Sherry Chandler » 2006 » June » 24
We have diagnosed you as most likely being a member of the:
Cosmopolitan Modernists

Your individual position among the social values tribes is plotted as a dot on our map of sociocultural values above this text. Your individual position plot on the map can be interpreted along two major explanatory dimensions, or axes of social values. The first axis, shown here as the horizontal or x-axis, describes a general orientation of values toward being either socially or individually predisposed, that is, either “Social” or “Individual”. The second axis of explanation of social values, shown here as the vertical or y-axis, describes a general orientation toward the acceptance versus rejection of long-standing social norms in society that is either deferential, labelled “Tradition”, or questioning, labelled “Modern”.
A further description of Cosmopolitan Modernists can be found here. My “icons,” whatever they are, are mostly Canadian and unknown to me except for John Kenneth Galbraith and Pierre Trudeau. My motivations are, supposedly, personal autonomy and experience seeking, and as you can see from the graphic, way, way off center. Probably not an unfitting profile for an aspiring poet. At least I am not a Disengaged Darwinist, which anyway is not even a possibility for some one in my age group (a pre-Boomer).
I found the survey through Kevin Drum’s blog. He explains that Environics does “research into political attitudes based on consumer marketing surveys.”
You can take the survey for yourself here.
This post was written by sherry
Charlie Hughes writes in response to our conversation about noodling, and what he has to say is important enough that I want to make it my major post of the day:
Noodling for catfish may be increasing in popularity in this country. However, I recently have had second thoughts about catching either fish or turtles from Kentucky streams, by any method. Many states including Kentucky, have on-going advisories against the eating of all freshwater fish caught in those states. The Kentucky Division of Water advisory, currently in effect, states the following:
“A statewide fish consumption advisory was issued on April 11, 2000, because of low levels of organic mercury found in samples of fish from Kentucky waters. Women of childbearing age and children 6 years and younger are advised to eat no more than one meal per week of freshwater fish from Kentucky rivers, streams and lakes because of the presence of mercury.”
I’d say that a concentration of mercury that’s dangerous would be a “high” rather than a “low” level — but let’s not argue semantics with something so dangerous. Among the well-documented toxic effects of mercury in humans are severe birth defects and mental abberations.
According to the EPA, “The largest human-generated source of mercury emissions in the United States is the burning of coal…”
97% of Kentucky’s electricity, and 50% of U.S. electricity, is produced from coal-burning power plants. And there are plans, promoted by our government, for construction of many more such polluters in Kentucky and across the nation.
When we humans have befouled the air and water sufficiently the earth will be unfit for human habitation. Loss of a sustaining environment is the primary reason that species become extinct. It may thunder one day and neither turtles nor humans will hear it. ¹
References:
http://www.water.ky.gov/sw/advisories/fish.htm
http://www.epa.gov/envirohealth/children/emerging_issues/fish.htm
¹ Referring to the folk belief that, if a snapping turtle bites, it won’t let go until it thunders.
This post was written by sherry

