it’s not just your imagination: they really are motivated by fear

The Great Society :: John Dean: Study Says Authoritarians “Overwhelmingly” Conservative :: July :: 2006:

In last night’s appearance on MSNBC’s Countdown with Keith Olbermann, former White House counsel to President Nixon, John Dean, discussed his recently released book, Conservatives Without Conscience, where he says he came across a little known fifty-year academic study that chronicled the characteristics of the authoritarian personality.

Well worth perusing, but here are some money quotes:

Both those who are inclined to follow leaders and those who jump in front and want to be the leaders. It was not the opinion of social scientists. It was information they drew by questioning large numbers of people — hundreds of thousands of people — in anonymous testing where [the subjects] conceded their innermost feelings and reactions to things. And it came out that most of these people were pre-qualified to be conservatives and this, did indeed, fit with the authoritarian personality.

<snip>

OLBERMANN: And the idea of leaders and followers going down this path or perhaps taking a country down this path requires — this whole edifice requires an enemy. Communism, al Qaeda, Democrats, me… whoever for the two-minutes hate. I overuse the Orwellian analogies to nauseating proportions. But it really was, in reading what you wrote about, especially what the academics talked about. There was that two-minutes hate. There has to be an opponent, an enemy, to coalesce around or the whole thing falls apart. Is that the gist of it?

DEAN: It is one of the things, believe it or not, that still holds conservatism together. There is many factions in conservatism and their dislike or hatred of those they betray as liberal, who will basically be anybody who disagrees with them, is one of the cohesive factors. There are a few others but that’s certainly one of the basics. There’s no question that, particularly the followers, they’re very aggressive in their effort to pursue and help their authority figure out or authority beliefs out. They will do what ever needs to be done in many regards. They will blindly follow. They stay loyal too long and this is the frightening part of it.

<snip>

DEAN: The lead researcher in this field told me, he said, “I look at the numbers of the United States and I see about 23% of the population who are pure right-wing authoritarian followers.” They’re not going to change. They’re going to march over the cliff. The best thing to deal with them — and they’re growing, and they have a tremendous influence on Republican politics — The best defense is understanding them, to realize what they are doing, how they’re doing it and how they operate. Then it can be kept in perspective and they can be seen for what they are.

The masses are motivated by fear and those at the top use it as a weapon, a goad.

misplaced blame

I guess we should all have waited for the music industry to present a digital music store: I’m sure it would have been more sensitive to consumer rights than big bad Apple and their eveil DRM.

Anti-iTunes DRM demonstrations across the USA tomorrow:

Tomorrow, activists in seven cities across the US will picket Apple Stores, handing out information about the dangers of the DRM hidden in Apple’s iTunes. iTunes DRM may seem pretty innocuous at first, but every time you invest in an iTunes Store song, you make it more expensive to switch to an Apple competitor’s product at any time in the future. You didn’t have to abandon your CDs to switch to MP3s (in fact, the more CDs you owned, the better your MP3 experience was, since you could rip those CDs to seed your MP3 collection), but if you want to go from Apple’s iTunes to a competing device, ever, you have to be prepared to abandon your whole investment.

Unless you burn your tracks to CD, something Apple recommends anyway (hint, hint). DRM only exists within the iTunes/iPod part of your music collection. Once it gets burned to physical media, the tracks are free of DRM.

Also this:

I love this FUD, if the music industry had not forced DRM on Apple, Apple wouldn’t be the focus. If Apple’s iTunes under new attacks in Europe Why isn’t Microsoft’s DRM mantioned? Why isn’t the music industry mentioned as the culprit in these articles?

I guess some would be happy without Apple creating a mainstream market for digital music. I don’t think they are altruistic here and I don’t impute any kind of holiness to their motives, but seriously, do the DRM==Death forces think that the power of iPod/iTunes as a way of getting this into the mainstream is helping or not?

Continue reading “misplaced blame”

wildlife status

As best I can tell, raccoons don’t like crystallized coyote weewee any more than tiggers like haycorns. I haven’t seen any repeat visits from the little attractive nuisances.

It looks like they may have overwintered in a disused playhouse on my neighbor’s property, but overhanging mine: it’s a two-story structure and the upper floor is carpeted with raccoon deposits. Yuck.

It doesn’t seem terribly effective on squirrels but they weren’t my primary target. I can now turn my attention to them and see if I can find something that will work on them.

Now playing: Galang (Radio Edit) by M.I.A. from the album “Galang – Single” | Get it

post-op

Had a tooth extracted this morning. I had walked in with a glimmer, a flicker, of hope that upon further review, the tooth would be seen as salvageable.

Not so. It was out in 30 minutes and when I saw what was left of it, I realized I was lucky to get off a lightly as I did. It was the next to last molar on the top right: the roots spread fore and aft to anchor it, generally making extractions problematic — like pulling a toggle bolt through a brick wall. But since the visible tooth was cracked all the way to to the gumline, it broke into two chunks under some persuasion and came out in stages.

Yuck. Now to sit around with gauze in my trap and wait for things to calm down.

There are lots of things I’d rather do right now.

bass-ackwards (was: Ouch. That’s 2 AM Monday.)

The f/295 pinhole photography group wants to do a collaborative project: simultaneous exposures at 7PM GMT.

Time Zone Converter:

19:00:00 Sunday April 30, 2006 in US/Pacific converts to
02:00:00 Monday May 1, 2006 in GMT

I may not be participating . . . . not for lack of ideas but <yawn> lack of sleep. I plan to spend a bit of time on the day getting some images: grabbing one more at 2 AM, especially as it would not be near the house, might be too much.

So I can participate. I have a list of stuff to do/places to be (sorry, no time for remedial reading comprehension) but I have a few ideas sketched out.

terrorism vs terror, or why movie plot terrorism is not what we need to worry about

Movie Plot Threat Contest: Status Report:

The best plot ideas leverage one or more of those tendencies. Big-ticket attacks leverage the first. Infrastructure and low-tech attacks leverage the fourth. And every attack tries to leverage the fifth, especially those attacks that go on and on. I’m willing to bet that when I find a winner, it will be the plot that leverages the greatest number of those tendencies to the best possible advantage.

I also got a bunch of e-mails from people with ideas they thought too terrifying to post publicly. Some of them wouldn’t even tell them to me. I also received e-mails from people accusing me of helping the terrorists by giving them ideas.

But if there’s one thing this contest demonstrates, it’s that good terrorist ideas are a dime a dozen. Anyone can figure out how to cause terror. The hard part is execution.

Take a look: there are almost 600 comments to this post. I’m sure the terrorists are hitting “Refresh” early and often to make sure they don’t miss anything.