Archive for the ‘Culture’ Category

How Thinking Like an Economist Undermines Community

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

An excerpt from
Stephen A. Marglin, The Dismal Science: How Thinking Like an Economist Undermines Community (Harvard, 2008).

http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/MARDIS.html

Economics celebrates the self-interested, calculating individual and the market as a means of realizing individual satisfactions, and this celebration is important in overcoming opposition to extending the sway of the market and, by the same token, undermining community. Economics is not only descriptive; it is not only evaluative; it is at the same time constructive—economists seek to fashion a world in the image of economic theory.

The problem with the idea that economics is purely, or even primarily, a descriptive undertaking is that the apparatus of economics has been shaped by an agenda focused on showing that markets are good for people rather than on discovering how markets actually work. And from this normative perspective has come the constructive agenda. If you believe that economics is or should be about describing the world, then it is a case of the tail wagging the dog. If you believe, as I do, that the normative agenda has been central to economics from well before Adam Smith’s time, then it is more understandable why the apparatus of economics is built on foundations that undermine community. Undermining community is the logical and practical consequence of promoting the market system.

This much is certain: if all we economists cared about was describing the world, we could easily forgo much of the framework that I find problematic. Take one of the most basic tools of economic analysis, demand. If we did not care about drawing conclusions about how well markets work, as distinct from how markets actually work, we could start directly from the demand curve rather than basing demand on choices made by rational, calculating, self-interested individuals. We do not take demand as the starting point because it would then be impossible to argue that—subject to some fine and not so fine print—a system of markets maximizes welfare.

In making this argument, economics relies on value judgments implicit in foundational assumptions about the self-interested individual, about rational calculation, about unlimited wants, and about the nation-state, and it is these assumptions that make community invisible. In arguing for the market, economics legitimizes the destruction of community and thus helps to construct a world in which community struggles for survival.

Resistance is futile. So why then do some people resist science?

Monday, September 17th, 2007

Evangelical Atheists like Richard Dawkins frequently bemoan the resistance to science they see in Evangelical Christians ((I’m using “Evangelical Christian” to signify the set of Christians which take a literalistic view of the bible.)) Paul Bloom and Deena Skolnick Weisberg provide some insight into where resistance to science may come from:

The developmental data suggest that resistance to science will arise in children when scientific claims clash with early emerging, intuitive expectations. This resistance will persist through adulthood if the scientific claims are contested within a society, and will be especially strong if there is a non-scientific alternative that is rooted in common sense and championed by people who are taken as reliable and trustworthy. This is the current situation in the United States with regard to the central tenets of neuroscience and of evolutionary biology. These clash with intuitive beliefs about the immaterial nature of the soul and the purposeful design of humans and other animals — and, in the United States, these intuitive beliefs are particularly likely to be endorsed and transmitted by trusted religious and political authorities. Hence these are among the domains where Americans’ resistance to science is the strongest. ((http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/bloom07/bloom07_index.html))

Robert McHenry writing on Britannica Blog takes issue with Bloom and Weisberg: “a good deal more is needed to answer the question the two authors initially set themselves. We need to know much more about the various mental faculties that humans exhibit in varying degrees. Curiosity, for a prime example. That’s a common word for something that, in ordinary discourse, we think we know about, but what is it, what is its source? Why are some people more curious than others?”

Retail space per person

Friday, August 31st, 2007

This is messed up:

Retail Space Per Person

(Ganked from Clusterfuck Nation by Jim Kunstler : Peak Suburbia)

Abortion: if illegal what penalty for the women?

Tuesday, July 31st, 2007

Watch this short documentary on YouTube and you’ll see anti-abortion protesters struggle with the question: Assuming abortion is illegal, should there be a penalty for women who get abortions illegally? None of them seem to have thought of this before. When pressed, many of the anti-abortion protesters want to leave the women’s responsibility for taking a human life between the woman and god. Some thought counseling was the way to go. Only one, clearly wracked by conflict, proposed jail time. Yet even that person couldn’t come up with an amount of jail time to pin on the hypothetical illegal abortion receiving women.

Anna Quindlen, writing for NewsWeek, reports (via Broadsheet) :

A new public-policy group called the National Institute for Reproductive Health wants to take this contradiction and make it the centerpiece of a national conversation, along with a slogan that stops people in their tracks: how much time should she do? If the Supreme Court decides abortion is not protected by a constitutional guarantee of privacy, the issue will revert to the states. If it goes to the states, some, perhaps many, will ban abortion. If abortion is made a crime, then surely the woman who has one is a criminal. But, boy, do the doctrinaire suddenly turn squirrelly at the prospect of throwing women in jail.

“They never connect the dots,” says Jill June, president of Planned Parenthood of Greater Iowa. But her organization urged voters to do just that in the last gubernatorial election, in which the Republican contender believed abortion should be illegal even in cases of rape and incest. “We wanted him to tell the women of Iowa exactly how much time he expected them to serve in jail if they had an abortion,” June recalled. Chet Culver, the Democrat who unabashedly favors legal abortion, won that race, proving that choice can be a winning issue if you force people to stop evading the hard facts. “How have we come this far in the debate and been oblivious to the logical ramifications of making abortion illegal?” June says.

As much as I love to see the anti-abortion protesters squirm and applaud efforts to highlight the ramifications of making abortion illegal, I wonder if highlighting this contradiction will be effective. Quindlen supposes the escape for anti-abortionists is to ignore or infantilize “women, turning them into ‘victims’ of their own free will. State statutes that propose punishing only a physician suggest the woman was merely some addled bystander who happened to find herself in the wrong stirrups at the wrong time.” The history of contraception and abortion illustrates that people who have anti-abortion and anti-contraception sentiments are often quite comfortable with the paternalism required to take the escape route Quindlen envisions.

A Different View on Sex Offenders in England

Saturday, July 28th, 2007

I was surprised by this Times story. There seems to be much less sex offender paranoia in the UK if the attitudes evinced in this article are representative:

Convicted sex offenders should not be prevented from using social networking sites such as MySpace, Scotland Yard said yesterday.

. . .

The force said that it had no plans to share information about sex offenders with sites such as MySpace and Bebo with a view to having the profiles of such people taken down. “Just because you’re a convicted offender doesn’t mean you’re still offending,” a spokeswoman said. “Why would we pursue them in this way? These are people who have served their time.”

Scotland Yard’s position was backed up by the Home Office, which said it was “not intending to disclose lists of registered sex offenders to individuals or organisations not directly at risk or concerned with law enforcement”.

young sex offenders

Saturday, July 28th, 2007

The most recent New York Times magazine has a story about young “sex offenders” and Salon’s Broadsheet brought to my attention a news story, from earlier this week, about a couple of butt swatting boys in Oregon being sent to juvie for 5 days and perhaps being required to register as sex offenders: for life. Think about that for a moment. Sex offender registries, even if they include the statutory offense, don’t provide enough context to discriminate the rambunctious from the criminal. This is especially so when prosecutors are zealous and the defendants are children.

The Oregon boys, for example, were initially charged with multiple counts of Sexual Abuse in the First Degree (ORS 163.427), the class B felony of sexual contact by forcible compulsion against a person less than 14 years of age. They were also charged with Sexual Abuse in the Third Degree (ORS 163.415), the class A misdemeanor of subjecting another person to sexual contact without consent (a victim under 18 being incapable of consent). Both charges hinge on sexual contact, the difference between the felony and the misdemeanor is the existence of forcible compulsion. It is the definition of sexual contact that illustrates the zealous overreaching of the prosecutor in this case. “Sexual contact” is defined by ORS 163.305(6) as “any touching of the sexual or other intimate parts of a person or causing such person to touch the sexual or other intimate parts of the actor for the purpose of arousing or gratifying the sexual desire of either party.” (Emphasis mine.) I think it a stretch, from facts of this case, to conclude the actions were for the purpose of arousing or gratifying the sexual desire of either party.

The police reports (here and here) indicate that both boys and girls engaged in butt swatting. In subsequent news stories, children at the school describe how the butt swatting was a customary friendly greeting. And testimony of two girls in court indicates that the police and school administrators pressured them to characterize the activity more severely the the girls would have otherwise. The actions were awkward, and perhaps inappropriate, adolescent attempts at affectionate human contact and horsing around.

Under mounting pressure the prosecutor dropped the felony charges and offered a plea bargain which would have allowed the boys to avoid sex offender registration. The boys rejected the offer and intend to fight it out in court. The district attorney argues, “What’s been lost in this whole thing are the victims, who have been pressured enormously by these boys’ friends.” ((http://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/Story?id=3406214&page=3)) Even if it’s true the girls were pressured — and the police reports, court transcript, and news interviews cast significant doubt — this isn’t a sexual crime. Indeed, the only way to criminalize the conduct is to sexualize the touching. Otherwise, the touching, which didn’t cause physical injury, wouldn’t be criminal under Oregon law (ORS 163.160, 163.165, 163.175, 163.185). (Don’t forget the tort of battery remains available to those feel harmed or offended by the touching.) Critics of the prosecutor’s actions note an increase in criminalization of adolescent sexual behavior:

The arrests, critics said, reflect a trend toward criminalizing adolescent sexual behavior. Between 1998 and 2002, juvenile arrests for sex offenses other than rape or prostitution rose 9 percent — the only kind of juvenile arrests that rose during that time, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics. “More and more, they are criminalizing normal adolescent or preadolescent behavior,” said Chuck Aron, co-chairman of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers juvenile justice committee. ((http://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/Story?id=3406214&page=2))

Why seek to criminalize the conduct in this case? More generally, why is there an increase in criminalization of adolescent sexuality? I welcome any thoughts on this. I’m doing a little historical research on this issue and I’ll post my conclusions later this weekend.

new media: blogs and open source news

Thursday, July 12th, 2007

The source for the open source religion story provides a perfect segue away from religion. Something new in news production is on the horizon and it can’t arrive soon enough. If you want to get yourself depressed go read Glenn Greenwald’s column on salon.com for a week. Don’t get me wrong, I think Greenwald’s unflinching muckraking on politics and the political press is a critical aspect of the antidote to the utterly broken journalism operating in this country. However, I can only take the raw truth in small doses before I start to feel like moving to the hills and giving up on society. Take, for example, Greenwald’s post from earlier in the week:

The [NY] Times allowed itself to be completely manipulated by the government and/or eagerly participated in its propaganda campaign, obediently reciting the government’s false claims on its front pages and selling this war to its then-trusting readers.

The Times itself has been forced to acknowledge these failures and solemnly insists that it has learned, and taken to heart, the important lessons about the need for skepticism when it comes to government claims about war. Back in February, when Michael Gordon’s gullible, government-reliant reports about Iran’s actions in Iraq prompted a tidal wave of blogosphere-generated (and FAIR-generated) reader complaints, then-Public Editor Byron Calame spoke with NYT Executive Editor Bill Keller about these complaints:

The situation [of the Times' reporting on Bush's claims about Iran] closely parallels the pre-war period when The Times prominently reported that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction. Deeply shamed when they were not found, the paper publicly acknowledged that its coverage had been “insufficiently qualified or allowed to stand unchallenged.” Times editors clearly were mindful of the W.M.D. coverage as they pursued the Iranian weapons issue. “W.M.D. has informed everything we’ve done on Iran,” Bill Keller, the executive editor, told me three days after the Baghdad briefing. “We don’t have to tell the reporters to be as skeptical as possible. W.M.D. restored a level of skepticism.”

But Hoyt’s [the current NYT's Public Editor] column yesterday demonstrates that exactly the opposite is true. The Times is still doing exactly what it did before the invasion of Iraq — the activities that supposedly brought it such “shame” — and in many cases, it is exactly the same people who are doing it.

We need to get out from under the thumb of our defective media. The best way forward is beginning to take shape. Blogs already wield enough eyeballs to hold the defective media (somewhat) accountable. I suspect, however, that simply holding the defective media’s feet to the fire won’t be enough. We need to make the defective media irrelevant. We need better news and analysis. The open source news experiment at AssignmentZero offers the promise of a better way to collect, analysis, and disseminate information:

The investigation takes place in the open, not behind newsroom walls. Participation is voluntary; contributors are welcome from across the Web. The people getting, telling and vetting the story are a mix of professional journalists and members of the public — also known as citizen journalists. This is a model I describe as “pro-am.”

The “ams” are simply people getting together on their own time to contribute to a project in journalism that for their own reasons they support. The “pros” are journalists guiding and editing the story, setting standards, overseeing fact-checking, and publishing a final version.

If we can build on endeavors like AssigmentZero, the Creative Commons, and the principles of the open source movement we might be able to save our society. (If you think I’m being hyperbolic with my “save our society” rhetoric, read some of Chalmers Johnson‘s work here or here or a PDF of a Harper’s article here.)

Contra-Contraception – New York Times

Monday, May 8th, 2006

The New York Times magazine is running a long piece on the growing movement to attack contraception. There is a lot to unpack in the article. I was going to do so later but then I read about “purity balls” and I just couldn’t wait.

Contra-Contraception – New York Times:

Leslee Unruh, a 51-year-old former motivational speaker who says that her life was transformed in 1984 by the psychological devastation wrought by having an abortion, is the doyenne of the abstinence movement. She has dedicated herself to fostering in teenagers a holistic approach to relationships. Like many in the abstinence movement, Unruh says she believes that society is unhealthily focused on sex and that dwelling on contraception makes it worse. “I see the problem as a lack of teaching about relationships: how to bond with the person you’re going to have a relationship with, so that it’s something that’s good for you,” she says. “We teach kids it doesn’t have to be physical.”

In addition to providing an information center for the abstinence industry that has blossomed in recent years, she takes her message directly to kids. Besides “Girls Gone Mild,” she sponsors “Purity Balls,” which fathers attend with their teenage daughters. “We think the relationship between fathers and their daughters is the key,” she told me. At the purity ball, a father gives a “purity ring” to his daughter — a symbol of the promise she makes to maintain her virginity for her future husband. Then, during her marriage ceremony, the daughter gives the ring to her new husband. Abstinence Clearinghouse’s Web site advertises the purity ball as an event “which celebrates your ‘little girl’ and her gift of sexual purity.”

Last night I finished the first chapter, “Governing Women in British North American,” in Belonging to the World: Women’s Rights and American Constitutional Culture (Bicentennial Essays on the Bill of Rights)” (Sandra F. VanBurkleo). The chapter traces the interaction of women with family, social, and legal structures from, roughly, 1630 (when “English settlement of North America began in earnest”) to the Revolution. With Colonial women’s lives fresh on my mind, I saw a striking similarity between “purity balls” and Colonial notions of patriarchy. To wit:

Eighteenth-century Philadelphians thought of adultery less as a sex crime than as a political challenge to the “husband who was master of his wife”; much as the kidnapper of a man’s wife had not violated her rights so much as “stolen another man’s cargo,” so the adulterous male undermined the husband’s authority of his dependents. Prerevolutionary colonists tied manhood to household mastery; a man who could not control his wife or servants was “not a full member of the civil community of adult men.” . . . In New England, courts intervened on the complaints of husbands or fathers to end unauthorized liaisons, and to some extant, the magistracy’s defense of the family aimed to prevent adultery and sexual abuse of daughters. (VanBurkleo, 29).

I was stuck by the similarity between Colonial notions of patriarchy and the sentiment implicit in purity balls. Namely, that the father controls his daughter’s sexuality until she has a husband. Whereupon the husband controls her sexuality. The purity balls even include a physical token of control–the ring.

Ironically, the modern conservative Christian obsession with virginity and purity stands in marked contrast to Puritan views. The article connects the modern view to Catholic influence, which is noteworthy (and adds even more irony) in light of Puritan views on “Popish conceits”:

And within limits, New England women who were violated by men may have been helped by the fact that Puritan judges expected everyone to sin, did not pathologize sex more than the English did generally, and could believe tales of male lust run amok. But the expectation of male misbehavior also subjected women to ongoing, low-level sexual “play,” and judges, rather than women, drew the line between revelry and crime. Puritans encouraged moderate enjoyment of “the flesh,” insisting that the use of the marriage bed was “founded in man’s Nature.” Although they discouraged sexual relations outside betrothal and marriage, they forgave fleshly appetites and sometimes associated the veneration of “pure” women with the “Popish conceit of the Excellency of Virginity.” . . . In Connecticut, where premarital pregnancy was commonplace, ministers and judges simply enjoined couples to marry; in Hingham, Massachusetts, between 1721 and 1800, 41 out of 100 women aged 15-19, and 23.8 out of 100 aged 20-24 were pregnant at first marriage. (VanBurkleo, 25).

The notion that contraception or abortion promotes promiscuity (“An editorial in the conservative magazine Human Events characterized the effect of such legislation as ‘enabling more low-income women to have consequence-free sex.’” Contra-Contraception.) is patently disproved by the high rates of promiscuity in historical evidence. Similarly, modern evidence indicates, following Roe, the number of abortions changed little. That is, women simply shifted from having unsafe and illegal abortions to having safe and legal abortions. (Hull & Hoffer, Roe v. Wade: The Abortions Rights Controversy in American History (University Press of Kansas, 2001), 149). People have always and will always have lots of sex. The only question worth asking is: Who must bear the burden of the results? Without access to contraception and safe abortion the answer would be women.

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racism

Sunday, April 30th, 2006

dandanar and I were talking about immigration and racism last night at his graduation party. He is heading off to UCSD for grad school in sociology. His visit to the Princeton sociology department, his other choice, illustrated the propensity for elite graduate programs to become mere status propagators while becoming nearly useless for effecting positive change in society.*

We also talked about some interesting audit studies (send applicants, identical in every respect except for race, to apply for jobs or housing–in this case jobs–and track the responses) which indicate how strongly racism continues to disadvantage black people. To read more, visit Devah Pager’s web site. A summary report in pdf format is here.

The conclusion from the summary report:

In contrast to public opinion that assumes little influence of discrimination on labor market inequality, we find that black job applicants are only two-thirds as successful as equally qualified Latinos, and little more than half as successful as equally qualified whites. Indeed, black job seekers fare no better than white men just released from prison. Discrimination continues to represent a major barrier to economic self-sufficiency for those at the low end of the labor market hierarchy. Blacks, and to a lesser extent Latinos, are routinely passed over in favor of whites for the most basic kinds of low-wage work. Indeed, discrimination has not been eliminated in the post-civil rights period as some contend, but remains a vital component of a complex pattern of racial inequality.

* Some exceptions apply. An example might be the Stanford Center for Internet and Society.

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Poll finds 33% of Detroiters want to leave

Wednesday, November 9th, 2005

Poll finds 33% of Detroiters want to leave :

About one out of three Detroit voters surveyed Tuesday said they would move out of Detroit if they could. And of those who would leave, more than half said they would move out of state, rather than move to the suburbs. Some 33% said they would pack up and leave, according to a Detroit Free Press/WXYZ-TV telephone poll with 400 respondents conducted Tuesday by EPIC/MRA of Lansing. The margin of error was plus or minus 5 percentage points.