Archive for March, 2017

The liberals who loved eugenics – Washington Post

The progressive mob that disrupted Charles Murrays appearance last week at Middlebury College was protesting a 1994 book read by few if any of the protesters. Some of them denounced eugenics, thereby demonstrating an interesting ignorance: Eugenics controlled breeding to improve the heritable traits of human beings was a progressive cause.

In The Bell Curve, Murray, a social scientist at the American Enterprise Institute, and his co-author, Harvard University psychologist Richard J. Herrnstein, found worrisome evidence that American society was becoming cognitively stratified, with an increasingly affluent cognitive elite and a deteriorating quality of life for people at the bottom end of the cognitive ability distribution. They examined the consensus that, controlling for socioeconomic status and possible IQ test bias, cognitive ability is somewhat heritable, the black/white differential had narrowed and millions of blacks have higher IQs than millions of whites. The authors were resolutely agnostic concerning the roles of genes and the social environment. They said that even if there developed unequivocal evidence that genetics are part of the story, there would be no reason to treat individuals differently or to permit government regulation of procreation.

[Why Middleburys violent response to Charles Murray reminded me of the Little Rock Nine]

Middleburys mob was probably as ignorant of this as of the following: Between 1875 and 1925, when eugenics had many advocates, not all advocates were progressives but advocates were disproportionately progressives because eugenics coincided with progressivisms premises and agenda.

Progressives rejected the Founders natural-rights doctrine and conception of freedom. Progressives said freedom is not the natural capacity of individuals whose rights preexist government. Rather, freedom is something achieved, at different rates and to different degrees, by different races. Racialism was then seeking scientific validation, and Darwinian science had given rise to social Darwinism belief in the ascendance of the fittest in the ranking of races. The progressive theologian Walter Rauschenbusch argued that with modern science we can intelligently mold and guide the evolution in which we take part.

Progressivisms concept of freedom as something merely latent, and not equally latent, in human beings dictated rethinking the purpose and scope of government. Princeton University scholar Thomas C. Leonard, in his 2016 book Illiberal Reformers: Race, Eugenics & American Economics in the Progressive Era, says progressives believed that scientific experts should be in societys saddle, determining the human hierarchy and appropriate social policies, including eugenics.

Economist Richard T. Ely, a founder of the American Economic Association and whose students at Johns Hopkins University included Woodrow Wilson, said God works through the state, which must be stern and not squeamish. Charles Van Hise, president of the University of Wisconsin, epicenter of intellectual progressivism, said: We know enough about eugenics so that if that knowledge were applied, the defective classes would disappear within a generation. Progress, said Ely, then at Wisconsin, depended on recognizing that there are certain human beings who are absolutely unfit, and should be prevented from a continuation of their kind. The mentally and physically disabled were deemed defectives.

In 1902, when Wilson became Princetons president, the final volume of his A History of the American People contrasted the sturdy stocks of the north of Europe with Southern and Eastern Europeans who had neither skill nor energy nor any initiative of quick intelligence. In 1907, Indiana became the first of more than 30 states to enact forcible sterilization laws. In 1911, now-Gov. Wilson signed New Jerseys, which applied to the hopelessly defective and criminal classes. In 1927, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Virginias law, with Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. writing in a letter that, in affirming the law requiring the sterilization of imbeciles, he was getting near to the first principle of real reform.

At the urging of Robert Yerkes, president of the American Psychological Association, during World War I the Army did intelligence testing of conscripts so that the nation could inventory its human stock as it does livestock. The Armys findings influenced Congresss postwar immigration restrictions and national quotas. Carl Brigham, a Princeton psychologist, said the Armys data demonstrated the intellectual superiority of our Nordic group over the Mediterranean, Alpine and Negro groups.

Progressives derided the Founders as unscientific for deriving natural rights from what progressives considered the fiction of a fixed human nature. But they asserted that races had fixed and importantly different natures calling for different social policies. Progressives resolved this contradiction when, like most Americans, they eschewed racialism the belief that the races are tidily distinct, each created independent of all others, each with fixed traits and capacities. Middleburys turbulent progressives should read Leonards book. After they have read Murrays.

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The liberals who loved eugenics - Washington Post

Liberals apologize more than conservatives, study says – CNET

Technically Incorrect offers a slightly twisted take on the tech that's taken over our lives.

The president (almost) never apologizes.

I'm sorry, but this may upset some of you.

I have happened, you see, on research that chose to examine whether your political leanings make you more prone to apologies.

This research may have been stimulated by our sorry political times.

Indeed, Matthew Hornsey, from Australia's University of Queensland, told PsyPost on Tuesday: "My thinking on that had been influenced by casual observation of politics -- it just seemed that people on the left side of politics would issue public apologies more than conservatives."

Ah, but public apologies are different from, say, sincere apologies. They can be strategic, rather than real.

Science hasn't yet delved deeply enough into apologies. Studies have often focused on whether an apology exists, rather than how effective it might have been in achieving forgiveness or even rebuilding a little trust.

For an apology to be effective, one 2011 study concluded that you have to convince the other person that it won't happen again. Can anyone believe that from a politician?

Another study suggested that when you apologize matters too. It can be too late. In this 2013 study, a conversation of less than 10 minutes can tolerate a later apology. A longer conversation requires a much quicker "sorry."

Hornsey, whose study was first published in January, admitted to being fascinated that President Donald Trump, while campaigning, insisted he never apologized. Which, surprisingly, turned out not to be true.

The study looked at 2,130 people in seven countries -- Australia, Chile, China, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Peru and, look here, Russia.

It involved subjects writing down what they would say in situations that may have required an apology. The researchers concluded that not only are conservatives less prone to apology, but also less moved by someone else's apology.

Hornsey tried to offer initial explanations. It seems that conservatives are more hierarchical and accept power difference more readily. So if I hurt someone lower than me, ach, that's the way of the world.

Hornsey, though, says he'd like to go deeper into into examining whether conservatives simply see apologies as a sign of weakness.

"I also wonder if conservatives have a higher threshold for what they see to be offensive," he added.

I fear some conservatives may look at this and conclude that liberals are soft little things who pussyfoot around in their political correctness and bathe in apologizing for America.

I fear some liberals may retort that conservatives have neither decency nor self-awareness and are emotionally Neanderthal.

I fear we're may all be feeling very sorry if we carry on like this.

Technically Incorrect: Bringing you a fresh and irreverent take on tech.

Tech Enabled: CNET chronicles tech's role in providing new kinds of accessibility.

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Liberals apologize more than conservatives, study says - CNET

Liberals and Labor fail to reach agreement on banning foreign … – The Guardian

The preliminary agreement between the major parties on foreign donations has broken down with Labor expected to reject curbs on activist groups such as GetUp. Photograph: Torsten Blackwood/AFP/Getty Images

Liberal and Labor parliamentarians have failed to reach a consensus on banning foreign donations to political parties with Labor now expected to reject curbs on activist groups such as GetUp.

The joint parliamentary committee on electoral matters is due to bring forward an interim report on foreign donations on Friday after being given an extension of time in an attempt to build cross-party agreement.

Guardian Australia understands there was preliminary agreement between the major parties on a working draft of the report late last week but the deal broke down last weekend.

A copy of the working draft made its way to some activist groups, who were alarmed by the thrust of the recommendations, and intensified their lobbying efforts.

Labor is now expected to produce a dissenting report, which will argue foreign citizens and entities should be banned from making donations to political parties and associated entities, which includes some but not all trade unions but will draw the line at extending the ban to activist groups.

The Greens, who are also expected to issue a dissenting report, support a ban on overseas donations to political parties and associated entities but do not believe the ban should extend to activist groups.

The Greens believe restrictions for activist groups should not apply before writs are issued because a blanket donations ban would harm groups including environmental, religious and public health groups taking part in civil society, including advocacy and delivering other programs outside election time.

The Liberal Democrat senator David Leyonhjelm opposes a ban on foreign donations and peppered witnesses with questions suggesting there was no problem to be fixed. Other members of the committee believe he will issue a further dissenting report.

Labor has been telegraphing concerns in recent weeks that the government wants to cross the line between regulating campaign finance for electioneering purposes and regulation that could be interpreted by the courts as curbing activism.

Bruised by coordinated campaigns from progressive activist groups against the Coalition in marginal seats during the 2016 election campaigns that supplemented a massive field operation from the ALP and trade unions the government has signalled on several occasions it wont countenance reform of the donations and disclosure regime that applies only to political parties.

The government has made the point that third-party activist groups are now significant players in the Australian political system, and you create an asymmetry if you regulate political parties but not other actors capable of influencing the political system.

The special minister of state, Scott Ryan, told Guardian Australia last September: Theres no point regulating political parties to within an inch of their life and then saying its a free-for-all elsewhere.

Coalition sources have told Guardian Australia agreement has broken down through the joint committee process because Labor has been pursuing a GetUp exemption and that is unreasonable at a time where activist groups run overt political campaigns.

The committee, which has been charged with reviewing the conduct of the 2016 federal election, and with looking at the donations and disclosure system, managed to produce a consensus report on authorising electoral messages in the first phase of the inquiry.

If the government intends to pursue a proposal on foreign donations that Labor cant ultimately support, it will have to run the gauntlet of the crossbench.

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Liberals and Labor fail to reach agreement on banning foreign ... - The Guardian

Surprise winner Emmanuella Lambropoulos secures Liberal nomination for Saint-Laurent – CBC.ca

A 26-year-old high school teacher has defeatedformer provincial cabinet minister Yolande James for the Liberal nomination in the riding of Saint-Laurent.

Emmanuella Lambropoulos beat both Jamesand law professor Marwah Rizqy Wednesday night to secure the nomination.

Lambropoulos and her team couldn't hold back their surprise at winning out overJames, the woman considered to be the Liberal party favourite. She said her victorywas the result of a lot of hard work.

"I really went every day, door-to-door, with one or two other people. We worked really hard,"Lambropoulostold Radio-Canada.

Leading up to the vote the media didn't pay much attention to her candidacy, she said,and often, people didn't even know there was a third candidate running.

James was reportedly approached by the party to run and served as provincial immigration minister between 2007-2010 under former Quebec premier Jean Charest.

She had also recently worked as a commentator on CBC and Radio-Canada.

James didn't speak to reporters following the announcement, but sent a tweet congratulating Lambropoulos. She ended up finishing in third.

Lambropoulos teaches in Montreal's Rosemont neighbourhood and has worked for the Saint-Laurent riding association.

Her supporters credited the fact she lives in the Saint-Laurent borough and wasn't parachuted in by the Liberal party as the main reason she came away with the victory.

Emmanuella Lambropoulos reacts after winning the nomination. (Graham Hughes/Canadian Press)

"We came from the bottom up,"said Petro Vouloukos, 22, who helped Lambropoulos secure her win. "We were the grassroots. Not from the top up like Mrs. James."

The Saint-Laurent riding has been Liberal for decades and is considered a safe seat for the party in the April 3 byelection.The seat was left empty whenStphane Dionaccepted the role ofambassador to the EU and Germany.

Lambropoulos was the only of the three candidates to live in the riding.

Second place was Rizqy, a tax lawyer who ran unsuccessfully for the Liberals in another Montreal riding in the 2015 federal election.

The race has been the subject ofcontroversy, as long-serving St-Laurent borough mayorAlan DeSousawas blocked from seeking the nomination by the party without explanation.

His appeal of the decision was unsuccessful.

A Liberal member at Wednesday's votewho has lived in the riding for 13 years,Bilal Hamideh, told CBC it was unfortunate DeSousa was not allowed to run.

"In general, I think it's discouraging to participate in the [nomination]system," Hamidehsaid.

"It does weaken the system in a way if it is not clearly explained why he wasn'tallowed.

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Surprise winner Emmanuella Lambropoulos secures Liberal nomination for Saint-Laurent - CBC.ca

WA Election: Royalties for Regions stoush between Nationals and Liberals on election eve – ABC Online

Updated March 09, 2017 14:42:51

A public stoush has broken out between WA Government alliance partners the Nationals and Liberals over regional funding, less than 48 hours before voters go to the polls.

The WA Liberals are keen to push their financial credentials, but the WA Nationals today dropped a bombshell by lashing out at the Liberals' plan to cut regional spending under the Royalties for Regions program.

On Wednesday the Liberals' election costings revealed funds from the scheme would be shifted to meet recurrent costs of regional programs to save $800 million over two years.

The money would be used for operating regional infrastructure that was previously funded through consolidated revenue.

Nationals leader Brendan Grylls said the promise was "based on a massive 40 per cent cut to Royalties for Regions".

He told ABC Perth Radio the Liberals had taken a "blunt machete" to the program.

"I will not be a part of the gutting of the Royalties for Regions program," he said.

"We will fight until our last political breath to ensure that (Treasurer) Mike Nahan and (Premier) Colin Barnett cannot implement this plan.

"We look forward to the voters signalling to Labor and Liberals that their plans are unacceptable."

It deepens the fractures that have emerged between the alliance and puts their key election promises at odds.

"This is now a critical moment in this election campaign for regional voters," Mr Grylls said.

"This is now a fight to save Royalties for Regions. I am happy to be in it."

But Mr Barnett said the Liberals would "set the agenda" and remained committed to changing Royalties for Regions.

He said the Liberals' position would not prevent them forming government with the Nationals after the election.

"Because we are the Liberal Government, and if we are elected, we will form government," Mr Barnett said.

"And we will invite the National party to be part of that, but we are the major party and we will set the agenda."

Mr Barnett defended the proposed shift in Royalties for Region funding from new projects to recurrent funding for existing facilities and services.

"Everything we have committed to will be honoured but in the out years, so years three and four of next term we are going to make some adjustments," he said.

Mr Barnett said the major new regional projects had been largely completed, but money to maintain them was now needed.

"So where Royalties for Regions funding goes into an area we will help, not only to build the facility but also help to maintain it and operate it," he said.

"The Royalties for Regions money will still 100 per cent exist and 100 per cent go into country and regional Western Australia, but we're going to fund it in a better way.

"We've done the catch up job and it is fantastic and we are going to continue that project."

Topics: elections, state-parliament, regional-development, regional, nationals, liberals, wa

First posted March 09, 2017 14:21:06

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WA Election: Royalties for Regions stoush between Nationals and Liberals on election eve - ABC Online