With regard to emails on her
server that were are the highest level of classification, in a recent NPR interview, Hillary Clinton
stated: “Well, first, let me say that this is the continuation of an
interagency dispute that has been going on now for some months. As the State
Department has confirmed, I never sent or received any material marked
classified, and that hasn’t changed in all of these months.” Like many Clinton
statements, parsing is required. Clinton’s attitude is the result of a long
standing systemic distrust between DOS and DOD characterized not by
cooperation, but by competition due to a number of factors not to mention that
the DOS budget is a fraction of the DOD budget. If you are at DOS you consider
yourself the incarnation of "soft power" while on the other hand, DOD
is clearly the instrument of war. These cultural differences are made
dramatically manifest due to this latest Clinton scandal where DOD security
classifications were viewed by DOS as being intrinsically DOD/Intel, and
revocable by DOS. By the way, this interagency dysfunction brings the
unfortunate Benghazi incident into a clearer perspective.
Thursday, January 21, 2016
Friday, January 15, 2016
Could critics of personality tests have their own agenda?
The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) test is based on the theories of Carl Jung, in which the test-taker reveals himself to fit four dichotomies: introverted or extroverted, intuitive or sensing, judging or perceiving, and thinking or feeling and classifies respondents by the initials of the predominate dichotomies. Notwithstanding vocal critics, MBTI is the most widely used and trusted personality assessment tool which reinforces its validity, albeit non-scientifically. The reality is that MBTI is a user friendly tool providing insight into the human complexity by classifying respondents into easily digestible categories. Arguably, some of the recent criticism comes from zealots of political correctness and anti-profiling who regard any categorization of the human personality as an example of prejudice.
Tuesday, January 5, 2016
Don't drink the water in Naples
Living in Italy made for awareness about the callous and reckless dumping of toxic waste in the Naples environs, but it is only from time to time does this crisis come to the attention of a wider population. Last Sunday's WaPo did report that the Italian government confirmed higher-than-normal incidents of death and cancer among residents in and around Naples, thanks to decades of toxic waste dumping by a particularly treacherous element of the Mafia, the local Camorra. The rates of babies in the provinces of Naples and Caserta hospitalized in the first year of life for tumors, especially brain tumors, was determined to be excessive. The government blamed the excessive health issues to contaminants found at illegal hazardous waste dump sites which include high levels of lead, arsenic and assorted industrial solvents. In general, these dumps are the result of the Camorra's disposing of toxic waste from Italy's industrialized North for a fraction of the cost of legal disposal. In Italy where wire tapping is commonplace, a local mob boss was overheard when asked what he suggested doing about the toxic aquifers, "Drink bottled water!"
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
American Unexceptionalism
In an earlier post, I wrote about how it has become a norm to confuse fact with opinion which is an obvious and unfortunate testament to the country's disintegrating morals. Another contributory factor to this confusion is a pervasive anti-intellectualism which has resulted in the younger generation being less informed, despite a wealth of knowledge at their fingertips. After all, it makes it easier to confuse facts and opinions, if you don't really know what are the facts. The younger generation sees the internet not as a learning tool, but as a social networking tool with a focus on themselves and their friends. Mark Bauerlein, in his book, The Dumbest Generation, revealed how a whole generation of self-absorbed youth has become less informed and less literate than preceding generations. Coupling ignorance with a doddering moral compass does not make for a shining city on the hill.
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
Are Baltimore rioters the beginnings of ISIS in America?
Counter terrorism officials observing the recent
rioting in Baltimore should be concerned that those responsible for the mayhem
could be co-opted by ISIS and unleash home grown violence reminiscent of the
race riots in the late 1960’s or worse. The
parallels between the ISIS zealots and the Baltimore rioters are noteworthy. These
rioters are fundamentally rootless and are untethered from society having little
or no ties to family, culture or faith. In
a classic case of trying to extend one’s own values to another segment of
society, media pundits incessantly admonished the mothers and fathers. The
media is right, of course, that IF the rioters did come from a strong family
environment, they would be less likely to be thugs. On the other hand, the more likely
scenario is that they come from single parent homes, a mother struggling to
support her family, family members involved with drugs and criminal activities/incarcerated –
or all of the above. The erosion of the family in the Black community has been
well documented, and the Baltimore riots are yet again a consequence. Institutions and other organizations that
should be trying to fill this void have not.
What sort of school is teaching these kids that it is OK after classes to
go on a rampage at the local mall? The only difference between these thugs and
the ISIS fighters is that ISIS is better armed and organized. The situation would seem to be a huge
opportunity for the radical Nation of Islam.
Philosophical differences between ISIS
and the Nation of Islam are almost indistinguishable. Ironically Mayor Stephen
Rawlings-Blake during a press conference stood alongside the leader of the
local chapter of the Nation of Islam and thanked them for helping her deal with
the riots. Last November in a speech
about the Michael Brown case, the leader of the Nation of Islam, Louis Farrakhan,
told the crowd: “We’ll tear this ******* country up! We going to die anyway,
let’s die for something.” This sounds a lot like the tweet urging the Baltimore
high school students to go on a “purge”. The fact that the Nation of Islam has
long standing ties to Lybia increases the likelihood of ISIS co-opting and
channeling the anger and violence of untethered black males in our major cities. Sunday, April 26, 2015
Remembering Lunghua
With fewer and fewer of the Greatest Generation, WWII
commemorations and remembrances have become more and more meaningful. Amidst this historical retrospective there
are some aspects of the war that have been largely ignored, namely the Japanese
internment of over 13,500 civilian men, women, and children in China. Case in
point, Shanghai which was a bustling commercial metropolis with a large
international population had no less than 12 internment camps. Residents of the International
Settlement, predominantly British, were colonial officials who enjoyed a privileged life of afternoon teas
waited on by a bevy of servants, and exclusive activities like cricket and
polo. This blissful existence effectively ended on 8 December 1941, when the
Imperial Japanese Army entered and occupied the British settlement.
Thursday, April 16, 2015
Nature-Nurture Redux
In 1690 John Locke proposed that humans start with a
tabula rasa and acquire most all of
their behavioral traits from environmental experiences, thus denying the influence
of heredity.
This nature-nurture
controversy is again in the news with a recent study that shows poor children
have smaller brains than affluent children.
Neuroscientists studied the region of the brain that handles language,
memory, spatial skills and reasoning and discovered that the brains of children
in families that earned less than $25,000 a year were smaller than those whose
families earned $150,000 or more. The children with smaller brains scored lower
on a battery of cognitive tests. The
purpose of the research was to better understand the academic achievement gap
between poor and more affluent children. While the new research does not
explain the reason for brain differences, the researchers have postulated two
theories: (a) brain size may related to poor nutrition and lower-quality health
care, or (b) poor families tend to live more chaotic lives, and that stress
could inhibit healthy brain development. There is now a study to investigate
whether giving low-income mothers a small or large monthly sum of cash impacts
the cognitive development of their children in the first three years of life.
On the other hand, James Thompson, a psychologist at University College London
believes that there is a genetic component that should not be overlooked. His point is that basically less ability
people marry other people with less ability and have children which on average
have less ability. To be sure all children
are capable of learning regardless of their backgrounds or economic situation. Steven Pinker famously emphasized in his best-seller
that the behaviorist’s position is rooted in the ideology espoused by John Locke that humans are
conditioned by culture because social influences can be used to educe desirable
traits or repress undesirable traits. The pile of evidence to the contrary including this recent brain size study are an inconvenient truth.
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