I am now living into my fourth generation. When I was born
in 1931, Herbert Hoover was still President of the United States. I grew up in New York City during the Great
Depression when a subway ride or a hot dog at Nedick’s was five cents. During
World War II in public school I collected tin foil, rubber bands, and
newspapers for the war effort. My second generation began with the birth of the
United Nations and the start of the Cold War. It led in turn to a wave of
hysteria about Communist influence on American life. The witch hunt for current and former
Communists made me nervous. My oldest brother
quit the Communist Party when the Lysenko Controversy erupted. As an undergraduate
at NYU, I associated with fellow students of the Beat Generation. I left New
York for Indiana University and learned to be a geneticist. Some of my high
school classmates were killed in the Korean War. My second generation came to a
close at UCLA where I witnessed the first Peace Corps volunteers and students who
registered African American voters in Mississippi. Our children formed the Baby Boom generation.
The 60’s were transforming and I shifted my emphasis to teaching non-majors
biology courses. My third generation was mostly lived while teaching at Stony
Brook University on Long Island in New York State. It was an age of greed, the
pursuit of wealth, the tearing down of the New Deal that Presidents Roosevelt
and Johnson had built. We became the world’s policeman or bully depending on your
politics. We became a nation of winners and losers, makers and takers, patriots
or subversives. There was no middle
ground and the middle class was disappearing.
My fourth generation began as we entered the twenty-first century. I retired. I shifted to full time
writing. We moved to Indiana to enjoy
its university setting and opportunities to enjoy its theater, libraries, music
performances, and ease of access and cost. After 9/11 and the endless wars of a
nation engorged with armaments waiting to be used, we are still trying to
define ourselves. We can smash armies that
are well armed but we are stymied by terrorists, guerrillas who melt into the
jungles, and an amorphous enemy of uncertain size, location, and objectives,
partly created by our own failed international policies which reflect our own
domestic shift towards a plutocracy dictating legislation favoring the wealthy.
The two iconic images of these four generations are the bombing of Pearl Harbor
that inspired what some call “the greatest generation” in our fight against
fascism and 9/11 which sadly inspired fear, lashing out at the wrong enemies,
the loss of privacy, the shift to the perpetual military state, the crushing of
labor unions, the demeaning of liberals, the rejection of science, and a
contempt for teachers and scholars.
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
Monday, September 1, 2014
WHY IS WHAT I AM READING NOT MAJOR NEWS?
While in Ocean Grove, New Jersey,
my sister-in-law gave me three articles to read that a friend of hers
recommended. My sister in law is the
widow of Congressman Ted Weiss (D., NY) so she likes to keep informed. One article was from the Harvard Business Review and the other two were from Forbes magazine. These are not left-leaning magazines. They discussed what went wrong with the last
market collapse and why the gap between the rich (the 1%) and the poor (the
bottom 10%) has been widening. I consider
myself poorly informed about economics.
I try to be a Platonic liberal arts thinker who avoids mundane things
like making money, investing, or admiring those who amass personal fortunes.
But I listen to a lot of news commentary on cable TV and this story has not
been explained with the detail and clarity these three articles convey.
The Harvard Business Review article was by William Lazonick, a
professor at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell [“Profits without prosperity”]. He argues that our inequality gap was largely
due to a policy of “buying back” the stock of one’s own company to drive up the
value of the stock. Why this is not seen
by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as manipulating the stock
market is a puzzle to me, but It is apparently legal (loop holes generally
are). This short term gain is offset by
using the increased value to pay executives and major shareholders generous salaries,
bonuses, and returns. But it is not used
to invest in expanded business, research and development, or salary increases for
the vast number of employees whose higher productivity made the initial high
value of the company’s stock. Lazonick argues
that corporations use the credo that the purpose of a corporation is to
maximize stock value. He argues that the
function of a company is to make a useful and desired product. The higher stock value should be a consequence
of the sales of those products. The Forbes editorial comments supported
Lazonick’s thesis and warned that if the gap continues to widen and if the
wealth generated by a company does not go into the processes that benefit the
long term interests of a company, there will be a collapse of massive
proportions when the over-inflated bubble bursts. Corporate boards do not usually take up this
issue because its members are usually fellow CEOs who benefit from such
inflated salaries and bonuses.
What puzzles me is the relatively
scant discussion of the “buy back” policy, the lack of curiosity by the press
to go after the SEC, major corporations, and congressional supporters of this
dangerous policy that the Forbes articles described as a “negative Ponzi scheme.”
The “buy back” practice depletes funds
from the company, puts a lid on worker pay raises, reduces or eliminates health
and retirement benefits, and shifts the burden of stagnant or reduced worker
income to the taxpayer. This leads to
worker discontent and loss of loyalty.
In the 1890s and early 1900s
there were journalists and writers like Ida Tarbell, Frank McClure, Upton
Sinclair, David Phillips, and Louis Brandeis.
We need more “muckrakers”, as they were then called, for the
twenty-first century. Where are they? What are they waiting for, another 1929 type
of stock market crash?
Sunday, August 24, 2014
THOUGHTS ON FERGUSON, MISSOURI
I grew up in the 1930s and 1940s in New York City. My ideas
of race were influenced by the movies I saw, the radio programs I heard, and
the conversations on the city streets where I lived. I think of the Marx
Brothers as they formed a type of conga line with African Americans (then
called negroes) in Cocoanuts. I think
of Al Jolson, in blackface, on his bended knee singing Mammy. I think of Amos and
Andy and their comic characters (whites playing blacks on radio, but black
actors in the 1950s when it shifted to television). I also think of Jack Benny’s sidekick valet,
Rochester [Eddie Anderson], and their comedy routines. I think of the song
lyrics “Pardon me boy, is that the Chattanooga Choo-choo? Track 29. ‘yes, sir’
… then, boy, you can give me a shine.”
Offsetting this I recall two black friends, one when we lived in the Bronx
near Brook Avenue and I was in third grade who taught me how to make a ring from
a peach pit. The other was a classmate in junior high school whose father was a
movie house film projectionist and whose house I visited in Brooklyn. But by
far the most influential experience I had on who African Americans were came
when I walked into the freshman English class at NYU. My teacher was Charles Davis (then Mr.
because he was still working on his PhD).
He was brilliant and took an interest in his students and read their
essays aloud to the class with the same analysis as the short stories and
published essays we had as homework to read.
Later he would take me to coffee at a nearby Chuck full o’ Nuts and ask
me about my progress. When I thought of
switching from Biology to English he talked me out of it because he said the
books I was reading showed my love for science.
Davis later became the first black professor at Princeton and the
founding director of the Black Studies program at Yale. I learned from him the importance
of mentoring students and I frequently took students to lunch to teach them
generosity as he did for me.
There is an erratic zigzag path to finding our “better
natures.” The abolitionist movement before
the Civil War was supported by many white intellectuals, ministers, and men and
women of conscience. The Civil rights movement had numerous white supporters of
a movement led by Martin Luther King, Jr who spoke to the moral sensibilities
of white people. The Supreme Court set
aside prejudicial laws and the federal government took an active role in
enforcing civil rights in the old segregationist south. Despite these
victories, discrimination in housing and social discrimination lagged
behind. We also liked to believe that
electing an African American as President was the last nail in the coffin of
segregation and racial prejudice. The response to the deaths of young black men
seen as “uppity,” confrontational, or potentially murderous has led to tragedy
with largely unarmed men in their teens being shot in a country that still has
too many citizens who believe in shoot first, ask questions later, for
perceived threats. Despite these
setbacks generating self-doubts about our progress, we need to remind ourselves
that there has been progress and there will be progress as we learn to accept
our diversity as a nation and see our nation as one that fosters the liberty
and equality of opportunity that motivated so many of those who framed our
founding documents as a nation.
Sunday, August 17, 2014
Identiying our ancestry can be far from simple
My father was born in 1901 in Stockholm his ancestors,
maternal and paternal, came from southwest or southeast Sweden. My Swedish grandmother was born near Goteborg
but spent part of her youth in Normandy in France, where she met her future
husband who was visiting from a trip to Germany. I can say in good conscience
that paternally I come from Swedish ancestry but I can’t claim any French
ancestry.
My mother was born in 1893 in Bound Brook, New Jersey, so
that makes her American. Her parents
came to the US as immigrants from Tarnapol, then a city in the Austro-Hungarian
Empire. In the US census records for 1900 my maternal grandparents are listed
as “Austrian.” After World War I the
region that includes Tarnapol was given to Poland, so as a youth I thought
first that they were Polish. In 1939, however, Tarnapol was carved out of
Poland and given to the USSR so Tarnapol became Russian. When the USSR collapsed in 1988 Tarnapol became a part of Ukraine, a country now independent
of Russia. This might seem just a
question for map-makers to settle, but it had profound implications for many
Americans.
My mother was married twice.
Her first was in an arranged marriage, as was the custom of Orthodox
Jews, and the husband her father selected was an immigrant from Chernobyl. As was the legal policy at that time in US
immigration law, my mother became the property of her husband and thus she was
a subject of Russia. She did not know
this until she tried to register to vote for Roosevelt in 1940. My brother and
I went with her to be re-naturalized as an American in downtown Manhattan.
I could describe my ancestry on my mother’s side as
Austrian, Polish, Russian, or Ukrainian.
Most Jews (especially the Orthodox and Conservative branches of Judaism)
identify Jewishness as a maternally transmitted trait so they would consider me
Jewish. But Swedes would not consider me
Lutheran, the faith my father had until he was about 10 when he became an atheist
and his mother converted to Roman Catholicism.
I much enjoy my melting-pot heritage. It is very American and in the years when I
taught genetics and biology, I sometimes had my classes prepare pedigrees of their
parents, siblings, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins. Along with those connections, I asked for
their ancestry. Most of those who have
been in the US for 3 or more generations are melting-pot mixtures who have both
ethnic and racial mixtures. The farther
back one goes, the more this becomes a reality because of the migratory history
of Americans from coast to coast. Oh yes, when asked about where my mother’s
ancestors came from, I now say “Tarnapol;
it’s now in Ukraine.” Unless, of course,
I go into Ancient Mariner mode, and tell them this more detailed story.
When you hear the word "evolution" does "neotony" come to mind?
How many ways can we make a home? I remember as a child walking through the
corridors of the American Museum of Natural History and gawking at the many
dioramas which combined realistic painting with artifacts or copies of natural
and prehistoric settings. I saw homes of
our ancestors built from mammoth tusks in Siberia. I saw tepees with animal skin wrapped around
a cone of trimmed saplings. I saw igloos
built from blocks of ice or compact snow.
Outside the museum I saw the swank apartments of those who lived on Central
Park West and imagined the view of Central Park they enjoyed. I contrasted that with our own Brooklyn cold
water flat with a coal stove in the kitchen.
In books I saw castles and mansions that housed the privileged and log
cabins that Presidential candidates promoted as their identification with the underprivileged
voter or common man.
In a similar way there are many mechanisms by which evolution
occurs. There is natural selection in
which adaptive traits survive, thus providing the genetic basis for them that
enters a new generation and this in turn changes the gene frequency of the
population. There is the “founder effect”
in which a small number of individuals enter a new niche and reproduces rapidly
in large numbers to create a population that differs in appearance from its
original source. There are hybrids that
undergo a doubling of chromosome number and thus establish a new self-reproducing
species. There are developmental mutations that can multiply body parts or
organs like wings, limbs, or eyes. There
are other developmental mutations that place organs in different parts of the body
producing new variations in a species.
One of my favorites is a process called neotony in which juvenile or
embryonic features are carried into adult stages. In the 1920s such neotonous species were
found in salamanders in caves, the fertile adults sporting gills which are
normally absorbed in the related species living outside the caves.
We humans have a neotonous origin from out primate ancestors
because we have prolonged child-raising period compared to other primates which
are sexually mature and functionally adult in fewer years. The most recently studied neotonous organisms
are the birds that had a dinosaur-like ancestry. They miniaturized as they shifted from living
on land to living in trees and then to the skies as they developed wings for
flight. Their eyes are larger (like an
embryo’s) in proportion to their bodies.
We do not reflect as much as we should on these neotonous traits in the evolutionary
process, and most of the debates about Creationism and Intelligent design are
waged over natural selection which is only one of many ways evolution works.
Labels:
evolution,
human evolution,
natural selection,
neotony
"Vain Hopes I gave to Man"
In Aeschylus’s play Prometheus
Bound, Prometheus is chained to a rock, his liver devoured daily by an
eagle but it regenerates each night. One of his comforters asks him why he was
punished by Zeus. Prometheus explains how
he felt sorry for the plight of humans and taught them to make fire so they could
keep warm, cook food, and build a civilization.
This angered Zeus and Prometheus was now paying the consequences for his
good deed. In one of his darkest moments as he reflected on some of the bad
outcomes of his gift to man, he said “Vain hopes I gave to man.”
Idealists imagine that the benefits of their voluntary participation
or support will be realized. In World
War I someone coined the phrase that this was “the war to end all wars.” Among the abolitionists before the Civil War
were many ministers who believed that education, preaching, and popular opinion
would lead slave owners to voluntarily give up their slaves. We have had a “war on cancer” for some 40
years without that hoped for victory. We
have had a war on poverty for 50 years and the gap between the poor and the
very rich has increased rather than diminish.
There are some victories along the way. The suffrage movement did lead to a vote for
women. The Civil War did end legal slavery. The child labor laws did protect children from
hazardous work. Public health laws did
provide compulsory immunization against infectious diseases. The Food and Drug Administration does protect
consumers from contaminated or toxic foods and medicines. It is not as perfect as idealists wished, but
certainly it is far superior than doing nothing.
Pessimists
will see the failures and optimists will cite the victories. Those who lived through triumphs and
disappointments will realize that our “vain hopes” are still worth cherishing.
What makes a happy marriage?
Nedra and I attended our daughter’s
wedding on the beach at the Fort Pierce, Florida, state park. It was a lovely setting and I was asked to give
a blessing to Erica and her husband, Dwayne Morrell. It was a second marriage for both. I too had experienced a failed first marriage
but with Nedra it has been 55 years of happy marriage and it is still a
pleasure to be together. I decided to share what makes a happy marriage and I
told the newly wedded Mr. and Mrs. Dwayne and Erica Morrell that is what we
learned in our 55 years of being Mr. and Mrs. Elof and Nedra Carlson:
2. Recognize that you also have different interests and learn to respect these because no two people should or can think and experience life alike. The world is filled with the ideas and contributions of billions of others and we can often learn from those differences.
3. Learn to sort out the household activities. I pay the bills; Nedra does the cleaning of laundry and the rooms. We both take turns cooking and shopping. In times of need we pinch hit.
4. Help other people. We both find satisfaction and meaning in life when we help causes we believe in and individuals in need.
5. Appreciate each other’s talents and skills and cheer for each other’s successes. Encourage each other for your failures or struggles.
6. Learn to sublimate your discontents and turn disappointments into creative acts and works that benefit others.
7. Be each other’s confidante and don’t be afraid to express what dispirits you and what your innermost hopes and fears are.
Nedra and I differ in our experiences and
talents but we share many of the values expressed in these guidelines. I admire her gifts in sewing, especially quilt-making.
She admires my capacity to write almost effortlessly. We both love the life sciences with her direction
leading to a career in in vitro fertilization and mine leading to a career as a
geneticist. We both have a capacity to
be flexible. I am less secure than Nedra
in social settings. Nedra is less secure than I when asked to give a talk in
front of an audience. We still hold
hands and tell each other “I love you.”
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