Oct 15th 2016

I Have More Respect For Trump Voters Than Undecided Ones

by Jeff Schweitzer

Jeff Schweitzer is a scientist and former White House Senior Policy Analyst; Ph.D. in marine biology/neurophysiology

If I hold a Red Delicious apple in my left hand, and in my right hand hold another Red Delicious apple, I can claim with confidence that I hold in my hands a total of two apples. This is not open to interpretation or opinion; I am gripping two apples. This is fact; this is objective truth. You can disagree with me; you claim that I have three apples, or one, or am holding Bosc pears. But you would be mistaken, factually incorrect, demonstrably wrong, definitively untied to reality. To paraphrase Neil deGrasse Tyson, the good thing about reality is that is it true whether or not you believe in it.

A Misunderstanding of Bias

Any opinion that I hold something other than two apples does not warrant further discussion. My appeal to an objective truth is not open to mediation or interpretation. Submitting the fact of my two apples to negotiating a different number would give credibility to a position that is objectively and clearly untrue. Facts matter. Not every opinion becomes valid simply because somebody holds that opinion.

Third party support of my claim that I hold two apples is not bias; it is an acknowledgement of a widely accepted and verifiable truth. Rejecting the false assertion that I hold pears is not favoritism, but an appeal to reality. Giving air time to those who claim I’m holding pears is a misguided attempt to avoid bias with the odd consequence of introducing bias toward fantasy.

Not all arguments have two sides; not all claims warrant serious attention, not every argument is worthy of debate. This self-evident truth is what is missing from media coverage of the presidential election. Patently absurd, obviously false, clearly ridiculous statements are given air time in a naïve attempt to appear impartial or fair. Let’s look at some real examples. 

In the cable news echo chamber, panels of pundits and political commentators sit around debating that which cannot be debated. What is “shocking” about the Trump video is that anybody finds it shocking at all. What is astonishing is that this video is considered shocking, but not Trump’s other many misdeeds.

Whenever Donald Trump’s misogyny comes up, his rather creepy trolls Jeffrey Lord, Scottie Nell Hughes and Kayleigh McEnany quickly deflect by appealing to the idea that we need to focus on the issues that matter to voters, like terrorism, ISIS, borders, refugees, and the economy. Conservative Christian activist Ralph Reed said that Trump “is still the best candidate” even if Trump would seem to exhibit every behavior anathema to family values. Why?

“People of faith are voting on issues like who will protect unborn life, defend religious freedom, grow the economy, appoint conservative judges and oppose the Iran nuclear deal.” Female Trump fans interviewed on CNN said “there are more important issues than a vulgar video.”

In contrast, such diversions from the important issues are welcome and acceptable when it comes to talking about Hillary. The very next utterance from these folks seemingly so anxious to discuss ISIS or the economy is a complaint that Hillary is untrustworthy and a liar who deleted thousands of emails. Or the insane claim that in responding to Trump’s video Hillary is running a campaign based on political correctness simply because she believes that Trump’s language indicates a lack of respect for women. Hillary is supposed to “move on” from the video — but Trump is not supposed to move on from emails.

Fine, these apologists for Trump’s campaign of the absurd are doing their job, however grating and annoying their efforts may be — but the media in giving them attention are not fulfilling their mandate. Not one time have I seen a news host ask the simple and terribly obvious question: “If you want to eschew any discussion of Trump celebrating sexual assault in order to focus on issues that concern voters most, how is it that you now bring up emails or political correctness instead of focusing on the economy and terrorism?”

We are meant to believe that any focus on Trump’s behavior is a distraction from real issues, while attention to Hillary’s behavior is fair game. The media report a twisted inversion of reality by airing without dispute the idea that Trump wants to emphasize issues and that Hillary deflects with salacious rumor. In fact the opposite is true with Trump’s constant reference to Bill’s sex life, email, Benghazi, and Hillary’s “hate in her heart” rather than ISIS, border control or prosperity.

Should we not stop talking about email so we can vote on issues like growing the economy, which Reed and his ilk claim is more important than infidelity and dishonesty? How is it that no host has pointed out this evident hypocrisy? Because we operate with the inappropriate sense of false equivalency that all sides deserve equal time or equal consideration, no matter how biased or absurd or inconsistent or hypocritical a position may be.

Newscasters and pundits have failed too to put Hillary’s email trouble in context. I have not heard at any time in this election the fact that between 2003 and 2009 the George W. Bush White House deleted 22 million emails illegally stored on a private server run by the Republican Party. Worse, these emails were part of a congressional investigation into the period when Bush got us into the Iraq War, so the deletions were a clear and deliberate act of obstructing justice. Somehow this hypocritical double standard and odd sense of differential outrage is rarely if ever questioned on any cable news show.

Here is what is shocking: That nobody raises the 22 million emails whenever Trump or his supporters bring up the 30,000 missing from Hillary’s server, if for no other reason than to put the issue in its proper historic framework. Of course one wrong cannot be used to justify another wrong, but context and magnitude are important in presidential elections. The media have a duty to create this context and they have failed.

Misplaced Priorities

With release of the video that shows Trump bragging about sexual assault, high-profile members of the GOP have abandoned ship with astonishing speed. It would seem that in the strange world of conservatives, boasting about grabbing pussy is an offense worse than all of Trump’s other gross transgressions. Step back and consider for a moment what Trump has done and said about women prior to the video coming out, including his public fat-shaming of beauty contestant Alicia Machado, and calling women fat pigs, dogs, slobs and disgusting animals. None of this was enough for GOP to withhold support for Trump.

He implied that Megyn Kelly’s questions during a debate resulted from her menstruating: “You could see there was blood coming out of her eyes. Blood coming out of her whatever.” Trump believes the normal human act of going to the bathroom is too uncivilized to be mentionable. He has denigrated Hillary Clinton for taking a bathroom break during a debate saying that “I know where she went. It’s disgusting.” None of that is a deal breaker for the GOP. Hey, it’s just locker room banter.

But, really, this is just the tip of the iceberg, because misogyny and fear of normal body function are by no means Trump’s only disturbing personality characteristics. He mocked a disabled reporter. He blatantly lied about seeing thousands of Muslims celebrating the 9/11 attacks. He won’t release his tax returns; he has questionable business deals with Russia. He praises dictators like Putin and Assad. In the second debate with Clinton he confused the constitutional constraints of powers of a president by threatening Hillary with jail by ordering a special prosecutor to investigate her. Still, the GOP remains supportive.

Trump’s policies reflect a worldview that should have long ago caused concern enough to withdraw even provision backing. But no matter how outrageous his policy proclamations, the GOP remains in Trump’s camp. For example:

Trump proposes that the U.S. Government should shut down mosques; yes, just like Nazi Germany closed synagogues. Should we have our own version of Kristallnacht now? Worse, if there can be a worse, pining for the good old days of internment camps for the Japanese during World War II, Trump suggests that the government create a database to track Muslims — much like the Nazis tracked Jews. Perhaps we should require that all Muslims wear yellow crescent moons to make them easier to identify. If it was good enough for the Nazis, it is good enough for us, no?

Trump describes immigrants as rapists and criminals. “But you have people coming in and I’m not just saying Mexicans, I’m talking about people that are from all over that are killers and rapists and they’re coming into this country.” Never mind the pesky fact that there is no evidence that immigrants commit more crimes than people born in the country. Here is the conclusion from a Congressional Research Service report from 2012: “The overall proportion of noncitizens in federal and state prisons and local jails corresponds closely to the proportion of noncitizens in the total U.S. population.”

With this dark but factually incorrect perspective on the influx of criminals, Trump not surprisingly has a solution when he says all undocumented workers “have to go.” This means that a candidate for the presidency of our country is proposing, seriously, that we locate, round up, arrest and then forcibly deport a population of 11 million people.

To find these undesirables in our midst, would we create a secret police like the Stasi in East Germany, so neighbors would rat on neighbors? Who would take care of the children left behind? Do we perhaps create camps in which we concentrate these populations prior to expelling them?

Perhaps the most extreme proclamation from Trump is that he would kill the families of terrorists. He would order our military to kill innocent non-combatants. He has proposed that we kill the family members of ISIS terrorists because they “know what is going on” because they are related to the terrorists.

There is yet another pesky fact that intentionally killing civilians in wartime is a crime against humanity under two international treaties signed by the United States: the Hague Convention and the Fourth Geneva Convention.

But the GOP is horrified, absolutely horrified, that Trump thinks he can grab pussy at will. For that they withdraw support, shocked, just shocked that Trump denigrates women in light of a lifetime of doing so. However, mass deportations, killing innocents as policy, violating international law, trampling upon religious freedom — all that and more are perfectly OK. Can we imaging a worse case of bizarrely misplaced priorities?

Bill Clinton is Not the Candidate

We are told forebodingly that as an attorney Hillary defended someone accused of rape. Unlike the lie told about this tale, she did not volunteer to this task, she was assigned to the case by a judge. This duty under our constitution to defend a client is now highlighted as a character flaw. When talking about the case years later she laughed when asked about the inaccuracy of lie detector tests and breakdown in the prosecutor’s case, but her opponents falsely claim she laughed at the victim. She did not. Hillary presented the best defense she could, which was precisely her obligation.

When such attacks prove ineffective, Trump goes after Hillary’s husband. Mysteriously the GOP and Trump campaign have decided that a path to the White House is to attack Bill and his well-documented sexual transgressions. This strategy of smearing Hillary with Bill’s sins exposes a number of important inconsistencies and hypocrisies in the GOP and Trump camp. Trump recently held a surrealistically weird press event in which Bill Clinton’s accusers held forth immediately prior to the second presidential debate.

This was absurd at many levels, starting with the obvious that Bill is not the candidate. Nobody explained how these women relate in any way to Hillary’s fitness to serve in the Oval Office. The only link in a generous interpretation could be that somehow in defending her husband over the years Hillary exhibited dishonest and disingenuous behavior by supporting a cheating spouse. The right wing never considers the idea she was a loyal wife struggling to save the home in which her child would be raised.

So we have inconsistency number one: Family value conservatives disparaging a woman devoted to saving her marriage. On what basis, what theory of personal responsibility, would a voter reject Hillary because of Bill’s past behavior? Would not those who support family values celebrate her commitment to her marriage and faith and child, working through troubled times, sticking by her man? Even if not, how do Bill’s sins taint Hillary in any way?

The second inconsistency/hypocrisy is this odd attack on Hillary for behavior by others for which she suffered. But hypocrisy does not end there; the third egregious double standard concerns differential tolerance of sin in others. Trump’s running mate, Mike Pence dismisses the video as old news because Trump apologized for his boorish behavior. But more importantly, he dismissed the video because he “believes in forgiveness.”

Here is what he said: “I believe in grace and I believe in forgiveness. And last night my running mate showed the American people what was in his heart. He showed humility.” This would be the first time anyone ever accused Trump of exhibiting humility. Pence has a strange definition of that term.

Yet decades later, Pence won’t offer that same grace and forgiveness to Bill Clinton, who also apologized and admitted that with his infidelity he had “sinned.”

On the contrary, Pence refuses to forgive Bill as he forgives Donald. And in this election Pence does not offer that same grace and forgiveness when it comes to Hillary’s email. Like Trump apologizing for his celebration of groping women by their genitals, Hillary has apologized for using personal email for government business, including classified material.

But Pence does not forgive. So Pence only forgives certain sins when committed by people he supports. This is the transparently cynical use of religion, not a belief in grace and forgiveness.

So let’s see: Trump supporters absolve their candidate of his transgressions, but do not provide the same forbearance and grace to Hillary. They are horrified by her loss of 30,000 emails but not by the 22 million deleted by Bush and Cheney.

Trump voters lightly condemn and then forgive a crude video, but have no issues with his destructive policies, racism, bigotry, casual support for nuclear war, disregard for the constitution or disdain for international law. They however are outraged, outraged, that Clinton called Trump supporters “deplorables” but dismiss as a distraction Trump calling women pigs, having a history of infidelity, multiple marriages, and denigrating women for being overweight.

Only grabbing pussy seemed to be too much, until of course everything was OK again with a strained apology. Trump supporters pivot to the call for a focus on “more important issue” when faced with inconvenient truths about Trump, but immediate forget that plea when talking about Hillary. Yes indeed, hard to talk about ISIS when Trump occupies the media by rolling out Bill’s victims and accusers. Deplorable.

Undecided Voters: Really? Really?

I have more respect for someone voting for Trump than I do for any citizen undecided at this late stage of the election. The distinction between the two candidates could not possibly be more extreme, perhaps offering us the greatest disparity in our nation’s history.

Nobody can possibly be so vacant of conviction that both of these candidates hold potentially equal allure. They represent radically different worldviews, opposing philosophies on the role of government, opposite takes on what is our greatest threat: there is no overlap between the candidates, no gray area open to ambiguity about where they stand.

Waiting for more information over the next 30 days will never change that reality. An undecided voter is undecided about what is important, not about what candidate to elect. Being undecided must reveal a complete lack of principle because with even basic ideals a voter would be compelled to support only one candidate given how extraordinarily far apart Clinton and Trump are on all matters of any import.

Any voter with core values would be drawn to one candidate or the other who most closely is aligned with those values. The candidates offer a starkly clear choice. You can be undecided if you like pecans more than walnuts or undecided about Obamacare or undecided about military spending because these are open to taste and opinion, interpretation, changing values, shifting circumstances.

But you cannot possibly be undecided between Trump and Clinton any more than you can be undecided between good and evil or right and wrong — however you personally define those. Choose. These concepts are not interchangeable any more than are the two candidates. For crying out loud, choose.



Dr. Jeff Schweitzer is a marine biologist, consultant and internationally recognized authority in ethics, conservation and development. He is the author of five books including Calorie Wars: Fat, Fact and Fiction (July 2011), and A New Moral Code (2010). Dr. Schweitzer has spoken at numerous international conferences in Asia, Russia, Europe and the United States.Dr. Schweitzer's work is based on his desire to introduce a stronger set of ethics into American efforts to improve the human condition worldwide. He has been instrumental in designing programs that demonstrate how third world development and protecting our resources are compatible goals. His vision is to inspire a framework that ensures that humans can grow and prosper indefinitely in a healthy environment.Formerly, Dr. Schweitzer served as an Assistant Director for International Affairs in the Office of Science and Technology Policy under former President Clinton. Prior to that, Dr. Schweitzer served as the Chief Environmental Officer at the State Department's Agency for International Development. In that role, he founded the multi-agency International Cooperative Biodiversity Group Program, a U.S. Government that promoted conservation through rational economic use of natural resources.Dr. Schweitzer began his scientific career in the field of marine biology. He earned his Ph.D. from Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego. He expanded his research at the Center for Learning and Memory at the University of California, Irvine. While at U.C. Irvine he was awarded the Science, Engineering and Diplomacy Fellowship from the American Association for the Advancement of Science.Dr. Schweitzer is a pilot and he founded and edited the Malibu Mirage, an aviation magazine dedicated to pilots flying these single-engine airplanes. He and his wife Sally are avid SCUBA divers and they travel widely to see new wildlife, never far from their roots as marine scientists..To learn more about Dr Schweitzer, visit his website at http://www.JeffSchweitzer.com.


To follow Jeff Schweizer on Twitter, please click here.

For Jeff Schweitzer web site, please click here.

Below link to Amazon for Jeff Schweitzer's latest book.


TO FOLLOW WHAT'S NEW ON FACTS & ARTS, PLEASE CLICK HERE!




 


This article is brought to you by the author who owns the copyright to the text.

Should you want to support the author’s creative work you can use the PayPal “Donate” button below.

Your donation is a transaction between you and the author. The proceeds go directly to the author’s PayPal account in full less PayPal’s commission.

Facts & Arts neither receives information about you, nor of your donation, nor does Facts & Arts receive a commission.

Facts & Arts does not pay the author, nor takes paid by the author, for the posting of the author's material on Facts & Arts. Facts & Arts finances its operations by selling advertising space.

 

 

Browse articles by author

More Essays

Mar 8th 2024
EXTRACT: "This study suggests that around 10% of people diagnosed with dementia may instead have underlying silent liver disease with HE causing or contributing to the symptoms – an important diagnosis to make as HE is treatable."
Jan 28th 2024
EXTRACT: "Health disparity is a powerful weapon in the savage class warfare otherwise known as neoliberalism. (In 2020, the RAND Corporation did a study of the transfer of wealth over the last several decades from the working-class and the middle-class to the top one percent. Their estimate is a staggering $47 trillion – that is how much the “upward redistribution of income” cost American workers between 1975 and 2018.) Neoliberalism is a brutal form of labor suppression, which uses health as a means of maintaining and reproducing a condition in which wealth is constantly being redistributed upwards, and the middle-class is kept in a constant state of fear of sinking into the ranks of the poor. Medical expenses are the leading cause of bankruptcies in America – and that’s according to the American Bankruptcy Institute. The ballooning costs of healthcare serve to maintain a system marked by morally unacceptable health inequity and injustice."
Jan 28th 2024
EXTRACT. "But living longer has also come at a price. We’re now seeing higher rates of chronic and degenerative diseases – with heart disease consistently topping the list. So while we’re fascinated by what may help us live longer, maybe we should be more interested in being healthier for longer. Improving our “healthy life expectancy” remains a global challenge. Interestingly, certain locations around the world have been discovered where there are a high proportion of centenarians who display remarkable physical and mental health. The AKEA study of Sardinia, Italy, as example, identified a “blue zone” (named because it was marked with blue pen),....."
Jan 4th 2024
EXTRACT: ""Tresors en Noir et Blanc" presents 180 prints from the collection of the Musee des Beaux-Arts de la Ville de Paris, also known as the Petit Palais.  The basis of the museum's print collection is 20,000 engravings amassed by a 19th-century collector, Eugene Dutuit, " ----- "This wonderful exhibition, the tip of a great iceberg, serves to emphasize how unfortunate it is that the tens of thousands of prints owned by the Petit Palais are almost never seen by more than a handful of scholars who visit them by appointment.  Nor is the Petit Palais the only offender in this regard,....."
Jan 4th 2024
EXTRACTS: "And that is the clue to Manet’s work. He paints painting, regardless of his subject: he paints the medium itself, it as if he is constantly reminding us that this is a painting," ..........."This is a new conception of painterly truth at play here, a new fidelity to truth. Manet is the Kant of painting because he initiates a similar kind of “Copernican revolution” – we do not see the world as it is but as we are. " -------- " Among the most remarkable but unfamiliar of Manet’s work on display are those depicting the bloody aftermath of the Paris Commune of 1871.There is no question regarding Manet’s condemnation of the Versailles government’s actions following the defeat of the Commune, when some 25,000 Parisians were gunned down, including women and children."
Dec 27th 2023
EXTRACT: "Think of our brain like a map. When we’re young, we explore all corners of this map, sending out connections in every direction to make sense of our environment. Before long, we figure out basic truths – such as how to secure food, or where we live – and the neurological paths that make up these connections strengthen. Over time, a network emerges that reflects our unique experiences. Regions we re-visit often will develop established paths, whereas under-used connections will fade away. ---- Conditions such as addiction, chronic depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are characterised by processes such as repetitive negative thinking or rumination, where patients focus on negative thoughts in a counterproductive way. Unfortunately, these strengthen brain connections that perpetuate the unfavourable mental state."
Dec 14th 2023
EXTRACT: "While no one was looking, France has become a melting pot of European peoples. Its neighbors have traditionally been welcomed, and France progressively turned them into French boys and girls in the next generation."
Dec 4th 2023
EXTRACTS: "Being rich is essentially about having more stuff in general, including bigger houses." "..... if SUVs had not become widely adopted largely as a status symbol for the global middle classes, emissions from transport would have fallen by 30% over the past ten years. For the largest class of SUVs, six of the ten areas of the UK registering the most sales were affluent London boroughs like Kensington and Chelsea."
Nov 11th 2023
EXTRACT: "By using these “biomarkers”, researchers have discovered that when a person’s biological age surpasses their chronological age, it often signifies accelerated cell ageing and a higher susceptibility to age-related diseases." ----- "Imagine two 60-year-olds enrolled in our study. One had a biological age of 65, the other 60. The one with the more accelerated biological age had a 20% higher risk of dementia and a 40% higher risk of stroke."
Nov 6th 2023
EXTRACT: "We are working on a completely new approach to 'machine intelligence'. Instead of using ..... software, we have developed .... hardware that operates much more efficiently."
Nov 6th 2023
EXTRACTS: "When people think of foods related to type 2 diabetes, they often think of sugar (even though the evidence for that is still not clear). Now, a new study from the US points the finger at salt." ...... ".... this type of study, called an observational study, cannot prove that one thing causes another, only that one thing is related to another. (There could be other factors at play.) So it is not appropriate to say removing the saltshaker 'can help prevent'." ..... "Normal salt intake in countries like the UK is about 8g or two teaspoons a day. But about three-quarters of this comes from processed foods. Most of the rest is added during cooking with very little added at the table."
Oct 26th 2023

 

In 1904, Emile Bernard visited Paul Cezanne in Aix.  He wrote of a conversation at dinner:

Sep 11th 2023
EXTRACT: "Many people have dipped their toe into the lazy gardener’s life through “no mow May” – a national campaign to encourage people not to mow their lawns until the end of May. But you could opt to extend this practice until much later in the summer for even greater benefits. Allowing your grass to grow longer, and interspersing it with pollen-rich flowers, can benefit many insects – especially bees. Research finds that reducing mowing in urban and suburban environments has a positive effect on the amount and diversity of insects. Your untamed lawn won’t only benefit insects. It will also encourage more birds, such as goldfinches, to use your garden to feed on the seeds of common wildflower species such as dandelions."
Aug 30th 2023
EXTRACT: "Eliot remarked that Shakespeare's greatness not only grew as the writer aged, but that his development became more apparent to the reader as he himself aged: 'No reader of Shakespeare... can fail to recognize, increasingly as he himself grows up, the gradual ripening of Shakespeare's mind.' "
Aug 25th 2023
EXTRACTS: "I moved here 15 years ago from London because it was so safe. Bordeaux was then known as La Belle au Bois Dormant (The Sleeping Beauty). It's the wine capital of France and the site of beautiful 18th century architecture arrayed along the Garonne river." ---- "What’s new is that today lawlessness is spreading into the more comfortable neighborhoods. The favorite technique is to defraud elderly retirees by dressing up as policemen, waterworks inspectors or gas meter readers. False badges including a photo ID are easy to fabricate on a computer printer. Once inside, they scoop up most anything shiny as they tip-toe through the house."
Aug 20th 2023
EXTRACT: "The 1953 coup d'etat in Iran ushered in a period of exploitation and oppression that has continued – despite a subsequent revolution that led to huge changes – for 70 years. Each year on August 19, the anniversary of the coup, millions of Iranians ask themselves what would have happened if the US and UK had not conspired all those years ago to overthrow Iran’s democratically elected leader."
Aug 18th 2023
EXTRACT: "Edmundo Bacci: Energy and Light, curated by Chiara Bertola, and currently on view at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice, is the first retrospective of the artist in several decades. Bacci was a native of Venice, a city with a long and illustrious history of painting, going back to Giorgione and Titian, Veronese and Tiepolo. As a painter, he was thoroughly immersed in this great past – as an artist he was determined to transform and remake that tradition in the face of modernity and its vicissitudes, what he called “the expressive crisis of our time.” That he has slipped into obscurity affords us, at the very least, an opportunity to see Bacci’s work essentially for the first time, without the burden of over-determined interpretations or categories."
Aug 12th 2023
EXTRACT: "Is Oppenheimer a movie for our time, reminding us of the tensions, dangers and conflicts of the old Cold War while a new one threatens to break out? The film certainly chimes with today’s big power conflicts (the US and China), renewed concern about nuclear weapons (Russia’s threats over Ukraine), and current ideological tensions between democratic and autocratic systems. But the Cold War did not just rest on the threat of the bomb. Behind the scientists and generals were many other players, among them the economists, who clashed just as vigorously in their views about how to run postwar economies."
Aug 5th 2023
EXTRACT: "I have a modest claim to make: we need Bruno today more than ever. This is because he represents an intellectual antidote to the prevailing ideology of today which tells us that we are doomed to finitude, which comes down politically to the assertion that there is no alternative to the reign of global capitalism. Of course, Bruno did not know about capitalism, globalization or neoliberalism. What he did know however is that humanity is infinite. That we are limited only by our own narrowness of vision."
Jul 26th 2023
EXTRACT: "We studied 55,000 people’s dietary data and linked what they ate or drank to five key measures: greenhouse gas emissions, land use, water use, water pollution and biodiversity loss. Our results are now published in Nature Food. We found that vegans have just 30% of the dietary environmental impact of high-meat eaters. The dietary data came from a major study into cancer and nutrition that has been tracking the same people (about 57,000 in total across the UK) for more than two decades."