Sunday, April 23, 2017

March for Science's Blindspot

Japanese awareness of humankind's contribution to global warming is among the highest in the world. The same is true for public acceptance of evolution. These are two of the facts that are front and center in the March for Science.

Then why was March for Science in Japan such a failure. Only two were held in the whole country, in Tokyo and Tsukuba. Nothing in Kansai. Nothing in Tohoku. Nothing in Kyushu. Participation at the marches was at the level of a large family picnic. Japanese participation hovered near zero.

Part of the problem is likely competition from numerous Earth Day celebrations. At least 10 were held across Japan. Earth Day Tokyo is in its 28th year and annually attracts more than 100,000 attendees. In contrast to Washington, D.C., where Earth Day and March for Science coordinated, March for Science Tokyo was unable to work with Earth Day Tokyo.

But the main problem, I think, is in the failure of March for Science to recognize that the war against facts in the United States is deeply rooted in that country's systemic racism. Indeed, March for Science itself has been accused of being a microcosm of liberal racism.

Opposition to climate change is but one example of Lee Atwaters's Rules.
The late, legendarily brutal campaign consultant Lee Atwater explains how Republicans can win the vote of racists without sounding racist themselves: 
[Edited] You start out in 1954 by saying, “N----r, n----r, n----r.” By 1968 you can’t say “n----r”—that hurts you, backfires. So you say stuff like, uh, forced busing, states’ rights, and all that stuff, and you’re getting so abstract. Now, you’re talking about cutting taxes, and all these things you’re talking about are totally economic things and a byproduct of them is, blacks get hurt worse than whites.… “We want to cut this,” is much more abstract than even the busing thing, uh, and a hell of a lot more abstract than “N----r, n----r.”

Views on evolution and creationism have even stronger ties to racism.

Why is March for Science blind to racism? Perhaps this is because public schools in the United States are highly segregated and strongly favor whites. Except for the addition of immigrants, America's science establishment is a product of this school system. American science is very much a part of the problem it is protesting.

Until scientists go beyond generic diversity statements to combat the racism that is behind the war on facts, they will make no progress on facts in public policy.

While March for Science should be grateful for international help, it needs to recognize that the struggle it is fighting was made in the USA and cannot expect others to simply jump on their bandwagon. It also needs to show some humility. The rest of the world did not cause or even contribute to American science's current fix.

The problem is not Americans' blindness toward science; it is American science's blindness and complicity to its own systemic misogyny and racism.


Monday, April 3, 2017

International Community Populations in Tsukuba and Ibaraki


Tsukuba, 3 April 2017. These are the most recent statistics available for populations of foreign residents in Ibaraki Prefecture.



  Total
Pop
Foreign China South
Korea
Philip-
pines
Viet-
nam
Brazil Nepal USA Taiwan Other
Mito 270859 3311 657 805 394 313 26 124 108 36 848
Hitachi 187503 1727 418 202 592 52 24 34 43 20 342
Tsuchiura 142567 3535 643 278 888 165 451 50 29 139 892
Koga 141952 2909 444 173 888 260 205 31 18 62 828
Ishioka 77302 947 153 106 165 40 71 10 9 64 329
Yuki 51726 2035 273 28 317 260 360 173 7 21 596
Ryugasaki 79279 1476 367 101 353 69 92 26 21 24 423
Shimotsuma 43829 1808 191 40 354 127 160 30 9 56 841
Joso 63634 4614 268 64 1096 190 2023 36 3 30 904
Hitachi Ota 53684 133 41 18 23 8 2 6 6 1 28
Takahagi 29815 144 23 20 32 3 20 5 7 1 33
Kitaibaraki 44782 242 42 47 39 14 13 0 7 1 79
Kasama 77723 605 100 54 101 35 73 17 16 12 197
Toride 107310 1471 368 167 161 158 132 131 27 36 291
Ushiku 83531 1117 249 76 159 27 322 20 19 29 216
Tsukuba 219402 9059 3222 898 374 381 323 129 228 262 3242
Hitachinaka 156964 1427 448 113 333 102 28 37 44 27 295
Kashima 66700 913 190 113 190 56 36 11 21 43 253
Itako 29621 324 46 25 47 10 11 13 5 15 152
Moriya 63693 770 208 115 66 53 118 7 32 31 140
Hitachi Omiya 43496 248 50 48 24 22 27 6 7 4 60
Naka 53835 211 43 30 47 25 0 7 8 3 48
Chikusei 105816 2171 196 106 475 143 224 34 10 61 922
Bando 55275 2131 273 107 401 208 67 40 14 35 986
Inashiki 44556 938 206 52 142 79 51 13 5 23 367
Kasumigaura 42515 1035 102 24 77 64 292 0 5 7 464
Sakuragawa 43826 291 76 25 37 30 8 8 5 7 95
Kamisu 94143 2264 633 104 393 162 185 0 13 145 629
Namagata 35967 946 395 17 86 83 5 10 5 10 335
Hokota 48355 2251 764 48 111 543 1 7 4 11 762
Tsukubamirai 46517 507 83 71 81 64 51 6 7 19 125
Omitama 51844 1262 209 72 120 171 42 5 8 34 601
                       
Ibaraki total 2933381 58182 12510 4403 9352 4359 5743 1085 785 1339 18606

2016-10 Total population stats from http://www.pref.ibaraki.jp/hokenfukushi/koso/iji/koso/stachischics/health-welfare-report/2013.html
2016-12 Foreign population stats from http://www.e-stat.go.jp/SG1/estat/List.do?lid=000001177523