Here you go:
It was a good performance, but I think he tried a little too hard to cram a whole lecture into a few minutes — but then maybe that’s what you need to do on Colbert, ride hard over his attempts to derail you. I also disagree with his premise that creationism has its roots in anti-authoritarianism and rebelliousness, which he touched on briefly here but goes on at length in his book…but yeah, he’s dead on target when he points out that ID has no evidence, and is basically trying to cheat its way into the curriculum.
Brownian, OM says
Indeed. Very goo.
Glen Davidson says
It doesn’t have its roots in meaningful anti-authoritarianism and rebelliousness, but those are aspects of the human psyche which religious authorities try to co-opt for their religion. I believe that they have some success, however lame it may look to outsiders.
I tried to figure out what this might mean as written:
but I think the only reasonable conclusion is that a “d” in “good” is missing.
Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/2kxyc7
Speck says
I was on board with him up until his “welfare queen” crack. If making evolution palatable to the right wing means bringing up racist stereotypes, count me out.
SC says
Well, I guess I’ll just have to repost my comment from the earlier thread:
Prof MTH says
I just finished watching this. I disagreed with only one comment Miller made. Creationism and ID are not equivalent. The political use of them treats them as equivalent but in and of themselves, the views are not equivalent. A factory line is a good analogy. The fine tuning argument also illustrates the non-equivalence. The “evolution of an intelligent designer” argument PZ recently posted also illustrates how creationism and ID as hypotheses are non-equivalent.
Again, the Discovery Institute and others politically utilizes them in an equivalent manner.
Mike P says
I doubt it has its ultimate roots in anti-authoritarianism, but I agree that that’s how it gets its hooks in people. “Heeeey you’re right! I don’t like these know-it-all eggheads telling me I don’t know where I come from! Tell me more about your nonsense!”
me says
It is only anti-authoritarian in the sense that the American biblical fundamentalists of the late 19th and early 20th centuries considered modernists as authoritarian.
Janine ID says
Here is a goo performance.
Lowell says
#3
I agree that the “welfare queen” remark didn’t work. I didn’t really interpret it as pandering to the right wing, though. I thought he was trying to be sarcastic and out-Colbert Colbert. Not a good idea.
Prof MTH says
Government involvement via funding and government interference are not the same thing. I believe Miller said “interference” and not “involvement”. If I am wrong, then yes, funding is involvement in some capacity and so he is technically wrong but I took him to mean “interference”. But that is not to say that the government does not interfere either. As we know, under Bush, the government has grossly interfered.
For me too, the “welfare queen” comment made me physically recoil.
Architeuthis says
Agreed with the above posters. I was generally on-board with him until he brought up the “welfare queens” comment. If you take the horrible connotations and racial stereotypes inherent in that phrase away, it was a good analogy.
For what it was worth, it was good seeing a defender of good science up there, and getting the word out.
So, when are you going to go on the Colbert Report PZ?
Nentuaby says
Prof MTH, in what way are they not equivalent? They are, in every practical regard, the same hypothesis mutated for political purposes. If you’re not familiar with just how true that is, do a Google search for “cdesign proponentsists.” “Intelligent design” is purely creationism with a few pseudoscientific gubbins glued on in an attempt to evade prior court rulings about the teaching of creationism.
M07 says
The direction of scientific inquiry gets crafted by the government when it decides how to dole out funding, but the *conclusions* have not been influenced by the government (at least not until the Bush administration) the way they are in Muslim countries.
I think that was his point.
What creationists are trying to do is influence scientific conclusions and how they are taught in academia.
Rev. BigDumbChimp says
The Welfare Queen crack didn’t bother me so much. Maybe not the most tasteful choice but welfare abuser would have been better. It’s a good analogy just obviously poorly chosen words as some took it offensively.
Other than that I think you have to filibuster to get past Colbert’s skillful derailments.
Blake Stacey says
The creationists who have solemnly assured me that my godless Darwinism is just an excuse to live a licentious life will be greatly surprised to hear that their beliefs are rooted in anti-authoritarianism.
It sounds like Miller needs to read Altemeyer.
negentropyeater says
I don’t know, why did he feel the need to start with all kinds of clichés that are so damn wrong, to flatter the American audiences, for a minute I thought I was hearing McCain talking :
– regarding science as the enemy would be downright “anti-american”
– america has become the “greatest scientific nation in the world” because it didn’t allow for any governement interference
– americans have this great quality that scientists have, the ability to disregard what the establishment says : “a culture of disrespect”
Yep, this guy is just as dangerous as the creationists, repeating the same old tired clichés so that Americans don’t think too much and feel flattered so that he can sell them his story afterwards.
Why can’t he just tell people the truth, without all the sugar-coating ?
Ravi says
I’m pretty certain that when he means, nation of “disrespect” and anti-authority, he means in science. One SHOULD disrespect all authority in science, at least in a manner that one tries to test all claims for themselves. Is this not what science is about?
Rev. BigDumbChimp says
That’s a little extreme.
negentropyeater says
ok correct my post #16 please,
Yep, this guy is almost as dangerous as the creationists,…
Does it change much ?
Prof MTH says
I listed several examples but here is a more elaborate explanation: take the factory analogy. Let us say we want to build a car (the universe). First you need blue prints. Then you must create the parts, and then finally assemble those parts. The specific Judeo-Xtian literalist 6 day creationism does include all these steps. However, intelligent design, the hypothesis itself, only addresses the latter step. Some variations, such as the fine tuning argument, assert that the universe itself is a necessarily existent substance along with the intelligent designer. The designer just put it together or tweaked it. The gnostic version of creationism explicitly separates creation from design. (I like the linked story, as a myth.)
The term “cdesign proponentsists” is a result of the political use of the two kinds of hypotheses, not the content of the hypotheses themselves.
SC says
The direction of scientific inquiry gets crafted by the government when it decides how to dole out funding, but the *conclusions* have not been influenced by the government (at least not until the Bush administration) the way they are in Muslim countries.
I agree that this is the generous interpretation, but since he doesn’t actually say this it can leave people with the wrong (if you are correct) impression.
It’s a good analogy just obviously poorly chosen words as some took it offensively.
I took it offensively because it is a racist myth that has been used to powerful effect by the right to stigmatize poor people and stir up support for dismantling social programs.
Nick Gotts says
What a pair of pillocks.
ndt says
It’s important to remember that the Colbert Report is a comedy show (it’s easy to forget because it has higher journalistic standards than most TV news programming). Miller may well have been having a little joke.
amplexus says
I thought that what Miller was saying is that science is a very American enterprise because of it’s multiple points of entry into the field and the overall egalitarian nature of any results-driven field. Those that stick to dogma in science are quickly weeded out when some upstart scientist overturns the orthodoxy of the establisment through new discoveries.
negentropyeater says
Instead of all this nonsense :
regarding science as the enemy would be downright “anti-american”
– america has become the “greatest scientific nation in the world” because it didn’t allow for any governement interference
– americans have this great quality that scientists have, the ability to disregard what the establishment says : “a culture of disrespect”
Couldn’t he just say :
“America is at great risk of losing its leadership in Science”
Prof MTH says
Ooops, I accidentally deleted the last part that explains the “kinds” terminology.
Creationism is capable of answering the question “Why is there something verses nothing?” Although it does so erroneously. ID cannot answer that question without assuming a creator. ID in and of itself, especially the Fine Tuning Argument, is only an (erroneous) explanation for “Why is the universe the way in which we find it?”
Rev. BigDumbChimp says
No, It doesn’t. He’s far from being anywhere close to as dangerous as Creationists. Sure he’s got some views on theology I find to be wrong but he’s pushing evidence based knowledge when he speaks on science. Those statements you quoted above, I’m not sure I find major issues with. I’m sure they are better laid out and reasoned in his book or in a longer format than the short time spurts one is alloted on a comedy show. I’m willing to give him the benefit of a doubt because he comes from the side of honesty when defending evidence based science. That doesn’t mean that my mind couldn’t be changed but before I put him in the same garbage dump as the lying ass creationists who wouldn’t know honest debate if you crammed it down their throat, I’m willing to find out how he reasons those short chopped up statements.
If you feel the need to condemn him on a few phrases on 6 min segment on a comedy show that is 100% your right.
geoff says
Here’s the classic video of Miller tearing ID (and creationists) a new one for anyone who is interested:
Rev. BigDumbChimp says
He does. I listened to him the other day on NPR and he made that very point. Again, he could be harboring some strange neo-patriotic opinions but I’m siding with there is more it than what can be conveyed on a 6 mins segment.
Was it a bad choice on his part to use those in a format that doesn’t allow him to fully explain? Maybe.
SC says
What a pair of pillocks.
Translation, please.
Rev. BigDumbChimp says
“more to it”
Greg Peterson says
I was a little pissed at Colbert for not providing Miller some more space and oxygen. I would like to have heard more full sentences, fewer cut-off phrases. How could Miller hope to sound coherent at all? But that is the format, and given that fact, I think he did all right.
I think his effort to paint science as “cowboy-American,” rough-and-ready, independence, and ID as an effete little parasitic weakling trying to suckle at the government teet is a fun rhetorical flourish. I doubt it’s true in any literal sense, but I do enjoy seeing the tables more or less turned like that.
mothwentbad says
ID is “rebellious” in the sense that TRUE rebels submit to God and will let you have their slaves when you pry them from their cold, dead hands.
Lord Zero says
I hate them about the same anyway…
Regarding the video, well enough,
that`s thousands of pages of “god did it”
and nothing more. Anyway, thats too few
screen time to explain evolution.
negentropyeater says
Look, I’m commenting on this video.
It took him from 1min20sec to make a totally weak and unbelievable argument.
Why are Americans at such great risk (which he doesn’t even say), if they are so good ?
They’ve had creationism very active in this country over the last 25 years, and :
– they have become the “greatest scientific nation in the world” without the need for any government intervention
– they have this wonderful ability that scientists have
– and of course nobody would ever ever say that they are anti-science now would they, that would be so, hmmm “anti-american”
And now, suddenly, things are changing ? Creationists are becoming way more active are they ? That’s why we shouldn’t have any government intervention ?
Longtime Lurker says
The meme that creationism is rooted in anti-authoritarianism is inextricably linked to the false notion that science is a set of beliefs handed down by a sacerdotal caste rather than a set of methods which can be employed by anyone.
Thanks for th goo, Janine. Kim Gordon is truly one of the most alluring women to grace the planet.
JStein says
I didn’t know Ken Miller was a Catholic.
That’s the only part of this interview I found shocking.
Otherwise, I thought it was good, and he did a good job steamrolling Colbert’s attempts to usurp him.
Josh West says
Is Welfare Queen a racial stereotype? To be honest it’s not one I had heard before.
Nick Gotts says
SC@30 “Pillock”: pratt, wally, twerp, nincompoop, twit, idiot. Googling the term, I find two things I didn’t know (a) It’s specific to the UK, and (b) It was originally a slang term for the penis, “but fairly inoffensive, now its meaning has been forgotten” (www.peevish.co.uk/slang/p.htm). It expresses mild, shoulder-shrugging contempt.
Janine ID says
Josh West, Welfare Queen is an old Ronald Reagan trope. And, yes, welfare is code for “black”.
Rey Fox says
“the false notion that science is a set of beliefs handed down by a sacerdotal caste rather than a set of methods which can be employed by anyone.”
If Ichthyic were here rather than out chasing stingrays or something, he’d say “projection, projection, projection”.
SC says
He’s always like this. It’s extremely frustrating when you’re actually interested in what the person has to say.
And those interested in seeing more cuts to public science funding should stick with it, by all means. I think the maverick-scientist game is a dangerous one to play in the American political culture today. Science is a cooperative, social activity – there’s nothing shameful about that.
Google it.
Janine ID says
SC, I already posted a link.
Josh West says
Yeah, I went and looked it up after I posted. It’s odd, even though I don’t ever recall hearing the phrase before, the image that popped into my head initially wasn’t black, but the Alabama/South Georgia white trailer mom. Maybe a regional thing.
Longtime Lurker says
Reagan was a nasty piece of work. Not many people immediately think of the captive teen-brides on Mormon polygamist compounds when they think of welfare recipients.
Jesse says
You guys need to loosen up a little bit if you’re *that* offended by a welfare queen crack. Newsflash: The USA is loaded with people who abuse welfare on purpose. Pointing out the obvious shouldn’t be taboo. I thought he did a great job, and was right on the mark.
SC says
SC, I already posted a link.
Yeah, I didn’t see it until too late. :)
Nick Gotts,
Thanks. Gank, stroppy, taffy, pillock,… – so many new words! Are you saying Colbert is a pillock? You know he’s in character, right?
SC says
I agree completely. To be more precise, they’re juridical people, aka corporations.
negentropyeater says
What was great about it, apart from the fact that he doesn’t want to change anything and keep everybody thinking that America is the greatest scientific nation in the world, and that Americans have this wonderful abiltiy that scientists have ?
Oh, I forgot, he also said that we shouldn’t allow ID in our classes. And does that change anything ? Have we had ID in our classes for the last 25 years ? Didn’t stop Americans to be the only developped nation in the world where a majority of people still believe in a 6000 yold earth did it ?
What did he say that was so great ?
David Marjanović, OM says
I think that’s pretty obvious.
negentropyeater, Colbert is a comedian who acts as if he were some C**lt*r or Limbaugh type, but in fact parodizes them. He gave the famous speech at Bush’s “re”inauguration: “This administration isn’t sinking, this administration is soaring! If anything, they’re rearranging deck chairs [not on the Titanic, but] on the Hindenburg!”
Sven DiMilo says
When he’s got a book to self-shill and not a moment before.
Benjamin Franklin says
I like Miller a lot, and if you look at the work that he has done, it is grossly unfair to consider him even remotely as dangerous as a creationist. He is a solid scientist, author, and speaker arguing against the loonies of this world.
Miller appeared to be much more nervous than he usually is, and when he was on Colbert’s show previously. He also came across in a very adversarial mode
I suspect that Colbert read that as well and pounced on it, to show Miller that he is the boss on his show. It was certainly not Miller’s best showing. Perhaps he has been too active on the press tour for his book.
I give him a C+, he’s capable of much better.
negentropyeater says
What’s pretty obvious ?
That Miller didn’t really mean the things he said ? That we should actually change nothing, because everything is fine as it is today.
Or that Colbert was very clever and pulled the whole thing out of the horse’s mouth ?
Thorn says
Is it me or does Colbert normally give scientists an easy time? It’s authors and politicians that get most of the stick.
Torbjörn Larsson, OM says
No, it doesn’t, and that is the problem. “Intelligent design” refuses to address mechanisms. When it does, as it must to be a testable hypotheses, it can include any number of steps. So the general proposals (creationism vs design) are logically equivalent, when considered as an explanation. It is not a coincidence that design arguments and creation arguments are the same.
But that philosophizing is all besides the point. As earlier commenters noted, ID is verifiably repackaged creationism. And you can take that to the court.
Nick Gotts says
Are you saying Colbert is a pillock? You know he’s in character, right? – SC
No, I didn’t! Now I get it – he’s pretending to be a pillock. Thanks SC. We have what’s probably a very similar act, “Alan Partridge” (real name Steve Coogan). I’ve not found him very funny on the few occasions I’ve seen him, but a lot of people do.
negentropyeater says
All correct, but do you want a speaker who actually believes we shouldn’t really change anything ?
Oh, he’s arguing against the loonies but what is he actually proposing to do to make sure there are way less loonies, when he can’t even tell the American people that they’ve got the highest percentage of loonies of all developped nations ?
I’ve listened to Miller several times now. He won’t change anything. Only somebody who is fundamentally different from him can change things.
Tyr says
I thought Miller did a decent job and its great for even a slight exposure of science in the mainstream media. I’m so weary of the same misunderstandings from otherwise intelligent people. I recommend Dr Stephen Miller’s scientific literacy work to really understand how bad it is out there but there is a silver lining in that SL is improving…
As far as welfare queen I’ve seen it dozens of times and I don’t think black and most people I know back home don’t think black because most of the black people in town were very well educated and highly paid…I think it really depends on where you’re from and the demographics of the area. If you’re from the Pacific Northwest your prejudice will be very different than someone in the south or southern midwest from my personal experience.
It is really irritating when you see some “lady” get a handout twice as large as your handout to go to college while you have a 3.9 gpa and she has a 2.1. It wasn’t until my third year of college and the smart grant that my handout was superior to most of my fellow students even though I had quite a few accolades. The one that pissed me off the most was a family of Sudanese who are pretty cool people but they have a brand new mercedes and bring in 60k+ a year from investments and a share in the International Cafe down the street and they actually received more aid than I with a completely full ride. At least I get free coffee whenever I go in after I helped their cousin with his Calculus homework…doesn’t quite even things up though:)
minimalist says
Yeah, I guess Colbert’s character is quite a lot like Alan Partridge (“The Daily Mail is, arguably, the finest newspaper in the English language”). I find them both hilarious, but that’s my opinion. Colbert applies it to much more topical satire, though, a bit similar to Brass Eye but much more tame.
Slacks says
I like Miller. He is pro-science and charismatic, which are characteristics we need in people cheer leading science on national T.V., despite any relatively small flaws one could think up.
I don’t think I have to remind you how dismal the numbers look re: the % of american public whom do not accept evolution, or that we went to the moon, or any host of other sciencey stuff. We need all the help we can get.
bunnycatch3r says
We need to be supportive of professor Miller. He’s trying to popularize evolution and more importantly science. I’m sure he realizes that this will earn him disrespect in the science community but he does it anyway. Thank you Dr Myers for placing this in your blog.
Jesse, Dallas says
Reading the comments, I’m surprised how critical everyone is being. I thought he did great.
He kept Colbert off balance through most of the interview and was able to say the bulk of his message. That alone is a feat. I think he actually did manage to “out-Colbert Colbert” a few times (the opening and the ‘welfare queen’ comment).
Lynnai says
I preffer Daily to Colbert, it’s a very fine line to walk; ’cause even if he’s only pretending to be a pillock you’re still left watching a pillock. Daily is pretty similar but is a bit gentler with his guests so you get to hear what they say a bit more.
Carlie says
I also thought he did a good job in the time, space, and place he had. I saw all of the cliches as him doing the Colbert schtick,trying to be over the top so as to play up to the Colbert ultra-retro conservative character. He’s not the only guest to have gone that route, and it works pretty well when they’re both “on”. Colbert’s character has no good way to reject what the guest is advocating when he’s being directly pandered to like that, and Colbert seems to enjoy the challenge of trying to figure out what to say in response. I also thought he got a few pretty long statements in, given the way Colbert interviews. When he agrees with a guest he gives them a decent amount of space; when it’s someone he really doesn’t like, he doesn’t let them finish a single sentence.
Kel says
He did his job and he handled Colbert very well. Though it seems like preaching to the converted but I suppose any airtime dedicated to real scientists is better than none.
Costanza says
Re 13
“…and how they are taught in academia.” If by “academia” you mean the entire educational enterprise, then OK. Usually the term is reserved for the collegiate levels. In that case then, the intent of the Creationists is far more pernicious, aiming at the K – 12 crowd. In this case, teachers, usually possessing only an education degree (preemptive apologies here) simply do not have enough exposure in the subject matter at a sufficiently high level to be prepared for this kind of (often) subtle attack.
Norman Doering says
I think Miller got one thing right, he saw them going through labels, “creationism,” then “scientific creationism,” then “Intelligent Design(TM)”… and the next label they use could be “Evolution.” They’re already pushing a straw-man version of it. Soon it will be “Evolution is how the Christian God upgrades our design… it’s in the Bible, the flood (mass extinctions)… lots of death in the Bible… gradual change (mote the two different sets of ten commandments or even the gradual changes in the two different creation stories in Genesis…”
JakeR says
Get a grip, folks. Miller was using Colbert’s rhetoric to show that even the righties who don’t get that Colbert is a satirist would agree with Miller’s propositions. He didnt’ fail at out-Colberting Colbert, he succeeded wildly.
amk says
Black #15
Hey, I was going to plug Altemeyer! That’s my job!
The sheeple who accept creationism are submitting to religious authorities. Those who are leading the sheeple may be cynically exploiting them.
amk says
BlackBlakeWoops.
SC says
I’m open to the he-was-trying-to-out-Colbert-Colbert idea (tentatively, as I know nothing of Miller’s politics). If this was the strategy, though, I think it failed, and that the welfare-queen analogy was inexcusable even as humor. I may be alone in that, though.
Anyway, I just returned home after an eventful day at the hospital. Went in for a routine procedure, during which I fainted, and the next thing I knew I was on a stretcher on my way to the emergency room for an EKG. (It was fine, and I have two more new words for the day: “vasovagal” and “syncope.”) As a delicate friggin’ flower, I’m not up to a debate, so I’ll give Miller the benefit of the doubt for the moment.
P.S. Mass General is a wonderful hospital with committed, caring people. I highly recommend it.
negentropyeater says
Hey SC, I’ve had recurrent episodes of vasovagal syncopes. Trigger : blood donation
Very anoying.
Orson Zedd says
My dad got pissed when I tried to explain Miller’s point. Of course, his definition of science is God, while mine exists.
Steven Sullivan says
[QUOTE]What a pair of pillocks.
Translation, please.[/QUOTE]
translation: some Brit is clueless about The Colbert Report.
[QUOTE]negentropyeater, Colbert is a comedian who acts as if he were some C**lt*r or Limbaugh type, but in fact parodizes them. [/QUOTE]
Exactly. I do wish people would do a *little* research before they pontificate and condemn.
ngong says
Over at Uncommon Descent they’ve got an article bemoaning Miller’s notion of “truth and beauty” in evolution. The concluding sentence: If this is truth and beauty, please give me lies and ugliness.
lostn says
I wish this buffoon would stop interrupting his guests. At many points Ken Miller actually had something interesting to say that I wanted to hear, but this moron kept cutting him off. He does that to all his guests. He’s very egocentric. I don’t know how anyone can stand Colbert. He’s the most overrated guy on TV.
Kel says
It’s called satire, and he does it brilliantly.
Emmet Caulfield says
The “buffoon” is a comedian who parodies Bill O’Reilly. The show is a cutting and award-winning satire of right-wing political pundits. It was not a “real” interview.
lostn says
“The “buffoon” is a comedian who parodies Bill O’Reilly. The show is a cutting and award-winning satire of right-wing political pundits. It was not a “real” interview.”
I’ve seen many clips of Colbert’s interview. Let me just say,
not once have I ever found this “comedian” funny.
Hell, I’d rather watch O’reilly, if only marginally. What’s the point in having guests if you want to be the only star? O’reilly at least lets you finish a sentence sometimes.
Kel says
Each to their own I suppose.
Unless you are even more egocentric than the character Corbert is playing then don’t make statements like this if you don’t want the answer. Some people here think the show is a brilliant parody of the right-wing talk shows. If you can’t stand him, it doesn’t make anyone else’s opinion less valid, especially on the subjective matter. Don’t take the show seriously, it’s on the comedy channel, not C-Span.
Geoff says
^ What Kel said.
RT NZ says
That turd colbert has certainly turned ignorance into an art form. Was that xtian comedy? Might have worked if he was a comedian.
lostn says
Unless you are even more egocentric than the character Corbert is playing then don’t make statements like this if you don’t want the answer. Some people here think the show is a brilliant parody of the right-wing talk shows.
Why do you assume I don’t want the answer? Sorry if I hurt your feelings, but I do.
If you can’t stand him, it doesn’t make anyone else’s opinion less valid, especially on the subjective matter. Don’t take the show seriously, it’s on the comedy channel, not C-Span.
So if I don’t know something, it means I make other people’s opinions less valid? Shit, I don’t how or why people believe in obvious nonsense like homeopathy, ESP, zombie jews, and stuff like that too. Colbert is to me just another one of those things I don’t understand.
Get a grip.
Kel says
You put yourself in a position where you ask for an explanation then deride the explanation when it comes. That’s just pathetic.
Nick Gotts says
Steven Sullivan@74 As the clueless Brit in question, I might have realised Colbert was supposed to be a comedian if I had seen or heard anything funny.
SC says
Nick Gotts,
lostn, RT NZ, and Steven Sullivan may be morons/trolls, but do at least watch a few full episodes of the Colbert Report online at Comedy Central before you pass final judgment. It’s funny. Very funny.
DLC says
Have to admit I don’t watch Colbert much.
However, it can be hard for someone not acquainted with his style to think he’s being an obnoxious jerk when in fact his jerkiness is a sham.
Sometimes I wish people communicated using checksums. . .
Nick Gotts says
SC@86,
RT NZ and lostn seem to agree with me! I’m only very slightly offended by Steven Sullivan’s assumption that anyone who is not familiar with a particular US TV show (I’d guess this might apply to RT NZ as well) is “clueless” – just standard OWHITUSAC syndrome. I’m quite prepared to believe Colbert is funny, if you are familiar with what he’s satirising – but oddly enough, as a leftist Brit, I don’t watch right-wing US talk shows! I don’t in fact have access to Comedy Central, though I guess I could do if I paid for it. I do wonder, though, what proportion of Colbert’s audience watch him as just another right-wing talk show. There used to be a UK sitcom called “Till death us do part”, of which the central character was a grotesque bigot called Alf Garnett. The writer, Johnny Speight, intended Garnett to be laughed at, but it became clear that many of the audience were laughing with him. I think Garnett was trans-Atlanticised as Archie Bunker.
Walton says
Well, I’m a Brit and I still watch and enjoy the Colbert Report (admittedly, I find the satire funny because I’m also very familiar with shows such as the O’Reilly Factor and Hannity and Colmes).
I enjoyed this segment very much and agreed with virtually everything Professor Miller said, especially towards the end where he explained how the Bible is a spiritual guide not a textbook of science, and trying to treat Genesis as a scientific theory is both bad science and bad religion.
negentropyeater says
Steven Sullivan,
And what kind of little research is necessary ? I’ve watched Colbert about 20 or 30 times, is that sufficient ? You think I don’t know who Colbert is, what he does, his style, how could I have forgotten his keynote at the White House Correspondent’s dinner, and Bush’s reaction ?
It’s always the same thing, if someone makes a comment that you don’t like, assume he is ignorant.
Still, you do not answer my question, actually nobody answered my question, did Miller mean the things he said ?
– regarding science as the enemy would be downright “anti-american”
– america has become the “greatest scientific nation in the world” because it didn’t allow for any governement interference
– americans have this great quality that scientists have, the ability to disregard what the establishment says : “a culture of disrespect”
So, please read my comments 49, 53, 57 and see if you care to come up with an opinion, instead of tacitly assuming that I’m ignorant about Colbert.
Monado says
I stayed up to watch it and admired the way Miller soldiered on in the face of Colbearrrrr’s interruptions. He does a finely tuned parody of right-wing rhetoric. The “welfare queen” remark didn’t faze me too much as I’m used to hearing companies called “corporate welfare bums” and I did not connect it to race. Are you guys being too sensitive? It sounds to me as if you’re the ones jumping to conclusions. Miller got in quite a few complete statements in spite of the Colbert format.
SC says
Monado,
See Janine ID’s link @ #40.
negentropyeater says
Monado,
colbert is the comedian, he’s doing the parody of right-wing rethoric. Ok ?
But what about Miller, is he also playing into the parody, when he talks about “anti-american attitude”, “america has become the greatest scientific nation in the world because it didn’t allow for any governement interference”, “americans have this great quality that scientists have, the ability to disregard what the establishment says”, … ? Is that also parody ?
SC says
negentropyeater,
I just skimmed through the Amazon page about Miller’s new book, and what I’ve been able to glean from that makes it very clear that he was not trying to be humorous and that he really does believe the things he said. I don’t know if the welfare-queen analogy appears in the book, but it doesn’t look like it would be out of place there.
windy says
Colbert’s guest from yesterday also professed American exceptionalism, that the ‘little guy’ has a chance to succesfully challenge the government in court and this is “unlike any other country on earth”.
negentropyeater says
SC,
I found it strange when people who can’t separate Colbert’s obvious parody from Miller, and then accuse me of being an ignorant fool who should do a little research about Colbert.
Well, they should do a little research about Miller then.
SC says
And that remarkably ignorant claim elicited a hearty round of patriotic applause. *sigh*
frog says
To all Non-Americans: please understand that a very large (preponderant) section of the American population, from the bottom to the top including the intelligentsia, are trapped in a delusion about ourselves that is similar to early 20th century British ideas about the “White Man’s Burden”.
Yes, we are (as a group) insane. It’s common among hegemons, and we don’t appear to yet have had our Orwell to straighten us out – very few Americans can even understand Orwell, not for intellectual but for mythological reasons. We actually do believe the Cowboy myth – for most of us, it’s not ironic, but a real self-delusion (excepting the few cowboys in N. Dakota who actually are cowboys).
But then again, note how often Brits come and comment still believing in the White Man’s Burden, half a century after getting your asses kicked all over the world. We’re not the only insane ones…
I doubt that Miller was trying to out-parody Colbert, unless he’s really bad at the wink-and-nod. He’s just a “manly man” — aka, nuts like the rest of us. He may be no Harvey Mansfield, but the T. Roosevelt image came to mind.
Uber says
I’m reading Millers book right now and it’s ok. He equates science and religion as ‘truths’ which is annoying and makes me wonder how daft he really is to say something so silly but it’s an interesting read. But not great.
ngong says
And that remarkably ignorant claim elicited a hearty round of patriotic applause. *sigh*
Hot damn! It took 97 posts before someone got around to critiquing the audience.
JJ says
# 75 – I think they have done a pretty good job of giving us lies and ugliness. The “welfare queens” is not in Miller’s book. He mentioned “intelluctual welfare” on Science Friday, when describing the “strengths and weaknesses” strategy of the creos. I thought the “intelluctual welfare” comment was funny and true.
Sanguinity says
For those who objected to the “welfare queen” remark, ColorLines is organizing a write-in campaign asking Dr. Miller to stop using the analogy.
SC says
Thanks, Sanguinity. Your link doesn’t work, but I found it:
http://www.racewire.org/archives/2008/07/kenneth_miller_compares_propon_1.html