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Richard Feynmann served on the commission that investigated the Challenger disaster in 1986, and he observed that much empirical evidence had been ignored and that decisions that led to the disaster had been made for political reasons. Feynman concluded his observations, which appeared in an appendix rather than in the full report, with the statement “For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled.” Progressive discourse requires the group to regard reality as Nature intends, and observation is necessary to expand the factual basis of progressive discourse.

@garyackerman Yes, but also carefully. There is so much oppressive framing baked into even our "purest" ideas about "as Nature intends", that it's easy to overlook that we're accidentally operating under decidedly non-Progressive assumptions...

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