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virgil

More good news today.

In yesterday’s post, I officially acknowledged the Breitbart News website to be “catholic”. Following up today, I have noticed an author writing on this site that goes by the nom de plume of Virgil.

The reason that I bring Virgil to your attention is that he writes on a subject that is very near and dear to my heart. This subject matter has to do with what constitutes a logical, rational thought process.

On an aside, if you recall dear reader, one of the first reasons that I gave for the electability of President Donald J. Trump (… love the way that sounds…) was that I detected in his speeches a rational, logical thought process.

But back to the subject at hand. Today I would like to introduce another phenomenon that has been identified by social scientists, what is known as the Dunning-Kruger effect. Aside, since Stefan Molyneux refered to this effect in a recent video that I linked to here (at the 2:00 minute mark), I feel it is good to explain what this effect actually entails. The following definition appears on the Wikipedia website: (see here)

The Dunning–Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which low-ability individuals suffer from illusory superiority, mistakenly assessing their ability as much higher than it really is. Dunning and Kruger attributed this bias to a metacognitive incapacity, on the part of those with low ability, to recognize their ineptitude and evaluate their competence accurately. Their research also suggests corollaries: high-ability individuals may underestimate their relative competence and may erroneously assume that tasks which are easy for them are also easy for others.[1]

Dunning and Kruger have postulated that the effect is the result of internal illusion in those of low ability, and external misperception in those of high ability: “The miscalibration of the incompetent stems from an error about the self, whereas the miscalibration of the highly competent stems from an error about others

In other words, one can say that these people who fall into this category are too stupid to know how stupid they are.

One manner in which the Dunning-Kruger effect manifests itself with low intelligence, low competence individuals is through their use of faulty logic. Or to put it another way, low intelligence individuals are too stupid to know that they violate the rules of coherent and cogent thought by make these basic mistakes.

A good example of the pervasiveness of the Dunning-Kruger effect in Catholic doctrinal texts can be gauged by a quick reading of say the Francis document Amoris Laetitia (The “Joy of Sex”) and any of the pre-conciliar docs. A good one to compare “Joy of Sex” to would be the Papal Encyclical Pascendi Dominici Gregis.

See what I mean?

Below is the post written by Virgil regarding the Dunning-Kruger effect exhibited in the “FAKE NEWS” legacy media’s obsessive campaign against Steve Bannon. Virgil identifies the logical fallacies and explains how they are used.

Which leaves a dangling question for you dear readers to contemplate: do these presstitutes and their readership know how stupid they are?

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Virgil: The Real Purpose of the Left’s Permanent Campaign Against Steve Bannon

In the past, Virgil has taken note of various Main Stream Media tricks, such as the false “argument from authority” and the “assertion of a false conflict.” 

Well, the MSM is at it again.  This newest trick can be called, “build him up so as to try to knock him down.”  A case in point is the lead editorial in The New York Times on January 31, entitled, “President Bannon?

That editorial was mostly the usual lefty litany of attacks against Stephen K. Bannon, the former executive chairman of Breitbart News, now serving in the White House as President Donald Trump’s Chief Strategist.  Indeed, the utter familiarity of the anti-Bannon attacks makes Virgil conclude that Times writers must think that Times readers never get tired of reading the same “golden oldie” re-runs. 

However, there was one thing new in that latest attack. And that was the headline, “President Bannon?”  Even people a lot younger than old Virgil can plainly see what the Times was trying to do here; namely, build Bannon up into sort of giant existential threat.  In this telling, he’s a threat not only to liberalism, but also, a threat to the constitutional order of the Republic.  The good-liberal reader is thus supposed to think to himself or herself, “Steve Bannon is bad enough.  But President Bannon?  Yikes!” 

The short-term goal is to provoke ever more outrage from anti-Bannon readers.  And the long-term goal, of course, is to somehow knock out Bannon, as a way of somehow knocking out President Donald Trump.

The latest flashpoint of MSM angst is Bannon’s participation in the National Security Council (NSC).  On January 28, President Trump issued a 2200-word memorandum outlining his update to the structure of the NSC; it’s typical for any  new president to do this at the beginning of his term.

In the course of all the legalese, the new presidential document assigned Bannon a place on the “Principals Committee” of the NSC.  That is, Bannon will participate in NSC deliberations—under the direction, of course, of the President.  Other members of the NSC include Vice President Mike Pence (who is to preside over NSC meetings in the President’s absence), the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, as well as six others, including Bannon.  In addition, another half-dozen senior figures in the government are mentioned as frequent, or likely, participants.  In other words, the most that one can say is that Bannon is one of ten regular “Principals,” and nearly a score of total attendees.  

And yet since the MSM mantra is All Anti-Bannon All The Time, obedient journos have gone into overdrive.  For example, veteran MSM-er Jonathan Alter, a fixture on MSNBC, has tweeted:

Breaking: obscure law requires Sen confirmation for WH aide like Bannon to serve on NSC. 50 U.S. Code § 3021  

Wow.  Citing an exact legal code makes Alter’s claim sound so official.  But then, a lot of fake news sounds official. 

Yet as Jack Landman Goldsmith–who served as a high-level appointee in the Bush 43 Justice and Defense Departments, and is now a professor at Harvard Law School—tweeted in response:

Bannon is not on the NSC.   Order says he is invited to attend as non-statutory attendee.  Lots and lots of people not on NSC attend.

Goldsmith has it right: According to federal law—the National Security Act of 1947, as amended—the National Security Council, and also, the more recent Homeland Security Council, have a very few “statutory” members; that is, formal memberships, enumerated in the underlying statute.  And nothing that Trump decided last week changes that; such a change would require an act of Congress.  

In other words, while Bannon certainly has a high position in the Trump White House, he has no statutory role in the NSC.  He is not, for example, in any way a part of the National Chain of Command; that’s another matter of statute.  Bannon is simply a valued member of the President’s team—and we all already knew that. 

And yet the reality of the situation notwithstanding, the Times went to work.  In that editorial, “President Bannon?” the purported newspaper of record attempted to whip Bannon’s elevated role into some sort of coup d’etat:

A new executive order, politicizing the process for national security decisions, suggests Mr. Bannon is positioning himself not merely as a Svengali but as the de facto president.

Got that, Times readers?  Bannon isn’t merely some sort of wickedly hypnotic figure, he’s on his way to being the “de facto president.”  

As we have seen, there’s not a scintilla of truth to any of this, but as we have also seen, the Times loves re-runs.  And with that in mind, the editorial made the same fallacious point a second time: 

While Mr. Trump long ago embraced Mr. Bannon’s politics, he would be wise to reconsider allowing him to run his White House.

You get the idea: “de facto president,” “run his White House.”  As they say, sometimes a falsehood, repeated often enough, becomes persuasive—at least that’s the result that the Times is striving towards.  This repetitive technique is sometimes called “The Big Lie.”  Or, as Virgil likes to say, magnum mendacium.  

Of course, the Times is hardly alone on the Bannon-bashing bandwagon; right now, a hashtag campaign on Twitter, #StopPresidentBannon, is going full blast. 

Indeed, much of the MSM is joining in this attempted stampede.  Here, for example, is a headline from the liberal-leaning Beltway publication, Foreign Policy: “Steve Bannon Is Making Sure There’s No White House Paper Trail, Says Intel Source: The Trump administration’s chief strategist has already taken control of both policy and process on national security.”  Got that?  The goal of all this reportorial alarmism is to make you afraid, very afraid.

In this instance, the supposed issue of import is NSC record-keeping.  Given that the Trump administration is not even two weeks old, it’s unlikely that any sort of precise precedent for records has been established, and yet that didn’t stop reporter Kate Brannen from declaring, “The lack of a paper trail documenting the decision-making process is also troubling.” 

Brannen’s source for all this ominousness, we might add, was an “intelligence official.”  Ah yes, the ever-unnamed “intelligence official,” always ready to give a reporter a juicy anti-Trump quote.  We might note that is the modus operandi of the Deep State.  In the past, Virgil has chronicled the Deep State’s effort against the Trump administration, as well as, of course, the MSM campaign waged against Bannon.  So this latest is just another blast from the Deep State, dutifully trumpeted by the MSM.    

Amusingly, that Foreign Policy article held up the Bush 43 administration as the gold standard of NSC paper-trailing.  That might be a source of amusement—albeit bitter amusement—for those who remember the follies of, for example, the Iraq War.   And yet for veterans of that vainglorious conflict, and for the families of the fallen and the wounded, it’s no comfort to know that the Bush NSC was careful to write up a thorough “summary of conclusions” after every meeting.  The rest of us, too, can quickly see: the critical issue is the quality of the decision, not the quantity of the paperwork.

Yet as we know by now, the MSM attacks—grabbing any available hammer, no matter how ridiculous—will never stop.  The same Foreign Policy, we might add, made ample room on the same day for another hit-piece, this one from dedicated #NeverTrumper Max Boot:  “President Bannon’s Hugely Destructive First Week in Office: The puppet master is leading the Trump administration down a road of carnage.”  For his part, Virgil has always figured that hardcore supporters of the Iraq War, such as Boot, ought to be a little more circumspect before throwing around phrases such as “road to carnage.”  

Still, the real issue isn’t Bannon.  Instead, the real issue is Trump.  And Foreign Policy gave that game away in yet another story, headlined, “3 Ways to Get Rid of President Trump Before 2020.”  That piece, written by Rosa Brooks, a former under secretary of defense in the Obama administration, semi-approvingly raises the idea—Virgil kids not—of a military coup d’etat against Trump.  

Okay, so Brooks is showing a high degree of kookiness that should forever disqualify her from future public service.  And yet, of course, the Trump administration is young, and so there’s plenty of time for other “progressives” to join Brooks’ extremity. 

Meanwhile, the rest of us can watch these antics with a combination of bewilderment and bemusement.  The only thing we should always bear in mind is that the MSM’s real target is Trump.