Educated Savages: The New Left Policy Elite
Aaron C. Smith
February 2015
Things looked pretty darn good in
the middle of the twentieth century. We split the atom, using its energy for
power and to send the most dead-end, dead-enders of the Axis scurrying. The
Green Revolution saved a billion people from starving to death. On the micro
level, we developed vaccines for polio, mumps measles and rubella.
In other words, we had the future
and it was so bright, the world had to wear shades.
Fast forward another half-century.
In January 2015, we have at least 91
people infected in an outbreak linked to Disney Land. School districts are
quarantining some students. The disease has spread from the happiest place on
earth to other states and beyond our borders.
To keep this in perspective, we had
644 cases of measles in the United States for the year of 2014. That was a
record year.
But hey, these things happen. After
all, President Obama made our border easier to crack than a high school kegger
and invited an unprecedented surge of illegal alien kids to crash that party.
So an uptick of children’s diseases makes sense, right?
One problem.
The disease is hitting the
unvaccinated Americans and those unvaccinated aren’t born in East LA.
According to the National Institutes
of Health, “unvaccinated children tended to be white, to have a mother who was
married and had a college degree, to live in a household with an
annual income exceeding 75,000 dollars, and to have parents who expressed
concerns regarding the safety of vaccines and indicated that medical doctors
have little influence over vaccination decisions for their children” (emphasis
added).
So it’s not the poor and ignorant
who avoid vaccines. It’s the Real Housewives of Orange County.
Why?
Well, in their defense, they have
Jenny McCarthy on her side. And Jenny McCarthy went on both Oprah and Larry
King.
The reality is that a significant
subset of our population has bought hook, line and sinker that vaccines cause
autism. They even had a study that showed the link between vaccines and autism.
Of course that study is discredited, not as an error but
as an actual fraud by a man paid by the lawyers suing vaccine manufacturers.
Its author lost his medical license. His coauthors removed their names from the
study. Lancet, which carried the fraudulent data, pulled it.
Yet the non-vaccinated children
still come from educated households.
Because autism.
Okay, that’s just one crazy
superstition that can kind of make sense because a washed-up Playboy model
glommed onto a fraudulent study. That’s no reason to see a trend,
right?
Well, look at the case of manmade
global warming. Well, wait. Here the elites have
science. After all, didn’t President Obama point out that 2014 was the hottest
year in human history? If you can’t trust a president who
just had his butt handed to him in the midterms, whom can you trust?
In ancient days, when life was
nasty, brutish and short, people looked for any sort of advantage to reach the
ripe old age of 30. First, there was fire and with it came cool things like
keeping the animals at bay and not having bleeding runs every time you ate your
latest kill. Then came the wheel, an easier way to get that steaming carcass of
meat from here to there.
But let’s face it. In the game of
survival, there’s no better way to get an edge on the local saber-toothed tiger
— or your annoying neighbor — than seeing the future.
Thus we have the casting of bones
because everybody knows that if anything is linked to the future, it’s chicken
bones. I mean, that’s just logic. Global warming alarmists have their
own version of chicken bones, in the form of computer climate models:
Problem: When compared to what is
actually observed in the real world, the climate models fail to make accurate
predictions. And this is a consistent problem.
You have to think that if our
chicken-bone-throwing ancestors noticed that none of their throws matched up to
actual events, they’d realize something was wrong. Perhaps they might not give
up on the enterprise of chicken-bone throwing altogether – after all, who can
deny chicken bones? – but they might decide that they’d killed a defective
chicken.
Today’s educated savages can’t even
make that leap. An honest man would say since the models don’t figure in things
like water vapor – just a small part of the atmosphere, after all – and don’t
actually predict the future, let’s try something else.
Instead, the educated savages award
the computer modelers the Nobel Prize.
Primitive superstition is also
strong in Leftist economics.
In World War II, the tribes of Papua
New Guinea saw vast amounts of wealth coming into the Pacific on both the
Allied and Axis sides. They had no way to comprehend the power of
industrialized economies fully mobilized and dedicated to the largest war the
world had ever seen. The natives made the natural assumption that spirits sent
cargo to the earth and the evil outsiders jacked the loot. So they built fake airplanes. They
erected structures in the jungle and filled them with fake cash, sometimes even
making fake suitcases.
Hmmm. Make work projects paid for
with worthless currency. Doesn’t that sound like Obama’s stimulus plan or Paul
Krugman – another educated savage Nobel laureate – looking for an alien
threat in order to create demand to boost the economy?
Yes, Keynesian economic theory is a
cargo cult, dressed up in suits and the flowery rhetoric of the university.
Unfortunately, it shows the same effectiveness.
Welcome to the new Dark Ages, a time
of policy based on superstitions easily recognized by savages sitting around
the campfire. They might not understand the terms of the new cargo cults that have
risen but they’d understand that old time religion.
Aaron Smith is a family law attorney
living in San Diego with his lovely fiancé and two pit bulls. Aaron spends his
time trying to get clients out of their own messes and figuring out how to put
his fictional characters in messes of their own. A graduate of UC Berkeley,
Aaron is confident that he is one of the few students who saw the utter squalor
of liberal rule and came out a confirmed conservative with libertarian
leanings. Read an interview with him and a story excerpt here. See his archive at Liberty Island here and his blog here.
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