Morning Ethics Warm-Up, 6/23/26: The Dangers of Pickleball, and More

3. As I predicted, the mainstream U.S. news media, aka. “Axis media” is not covering the 219-page report documenting decades of rampant sexual abuse, torture, and trafficking perpetrated against as many as 250,000 underage British girls, primarily by Pakistani Muslims It has still not been covered in the New York Times. CNN, MS NOW, ABC, CBS, NBC, and PBS did not cover the horrific scandal as of several days after the report was released. When Prime Minister Keir Starmer resigned yesterday under mounting political pressure, much of it centering on the UK’s migrant crisis, Monday’s CNN News Central omitted any mention of the rape report, though the proximity of its release to Starmer’s resignation seems more than coincidental.

Regarding the news blackout of what should be a major international story, conservative media watchdog Newsbusters writes, “By acting as agents of the leftist political order, the media hoped to pull the wool over American eyes, blinding them to the dangers that their mass immigration policies bring upon places they were implemented in. All this to further the implementation of the same disastrous policies in America.”

If there’s another explanation, I’d like to hear it.

4. Oh yeah, the party of diversity and inclusion: Congressman Dan Goldman (D-NY), visited Poetica Coffee in Williamsburg, Brooklyn with his 7-year-old daughter. Hours later, Poetica’s owner published an Instagram post:

“We see that you stopped by our shop today for a coffee. Do you see how it doesn’t taste like genocide juice? Or are you still having a hard time telling the difference? We don’t serve racists, fascists, homophobes, genocide enablers or anyone in between. Too bad we didn’t recognize you right away, or we would have turned you away.”

Goldman is a target of the the Islamic and anti-Jewish left for his support of Israel. The epically offensive, ignorant, bigoted and un-American post was quickly taken down and the account deleted. That it was posted at all is signature significance for a progressive bully and anti-Semite, not to mention a moron, however. No respectable citizen, right, left or center, should appear to endorse such attitudes by patronizing that establishment.

5. Professional asshole Tucker Carlson says he is no longer a Republican! “I would not support the Republican party, there’s no chance I would support the Republican party. How could I support a political party that is not loyal to the United States. I voted Republican my entire life, I have been a consistent defender for 35 years of the Republican party, but there is no defending this. I’m out,” he Xed. The GOP should send him a nice parting gift, then fall on its knees and thank God. If the party isn’t attractive to self-aggrandizing jerks like Tucker, it only makes Republicans look better. Like so many others, Carson doesn’t get that Cognitive Dissonance Scale thingy.

11 thoughts on “Morning Ethics Warm-Up, 6/23/26: The Dangers of Pickleball, and More

  1. I know this is a stereotype, but in my experience with nurses (knowing multiple personally and just general experience) and the plethora of Tik Tok videos and such that nurses have posted, I am surprised not at all by this.

  2. #3: I might bet the trigger for Starmer’s pressured removal was still not the general predation of islamists in Britain, but the Henry Nowak case

  3. About point 2, are alcoholic doctors protected by the Americans with Disabilities Act? Same about alcoholic lawyers. My understanding is that under ADA airlines cannot fire alcoholic pilots but have to accommodate “recovering” pilots rather than fire them. Same holds for ship captains. The captain of the Exxon Valdez during the 1989 oil spill, struggled with alcoholism prior to the disaster. While he had previously received treatment for alcohol abuse, documents revealed he had been drinking heavily in waterfront bars just hours before the ship ran aground.

    I think that ADA has warped ethics regarding alcoholism as it has created “Damned if you don’t, damned if you do” scenarios; in those type of scenarios ethics has takes a backseat to legal calculations regarding minimizing the financial exposure due to lawsuits, accidents etc.

  4. I almost found myself in a pickleball incident last week. Was stopped in traffic as I was waiting for the person in front of me to turn left into a driveway. A young woman rear-ends me. We get out, see that each other are okay. I call police, she calls her mom. Mom shows up first and starts yelling at me like I did something wrong. Says her husbands a cop and she’s calling her lawyer.

    I’m like…lady, I just want the police report so I can file with the insurance. You don’t need to be here.

    Cop made it worse when he showed up. Apparently, she wasn’t lying about her husband. The cop wasn’t him, but was a family friend. Even went up and hugged her. Fortunately, the daughter stated the truth. That could have gotten ugly fast.

  5. I’ve been thinking recently about that quote…. “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”

    There are things I don’t understand. And when I come across one, I try to figure it out.

    I asked myself “How does an internal combustion engine work?” I didn’t know, I assume most people don’t. Fuel is mixed with air in the cylinder, then compressed and ignited by the spark plug, and the resulting explosion provides mechanical force to the piston. But even if they don’t know it now, it’s still a relatively simple enough concept that a person could ask the question, go to Google, and get a passable answer…. Or just listen to me.

    But there are more complex questions. I barely understand how a computer works. Coding makes sense to me, but the actual mechanics of how data is stored and accessed flummoxes me. I get the basics about binary and bits, but I think the scale and scope of how many switches there are, how small they are, how often they move and the speed in which they relay breaks down in my cognition. The precision is incredible. The number of moving parts behind the blinking of the cursor that marks where I’m typing is humbling.

    If I was the last man at the end of the world, with enough time, material, tools and manuals, I could probably figure out how to mill an engine and refine fuel… Computers would be lost to humanity. I like to think that I’m a relatively intelligent, moderately curious individual, but there are things that are still magic out there for me. “It’s because that’s why”, as Bobby Finn would say. But maybe it’s not important for me to be able to grasp that magic, or be able to replicate it, maybe it’s good enough for me to do what I’m good at, let engineers do what they’re good at, and bask in the results.

    The problems are that this scales, and that there are things out there that are slightly more controversial than the inner workings of a computer chip, but still above the cognition levels of a material portion of the population. We saw that with vaccines… It’s possible to ask questions like “What is a vaccine?”, “What are the risks associated with taking a vaccine?”, “Is there a benefit for me to take this vaccine?” or “What’s the story behind Ivermectin?” and find fairly digestible, honest answers. But people weren’t doing that exercise, and I can’t tell whether it was because they were incapable or lazy, but the result for either would be the same. This isn’t even just a shot at anti-vaxxers (although it’s that too); The people way out over their skis lying to people out of a combination of fear and authoritarianism were doing the exact same thing: They didn’t know what they were talking about, they weren’t seeking answers to the questions, they were either just straight up making shit up, or listening to people who were.

    And once you see that pattern, the replication happens again and again and again… Right now the one that’s really bothering me, and has been for a couple of years, are the economic arguments. These are my bread and butter, so it’s the most in my face, but there are others. Recessions, inflation, cost of living, tariffs, demand, supply… All of these things are important, they are all relatively understandable. But as opposed to asking the questions and understanding what the forces in play are, how they interact with policy, and why some things might work better than others, I find that people are settling into a familiar pattern of behavior where they separate among partisan lines, and shout the most extreme versions of a set of bumper-stickery policy slogans at each other. And it’s frustrating, because the institutions, the experts, the computer engineers, from my chip example… They seem just as captured as anyone else. I don’t know whether the honest actors can’t find a platform, or there’s none left, but it’s like we can’t live in a shared reality with other people because sometimes reality will disadvantage our position, and the tribal politics is more important than truth.

    I am bone weary of the constant, petty shittiness. If we can’t figure out a way to live in reality, if we can’t be curious enough to seek truth and accept the reality of what that truth is… We’re fucked. There is a reliability crisis… We can’t control that people who lie to us end up in positions of power, but we need to stop believing the people who lie to us, once they’ve been proven to be liars. We need to stop rewarding them for their grifts. We need to hold them accountable. We need to ask questions and do our level best to seek answers. Otherwise, eventually, the competent experts will die out, they’ll be replaced by people that can’t do the thing, and we’ll lose it.

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