Quote of the day:
Reflection is at once a creative endeavor and a fundamental refusal. The task of reflection in the face of eugenic modernity is not only to resist biopolitical operations that disallow life to the point of death, in the name of protecting the population and its production, though this is crucial. More fundamentally it means attempting to uncover the limits of the metaphysical apparatuses that render life as an object of knowledge.
We in the US are living in a eugenic modernity, by the way, when the putative head of "Health and Human Services" is making the kinds of statements he makes about autistic people. This is not just an anti-vaccination meme; it's an attempt to subordinate an entire class of people, suggesting they are subhuman for being who they are. This is a eugenic move. One has to wonder whether the "human services" people in HHS imagine themselves providing has to do with "improving the human stock" of the nation, the services not being provided to humans but instead having humans as an output.

Rather than get mired in the thought-terminating arguments around political parties or political factions, though, I think we'd do well to reflect on what sorts of other ways of thinking feed into this one: the measured life; standardized testing; the internet of things (sensors); tracking apps of various kinds; electronic health records; data science as a profession and Big Data generally; predictive modeling; generative AI and other optimization-oriented or productivity-promising technology. All of these function to render life as an object of knowledge in one way or another. All of them trace their origins through eugenics and the patterns of thought that led to it, and all of them threaten to enable and enhance further eugenic thinking. This is not to say these things are always all bad; this is meant to be a reflection on what exactly they're for.

Why read the number of steps your FitBit told you you took today, unless there were some sense in which you want your future self to be better than your present self? It's not an accident that this is called "physical fitness", "fitness" being the Darwinian concept describing which organisms should survive. Why subject children to standardized testing unless there were some belief it made them better students? To what end tends to be left out. Why adopt a technology meant to improve productivity, unless you're of the belief that improvement (optimization) were even possible?

Generally speaking, if one is able to bring oneself to believe that a human being is made better by a data-informed technical intervention, isn't one playing the same game as these anti-autism anti-vaxxers, just with different terminology? If your answer to this provocation is that your data is better than theirs or that you're more aligned with reality than they are--some variation of "the science is on our side"--you've ceded the territory: this is more of the same optimization logic that brought us to this point to begin with. I think we have no choice but to do better than this.

That's my reflection anyway.

#USPol #autism #vaccination #vaccines #antivax #eugenics #BigData #AI #PredictiveModeling #DataScience #science
@abucci if people were injured by a vaccine or any other means, is it not reasonable to disestablish the means of injury?
@[email protected] Your suggestive implication is irrelevant to the topic at hand. Nice try, though.
@abucci was relevant to vaccines and injury. if you were injured, you're not necessarily a subhuman but it's reasonable to avoid that condition and prevent it for others.
@[email protected] You should have the courage of your convictions and simply state outright whether you believe vaccines cause autism and that autism is a condition that needs to be prevented. The suggestive hypotheticals are a cowardly attempt at a motte-and-bailey fallacy, which I will not waste my time with.

To onlookers who care: this person is attempting to conflate a reasonable position, the motte ("it is reasonable to do what we can to prevent injury") with a controversial position, the bailey ("vaccines cause autism, which is an injurious condition that should be eliminated from society"). It's a standard technique for maintaining plausible deniability while still holding and communicating abhorrent views.
@abucci don't try to put words lacking nuance in my mouth. I'm allowed to entertain possibilities, no?
It doesn't have to be autism necessarily. any form of side effect, really.