Tuesday, December 27, 2016

I'm-a-grant

poor georgie's almanack:

You and I are what we are because each of us benefits from an “I’m a grant” family.  


America grew because colonists, early soldiers, plantation owners, railroads, colleges, and infrastructure projects were awarded land grants.  Not all of the land and grants were shady.


Thursday, December 22, 2016

Friendship alert

poor georgie’s almanack

I just discovered a shockingly brilliant plan we all can agree upon to make small town America great again (and catch this), protect the USA from devastating all-out cyber attack, vastly improve basic education, upgrade training for the new-age workforce, give lagging entrepreneurial class a boost, create jobs and not cost a fortune … because it all has been done before.

My old friend, Harvey Meyerson, in his new book, “Jefferson, The Army and The Internet" (AMAZON) has found the sweet spot where history and modern common sense come together.  Tell everyone you know!

Like a five star Michelin chef, he concocts a recipe that relies on the amazingly successful and under-reported skills of the US Army in (believe it or not) nations like Afghanistan, and in America’s bad ass Wild West, and even during the Great Depression of the 1930s. 

I am the ultimate skeptic, up to now thinking there was no way the right, middle and left could work together.  Suddenly, I am convinced it is possible. 

Out of the haze of uncommonly bitter discourse, Harvey has charted a course, hidden in plain view, that relies on common values and successes we have forgotten.  Repeating … Tell everyone you know!


Thursday, December 15, 2016

Dark

poor georgie’s almanack:

I read that a group of astronomer/cosmologists created a map of Dark Matter, but I can’t find it.

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

oped york record 12/12/16 science and vote


Science knows why a Trump supporter has a different version of reality than a Clinton supporter.

oped by George Kroloff

That’s because there is no single reality.

Reality is now, but it lasts for less than an instant. Then it is a memory. The past is gone. The future is not here yet.

Each of us processes information that goes into our memory bank differently.

But, there is one constant that comes to my mind and it is from, of all things, Albert Einstein’s theories of relativity.

Einstein said to make sense of any thing it can only be described by how that particular thing is relative to something else. In politics, that helps explain different points of view.

Your eyes see any object or activity differently than I do, even if we are next to each other. You see it through a lens that is at a different angle than mine. Your lens might be panoramic, mine might be tightly focused.

Meanwhile, you and I may hear the same things during a political debate or a radio advertisement, but we process things differently. That’s because whatever enters our brains through our eyes and ears passes through a screen of past memories and beliefs. That is our intellectual baggage, which comes from what we assume we have seen, heard, read and felt.

Much of the politics and ideologies we process feeds into a collective consciousness, which is the set of shared ideas and attitudes that are a unifying force within society. It is, in large part, influenced by our tribes. I process Republicans and Democrats as two ancient tribes and independents as a leaderless, disorganized, chaotic wandering lost tribe.

One of the most accepted theories in science is the Chaos Theory. It says that even when everything around us appears to be in chaos, our pocket of turmoil actually is a small section of a bigger pattern. It is a pattern that only makes sense when seen from afar. Just like an isolated windstorm or a rain shower is part of a massive weather pattern.

In the big picture, chaotic issues that seem to be isolated in the U.S., such as the heightened fear of “the others,” also are thriving around the world. Fear still drives old bugaboos like anti-semitism and anti-immigration, rich vs. poor, and one color vs. another.

Weirdly enough, we also are affected by brain-like decisions made by things we do not think of as brains. Like all mammals, fish and birds, we react to those we feel close to – especially to their fears.

One evidence of that is how humans swarm, just like fish and birds swarm. Media swarm, or circle, around the surrogates for presidential candidates after a debate in the “spin room.”

Species often swarm to protect the strong in the middle and to sacrifice the weak on the fringe. Think of a school of mackerel, with no apparent leader, forming an almost solid mass when one fish spies a shark and gets agitated. Or think of a political platform that protects one section of society against another.

The Internet is a perfect example of a leaderless but brain-like thing that motivates humans to react collectively. Remember the huge Ice Bucket Challenge to raise funds for ALS research? There was no leader, it just happened.
So, science can give us insight into why we think like we think, or do what we do. But it still can’t sort out all our biases based on what we each think we have experienced – our individual concept of reality.

That’s one reason why your well-reasoned argument, backed up by what you believe to be the facts, is less likely to change the mind of someone’s equally well-reasoned argument, backed up with a different version of the same facts.
Thus, if you thought a candidate was not trustworthy or just made you uncomfortable, you probably are reflecting the fears and reactions of those you trust.

You are like the middle bird in a flock of starlings swirling through the air.

Yep, science says “birds of a feather do flock together.”

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George Kroloff was head of public relations for The Washington Post during the Pentagon Papers through Watergate period, held senior staff positions on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, in the office of the Postmaster General and later became counselor to science, business, nonprofit and government organizations. Some of his work is in the Newseum and Smithsonian collections.
YDR-CD-110816-election-york-democrats

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Monday, December 12, 2016

Friday, December 9, 2016

Lost Tribe

poor georgie’s almanack

American political tribes:

Reds (mad), mostly in midsection. 

Blues (sad), mostly on coasts.

My tribe, the Purples, (mad and sad), lost in an uncharted desert, listless, leaderless, hopeless, our SUVs out of gas.
















 









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Monday, December 5, 2016

Thursday, December 1, 2016

The adventure continues

poor georgie’s almanack:

The adventure continues.

Coming up next! 

Week five of America’s Presidential Transition.