The Origin of Goodness

https://newslit.org/

Before you go on, an article in the May 8 & May 22 issue of Science News ran with a cover "Awash in Deception:  How science can help us avoid being duped by misinformation."  In the lead article titled: "The Battle Against Fake News," Alexandra Witze presents five suggestions on how to debunk bad information.  They come from the News Literacy Project (see the above link).

How to Debunk:

1.  Arm yourself with media literacy skills, at sites such as the News Literacy Project (newslit.org), to better understand how to spot hoax videos and stories.

2.  Don't stigmatize people for holding inaccurate beliefs.  Show empathy and respect, or you're more likely to alienate your audience than successfully share accurate information.

3.  Translate complicated but true ideas into simple messages that are easy to grasp.  Videos, graphics and other visual aids can help.

4.  When possible, once you provide a factual alternative to the misinformation, explain the underlying fallacies (such as cherry- picking information, a common tactic of climate change deniers.

5.  Mobilize when you see misinformation being shared on social media as soon as possible. If you see something, say something.
"Misinformation is any information that is incorrect, whether due to error or fake news.  

"Disinformation is deliberately intended to deceive."

"Propaganda is disinformation with a political agenda."

Sander van der Linden
Social Psychologist
University of Cambridge

Source:  Science News/May 8, 2021 & May 22, 2021

This Blog space will be empty for a time (a few weeks or so) while I change my writing focus to a systematic look at my own belief system. Due to the nature of these fascinating, troublesome and challenging times, my writing has taken on the self appointed role of “Flashlight on Fascism.”

It has been focused on the dark side of things going on in the world. It’s time to look at the lit side, the lighted side, the positive side or the good side. I am inspired to systematically write down why I believe what I believe. In so doing, I can restore balance in my own soul and contribute to strengthening my mental health which is generally sound but is in need of some focused attention.

My inspiration for this is a Workshop class offered by the Interim Senior Minister at the First Unitarian Church of San Jose on on the subject of “Systematic Theology.” For the non-religious thinkers among you, this basically means a self examination of what I believe and why I believe it.

The timing of this course is perfect for me. By digging in on myself and getting to the core of my belief system, I will better prepare myself for interactions and conversations that I will have with people of different beliefs.

When I get back, I’ll share with you what I’ve dug up and we’ll re-plant it together and see what comes up!

In the meantime, be vigilant, be active and be positive!

Bruce

Make America Great for All

https://newslit.org/

Before you go on, an article in the May 8 & May 22 issue of Science News ran with a cover "Awash in Deception:  How science can help us avoid being duped by misinformation."  In the lead article titled: "The Battle Against Fake News," Alexandra Witze presents five suggestions on how to debunk bad information.  They come from the News Literacy Project (see the above link).

How to Debunk:

1.  Arm yourself with media literacy skills, at sites such as the News Literacy Project (newslit.org), to better understand how to spot hoax videos and stories.

2.  Don't stigmatize people for holding inaccurate beliefs.  Show empathy and respect, or you're more likely to alienate your audience than successfully share accurate information.

3.  Translate complicated but true ideas into simple messages that are easy to grasp.  Videos, graphics and other visual aids can help.

4.  When possible, once you provide a factual alternative to the misinformation, explain the underlying fallacies (such as cherry- picking information, a common tactic of climate change deniers.

5.  Mobilize when you see misinformation being shared on social media as soon as possible. If you see something, say something.
"Misinformation is any information that is incorrect, whether due to error or fake news.  

"Disinformation is deliberately intended to deceive."

"Propaganda is disinformation with a political agenda."

Sander van der Linden
Social Psychologist
University of Cambridge

Source:  Science News/May 8, 2021 & May 22, 2021

If you want to stand by and stand for M.A.G.A. , stand for this version: Make America Great for All. This is the only M.A.G.A. The other version held up as the guiding darkness of the Radical, Racist, Repulsive Right Wing of the Republican Party is untrue, unjust, Unamerican and unacceptable.

The history of racism in the U.S.A. is well documented and yet it remains largely unaddressed. Until it is addressed, we will continue to be susceptible to White Nationalist Fascist movements like the one we are experiencing right now. The systematic devaluation of darker skinned Americans must end and it must end on our watch.

How will it end? Here are some suggestions from the United Nations. I personally attempt to address it as a white ally with a small blog and standing with my Unitarian Universalist brethren to keep systemic White Nationalist-based racism in the forefront of the American psyche.

Jackie Robinson, Barack Obama and Martin Luther King stand tall in our American quest for greatness.

Where do you stand?

Covid and Me

https://newslit.org/

Before you go on, an article in the May 8 & May 22 issue of Science News ran with a cover "Awash in Deception:  How science can help us avoid being duped by misinformation."  In the lead article titled: "The Battle Against Fake News," Alexandra Witze presents five suggestions on how to debunk bad information.  They come from the News Literacy Project (see the above link).

How to Debunk:

1.  Arm yourself with media literacy skills, at sites such as the News Literacy Project (newslit.org), to better understand how to spot hoax videos and stories.

2.  Don't stigmatize people for holding inaccurate beliefs.  Show empathy and respect, or you're more likely to alienate your audience than successfully share accurate information.

3.  Translate complicated but true ideas into simple messages that are easy to grasp.  Videos, graphics and other visual aids can help.

4.  When possible, once you provide a factual alternative to the misinformation, explain the underlying fallacies (such as cherry- picking information, a common tactic of climate change deniers.

5.  Mobilize when you see misinformation being shared on social media as soon as possible. If you see something, say something.
"Misinformation is any information that is incorrect, whether due to error or fake news.  

"Disinformation is deliberately intended to deceive."

"Propaganda is disinformation with a political agenda."

Sander van der Linden
Social Psychologist
University of Cambridge

Source:  Science News/May 8, 2021 & May 22, 2021

March 12, 2020: If you are or were a teacher on this date, you will remember it with a great sense of mixed feelings. Most of us didn’t really know about COVID yet. We were told by the governor through our school administrators that we would not be teaching in our classrooms for at least the next two weeks. Great vacation, right?

After that first week or there about, we got word that we would be teaching remotely. It came to be known as “Distance Learning.” In retrospect, it was a sincere attempt at “Distance Teaching,” but to call it “Distance Learning” was presumptively over optimistic and badly misnamed from the perspective of students.

We did the best we could for the remaining 2 1/2 months of school. Little did I know at the time that I would not be setting foot in my classroom again as a full time middle school educator. I am grateful for those 2 1/2 months and the technical expertise that I developed during that time and the years immediately preceding my retirement. It has prepared me for my return to the classroom as a Substitute or Guest Teacher and my future as an educator.

I mention these things because after 983 days of COVID freedom, an Antarctic cruise, nearly 20,000 airline miles and 51 days of Guest teaching, the blasted little mass of infectious, viral proteins known as COVID, finally got me. Nearly three years of not only being COVID free, but from being illness free. The masking, the hand washing, the social distancing. It all worked.

If it hadn’t been for my own frontal lobe deficiency on December 9, 2022 at a Christmas Concert, I WOULD STILL BE ILLNESS FREE.

Why did I just put that in caps? Actually, it was an accident. But, as it turns out it was appropriate for me to emphasize that point in print with ALL CAPS! Dr. Fauci, the CDC and all of those nagging public health officials were RIGHT ALL ALONG about masking, hand washing, social distancing and, yes, even about vaccination.

I got COVID because I made a wrong decision about masking in my role as a Master of Ceremonies for a Christmas concert in December 2022. The experts were right, the scientists were right, the public health officials. They were all right. They have been right all along. Read about COVID fatigue in Science News.

I’m going to be ok. I had moderate cold-like symptoms for four days and I knocked COVID back on its little viral suction cups by taking Paxlovid. If this had not been the holiday season and if I were not going to be around people who were immunocompromised, I likely would have chosen not to medicate. Medicating seemed the prudent thing to do.

Coincidentally, these COVID statistics are dated December 9, 2022, the day that I was most likely exposed to the COVID virus. Up to that day, there had been 101,000,000 cases in the United States, 183,000,00 cases in the Americas and 1,109,394 deaths.

Over ONE MILLION DEAD AMERICANS. Wherever you stand on mask wearing, personal vaccination or precious individual and civil rights and liberties, that number is grotesquely higher than it should have been. I personally blame the gurus of disinformation and propaganda for a very large percentage of those victims. They did not have to be victims. You know some of them and so do I.

If I sound a little angry here, it’s because I am angry. I’m NOT angry at the fact that I got sick. I am angry that I put many innocent and vulnerable people at risk because I made a bad decision on a December night in 2022.

Bottom line? Trust the experts. Follow the tools that I started the blog with and look at the news sources that you have chosen to believe with a critical and rational eye and brain. Teach your loved ones to do the same. Ignorance is not an excuse. Be critical, be smart, be safe and take care of the people you love.

Have a happy and safe holiday season.

Bruce

“Ultra”

https://newslit.org/

Before you go on, an article in the May 8 & May 22 issue of Science News ran with a cover "Awash in Deception:  How science can help us avoid being duped by misinformation."  In the lead article titled: "The Battle Against Fake News," Alexandra Witze presents five suggestions on how to debunk bad information.  They come from the News Literacy Project (see the above link).

How to Debunk:

1.  Arm yourself with media literacy skills, at sites such as the News Literacy Project (newslit.org), to better understand how to spot hoax videos and stories.

2.  Don't stigmatize people for holding inaccurate beliefs.  Show empathy and respect, or you're more likely to alienate your audience than successfully share accurate information.

3.  Translate complicated but true ideas into simple messages that are easy to grasp.  Videos, graphics and other visual aids can help.

4.  When possible, once you provide a factual alternative to the misinformation, explain the underlying fallacies (such as cherry- picking information, a common tactic of climate change deniers.

5.  Mobilize when you see misinformation being shared on social media as soon as possible. If you see something, say something.
"Misinformation is any information that is incorrect, whether due to error or fake news.  

"Disinformation is deliberately intended to deceive."

"Propaganda is disinformation with a political agenda."

Sander van der Linden
Social Psychologist
University of Cambridge

Source:  Science News/May 8, 2021 & May 22, 2021

The holiday season is a time of giving…and receiving, let’s face it. There will be periods of time between now and New Years Day where you won’t be working, eating, watching football or engaging in whatever you engage in during the festivals of light and celebration held during the latter part of December.

As a friend or (maybe) respected acquaintance, I have a request for you. Listen to a little publicized and therefore little known history of events in the United States in an eight part podcast by journalist Rachel Maddow.

It takes place between the mid 1930’s through the post World War 2 years and on into the early 1950’s. It is a story that will engage you, enrage you, mystify you and make you think about this period in U.S. history in ways that you never have before.

I believe that every citizen of the United States should hear this story and what better way to hear it than from the dedicated journalist and master storyteller Ms. Maddow.

Come the new year, you will appreciate this story even more as history continues to unfold before our eyes in 2023.

One of the tools in addressing misinformation, disinformation and propaganda is to get out in front of it. It is a technique that has worked to throw a major wrench in Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

Putin has and continues to wreak great suffering on the civilians of Ukraine, but he has been stifled in his attempt to gain control of the country by the United States Government and others in releasing critical intelligence to the public prior to the implementation of his disinformation campaign. By doing so, his ability to unleash his disinformation and propaganda to justify his invasion and his tactics has been undermined and used against him in the court of public opinion.

As you progress through the podcast, it will become more and more obvious to you why you should be learning this little known but wildly impactful history of our country and just how close we came to being run by Nazis. Follow this link to “Ultra” and make it a goal to finish it before the next Congress is seated in mid-January.

You’ll be glad you did.

Mt. Shasta

https://newslit.org/

Before you go on, an article in the May 8 & May 22 issue of Science News ran with a cover "Awash in Deception:  How science can help us avoid being duped by misinformation."  In the lead article titled: "The Battle Against Fake News," Alexandra Witze presents five suggestions on how to debunk bad information.  They come from the News Literacy Project (see the above link).

How to Debunk:

1.  Arm yourself with media literacy skills, at sites such as the News Literacy Project (newslit.org), to better understand how to spot hoax videos and stories.

2.  Don't stigmatize people for holding inaccurate beliefs.  Show empathy and respect, or you're more likely to alienate your audience than successfully share accurate information.

3.  Translate complicated but true ideas into simple messages that are easy to grasp.  Videos, graphics and other visual aids can help.

4.  When possible, once you provide a factual alternative to the misinformation, explain the underlying fallacies (such as cherry- picking information, a common tactic of climate change deniers.

5.  Mobilize when you see misinformation being shared on social media as soon as possible. If you see something, say something.
"Misinformation is any information that is incorrect, whether due to error or fake news.  

"Disinformation is deliberately intended to deceive."

"Propaganda is disinformation with a political agenda."

Sander van der Linden
Social Psychologist
University of Cambridge

Source:  Science News/May 8, 2021 & May 22, 2021
Mt. Shasta, Cascade Range, California. Photos by Bruce Halen taken on November 26, 2022 from car.

“Tis the Season”

https://newslit.org/

Before you go on, an article in the May 8 & May 22 issue of Science News ran with a cover "Awash in Deception:  How science can help us avoid being duped by misinformation."  In the lead article titled: "The Battle Against Fake News," Alexandra Witze presents five suggestions on how to debunk bad information.  They come from the News Literacy Project (see the above link).

How to Debunk:

1.  Arm yourself with media literacy skills, at sites such as the News Literacy Project (newslit.org), to better understand how to spot hoax videos and stories.

2.  Don't stigmatize people for holding inaccurate beliefs.  Show empathy and respect, or you're more likely to alienate your audience than successfully share accurate information.

3.  Translate complicated but true ideas into simple messages that are easy to grasp.  Videos, graphics and other visual aids can help.

4.  When possible, once you provide a factual alternative to the misinformation, explain the underlying fallacies (such as cherry- picking information, a common tactic of climate change deniers.

5.  Mobilize when you see misinformation being shared on social media as soon as possible. If you see something, say something.
"Misinformation is any information that is incorrect, whether due to error or fake news.  

"Disinformation is deliberately intended to deceive."

"Propaganda is disinformation with a political agenda."

Sander van der Linden
Social Psychologist
University of Cambridge

Source:  Science News/May 8, 2021 & May 22, 2021

The world is pretty messed up these days. And that’s to put it, perhaps overly politely. The young nation state of the United States of America is going through one of, if not the biggest challenge to its survival. There have been a few of those challenges over our first 246 years in existence. It’s got a real bad case of the “Killer C’s.” (Skin) color, Covid, Climate Change (denial), Culture (wars) and chaos. The Killer C’s all being driven by the “F” word of all “F” words: Fascism.

We have a ground war in Ukraine started by the latest incarnation of evil and the world’s current chief Fascist. We ourselves have our own incarnation of a Fascist lurking in our own midst. This puppet person is responsible for facilitating a series of Democracy-damaging actions that Constitutional democracy may or may not survive.

By my Google-based rapid research, there is approximately one gun for each of the more than 335,000,000 Americans walking, crawling, laying or wheeling around. Some of those are automatic weapons of war. I guess we need them to shoot up Electrical sub-stations, assault police stations and conduct peaceful protests.

Yet despite the sorry state of affairs that we have collectively put ourselves into, I think the world is actually a pretty damn good place to be. It better be. So far, despite the efforts of Richard Branson, Elon Musk and billionaires of that ilk trying to find someplace better than our current planetary home, this is it. We’re already there in the best place we could be. Best treat it with a little more respect or we’ll have to adapt to living in our own waste.

Sorry about that last paragraph. I started to tell you how I really feel.

Actually, if we figure out as a country and world how to vaccinate against our once or twice a century flirtations with fear-mongering, white supremacist tyrants, the world and the United States would be much more pleasant places to be.

Halloween, Thanksgiving and Christmas. Together we call them “The Holidays.” They provide a period of temporary relief from our self inflicted wounds.

And, they give us Major League Baseball’s Winter meetings. This holiday season also brought The World Cup. This is usually a Summer event unless the host country is Qutar.

We got a glimpse into the future of U.S. soccer (I prefer to call it football). By the way, how the hell does a game where the only time that you contact the ball with your feet are when the team kicking is trying to give the ball to the other team after it has failed? Anyway, this year’s World Cup 2022 was a good thing.

Music, food, friends and family abound. The family part is good as long as you agree not to discuss anything outside of your family.

And best of all despite it all, I get to say…

I love you and I wish you a joyous and peaceful holiday season.

Mathew 11:28

https://newslit.org/

Before you go on, an article in the May 8 & May 22 issue of Science News ran with a cover "Awash in Deception:  How science can help us avoid being duped by misinformation."  In the lead article titled: "The Battle Against Fake News," Alexandra Witze presents five suggestions on how to debunk bad information.  They come from the News Literacy Project (see the above link).

How to Debunk:

1.  Arm yourself with media literacy skills, at sites such as the News Literacy Project (newslit.org), to better understand how to spot hoax videos and stories.

2.  Don't stigmatize people for holding inaccurate beliefs.  Show empathy and respect, or you're more likely to alienate your audience than successfully share accurate information.

3.  Translate complicated but true ideas into simple messages that are easy to grasp.  Videos, graphics and other visual aids can help.

4.  When possible, once you provide a factual alternative to the misinformation, explain the underlying fallacies (such as cherry- picking information, a common tactic of climate change deniers.

5.  Mobilize when you see misinformation being shared on social media as soon as possible. If you see something, say something.
"Misinformation is any information that is incorrect, whether due to error or fake news.  

"Disinformation is deliberately intended to deceive."

"Propaganda is disinformation with a political agenda."

Sander van der Linden
Social Psychologist
University of Cambridge

Source:  Science News/May 8, 2021 & May 22, 2021

“Come to Me, all who are weary and burdened and I will give you rest.”

Mathew 11:28 from the Christian Bible

(Inscribed as a dedication on a bench outside The Open Door Clinic in Fortuna, California)

My best wishes to you for this Holiday season. May you find inner peace and spread it far and wide.

Bruce

Never Fear, Truth is Here

https://newslit.org/

Before you go on, an article in the May 8 & May 22 issue of Science News ran with a cover "Awash in Deception:  How science can help us avoid being duped by misinformation."  In the lead article titled: "The Battle Against Fake News," Alexandra Witze presents five suggestions on how to debunk bad information.  They come from the News Literacy Project (see the above link).

How to Debunk:

1.  Arm yourself with media literacy skills, at sites such as the News Literacy Project (newslit.org), to better understand how to spot hoax videos and stories.

2.  Don't stigmatize people for holding inaccurate beliefs.  Show empathy and respect, or you're more likely to alienate your audience than successfully share accurate information.

3.  Translate complicated but true ideas into simple messages that are easy to grasp.  Videos, graphics and other visual aids can help.

4.  When possible, once you provide a factual alternative to the misinformation, explain the underlying fallacies (such as cherry- picking information, a common tactic of climate change deniers.

5.  Mobilize when you see misinformation being shared on social media as soon as possible. If you see something, say something.
"Misinformation is any information that is incorrect, whether due to error or fake news.  

"Disinformation is deliberately intended to deceive."

"Propaganda is disinformation with a political agenda."

Sander van der Linden
Social Psychologist
University of Cambridge

Source:  Science News/May 8, 2021 & May 22, 2021

Brace yourselves, the levels of disinformation and propaganda will reach new lows in this final week leading up to the 2022 Mid-term elections. And who, by and large, (besides Mehmet Oz who is self funding his own campaign and Elon Musk who is now the owner of his own social media machine) are funding the steady stream of misleading, confusing, numbing and hateful stream of politically motivated wack speech that makes it all possible?

Look no further than the folks who bring you climate change denial and record profits. Wanna take a guess?

If you guessed the global petrochemical industry, you win today’s prize. Russia, Saudi Arabia and Texas. Russia’s interestingly timed invasion of Ukraine, Saudi controlled OPEC deciding to cut production of it’s oil (also interestingly timed) and Texas based Exxon-Mobil making record profits. Exxon-Mobil, Chevron, Shell, British Petroleum (BP) and Total energy have earned over $100 Billion in profits in the first two quarters of this year.

That is more than they collectively earned all of last year and 2 1/2 times what they made in 2021. Combine the cutting of global oil supplies to fuel inflation, the obscene level of profits of these oil interests and you have a good starting point for holding them responsible for tilting the upcoming elections in favor of the Republican Party, hereafter to be referred to as the “Party That Shall not be Defined ” (PTSD).

These numbers are facts. The actions of Russia and Saudi Arabia are facts. My insinuation that they are funding disinformation leading up to the all important U.S. mid-term elections is not a fact. But there is plenty of circumstantial evidence to support it.

Why should Big Oil go to such lengths to support PTSD? It shouldn’t come as any great surprise that maintaining wealth and power are likely the two main reasons for spreading The Big Lie. Climate Change Denial is equally easy to attach to Big Oil. But why the resistance to solving COVID19? Why the White Nationalism? Why the attack on women? Why the political hatred? Why culture wars? Why the attack on the strongest democracy in the world? Why are we in the United States turning on our own Constitution? Why the love affair with the religious right? Why are we messaging that elections are not to be trusted?

The answers to these questions I don’t have. But, I suspect that Big Oil knows the answers to all of those questions.

I have considered several metaphors to use to illustrate my point that Big Oil is the main driving force behind the great American societal mess . The lobster in the pot is the one I have chosen to drive home my point.

Lobsters are cooked by throwing them into a large pot or vat of tepid over a burner. The lobsters are relatively content at the start. After all, they are in water and that is a comfortable environment for them.

The water starts to get a little warmer which certainly must get their attention, but not enough to get too excited.

Then, however, it starts to become uncomfortably hot and they get agitated and try to get out of the water. That’s when the lid goes on and offers them no escape. Eventually the lobsters die and become a lifeless main course on someone’s dinner plate.

That is precisely what Big Oil is doing to the United States. The metaphorical pot of heating water has been poured on us in the form of massive disinformation and propaganda in an all out attempt to end Democracy once and for all.

One of the oil interests has a long standing ideological axe to grind against Democracy. One wants to see us continue to be dependent on their oil to fuel our overconsumption because that is their only attachment to global power and influence.

We bicker and batter each other literally and figuratively, but the reality is that we are all a part of that metaphorical lobster. The lobster that is cooking is all of us and not just metaphorically if you think in terms of climate change. PTSD will not be spared from this fate. They will cook right along with us liberals whom they have been conditioned to hate. Why? Because Big Oil “will fiddle while Rome burns.”

So, you should be afraid. Afraid but not powerless. The upcoming electoral races will all be close. They are close only because of massive amounts of dirty oil money both foreign and domestic. What can you do with only a week remaining before a pivital vote where the choice is Democracy or not Democracy at the local, state and federal levels. Hear me, it is not a choice between Democrat or PTSD. It is the choice between Democracy or some alternative. We’ve seen some signs of what the alternative might look like. I don’t like what I see in the alternative.

Vote, encourage others to vote, donate to candidates of your choice if you are able, look for ways to make phone calls or send text messages and most importantly, don’t let the Big Oil Bullies intimidate you into submission. Fight back. Not with guns, but with facts.

“Worth Remembering”

https://newslit.org/

Before you go on, an article in the May 8 & May 22 issue of Science News ran with a cover "Awash in Deception:  How science can help us avoid being duped by misinformation."  In the lead article titled: "The Battle Against Fake News," Alexandra Witze presents five suggestions on how to debunk bad information.  They come from the News Literacy Project (see the above link).

How to Debunk:

1.  Arm yourself with media literacy skills, at sites such as the News Literacy Project (newslit.org), to better understand how to spot hoax videos and stories.

2.  Don't stigmatize people for holding inaccurate beliefs.  Show empathy and respect, or you're more likely to alienate your audience than successfully share accurate information.

3.  Translate complicated but true ideas into simple messages that are easy to grasp.  Videos, graphics and other visual aids can help.

4.  When possible, once you provide a factual alternative to the misinformation, explain the underlying fallacies (such as cherry- picking information, a common tactic of climate change deniers.

5.  Mobilize when you see misinformation being shared on social media as soon as possible. If you see something, say something.
"Misinformation is any information that is incorrect, whether due to error or fake news.  

"Disinformation is deliberately intended to deceive."

"Propaganda is disinformation with a political agenda."

Sander van der Linden
Social Psychologist
University of Cambridge

Source:  Science News/May 8, 2021 & May 22, 2021

I keep a page of wise statements magneted to the small bulletin board above my desk. It is usually ignored and that is too bad, because what it says makes a lot of sense. Especially when I use it to evaluate myself as I am doing today.

It goes like this:

Worth Remembering

"No one will ever get out of this world alive.  Resolve therefore to maintain a reasonable set of values...

I'm good with this.  My values have remained consistent throughout my adult life. I learned my values/belief system from my parents, my religious life and my experiences. I am proud of how those values have remained the cornerstone of the adult human being  that I have become and continue to become.  
                        ********
"Take care of yourself. Good health is everyone's major source of wealth.  Without it happiness is almost impossible.  Resolve to be cheerful and helpful.  People will tend to repay you in kind...

Pretty strong on this one.  I do admit that it has been difficult at times since 2015 to be ever cheerful. Yet, it cheers me up to stand up for my values.  If at times I come across as being angry or abrasive, it is really me expressing the strength of my values.  I feel no vengeance towards anyone.  Anger yes, vengeance no. I guess this statement belonged down below.  As long as it got expressed, it's all good.

 My natural tendency is to be helpful to others. Giving of myself is something that I enjoy doing.  Sharing my thoughts is one form of giving; Donating platelets is another; singing is another; visiting and respecting my elders is another...
                        ********

Avoid angry, abrasive persons.  They are generally vengeful.  Avoid zealots, they are generally humorless...

I had to stop and take a longer look at this one.  I have been angry of late much more than I think is healthy for myself, those around me and the world in general.  That anger is usually directed at talking heads on the television and not to real people.  Yet anger is anger and should be avoided as it leads to angry actions.  That is never ok...never.  I have considerable work to do in this area.  I ask your indulgence and patience.

As I mentioned above, there are times when I feel anger, but not vengeance.  Vengeance is dangerous, very, very dangerous.  I don't want it anywhere near me.
                        ********

Resolve to listen more and talk less.  No one ever learns anything by talking...

You might think that I talk, or in this case, write too much.  You might think that I should listen more and read more.  You are right.  I should do more of both, but that will not stand in the way of expressing what I believe in this moment.  By reaching out to you in this blog, I am making an effort to listen more.  Please engage with me even if you think it will be unproductive or piss me off.  I don't mind being pissed off if it increases our level of dialogue.
                        ********

Be wary of giving advice.  Wise men don't need it, fools won't heed it....

The only advice you'll get from me is the advice I've gotten from others who are much wiser than I.
                        ********

Resolve to be tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving, tolerant of the weak and the wrong.  Sometime you will have been all of these...

For the most part, including my three decades as a middle school teacher, I have been "tender" with the young and hugely apologetic when I wasn't as tender as I should have been. 

Tolerant of the weak.  Weakness can take many forms.  It can be physical, mental or emotional. I am good at being tolerant of weakness. I have had periods when I was very weak and vulnerable.  I'm not always good at turning my tolerance into action to help the weak.

Tolerant of the wrong.  That is a tough one to touch.  Who gets to determine what is right and what is wrong. In this blog, I express strong opinions about what I think is right and what I think is wrong.  None of what I comment and opine about is right or wrong. 
Being the judge or right and wrong is way out of my league.  For that matter way out of my universe.  Beware anyone that claims to have all the right answers.   

                        ********

Do not equate money with success.  The world is too full of miserably unsuccessful rich people..."

This is painfully obvious at the present.  Rich, "miserably unsuccessful" people have positions of power in the world today that they should not have. I focus my attention on them.  Vote to put those "miserably unsuccessful" people out of office.  Slava Ukrani.

Money has never been of much importance to me.  
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Bold print material is Unattributed.  The italic material is mine as the author of this blog.



Unity

https://newslit.org/

Before you go on, an article in the May 8 & May 22 issue of Science News ran with a cover "Awash in Deception:  How science can help us avoid being duped by misinformation."  In the lead article titled: "The Battle Against Fake News," Alexandra Witze presents five suggestions on how to debunk bad information.  They come from the News Literacy Project (see the above link).

How to Debunk:

1.  Arm yourself with media literacy skills, at sites such as the News Literacy Project (newslit.org), to better understand how to spot hoax videos and stories.

2.  Don't stigmatize people for holding inaccurate beliefs.  Show empathy and respect, or you're more likely to alienate your audience than successfully share accurate information.

3.  Translate complicated but true ideas into simple messages that are easy to grasp.  Videos, graphics and other visual aids can help.

4.  When possible, once you provide a factual alternative to the misinformation, explain the underlying fallacies (such as cherry- picking information, a common tactic of climate change deniers.

5.  Mobilize when you see misinformation being shared on social media as soon as possible. If you see something, say something.
"Misinformation is any information that is incorrect, whether due to error or fake news.  

"Disinformation is deliberately intended to deceive."

"Propaganda is disinformation with a political agenda."

Sander van der Linden
Social Psychologist
University of Cambridge

Source:  Science News/May 8, 2021 & May 22, 2021

I have been quite blunt about what I think about Fascism/Authoritarianism/Nationalism. From the start of this blog just prior to the 2020 election, it has been the focus of my posts. Many of my posts on the subject have taken a partisan tone because I believe that it has become a partisan issue. I’ll go no farther than that today.

Quite simply, the key to putting the “united” back into the United States of America falls on us and our ability to freely and accurately communicate facts to all U.S. citizens regardless of their race, ethnicity, religion, sexuality or political party.

For many months, I have opened this blog with a summary of an article from the May 8-22 , 2021 issue of Science News magazine on the subject of information, misinformation, disinformation and propaganda. The Union of Concerned Scientists also addresses the issue with its “Disinformation Playbook.” The purpose has been to call your attention to the key terms on the subject and help you to be a critical consumer of media offerings, some of which is news, some of which is not by looking at it through a scientific lens.

Herein lies a substantial part of the issue. Some of us have been trained to distrust science. In essence, to distrust facts and evidence. My career as a middle school science teacher taught me many things. The most important thing it taught me was that the careful and persistent gathering of evidence through a protocol loosely called “the scientific method” assured that any claims and conclusions made at the end of this process of seeking answers to an experimental question were factually based. This is at the core of good science.

Good science is to be trusted period. There is no debate. When science is done right, which it very consistently is, it is to be trusted. Casting doubt on science is casting doubt on facts. Facts get in the way of those that survive/thrive on disinformation and propaganda. Note here that I’m not referring to misinformation.

Misinformation is incorrect information that is published accidentally and without malice or intent to spread inaccurate information. Disinformation and propaganda are the intentional transfer of information that is known to be false but is published anyway. On occasion, misinformation is published under the guise of good science. But, the massive majority of scientific news that reaches the eyes and ears of us in the general public is done to inform us and not disinform us. News that comes from credible news sources has been gathered in a systematic and scientific way.

In order to reunify those of us in the fifty states that we commonly refer to as America, we must receive news that is scientifically gathered and processed. News that is based on evidence and is not published until it is verified, peer reviewed and fact checked.

I think that this simple solution would put the “United” back into the United States of America. Working out the details is the hard part.

Hard, but essential. Time is of the essence.