yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

How religion turned American politics against science | Kurt Andersen | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

In 2008, the big Republican presidential candidates were asked: "How many of you believe in Darwinian biological evolution?" Two-thirds or three-quarters said, "I do." In 2012, the same question was asked, same group of people—Republican presidential candidates—and it was already down to a third. In 2016, the 17 main candidates for the Republican nomination were asked: "Do you believe in evolution?" One, Jeb Bush, brave Jeb Bush, said he did—"but," he said, walking it back even as he said it, “I’m not sure it should be taught in our public schools, and if it is, it should be taught along with Creationism.”

So from 2008 to 2016, that was the change and that change is—I don’t believe all those people believed what they said; I don’t think all of them disbelieve in evolution, just some of them—but they were all obliged to say yes to falsehood and magical thinking of this religious kind and that’s where it becomes problematic. America has always been a Christian nation. That meant a very different thing 100 years ago or even 50 years ago than it means today.

I grew up not going to church very often at all and not with much religious education, but all of my friends were weekly, regular churchgoers of various kinds. Christian Protestant religion became extreme; it became more magical and supernatural in its beliefs and practices in America than it had been in hundreds of years and more so than it is anywhere else in the developed world. So you have that happening.

At the same time, not coincidentally, you have the Republican Party, beginning certainly about 30 years ago, becoming more and more a party of those religiously extreme Protestants. So one thing that has happened and one thing that has led, I think, the Republican Party to accept fantasy and wishful untruth more and more into its approach to policy—whether it’s climate change or the idea that a secret Muslim conspiracy is about to replace our constitutional judiciary system with Sharia law, or any number of other simply untrue tenants of republicanism—all these things which were nutty fringe ideas as recently as 30 years ago are now in the Republican mainstream.

I think there’s a connection. I think once you have a political party, more and more of whose members believe in religious and supernatural fantasies of a more and more extravagant kind, it stands to reason or to unreason that you will have a party that is more and more inclined to embrace the fantastical in its politics and policy. Believe whatever you want in the privacy of your home, in the privacy of your family, in the privacy of your church, but when it bleeds over, as it inevitably has done in America, to how we manage and construct our economy and our society, we’re in trouble.

More Articles

View All
What the Discovery of the Last American Slave Ship Means to Descendants | National Geographic
[Music] I was born in this four-room house right next to the Union Baptist Church in Plateau Mobile, Alabama. [Music] In this house, my grandmother had taught us a whole lot about this history, but me being a little girl, I didn’t know that this history w…
It's all about talking to your users.
Most people in the world have the idea on how new startups are formed completely wrong. They think ideas of new products is something the founders come up with on a lazy Sunday or a late night coding session. You probably know it doesn’t work this way. Th…
Why is Deadly Weather Mesmerizing? | StarTalk
Well, in the same way that CNN does very well in their ratings when there’s war, the Weather Channel does really well when there’s extreme weather. Right. So people love watching extreme weather—the tornadoes—it’s mesmerizing. Hurricanes. Absolutely. And …
Making Music and Art Through Machine Learning - Doug Eck of Magenta
Hey, this is Craig Cannon and you’re listening to a Y Combinator’s podcast. Today’s episode is with Doug Eck. Doug’s a research scientist at Google, and he’s working on Magenta, which is a project making music and art through machine learning. Their goal …
Astronauts Training for Moon Missions | National Geographic
(Uplifting music) I’m astronaut Nicole Mann. I am astronaut Frank Rubio. I am NASA astronaut Jessica Meir. So there’s about a million things going through my mind as I think about going to the moon. You know that the little kid inside of me just get…
The U.S. Economy Just Hit a Big Turning Point. (Howard Marks' Sea Change Is Here)
People believe in the ability to predict the future, and in general, uh, I agree with uh, John Kenneth Galbraith, who said, “There are two kinds of forecasters: the ones who don’t know and the ones who don’t know they don’t know.” There is Howard Marks, …