Links to Consider, 10/30
Zach Goldberg and Christopher Rufo on CRT teaching; Robert Bryce on energy reality; Nicholas Wade on the lab leak hypothesis; Devon Kurtz on mass incarceration
Zach Goldberg and Christopher Rufo, in a survey of recent high school graduates, found that
62 percent reported either being taught in class or hearing from an adult in school that “America is a systemically racist country,” 69 percent reported being taught or hearing that “white people have white privilege,” 57 percent reported being taught or hearing that “white people have unconscious biases that negatively affect non-white people,” and 67 percent reported being taught or hearing that “America is built on stolen land.” The shares giving either response with respect to gender-related concepts are slightly lower, but still a majority. Fifty-three percent report they were either taught in class or heard from an adult at school that “America is a patriarchal society,” and 51 percent report being taught or hearing that “gender is an identity choice” regardless of biological sex.
despite more than $2 trillion in spending on renewables over the past three decades, there is scant evidence that an energy transition is underway. Last year, according to data from the BP Statistical Review of World Energy, in both the US, and the world as a whole, the growth in hydrocarbons—oil, natural gas, and coal—far exceeded the growth of wind and solar by huge margins.
Though viruses spill over from animal hosts to people quite often, they usually leave a trail of evidence when they do so. In the case of the SARS1 epidemic of 2003, virus researchers were able to trace the host population of wild bats, the mutations in the virus as it adapted from bats to civets and then to people, and the immunological traces it left in the human population. If SARS-CoV-2 has a natural origin, we should expect the same pieces of evidence to emerge. In three years, none has.
The hard truth for criminal-justice reformers is that violent offenses are far more prevalent among America’s prisoners. At the state level—where nine in ten prisoners are incarcerated—almost 60 percent of inmates committed violent crimes. Roughly 143,000 people are imprisoned for convictions related to sexual assault and 155,000 for homicide, compared with 146,000 for all drug crimes combined. The idea that America’s “mass” incarceration is a result of drug crimes is absurd.
Unconscious racial bias is a real thing, and so were settler land grabs in the emergence of the USA. These topics have a proper place in school curricula.
Key challenges are:
(a) Wise pedagogy and balance to achieve an accurate, well-proportioned, and constructive education about human nature and history.
(b) Wise inculcation of ethical individualism, to encourage youths to treat one another as individuals, not tokens of groups.
The use of fossil fuels will increase at about the same rate as today for the next hundred years at a minimum. The people pushing Green energy as the future are mostly fools and charlatans. The only people in that camp to take seriously are those that are fighting for adoption of nuclear, and there damned few of those.