Archive for August, 2010

Mosque At Ground Zero

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

If you don’t understand why religious leaders should be allowed to build the Muslim mosque at ground zero  near the site of the 9/11 World Trade Center attack, then you don’t understand the first amendment, which articulates perhaps the most basic of our rights as Americans: freedom of expression. You don’t really understand why so many people over the past 234 years have died, fighting for American ideals. 

American muslims should be free to express themselves no matter what they believe, so long as they’re causing no demonstrable harm to others.  This proposed mosque at ground zero, in and of itself is benign.  In fact, the Muslims building it probably had nothing to do with the 9/11 attacks.

In America, a religious organization’s freedom is not to be based on how popular it is.  This is what differentiates The West from places in the east that do repress free expression.  America is great because ideally, we tolerate all beliefs (or at least, we’re supposed to), and we don’t condemn an entire group of people because of the actions of a very small few.  Again, at least, we’re not supposed to, and again, let’s cool this racial and religious hatred.   

You may not be able to control your feelings on this directly or quickly. But you can expand your views over time by reading some good classic books, like:

  • The Grapes of Wrath,
  • Up From Slavery,
  • To Kill A Mockingbird,
  • Best African American Essays: 2009, and
  • The US Constitution.

One point that emerges from these works is that it’s likely never right to direct retributions against an entire group when only a small few committed the heinous crimes of 9/11, the oppression of Jews, … History is full of this sort of “dumb bomb”   prejudice,   that targets the many for the actions of a small few, and sometimes, the   none. Perhaps at one time, limited technology and our primitive social development prevented us from employing a more “smart bomb” sort of targeting to exactly get at the guilty parties. So we were stuck with hammering the group who looked like the guilty parties, but was not guilty itself. But nowadays, we’ve evolved enough to realize that “one bad apple [does not] spoil the whole bunch..!”

So let’s say that I’ve parented a little boy.  Then tragically, a strange woman kills him in the first degree because she hates me.  Now a few years later, another lady who doesn’t even know the murderer, wishes to build a house near mine and live there.  Would it not be absurd of me to go to city council and fight against her house project because the builder is a woman and it was after all, a woman who killed my son?  Unfortunately, this is the same sort of ridiculous fight that opponents of the mosque are waging against the Muslim community.

To those who acknowledge the prejudice they harbor but clam that they cannot help, I’d say: Well, at least you recognize your “mental limitations” regarding 9/11 and Muslims. That’s a great start; in spite of your lacking desire to alter them. Being aware of the problem is likely the first step in solving it, and you’ve taken that step at least. So, I congratulate you.

Actually, since we’re talking about 9/11,  Al Qaeda comprises a very small part of the entire world Muslim population. Number of Muslims in the world: Between 1.3 and 1.8 billion according to Wikipedia. So even if Al Qaeda had a hundred thousand members (which it by no means does), at most it would occupy less than one percent of the entire Muslim population. In a barrel of a hundred apples, only one (at most) would be bad if we applied this good-to-bad ratio of one percent to the apples; a very small number indeed. Now are we to throw away the entire barrel just because of that one bad apple? IMHO: I think not. Let’s not punish an entire group by denying Muslims the freedom to build their mosque at ground zero, for the wanton acts of but a few.  This would show the world that we bear no grudge against Islam as a whole, and that we’re only interested in punishing the people who perpetrated the 9/11 attacks; their religions notwithstanding.  If we truly believe in American freedom of religion ideals, then we should stop fighting this mosque at ground zero.

For more on why American Muslime should be allowed to build their mosque at ground zero, see my   Muslim American Rights   and   Support Muslim Mosques Anywhere In America   pieces.

Tom Hesley

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Happiness Vs. Purpose

Friday, August 13th, 2010

So what good is doing something that matters, being productive, being useful, and making a difference, if one is not happy in the process? Why would / should a person do these things if not to be happy?

How would one know what his purpose is, other than by observing the happiness or sadness that various pursuits produce?  Happiness, or more precisely, our perception of it, is a sort of guide for us; a compass if you will.  By trying various activities, and then noting how each one makes us feel, we zero in on our purpose by pursuing what makes us happy, and avoiding what makes us sad or bored. 

When we occupy ourselves in ways that make us truly happy, then I propose that we’ve discovered our true purpose (if there is even such a thing as true purpose, and I’m not convinced that there is).  Without our good and bad emotions to show us the way, I submit that it would be impossible for us to learn our true purpose. 

So be careful not to underestimate the role of happiness.  IMHO: Happiness is indeed the ultimate object of life.  That other stuff (making a difference, leaving something good behind, and so on), is the means we have to reach happiness and complete fulfillment. 

Tom Hesley

Is Homosexuality Genetic?

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010
One fellow I read today, who denied the posibility that homosexuality has genetic roots, cited the completion of the gnome mapping of human genes as proof that there’s no gene that determines sexual orientation.  So I responded as follows:
 
Homosexually may not result from a   single   gene; but perhaps from a   combination   of many genes together that separately, mean nothing in the evolution of desire in the individual. Sometimes, people display gayness when younger than three years old; even when raised in heterosexual families. So it’s hard to fathem that they   decided   at that age to be homosexual.  In fact, while the gnome project may have mapped our genes, it will take decades or centuries perhaps, to fully understand the ramifications of each gene or gene group, and the influences that each exerts on sexual orientation. So as you say, while there may not be factual evidence that proves that homosexuality is genetic, there’s also no clear evidence that refutes the homosexuality genetic theory either.

Besides, even if you could rule out the genes, this by no means implies that homosexuality is   chosen. Many other factors besides genes also help determine our orientation; factors that are equally as unchangeable as genes.

Then, he suggested that homosexuals marrying, somehow degrades prevailing family values.  So I asked him if he meant to suggest that gays don’t have family values. 
 
Finally, he said that people   choose   to be gay.  Others called him on this and asked if he chose to be straight.  I jumped in too, saying that it’s hard to imagine that someone would   choose   to be gay and persecuted over being straight and at peace — if they could choose that is.  But it’s more clear that they cannot than that they can choose it.  Given the early ages that many homosexuals know that they’re gay, it’s hard to avoid suspecting that a person’s genes have great influence over his orientation of homosexuality. 
 
Tom Hesley
 

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Driving While Using Cell Phones

Sunday, August 1st, 2010

I believe that it’s past time for debate on cell phone use while driving. It’s dangerous. Period. Yet he argued this with one mobile gabber as a passenger, as she swerved about while saying her day on-air. He thought she’d expel him but she drove so poorly that walking seemed preferable. So he spoke anyway. Just like tobacco and alcohol, this debate will rage for decades beyond when science resolves it. Why?

Scientific studies aside for a moment: In my experience, after observing many people driving while chatting or texting on cell phones, I’ve concluded that their driving is definitely impaired; particularly when the conversation is emotionally charged in some way, like when a couple is arguing or dealing with an emergency.

Now, back to the studies: Actually, numerous large-scale observations and epidemeological numbers crunching suggest that when a person uses a cell phone while operating a moterized vehicle, they become more apt to have an accident than someone who is drunk. These works have been cited often on CNN, Dr. Phil, NBC’s Nightly News, and so on.

Also, remember that numerous studies have also concluded that there’s no correlation between cigarrette smoking and lung cancer either.  Unfortunately,  it’s much harder these days for evolutionary forces to weed out idiocy from the species. But we can only hope that natural selection will take care of it. :-)

Studies imply that even hands-free operation of cell phones impairs safe driving ability. While I’ll admit that voice-actuated, eye-free operation is safer than traditional phone-in-the-hand-with-button-pressing mode, cell phones still present many opportunities for distraction when complete attention to the road is criticial; like when merging or exiting interstate highways, driving around the barrels in construction zones, avoiding black ice and pot holes, steering through wind gusts, and moving through heavy rain or snow storms with the windshield wipers flapping and the raindrops distorting the view. Since one or more of these adverse conditions can arise at any time and without much warning, IMHO, a driver’s attention needs to be focused on driving, with near minimal distractions.
 
Talking to someone on a cell phone differs from conversing with a passenger in that the person on the other end cannot tell when dynamic traffic conditions indicate that he should be silent. The driver must tell him, and this is just one more responsibility to tax the driver’s attention and slow his responses to the rapidly-changing road conditions mentioned above. The phone buddy keeps gabbing even though traffic signs may appear that the driver really should read and understand. Drivers tend to not perceive such info bits when absorbed in conversation on the phone.

Conversations with passengers are safer than those with folks on the cell phone, also,  because the passenger can observe the driver’s body language, and can also see the road conditions to the same degree that the driver does. So, when a attention-demanding situation occurs, the driver need not tell the passenger to be quiet, but might have to tell the person on the cell phone.  The person on the phone does not as directly observe the road conditions and can thus, unintentionally distract the driver with his banter. 

Also, a passenger’s voice demands less of the driver’s brain power to comprehend than a voice on a cell phone – hands-free or not. The audio in cell calls tends to be more muffled and constrained in audio frequency bandwidth and volume, and thus, is less intelligible than a voice on a radio, or a passenger’s voice for that matter. Additionally, intermittent cell signals often cause some words to be lost; there’s a lot of, “What did you say?” and “I can’t hear you” with cell phones that cause the driver to (albeit momentarily) direct his attention away from the road. In this way, even a hands-free cell phone conversation demands much more mental overhead than a direct verbal exchange with a passenger, and thus, places the driver as well as his passengers in greater peril.  The technology is not mature enough to be consider safe to use while driving. 

GPS Vs. Cell Phone Usage Dangers

Some suggest that if we ban cell phones, then why not ban GPS units as well.  My answer: GPS units differ from cell phones in several key ways.  First, the ones I’ve observed require less of the driver’s attention.  Once you program your destination into them, they generally require no further adjustment.  They call out the directions clearly (usually), and the announcements are timed to occur well before the driver is required to merge, exit, or turn. 

Also, the speech that GPS units generate is typically more legible than cell phone chatter, and what’s more is that there’s much less of it except during those times when you’re driving in the close quarters of a city.  Then they can be a bit monotonous.  But unlike a conversation with a real person, the driver is not mandated to pay them attention.  With people, there is social pressure to respond promptly during conversations. 

Further, unlike most cell phones that tend to be very compact, GPS units are specifically designed ergonomically for drivers so that they’re as minimally obtrusive as practical.  Indeed, they’re meant to be used by drivers. 

Many units even provide timely information on traffic and construction conditions that enable drivers to avoid congested areas as well as the risks of driving in said places.  Though the GPS technology is newer than cell phones, and thus hasn’t been studied as much, my hunch is as follows: Whatever increased danger to drivers there is that’s due to paying attention to the GPS unit instead of the road, is more than offset by the improved safety they bestow.

After all, with an audible GPS unit in the car, the driver need not look away (or as far away) from the road as much as he would if he was using a paper map.  The GPS display is much simpler than most maps and would seem to require of the driver less concentration for navigational purposes than a map.     As far as map usage goes, a GPS unit may in fact reduce accident rates because it conveys its information to driver more efficiently by taking much of the guess work out of where to go. 

So because of the more tightly focused and useful niche role of GPS units in the car’s cockpit, they can’t be legitimately likened to cell phones.  Indeed, I’d argue that GPS units as described, are far less dangerous than cell phones. 

Now as I do not drive, my experience with GPS systems is admittedly rather limited.  However, my original statement was about the distracting effects of cell phone usage only.  GPS usage and how closely it mirrors the cell phone in the degree of distraction it creates I would have preferred not to get into, as I do not see them as being in the same class of activities.  While the former is specifically designed to aid the driver, the latter is not.  Practically all the information provided by the GPS pertains to the driver’s focus, which is driving and navigating the vehicle.  But most often, the information being exchanged while talking on a cell phone has nothing do with (and thus supplements in no material way) the task at hand, which is to drive the vehicle safely. 

The jury is still out on the dangers of GPS usage — indeed, much less scientifically obtained data is available about GPS than cell phones at this time. The intense visual GPS interfaces of today’s sleek GPS devices may indeed be more dangerous to use than talking on a hands-free cell phone.   So I’m not passing judgment on GPS just yet. 

But with the cell phone, unlike the GPS, much evidence is already in that shows this activity to impair a person’s ability to drive a car as much as 90 percent, which is worse than many drunk drivers experience at the height of their intoxication.  Now the potential for danger with GPS is real, I think.  But it hasn’t been studied enough yet to know how much it impairs a driver. 

The similarity I cite between cell phone users and drunk drivers was intended to illustrate with an extreme example, how cell phone users, as do drunk drivers, overestimate their multitasking abilities on the road. While using a cell phone may not be an actual impairment in the sense that drunk driving is, it does however cause acidents that are just as deadly. Drunk driving is banned because of how deadly it has proven to be. In that same vein thus, so too should talking on a cell phone while driving be banned, as it has also proven to be equally dangerous.

Cell Phones Are Visual Too

On the simple interfaces of cell phones being less dangerous to use than the highly visual GPS ones: The trend is that cell phones are becoming more visually-operated as well — especially with the recent landslide popularity of the iPhone 4.  There are millions of iPhones in use already, and this latest one’s only been on the market for roughly two months.  In fact, with this phone, most of the arguments made against the GPS and how its visual interface might be very distracting would also apply to the iPhone, the Droid, the Blackberry, and other devices that are more-than-ever utilizing a visual interface for user I/O.  So in this sense, perhaps GPS usage could be viewed as akin to cell phone usage.  

For the increasingly visually demanding aspects of cell phones, I was responding to the argument that GPS units are more dangerous than cell phones because of the visual attention that operating them demands. My counter argument was that cell phones are not exempt from this trend toward increasingly complex visual user interfaces, and so suffer increasingly from the same drawback.

Within the city, GPS units are admittedly more intrusive than they are on highways and strait-shot pathways. But even in the city, I can’t imagine them being AS intrusive as an ongoing cell phone conversation that requires listening as well as thinking up responses. In the GPS case, all you have to do is listen to it chatter.

With the plethora of road-ready apps available on the iPhone et al, the potential to lure drivers’ eyes from the road is likely no less than a GPS. 

All Distractions Pose Dangers

Yes, drivers are responsible for ignoring many distractions.  So why add to that already large list by talking on a cell phone while driving? 

I agree that with freedom comes responsibility.  But people often enjoy the freedom without actually shouldering this responsibility.  Ideally, a person should be able to self-police, and abstain from an action when what he’s considering is beyond his capability.    She may think she knows when she’s unable to operate a car safely while chatting, and perhaps many can.  Drunk drivers invariably feel that they can safely drive a car while inebriated.  But while many boast that they can, many of those also prove that they cannot; they kill another with their car while gabbing.  People tend to overestimate their multi-tasking abilities with cell phones as well.  So, they need regulated, and if it takes a ban to do that, then that’s what should be done.    IMHO.

My bottom line is that anything that distracts the driver from the road enough to put me in peril when riding with him / her is a bad thing and should be banned.  That includes cell phones as well as GPS units.  Just ask anyone who has been injured by a cell phone wielding road warrior, and they likely feel the same.  If you need to use such devices then just pull over until you’re done. 

Tom Hesley