Wednesday 11 September 2013

Some perspective on Obama

Ok internet, I’m officially irritated with loud stupid people. I think everyone will agree right now that Obama is way more a hawk than anyone thought but I’m really, really tired of this idea that he’s something new, or worse. America has been violently intervening with the internal policies of countries significantly and illegally since the second world war and before (I’m well aware Britain has too, that’s not the point here), and brinksman politics were the goddamn norm during the cold war. JFK and Reagan both acted in a way that makes current politicians look like mild mannered pacifists.

And I need not even mention Vietnam.

I’ve heard time and again that Obama is a warmonger, or a murderer, and it really needs to be said: what version of the last seventy years of American history have you been reading to make such a negative comparison? Government overthrows, illegal funding and aid of terrorist organisations, client warfare so blatant it may as well have been straight up war with the Russians, chemical weapons abuse in Vietnam, NUCLEAR BOMBARDMENT OF THE JAPANESE.

By our current standards, Obama is a little scary, but what is scarier is the way people are cherry picking their way through history to show America as a force for good in the past progressively getting more malignant, rather than precisely the opposite. Aside from their involvement with the first and second world wars, America’s military action in the past has been incredibly shaky morally. This must not be forgotten.

A Short, Ranty Reply to David Attenborough

This morning I nearly burst a blood vessel reading an interview with David Attenborough and it's just now been brought back to my attention. My overall feeling about the whole interview is disappointment and irritation. His comments about humans having stopped evolving are just wrong-headed and seem to wilfully misunderstand what evolution actually is.

Evolution is a process whereby any organism adapts generationally to its environment, whatever form that environment takes. This is adaptation to anything, over time. This can be standard environmental pressure (things with big teeth want to eat my species, so I suspect Johnny Fast-Runner is probably going to be the one surviving to breeding age), sexual selection, cultural selection, or even unimpeded mutation, i.e. a mutation occurs and doesn't necessarily cause any harm or benefit and survives. This is not a transcendent process. It is not a ‘simple to complex' process. It is NOT a directed process. It is a series of adaptations changing the form of an organism over generations. This cannot be stopped. The environmental pressures can change, but there will always be environmental pressures. Attenborough seems to be under the illusion that humanity exists in a vacuum and is somehow immune to the pressures of life around it. Problematically, humans have been adapting alone for many tens of thousands of years. The hominin control groups are all dead, so we have very little to directly compare ourselves to to make our adaptive changes more immediately obvious, but be certain, adapt we do and adapt we will. Thousands of generations down the line, we may look the same, but we will have speciated away from our current norm. Evolution is not a blue-printing design improvement process. It is simply the gradual change in a species over time. It can not be stopped. We are not gods.

Secondly, this population bomb style fatalism he brings to the table regarding over-population in the future: hogwash. The population bomb is a 1960s idea that the population would rise exponentially and cause an ecological apocalypse. In the late 1970s, the population increase (percentage increase per year) plateauxed, and has been decreasing ever since. So whilst the population has continued to increase, the speed of increase has been slowing since the 1970s. With this in mind, the consensus is that the population will peak around the middle of the century at ten or eleven billion. This is not an apocalyptic number. Freeman Dyson said of climate change, “sounds like a land management issue”. Well the same goes for population increase. It is a land management issue. We need to keep developing agricultural technology and practice. We need to be creating increasingly well connected, distributed and efficiently powered cities. We need to fully accept responsibility for this Terran environment we have spread throughout. When we can do this, we can feel safe. And we can do it. We've done much crazier things.

Factual errors aside though, my biggest source of disappointment is that David Attenborough, such a loved and influential figure, would express such malign views. There is no strength in defeatism, or fatalism. We must be innovative. We must be hopeful and starry eyed, and we must know the sheer power of human cooperation. On all counts, we need faith in humanity's ability to adapt and improve, as we always have. So for the first time in my life, I must say, “don't listen to David Attenborough. The world and its future is much more wonderful than he would have you believe.”