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The IQ-Killing Plague Driving the Gun Lobby
more from Hrafnkell Haraldsson
If you were an alien observer of earth, possessed of little or no knowledge of human history, you might conclude that some “IQ-killing plague” had spread across North America, hitting some states and communities worse than others, which is not, after all, unusual where plagues are concerned.
Rather than embracing progress and the life progress bestows upon humanity, those stricken begin parading around with crosses and Bibles, and in place of the Ark of the Covenant, AR-15s; they are loaded down for a Bronze Age holy war, convinced that there is no crime for those who have Christ – or have at least heard of him.
This disease theory would be a reasonable diagnosis, a working hypothesis to explain why humans suddenly choose to disregard all the scientific advances made since the Bronze Age, and embrace gross superstition in their place, to throw off the empowering cloak of knowledge and huddle in fear of the dark instead.
Examples abound. The virus-free, retaining their knowledge of science, know that the Pacific Ring of Fire causes volcanoes and earthquakes on both shores of the Pacific. But the plague victims are afflicted with an aversion to science written or spoken and so cannot avail themselves of the nearly limitless resources to be found all around them; they see such occurrences as too coincidental to be plausible, a certain sign from an irate if undemonstrated God.
The alien might wonder what could cause humans, humans who are in possession of the science necessary to understand how they are affecting their planet’s climate, to choose to disregard such knowledge for superstitious explanations having to do with an angry deity who uses climate to punish his recalcitrant flock. The un-afflicted would be wondering the same thing.
Speaking of flocks, if birds fall dead out of the sky, the cause of death cannot be something as mundane as nature or something caused by humans. That, too, must be a sign from God. The alien observer in possession of this knowledge would be flabbergasted. Had this species truly harnessed the power of the atom and achieved space travel?
So averse to science and technology, not to mention logic and common sense, are those afflicted, that our alien would find himself wondering how they remember to drive their cars or punch the keys on their computers. How they can find websites devoted to superstition but not those dedicated to science is a source of wonder to him.
And so the alien, unversed in religious extremism, posits disease as a cause. There would have to be some reason, after all, why facts in general suddenly meant so little to the plague victims; that would explain why the crazier and more illogical the explanation, the more likely it was to be believed, despite the presence of facts which easily account for the phenomenon.
The alien observer would know that humans find dinosaur bones and can easily place them within a chronological context. Yet because the existence of these fossils violate unsubstantiated human belief, a belief created in a long-ago era when science had not yet been invented, the scientific evidence has to be suppressed and the conclusion advanced that these dinosaurs co-existed with humans.
The disease, whatever it’s vector, seems to our alien observer to be responsible for a free-fall of IQs.
The alien might possibly be able to read a New York Times editorial dated January 18, which stated:
Galileo’s achievement was the end of geocentrism, but it was hardly the end of ignorance and magical thinking. When obstinacy places reason under siege, as it does to this day — when fundamentalism defames biological science in the classroom, or the politics of denial prevent action to deal with a changing climate, it helps to recall our debt to a man who set a different example more than 400 years ago. It took just a wooden tube and some polished lenses, a critical and inquisitive mind, and four points of light that didn’t behave the way they were supposed to.
Clearly, plague-free humans are as perplexed as the alien.
The alien would see that diseased humans are casting humanity’s hard-won achievements aside and not only that, demanding all healthy humans do the same. The alien might conclude this is because the disease-ridden do not want to be different. If everyone is made to be like them, they will feel better about themselves. Or they might conclude that the disease not only drastically lowers IQs but causes the infected to be driven to spread their disease, a sort of zombie apocalypse.
The alien, if possessed by a sense of humor, must be amused to learn that latter explanation had also occurred to the un-afflicted on earth. But that brings him no closer to a diagnosis; even facts can be amusing, or heartbreaking, and sometimes both. The alien, fearing contamination, would likely turn his craft around, to disappear into the stars, calling for a quarantine of this unusual planet and its neo-Luddite plague, happy to escape to a place where up was still up, instead of down.
We humans, left behind, with no recourse but to face down this most deadly of scourges, must battle on, and somehow win through to a New Enlightenment, where those who murder happily for Jesus are put in mental hospitals where they belong, their crosses and AR-15s melted down to form the bars on their doors and windows.
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Bob Clark
Jan. 19th, 2013 at 9:06 pm
Amen!!
Reynardine
Jan. 19th, 2013 at 9:27 pm
Actually, this plague behaves more like rabies, where those infected just have to bite and infect others. Instead of physical convulsions and death, however, it causes psychiatric convulsions and decortication.
djchefron
Jan. 19th, 2013 at 9:28 pm
I think it boils down to this.Conservatives do as they are told.Liberals ask why.Its that simple.
Take any topic and like some bat signal conservatives come and post and basically they all say the same thing.Guns,its my right to own anything and we will rise up blah blah blah.Planned Parenthood kills millions, show them facts to the contrary they throw in contraceptives to prove their “case” and so on.They still believe their were WMDs in Iraq to this day.Saddam had something to do with 9/11.Really if it wasn’t so dangerous it is pure comedy.
I engage them hoping that a light bulb would go off and just once one of them would at least say that makes sense but they don’t and that’s why they are dying out.You adapt or you die.
I wish they would come here when we as liberals go at it.Just to see what an exchange of ideas is really like.We have our positions and we myself included will feel strongly about something but if something makes sense ,we take a deep breath and say I never thought about it that way.You just may have a point.Then we all are smarter for the experience.
Like I said we think they don’t
djchefron
Jan. 19th, 2013 at 9:32 pm
Oh,I forgot.Bring back the buttons.I liked them.But you should make it if you dislike something you have to give a reason why and just saying bullshit wont count as a reason.
fedded-up
Jan. 19th, 2013 at 10:43 pm
I have spent most of my life trying to figure out WHY they do this. I wish somebody could tell me why. I reallllllly do.
Best I can figure – there is no one reason, sort of like there are multiple ’causes’ and ‘contributing factors’ to the development of cancer.
I think a disproportionate number is caused by fear, plain and simple. I don’t mean a concrete fear of anything specific – I mean fear of the unknown, fear of being disconnected, fear of a lack of meaning or purpose. We are a tribal people, i.e., we thrive best pulling in concert toward a goal, we can repel dangers best as a cohesive unit, etc, etc. Without religion, much of the sticky that holds the unit together could be gone. For many, that may be like being set adrift in the middle of the ocean.
I’m not saying it’s right or wrong either. I get the sense (which may be completely wrong) that a lot of people would literally rather die than give up that belief. It is that strong.
Fortunately (or unfortunately??), I am one of those cantankerous people that somehow cannot grasp that persuading myself to believe in what smacks strongly of a very elaborate, detailed fairy tale would help me. At all. If I were to do that, I would far rather it be wizardry – after all, Hogwarts looks like an outrageously cool place to be, and Voldemort a far more believable villain. Thank you, my granddaughter, for introducing me to that world…lol!
mathazar
Jan. 20th, 2013 at 1:11 am
Your thought experiment with the alien observer reminded me of the Star-Trek episode where the alien has had enough of all the feuding, and decides to make all weapons on the planet way too hot to handle. It’s a personal fantasy of mine.
SinghX
Jan. 20th, 2013 at 7:19 am
I like this article. It leaves lots of room to ask many questions about the human mind and it’s ability to adapt, think, fear, reason, change course or ruminate unto infinity…and, it leaves lots of room for many answers. It creates a colloquium of minds who gather to seek understanding of this phenomena.
One this is for sure, those humans who think like the alien (bewildered and dumbstruck by the other) know that nothing is for certain or taken for granted in this life/universe. It is the exact opposite thought process by those “infected” or indoctrinated through superstition creating a reptilian brain mindset–they cling to certainty.
I posit that this entire “mind-set of certainty” has gone way beyond it’s original or natural function and purpose in humans–certainty is meant to give comfort, security and a basic sense of confidence, especially to a growing child. But some how, it is no longer passed on as part of human development but as the ultimate path of conscious thought; it keeps humans not only regressed (probably does lower the IQ)) but permanently shut down the brain down like it did Pavlov’s dogs. (I’m about to apply the KISS principle)
Once Pavlov’s dogs had absolute certainty drilled into them with “the bell” (bell=food) they sort of stopped responding. The conditioning removed parts their natural instincts as they were “unused” (perhaps th instinct of hunting for food). At a certain point, the dogs responded by looking up when they heard the bell and going back to sleep. Their brain was “conditioned” into “certainty”, the rest went to “sleep”. The conditioning of “certainty” developed one distinct path that sort of wore a “groove” in their brain. So, instead of more “folds” or places to store new information, they had a one-track mind.
Humans who adhere to multigenerational dogmas that ring the bell of certainty as the only way to live, have developed a visceral reptilian “grooves” not new neuro-well-being…
Rho
Jan. 20th, 2013 at 8:07 am
H.P. Lovecraft once said, “The oldest human emotion is fear, and the biggest fear is that of the unknown.” The thing is, the unknown is getting revealed more and more all the time by myth-busting, inquisitive people that are looking to solve natural and even supernatural mysteries. We can’t let tens of thousands years of looking for the answers be wiped out by those whom use fear as their weapon in order to tow the bottom line, financially and spiritually.
Anne
Jan. 20th, 2013 at 8:24 am
Just as fear and ignorance are used to appeal to the gun nuts, fear and intimidation are often used to make some politicians toe the line in order to continue getting political support to be elected or re-elected. While the example of what an alien might think is 100% on point, I’m quite sure that people in countries outside our boarders have come to the very same conclusions based on their own observations on how the issue of gun control is played out. The article also provides an excellent description of how some Americans are stuck at a point well before the 21st century and have problems adapting to the realities of living in 21st century America.
harris stein
Jan. 20th, 2013 at 11:03 am
Excellent post. If the ignorant clowns on the right fringe knew some of the science that went into manufacturing guns and ammo and the science behind ballistics, they would be dumbstruck, kind of shock and awe.
Unfortunatly, they only want to know that when you pull that trigger a bullet will fly out the barrel and impact whatever the barrel had been pointing at when the trigger was pulled.
Rose
Jan. 20th, 2013 at 11:37 am
Goes back to the high holy very revered dumb down jock culture Smart and intelligence is considered a curse and something to put down no matter who or what.
The holy trinity is now: Guns, beer, and STupid.
Icon is a very crass stupid braggart jock who has accomplished nothing in their life, doesn’t intend to accomplish anything more than the holy sacrament of BUYING over large tvs, care-trucks etc , lots of guns. and liquor.. He who farts the loudest is (physically and vocally) is the one worshipped publicly
Eric
Jan. 20th, 2013 at 12:00 pm
You can fool some of the people all of the time and those are the ones you want to concentrate on.
Steve Levesque
Jan. 21st, 2013 at 8:39 am
The reason so many humans cannot apply simple logic or clear analytical thinking to life and waste so much energy talking up delusion, can be found in the new science of bio-psychology. There are three distinct parts of the brain. One that operates the instinctive responses to reality, one that operates the emotional responses and one that operates the logical, analytical responses. Any one of these can be dysfunctional. Unemotional humans who care not for others? Check out the psychopaths of Wall Street. Illogical and delusional humans? Check out the far right religious. Humans who are paranoid, full of anger, dread and fear? Check out the old south.
Just like a disease can damage the liver, the heart, or a lung, disease can also damage the brain. The causes of the disease lie in the drugs(tranquilizers) administered to birthing mothers, causing birth dysfunction, injury, and lifelong mental debilitation, the beating of children to control them, and the forced indoctrination of children into the sick, anti-life beliefs of all religions. If anyone wants to read the research on these comments, buy yourself The Biology of Love by Dr. Arthur Janov of the Primal Center in LA. Or any of his other ten books. Cutting edge knowledge for you.