Fri 26 May 2006

While watching “Conspiracy Moon Landing” (National Geographic Channel) last night (TiVod, of course), I came to realize there are only two things I hate in this world: people who are intolerant of other people’s cultures and the Dutch. Just kidding. What I hate are uneducated, loudmouthed people. Seriously, if you really don’t believe that we landed on the moon back in 1969, well, then I hope Darwin’s natural selection takes its toll on you before you manage to reproduce.
A problem of perhaps greater proportion is this: the assumption that a general education gives one license to make judgments and conclusions universally. Generally-educated people are helpful for a stable and productive society, however, such broad-based (and by extension, shallow) learning is insufficient for many arenas. While the “does it make sense” litmus test is essential for most of life’s questions, it is wholly inadequate for speculation in specialties. Unless you have a degree in physics or astronomy, I really don’t care what you think about the moon landing. Your inane ramblings about the effects of the Van Allen radiation belt are as welcome as a rain shower of anvils. I’d rather slide down a razor blade into a pool of alcohol, than listen to a “self-taught” conspiracy nut lecture me on the intricacies of space photography or the properties of shadows on the lunar surface. Go to school, earn a degree, and then get back to me.

Recently overheard conversation:
“So if (pointing to a cross-sectional sketch of the World Trade Towers) the airplane hit here and fires broke out here, here, and here, does it make sense that the building would have collapsed in on itself?”
…
“Look at the picture of the Pentagon during 9/11. Does that hole look like a hole that an airplane would make it if hit the building?”
The answer to both of these questions is “I don’t know” (and, likely, neither do you). I don’t have the required background or expertise to even begin such an analysis. I know nothing about the properties of steel, high-rise construction, the effect of burning jet fuel on structures, let alone even the faintest clue about impact and explosions of such a degree. I think it best to defer to experts in such situations. It’s what they’re there for.
A little Learning is a dang’rous Thing;
Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian Spring:
There shallow Draughts intoxicate the Brain,
And drinking largely sobers us again.
– Alexander Pope’s “An Essay on Criticism.”
UPDATE: 9/11 conspiracies debunked point-by-point
UPDATE: another 9/11 conspiracy debunking, this time by NIST
UPDATE: a response to the irresponsible film “Loose Change”
UPDATE: a site devoted to disproving 9/11 conspiracies
UPDATE: 9/11 myths dot com