By Lawrence Davidson
February 12, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Cheating, and the lying
that always accompanies it, is probably as old as
the human species. At the same time, that is
probably how long we have known that they are
harmful traits. The Eighth Commandment (out of the
famous ten) tells us not to bear false witness,
which means, don’t lie. Most older societies had
someone assigned to monitor the marketplace for
reliable weights and measures—because left to
themselves, most capitalists, of all times and
places, cheat. This reality was and still is
confirmed by the Roman warning “caveat emptor,” let
the buyer beware.
This perennial problem is still with us and can
only be held at bay by education, regulation, and
standards set by role models and other worthy
authority figures. Alas, these standards are
slipping in the case of the United States and thus,
our tendency to cheat is witnessing a growth phase.
Here are some recent examples:
(1) The Astros baseball team
cheated to win the World Series in the 2017
season. Baseball is the “national sport” of the
United States and as such it is supposed to hold an
honorable place in our culture. But did that stop
what must have been nearly the entire Astros team
(every batter must have been in on the scheme) from
involving themselves in the “game plan” to steal
their opponents’ pitching signs? Not at all.
(2) Then we were shown how willing numerous
well-to-do Americans were to
suborn the college entrance process by buying
their children into elite schools. The educational
system in the United States is supposedly a mark of
national pride, but so is the status of wealth. So
why shouldn’t the latter assure entrance into the
former? To make it so, all one has to do is cheat
(in these cases bribery was the vehicle).
(3) And, by the way, students in colleges and
universities, high-end schools or otherwise, can
engage in the cheating process by
plagiarizing. Term papers and other
pre-prepared, and illicit, assignments are for sale
online.
Here in the U.S., we are no longer sure that all
of this is really so bad. Maybe, if you can get away
with it, it is just smart. That is the message the
public receives from an increasing number of
traditional role models—those who now stand at the
very highest levels of our society and publicly
flaunt corruption.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
I speak here of the behavior of President Donald
Trump (and his entourage), who, in less than three
years in office has managed to brandish his
particular aptitude for mendacity (the
man is a habitual liar by any standard),
bribery, obstruction, incitement and just plain
disdain for all manner of rules. And this behavior
has given license to others to act out their own
disregard for both honesty and truth.
All of this is very bad news. This cheating side
of our behavior, having gained increased acceptance,
has become a real threat to two basic pillars of our
society: the integrity of science/technology and the
practice of honest government.
Part II—Cheating as a Societal Threat: The
Erosion of Science
Let’s begin with science/technology. Our society
would be unrecognizable apart from the science and
technology that underpins all material aspects of
modern life. The scientific method is the surest way
we know to establish the truth about aspects of the
material world. Yet today, this foundation is in
danger of being eroded by the lies and
misrepresentations that plague our everyday lives.
How is this being done? According to the Union of
Concerned Scientists, the Trump administration, in
its rush to do away with all manner of regulations,
appears to consider scientific facts as obstacles to
be overcome. This is particularly the case when it
comes to the “active
dismantling science-based health and safety
protections, sidelining scientific evidence, and
undoing recent progress” based on scientific
research. Here are just a few of dozens of examples:
(1) Trump appointed administrators at the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) have
“forbidden SACC [that is, its own Scientific
Advisory Committee on Chemicals] from commenting” on
EPA decisions concerning such things as worker
safety protections, cancer risks, and the (often
suspect) quality of industry data.
(2) The Department of the Interior (DOI)
“dismantled the role of science” when looking at
protections for endangered and threatened species.
(3) The Department of Agriculture (USDA)
prevented the release of a plan for how the agency
can effectively respond to the impacts of climate
change.
(4) President Trump issued an Executive Order to
“rid federal agencies of one-third of their advisory
committees,” many of which provide scientific advice
to federal agencies.
Without proper scientific standards for review
and regulation, we get what David Michaels, former
Assistant Secretary of Labor for the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration, (OSHA), calls “mercenary
science.” This is “science-for-hire, contracted
out by chemical and pharmaceutical companies to
prove that their harmful products aren’t harmful by
giving them the quantitative imprimatur.” This is
what happens given inadequately supervised
capitalism, where science and truth are separated
out for the sake of profit. Before proper
regulation, this approach ended up killing and
maiming a lot of consumers. It will do so again as
Trump deregulates.
Part III—Cheating as a Social Threat: The Erosion
of Honest Government
A popular sense that those who run the U.S.
government are not trustworthy, and do not run the
government in the interests of the nation as a
whole, is not new. According to
multiple polls taken regularly since the end of
World War II, this sentiment began to become
prevalent in the 1960s, and has persisted ever
since.
It is also interesting that this downturn in
confidence in U.S. leadership coincides with the
upturn of a culture war still being waged today. In
the 1960s, it was the alienating and starkly immoral
nature of the Vietnam War that gave impetus to a
youth counterculture movement. It was also in the
1960s that the various aspects of an
African-American power movement—ranging from the
actions of Martin Luther King to those of the Black
Panthers—began to promote politically effective
equalitarianism. Therefore, one should not be
surprised that a good part of Donald Trump’s “base”
is a reactionary force in this war: white, racist
and culturally traditionalist. As to the last of
these positions, many of Trump’s backers are
religious ideologues who wage a societal war against
same-sex marriage and other LGBTQ civil rights
protections. These are the same “Godly” folks who
think evolution is wrong and science a suspect
anti-religious enterprise. Simultaneously, they turn
a blind eye to President Trump’s criminal
inclinations. They will support him because they
think he is a tool, albeit a lying and cheating one,
in some genocidal divine plan.
However, the cheating culture we are now
confronted with does not express itself through
Trump and his supporters alone. As we have seen, it
is wider ranging. So, while the actions of certain
Democrats may not match Donald Trump’s venality, you
can bet that these Democrats are also undermining
honest, representative government.
Democratic Party cheating became notable in 2012.
No doubt it goes back much further, but 2012 is when
it literally showed itself on public media.
Specifically,
the telltale incident occurred on Wednesday, the
5th of September, 2012—in the middle of a
broadcasted session of the Democratic Party
convention, no less! Here is how it went:
—The Democratic platform committee had decided to
keep all issues pertaining to a final treaty between
Israelis and Palestinians out of the platform. After
all, Israel and Palestine are foreign nations. Among
these issues was the final status of the city of
Jerusalem.
—However, the Republican platform of that year
“envisioned” Israel with Jerusalem as its capital,
and the Republicans were trying to make the status
of Jerusalem a campaign issue.
—So, President Obama and his platform committee
apparently decided that the politically savvy thing
to do was to change the Democratic platform to match
that of the Republicans.
—However, to amend the platform required a
two-thirds majority vote from the convention floor.
So Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who was
chairing the Democratic convention, confidently
called for a voice vote on the issue.
—Villaraigosa called for the vote three times.
Each time the viewer could hear that he failed to
get the desired result. Between the second and third
vote a member of the platform committee went over
and told Villaraigosa that he had to rule in favor
of the change in wording. So, after the third vote,
which again could be heard to fall short of the
two-thirds required, Villaraigosa straight out lied
and said the delegates had approved the change in
wording, and that was that.
This brazen incident, taking place on national
television, was not the last time the Democratic
leadership cheated. They rigged the selection
process in favor of Hillary Clinton in 2016 and may
even now be rigging the selection process against
Senators Sanders and Warren in 2020. Also, some
Democratic “progressives” are showing signs of being
vicious competitors in their own right.
Part IV—Conclusion
Cheating, along with its partner habitual lying,
undermines both communities and institutions:
everything from marriage to commerce, to science, to
government. Nothing can stand firm before them once
these vices become normative. That is what makes
Donald Trump so unacceptable—he represents a social
climate wherein honesty can never be assumed.
Once again, it should be emphasized that Trump,
as dangerous as he certainly is, did not cause this
present problem. He is just opportunistically
exploiting it. In truth, these vices are always
latent within society because, for human beings,
cheating rather than honesty may be a default
position. Thus, we must be taught or otherwise
encouraged to be honest with both each other and
ourselves.
This is not just a lesson for parents, schools,
the courts, and the marketplace. It is also a
necessary lesson for our politics. But we have not
managed to come up with a way to vet our leaders so
as to assure their long-term honesty and integrity—a
process we have been searching for since the time of
Plato. Nonetheless, we should try harder, because
both history (of which most people are woefully
ignorant) and our present circumstances offer us
examples of what it means to fail in this regard.
Cheating and the habitual lying that comes with it
are the ultimate signs of systems failure.
Lawrence Davidson is
professor of history emeritus at West
Chester University in Pennsylvania. He has
been publishing his analyses of topics in
U.S. domestic and foreign policy,
international and humanitarian law and
Israel/Zionist practices and policies since
2010.
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