Friday, November 5th, 2004 07:04 am (UTC)
In all fairness, the comment related to the following question asked earlier:

Washington, D.C.: There was an unprecedented grass-roots effort for progressive candidates this past election, and it didn't carry us over the top. Maybe it's just the case that slightly more than half the country really wants to live under George Bush. I'm wondering why we have to keep living with these backwards southern and middle-Western states. Is there a process for secession?

My original thought from the quote you put was that Baltimore was referring to something Hersh said.

There is a cultural divide, and it is not even between blue states and red states. Look at the CNN's county-by-country voting maps. Outside of the South (where there is a strong correlation with African-American proportion of county population) and, perhaps, Texas (where the same holds for Latino population), there is a strong correlation between the color of the county and the number of people who voted in the county.
(and yes, there are other hidden variables there as well).

People who live in medium-size and small towns are culturally conservative. They overwhelmingly voted Republican. These are facts.

From the emitional side of things, namecalling works both ways. Words like "true America" or "heart of America" have been used to successfully contrast the abovementioned "backwards" states to states like Massachusstets.

So, what's your point?
Friday, November 5th, 2004 09:59 am (UTC)
The thing about "looking down your noses" is something Hersch need to think hard about. And he is not alone. Speaking of the other side, they have a similar attitude towards (or against) urban professionals. But people who think of themselves as tolerant and progressive need to behave accordingly.
Friday, November 5th, 2004 11:27 am (UTC)
I am not going to play Hersch's advocate, but in the context of the exchange, it wasn't him who expressed the thought. Which does not mean that Hersch does not think of red states as backwards.

Heck, he might even be right about some of them.

But people who think of themselves as tolerant and progressive need to behave accordingly.

How tolerant one must be of human stupidity?

(I am asking you not to pick up a fight with you, but to see where you draw the line).
Friday, November 5th, 2004 03:42 pm (UTC)
That's right, it was not Hersch, but he could have said a couple of words about the attitude expressed by someone else. This kind of attitude is not unusual.

Heck, he might even be right about some of them.

And the other side may be right about some of the lefties too, so what? The big picture still is incorrect.

How tolerant one must be of human stupidity?

No "must" here, the modality is different. If someone is aloof and condescending, it does not square well with his self-image of tolerance and human brotherhood.

And in terms of fighting for electoral votes, who is more stupid, the one who is stupid or the one who calls him stupid?
Friday, November 5th, 2004 05:25 pm (UTC)

And the other side may be right about some of the lefties too,

Yes, they are. We do want to legalize gay marriage. We just don't see anything wrong with it.

And in terms of fighting for electoral votes, who is more stupid, the one who is stupid or the one who calls him stupid?

Is electoral votes the only correct measure to intelligence? Is it even a correct measure of intelligence. You have answered yourself in your question - I can hardly add to it.
Friday, November 5th, 2004 06:37 pm (UTC)
I read that 23% of Gay vote went to Bush this time, and the same number did the last time too. Generally, I would suggest Gay issues were not as important as they might appear.

I certainly was not talking about that, though; when people dismissed as rednecks are themselves dismissed as aloof intellectual snobs, I may not be happy about that, but I do feel justice has been served.

Of course, the elections were not about how the urban elite and the country bumpkins feel about each other, but about other things mostly. But these feelings exist.

As to the measure of intelligence, I would rather not go into that. The best measurement of intelligence is IQ, and it is not good enough. Everything else is worse and is bad.
(Anonymous)
Tuesday, November 9th, 2004 07:40 am (UTC)
The best measurement of intelligence is IQ

Are you sure about that? What does this measure of intelligence predict or correlate with, exactly?

(Anonymous)
Tuesday, November 9th, 2004 03:20 pm (UTC)
I read that 23% of Gay vote went to Bush this time, and the same number did the last time too.


It should come as no surprise as gays are not particularly supportive of abortion for obvious reasons: making abortion illegal shuts the door for any and all kinds of selective abortion.

Tuesday, November 9th, 2004 08:00 pm (UTC)
Gays, abortions. Do you think they cared that much?
Tuesday, November 9th, 2004 08:15 pm (UTC)
Mathematical, verbal, logical, and some spatial aptitude. Other similar tests test mechanical aptitude, physical (i.e. physiological) aptitude etc. There is also some correlation with g, a proposed generalized intelligence quotient, but I have not actually studied that concept myself, only read that it was accepted as a vague estimation of overall intelligence.

Keep in mind that intelligence is not the same thing as smarts.
(Anonymous)
Wednesday, November 10th, 2004 07:37 am (UTC)
By explaining the IQ with a set of aptitudes, you're just juggling words. Draw a bridge to the real life.

Keep in mind that intelligence is not the same thing as smarts.

I'm glad you've mentioned that. Don't you think that smarts is a better predictor of a person's ability to function in the society? Don't you think that it matters more?
(Anonymous)
Wednesday, November 10th, 2004 07:55 am (UTC)
I think quite a few of them sincerely believe that given a foetal "gay gene" test, quite a few "pro-choice" parents would choose to terminate pregnancy once it is known that the foetus has the gene. And this, from a particular viewpoint, can be construed as genocide.

Moreover, gays themselves tend not to have children who might be at risk of the military draft, or subjects to excessive taxation in the future due to today's rampant budget deficits, etc; therefore, the litmus test is most likely Bush's stance on gay marriage, but even some heterosexuals do not care much about marriage nowadays.
Wednesday, November 10th, 2004 05:10 pm (UTC)
Real life is overvalued.

Did I say anything about "person's ability to function in society"? Anyway, it was not me who started talking about intelligence.
Wednesday, November 10th, 2004 05:15 pm (UTC)
You are not the same anonymous, are you? (But the same as above, right?)

The gayocide theory is interesting, but I doubt it has anything at all to do with the real issuea in these past elections.

The second paragraph smells of some conspiracy theory (we need children in order to institute draft? I did not get it), but I am sure if you explained what you meant in more detail, I would be able to grasp it better.
(Anonymous)
Wednesday, November 10th, 2004 07:17 pm (UTC)
To put it succinctly, having no children makes a person somewhat more likely to adopt the "apres nous le deluge" (sorry for no accents) attitude. And who knows, maybe some "macho" gays voted for Bush to spite "girlie men" advocating gay marriage.
(Anonymous)
Wednesday, November 10th, 2004 07:21 pm (UTC)
Real life is overvalued.

What are you waiting for, then? Sell high!

Anyway, it was not me who started talking about intelligence.

What a marvelous excuse! Don't you think that making election choices is one of the person's functions in society?

Wednesday, November 10th, 2004 10:04 pm (UTC)
I don't have much of one. :-)

Speaking of intelligence, it should be augmented by other important and often overlooked qualities such as maturity. Everything else being equal, higher intelligence certainly helps; but everything else is not equal. Besides, there are kinds of work that require certain specific abilities which can be tested for. A person with high IQ (measured as usual) is likely to be a better computer programmer than a person with low IQ (measured the same way). Whether he is going to be a happier person, and how much each will achieve in his life, cannot be derived from the IQ scores.
Wednesday, November 10th, 2004 10:17 pm (UTC)
I am sure there are all sorts of strange people around, even people who vote for one candidate so spite the other ("anybody but Bush" etc). However, I do not think they played an important role in these past elections.