Considering some the styles utilized by everyone who posts regularly in this forum, I ran into the Opinion Piece this past Sunday, and thought I'd share it here for discussion:
The entire article can be read here: Dallas Morning News | Opinion
So? Is it just me, or has the discourse of our country / politics really changed or been as influenced by this mindset, as some would claim?
Joel Achenbach: The benefit of doubt
[SIZE=+1]Uncertainty's been all but outlawed in D.C. But it's time to learn how to think again. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]09:03 AM CDT on Sunday, July 22, 2007[/SIZE]
Here's who we need in Washington: Socrates. The Greek fella.
We need him not because of what he knew, but because of what he knew he didn't know, which was pretty much everything. He was one of the all-time great doubters.
Listen to Loyal Rue, a professor of science and religion at Luther College, describe him:
"He would say things like: 'How do you know that? What's the evidence for that? What do you really mean when you say that? Here's the implication of that claim. Here's the danger you get into if you try to generalize that claim and apply it to everyone.' "
Give Doubt a Chance: This could be a rallying cry for our troubled times.
Doubt has been all but outlawed in contemporary Washington. Doubt is viewed as weakness. You are expected to hold onto your beliefs even in a hurricane of contradictory data. Believing in something that's not true is considered a sign of character.
The president sets the tone: He told Bob Woodward that he relies on "gut instinct" and said: "I'm not a textbook player. I'm a gut player." Blogger Glenn Greenwald's new book, A Tragic Legacy, opens with something Mr. Bush told journalists last September, "I've never been more convinced that the decisions I made are the right decisions." The smart bet: He'll become more convinced yet. He's not the type to slap his forehead and say, "What a bonehead I am!"
But these are particularly polarized times, and we're in a war (or three), and no one has much patience for a lot of maybe-this, maybe-that stuff. If you want to become president, you probably should act as though you've never had a doubt in your life. Rudy Giuliani said the other day, "You face bullies and tyrants and terrorists with strength, not weakness." And strength means you don't sit around requesting more data.
This was driven home in the first Democratic debate, when Barack Obama was asked what kind of military action he'd take if the United States were attacked again by terrorists. His answer was criticized as weak. He began by saying he'd check on the emergency response to the attack itself. Then:
"The second thing is to make sure that we've got good intelligence, (a) to find out that we don't have other threats and attacks potentially out there, and (b) to find out: Do we have any intelligence on who might have carried it out so that we can take potentially some action to dismantle that network? But what we can't do is then alienate the world community based on faulty intelligence, based on bluster and bombast."
Way too deliberative. Correct answer: I'd start killing lots of bad guys. (Better yet: Make pocketa-pocketa sound effects while pantomiming the machine-gunning of the enemy.)
The entire article can be read here: Dallas Morning News | Opinion
So? Is it just me, or has the discourse of our country / politics really changed or been as influenced by this mindset, as some would claim?



















