Michael Shermer: How Scientific American Got Woke

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  • Опубликовано: 15 авг 2022
  • The science writer and journalists talks identity politics, wokeness, trans athletes, and why his goal is to find out what is true rather than to "be right."
    reason.com/video/2022/08/16/m...
    "I think the second-wave feminists I've talked to are very worried about the kind of woke, gender-identity movement because it's reducing women to just body parts," says Michael Shermer. "A guy can say, 'Well, if I just get breast implants [and] then I can have a vaginal plastic made out of a piece of my skin, I'm in. I'm a woman, right?' Well, no, because women are not just tits and ass. There's more to it than that, a lot more."
    For decades, Shermer has been one of the most popular-and provocative-explicators of science to popular audiences, having authored bestselling books such as Why People Believe Weird Things, Why Darwin Matters, The Moral Arc, and The Mind of the Market. He founded Skeptic magazine in 1992 and hosts a video podcast with leading activists and intellectuals. For nearly 20 years, he authored a widely read column for Scientific American in which he debunked beliefs in UFOs and other paranormal phenomena, explained the rise of the "new atheism," and showed how evolution systematically informs human behavior. Shermer's work is deeply and explicitly rooted in libertarian and Enlightenment ideas about individual responsibility, free market economics, rationality, and the search for something approaching objective truth.
    In 2019, Scientific American cut him loose, a move he ascribes to the publication's suffocating embrace of the sort of identity politics and wokeness that he says dominates academic and intellectual circles and, increasingly, the culture at large.
    Last fall, Shermer, who holds a Ph.D. in the history of science and teaches a class called Skepticism 101 at Chapman University, started a weekly Substack where he posts podcasts and the columns he would have written for Scientific American. The 67-year-old former competitive cyclist talked with Reason during FreedomFest, an annual gathering in Las Vegas, about what he sees as the fundamental clash between wokeness and scientific inquiry, how hard it is to overcome the cognitive biases we all have, why he thinks trans athletes should be banned from most women's sports, why we have so much trouble acknowledging moral and technological progress, and why he now identifies as a classical liberal rather than a libertarian.
    Shermer has sat down with Reason a number of times since 2008, speaking about the future of science, how evolution formed the modern economy, and his "Google theory of peace." He's also spoken to us about the history of modern skepticism, why everyone wants to believe in Heaven, and why self-help gurus aren't the key to happiness.
    Photo Credits: Willie J. Allen Jr./ZUMApress/Newscom; Loxton, via Wikimedia Commons; Gage Skidmore, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Fronteiras do Pensamento, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Fronteiras do Pensamento, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Fronteiras do Pensamento, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Sports Press Photo/Daniela Porcelli / SPP/Sipa USA/Newscom; Jose Perez / SplashNews/Newscom; Tristanb at English Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Kenneth Martin/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom; Glasshouse Images Glasshouse Images/Newscom; RICHARD B. LEVINE/Newscom.
    Music Credits: "Just Make It Fun," by Custommelody via Artlist.
    Interview by Nick Gillespie. Video by Regan Taylor and Adam Czarnecki.

Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @billcosgrave6232
    @billcosgrave6232 Год назад +77

    I used to read Scientific American until I graduated from college in the 1980's. I found it to be a an excellent magazine with many excellent and rigorously written articles. I picked a copy of it recently and I was shocked at how it has turned into total crap!! Another example of the dumbing down of America. I really fear for this country's future and luckily I will not be around to see it.

    • @b.g.5869
      @b.g.5869 Год назад +1

      It's more insidious than a mere dumbing down. It literally reads like something from a Jim Jones' Peoples Temple or Symbionese Liberation Army pamphlet from the early 70s.
      Weird ass radical identity politics etc.

    • @billcosgrave6232
      @billcosgrave6232 Год назад +5

      @@b.g.5869 I agree. It is actually very dangerous since this type of behavior seems to be everywhere.

    • @sookiebyun4260
      @sookiebyun4260 Год назад +3

      It is a matter of perception. Everyone has their own version of fact and truth. Everyone is a judge. Everyone is a chief. Everyone is Right as Rain about their own opinion, which is often just an adoption of someone else's opinion. I would like to see a conversation between 2 people of opposing views on the results of a scientific study in which they focus strictly on the results without adding in a purpose, such as trying to reach a particular conclusion to prove a thesis.

    • @sookiebyun4260
      @sookiebyun4260 Год назад +4

      And to think that so many people want to live longer! What for? To see how bad it gets and how much deeper in resignation about humanity? Cynical people like us really don't want to live longer. I think we're happy to kick off any day.

    • @jeffk464
      @jeffk464 8 месяцев назад

      Science is the opposite of ideology, if Scientific America adopts leftist ideology then they aren't a legitimate scientific journal.

  • @paulsnow
    @paulsnow Год назад +47

    I consumed Scientific American as a kid in the 70's. I grew into an Engineer, building interpreters, compilers, embedded systems, children's software, rules engines used by some states even today, and now blockchain technology. Innovation, science, creativity, technology and more were the life blood and ethos of Scientific American.
    How sad for them to lose their way.

    • @ytehrani3885
      @ytehrani3885 10 месяцев назад +6

      I'm so glad you got to become an engineer before all this woke rubbish!
      I think every Biology student in the late 1980s & 1990s was assigned one of Scientific American's center piece articles detailing how DNA & protein synthesis works.
      The diagrams and writing were brilliant for an introduction to basic genetics.
      What a shame to see them get captured by these woke activist types.
      I saw a Scientific American video with an editor called Tulika Bose about the trans issue - it was just awful! What a shame.

  • @lockerius4208
    @lockerius4208 Год назад +136

    DeSantis didn't slap Disney with higher taxes, he removed some EXTREMELY beneficial tax breaks that nobody else was getting.
    He was balancing it out, making it equal for everyone. THAT is a libertarian belief.

    • @SonOfLiberty82
      @SonOfLiberty82 Год назад +21

      I was going to comment this exact thing!
      This guy is a walking contradiction.
      "I believe in knowing all the facts and making informed decisions of both sides without unconscious bias or cognitive dissonance"
      "Now I'm going to recite incredibly inaccurate information about what happened to Disney and about Ron DeSantis"

    • @jwilliam2255
      @jwilliam2255 Год назад +26

      Disney lost tax breaks and (limited) territorial autonomy that they never should have had in the first place.

    • @thanksforbeingausefulidiot9016
      @thanksforbeingausefulidiot9016 Год назад +4

      How about DeSantis telling companies they are not free to decide how to manage their employees with respect to vaccine mandates? Why aren't these companies free to do as they see fit? Or how about DeSantis wanting to fine social media companies that deplatform policiticians? THOSE are NOT libertarian acts, much less beliefs.

    • @PersonMan1234
      @PersonMan1234 Год назад

      @@SonOfLiberty82 Yeah, definitely pushing back from the wokeness, but still just spooning in the mainstream media narrative.

    • @ddwieland
      @ddwieland Год назад +12

      You're overlooking the human rights aspect of De Santis's actions. It seems consistent with libertarian principles to me to constrain business actions that infringe on human rights/liberties. Vaccine mandates are based on the false notion that being unvaccinated poses a threat to a vaccinated person. That notion certainly deserves skepticism.
      (Edit: Mandates claim justification on the basis of protection, but they're based on the desire for control.)

  • @wetwingnut
    @wetwingnut Год назад +20

    Discovering Scientific American in high school in the seventies changed my life. I hardly ever made it all the way to the end of any paper - they were published papers then, not articles - but what I learned from reading as much as I could follow was immense. Sci Am taught me to think like a scientist, be rationally skeptical, and showed me what REAL science looks like.
    I recently got a subscription for my son who just started high school, but it is nothing like the eye opening journal that I remember.
    What a tragic loss.

  • @Muonium1
    @Muonium1 Год назад +355

    I let my subscription lapse about 20 years ago because it was getting obnoxiously politically biased and sensationalist even then. Compared with the absolute irredeemable trash it's become today it was practically Nature or Zeitschrift für Physik back then. I have a huge bound and hard covered 1887 year in review edition on my coffee table that a relative gave me as a gift and it was truly an amazing resource of clearly explained cutting edge scientific information. What an absolute disgrace they've become in just the last few years alone.

    • @commentsboardreferee7434
      @commentsboardreferee7434 Год назад +15

      Agreed.

    • @doepicshizzle6465
      @doepicshizzle6465 Год назад

      Same. He’s just an exploiter of workers and a chud now. All these idiots self reported when Trump ran. None of them can be trusted now. They’re all bias af.

    • @Ralph64
      @Ralph64 Год назад +24

      Maybe I'm conflating Shermer's advent with the general decline of the magazine, but my first reaction to the title of this video was: "YOUstarted it!!" Compare SciAm from this guy's time to the 1960s and 70s, when scientists wrote the articles (instead of staff), and one can easily conclude that activists replaced scientists, with Shermer carrying the banner of the activists.

    • @Muonium1
      @Muonium1 Год назад +28

      @@Ralph64 I don't know if I'd agree that Shermer was one of the activists but it's certain that no one can deny SciAm was fucking AMAZING from the 50s through the 80s when scientists regularly wrote articles. In fact I think the heyday was clearly that era in the 70s when columns like the "the amateur scientist" were at their best.

    • @aPlateOfGrapes
      @aPlateOfGrapes Год назад +21

      I came here to write something very similar. In the late 90's and early 00's I noticed it was getting more political. After one particularly horrible article and an editor's nasty response to a reader, I'd had enough. I wrote them a letter and canceled my subscription. That was about 20 years ago...

  • @rasmur1
    @rasmur1 Год назад +230

    One of the most disturbing aspects of woke ideology for me is its attack on meritocracy-or academic standards of merit such as standardized tests and tests for professions.

    • @SuperManning11
      @SuperManning11 Год назад +12

      Definitely not defending woke ideology, nor attacking meritocracy, but as a public school teacher, I can attest to the fact that we have gone too far in the past 20 years on standardized testing. In many cases teachers were simply teaching to the test, while critical thinking was out the window for lack of time. Things are definitely getting better, but I assume that is part of the attack on standardized testing. That, and the fact that the very standardization of the test makes them often unreliable, as many students do not have the academic background that the tests assume they have. Again, I’m not advocating getting rid of meritocracy, but a balanced and more nuanced approach sure would be nice, at least from a teacher’s point of view.

    • @rasmur1
      @rasmur1 Год назад +8

      @@SuperManning11 We need to do more to help disadvantaged young people to stay up with their peers. (whatever happened to Head Start?) I'm not an expert on education or a teacher, but if we don't have some kind of academic standards, I fear our society will be dumbed down.

    • @SeaTeaSnow
      @SeaTeaSnow Год назад

      @@SuperManning11 But that is not the genesis of the attack on meritocracy. The attack stems from the CRT belief that whites design the tests for whites to pass, and that upper class people design the tests to perpetuate their dominance. Of course, this is neomarxist nonsense.

    • @ragnarok7976
      @ragnarok7976 Год назад +6

      I would be fine with them saying we can make better tests the current ones are not cutting it but they don't want to replace them with anything better or even worse they just want to burn them to the ground and pray something rises from the ashes.

    • @crescendo5594
      @crescendo5594 Год назад +3

      @@katansi This might be among the best arguments in favor of standardized testing I’ve ever seen. I agree with almost all of it.
      I think it’s not necessarily a problem with the differences in the utility of standardized testing, but the differences in the methodology of schooling itself.
      We must first ask ourselves, “Why do we have school?” and agree upon the answer. The answer, in my mind, is to give young people the basic tools they need to be useful adults.
      Which tools apply, and the definition of useful can certainly vary, but you do have constants across all cultures. And it’s within those constants, that standardized testing makes perfect logical sense.
      Now, if you’re offering elective classes which also serve the general purpose of fostering usefulness, like say, a multimedia class. Then the edges of standardized testing begin to break down a bit, because to be successful in a lot of forms of media, one _must_ be creative, and entertaining. And this would be a very relevant modern class, I think.
      But in terms of arithmetic, language, history, etc., nothing _but_ standardized tests and well-defined expectations makes sense to me.

  • @PeterDivine
    @PeterDivine Год назад +97

    19:51 - Desantis isn't "slapping Disney with regulation," he's revoking a company's ability to run their own private kingdom complete as a tax haven and he's doing it so DISNEY doesn't tacitly dictate state policy.
    Revoking special government privileges for favored companies should be a libertarian value. Instantly soured my opinion of this guy. Grossly reductive and false.

    • @bobcobb7992
      @bobcobb7992 Год назад +16

      Agreed. That immediately struck me as dishonest. Hitting a company with regulations is very different from taking away special privileges that no one else gets.

    • @FEV369
      @FEV369 Год назад +9

      I didn't care for him much the more he droned on. He has a way of taking an issue, applying an overly simplistic position on those he disagrees with, then giving his bias and generally uninteresting feelings on the subject. I feel like if I knew him in person and we were "friends" and hung out, I'd be calling him on his BS more than he's comfortable with.

    • @SK-hj8ss
      @SK-hj8ss Год назад +13

      I try to like Michael Shermer. But he's so frustrating. As soon as he get's near a sublime position on something he says something frustrating just to be contrarian. He's so slavishly centrist he never really takes a firm position on anything.

    • @marcalampi5036
      @marcalampi5036 Год назад +1

      @@SK-hj8ss absolutely correct. Exactly right

    • @arcguardian
      @arcguardian Год назад

      Better late than never.

  • @Baconmanperson
    @Baconmanperson Год назад +36

    Desantis didn't "sic the government on Disney" He (and his congress) simply decided to not continue providing special protections and privileges to a company that went out of its way to show that it was no longer fostering the kind of community they want to incentivize in Florida.

    • @peaceflower8302
      @peaceflower8302 Год назад

      So instead of letting the corporation that opposes his policies be an entity separate from Florida, he further incorporates it... sounds pretty poorly thought out on DeSantis' part.

    • @arbitrarysequence
      @arbitrarysequence Год назад

      "simply decided"... I suspect even you don't think that's an honest response.

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Год назад

      Well said.

    • @vapecatt
      @vapecatt Год назад +1

      @@peaceflower8302 no, it is now subject to Florida's laws, regulations, and taxes. I'm not a fan of this outcome but cronyism doesn't help anyone.

    • @peaceflower8302
      @peaceflower8302 Год назад

      @@vapecatt And because it is subject to those laws, regulations, and taxes, it will now work to influence those laws, regulations, and taxes through lobbying. Because Disney can’t be it’s own entity, it will try to shape Florida to benefit itself.

  • @aaxen7255
    @aaxen7255 Год назад +64

    One of the strongest memories I have of my father, a physicist, was him in his chair reading SciAm of an evening ... he'd be rolling over in his grave seeing the rag that it has become.

    • @markawbolton
      @markawbolton Год назад +3

      I always got to The SciAm before my Dad. He got to watch me read it first.

    • @adamvicari3295
      @adamvicari3295 Год назад

      Also, every libertarian AND every legitimate scientist, specifically every biologist, should be pro-LIFE, NOT pro choice, because, again, the science is clear on this issue: life begins at conception. One study found the 95 percent biologists surveyed in the study admitted life begins at conception. The zygote has historically been the mile marker as the beginning of human development during the gestation cycle, and by 6 weeks the infant has a heartbeat. The zygote is formed as soon as the sperm cell(a living piece of matter) is fused with the egg cell(a living piece of matter). Thus, no matter when an abortion is being performed, according to biology, a living being is being murdered, intentionally with premeditation, which, in any other context would be classified as capital murder. If abortion was applied to a 5 month post-birth child, it would universally be considered a heinous crime, but when it is applied to a 5 month old pre-birth, people like Shermer pretend it is acceptable? This is where the argument falls through: the "pro choice" crowd pretends to be standing for and defending the" rights" of the mother and protecting her bodily autonomy, but what they pretend not to notice is that by protecting the mother's "right" which is not a right at all because no one has a right to commit murder, you are simultaneously depriving someone else of their rights and their bodily autonomy(the unborn child). Libertarians always say people should be allowed to do and live however they want as long as it is within reason, the confines of the law, and does not harm a third party. Well, abortion does actively harm a third party(the unborn child) by depriving him or her of their most basic right(life) and it is unreasonable to do this because the SCIENCE contradicts the baseless and vacuous "pro choice" argument because it indicates that a fetus IS human life. Let's not pretend that the pro choice argument and movement is based on anything but politics and convenience.

    • @ytehrani3885
      @ytehrani3885 10 месяцев назад +2

      Too right!

  • @normanhosford2506
    @normanhosford2506 Год назад +25

    I had quit reading SA about 10 years ago when it became more political than scientific. It had been trending for some time and the time to read it became more valuable than the science in it.

    • @markawbolton
      @markawbolton Год назад +1

      That was about the stone end for me. I fell out of love with it about 20 years ago.

    • @zxyatiywariii8
      @zxyatiywariii8 8 месяцев назад

      I only know its value due to the old issues my dad kept. It was once a great resource.

    • @bengeurden1272
      @bengeurden1272 4 месяца назад

      In 2013, they were bit less objective than let's say 2008, but they recovered from it.

  • @EquippedwithStrength
    @EquippedwithStrength Год назад +18

    The straw for me was their article saying sex is a spectrum. I couldn’t believe they published it. Utter nonsense and non-science.

    • @brechtkuppens
      @brechtkuppens Год назад

      Was that article about sex or gender? Any source or hints for me to find said article?

    • @blugreen99
      @blugreen99 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@brechtkuppens Sex it's on yt. Paradox institute and ColinWright biologist

  • @mendocinolake6421
    @mendocinolake6421 Год назад +131

    Science mixed with the certainties of politics or religion often yields a sloppy and sour stew.
    The cleanness of Scientific American’s articles relatively free of political taint prior to 25 years ago was a celebration of the nature of science and actually one of my joys in life. It is sadly missed.

    • @proaktivhalsaab2644
      @proaktivhalsaab2644 Год назад +1

      Where do we find it today?

    • @charleslueker2597
      @charleslueker2597 Год назад +1

      @@proaktivhalsaab2644 RUclips, I'm afraid

    • @spec24
      @spec24 Год назад +1

      "certainties of politics"
      You'll have a hard time convincing anyone of this.

    • @Dancestar1981
      @Dancestar1981 Год назад

      I saw the same happening in Australia at the same time

    • @Orson2u
      @Orson2u Год назад

      The Sciences, published by the New York Academy of Sciences, comes closest.

  • @Desrtfox71
    @Desrtfox71 Год назад +131

    I used to be subscribed to Scientific American (in print even back in the day). Increasingly over the years, and especially in the last year or two SciAm has just been covering far too much of the Religion of Woke, instead of the Science of anything. Too bad. A once great institution brought low by identity politics. Here's hoping that one day, they recover.

    • @TransparencyandMerit
      @TransparencyandMerit Год назад

      The left seems to have gone full Pol Pot

    • @bthemedia
      @bthemedia Год назад +1

      Used to read SciAm all the time as an “armchair scientist” in 1990s to early 2000s - must have missed his articles.

    • @friendlyfire7861
      @friendlyfire7861 Год назад +5

      It has been happening for a long time.

    • @cyberedge881
      @cyberedge881 Год назад +18

      Wokism is indeed a religion.

    • @imperioustheone3530
      @imperioustheone3530 Год назад

      @@cyberedge881 Given its destructive nature and results, it would be better classified as a disease.

  • @vociferon-heraldofthewinte7763
    @vociferon-heraldofthewinte7763 Год назад +173

    Shermer is for gun control, vaccine mandates and massive tax breaks for certain corporations. How exactly is he a libertarian or classical liberal?

    • @EclecticBuddha
      @EclecticBuddha Год назад +27

      That is a fine question.

    • @RedBricksTraffic
      @RedBricksTraffic Год назад +1

      He's against fossil fuels too, and absolutely refuses to address Alex Epsteins arguments.

    • @warwitheastasia
      @warwitheastasia Год назад +19

      And the idea that its somehow "inconsistent" for Libertarians to say we shouldn't invade other countries "to help people under suppression of civil liberties". I mean for chrissakes, what Libertarian principle does he think "humanitarian" wars fall under? Of all the things to fault Libertarians for, he chooses opposition to war? Unbelievable.

    • @hrbattenfeld
      @hrbattenfeld Год назад +37

      Obvious answer:
      Shermer is simply as unprincipled as the one he accuses of being unprincipled.

    • @vociferon-heraldofthewinte7763
      @vociferon-heraldofthewinte7763 Год назад +7

      @@RedBricksTraffic One really wonders why Freedom Fest would have him and Reason to interview him?

  • @mehtacotute
    @mehtacotute Год назад +21

    Scientic American doesn't really seem to be either scientific or American....

    • @thomasmaughan4798
      @thomasmaughan4798 Год назад +3

      It's German. And not particularly scientific.

    • @mehtacotute
      @mehtacotute Год назад +1

      @@thomasmaughan4798 Sounds about right.
      Although nothing is more American than a company with American in the title owned by foreign nationals.

    • @AcquiredCents
      @AcquiredCents 2 дня назад

      Not anymore. When marxist activists ruin things, they ruin EVERYTHING. Literally. And it's not opinion, they've taken over our institutions to the tune of about 95% professors are 'woke' aka marxist/leftist

  • @michaelweber5702
    @michaelweber5702 Год назад +32

    Disney had lower taxes and almost no regulations . Taxes on Disney were very very low . Also the vaccines worked? , and government should mandate them? They didn't work .

    • @trystdodge6177
      @trystdodge6177 Год назад

      Anyone who still holds the position that vaccines worked has lost scientific credibility. It's like saying the hole I plugged in my sinking ship worked when water is pouring in from the 30 others. It's sophistry, yeah dude it worked marginally for the elderly for a six months. If that's how you define worked you don't deserve any respect.

  • @rao8559
    @rao8559 Год назад +14

    I remember when this magazine declared Barack Obama as among the top 10 scientific personalities of 2008 in its Jan/Feb 2009 issue. This type of Kim Jong Uhn grovelling put me off. Havent read it since then.

  • @50srefugee
    @50srefugee Год назад +20

    I knew Scientific American, which I grew up with, was on its way out when they let Forrest Mims go as the Amateur Scientist columnist. Mims, who I had been a fan of since his work in model rocketry, had opinions I disagreed with, but his instinct for building your own instruments was spot on. He kept his views on evolution out of the column, and there was no excuse for cutting the column. A tremendous loss.

    • @christheother9088
      @christheother9088 Год назад +2

      I bought all the Mims booklets from Radio Shack when I was teaching myself electronics. And yes SA made a bunch of changes long before the woke trauma. I dumped them long ago,

  • @element5999
    @element5999 Год назад +28

    Easy answer: They promoted a woman to Editor in Chief and then appointed more women to other key editorial positions. This trend of feminizing science leads to avoiding publishing controversial topics that could be upsetting some people and a general aversion to promoting controversial ideas that can challenge popular social narratives - and science is loaded with those. Women prefer to avoid upsetting others and more often imbibe current popular dogmas to signal their allegiance to the group...they do not like rocking the boat.

    • @americancitizen748
      @americancitizen748 Год назад +5

      And such a trend could doom civilization.

    • @reconstructingphilosophy
      @reconstructingphilosophy Год назад

      Such a huge overgeneralization about women, set forth as an “easy answer.” As with easy answers in general it’s way too simplistic. Certainly does not apply to me or to a great many other women. I know plenty of gratingly conformist far left “woke” men as well. I hope this new trend you’re spewing doesn’t continue to spread. Such a lack of nuance and overgeneralized easy answers, setting women in such an awful light, reflect and stoke sexist biases. Also fails to acknowledge ways that women have helped to identify foolish biases in science and contribute to improved standards, as by recognizing ways that significant variables were inadequately heeded (as with testing a safety device entirely on a standard adult male form). Rachel Carson and Ruth Harrison also did innovative and pioneering work from outside academia that has helped to show the need to teach and approach science in ways that are attentive to ethics and to the broader context. Mary Midgley likewise was right to call for attention to the bigger picture and to challenge scientism. If you’re going to throw about stereotypes how about also include ways that stereotypically masculine approaches to science have been utterly disastrous and have led us towards many Darwin awards? Bacon would not approve. His New Atlantis was big on character and on openness to criticism and to changes if they prove called for. He was also big on an eye on the whole and on intelligently orchestrated efforts rather than the foolish cacophony that so often misgoverns contemporary research efforts. Much of what he would support is standard fare from a traditional conception of philosophy as the love of learning and wisdom, and is presently often associated with femininity. Socrates’ final words were to tell his friends that “we owe a debt to Asclepius,” the god of healing and medicine, and to advise them to see to it that it is paid / to not be careless. He is shown by Plato taking Diotima (possibly Aspasia) as a major influence upon him, and that, as someone who taught him about love. We continue to trivialize the importance of care and love and concern for justice and for wisdom at our ongoing peril.

    • @HamhockandHemorrhoids
      @HamhockandHemorrhoids Год назад

      @@reconstructingphilosophy women are easily manipulated. White, post-grad women are the ones who push this horse shit the most.

    • @tom-kz9pb
      @tom-kz9pb Год назад

      As I have read, Shermer has had his own problems with accusations of sexual harassment. I get a sick feeling that the bellyaching about Scientific American being "woke" has more to do with a lot of men's bad attitudes toward the female gender than anything wrong with the magazine. Maybe it is just as well- the kinds of right-wingers and Trump loyalists who use the word "woke" as a cuss word seem not really cut out for such things as science, facts or logic.

    • @Dancestar1981
      @Dancestar1981 Год назад

      Women per se aren’t a problem only those who have been brainwashed by bull shit

  • @jeremyogrizovich3247
    @jeremyogrizovich3247 Год назад +9

    It’s not that the 2nd Amendment is a argument that we live in a failed state. It’s an argument that all states will fail.

    • @tom-kz9pb
      @tom-kz9pb Год назад

      Gun lovers are not so much representing the defense against tyranny as they are representing the threat of tryanny.

    • @jeremyogrizovich3247
      @jeremyogrizovich3247 Год назад

      @@tom-kz9pbGun lovers are a category, as is criminal, and more importantly tyrannical states. In addition; we are in a room filled with guns, by all means pick one up or don’t.

    • @tom-kz9pb
      @tom-kz9pb Год назад

      @@jeremyogrizovich3247 We are in a room filled with kerosene and a lot of people throwing matches. The real tyranny of America has been decidedly right-wing. The FBI for decades harassed the Left, obsessively and almost exclusively: black groups, Martin Luther King, women activists, gays. The CIA trained, installed and supported numerous right-wing dictators who murdered and tortured thousands, pretty much anyone left of center or otherwise impeding corporate interests, like human rights or environmental activists. To hear conservatives whining about "Deep Stats" shows only their disconnect from reality and their profound ignorance of history, like Trump praising the unquestioned loyalty of Hitler's generals, and needing to be reminded that Hitler's generals tried to assassinate him, three times.

    • @pitchforkpeasant6219
      @pitchforkpeasant6219 Год назад +1

      3 replies and i see none. Shocker

  • @atgrandfathersknee3065
    @atgrandfathersknee3065 Год назад +163

    Wait, am I supposed to watch this while pretending like Shermer wasn't a part of the problem that got us where we are today in public discourse and academia?

    • @thomasmaughan4798
      @thomasmaughan4798 Год назад +42

      So you noticed that as well.

    • @tekharthazenyatta2310
      @tekharthazenyatta2310 Год назад +25

      Somebody should also put to Shermer a few other things: (1) there ain't no draft no more (re: the now inapplicable Carlin joke), (2) aside from a hard line on abortion, he's in agreement with Matt Walsh on every issue brought up in this interview, (3) since when are 2nd amendment supporters "gun nuts"? (Shermer deftly avoids defining a "gun nut"), (4) there is no hard evidence that one's gender identity or sexual orientation is "baked in" at birth, and in asserting this you're contradicting your stance that if you think binary and ignore a continuum scale of measure then you'll confuse yourself, and (5) opposition to unilateral foreign-war interventionism is a bad thing?

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Год назад +7

      @@tekharthazenyatta2310 MY gender identity was absolutely hardwired from birth, I assume that is not the case for everyone tho.

    • @smelltheglove2038
      @smelltheglove2038 Год назад

      @@Mrbfgray well it is until the Uggo girls get to high school and decide to pretend to be more popular.

    • @mightyirish
      @mightyirish Год назад +25

      @@tekharthazenyatta2310 Mentioning the "gun show loophole" is a tell that he doesn't know what he's talking about. He fancies himself a skeptic but seems to suspend it on the gun topic.

  • @bthemedia
    @bthemedia Год назад +34

    31:46 Matt Walsh is a “right wing troll” 🤣 That’s what we call people speaking rationally against illogical and damaging woke ideology now?

    • @EclecticBuddha
      @EclecticBuddha Год назад +4

      It's accurate tho. His most effective/popular content is him trolling people.

    • @bthemedia
      @bthemedia Год назад +2

      @@EclecticBuddha Shermer defends the “What is a Woman” work as legit scientific critical skeptical analysis of the “other side” of the argument. I do not see “critique / criticism” as “trolling” since trolling typically is making inflammatory and false/straw-man counter arguments… rather than objectively based and rational criticism of outrageous ideas/agendas… just like Shermer attacks conspiracy theorists arguments.

    • @rafaelmusacchio5257
      @rafaelmusacchio5257 Год назад +3

      His fundraiser tô save AOC Abuella was one of his bests trollings ever. Because even If It was a mockery, the end result would bê beneficial either way tô her Abuella, só even If they Go against, It would look bad for progressives either way

    • @crockmans1386
      @crockmans1386 Год назад +1

      What is a woman , film is genius.

  • @englishincontext4025
    @englishincontext4025 Год назад +8

    The scientific method is not concerned with CULTURE. That is the remit of psychology and sociology. A scientific journal has no business trying to "steer' society about cultural issues.

    • @theboombody
      @theboombody Год назад

      When it was scientifically discovered that the earth went around the sun, I wonder if those that made the discovery thought about how important it was to spread the message throughout all culture. I imagine they really cared about spreading it in the scientific community, but were pretty uninterested in whether the common man accepted the results. But I have no idea. It didn't change daily life all that much. When you want science to impact daily life, I imagine you call it engineering.

    • @chrisfreebairn870
      @chrisfreebairn870 Год назад

      @@theboombody Darwin withheld publication of the Origin out of concern for the impact he knew it would have on how ppl thought ..

    • @theboombody
      @theboombody Год назад

      @@chrisfreebairn870 Very dangerous to go against public opinion. Turing paid dearly for it. That's probably why Scientific American is heading in the direction it's heading. It doesn't want to go against public opinion.

    • @chrisfreebairn870
      @chrisfreebairn870 Год назад

      @@theboombodyIt turns out that sociality is a rather more important component of our success as a species than was recognized in the heady days of disembodied rationalism. To step outside the envelope of social sustenance ...

  • @paulaharrisbaca4851
    @paulaharrisbaca4851 Год назад +9

    Before I was born, I believe my mom (she believed it as well) was given hormones supposedly to prevent miscarriage, but also caused masculinization of the female fetus. Now, I don't know if she knew that at the time, but it may have affected many of the behaviors I had
    (And still have) as a teenager.
    I would probably be begging my mom to let me get spayed and get a double mastectomy at 13 because I was a tomboy and I hated becoming a woman, who was doomed to a life of misery and child-bearing, as opposed to the true happiness having children, wanted children, can bring. Much more than my working life ever did....

  • @gailnorman1133
    @gailnorman1133 Год назад +44

    I finally had enough when most of the material focused on environmental issues rather than the rest of the physical sciences.

    • @karlerikpaulsson88
      @karlerikpaulsson88 Год назад

      if you don't like the planet that gives you life, you are free to leave it. sooner would be better.

  • @boostpw4155
    @boostpw4155 Год назад +13

    Too bad , was interesting stuff with no politics. Everything woke turns to shit.

  • @joebiz4824
    @joebiz4824 8 месяцев назад +4

    Shermer says he no longer considers himself a libertarian because he doesn't believe that we should be able to do whatever we want, which is why he now calls himself a Classical Liberal. Yet earlier in his remarks, he said he's hardcore pro-choice, which I have to assume means to take a life for any reason and at any time during the pregnancy. He states he's no longer a libertarian as it conveys an attitude unconstrained. He defies the new position he set for himself on just this issue alone.

    • @rebusd
      @rebusd 8 месяцев назад +2

      Yes his obliviousness is quite obvious

  • @trohlack5150
    @trohlack5150 Год назад +12

    It's funny....I've been reading the magazine occasionally looking for the good articles and buying at the newsstand. Ive been thinking a lot of this to myself and it's good to see others have noticed the same.

  • @vimmentors6747
    @vimmentors6747 Год назад +31

    Historically you could feel relatively confident that the science in Scientific American would be correct. Over time, they have hired more non-scientists graduates of "scientific writing" programs who apparently are taught that being click-worthy is more important than being correct. I have given up writing authors who got facts wrong in stories, sending annotated lists of publications and lists of scientists with the credentials and expertise to inform their mistakes. When they did respond, they would be defensive and drop the attitude that as science writers they knew what was really true, even in areas where I am an expert. Scientific American has become CNN, desperately trying to hold on to some kind of market share, and watching their revenue and reach shrink.

    • @thomasmaughan4798
      @thomasmaughan4798 Год назад +3

      "Scientific American has become CNN"
      COL (Chuckled Out Loud)

    • @wasdwasdedsf
      @wasdwasdedsf Год назад

      this sherman clown is the one to whine... his twitter feed is filled with copypastings of every msm propaganda line in the book... his brain is fried

  • @friendlyfire7861
    @friendlyfire7861 Год назад +30

    American Scientist is more like what SciAm used to be--actually intellectual and scientific.

    • @alienmoonstalker
      @alienmoonstalker Год назад +11

      Generally, yes. But I am seeing wokeness starting to pervade it as well. Not to mention the nonstop climate articles.

    • @friendlyfire7861
      @friendlyfire7861 Год назад +5

      @@alienmoonstalker Ugh, I haven't actually subscribed in a few years; what a disappointment. That was a looming nightmare. ☹😡

    • @tomorrow6
      @tomorrow6 Год назад

      @@alienmoonstalker the “covering climate now” journalist initiative subverts journalists worldwide by adding climate change to most articles and omitting any objective challenges to data ensuring the “average” modelling and predictions are much more extreme than reality which impacts on current and future credibility amongst those that understand flaws in data gathering and statistical analysis.

  • @runderwo
    @runderwo Год назад +32

    21:30 It's worth noting that like virtually all self-styled "skeptics", Shermer fell for the vaccine scam hook, line and sinker. What good is skepticism when it tilts at windmills and punches down, instead of doing the real important work of scrutinizing authority itself?

    • @thanksforbeingausefulidiot9016
      @thanksforbeingausefulidiot9016 Год назад

      Actually the person who fell for the vaccine scam hook, line, and sinker was you, if you believe they are not safe. And to think you listened to the likes of Donald Trump on that issue, a man who can't tell the truth on anything, even by accident. I'm healthier than ever two years out from my first vaccine dose.

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 Год назад +1

      He believed Liz Cheney and her 1/6 political theater. Just like Sam Harris, Shermer has TDS.

    • @danieldoucet9121
      @danieldoucet9121 Год назад

      Why was the vaccine a scam ? Because it didn't go "poof" and 100 % eradicate every trace of the virus ? It took decades to eradicate polio (Jonas Salk sold the patent for a buck), small pox (the biggest killer in human history), though they are slowly resurfacing because (wait for it..) vaccination rates for these have dipped. Nothing is 100 % certain but that's what the average person wants and expects. Doesn't work that way and it never will.

  • @billscannell93
    @billscannell93 Год назад +31

    His column was my favorite part of that magazine for years. It's a shame politics have tainted even something that is supposed to be a scientific publication. This "woke" thing is truly insidious.

    • @lonzo61
      @lonzo61 4 месяца назад

      Indeed, it's insidious and dangerous. I"m a liberal who has been railing against this Leftist mind virus for years.

  • @brianzmek7272
    @brianzmek7272 Год назад +54

    It is shocking to me that people see the removal of special privileges like Disney has via the Bueno Vista incorporated township or via section 230 protection reform or abolition as imposing special laws or taxes when they are just putting mega corps on the same level as everyone else.

    • @strnbrg59
      @strnbrg59 Год назад +4

      Yeah. I'm going to give Shermer the benefit of the doubt and assume he's just uninformed about the specifics here. Maybe he'll see your comment, or someone else will set him straight.

    • @fattyboombatty2000
      @fattyboombatty2000 Год назад +10

      This is the second comment that already said what I wanted to say on two different subjects. This is the best chat I’ve seen on yt in a long time. Anyway, yeah he completely swallowed the media’s take on the Disney battle. To me, it boils down to this: if I’m a governor of a state with a huge corporation operating in it with special privelages, and that corp begins to openly oppose legislation we just passed with popular support, going so far as to say that they will do whatever they can to undo it, I feel it’s justified to strip them of the privilege that they are brazenly taking for granted.

    • @BlacksmithTWD
      @BlacksmithTWD Год назад +1

      @@strnbrg59
      All people are uninformed or misinformed about most topics simply by the fact that even three human lifetimes are not long enough to get informed about everything.

    • @lalaboards
      @lalaboards Год назад

      Was thinking the same thing .

    • @arcguardian
      @arcguardian Год назад +1

      Not just people, influential/highly regarded ppl.

  • @book3100
    @book3100 Год назад +5

    When the woke is attacking you, the thing to do is counter attack, not rely on the "old conservative" response.

    • @aerialpunk
      @aerialpunk 8 месяцев назад

      Yeah, I found that to be odd given how much he was talking about consistency and whatnot. Making fun of conservatives for "thinking gay marriage would lead to duck marriage" while we live in a world where feelings matter so much more than objective definitions and standards that we have pedophile apologists, child gender transitions, math is racist and men can be women just by throwing on a dress. It's almost as if what we allow individuals to do relies on logic than can translate to other parts of society ... but no, no, that's just collectivist thinking 🤔

  • @SkepticalTeacher
    @SkepticalTeacher Год назад +30

    I hadn't bought it for 20 years; bought it a couple of years ago at the airport and was truly shocked at how awful it was, completely unrecognisable. Likewise, the UK equivalent magazine, same woke nonsense. As a woman, I object!!

  • @henrylawson430
    @henrylawson430 Год назад +5

    Next do The Economist magazine…

  • @Aleksamson
    @Aleksamson Год назад +7

    I don't think what DeSantis did to Disney was slapping them with extra higher taxes and regulations. Disney was given special status years ago. Autonomy, self regulation,...so they were practically like a state within a state. So certain privileges were revoked, which is not the same as slapping them with extra fine.
    Disney was not just making woke entertainment that Floridians could simply ignore -chose not to watch their program. They were not just supporting -pushing activism. They were getting involved in politics, which is not illegal, but when you're trying to change laws and your actions amount to subversion....a state is not obligated to grant you special status /privileges.

    • @ddichny
      @ddichny Год назад +3

      I was going to make the same point -- Disney got the political blowback not because of "wokeness" in their art, it was because as a corporation they started throwing their weight around in Florida politics. So Florida went, "well, that sword cuts both ways."

  • @bobcobb7992
    @bobcobb7992 Год назад +11

    29:20 "On the consistency issue..." There's nothing inconsistent there. Actual life and quality of life are two very different things. And I'm not a pro-lifer.

    • @JollySkeptic
      @JollySkeptic Год назад +1

      I agree, introducing distinctions are an important way to keep our principles reasonably consistent. However, I believe that our moral intuitions, being subjective, are different from one another, and so you might not convince a pro-lifer that quality of life really matters when dealing with abortion.

  • @subodhsarin4247
    @subodhsarin4247 Год назад +32

    Trans should not be discriminated against, Nor should any disadvantaged minority be. I doubt anyone would disagree.
    But if you, as a leader, do not want a narcissistic self-obsessed terrible person in your group, one who has no value for other's feelings or time, is perpetually ready to see insult and micro-aggressions where there is none, is perpetually annoying because of his/her permanent state of victimhood, one who brings the group's productivity crashing down, I think you would be very very justified.

    • @BorisNoiseChannel
      @BorisNoiseChannel Год назад

      What has _'a leader who does not want a narcissistic self-obsessed terrible (etc. etc.) person in its group"_ got to do with _"trans should not be discriminated against"_ ? Or: How is a leader, removing said narcissist, an act of _"justified discrimination against a trans person"_ ?

    • @Bangy
      @Bangy Год назад +1

      I want men in women's sports if the owner of the competition says so.

    • @thomasmaughan4798
      @thomasmaughan4798 Год назад +2

      @@BorisNoiseChannel The implication is that one or more trans persons fulfil the list of reasons for which discrimination seems appropriate. In other words, discriminating not solely because "trans" but because "asshole" in some form.

    • @BNK2442
      @BNK2442 Год назад +1

      You just described second wave feminism. Somehow shermer still defending second wave feminism. Figures.

    • @crescendo5594
      @crescendo5594 Год назад +2

      @@BNK2442 A lot of people don’t realize that within second wave feminism was filled with just as much vitriol. In their defense they had a little more to complain about, but certainly not to the extent that they often took it.
      When my dad was 16, he held the door open for a woman who scolded him that “She doesn’t need a man to hold doors open for her”. That was 1978. This dialectical mindset has been brewing in U.S. public consciousness since at least the 60s, and perhaps earlier, but certainly _by_ that decade.

  • @dandandandandanJr
    @dandandandandanJr Год назад +4

    The Time Magazine article about the election is a very poignant example of why people have concerns. I can't even post a link without getting the comment scrubbed.
    The reason we have so many problems is because you can't even have a rational discussion without your comment getting deleted. Like mine was. Censorship is the biggest problem these days. Hrghrhgrb!

  • @anorlunda
    @anorlunda Год назад +5

    I subscribed to SciAM since 1966. The sharp left turn (and turn to political stands) happened when John Rennie became editor in 1994. Perhaps the slide in advertising pages began around the same time.

  • @sifridbassoon
    @sifridbassoon Год назад +3

    I never subscribed to SA. But over the years, I've dropped subscriptions to Harper's, Atlantic, New Republic. All of which I started reading way back when I was in college (I'm 66). But it just got to be a waste of time (and money).

  • @ghimbos
    @ghimbos Год назад +33

    19:30 WRONG on De Santos & Disney
    De Santos did exactly the "old conservative" way: he did NOT slapped them with higher taxes, he stopped investing in Disney by taking away their special tax status! ...
    Anyway I've been listening to some of his interviews and I must say: in my opinion he is one of the guys who is responsible for what's going on culturally, then he understood the bullshit he's done but he's still reluctant to admit mistakes distance himself.
    THERE IS NO EXCUSE FOR WHAT'S HAPPENING NOWADAYS!!!
    And this has got NOTHING to do with women or "people of colour" ...
    All these "identities" are just social-political instruments for some PSYCHOPATS to get and keep "POWER" ...
    He must know it!!!
    And so do you, ReasonTV!!!
    This conversation - as good as it may be - is a WASTE OF TIME!!!

    • @MM-zw3qp
      @MM-zw3qp Год назад +6

      Spot on.... it's a rice cake conversation tastes bland but supposed to be good for you and in the end has no nutritional value.

    • @tekharthazenyatta2310
      @tekharthazenyatta2310 Год назад +2

      " in my opinion he is one of the guys who is responsible for what's going on culturally, then he understood the bullshit he's done but he's still reluctant to admit mistakes distance himself."
      A self-understanding that Shermer came to apparently only after being given the boot by Scientific American. Instead of admitting his own contributions (by his silence if nothing else) to the wokeness plague, he's trying to reposition himself as one of its victims.

    • @karamlevi
      @karamlevi 8 месяцев назад

      @@tekharthazenyatta2310he’s no longer useful to them and if this was Stallins America they take him out back and off him, to make room for “new” progressives.

  • @GuillenTraverso
    @GuillenTraverso Год назад +3

    As a first time viewer and a Christian I really enjoyed this interview. What an excellent opportunity to hear Michael Shermer’s views and thought processes. I agree completely with Michael about principles. I’m regularly finding just how self-unaware people are; they can’t see how hypocritical and inconsistent their views are being applied. If only we were prepared to listen to each other, especially when holding opposing views.

    • @thomasmaughan4798
      @thomasmaughan4798 Год назад +2

      "they can’t see how hypocritical and inconsistent their views are being applied."
      This is true of Michael Shermer but you'd have to have followed his work 20 years ago to see that this leopard has only outwardly changed his spots. When did he actually become skeptical? He isn't; only skeptical of certain things and that was his income stream. Embrace other things that he ought to have been skeptical of, but that too is related to income stream.

    • @GuillenTraverso
      @GuillenTraverso Год назад

      @@thomasmaughan4798 Understood. Obviously we’re all biased but atheists do have a particularly strong bias against God, Christianity and religion in general, which heavily censors open and honest discussion.

  • @dzerweck
    @dzerweck Год назад +26

    Interesting conversation. Unfortunately both these folks claim the moral high ground with a supposedly neutral tone (like our current authorities) by unconsciously (or openly) saying that whatever they say is "truth". I think everyone should think for themselves - true science (and logic) is definitely different than "the science" (which is highly political - encompassing a good portion of this conversation). Don't agree with me - but be wary of those who claim to "know" (without question) - and then push it on you (regardless of your "side"), and then claim the other side is pushing their agenda (a great way to distract from the truth).

    • @drstrangelove09
      @drstrangelove09 Год назад +3

      I must say, sometimes I think that Shermer is too far over on the side of the Progressives.

    • @myselftik
      @myselftik Год назад +2

      He doesn't claim to know the truth. He said we should push towards knowing the truth.

    • @wasdwasdedsf
      @wasdwasdedsf Год назад

      @@drstrangelove09 this sherman clown is the one to whine... his twitter feed is filled with copypastings of every msm propaganda line in the book... his brain is fried

    • @yoyo762
      @yoyo762 Год назад +1

      @@myselftik A very PC response. I say its male and female unless you can demonstrate some kind of physical blend and not just some mental illness.

    • @lonzo61
      @lonzo61 4 месяца назад

      Nonsense. We all have opinions. Some opinions just matter more, because they are borne out of better ideas and are evidence based. And Shermer does a much better job at thinking critically about important issues than most people. He's not always the best informed about every detail of that which he discusses, but he would say as much. What matters is his ability to reason is superior to most people. And I know you're going to disagree with me, in part, because you believe that you are better at reasoning and smarter than most people. That's a problem for MOST people, in fact. So, you have plenty of company.

  • @281189ism
    @281189ism Год назад +5

    I dont agree that being 'non-binary or whatever' isnt an impediment.
    If Im looking to hire and I see someone has blue hair and announces their pronouns on their resume it's going straight in the bin.
    I want someone who is going to show up for work and do their job instead of spending 3/4 of their workweek crying in H.R's office because someone misgendered them

  • @omstout
    @omstout Год назад +1

    " Self Elimination" is the ultimate act of body autonomy. "My body; my choice."

  • @JoeyArmstrong2800
    @JoeyArmstrong2800 Год назад +8

    I remember Michael Shermer from way back in the 90's from his appearances on Unsolved Mysteries. Really got me thinking about what what I actually believed.

    • @adamvicari3295
      @adamvicari3295 Год назад

      Also, every libertarian AND every legitimate scientist, specifically every biologist, should be pro-LIFE, NOT pro choice, because, again, the science is clear on this issue: life begins at conception. One study found the 95 percent biologists surveyed in the study admitted life begins at conception. The zygote has historically been the mile marker as the beginning of human development during the gestation cycle, and by 6 weeks the infant has a heartbeat. The zygote is formed as soon as the sperm cell(a living piece of matter) is fused with the egg cell(a living piece of matter). Thus, no matter when an abortion is being performed, according to biology, a living being is being murdered, intentionally with premeditation, which, in any other context would be classified as capital murder. If abortion was applied to a 5 month post-birth child, it would universally be considered a heinous crime, but when it is applied to a 5 month old pre-birth, people like Shermer pretend it is acceptable? This is where the argument falls through: the "pro choice" crowd pretends to be standing for and defending the" rights" of the mother and protecting her bodily autonomy, but what they pretend not to notice is that by protecting the mother's "right" which is not a right at all because no one has a right to commit murder, you are simultaneously depriving someone else of their rights and their bodily autonomy(the unborn child). Libertarians always say people should be allowed to do and live however they want as long as it is within reason, the confines of the law, and does not harm a third party. Well, abortion does actively harm a third party(the unborn child) by depriving him or her of their most basic right(life) and it is unreasonable to do this because the SCIENCE contradicts the baseless and vacuous "pro choice" argument because it indicates that a fetus IS human life. Let's not pretend that the pro choice argument and movement is based on anything but politics and convenience.

  • @paulaustinmurphy
    @paulaustinmurphy Год назад +5

    The British magazine New Scientist explicitly announced its Wokeness too.... Well, perhaps not its Wokeness - but that it would take explicit political positions on various issues and subjects (which it was doing anyway). That is, there were various New Scientist articles saying that it's a good thing that it has explicitly taken political positions (all of a certain kind, of course) on various issues. ("Tell it like it is. If science becomes politics, then so be it. We will only get one chance at the experiment of dealing with this.")

    • @element5999
      @element5999 Год назад

      Another once respectable science mag lost to the feminization of science - take a look at who their key editors are nowadays. "Science" isn't a systematic method to help discover the truth or the workings of things, for these new woke female status-seeking types it's a tool that can be used when it's useful for an agenda and hidden when it's not.

    • @jasondashney
      @jasondashney Год назад

      That reminds me of how there's this weird new paradigm in journalism where they believe that it's morally irresponsible to not try to be biased and influence the viewer. It's so arrogant I can't handle it. These people feel that they were able to take all of the information and forms a "correct" position but they don't feel the public would be able to do the same thing.

  • @timothymchugh6232
    @timothymchugh6232 Год назад +3

    In spite of any criticism that I may have brought forward here I have to give Mr. Shermer props for his honesty and willingness to describe the situation now

  • @joehutter7083
    @joehutter7083 Год назад +2

    I cancelled Sci Am after reading for 30 y. They wouldn't tolerate Phillip Morrison if he was alive today either. It is sad what happened.

  • @germslover6662
    @germslover6662 Год назад +5

    It's sad that Scientific American has basically destroyed itself, I still have my large collection of the magazine which I love every issue, I have issues dating back from when my father was alive over thirty years ago, and when he passed away, I started collecting, but in recent years that has come to an end, and today I don't even both looking at it on the news stand anymore.

    • @hagerty1952
      @hagerty1952 Год назад +1

      You just perfectly described my relationship with National Geographic. I subscribed for over 40 years (since 1980) and inherited my dad's collection back to the early '60s when he died, but I let my subscription lapse last year for the same reason.

  • @homewall744
    @homewall744 Год назад +10

    Driving on the designated side of the road isn't a reduction in liberty. Individuals do cooperate, but they do so voluntarily and under clear agreement (like a contract). For example, it is fine for someone to create a private road and set the rule to drive on the other side of the road. People are free so long as their actions don't cause aggression on another, and cooperation isn't aggression, isn't how all contracts and voluntary society operate.

    • @sachamm
      @sachamm Год назад

      Yes it is a reduction in liberty, it's just a reduction that is compensated for by a larger increase in liberty elsewhere (i.e. efficient roads and less accidents).
      So... what are you going to do when someone drives on the wrong side of your private road?

    • @jasondashney
      @jasondashney Год назад +1

      Hard-core libertarians are an inherent contradiction. They get mad when any sort of rule is imposed on anything, yep they don't believe that the world should be legit anarchy. You have to have some rules in a society. You can't have zero rules or nothing functions. It's about where that line in the sand is.

  • @eventhisidistaken
    @eventhisidistaken Год назад +20

    I will say, around 2019, the magazine became blatantly political, even outright endorsing a candidate for the first time ever (Biden of course). That was when I decided not to renew. They were trending toward woke idiotism even before that, but that was the last straw. I had a couple of years worth of issues pre-paid, and I'm lazy, so didn't cancel, but it has gotten even worse since. Are they even still doing science? What a shame to watch it wither away into Marxist wokism stupidity instead of science

    • @doughamblett5204
      @doughamblett5204 Год назад +2

      Same here, endorsing Biden was the last straw for me, I didn't renew. I didn't send the a letter to the editor chastisement either, what would be the use?

    • @christopherwilliams9270
      @christopherwilliams9270 Год назад

      The reason for endorsing Biden was because they wanted the anti-science, climate science denying, science-politicizing Trump out of office.

    • @tom-kz9pb
      @tom-kz9pb Год назад

      You sound blatantly political, yourself. For a science magazine to endorse a candidate is an unusual step, but for a man so anti-science as Trump, it is the only principled thing to do, in a situation so grave. We don't need a sleazy clown in the White House who thinks that global warming is a hoax, or that covid should be treated by spraying disinfectant in the lungs, or that the Colonial army took over airports.

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Год назад

      I carried on an aproximately 70 plus yr old family subscription until 5 yrs or so ago--for me the final straw was the climate change religion.
      (still get solicitations for renewal)

    • @tom-kz9pb
      @tom-kz9pb Год назад

      @@Mrbfgray The climate change science, you mean. Religion is what treats Donald ("climate change is a hoax") Trump, the perpetual liar, as their God-sent messiah.
      One has to wonder why conservative cranks ever bothered to read anything science-oriented, in the first place.

  • @joshfritz5345
    @joshfritz5345 Год назад +18

    I agree with some of this, but Ron DeSantis was completely right to revoke Disney's special tax privileges. Additionally, I don't get how you can be pro-abortion and pro-vaccine mandate. And finally, one would think we would have enough historical examples of what governments do to unarmed minority groups to make it clear why the 2nd ammendment is important.

    • @arcguardian
      @arcguardian Год назад +5

      Yeeeeah but someone "smart" said otherwise soooo why think for ourselves?

    • @mikearchibald744
      @mikearchibald744 Год назад

      It depends WHY they were revoked. "Because I don't like their movies' is a pretty stupid and outrightly fascist reason. That they had special tax concessions in the first place is the bigger issue. That kind of reminds of Breitbart where suddenly some people are all for breaking apart google and facebook, not because they have monopolies, but because they don't like their politics. So its ok for corporations to have complete control over industries....as long as t hey have the same politics as me.
      Not to be insulting if you don't see the difference in abortion and vaccines you aren't thinking much. Employers have a legal obligation to the safety of workers, meaning they can get sued if they didn't demand a vaccine. Nobody gives a shit what you do in your home, but when you are going to be around other people, thats when ALL laws come into play.

    • @fubarsk8
      @fubarsk8 Год назад +2

      as a floridian I agree with you and DeSantis....why the hell was disney getting this privilege to begin with. even if they weren't woke garbage I would want that shit to end.

    • @subodhsarin4247
      @subodhsarin4247 Год назад +5

      "... enough historical examples of what governments do to unarmed minority groups...". So true josh.
      1. In Turkey, Armenians were first asked to hand over their arms, for 'their own safety'.
      2. When India and Pakistan split (in 1947), many Hindus decided to stay back in Pakistan, because the Government assured them that they will not be discriminated against. Just a couple of months after the split, Pakistan Government issued an order that Hindus will have to surrender any arms they had 'for their own safety'. My family saw the writing on the wall and decided there and then to shift out of Pakistan. Many unfortunate Hindu families did not.
      3. I don't remember the details, but something similar happened to the Jews in Germany during or before Hitler's time.
      Not coincidentally, these events preceded the three bloodiest genocidal events of the 20th century. There are other examples too...

    • @joshfritz5345
      @joshfritz5345 Год назад +1

      @@mikearchibald744 Alright, I accept the logic behind that. The reason for the revocation should matter, but I still stand by that revoking the tax privileges is something that needed to be done regardless.
      No offense, but if you find yourself in favor of government medical mandates, you're probably a lot closer to fascism than you want to admit. I oppose government mandates in all cases. I think maybe employers should be allowed to discriminate in some cases, but the government should NEVER have the power to force people into a medical procedure.

  • @jennyredbeans
    @jennyredbeans Год назад +7

    It’s been woke a long ass time.

  • @jonathanmangnall6740
    @jonathanmangnall6740 Год назад +13

    16:02 - I laughed too when first heard that, but no one should be laughing anymore in 2022. This stuff basically all happened. It's important to realize when you're wrong. I was wrong to laugh at that and so are you.

    • @smelltheglove2038
      @smelltheglove2038 Год назад +2

      That’s right. They claimed they won’t come for the kids. Five minutes after gay marriage, they came for the kids. It has nothing to do with waterfowl, and everything to do with my kids.

  • @BNK2442
    @BNK2442 Год назад +3

    Prettending that I should care about female sports is the most woke nonsense that one could do.

  • @wade2bosh
    @wade2bosh Год назад +3

    disney wasnt taxed. their tax break was taken away

  • @robertanderson5092
    @robertanderson5092 Год назад +5

    I started getting SciAm in the 1970s. I could not renew it in 2016.

  • @beephex1
    @beephex1 Год назад +6

    Why does no one mention the role or influence of media companies' capital structure, i.e. owners/financiers? Clearly the big money is behind woke-ism. Grassroots initiatives would never build this kind of steam for so long.

    • @arbitrarysequence
      @arbitrarysequence Год назад

      Big money is 'behind woke-ism' because It sells. That's it.
      It's the same reason other Big Money is behind various righty causes.
      There's money to be made in outrage in anger.

    • @beephex1
      @beephex1 Год назад

      @@arbitrarysequence that's absurd. There are infinite things that would sell that do not pit the population against each other in such a scientific fashion. What we are experiencing is something like communo-fascism and cultural revolution.

  • @JoeSchmow
    @JoeSchmow Год назад +4

    Comparing guns to cars.. one major difference: driving is a privilege. Owning a gun for self preservation is a God given right!

    • @arbitrarysequence
      @arbitrarysequence Год назад +1

      FYI, an imaginary friend is not a good premise for argument.

    • @mightyirish
      @mightyirish Год назад

      And all the regulations on cars only apply on public (government-owned) roads. Treating guns like cars would be a significant deregulation of guns: no restrictions on who can buy what (for use on one's own property), a shall-issue license that most people can get and is good in all 50 states to use in public.

  • @neuromax3766
    @neuromax3766 8 месяцев назад +1

    I was in high school in the late 60's. During my freshman year I had an hour in study hall every day. My mom made me do 2 hours of homework every night so I didn't need to do that in study hall and I would read Scientific American and Science magazine. They were great. I learned a lot about science and wound up with a full scholarship to college. About 20 years ago I was at a library and picked up a copy of SA. Oh my GOD! They should change there name to Superstitious American.

  • @crystalexarch217
    @crystalexarch217 3 дня назад

    I enjoyed this interview, very informative, excellent questions and answers.

  • @Se7enChk
    @Se7enChk Год назад +8

    This guys is good in some places but does not acknowledge his own biases very well

  • @tallard666
    @tallard666 Год назад +5

    45:00 the only thing not horribly unfair to women is for trans to have their own categories. And we already know what the podiums would look like:
    Gold: Males who think they're women
    Silver: Males with Y-DSD issues
    Bronze: Females who think they're men doped on testosterone
    Consolation prize: females with DSD issues.
    Semenya does not have "elevated testosterone". Semenya has NORMAL male testosterone levels but reduced processing capacity. Still much more influence than women.

  • @ferriveiro3101
    @ferriveiro3101 9 месяцев назад

    A really interesting interview, thank you both.☺️🙏🌷

  • @KeefWard
    @KeefWard Год назад +42

    “Most of us really should get vaccinated, they work.”
    You’re fired.

    • @stephengreen2898
      @stephengreen2898 Год назад

      no discussion of the huge number of people made SICK by these shots.. AND the change of the definition of VACCINE…. THESE SHOTS ARE NOT VACCINES! This is so obvious but WOKE fake news & truth propagandists seem to BLOCK information about these facts…. EVEN THESE TWO “open minded scientific” people…. Come on Man… I mean, Person!

    • @staninjapan07
      @staninjapan07 Год назад +2

      The response to this post is not visible.

    • @staninjapan07
      @staninjapan07 Год назад

      @@itsallalie2 I wrote nothing that indicated what kind of thing, and to what degree, I am aware of.
      Thank you for the effort, though.

    • @staninjapan07
      @staninjapan07 Год назад

      @@itsallalie2 I see. Kind of you to explain further. No explanation was necessary, and nothing (as I see it) in my post indicated that it was. It seemed very presumptuous on your part. Never mind. Text-based communication very often stifles the kind of understanding that is often understood without words (from context and body language etc), and leads to these misunderstands. In addition to which, many people, including myself, are often "on guard" when in other (ideal) circumstances, they would not be.
      It may further aid understanding, though I usually refrain from saying so, that I am not remotely inclined to what is now called (though that is not the same as I grew up understanding it to be) "the left."
      I will not venture as to whether the (currently understood) "right" or its equivalent "left" are more guilty of propaganda, but I can say (without fear of knowing myself to be a liar) that each of the two contains its fair share of lies.
      In fact, I am almost entirely certain "the left" and "the right", as they are nowadays portrayed, are overly simplistic constructs used by the few who truly rule over the many who unknowingly obey, and should be abandoned and called-out as muddying the waters.
      I am inclined to believe that you will not find my last comment too disagreeable.

  • @petershaw814
    @petershaw814 Год назад +3

    As a many year SA magazine subscriber I stopped when the magazine became un-scientific, more like a Psychology Today, well
    before the latest move to Wokism, but I hope I would have resigned all over again. The magazine has long list it's lustre. That is a great shame.

  • @JakeEpooh
    @JakeEpooh Год назад +4

    I cancelled my Scientific American subscription about 6 months ago because it was just obnoxiously leftist. It became practically unreadable.

    • @FactualCounterpoints
      @FactualCounterpoints Год назад

      It’s been propaganda for a long time. Especially on climate change

  • @necrobushido
    @necrobushido Год назад +16

    Seems like Shermer failed several Ideological Turing Tests as I listened.

  • @alanserjeant4947
    @alanserjeant4947 Год назад +3

    Go Woke, Go Broke. It's true.

  • @thepagecollective
    @thepagecollective Год назад +3

    Pink was never associated with men. That's a myth. It was a suggestion in one industry magazine. Consumers, which are mostly women, decided the question.

    • @theboombody
      @theboombody Год назад +1

      Bret The Hitman Hart always wore pink and black. But he's more the exception than the rule. He was exceptional in a lot of ways.

    • @thepagecollective
      @thepagecollective Год назад

      @@theboombody 😄

  • @leannakennedy2567
    @leannakennedy2567 Год назад +6

    I am all the way pro life in my personal life but I do don't think government should be outlawing it at all. But can we all agree that we should have consequences for profit of body parts and promoting abortion in any way. Because the reason conservatives are on it so hard is our government is buying baby parts for science. This seems like a path none of us should take.

    • @tann_man
      @tann_man Год назад

      Why in your personal life?

    • @leannakennedy2567
      @leannakennedy2567 Год назад

      @@tann_man I raise my children to have all the conservative beliefs ex: against abortion, no same sex marriage etc. But I'm for limited government and think they shouldn't have much to do with health care or who gets married. They use these issues as platforms and and create huge division among citizens who should be finding common ground. As well as using big tech to push narratives and censorship of opposing views.

    • @tann_man
      @tann_man Год назад

      @@leannakennedy2567 Why would you be against abortion personally if it’s healthcare?

    • @leannakennedy2567
      @leannakennedy2567 Год назад

      @@tann_man your right it is more of reproduction. I guess we call it health care because a doctor in some instances oversees some births. But I can say the same for reproductive health. One of the antonyms for reproduce is abort. As you can see they have used certain key words that make it hard for us all to communicate.

    • @tann_man
      @tann_man Год назад

      @@leannakennedy2567 Why are you opposed to abortion personally?

  • @aaaaaauyt
    @aaaaaauyt Год назад +1

    agree!i am a woman scientist of color… when i experienced racism against my race,so many people so eagerly offended on my behalf… but for so many years,i was silenced/oppressed for my scientific disagreement,not one word of rebuttal….just administrative punishment…no one said a word… i was hopping those professional experts promoting inclusion can advocate a small scale internal seminar within my institution,only to find myself excluded by inclusion experts… as a woman scientist of color,independent thinking is not an allowed identity,despite “who you are matters” -- that only include my pigments and female parts…

  • @thegeneralist7527
    @thegeneralist7527 Год назад +11

    I blame it on women. I was a huge SciAm reader until a woman became the editor. It had decayed a bit over the years, but it really became junk after a woman took over. Same in IT, all the problems I had during my career involved women. So glad I'm retired. I believe in women's equality, but boy some of them are just insane.

    • @arcguardian
      @arcguardian Год назад +5

      Lol don't blame women, blame the one(s) responsible. I'm guessing some women don't like what it has become either, surely u don't blame them.

    • @kyleebrock
      @kyleebrock Год назад

      This goify channel brings out the worse in men. Competing with Faux News was a bad idea.

    • @thegeneralist7527
      @thegeneralist7527 Год назад

      @@kyleebrock GFY

    • @KibyNykraft
      @KibyNykraft Год назад

      @@arcguardian Look up the facts about USSR propaganda in the 1900s causing western ideological and cultural subversion into leftwingery, just like the Putin web troll factories aimed to extremize the american Right today.
      Youri Byezmenov's interview about this in the 80s documenting well his past as an agent in India should be obligatory for everyone to watch. One of the articles he mentions in the full interview series (totally 3-4 hrs in 3 places) that was supposed to rosewash the communist Kremlin regime for the western audience was called Russia today. We know why that name then was used for the russian channel after the 2000s aiming to create the western extreme christian Right.
      The whole point of such subversion is to unmount the stability of the western world and its numerous benefits to the nonwestern. Creating polarities in politics is a major part of that. This is the cause of wokeism as well as the cause of the fundamentalist Right and the Trump supporters and the conspiracy theories.

    • @justinratcliffe947
      @justinratcliffe947 Год назад

      @@arcguardian He does. He's a sexist pig who still posseses the whole "a woman's place is in the kitchen" mentality. Screw him

  • @LoisSharbel
    @LoisSharbel Год назад +7

    You're hooking me on these podcasts! Thank you. Reasonable discussions and disagreements! Imagine! Giving up my trust in Scientific American is painful, but necessary. Giving up trust in so many groups, people and information sources is epidemic and frightening for our country. Your podcast is reassuring, as I believe I will find Michael Shermer's, too. Thank you!

  • @bthemedia
    @bthemedia Год назад +5

    55:10 “Libertarian” and for gun control!?! 😳🤨 Logical and Principle Consistency be dammed! 🤷‍♂️🤯

    • @bthemedia
      @bthemedia Год назад

      Does not understand the 2A at all… it’s to protect the “right of the people” to “control their government”.

    • @bthemedia
      @bthemedia Год назад +1

      1:00:16 Car Regulation analogy… misses the point that beyond car safety (crash testing), preventing accidents (traffic, increased age limit, seat belts, no texting/drinking) LOWERED the accident death rate… especially among young people. How do we LOWER the Suicide rate in USA? Gun deaths are a “choice” and not an “accident” as guns are very dangerous yet SAFE.

  • @Mevlinous
    @Mevlinous Год назад +2

    I think the reason they dropped Shermer is, his skepticism has the potential to see through their woke bs, so feeling threatened they cut him loose. What that means is, sciam has no self critical view, I.e. it is no longer scientific.

  • @donde2k
    @donde2k Год назад +3

    22:10 He stepped on his own “classical Liberalism” when he chuckled into saying “the vaccines work” and people should follow Science. Dude, you need to catch up with reality.

  • @feindwalker
    @feindwalker 8 месяцев назад +3

    On the Disney thing: Far as I'm aware all he really did was strip Disney of special privileges that they shouldn't have had to begin with.

    • @TheRealDrJoey
      @TheRealDrJoey 6 месяцев назад

      Exactly! This guy did not impress me.

  • @nuqwestr
    @nuqwestr Год назад +3

    Jemarius Jachin Harbor emerged into the world at 21 weeks, weighing 13 ounces, smaller than the size of a hand on Friday December 20. 2019. He's looking forward to his 3rd birthday this December. Science moves the dividing point, and the law should follow.

  • @vociferon-heraldofthewinte7763
    @vociferon-heraldofthewinte7763 Год назад +3

    Today’s Scientific American isn’t.

  • @johnwatts8346
    @johnwatts8346 Год назад +4

    matt walsh is not just a 'right wing troll', he uses a bit of trolling and being deliberately provocative as a tactic to convery a serious message. hes serious and has serious opinions, i dont agree with him on everything but hes correct way more than 50% of the time in general. taking a hard line and not compromising is a perfectly legit way to operate.

    • @danieltemelkovski9828
      @danieltemelkovski9828 Год назад +2

      Not just trolling the wokesters, mocking them too. If anyone deserves to have the living shit mocked out of them, it's the "woke."

    • @johnwatts8346
      @johnwatts8346 Год назад +1

      @@danieltemelkovski9828 indeed.

    • @sliglusamelius8578
      @sliglusamelius8578 Год назад

      I love Matt Walsh.

  • @jeffersonianideal
    @jeffersonianideal Год назад +10

    Regrettably, there isn't much libertarian remaining in Dr. Shermer.

    • @jeffa847
      @jeffa847 8 месяцев назад +1

      Not a whole lot of classic liberal either

  • @publiusvelocitor4668
    @publiusvelocitor4668 Год назад +6

    Loved Scientific American when I was a kid (60's, 70's). Sad to hear they've gone woke, and more importantly: sounds like they've gone anti-scientific

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Год назад

      Totally anti-science. I like you read it starting early '70's, carried old family subscription until 5 or so yrs ago. It was the politics and climate religion that finished it off for m.

    • @ricomajestic
      @ricomajestic Год назад

      @@Mrbfgray Keep sticking your head in the sand!

  • @mikeottersole
    @mikeottersole 8 месяцев назад

    This makes me very sad. Scientific American was one of the absolute best magazines in the world. A place to learn not just science but how to think critically, something that is increasingly more difficult to find in this country of craziness.

  • @homewall744
    @homewall744 Год назад +5

    It was a bit sad when I finally canceled by subscription to Scientific American after untold decades. It just became silly, as propaganda was the new American Science.

    • @thomasmaughan4798
      @thomasmaughan4798 Год назад

      I experienced similar sadness after not renewing National Geographic after 40 years. It had ceased being national or geographic and was in a race to the bottom with unScientific unAmerican.

  • @EnwardSnowman
    @EnwardSnowman Год назад +3

    How did the state of Florida "slap higher taxes" on the Disney Corporation?

  • @davidlea-smith4747
    @davidlea-smith4747 Год назад +3

    The editorial sections of Nature and Science are increasingly woke. I pretty much skip it these days and go straight to the articles.

  • @tompirro3040
    @tompirro3040 Год назад +1

    Think before you take a action. If you don't. Accept your responsibility. I did, and I am better off for it.

  • @TomD1999
    @TomD1999 Год назад +1

    I subscribed to SA for years but the writing was on the wall by the early 2000's. I remember one issue in which some columnist whose name I don't care to remember declared that the arch of history was complete and that socialism was clearly the best and dominate social system. I haven't read the magazine since.
    Looking back, I think the decline began during the time of John Rennie as Chief Editor.

  • @beatrixkills1
    @beatrixkills1 Год назад +3

    I mean if you look at the trajectory of society conservatives kinda called it... People just need to decide if thats a good or bad thing.

    • @joshuarichardson6529
      @joshuarichardson6529 Год назад +2

      Not "kinda", they called it in the 1950's. Things that sounded like straw man arguments in the 50's are actually happening now. The slippery slope fallacy turned into the slippery slope reality.

  • @reyhudson563
    @reyhudson563 Год назад +7

    What De Santis DID (as I understand it) was NOT to "slap them with extra taxes" but RATHER to REMOVE their status as tax preferential AND their status as not being completely under Florida law (having, to some degree their OWN police and OWN law application.) De Santos simply leveled the playing field.
    Why should he have NOT taken this step when Disney chose to be a political entity at taxpayer's expense.
    Sorry, there ARE limits, there IS a constitution, and they were (apparently) dancing WAY outside their original auspices.
    Each and every entity who becomes too big for his her or it's breeches runs the great risk of having NEW breeches reassigned, involuntarily, if need be. Is that true or not?

  • @stevealexander8010
    @stevealexander8010 Год назад +2

    SciAmer started getting political in the early 1990s, both in editorials and content selection. I've seen this same problem start to creep into American Scientist too.

  • @wendys390
    @wendys390 Год назад +1

    When you have to explain to someone that there are differences between males and females.

  • @naylorjames
    @naylorjames Год назад +12

    All quite predictable: those who build their identity around being rationalist "debunkers" end up with some of the most glaring blindspots.

    • @KibyNykraft
      @KibyNykraft Год назад

      Depends on the subject. Rationalism is always the best option, but everyone human has a bias with so few exceptions that we can count neutral rationalists who are honest enough in supporting science 100 percent as maybe 1 out of a million people.
      In many ways Shermer is a mild parrot for the extreme left (as in pro gun control, underestimating that in many nations extreme growth in violence is regardless of gun laws. This since these have had largely stricter laws than many states in the US, like Mexico and Sweden.
      A problem does not go away with a decision in politics.
      You have to find the roots of the problem.
      One of them is a failed economy (keynesian economics) causing too much social unrest. Another cause is the large *production* of guns...
      He also underestimates that if a product like narcotic drugs or weapons have a big market, there will always be an illegal market giving large income to the gangster syndicates, in turn turning society into Mexico.
      Which has massive gun violence because of failed bans on guns and drugs.
      He never read about how the liqueur ban failed in the US and therefore was removed. The ban built up the Chicago mafia which was profiting large on booze bans, thus crime rose as these groups fought each others+ the rise in corruption. The drug ban in NY supported by Democrat and Republican parties caused the massive corruption in the police there in the 70s and early 80s.
      Here the Libertarian party is correct except that some of their arguments too much ofc build on anarcho-liberty nonsense).
      Shermer's view in the question of the age of human culture against Carlson and Schoch sounds like the christian theology (as in denying the evidence of the Younger dryas impact,and in denying the possibility and partial evidence for ancient human societies.
      The biggest fear of an old world is the fear of the christian Right ; the fear that a god didn't wave a magical wand 8000 years ago).

    • @KibyNykraft
      @KibyNykraft Год назад

      (a third cause regarding the cause of the huge rise of violence in Sweden in some districts is open borders for drug and weapon smuggling via the Schengen and EU , + that mass immigration of *males* from much less developed nations obviously increase the probability for crimes.
      In all statistics in all nations having statistics , a large percentage of prisoners are men..
      That is not bad luck or secret conspiracy from women against men... (!)
      That is the cause of which culture you are from + your natural sex + failed drug bans leading to increased recruitment of young men into gangster groups flashing easy big money made)

    • @KibyNykraft
      @KibyNykraft Год назад

      We can't compare drugs and weapons to motorcycle helmets 😅 Where is the dark criminal market for road systems where everyone are not using motorcycle helmets?
      Will never be there.
      Of course a ban on riding without a helmet will work.
      Of course a ban on drugs and weapons will never work IF the society already has a big market for those.
      Learn about the failure of the US liqueur ban.

  • @stevealexander8010
    @stevealexander8010 Год назад +4

    I always labored under the assumption that Shermer was a pretty intelligent human. This interview exposes mediocrity.

    • @281189ism
      @281189ism Год назад

      Every second thing he says is wrong. Eg claiming DeSantis imposed higher taxes on Disney as 'punishment'. DeSantis removed their generous tax breaks

    • @jeffa847
      @jeffa847 8 месяцев назад

      It really does. I don't think they lost much when they shed him

  • @raymondswenson1268
    @raymondswenson1268 8 месяцев назад

    When Walt Disney created Disney World in Florida he asked the state legislature to empower his company to manage all issues of land use and zoning, and control of the process of taxation to build and maintain infrastructure such as roads, sewers, electricity, natural gas, and water. When Disney decided to intervene in Florida politics, DeSantis asked the legislature to end Disneys special local government privileges and put it on equal footing with Universal Studios and other businesses in other counties. Putting Disney on equal footing with other businesses is not a threat to democracy.

  • @LittleOrla
    @LittleOrla Год назад +2

    National Geographic too, always on the leading edge of the current trend not necessarily the truth.