mikeh, on 2016-November-22, 13:53, said:
I was responding to your offer to engage in a rational discourse, in which, I assume, you intended to advance your views on issues.
I was confused by what was quoted. Sorry! Yes I do want to engage in rational discourse. While I do try to advance my own ideas, I frequently learn new things that changes the way I look at the situation - because while I have opinions on just about every issue that is argued, I'm not 100% married to any of those opinions. I hope the same is true for the people I'm discussing things with but in my experience my views have changed far more frequently than those of the people who I speak with. (Apparently being aware of one's cognitive dissonance is the first step in overcoming it, and most people are not aware of it affecting themselves, while everybody intelligent should be aware of it.)
mikeh, on 2016-November-22, 13:53, said:
However, my opinion of what that meant was informed by the post that I quoted in mine: the post in which you seem to divide views of matters into 'right' and 'wrong', while recognizing that one 'side' may believe their view to be 'right' and the other would disagree.
You refer to some 'very smart' people taking opposing sides.
My point was that there are matters on which one can legitimately assert that there are different opinions and that such differences are worthy of respect even tho, and maybe especially tho, one may prefer one side to the other, perhaps passionately. But then there are matters where no such respect should be accorded to some 'views'.
I agree with this assessment. There are some matters where fundamental beliefs will never bring the two sides together no matter how much they argue the points, such as the pro-choice/pro-life argument. I am personally pro-choice and thought that my party's obsession with pro-life would cost us the election. But there is no point in arguing this point with fellow conservatives because they think I advocate for murder. So I think that's one of those issues where people have to agree to disagree.
There are other issues where one side is clearly right and the other is wrong, but only a limited number of people can know for sure (like whether Hillary was truly hiding something evil by wiping her servers.) We can't know for sure, the only thing that each side can do is present examples of her good character or her bad character to support their side.
As I posted elsewhere, I totally expect that Trump will be a terrible president and that Hillary would have been even worse and one of my points will probably be proven, and I'll be slammed for voting for Trump even when I might have been 100% right. However, we will never know and it's probably pointless discussing this issue because (a) it won't matter and (b) it's going to be very hard for either side to prove the other right. However, one side is clearly right - we will never know which but it is certain that one of the following is true: Hillary would have been worse, or Hillary would not have been worse. Although it could be argued what the definition of "worse" is: many Sanders voters might be quite happy with a country that falls under my definition of worse.
mikeh, on 2016-November-22, 13:53, said:
I cited one's acceptance or rejection of two ideas that are largely, tho not uniformly, rejected by leading republicans in the US: evolutionary theory and global warming. Note that Trump has publicly claimed that global warming is a hoax by the Chinese, altho he lied about that during the 3rd debate. His approach to cabinet selection so far, and his pronouncements on energy (including coal) suggest that he is a denier, or (given who he is) that he doesn't give a damn about anything but himself, and he doesn't see how a global catastrophe can be bad for him. Note that Pence is a Creationist as well as a religious bigot (the two often go hand in hand)
I'm not happy with his Cabinet selections either, especially Banner. Whether I personally like Banner there or not, I think he is adding to the divisiveness in the country by choosing Banner, and if he truly wants to work with Democrats, then this is not the way to show it.
I agree that Pence is a scary choice of VP for many people. I would hate to see what would happen to the LGBT community if God forbid, Trump died and put Pence in charge. However, Trump in one of the debates said he didn't agree with Pence on an issue and Trump is the big dog so Pence's ideology might not matter. However, having Banner advising Trump isn't going to be good for minorities or LGBT. I just hope he can use good judgment in choosing when to ignore his advisors when they give him awful advice.
But I think there is hope, I think choosing Pence was more a move to help get elected than a serious replacement leader for the country in Trump's mind.
Climate change? I'm sitting that one out. I don't know enough and most of the material on the matter neither interests me nor is understandable to me. The only thing I have to say about it is that both sides of scientists should be allowed to speak freely on the subject. I at some point heard that Lynch wanted to arrest climate change denying scientists but that is probably right wing propaganda, but in case it isn't, she shouldn't be allowed to do that. Not only for freedom of speech, but let's let science happen freely and without legal consequences.
mikeh, on 2016-November-22, 13:53, said:
I want to know whether you accept that one should generally operate on the basis that a strong scientific consensus ought to give rise to a provisional acceptance of that consensus or whether you believe, as I infer that you do, that a rational person, with no scientific expertise, is entitled to respect for rejecting such a consensus. Ought we to recognize some form of equivalence between carefully researched, peer reviewed investigation by multiple specialist on the one hand, and religious or opportunistic babbling by scientific illiterates on the other?
Normally if scientists agree on something, I would rationally go along with it. However, the argument is whether the scientists truly agree or those that disagree are being muffled. Again, I don't know the answer, but conservative (you might say alt-right) sources say that the public is only hearing one side. I believe that there are evil forces in government, on both sides, so while it sounds like a conspiracy theory, I can't discount it as being 100% false. Certainly if the government only gives grants to scientists who have a preconception that man-made climate change is not only real but will have disastrous effects, then there is bias coming from the scientific community. It's not that I don't believe the scientists, it's that I'm not sure I'm not hearing only one side. After all, if I listen to Fox News and Breitbart, wouldn't you say I'm only getting one side of each issue? The same may be true for climate change, except that it's the other side.
Am I denying man-made climate change? Not on your life. I don't know enough. What I am sure of is that those scientists that I am allowed to hear from say that it's real. So that says there is at least some chance that it is real and I would be a fool to say that it isn't.
mikeh, on 2016-November-22, 13:53, said:
I know where I stand. Where do you stand?
I warn you that this is a dangerous path to take, should you agree that one should provisionally accept scientific consensus when such exists. As has been often noted, reality has a liberal bias, and once you start accepting reality over fantasy, your attitides will change, and you will find yourself at odds with many of your friends. I doubt that you will or even can take this path but would be truly delighted if you did.
I agree that since we don't know, the safer path is to assume that we can do something about it, as long as the expense isn't so great that other necessary programs will bite the dust. For example, given a choice between funding education or trying to fix the climate change problem, I think we have to fund education. If we are rich enough to do both, fine. However, our country is almost 20 trillion in debt (NOT counting unfunded Social Security and Medicare liabilities) and that works out to be a few hundred thousand for every taxpayer! If you count the unfunded liabilities, each new baby born is a few hundred thousand dollars in debt at birth. At some point, people will stop funding the U.S. government's extravagance. Also, it's a worldwide initiative and much of the world is ignoring the problem. Last I heard, only the USA fulfilled their Kyoto Protocol obligations, so we can pour untold trillions trying to solve the problem but it will do little good if there are countries with 4 times as many people as we have that continue to pollute and are become more industrialized.
mikeh, on 2016-November-22, 13:53, said:
Please note that in no way am I saying that this would result in you agreeing with me on value-based issues. I would respect and appreciate opinions that differed from mine, but that recognized a shared reality based on facts that seem to have been proven, as opposed to merely alleged.
I don't think you're being unreasonable here.
I've got a lot more to respond to here but unfortunately I must get some work done before Orlando.
However I think it's possible to have some good discussions. I remember one discussion I had recently on UBI. All the other participants were left-leaning as my fellow conservatives wouldn't touch the subject. However I felt having a conservative in the discussion was valuable to them as I was in a much better position to discuss the political obstacles that they are going to run into (knowing how fellow conservatives might think) and ways to overcome them and have people be happy about it, whereas without me it would have been more of an elitist "We know this is right so we're going to ram it down the Americans' throats."