Evidence
It’s bizarre how often Americans are forced to prove themselves.
You must have a full-time job to prove that you are worthy of health care.
You must take on crippling debt to prove that you deserve a college education.
If you’re a woman, you must prove that you understand your own body.
If you’re an immigrant, you must prove that you love this country better than people who are born here.
If you’re homeless, you must prove that you are drug-free to get housing (even if the exact opposite approach works better).
It goes on and on. But you’ll be glad to know that there are exceptions to all this proving.
For example, if you’re a lunatic millionaire racist who led the country into unprecedented disaster, you deserve another chance.
Also, if you’re a toddler in Missouri, you can openly carry a gun in the street. We trust you.
Yes, Americans seem like a skeptical bunch, always demanding proof. But they are actually quite discerning about what requires evidence.
For example, most Americans emphatically believe there is a man in the sky who controls the universe, despite the fact that he has never revealed himself.
They are mixed, however, on the whole concept of climate change, despite vast amounts of solid data obtained over decades
They may or may not believe that vaccines cause autism, or that covid exists, or that JFK is actually alive and working to overthrow a vast conspiracy run by lizard people. Really, millions of Americans believe that last one.
And still the contradictions mount.
Consider that many people think Biden stole the election (despite the absence of evidence), but these same individuals refuse to believe that giving people money or free food helps alleviate poverty (despite an abundance of evidence).
Of course, it doesn’t help that we are deeply suspicious of how poor people spend their cash, even while bursting with admiration for wealthy jerks who blow obscene amounts of money on egotistic endeavors and grotesque trivialities. There is quick judgment for what a poor person puts in her grocery cart, but foot-kissing praise for billionaires who spend the equivalent of Denmark’s GDP on themselves.
Other beliefs similarly defy reason.
For example, a high percentage of Americans believe that racism is dead, except if it’s directed at white people. But they also believe in blatant racist stereotypes so strongly that it affects public policy.
Yes, American life is a strange combination of superstition, illogical thinking, and skewed beliefs that are mixed with vociferous demands for objective proof that is usually ignored.
For many of us, there will never be enough evidence to change our minds.
And that’s a fact.
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