Thursday, October 3, 2013

Arguing like a simpleton


At the risk of giving an Op-ed piece more readers than it deserved, below is a letter to the editor in response to that piece which the newspaper refused to publish.
 
The OP-ed piece was written by a university professor and writer.  The thesis of the article was unclear, but it rehearsed the usual themes of catastrophic global warming being inevitable, and point at right wing politicians as the culprits and as obstructing evildoers in general.
 
I have written previously against the belief in man-caused global warming, and grounded my objections in scientific terms.  My having a science background, it is amusing to observe Arts majors speak with greater certainty of the conclusions of science than scientists do themselves. 
 
To wit:
 
Here we go again: another Arts major who is more confident in his grasp of science than real scientists are.

 

Here is a news flash for Professor of cultural studies and communications Latham Hunter: the globe is not warming, and none of his scientist friends can explain why.

 

Here is a piece of advice from another writer: when you argue like a simpleton, you can only persuade simpletons.  If you take it as intuitively obvious that Stephen Harper is an evil man devoted to the destruction of (a) the country he governs and (b) the world, you cannot persuade people who find these assumptions contentious and even repellant for a thoughtful person to hold.

 

The professor seems to have had his head in the clouds for so long that he has forgotten some basic philosophy 101.  I speak of the far-fetched argument.  Stephen Harper may believe in developing the Alberta tarsands, but from that it does not follow that he is in favor of “colossal water pollution, habitat destruction…” not that such things in Alberta would affect us in Hamilton anyway.  As for carbon emissions, I’m sure that even the professor is in favor of some of those, such as the carbon dioxide emissions he gives off by breathing.

How Stupid Can Americans be? Obamacare.


I'm watching Greta, and the crawl at the bottom contains Obama's taunt that the unifying principle of Republicans is to deny 30 million people health care.

 

Now, I watched the President's press conference live.  I noticed the illicit substitution in his argument the moment he made it, but NO ONE ELSE, NOT ONE JOURNALIST, picked it up or has made note of it since. (Either they think Obama is illiterate and don't want to say it, or they are!)

 

He was talking about the provision of health care insurance and then said that Republicans want to deny health care.  NO!!  They would want to deny health care insurance.  There is a difference between health care and health care insurance.  Smart people would rather have health care than health care insurance.  It is the difference between cash in hand and an IOU.

 

Nobody has picked up on this!!

 

To deny the free provision of health care insurance is not the same as to deny the provision of free health care, which Americans (and illegals) already enjoy to a certain extent.

 

When the entire political class and the entire journalistic class can't pick up these vital distinctions and illicit substitutions in argument, it is no wonder Obama gets to exist in an intellectual twilight zone.

 

To the taunt that Republicans want to deny people health care insurance, the retort is that Republicans refuse to force health care insurance on those who don't want it, don't need it, can't afford it.  In addition, this new insurance scheme may not be able to deliver the health care it promises!!!

 

Why??

 

Because doctors won't accept lower pay and more work.  They will select patients who will pay more than medicare and more than Obamacare minimalist policies.  They won't accept new patients.  So where are the 30 or 45 million new insureds going to get health care with their precious new policies? Mexico?

 

That's the distinction between health care and health care insurance.  Smart people would rather have health care than health care insurance, and Obama is offering insurance and saying the other side wants to deny you health care.

 

The iron law of politics is that the people get the government they deserve.

 

Does America deserve Obama?  I rather think so!!