Bonobos, Chimpanzees, and Maureen Dowd

In her endless quest to bring sexual politics into practically every discussion, the New York Time‘s Maureen Dowd recently blamed men for the fact that only 49 percent of female executives making more than $100,000 have children (compared to 10 percent of men in that position who are childless). Dowd absurdly thinks that men should take a lesson from bonobos.

Before we get into monkey business, lets look at Dowd’s absurd logic. She cites a “60 Minutes” report in which a handful of women claimed that the second they told men that they attend Harvard Business School, the men are no longer interested in them. Harvard Business School student Ani Vartanian told Lesley Stahl,

As soon as you say Harvard Business School . . . that’s the end of the conversation. As soon as the guys say, ‘Oh, I go to Harvard Business School,’ all the girls start falling into them.

Of course anecdotes like this are manna to columnists like Dowd who seem positively allergic to anything even remotely smelling of actual data. Dowd implicitly argues that this is the reason female executives are childless without offering a shred of evidence.

She then goes on to urge men to be willing to date more “challenging” women, and, in the process, pauses to denigrate women who are not as “challenging” or “demanding.” According to Dowd,

Women who don’t have demanding jobs are not less demanding in relationships; indeed, they may be more demanding. They’re saving up all that competitive energy and critical faculty to lavish on you when you get home.

What a demeaning thing to say about women who do not attend Harvard Business School or pursue the high challenge careers that Dowd apparently thinks they should.

But it is when Dowd ends her column in a bit of comparative evolutionary biology between human beings and bonobos that Dowd really goes off the deep end. According to Dowd,

Bonobos, or pygmy chimpanzees, live in equatorial rain forests of Congo, and have an extraordinarily happy existence.

And why? because in bonobo society, the females are dominant. Just light dominance, so that its more like a co-dominance, or equality between the sexes.

“They are less obsessed with power and status than their chimpanzee cousins, and more consumed with Eros,” The Times’s Natalie Angier has written. “Bonobos use sex to appease, to bond, to make up after a fight, to ease tensions, to cement alliances . . . Humans generally wait until after a nice meal to make love; bonobos do it beforehand.”

All of this, is offered as a way to achieve Dowd’s ultimate goal which is, namely, “If men would only give up their silly desire for world dominance, the world would be a much finer place.”

First, Angier’s claim that chimpanzees are “obsessed with power and status” whereas bonobos are “more consumed with Eros” is the absolute worse sort of anthropomorphism. Chimpanzees don’t sit around plotting how to obtain power, and bonobos aren’t thinking of ways to get laid. They’re both following scripts pre-arranged for them by their particular evolutionary path. Imputing to them these human motives is absurd and unworthy of even a beginning biology student.

More importantly, though, decades ago this sort of anthropomorphizing held up chimpanzees as a model for human behavior. Until it was discovered that chimpanzees organizing hunting parties and engage in plenty of other organized violence.

But in evaluating bonobos vs. chimpanzees Dowd, like a lot of people who cite bonobos, leave out what bonobos do not do. What they do not do is use tools to nearly the extent that chimpanzees do. Chimps, like human beings, are rather creative tool users — they will use sticks to fish, use tree branches as ladders to escape, and exhibit a whole host of other behaviors. Bonobos have never been observed using tools in the wild (though they do learn how to use tools in captivity).

One persistent theory about human intelligence and tool use is that it evolved out of the needs of organized hunting and other aggressive. To the extent that one can draw the sort of crude comparisons between non-human primates and human beings, the clear lesson is that following Dowd’s advice might indeed reduce conflict, but it would also reduce that which makes us human — our incredible manipulation of our environment.

Personally, though, I suspect the amount of comparative information that can be gleaned about human behavior from chimpanzees and bonobos is extremely limited. More often commentators such as Dowd simply use these non-human primates as a post hoc justification for their already pre-existing ideological views. That’s one difference between non-human primates and someone like Dowd — the primates do not intentionally prefer fallacious logic over reasoned argument (the bonobos and chimpanzees at least have a ready justification for not relying on solid data — what’s Dowd’s excuse?)

Source:

The baby bust. Maureen Dowd, New York Times, April 10, 2002.

Enough of Being Taxed to Death

The National Center for Policy Analysis notes that the House is supposed to vote this week on a tax bill that, among other things, includes a clause to permanently eliminate estate taxes.

One of the most absurd outcomes of the estate tax is that the Sept. 11 attacks suddenly made families of some of the victims liable for a huge tax bill. Congress partially addressed this with the Victims of Terrorism Tax Relief Act of 2001, but there were still some families who potentially faced a severe tax burden simply beause their loved ones happened to be in the World Trade Center on that fateful day.

Currently, the estate tax is scheduled to be gradually phased out through 2010, and then pop back full force in 2011. It is time to eliminate the estate tax altogether.

The Vaccine Shortage Continues

For the last 20 year or so the legal and financial position of vaccine manufacturers has steadily declined. Now, outside observers are wondering why the nation is experiencing a major shortage of vaccines. Duh.

Vaccines have a number of strikes against them already. The research on them is expensive enough, but the manufacturing costs for vaccines are much higher and more complicated than for drug compounds.

Add to that the growing legal exposure of vaccine makers and the FDA’s high profile yanking of vaccines such as the rotavirus vaccination, and the more accurate question is why any companies bother to stay in the vaccine business.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced in February that there were severe shortages for 8 of 11 key vaccines given to children, including those for chickenpox and the diphtheria/whooping cough vaccine.

The shortage of tetanus vaccines continues after Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories pulled out of the tetanus market in 2001, leaving a single company that produces tetanus shot.

The government convened a federal panel to look at how to increase vaccine production. A good first start would be to stop punishing the companies who manufacture the vaccines in the first place.

Source:

Panel seeks solution to vaccine shortage. Associated Press, February 12, 2002.

Supreme Court Upholds Constitutionality of Virtual Child Porn

Wow. The Supreme Court today announced that in a 6-3 vote it overturned a ban on virtual child pornography.

The 1996 Child Pornography Prevention Act banned not only digitally altered images of real children (a ban which the Supreme Court upheld), but also forbid the creation of “virtual” child pornography in which no actual child was used.

Pornographers and First Amendment advocates argued that the ban on virtual pornography would make scenes from movies such as “Lolita” or “Traffic” illegal (in fact, the law implied that depicting sexual situations with anyone who looked underage was illegal).

One thing that will be interesting to see is how this affects child pornography prosecutions. We will not have to wait long for a person caught with child pornography to argue that he was told it was virtual child pornography rather than the real thing.

There will also be inevitable lawsuits as virtual child porn becomes commercially more widely available. Can a school fire or reassign a teacher who buys computer generated child porn videos off the Internet? After all, according to the Supreme Court, that material is completely legal for Americans to own.

The Supreme Court made its ruling on the same basis that an Appeals Court had used in overturning the ban — it agreed that the government had failed to show a connection between virtual child pornography and the exploitation of actual children. That seems to me to be a completely unreasonable basis for such a decision — regardless of whether or not the First Amendment can be contorted to allow virtual child porn, it is absurd to claim that such materials will not be used to exploit children. That there is no evidence for such a link as of yet is largely due to the fact that this is a very new area — only in the past decade or so have the tools become widely available for creating this sort of material.

I suspect the Supreme Court will revisit this case sooner rather than later and likely reverse itself after enough evidence accumulates that child molesters and others are in fact using virtual child pornography.

Source:

Supreme Court Rejects Child-Porn Law. Fox News, April 16, 2002.

Instapundit vs. CAIR

Last night, Glenn Reynolds posted an item on his site about an online poll on the web site for the Council on American Islamic Relations web site. Reynolds wrote,

THERE’S A POLL on the CAIR site asking if Ariel Sharon should be tried for war crimes. At the moment, it’s 94% saying yes, with 513 votes. You may want to weigh in.

How many people read Instapundit? I didn’t see the item until this morning, visited the CAIR site, and the votes at that time were around 520 “yes” votes to 11,500 “no” votes.

Apparently this outcome was not satisfactory to CAIR which altered its poll and simply threw out all of the “no” votes that came in overnight. Now the poll results show 2254 total votes, with 87 percent in favor of trying Sharon for war crimes.

That’s pretty much business-as-usual for the way CAIR operates.

The Developing World’s Water Crisis

A conference is underway in Ghana looking at Africa’s water management problems. This follows a United Nations report that highlights the intense problems faced by those in the developing world in obtaining adequate water supplies.

The report, No Water No Future, notes that today an estimated one billion people lack sufficient access to safe drinking water. Half the world’s population lacks adequate sanitation.

One of the interesting things in that report is how private sector, for-profit initiatives have arisen where government policies have failed to provide clean water.

For example, the report notes the “astronomic growth” in bottled water sales in the developing world,

Firstly, where piped municipal water supply is unavailable or of inadequate quality, the provision of bottled drinking water is a very significant economic activity that has seen astronomic growth rates in countries ranging from Mexico to India to Thailand. In fact, the success of this domestic private sector has in recent years motivated multinational companies to develop near-global brands of drinking water that compete with local brands. For consumers in developed countries ‘bottled water’ refers to high-priced mineral water. For consumers in developing countries bottled water often refers to reliable, filtered water in 20-litre reusable containers, used for drinking, cooking or other uses that really require drinking water quality. Provision of affordable drinking-quality water in bottles or containers also relieves the piped-water system of the need to produce drinking water quality that is largely used for lower-grade purposes such as toilet flushing. Innovative public-private partnerships that devise alternative ways of providing water supply and sanitation services at various scales deserve more attention.

Similarly, in agricultural use, it has been private farmers — not governments — who have largely made investments in improving groundwater development. According to the report,

Secondly, in agriculture, private farmers have been largely responsible for the major investments in groundwater development in recent decades. This groundwater use has contributed significantly to food production and the creation of wealth in rural areas. But governments have largely failed to elaborate rules and mechanisms that ensure that groundwater is used in a way that minimises the risks of over-use and protects groundwater quality.

Perhaps one of the best things that developing countries could do to promote access to water is set basic, transparent rules and then get the heck out of the way.

Source:

No Water No Future. Report to the World Summit on Sustainable Development, Johannesburg 2002.