Facebook and MySpace Censorship

While at the gym, I read on the news that employers and schools are censoring people’s use of MySpace and Facebook. Some are also using these websites to refuse or terminate employment or admission. In addition some employers and schools are forcing employees or students to modify or remove their pages on these websites. This is another example of how the boundaries between personal life and professional life continue to blur in the United States. The primary question should be: does or could this person effectively carry out work tasks? This unfortunately is not the top priority of those people in organizations who have an unhealthy fixation on “professionalism.” Similar to a Dimitri Martin skit that goes something like “A lot of people don’t like bumper stickers. I don’t mind bumper stickers. They are a shortcut for me to know that we will never be friends.,” I don’t mind people who express their unproductive fixation on professionalism. It is a shortcut for me to know that they likely add little to the work or school environment (at least based on my experience with those who professionalize professionalism). One of my favorite quotes sums up the professionalism problem quite well. “Image is halfway around the block before substance has its shoes on.” I have found that professionalists’ arguments lack depth, though the promoters of the ideas seem to believe that the scope of professionalism is unbounded. The professionalists plan to reduce all of the variability of not only the work place but also of life in its entirety. I have found it interesting that the professionalists are more than happy to prescribe actions to others. However, when one questions the professionalists means or ends, a person is labeled as unprofessional—or lacking social value. The professionalist movement is an unhealthy extension of the unenlightened bureaucracy. When bureaucracies destroy diversity, they cannot contribute new ideas or products. Their expansion therefore inevitably reaches a point of obsolescence. As bureacracies grow with little to no variability, they also grow beyond their realistic scope. When no one can question or act in discord with a bureaucracy, the bureaucracy not only damages itself but also damages society as a whole. I encourage the professionalists to focus more on work product than on people’s personal lives. Many of the geniuses throughout the centuries would not meet the current professionalists’ standards. Do we want more Albert Einstein-s, Mark Twain-s, Vincent Van Goghs, Marie Curie-s, Amelia Earhart-s etc. in the work place? The professionalists apparently do not.

Heroism in Fantasy and Reality

Everyone needs a break from their day-to-day reality.  Varying environments and experiences seems to be a necessary condition for living a satisfying life.  Some people go on vacation.  Other people go to spas.  Some cycle, run, or read.  Still others play videogames.  My commentary today will focus on those who play videogames.  Videogames typically have a story line that puts the player into the role of saving someone or something from some “evil.”  Every three year or so, I like to play videogames for a few months as a break from day-today realities.  I perceive gaming to be a cost effective break (e.g., gaming=$200/yr versus vacation=$2,000/wk).  From the gaming experience, I have found that being a hero in the realm of fantasy is an actualized rewarding experience for many players.  However, in my real world life, I find that more often than not being a hero is hypothetical reward for many people.  In the real world, many people seem to like the idea of being a hero, similar to the fantasy of the gaming world.  However, as opposed to the gaming world acting as a hero is rarely actualized, especially with regard to acting as hero across long periods of time (not just saving a cat from a tree on a Thursday in 2001).  If people put as much time into acting as prosocial heroes in the real world as they do in videogames, positive social changes could be brought to fruition.  However, there are of course factors that make “heroing” in the real world less rewarding than in the gaming world (e.g., disempowerment).  Additionally, in the gaming world rewards are quick and relatively simple, which is typically not the case in the real world.  Videogames also help to facilitate gaining rewards with minimal frustration.  We need more real world heroes.

Razors and Laws Regarding Attributions

Hanlon’s Razor:
1a) Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity.
1b) Never assume malice when stupidity will suffice.

Occam’s Razor:
1a) Entities should not be multiplied beyond necessity”.
1b) All other things being equal, the simplest solution is the best.

Grey’s Law:
1a) Any sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice.

Clark’s Law:
1a) Sufficiently advanced cluelessness is indistinguishable from malice.
1b) Sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice.

Religion, Secularism, and Public Health

The Handbook of Religion and Health positioned an examination of the association, or lack thereof, between religion and health. Some contemporary medical, psychological, and public health researchers and practitioners have positioned religiosity and theism (e.g., prayer or church attendance) as a protective factor with regard to health and well-being. The resulting conclusion that religiosity improves one’s health has a salient and meaningful impact on not only people who are religious and/or theistic but also on those who are neither religious nor theistic. By supporting that church attendance improves health, researchers and practitioners tacitly or declaratively exclude nonreligious and/or atheist people from the possibility of maximal health and well-being. Additionally, perspectives on the association between religion and health remain biased. As one example, the author typed “is religion good for your health” (in quotations) into Google and received 3,860 hits– one of which was text by Harold Koenig titled Is Religion Good for Your Health: The Effects of Religion on Physical and Mental Health?. Comparatively, the search term of “is religion bad for your health” resulted in only five hits and no books. Additionally, when the author conducted a review of articles available through the Ovid database on the topic of health education and religion, the results showed similar biases. In the field of health education, religion or theism related articles accounted for 8.03% (1,436/17,887) of published health education articles, whereas non-religion or atheism accounted for 0.13% of articles (24/17,887). In other words, the number of religious/theistic articles was about 60 times greater than non-religious/atheistic articles. The number of religion or theism related health education articles increased from 236 between the years of 1995 and 1998 to 553 between the years of 2003 and 2006. During the same time periods, the number of non-religion or atheism related health education articles increased from two to nine. Furthermore, in 2002, the United States Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine reported that prayer was by far the most common form of complementary and alternative medicine with over 55% of adults in the United States using prayer for health reasons. Additionally, in the United States, faith has increased its impact on policy and politics in recent years (e.g., abstinence until marriage sexuality programs in public schools).

I decided to run some quick analyses regarding the association between religiosity and health. The results were expected to support one of three groups: 1) fundamentalist religionists, 2) fundamentalist atheists/secularists, or 3) liberal religionists who follow the social gospel and secularists/atheists who focus on social determinants of health. The fundamentalist religionist would position that in and of itself religion would have a positive influence on public health, regardless of social determinants of health. The fundamentalist atheist/secularist would position that in and of itself religion would have a negative influence on public health, regardless of social determinants of health. The liberal religionist and secularist/atheist would presume that religion may be associated with social determinants of health and public health, but social determinants of health would attenuate the associate between religion and public health. Four research questions guided the study.

1) Is religiosity associated with health?
2) Is religiosity associated with murder?
3) Is religiosity associated with robbery or burglary?
4) Is religiosity associated with social exclusion?

Methods and Justification

Various data sets and data sources exist to address these research questions. For the sake of simplicity and considering the less research orientated reader, the author chose to use statemaster.com as the data source. Statemaster.com offers various data sets from several data sources on dozens of topics. By using statemaster.com, the reader could quickly access data sets in one location and examine other relationships. As with any research, the use of statemaster.com trades rigor for simplicity, which the author accepts as a limitation for the purpose of this article.

Seven variables were included in the analyses used to address the four research questions; all of the variables were measured at the state level within the United States. Religiosity was measured as the percentage of people within each state who categorized themselves as nonreligious during the American Religious Identification Survey. Health was defined by the state ratings of health as part of the Morgan Quinto Press’ Health Index. Murder was defined in two ways: 1) murder was measured as the per capita rate of homicide by state according to the United States Department of Justice, and 2) murder was defined as the historical per capita rate of completed capital punishments (or carried out death penalties) by each state. The per capita rate of robbery per state, as measured by the United States Department of Justice, defined the robbery variable, and the per capita rate of burglary per state defined the burglary variable. Lastly, social exclusion was defined as states that voted for the defense of marriage act in 2004.

The following research results are based on linear correlations. The analyses were run at the state level, not at the level of individuals within states. There are five types of correlations. First, one variable increases as another variable increases (e.g., as ages increase from birth to 18 years, height increases). Second, one variable decreases while another variable decreases (as caloric intake decreases, weight decreases). Third, one variable decreases while another variable increases (e.g., as number of minutes of aerobic physical activity decreases, weight increases). Fourth, one variable increases while another variable decreases (e.g., as number of minutes of aerobic physical activity increases, weight decreases). Fifth, there is no linear relationship between the two variables (e.g., as SAT scores increase, the college grade point average of Harvard University scholarship students increases). One and two are called positive correlations; three and four are called negative correlations; and five means there is no correlation. A variable is defined as a group of data that has more than one level. Age in years is a variable people have various ages. The number of suns in our solar system is constantly one and therefore not a variable in our solar system. Due to concerns regarding small sample size (i.e., a maximum of 50 states in any given analysis) and interest in increasing power (the ability to find an effect when one is truly present; also known as a hit), the type 1 error rate (the probability of finding an effect when one is truly not present) was set to .10 instead of the more traditional .05. As a result, false alarm would occur in one out ten analyses instead of one out of twenty analyses. Contemporary justifications have also supported using a more liberal type 1 error rate in social science and public health research. Increasing the type 1 error rate decreases the likelihood of missing an effect when an effect is truly present (type 2 error).

Results

1) At the state level, do higher levels of religiosity predict better health?
Higher levels of religiosity do not predict better health at the state level. In fact, the exact opposite association emerges. Higher levels of nonreligiosity were associated with higher levels of health (n=47, correlation=.291, p<.10). In other words, more religious states displayed lower levels of health (correlation=-.291, p<.10). The magnitude of the correlation was +.291 with p value of less than .10 meaning that there was a statistically significant association between religiosity and health at the state level. This correlation would be considered medium or large in magnitude according to Jacob Cohen’s effect size rules of thumb for correlations.

2) At the state level, do higher levels of religiosity predict less murder?
Higher levels of religiosity do not predict lower levels of homicide at the level of the state. Again, the opposite trend is found. Higher levels of nonreligiosity were associated with lower levels of homicide (correlation=-.248), and higher levels of religiosity were associated with higher levels of homicide (correlation=.248), which is medium in magnitude. Additionally, the association between capital punishment (total number of carried out death penalties per capita) and percentage of religiosity was tested. Again, states that have historically reported higher numbers of capital punishment per capita were associated with higher levels of religiosity (correlation=.520), and states with historically lower numbers of capital punishment per capita displayed higher levels of nonreligiosity (correlation=-.520). According to Jacob Cohen’s rules of thumb regarding the effect size of correlation supports that this relationship shows a large effect.

3) At the state level, do higher levels of religiosity predict less robbery and/or less burglary?
With regard to statistical significance, religiosity was not associated with robbery or burglary. However, examination of the trends showed small effect sizes of .103 and .093, respectively. The results again ran in the opposite direction of what would be expected from the religious perspective. Higher levels of religiosity trended towards higher levels of robbery and burglary, and higher levels of nonreligiosity trended toward lower levels of burglary and robbery.

4) At the state level, do higher levels of religiosity predict higher levels of social exclusion?
Using states that voted for the defense of marriage act in 2004 as a proxy for social exclusion, a statistically significant association was found between religiosity and social exclusion. States that displayed higher levels of religiosity were more likely to support social exclusion meaning that states reporting higher religiosity were more likely to support the defense of marriage act (correlation=.317; p<.10), which is a medium to large effect. States reporting less religiosity were more likely to not support social exclusion (i.e., the defense of marriage act). Additional evidence of social exclusion of atheists can be found in the research of the American Mosaic Project. The American Mosaic Project found that atheists are more distrusted and less accepted than other marginalized groups such as people categorized as homosexual, African-American, Muslim, or immigrants. Intolerance toward atheists increased with higher levels of religiosity.

Given the faith-based perspective of some religionists and atheists in the United States, many covariates that a grounded public health researcher would typically include would be neglected. The analyses up to this point simply examined religiosity’s associations with public health outcomes from a fundamentalist perspective that neglected well established impactful variables of the natural world. Moreover, to anyone who has knowledge of public health in the natural world, it would be obvious to include many other variables (e.g., poverty). With the exclusion of obviously important variables such as poverty, religiosity at the state level seems to support the fundamentalist atheist position. The research presented in this article should not be used as evidence of causation but could be used as evidence of associations between religiosity and public health outcomes at the level of the state. Furthermore, in order to avoid the ecological fallacy, data at the state level, as presented in this article, should be interpreted at that level and not at the level of the individual.

Public health researchers and practitioners who inform federal policy based on state level data should continue to focus on the natural world and other social determinants of health to avoid misleading fundamentalist positions. Through examination of the association between per capita poverty rates and religiosity at the state level, one finds that states with higher levels of per capita poverty display higher levels of religiosity (correlation=.271, p<.10). When exploring per capita child poverty and religiosity at the state level, a similar significant trend was found (correlation=.277, p<.10). With the exception of capital punishment, including state level child poverty as a confounding variable in analyses of religiosity and health outcomes significantly attenuates the association between religiosity and health outcomes. For example, the unique variance in the Health Index accounted for by child poverty is 51.7% (semipartial correlation=-.719), whereas the unique variance accounted for by religiosity is only 0.6% (semipartial correlation=.08). Capital punishment is, however, an exception in this research because in the presence of one another both religiosity and child poverty are associated with a significant proportion of the variance in capital punishment. In this case, child poverty explains 25.8% (semipartial correlation=.508) of the variance in capital punishment, and religiosity explains 9.9% (correlation=.315) of the variance in capital punishment. However with the edition of other social determinants of health variables, this association would attenuate as well. These results support the position of the liberal religionist and liberal atheists/secularists.

Public health researchers and practitioners should remain critically objective in addressing the questions of religion and health. David Seedhouse has stated a rather convincing case that health promotion activities are inherently prejudiced, and health promoters’ prejudices often blindly lead them to decisions based more on values than objective evidence. In the case of religion, values and faith guide thought and behavior far more than evidence and reason for fundamentalists. As a result, health promoters should be more not less weary of studies positioning the fundamentalist perspective of the impact of religion. Health promoters must remember that supporting religion as a method of health improvement is only justified if the evidence supports positive health impacts of religion. It is not justified to purport religions health value simply because many people are religious and have faith that religion positively impacts health. To correct for these prejudices, health promoters must undergo a process of self-examination as well as an examination of the field in general.

In closing, in the United States, the message of religion improving health is a more common and more socially compatible position in popular culture than examining negative impacts of religion on health or social determinants of health’s attenuating the effects of religion. As a result of the often one sided position regarding religion and health, atheists and the non-religious suffer further social exclusion and marginalization. Additionally, some of the research findings within this research have also be shown to exist at the level of nations through the research of Phil Zuckerman, which was published in The Cambridge Companion to Atheism. To paraphrase and adapt Maurice Ogden’s poem The Hangman, to enable and reify immoral acts such as implicitly or explicitly supporting harmful and unbeneficial public health programs because it helps you for the moment, does not necessarily save you from a broader net of social exclusion in the future.

Charlatans and Social Injustice

In listening to contemporary fundamentalist Christian religious programming, suffering and submitting are two prominent themes. The third major theme is grace. If a person 1) suffers but does not abandon, betray, deny, forsake, or renounce God and 2) submits to God’s will, regardless of how harmful that will may be, then that person will receive the grace of God. From the contemporary perspective of social justice, however, this reasoning promotes and reinforces unjustified hierarchical relationships and preventable suffering. The people who believe in the aforementioned fundamentalist religious reasoning fall into one of two categories: 1) people who distribute the message then distribute the collection plate, or 2) people for whom the message is salient and are willing to contribute to the collection plate. Additionally, these messages increase, not decrease, the number of sinners. Religious people speak frequently of faith in God, but faith in God does not transfer to faith in those who claim to know and understand God’s thoughts and actions. If God is truly all-knowing, all-seeing, all-benevolent, all-present, and all-powerful, then how could any person speak for God with any reasonable accuracy or respectable utility; unless, of course, they were claiming to be closer to God themselves, which is clear evidence of the most deadly of sins– pride. Additionally, the distributors of these fearful messages commonly engage in other deadly sins such as greed (e.g., collection plates) and wrath (e.g., promoting the Rapture or as one Christian orator said “Only God can put a whoopin’ on them [the nonbelievers]”). The author does not definitively know of the validity or invalidity of the proposed sins or the messages; though based on history the evidence supports that sin has been a changing construct across time and has been used as a method of social control. However, for believers, these sins are real. Given this context, the audience of these Christian orators must also be at least guilty of the sins of envy and sloth. If sin is in fact true, then both the orators of these messages and the audience are guilty of several deadly sins. Karl Marx wrote that “Religioun is the sigh of the oppressed creature…” Why are people currently sighing so loudly and with such fervor? Although the number of non-believers has increased drastically in the United States in the last 15 years so has the number of zealous or fanatical religionists. Why do people have to suffer and feel disempowered to a point where they renounce the natural world and turn solely to the supernatural or more specifically the orators of the supernatural for solace? Marx also wrote that religion “is the opium of the people” and and that religion created the illusion of happiness for the people. When Marx wrote of “the people,” he wrote of the disempowered and impoverished. Marx encouraged destroying the illusions to offer space to reality.  As an aside and to reduce the emotional reaction that some may have to quotes by Karl Mark, keep in mind that Karl Marx explained that he “was not a Marxist.” The reality is that charlatans have taken advantage of the poor and disempowered for centuries, especially when the gospel of prosperity has been more popular than the social gospel as is the case in contemporary American culture.  Although the social gospel had important impacts on public health and empower (e.g., the civil rights movement, establishing hospital and educational opportunities), the gospel of prosperity has tended to divide people, focus on the ego of individual’s, and increase the gap between the empowered and disempowered.  One must understand, however, that unless the charlatans work threatens the wealthy and empowered, the charlatan goes unchecked. By peddling messages of accepting suffering and submission in the natural world, contemporary charlatans receive praise, not scorn, from the wealthy and empowered. In psychology, Seligman wrote on learned helplessness based primarily on experiments with animals receiving chaotic behavioral punishments. The contemporary charlatan adds a cognitive or attributional addition to learned helplessness—sermoned helplessness meaning that the natural world delivers suffering to disempowered people, but the charlatan preaches that the natural world is outside of people’s control and only God’s agency and not their own can change suffering and hierarchical position. The charlatan promises grace when God punishes the infidels. The charlatan explains that America will soon turn into a theocratic dictatorship in which Christians will reign and many people will die at the hands of God. However, in the United States, this model not only displaces democracy but typically misinterprets history as well. The charlatan will explain that America was founded on Christian values. However, a simplistic historical review shows that this is not the case. Thomas Jefferson stated that “Christianity neither is, nor never was a part of the common law.” John Adams declared that “The government of the United States is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion.” One can easily see how the contemporary view of Christianity’s role in the United States drastically differs from the view of those who founded the country. It is unfortunate and shameful how religion is currently being used by some and has been used to promote “sin” instead of reduce it. By sin, I mean acts that clearly offend common sense of reasoned and examined people.  Fundamentalist religion clearly undermines contemporary perspectives of social justice.

Hollywood Movies

I do not believe that many people would categorize me as a conservative person. On one point, however, I agree with some conservatives. Hollywood movies are terrible, but my reasoning behind this statement is different than most conservative people who dislike the Hollywood movie industry. A stereotypical conservative person would say something simplistic, feeble, and unsound such as “Hollywood movies are destroying American values” or “These movies are decimating the morality of our nation’s children.” Review Sunday morning television and/or political campaigns for support of these generalities regarding the conservative perspective on Hollywood. I can summarize the majority of Hollywood movies in two dimensions: 1) tragedy, which includes intentional and unintentional injury and 2) love stories, which are almost always focused on issues of family and/or heterosexual coupling. These dimensions of Hollywood movies are not destroying American values; instead they reflect and reify “conservative American values.” The conservative values system is fairly simple. People are responsible for themselves, but they, of course, need to value traditional family structures and protect their family by killing or suppressing anyone who is perceived to be a threat to their values. How many movies do people need to see regarding the glorification of war or historical events turned into a fiction that makes Harry Potter seem realistic? How many tragedies (e.g., Titanic) do people need to see turned into sophomoric love stories? Hollywood movies are not destroying morality directly, but they are destroying critical thought, discussion, and evaluation, which, in turn, creates a more simplistic and less mindful morality. As an aside, please note that in this rant I have not used the word Republican as a synonym for conservative because they are not necessarily more conservative in thought and action than Democrats. Both groups are rather conservative depending on the issue of the month or year. I perceive the conservative versus liberal argument to be one based on information processing, not on group membership.

Is Social Change Unethical?

In positioning the idea of social change, several health educators have asked me if social change is ethical, with the implicit message being that individual change is either ethical or at least more ethical than social change. Given the mounting evidence supporting the dominance of social determinants of health, I believe that it would be unethical to neglect the importance of social change. Individual change is certainly a safer, more comfortable, and more socially acceptable path in the United States, especially for academicians. However, despite the discomfort and risk in social change, evidence supports that social change would reap more rewards for people who are disadvantaged in disposition and/or situation. I also recognize that individuals must be changed in order to produce social change, and, as result, the process of social change is more complex than individual change. Furthermore, I also believe that many health educators believe that social change is ethical, even though they may perceive social change from a different perspective—e.g., review the tobacco reduction movement.

Beyond Horrendous Death–>Existential Death

Daniel Leviton has positioned the expansion of health education and promotion to include horrendous death.  Horrendous death includes acts of commission and omission.  People either intentionally, either directly or indirectly, commit acts that kill other people, or they unintentionally kill other people.  Daniel Leviton perceives horrendous death as preventable.  Though I agree with Dr. Levition, I would propose an extension of the concept of horrendous death.  The concept of horrendous death as positioned by Dr. Leviton is still biased toward the medicalization of health (morbidity and mortality) thereby focusing on life in contrast to physical death as opposed to focusing on life in contrast to existential opportunity, suffering, and death.  Given the breadth of health and well-being, this is an important shift.  From the perspective of “existential death,” people could suffer various types of death, which include intellectual death, emotional death, social death, physical death, and aspirational death.  Given the contemporary subtleties of oppression, suppression, and repression, it is important to expand the meaning of horrendous death.  In further elaborating on the content and contexts of death, people will also be more capable of preventing horrendous physical death.  Furthermore, the concept of existential death aligns with the contemporary social determinants of health and social justice movement.        

E Pluribus Unum versus In God We Trust

“In God We Trust” was approved as the official motto of the United States on July 30, 1956, during McCarthyism, and, as a result, officially superseded “E Pluribus Unum.”  One can ask, so what, why does this matter?  From a social justice perspective, this shift in motto is very important.  Moving from “E Pluribus Unum,” meaning “From many, one,” to “In God We Trust” has important ramifications regarding social exclusion.  In the same way that Georgia added the Confederate Flag to their State flag in 1956 and South Carolina added the Confederate Flag to the top of the statehouse in 1962, adopting “In God We Trust” as the official motto of the United States has a thinly veiled implicit message.  In God We Trust excludes non-religious, agnostic, and atheist, from the overarching vision of the United States, which is trusting in God.  The motto of “From many, one” was and is more socially inclusive.  E Pluribus Unum shifts the focus to people working together to establish and maintain a united country, whereas In God We Trust is inherently divisive.  Furthermore, In God We Trust is a more passive motto with regard to action of the citizenry.  People are trusting for God to provide and are not necessarily responsible for trusting themselves or the fellow citizens.  The motto of “From one, many” can connect people to themselves, community, country, and God, if preferred.         

Talk Test

In physical activity research, the Talk Test is used to measure physical activity intensity.  A person who is engaged in light physical activity intensity can sing; a person in moderate physical activity intensity can converse but not sing; and a person in vigorous physical activity intensity can neither sing nor converse.  I believe that the Talk Test can be applied to test people’s fundamentalism.  If a person is vigorously a fundamentalist, then they do not want other people to express themselves blatantly and will not participate in conversation.  If a person is a moderate fundamentalist, then they do not want people to blatantly express themselves but will engage in lecture-focused conversation.  If a person is a light fundamentalist, then they do not want people to blatantly express themselves but will engage in reasoned conversation.  If a person is not engaged in fundamentalism, then they want other people to express themselves and will participate in reasoned conversation.