[Mb-civic] ELOQUENT AND GREAT: Culture of Intellectual Corruption - Richard Cohen - Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Thu Mar 9 04:02:52 PST 2006
Culture of Intellectual Corruption
By Richard Cohen
The Washington Post
Thursday, March 9, 2006; 12:00 AM
It will be nearly impossible in the next several months to avoid the
phrase "culture of corruption." It is of Democratic vintage, coined to
take the sins of Jack Abramoff, former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham and
maybe some others and visit them on all Republicans running for office,
especially congressional incumbents. Strictly speaking, it's a bit of a
smear. But if it applies anywhere, and it does, it's not to corruption
having to do with money, it's to corruption having to do with thought.
The Bush administration is intellectually corrupt.
Some of this corruption is induced by the inability to keep religion in
its place. The president suffers mightily from this. After just eight
months in office, George Bush drew a line between acceptable and
unacceptable stem cell research and based it entirely on religious views
that had nothing to do with science. Destruction of the cells was
likened, as so much is nowadays, to the supposedly overriding issue of
abortion or, as it is sometimes put, the "culture of life."
That culture, as applied by the Bush administration, holds that what
works is what ought to work. So, for example, the official policy of the
United States government is the promotion of sexual abstinence (outside
of marriage), which is all right in and of itself but not as a
substitute for a workable policy of population control and HIV-AIDS
avoidance. The latter should entail sex education and, of course, the
use of some sort of contraceptive device, particularly (for AIDS
prevention) condoms. The Bush administration eschews that approach,
exhorting the young and the randy just to eschew sex. That approach
works until it does not. Then catastrophe hits.
Similarly, the Bush administration has somehow bottled up Plan B
emergency contraception so that it is not yet available over the counter
to women 17 and older. This is the case not because Plan B is dangerous
or ineffective or even because it is an abortion agent (it is not), but
because it is manifestly something that's needed if abstinence is,
somehow, not practiced. In other words, the scientific basis for this
policy apparently comes down to this: A good girl should not need such a
pill.
In the same way, the Bush administration for too long virtually insisted
that there was no such thing as global warming. It has since changed its
tune, conceding some of the case, but the epiphany has come late and not
until additional damage was done both to the environment and, with the
rejection of the Kyoto treaty, to America's international standing. "On
issues ranging from population control to the state of the environment,
and from how science is taught in the classroom to whether Iraq's
research establishment was capable of producing weapons of mass
destruction, the administration has repeatedly turned away from
traditional avenues of scientific advice," writes Michael Specter in The
New Yorker.
Specter is right to link Iraq with everything else, because the debacle
there is a product of the same magical thinking that rejected global
warming, stem cells and condoms alike. Underlying it all is a commitment
to belief over fact, what should be over what is. It is evidenced in the
insistence by Bush and others that "intelligent design" is, like
evolution, worthy of teaching. "Both sides ought to be properly taught,"
Bush once said. Yes, and astronomy and astrology, too, and maybe
chemistry and alchemy as well. It's a totally bogus proposition.
It was a chat about a religious moment that purportedly bonded Bush to
Vladimir Putin, the Russian leader of increasingly dictatorial bent.
It's as if Putin, an ex-KGB spy, read Bush's file -- and conned him. He
knew Bush would rather believe than think -- and that others in the
administration, who knew better, would simply go along.
Intellectual corruption has cost Americans more -- much more -- than the
occasional crooked congressman or lobbyist. Maybe they represent a
corrupt system -- one in which the Democrats also partake -- but they
pale in significance to a neoconservative theory that took the country
to war to face a threat that did not exist. In the war, as with stem
cells, we are talking about unnecessary loss of life -- right now on the
battlefield, a bit later when the cure for some disease arrives later
than it might have.
Corruption of any kind corrupts. It costs us either money or confidence
or both. But intellectual corruption is far more dangerous. It ruins and
costs lives.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/blog/2006/03/08/BL2006030801844.html?nav=hcmodule
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