
Ginger and Richard Rhodes
Ginger,
You really started a Frayster firestorm yesterday with your comments on Timothy McVeigh. Looks like they were roaring on well after midnight. Lots of passionate opinion out there. Never let it be said that Americans don't have an opinion. Me too. First in line.
Maybe today you'd like to offer a few judicious or lubricious comments on, let's see, O.J., Monica, J. Lo, P. Diddy, Clinton, Bush, what's his name's suicide, Ruby Ridge, abortion, evolution, the miracle at Lourdes, and the death of God? Is that what they mean by "right-wing talk shows"? Is it possible to overload the Slate servers? Wouldn't that be fun?
How about that Maryland women's lacrosse team! The Terrapins have won six national championships and are going for seven.
I think it's a shame Osaka got cut out of the 2008 (or is it 2004?) Olympics bidding. If Americans experienced the Japanese train system, especially the Shinkansen, maybe we'd start restoring the wonderful system we used to have and the highways would unclog a little. I can remember when there were more than a hundred passenger trains a day in and out of Union Station in Kansas City. Now it's a science museum. Not that I'm opposed to science museums. But since it's Kansas City, I wonder if they have any displays demonstrating evolution?
Cheney and the Kid issued their new energy policy yesterday. The Demos tried to trump them by issuing their energy policy the day before. One especially wicked little twist to the Bush proposals was one that would tie funds for developing wind and solar to royalties from Alaskan oil. I can just see the backroom boys grinning to each other as they slapped that one up. "That'll show those @#$%&* tree-huggers!" On the other hand, our lack of a coherent, long-term energy policy is a mystery to the rest of the world. When I met with the chairman of the Japanese Atomic Energy Commission in Aomori City a couple of weeks ago, it was one of his questions. He couldn't understand how the most advanced and powerful industrial democracy in the world could limp along jerry-rigging its energy policy from decade to decade. Engineers in the energy business were telling me back in 1990 that in about 10 years the U.S. would start seeing brownouts and blackouts, and here we are. The economics of building big new baseload power plants in the midst of deregulation have been discouraging--the only thing anyone's built anywhere in the last 10 years has been small combined-cycle gas plants--and the perpetual-motion-machine theory that conservation and efficiency alone could solve all our problems while we were adding the equivalent of a new California to our population every 10 years led everyone (especially California!) astray. For the latter I blame Amory Lovins, whose snake-oil theories were beautifully dissected by William Tucker in the Weekly Standard. (Not a periodical I would normally recommend, but what the hey, energy policy makes strange bedfellows.)
Speaking of Americans with opinions, have you noticed that every American down to toddler age and even below knows how to do television? Perfect sound bites! Watch for the little red light! Face the camera! Maybe that explains the creeping celebridom that is consuming the media the way termites consume wooden houses in Africa. Speaking of which, we had a perfect example of creeping celebridom when we went on safari in Tanzania for millennium week 2000-2001: 100 kilometers out of Dar es Salaam on our way to Ngorongoro Crater, nothing around for miles, a kid by the side of the road selling fake elephant-hair bracelets, he comes up the Land Rover, I roll down the window, he sees I'm American and says, "You know Michael Jordan?"
You have to leave after lunch to treat clients, I know. I'd better get the dialogue rolling. Last night was fun once we got the house warmed up ...
red xox,
Rhodeman
The John Cassavetes Movie That Changed American Cinema Forever
Am I Wasting My Money if I Give to a Needy Family at Christmas?
Troy Patterson: What I Love About Glee
Hurray! We Won the War on Spam.
Bill Simmons' The Book of Basketball Is a Crude, Fantastic Mess
Thanks, FDA, but We Don't Need Your Protection From Raw Oysters












Reader Comments From The Fray:
[Notes from the Fray Editor: This week's "Breakfast Table"-ers did a terrific job of summarizing the Fray entries, taking up their points and answering them in the column--Fray industry workers could have taken the week off. As new star Mangar put it: "Richard Rhodes was very gracious in his willingness to directly address comments from the Fray. It's a brave thing to do, and I wish more authors had the guts. Thanks to Richard, and I'll try to reply with that respect in mind." Though Mr Rhodes' claim that Fraymanians "blow off while hiding behind the anonymity of your nicknames" did not go down well. Several posters gently and politely defended their right to Fraynames, for example here.
An interesting discussion on Mr Rhodes theories, and of his comments on The Fray (Fraymers didn't like the bit about "can't read very well" either), started here, with the splendid title "An attempted ex post facto clarity?"--if there's one thing Fraysters are going to catch you out on, it is that. Some of the Fray's finest pitched in. A brave and honest (and not anonymous) post about brutalization in schools came from Roy Jaruk, here.
Violence was the overwhelming topic of choice, but there are a few posts on verity, fawns ("fauns are those things that have afternoons, unless your woods are much more interesting than mine"), lekking, and other matters. Use the Fray Editor's Picks button, or just look for the checkmarks and stars. And Claude Scales took up the question of what we should call Fraypersons here.]
What sociologists and psychologists try to do is find a reason for a behavior or pattern of behavior. They don't use these reasons as "excuses" to pardon criminals, just as a way to understand the root of criminal action. These reasons have been badly skewed in courts as they have become excuses for heinous crimes--true to history, people have used science irresponsibly for ridiculous and damaging profit. (By the way I am a biologist and no, this has nothing to do with cloning). So take it to heart and realize behavioral scientists are simply trying to find explanation for such actions to end this pattern in the future.
--Mel
(To reply, click here.)
You don't have to delve very deeply into the human psyche to find out why some people are violent. It's not some strange perversion or disease that needs an explanation from genetics or childhood trauma or sociological circumstance. Put quite simply, it works. It's an efficient and effective way of acquiring immediate power over people, and of gaining their enduring fear, if not their respect. Someone who stands to gain more than he loses from using violence is going to be quite tempted to use it. So in order to combat violence, we need have an ongoing legal, social, and moral campaign against it, to make sure most people who commit violent acts lose more (in terms of money, respect, and social approval) than they gain.
--Jane Grey
(To reply, click here.)
My personal belief (and so it is only opinion based on observation) is that we are not teaching children (males in particular) how to channel aggressiveness positively or when certain levels of violence are a reasonable response (and which are not). We are simply condemning aggressiveness and violence but the children in learning that things are not that simple are making up their own rules.
--Michael Murray
(To reply, click here.)
[People] talk about "violence" as if it were a simple and agreed upon quality, like the flavor vanilla, and could be discussed as a single unified thing. In point of fact, though, soldiers jumping out of trenches into machine-gun fire, cold-blooded poisoners, domestic batterers, schoolyard bullies, and generals who order airstrikes, although they are all engaging in "violence" of one sort or another, have nothing else in common, and it's disingenuous (at best) to discuss them as if their actions were interchangeable.
The "problem of violence" is an illusion. It is not tuberculosis. It is not vanilla. And it does not have a "cure".
--Thrasymachus
(To reply, click here.)
(5/17)