I’m hoping there are other weirdos like me who enjoy listening to lectures while they work. If you exist, here are a few that I’d like to recommend:
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Evaluating Horizons (Audio)
by David Brin
David Brin is the author of The Transparent Society. I’ve been pimping this guy’s stuff out to everyone I know ever since I listened to this lecture. I wrote a very long post over at Daily Kos, An Introduction to David Brin, with a lot more detail on that book. As for this specific lecture, it runs across a wide range of topics. From the pervasive theme of “question authority” in our popular movies to the value of criticism as the antidote to error. Here are a few exerpts:
Science and the Bible
I mentioned the passage from the bible, here’s an example: In Genesis what is the very first thing that is requested of us by the lord? It is something that was asked of us before we fell from a state of grace, so it can’t have anything to do with sin. It was even before asking not to eat from the tree of good and evil. No, it was to name the beasts.
Now look at that passage, it’s actually expressed as a favor, as an act of curiosity. All through the rest of the bible, it’s all about, “you guys are gonna have to hard scrabble and work your way out of sin”. It’s the one moment when god asks us a favor–and it is to name all the beasts.
Can you think of an allegory that better suits science?
Liberals’ Guilt Trip
Our very success makes us more self-critical, and the liberals have got to learn from this. See how the liberals brought last Tuesday about by always emphasizing guilt and never imagining using praise, for all the things we’ve done:
“You’ve bought our product for 50 years! It never worked! Buy more! You SUV driving, gun toting, racist sexist sons of bitches!”
As opposed to:
“You bought our product for 50 years! And look at the universities you’ve made! And these incredible bright kids! And the rising IQ scores! And the Earth that is half-saved from some ecological damage! And the karate-chopping Title 9 girls who we’ve got out there! And you fought the racisim in your heart until it’s about half gone. What amazing people you are! BUY MORE!”
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How Would a Patriot Act? (Fora.TV)
by Glenn Greenwald
The next video is by constitutional law expert, Glenn Greenwald. If I were for some reason restricted access to only one blog, it would be Glenn’s. I first became aware of his writing in December of 2005 when the NSA’s warrantless wiretapping story broke in the New York Times. I credit him with helping to push that issue to the forefront by his careful and precise explanations of how FISA was violated and destroying all the legal arguments that have been put forth to justify the behavior of an out of control executive. These days he’s been doing an exceptional job of pointing out how the media continually allows the Republican party to put forth ‘mythical warriors of unquestionable manly virtues’ while the Democrats are constantly held up to be ‘effete, elitist freaks’. Glenn is also the one who first introduced me to the book The Authoritarians, which I believe I’ve plugged elsewhere.
In this discussion at a small book store, Glenn elaborates on the dangers of the Neoconservative theory of the ‘unitary executive’, and the necessity and urgency that we fight back against these ideas. This was a discussion prompted by his book How Would a Patriot Act? Defending American Values from a President Run Amok.
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SCREWED: The Undeclared War Against the Middle Class and What We Can Do About It(Fora.TV)
by Thom Hartmann
Not since Howard Zinn has someone introduced me to so much history that I had not considered to seek out. Thom regularly has on staunch ideological conservatives to debate their ideas using logic, historical context and razor sharp common sense. In this book discussion he debunks various myths that are currently taken as fact such as the notion that a middle class is a natural state. He takes his audience through the history of the middle class’ rise and fall going back to the Renaissance up to FDR and then into present day.