed standoff with the Bureau of Land Management at the Bundy Ranch, stationed armed guards outside of military recruitment centers after the Chattanooga shooting, and unsettled Ferguson protestors when they showed up carrying assault weapons, is now offering anti-gay Kentucky clerk Kim Davis a “security detail” to protect her from further arrest if she continues to defy the Supreme Court’s marriage equality ruling. …

[Oath Keepers founder Stewart]Rhodes said that the Rowan County sheriff should have blocked U.S. Marshals from detaining Davis, but since neither the sheriff nor the state’s governor will do their “job” and “intercede” on behalf of Davis, the Oath Keepers will have to do it instead. “As far as we’re concerned, this is not over,” he said, “and this judge needs to be put on notice that his behavior is not going to be accepted and we’ll be there to stop it and intercede ourselves if we have to. If the sheriff, who should be interceding, is not going to do his job and the governor is not going to do the governor’s job of interceding, then we’ll do it.”

In an update she notes:

Rhodes reports that Davis, through her Liberty Counsel attorneys, has declined Oath Keepers’ offer and he has ordered members of his group to “stand down.”

Davis’ action should be a relief – to the right wing extremists.  After all, for years they’ve complained about the illegal actions of that fiendish elected official, Barack Obama.  Such accusations may be found here and here and, well, just point your finger anywhere on the Internet and you’ll find one outraged citizen full of, uh, outrageous claims.  But if they’re going to relieve Mz. Davis of the responsibility of actually fulfilling her electoral responsibilities, how can they, in good conscience, hold President Obama to his?

(h/t Steve Benen @ MaddowBlog)

The Federal Reserve on 9/11

Arliss Bunny @ The Daily Kos presents the story of the Federal Reserve during the crisis of 9/11.  It’s fascinating, and I had not really considered that event to be an attack on the US financial system before; I can’t help but wonder if the Great Recession was a fallout of that attack.

Old Vero Mammoth Plaque

The letters column of American Archaeology (fall 2015, not (yet) online) includes a mention of a bone fragment on which is a depiction of a mammoth.  This picture is from NPR:

James Kennedy, an amateur collector, found this fossilized bone with a mammoth or mastodon engraving in Vero Beach, Fla. It has been identified as one of the oldest pieces of prehistoric art in the Western Hemisphere

ScienceDirect published the abstract of the study of this bone fragment back in 2011:

Rare earth element analysis was consistent with the fossil bone being ancient and originating at or near the Old Vero site (8-IR-9). Forensic analysis suggests the markings on the bone are not recent. Optical microscopy results show no discontinuity in coloration between the carved grooves and the surrounding material indicating that both surfaces aged simultaneously. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) revealed that the edges of the inscription are worn and show no signs of being incised recently or that the grooves were made with metal tools. In addition, the backscattered SEM images suggest there is no discontinuity in the distribution of light and heavy elements between the scribed region and the surrounding bone indicating that both surfaces aged in the same environment.

To which I can only say, a pity the Crayon coloring didn’t survive those 13,000 years.

Computers making breakthroughs

NewScientist (29 August 2015, paywall) presents a short interview with Simon Colton of Falmouth University concerning his programs that discover things:

Can computers make breakthroughs?

I think we will only see computers making true discoveries when software can program itself. The latest version of HR [a program to discover things] is specifically designed to write its own code. But it’s a challenge; it turns out that writing software is one of the most difficult things that people do. And, ultimately, there are mathematical concepts that you can’t turn into code, especially ones dealing with infinity.

I’ve mentioned Noson S. Yanofsky and his book THE OUTER LIMITS OF REASON: WHAT SCIENCE, MATHEMATICS, AND LOGIC CANNOT TELL US in prior posts (here and here), and one of his subjects was the problem of paradoxical statements, which he attributed to languages capable of self-reference.  The above section of the interview strikes me as related: a program which can write itself is, in a sense, self-referential because it has to understand, in some sense, that it exists (which is a strange thought in itself for what is basically an arrangement of bits in a computer, and becomes even stranger as one goes deeper into operating system implementations and realizes that this arrangement of bits can be partitioned and moved around as the operating system pages programs in and out … but I digress), and that it can modify itself in order to achieve its goals.  I wonder if the program can formulate paradoxical statements and goals, and if this would eventually constitute a certain amount of consciousness / intelligence?  (Is intelligence the ability to express & comprehend a paradox?)

Also of interest is the problem of representing certain mathematical concepts, such as infinity, which suggests, once again, a limitation of artificial intelligence capabilities (at least, based on current computing architectures) which may render them forever unable to match us in certain competitions … or may suggest a problem with our mathematical assumptions.

And goals!

How do you make software discover things?

You give it data that you want to find something out about, but rather than looking for known unknowns – as with machine learning, where you know what you’re looking for but not what it looks like – it tries to find unknown unknowns.

We want software to surprise us, to do things we don’t expect. So we teach it how to do general things rather than specifics. That contradicts most of what we do in computer science, which is to make sure software does exactly what you want. It takes a lot of effort for people to get their heads round it.

I’ll just say it’d be fascinating to see more on this subject.  It also reminds me of the story of a friend of mine from, oh, thirty years ago, who claimed he’d put together a symbolic logic program and gave it some facts and told it to start deductions.  Occasionally it’d ask him a question.  Once it asked him if the famous little jerk in Mercury’s orbit had actually been observed.  And once it asked him if a platypus as mammal or bird.

I’ve never been sure if he was pulling my leg or not.

Finally, something in what I use for a brain keeps pinging me with “DNA” in connection with this entire post.  Can it be said that DNA is self-referential in some meaningful sense, since it … sort of … creates itself, including the self-creation aspect?  I can’t quite make myself believe it, but the pattern match is occurring and demanding to be revealed.

Egyptian Election Law

Egypt is taking baby steps towards removing the dread influence of religion from government, AL Monitor‘s Rami Galal reports:

Continuing its efforts to separate church and state, Egypt has banned its imams from preaching in mosques while running for political office, a move that is stirring controversy among officials, legal experts and, of course, imams.

The Egyptian Ministry of Awqaf (Endowments) issued a statement Aug. 24 that read: “In order to prevent mosques from being used as political platforms, the ministry shall ban all preachers running for parliamentary elections from delivering sermons or religious lectures in mosques starting the first day they announce their nomination until the completion of the election process, so as to prevent them from promoting themselves or others through the use of religion for electoral interests.”

The ministry went further, deciding to “irrevocably strip its leaders who decide to run for elections of their leadership position and privileges within the ministry.”

It appears imams are employed by the Ministry.  The Ministry justifies the decision using reasoning reminiscent of that used for the creation of the United States’ First Amendment:

Abdel-Latif added, “The nomination of an imam or a preacher would place the ministry in a very critical situation, in light of its efforts to separate religion from politics and to prevent Salafists and other religious parties from using the mosques as political outlets for their campaigns.”

He pointed out, “Had the ministry allowed its imams to run for parliamentary elections, the political Islamic movement would have accused it of using double standards. The mere appearance of a candidate on the political arena, especially if associated with the Ministry or Al-Azhar, would be regarded as a call to support him in the elections, even if he has not particularly called upon people to vote for him. This is especially true since people in Egypt place clerics on a pedestal, even if they lack political savvy.”

Some of the officials and imams are unhappy, but given the religious fury experienced by England as various sects took control of the monarchy from Henry VIII onwards, the realization that a religious figure capable of exciting the emotions of the mob acting in this capacity is quite important, and putting a muzzle on it makes complete sense – from the point of the officials responsible for public peace.  To the religious figure, on the other hand, the muzzle is uncomfortable and unflattering, as it seems to label them as, somehow, unclean – despite their close association with God.  Thus the Alliance Defending Freedom organization in the United States, as reported by CNN‘s Dan Merica in 2012:

“In light of what I have presented,” Johnson says he will say, “How can you go into that election booth and vote for Barack Obama as president of the United States?”

What Johnson plans to do is in violation of the IRS’ so-called Johnson Amendment, a 1954 law that has made it illegal for churches that receive tax exempt status from the federal government to intervene in “any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for elective public office.”

Why is Johnson so brazenly violating that law this Sunday? Strength in numbers: He will be joined by at least 1,400 others pastors across the United States.

Johnson’s sermon is part of a wider effort by the Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative Christian legal organization that since 2008 has organized Pulpit Freedom Sunday, when they encourage and pledge to help pastors who willfully violate the Johnson Amendment by endorsing from the pulpit.

Religious reasoning feels quite right to them, as they take their guidance from religious tomes – without ever realizing that exciting the religious loathing of other groups who disagree on some obscure – to me! – point leads to a more fragmented and ineffective civil discourse.  In the end, history teaches us the more religion-blind the government and the citizenry become, the more peaceful society becomes.  This does not mean agnostic or atheist, but having the sensibility that religion has a limited sphere in which to operate, and once it moves beyond the sphere, no matter how well-meaning, one may experience disaster.  This may tie in with the thoughts expressed in this post, which I daydream about expanding on some day.