Stupidity is so rampant now that the problem is to distinguish between the trivial and the significant.
Lost in the flood of sewage news about Anthony Weiner’s underwear and Sarah Palin’s Paul Revere gaffe are much more important examples of the dumbing down of American politics, where knowledge and insight keep giving way to slogans and invincible ignorance.
“Last October,” writes an MIT professor, “I won the Nobel Prize in economics for my work on unemployment and the labor market. But I am unqualified to serve on the board of the Federal Reserve–at least according to the Republican senators who have blocked my nomination…
“Analytical expertise is needed…to make government more effective and efficient. Skilled analytical thinking should not be drowned out by mistaken, ideologically driven views that more is always better or less is always better. I had hoped to bring some of my own expertise and experience to the Fed. Now I hope someone else can.”
Shutting out knowledge is only half of dumbing down. Replacing it with misinformation is the other, as Paul Krugman points out in analyzing the Paul Ryan Plan to replace Medicare with Vouchercare:
“Medicare is a government-run insurance system that directly pays health-care providers. Vouchercare would cut checks to insurance companies instead…If you couldn’t afford a policy adequate for your needs, even with the voucher, that would be your problem.
“And most seniors wouldn’t…A Congressional Budget Office analysis found that to get coverage equivalent to what they have now, older Americans would have to pay vastly more out of pocket under the Paul Ryan plan than they would if Medicare as we know it was preserved…the typical senior would end up paying around $6,000 more out of pocket in the plan’s first year.”
If we can’t get facts and figures straight on such tangible issues as employment and health care, how can we deal with anxiety over the relatively unknowable risks of giving ourselves brain cancer with cell phones, as new research warns?
MORE.