• More stupidity from the Biden administration

    From digimaus@618:618/1 to All on Mon Dec 16 15:25:06 2024
    [ The Biden administration knows no bounds to its stupidity. ]

    From: https://shorturl.at/c8PD5 (westernjournal.com)

    ===
    Biden Orders Gov't Org Responsible for Weather Forecasts to Use 'Special' Indian
    Knowledge

    By C. Douglas Golden
    December 15, 2024 at 9:00am

    "The mission of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
    is to provide daily weather forecasts, severe storm warnings, climate
    monitoring to fisheries management, coastal restoration, and the
    supporting of marine commerce."

    That's a pretty straightforward mission. In fact, it's right there on the
    homepage of the NOAA on the U.S. Department of Commerce's website, which
    administers the weather forecasting service. Its job should be dry,
    scientific and factual in nature.

    But, leave it to the outgoing administration of President Joe Biden to
    decide that the folks in charge of tracking storms and forecasting whether
    it'll rain or snow needed a bit of "Indigenous Knowledge" injected into
    it.

    According to a Tuesday report from the Washington Free Beacon, the effort
    is what writer Joseph Simonson described "as part of a last-minute push in
    the federal government to embrace what scientists call pseudoscience.

    "NOAA is excited to team up with the American Indian Higher Education
    Consortium to accelerate information-sharing aimed at building climate
    resilience, adaptation and co-production of knowledge in communities
    across the United States and tribal nations," said NOAA Administrator Rick
    Spinrad in a media release.

    "Indigenous Knowledge has made it possible for Indigenous Nations to
    persist and thrive for millennia. These knowledge systems are needed more
    than ever to inform NOAA and our nation's approach to environmental
    stewardship."

    "The American Indian Higher Education Consortium is honored to partner
    with NOAA to collaborate on shared goals and issues," said Ahniwake Rose,
    AIHEC president and CEO.

    "This collaboration will create opportunities for our faculty and
    students, combine Indigenous Knowledge with western science to achieve
    strong climate resilience for our tribal nations and across the country
    and empower our tribal colleges and universities to be leaders in the
    ongoing response to climate change."

    Now, most of these NOAA/AIHEC agenda items are vague box-checking items
    that sound a whole lot like gobbledygook that looks good on a website.
    Talk of how the agreement would "empower our tribal colleges and
    universities to be leaders in the ongoing response to climate change" is
    basically woke lorem ipsum stuff for these kinds of media releases.

    Is "indigenous knowledge" simply another way for the left to eat away at
    Western culture?

    However, there were a few phrases in there that, if you paid close
    attention in between the wokespeak, didn't exactly augur well for how this
    will impact the NOAA.

    For instance, the release talks about how the agreement would "advance
    Indigenous Knowledge, science, technology, education and workforce
    training opportunities." One of the bullet points of how this would have
    an affect is in "[i]dentifying western science and Indigenous Knowledge
    priorities for the AIHEC."

    That may sound vague enough, but it's not.

    "`Indigenous Knowledge' is a discredited belief system posting that
    native-born peoples possess an innate understanding of how the universe
    works," Simonson noted in his piece.

    "While scientists have referred to its ideas as `dangerous' and a
    rejection of the scientific method, those criticisms have not stopped the
    Biden administration from ordering the federal government to consider
    `Indigenous Knowledge' when implementing rules and regulations.

    "President Joe Biden issued a memo in November 2022 that directed more
    than two dozen federal agencies to apply `Indigenous Knowledge' to
    `decision making, research, and policies,'" Simonson continued. "The memo
    called on agencies to speak with `spiritual leaders' and reject
    `methodological dogma.'"

    Considering that forecasting whether it's going to rain cats and dogs or
    whether the sun will shine brightly requires a whole lot of
    "methodological dogma," that is indeed an issue.

    And what "Indigenous Knowledge" are we going to consider at the NOAA?
    Because, the Partnership With Native Americans noted in a 2017 article,
    the rain dance is still a thing among many indigenous American Indian
    tribes.

    "As a Lakota, I always found it stereotypical when asked about the rain
    dance. In all my life, I had never heard of any rain dance taught in
    Lakota culture. Why? Because, we don't practice it. The assumption of the
    practice still persists, however, and it's worth investigating where this
    idea originated," the writer noted.

    "It was only recently, for instance, that I learned the rain dance is
    actually a fairly common practice among southern tribes. These tribes
    typically reside in dry climates, where water is essential to life, making
    it something of a cornerstone in those cultures. Rain, specifically water,
    is important to sustaining life for all communities, but for some this
    precious resource is scarce."

    "One of the tribes that practices the rain dance still today is the
    Ohlone, located in a small town in the southern central part of
    California. And in a small town, it is said, `when you call a rain dance,
    word gets around.' In Ohlone culture, the dance is greatly respected, with
    pure intent and high significance. After a three-year drought, they
    attributed the returning rain to their dances."

    Will the NOAA be holding discussions with the Ohlone? After all, this is
    part of the body of "Indigenous Knowledge," which encompasses a wide
    variety of cultures and traditions we lump under the aegis of "Native
    American." Who's to say that tribes which place a strong emphasis on
    traditions that use rain dances or whose views on the environment are
    entwined with animism, say, have believes that are less valid than the
    Lakota, who don't practice those things?

    I mean, aside from the fact that it's entirely unscientific - but then
    again, "Indigenous Knowledge," if scientific, is simply "knowledge."
    Western culture managed to figure that out on its own, in fact. That means
    there's no need for any sort of partnership - unless, of course, the whole
    idea is to eat away at Western culture.

    So is this just woke posturing, or are we going to see Jim Cantore
    consulting an Ohlone elder/NOAA surrogate on the Weather Channel the next
    time a hurricane makes landfall?

    Enquiring minds want to know - but either way, it's a fitting manner for
    this wretched administration to go out on.
    ===

    -- Sean

    ... War never decides who is right, only who is left.
    --- MultiMail/Linux
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Johnson City, TN (618:618/1)