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Not Stupid

“The one thing that doesn’t abide by majority rule is a person’s conscience.” — Harper Lee

What most frightens me about the millions of people who want Donald Trump or someone equally fascistic and misogynist and woefully ignorant of international affairs to be President of the United States, and also what frightens me about those who feel Hillary Clinton would be a better choice for President than Bernie Sanders, is that many of these people are not stupid.

When I was in my twenties and roaming around the Midwest working as a farm laborer, I spent several days working for a farmer in eastern Kansas who was unquestionably a genius. He had quit high school at fifteen to take over the family farm when his father died, and had managed through hard work and intelligent planning to become a very successful wheat, corn, and alfalfa grower.

He was in his early fifties when I met him, his three children grown, graduated from college, and disinterested in being farmers. Thus he, as most of the Midwestern farmers I worked for in the early 1970s before it became common practice there to hire immigrants from Mexico and Central America, was glad to hire me at three dollars an hour plus meals and a barn to sleep in, to do the heavy lifting and drudge work his sons and grandsons might have done prior to the corporatization of agriculture and the demise of family farms.

Over our long dinners—dinner the name of the mid-day meal on the farms in the Midwest—and suppers and breakfasts, this farmer shared with me his many ideas about society, capitalism, psychology, and many other subjects, and when I would say, “Well, you’re reiterating what Marx said about…” or “Freud said a similar thing regarding…” he would invariably and honestly say, “Who?”

He read the local newspaper but did not read magazines or books, and he was chagrined to admit he found The Bible largely incomprehensible. Yet his ideas about culture and society and economics, born of his phenomenal intelligence and curiosity, were as sophisticated and plausible as anything I had read before, during, and after college.

He was also a devout Christian, a staunch Republican, and a racist, though he had abandoned his belief that men were inherently superior to women—his two exceedingly bright daughters and highly intelligent wife having cured him of that. On my last day with him, I told him I was baffled that someone of his vast intelligence and possessed of what I considered formidable wisdom, could be a racist Republican, and he said humbly, “Intelligence has a hard fight against deeply ingrained beliefs.”

“Learning learns but one lesson: doubt!” — George Bernard Shaw

My father was a vitriolic atheist and a psychoanalyst. In his old age, he was certain he had stumbled on the reason why so many people, even seemingly intelligent people, believed in God. He posited that the tendency to believe in God, what he called magical thinking, was genetic: that most people were genetically hardwired to be magical thinkers.

Any argument to the contrary infuriated him, so I would remain silent when he began his lecture about Type A People and Type B People, and how all of human history could be explained by understanding that Type A People, those who were not predisposed to believe in God, cleverly manipulated and controlled the much greater number of Type B People who had no choice but to believe in God. In other words, all the religious leaders in the world since the dawn of civilization were atheists who pretended to believe in God in order to control the genetically inferior masses.

My father believed it was the genetic mutation for atheism that began civilization, which was a direct consequence of one sector of humanity gaining power over another through this genetic intellectual superiority.

Science and history have shown my father’s theory to be nonsense, and modern history, current history, is replete with examples of masses of fanatically religious people being quite uncontrollable by people not predisposed to believe in God. And that, as I said at the outset, is what scares me most about the governors and legislatures of the majority of American states, and the current majority of representatives in the United States Congress, and the millions of people who favor Trump and Bush and Clinton over Bernie Sanders: these people are not stupid, they are insane.

Of course, they would say I am insane for thinking egalitarian socialism is a good way to go. They would say I am insane for thinking we ought to take half the military budget every year and spend it on solarizing every viable house in America and building fast electric trains to give hundreds of millions of people exciting and comfortable alternatives to automobiles, and making education free from kindergarten through graduate school. And they would say I am insane for thinking we should have Single Payer Healthcare.

“From fanaticism to barbarism is only one step.” — Denis Diderot

Walking to town today, I crossed the coast highway at the only stoplight in Mendocino, and exchanged smiles with a large man hitchhiking south, his backpack lying on its back on the ground. I continued into town, did my errands, and on my way home found the big man still there, waiting for someone to give him a ride.

As I waited for the light to change in my favor, I said to him, “In my hitchhiking days, albeit a long time ago, I found having a sign naming my destination was helpful.”

He nodded affably and said, “I find that’s still true.”

“Where are you headed?” I asked, curious why he didn’t have a sign.

He shrugged. “Don’t really have a destination. Just looking for a place to camp for a few days and stay dry.”

The light changed, and as I started across the highway I said, “Good luck to you.”

“Not luck,” he replied, shaking his head. “Everything is predestined.”

(Todd Walton’s website is UnderTheTableBooks.com)

4 Comments

  1. LouisBedrock January 14, 2016

    I agree with your father about atheism and with you about single payer insurance.

    Religion is a form of mental illness.

  2. Jim Updegraff January 14, 2016

    The experience in other countries is that health insurance works best if you build off an existing program. Single payment in the U.s. would have worked best if it was part of social security a program that works fairly well and covers almost all people in the country.

    Wasn’t it Socrates that said ‘Death is a long dreamless sleep from you never awaken’.

  3. George Hollister January 16, 2016

    Remember, we have a president right now who came into office woefully ignorant about foreign affairs, had a limited life experience, and was a racist. He has learned about foreign affairs on the job, but is still a racist. We are surviving, though increasingly divided. The way our Constitution was set up, we can survive woefully bad presidents. This would remain true, as long as we stay true the intent of our founders.

  4. Rick Weddle January 17, 2016

    Religions (the visible ones we see in practice) are patterns of behavior sourced at ‘beliefs’ (maybe based on fact, maybe not) that require total commitment and devotion…like Democrats…or Republicans. Picking between two such proven bands of liars and pirates, to chose one to ‘believe’ at election time is ‘religion’ of the lamest sort (Do this little exercise: Pick a tiny, trivial ‘evil;’ now, expect anything good whatever to come of such a ‘choice.’ See what I mean?). Shackled with a varied assortment of such ‘faiths’ pretty much guarantees conflict of increasing unpleasantness. So, good luck with all that.

    None of that has anything whatever to do with the existential fact that Intelligence is a property of the Universe. Along with ‘dark’ families of matter and energy and other ‘intangibles’ that make up our cosmos and ourselves.

    There are also those among us who exercise ‘faith’ anyway, including most of the herd of atheists I know, just putting one foot in front of the other.

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