
The book I read was Just How Stupid Are We? by Rick Shenkman. The book starts off with a quote by John F. Kennedy that states, "The enemy of the truth is very often not the lie - deliberate, contrived, and dishonest, but the myth - persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic. Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." The rest of the book the author tries to reveal the myths that have been shown to the American public. One such myth was the "Bush messed up everything" myth. Most Americans believe that George Bush did everything wrong that messed up America, e.g. Katrina and Saddam. But the truth is you can't stop natural disasters and we have been involved in Iraq since the OPEC crisis. Rick Shenkman believes that Americans are spoon fed lies and half truths therefore he thinks Americans should be tested in order to vote. That is how the book ties into my topic - Voting Rights.
My favorite section in the book is the second chapter about the American voter's stupidity. Shenkman pulls out an article from the Associated Press from March 2006 to start the chapter that says, "About 1 in four Americans can name more than one of the five freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment... but more than half of Americans can name two members of the Simpson family" (Associated Press 13). Shenkman continues on listing scientific result after scientific result each one getting more and more depressing. Shenkman believes, "The defining characteristics of stupidity are ignorance, negligence, wooden-headedness, shortsightedness, and bone-headedness" (Shenkman 14). I personally think that Americans are a mixture between ignorance and negligence with an extra hint of hypocrisy. Americans don't care about the news (ignorance), don't vote (negligence), and when confronted about both they become defensive (hypocrisy). Americans choose to believe only what they want to hear and everything else (otherwise known as the truth) is tossed out the window or seen as a threat. One truth that Americans can't face is that they really don't have a clue what's going on.
What if I told you that you were stupid? You would be enraged and try to convince me that it isn't true. But what if Americans could see their faults such as being too stupid? Then we would all be responsible for the actions done in this country. But if the first step to recovery is to admit your wrong, then the second step is to turn away and try to fix your fault. That means Americans should step up their game and educate themselves to the point that they aren't stupid. What would life in Intellegent America be like? You can either dream about the utopia of Intelligent America and disregard my question as useless jargon; or you can step up and make the utopia come true. It's your call America. Be stupid or not.
Shenkman, Rick. Just How Stupid Are We?. New York, NY: Basic Books, 2008. Print.