The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Thursday, January 9, 2025
Episode Date: January 9, 2025This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:14 - 02:26)Former President Carter’s State Funeral Today: What to Look For in the Funeral Service as O...ur Nation Mourns the Loss of a PresidentPart II (02:26 - 14:31)We are Witnessing the Largest and Deadliest Fire in LA County History: Absolute Devastation to Human Lives and Civilization as Fires Rip Through Southern CaliforniaFish at center of key conservation fight not a distinct species after all by YaleNews (Mike Cummings)Part III (14:31 - 24:36)Meta Drops Fact-Checking: Mark Zuckerberg Announces Significant Change to Censorship Policies Across Meta’s Social Media PlatformsMark Zuckerberg says ending fact-checks will curb censorship. Fact-checkers say he's wrong. by CBS News (Kate Gibson)Part IV (24:36 - 27:15)A Single Bluefin Tuna Just Sold for $1.3 Million in Japan – That’s A Lot of SushiTuna weighing as much as a grizzly bear sells for $1.3 million in Japan by The Washington Post (Leo Sands)Sign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Thursday, January 9, 2025. I'm Albert Mueller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and
events from a Christian worldview. Today, in the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., the nation will
observe a formal state funeral. It's the funeral of the 39th President of the United States, Jimmy Carter.
It's going to be at 10 o'clock a.m., although the events will begin far earlier, the former president's
body is expected to leave the rotunda of the Capitol.
about 9 o'clock on the way to the National Cathedral,
and then after a service which is expected to end by 1115,
the body of the former president will be carried to Andrew's Air Force Base
or Joint Base Andrews, as it is known now,
and then it will be flown to Georgia eventually.
By 520 this afternoon, the internment ceremony in Plains is expected to begin.
We will talk on tomorrow's edition of the briefing
about what happens today,
in these observances, the meaning of the state funeral, but just keep in mind that what defines a state
funeral as a state funeral is that this funeral, though it will follow a traditional Christian pattern
and will take place in a building clearly designated for Christianity, more on that tomorrow as well,
it is a state because it is being conducted by the state. It is a government act. And in the United States,
that is reserved for a very few individuals. And as I say, former president certainly rank as those
whose families can choose a state funeral. It is not automatic even for a former president,
but it was the choice of former President Carter and his family in arrangements that began
as far back as 1986. Just consider how long he lived dying just days ago at age 100.
In anticipation of that funeral, it's a wonderful thing for all Americans.
Americans to watch for American evangelical families to watch and understand the meaning of this
service, the meaning of the historic passage, the recognition of a former president.
This is the time when the formality points to the dramatic meaning of the event and of the
significance of such events to our national life. We'll be talking about it tomorrow,
but remember the state funeral begins about 10 o'clock this morning.
The big news, of course, around the nation right now, and frankly is making headlines.
around the world is the outbreak of fire in the area in Southern California, particularly in Los Angeles
County. At ground zero, so to speak, of this fire is the conflagration that has begun in Pacific
Palisades. The fires together, as of last night, had killed about five persons, and there have been
thousands of structures that have been destroyed. And by the way, these are structures that include
in at least some of these communities, from Malibu to Pacific Palisades and beyond, some of the
most expensive private residences in the United States. And as we look at this, there are vast issues
of worldview concern. First of all, of course, we are looking at the devastating power of fire.
And when you look at the fires right now in the Los Angeles area, we're also looking at
something that most Americans don't have to think about. In Los Angeles, they talk regularly
about fire weather. And in the case of what has come together over the last several days,
they talk about extreme fire weather. What would that mean? It means very high winds. The winds, as of
yesterday, were reaching even the velocity of about 100 miles per hour. And that is added to very dry
conditions. In Los Angeles, what is known as the winter wet season is beginning late. And so even as
these winds have kicked up, the wetness that comes by the rain has not yet arrived. And that
means extremely dry conditions and the velocity of the winds and the sustained nature of the winds,
especially whipping around so many of the mountains and canyons in the Los Angeles area, it has created
this extreme fire weather. And as we now know, it is devastating. So our first concern is, of course,
for human life. Five persons already have died and the death toll is almost surely to rise. Some of the
casualties probably will not known until some days from now. And frankly, right now, there is no
that these fires can be easily halted. And that's for a couple of reasons. Number one, because of the
extreme fire weather and recall that when you are looking at weather of this velocity, you can't put up
the aircraft that are very strategically used in these fires to help limit the fire spread and then to
put out the fires themselves. You may have noticed that the news networks were showing mostly
rather close-up glimpses of the blazes, and that's because even the news helicopters could
not get into the air until late yesterday afternoon. Once those images did come in, they showed the
devastating enlargement of the fire. And by some estimations, this is already the largest and most
devastating fire in the history of Los Angeles County. So number one, again, our concern is,
first of all, for human life, for saving human life. Secondly, the concern is for, just look around you,
the reality of human civilization. That is to say, houses and supermarkets and roads,
roadways and schools and hospitals and all the things that human beings build as a part of our civilization.
They add to human flourishing. They are a part of the Dominion mandate given us in scripture.
And thus, as we're looking at the devastation that comes in this fire, you recognize it is as if you are
setting civilization back in those areas. It is, first of all, an issue of danger to human lives.
It's secondly a danger to human civilization. And as is so often the case, in a big tragedy like this,
we have to separate the moral question into two different categories.
And this is simply absolutely essential.
The first category is natural evil.
The second category is moral evil.
Now, natural evil means earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes, vast natural events.
And by the way, Genesis 3 says that those are deadly precisely because of the effects of sin,
even throughout the universe all over the planet.
but the fact is that we are looking at natural events.
Human beings don't create earthquakes.
We don't orchestrate hurricanes.
And so the category of natural evil plays a very big part in this
because the fires themselves are not being assigned to human agency.
It's not as if someone set the fire deliberately
or even at this point by accident.
It is something that was simply probably, at least it is believed now,
the combination of factors, the extreme fire weather,
and all you need is a spark or two, and this kind of fire is underway.
So we're not looking to point fingers of responsibility at nature.
But moral evil is a different category, and this means that there's human responsibility,
and that responsibility comes with moral accountability as well.
And so you ask, how does that play into this?
Well, one of the complicating factors in terms of this fire
are widespread reports that fire hydrants had run dry.
Now, who's responsible for that? We may find out the answer to that question soon or it may not ever particularly be known right down to the level of an individual, but this much is known.
California has had a water problem for a long time, and California's leadership has been woefully inadequate over a period of decades in responding to that water crisis.
Just look at the fact that over the course of the last three to four years, California has received an unusually heavy rainfall.
And we're talking about what is estimated as trillions of gallons of water.
Where's all that water gone?
Right into the Pacific Ocean.
And you say, where else could it go?
And the answer is into reservoirs and into holding facilities.
And California has known for decades that these were necessary.
And even as California continued to build and its population continued to grow,
the vulnerabilities just increased.
And politically, one of the big problems here is that you're looking at a big government
that is extremely slow, obscenely,
slow at doing just about anything like creating a reservoir. And even as the media have poked at the
president-elect President Donald J. Trump for having during his first term in office said that
California makes itself vulnerable by actions such as not removing ground cover, the reality is
he was right then and he is right now. It is, of course, impossible given the topography and the
vegetation in California, much of it very beautiful. It is, it is, it is,
impossible to suggest removing all of that or even trimming all of that. But the reality is that there
has been a reluctance, driven at least in some part, by ecological concerns. There's been a reluctance
to clear the ground in such a way that it might limit the spread of this kind of fire. Now, once again,
we're talking about some level of human moral responsibilities, not clear how much of this
could have been prevented by any action. But certainly when we're looking at the threat to the water
supply, we are looking at very important moral responsibility. And in order to understand that,
consider the fact that California has known it is needed to build reservoirs to hold water and a lot
of water and a lot of reservoirs that would require a lot of dams. And there have been strategic
plans to do this, and even specific plans, such as is the case with the site's reservoir,
that is a $4.4 billion project. And it is to take place in the western Sacramento Valley. It's
been talked about for 40 years. It has been, at least contemplated as a formal project. Voters in
California authorized the action with a special funding mechanism years ago, but guess how much work
has been done on it? How much construction has been done on that? Well, you can answer your own
question. Basically, none. A report offered by Cal Matters there in California reports it this way,
quote, the site's reservoir, a $4.4 billion project to add dams and store more water that'll be sent
South is still years away from completion, the final environmental report is expected this year
before construction of two large dams and other structures can begin. End quote. We are told that the project,
quote, has been gaining steam and support since 2014 when voters approved Proposition 1, a water
bond that authorized $2.7 billion for new storage projects. End quote. Still, they say,
this project remains, quote, almost a decade away, end quote. Now, the interesting thing is that this
article was published in 2023 in the hopes that the project would be formerly underway the next year
in 2024. We're speaking in the early days of 2025. Guess what has happened? You can answer the
question. Now, Christians operating out of a biblical worldview understand there is a proper
ecological concern. There's a proper concern for ecology. It's a proper concern for wanting to be
good stewards of the planet, good stewards of nature, good stewards of a river, good stewards of a valley.
to be good stewards, but that biblical theme of stewardship goes with the theme of dominion. And that means
that we are to use what God has given us. And the use of a dam in this case would literally save lives,
not just save houses, but the absence of that water is a deadly factor. And by the way, this
goes into feeding California. It goes into just, well, as is now very much a concern in some
places flushing the toilets in the state. You've got to have water, and you have to have water going to
fire hydrants, or you face disaster upon disaster. But thinking in those terms, and at this point,
California is an unusual case at the state level of a bloated administrative state, a vast
government spending that is simply out of control and projects that never seem to get built.
But this is also a problem across the country, and on the ecological side, it is interesting.
and ironic, even as we are considering these things today, that we can go back to the late
1970s when a major dam project in the state of Tennessee was put on hold, and that was the
teleco dam, it was put on hold in the late 1970s precisely because a fish had been discovered
in the region that would be displaced. The argument was that it would be endangered and could go
extinct. It was a specific fish species that was identified as the snail darter. But on January the 3rd of
2025, experts at Yale University put out a major study based upon genetic evidence saying that there is
actually no species known as the snail darter. It is actually another species. It is simply a variant
of a species that isn't endangered. Or as the Yale University release said, the time
fish discovered at a lower stretch of the Little Tennessee River in 1973 is not a distinct species at all.
You got to love the next words in the Senate's quote, meaning it was never endangered, end quote.
In other words, if it doesn't exist, it can't be endangered.
The teleco dam was eventually built, and here's another irony in terms of how we're discussing these issues on the briefing today.
Once it was claimed that the fish was there, and this became a major issue in terms of national politics with the Endangered Species Act,
But nevertheless, the dam was built.
Construction was resumed once accommodations to protect the endangered species that we now know wasn't even a species.
Once that was in place, the project was able to go forward because of a waiver signed by the president of the United States, who was then, Jimmy Carter.
Now, one of the challenges to Christian faithfulness is putting these things into proper proportion.
But the Christian worldview does tell us that we begin with human beings and with human flourishing.
We have concern for other species.
We have concern for all the flora and fauna, you might say, around us.
We have concern for human impacts, but we have a prior concern.
The most fundamental concern is for human beings and human flourishing.
That's what's missing.
When you look at the conditions there in California, and I'm not talking about the weather
conditions, I'm talking about the political conditions, and those are based upon
worldview considerations, and therein lies the problem.
We will pray for the folks there in California and watch that story closely.
We need to turn to big news.
And in this case, it comes from META.
That is the parent company to Facebook.
And specifically, it comes from Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO and founder of the social media platform and the larger company.
The announcement that came in a video he released on Tuesday says that Facebook is going to make a very abrupt and very major change in terms of its policies.
it is no longer going to cooperate with outside agencies and so-called fact-checking.
Zuckerberg said, quote, we're going to get back to our roots and focus on reducing mistakes,
simplifying our policies, and restoring free expression on our platforms, end quote.
In a rather remarkable speech, Zuckerberg went on to say that he admitted that the fact-checking
process had led to what was effectively a system of censorship and that free speech had been constricted
by the use of this fact-checking apparatus.
Now, it was conducted by outside groups,
but Facebook really did allow those outside groups to have a lot of influence,
and that led to complaints by conservatives in particular
that they were being fact-checked to the point of being canceled on platforms such as Facebook.
Now, something similar was done for a time.
It was less specific in terms of the regimen,
but nonetheless, something like this was done on Twitter before Elon Musk bought it,
changed it to X and basically reverse the fact-checking policies. But even then, there was the
accusation that Twitter had also been restricting speech, particularly from conservatives. And just
to point out how this works, you just look at the fact that when you talk about, say, a transgender
question, the fact-checking process that is undertaken that Facebook was using, and it was linked to
these outside groups, you would have statements that would lead the fact-checkers to say,
that's not true. And so if you say, for example, anything contrary in some context to something like
the LGBTQ revolution, and you make a claim concerning, say, transgender identity, then the fact checkers
could, it was not true that they could remove your post. They would simply demote it in terms of
algorithms so that fewer people, if any, would ever see it. The Los Angeles Times reports the story
this way, quote, meta will dismantle its extensive fact-checking program in the United States,
Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said Tuesday, ending a practice that has sought to limit the spread of
falsehoods on its platforms, but has been assailed as censorship in conservative circles.
The company said it would allow its users to add content or debunk claims in notes that appear
next to specific posts, a process pioneered by Elon Musk X. Meta will also lift restrictions on
hot-button topics such as immigration and gender identity to focus on illegal or high-severity
violations, end quote.
Once again, Facebook is not saying there will be absolutely no restriction.
And in particular, it points to the misuse of materials related to children and illegal activities.
And I think all of us understand that.
The problem is that the fact-checking regimen that was put in place and was conducted by official groups designated as fact-checkers,
it was not neutral in terms of its application.
It was not neutral because, say, on issues related to COVID-19, any number of,
of other controversies. There was an official line that was just established as a fact. Any deviation for
that was treated as being unfactual, and thus it was reduced in terms of its exposure.
And sometimes in some of these situations, on some of these platforms, there was an absolute,
or at least a virtually absolute impossibility anyone's going to see such a post.
As recently as 2019, Zuckerberg had said that he was committed to free speech, quote,
increasingly today across the spectrum, it seems like there are more people who prioritize getting the
political outcomes that they want over making sure that everyone can be heard. He said then,
I believe we must continue to stand for free expression. End quote. But in the period between
2019 and the end of 2014, Zuckerberg took a very different tack, as did Meta and Facebook.
And that was towards the use of these fact-checking groups. And quite frankly, it led to the silencing
effectively of many conservative arguments. Now, I want to be clear. The Christian worldview is established
upon a clear understanding of truth, and that means we understand that the opposite of truth is not
another truth. The opposite of truth is a lie. And we understand that a biblical understanding of truth
makes very clear that a lie is a very serious sin. But we also understand that when it comes to the
political exchange, you have arguments that are made, and if one side can say, that's factual,
and they can say, we will demote your message because it will be declared non-factual,
that honestly, you don't have any public debate.
And as I say, it's one thing to argue about COVID-19.
You could have medical doctors here and others making the arguments,
but I will point to the issues related to the LGBTQ revolution,
and there is just extremely clear.
There was an ideological bias,
and whether or not that completely disappears, that remains to be seen.
But it is interesting that in this statement released on Tuesday,
Mark Zuckerberg was very clear about the fact that he felt that the fact-checking process was not
serving his customers, those who have registered and are members of Facebook, has not served
that community well, thus has not served the purpose well or the public purpose well.
And understand, Facebook meta, it's a big company.
Its purpose is to make a lot of money.
And so in one sense, one of the big problems for Zuckerberg is that there hasn't been a big win,
a big commercial win or a big new product in terms of the metaverse in quite a long time.
He cannot afford for Facebook to become a big problem.
And especially with the incoming Trump administration,
clearly the political terrain has changed and is changing.
There are many on the political left who, of course, are not happy about this at all.
You have the New York Times making the statement,
quote, Mr. Zuckerberg has long been a pragmatist who has gone where the political winds have blown.
He has flip-flopped on how much political content should be shown to Facebook and Instagram users,
previously saying social networks should be about fun, relatable content from family and friends,
but then on Tuesday, saying meta would show more personalized political content, end quote.
The New York Times also says that Zuckerberg has told his leadership team,
which, by the way, now includes a major conservative figure on the board.
That was not true.
And at least in terms of the executive team, there was a couple of,
clear shift. Nick Clegg, who had been a very high executive, is out. He was a former politician
and party leader in Britain. He's been replaced by Joel Kaplan, who is a pretty well-known conservative.
So there you see, or at least with ties to conservatives, ties to the Republican Party,
all of this is at this point a very, very small concession, you might say, to conservatives in this
country. But nonetheless, it is an important policy move. And it's really interesting.
to see that the fact checkers are not happy. Their fact-checking tells them that canceling their
services is factually not a good idea. Kate Gibson of CBS News reports in the Money Watch column with an
article. Here's the headline. Mark Zuckerberg says ending fact checks will curb censorship.
Fact-checkers say he's wrong. End quote. You got to love that. Fact-checkers say he's wrong.
you have a man, Neil Brown, president of the Pointer Institute for Media Studies, he said, quote,
facts are not censorship. Fact checkers never censored anything. Well, that is a complete misrepresentation.
If you say fact checkers never censored anything, then you imply that they had no purpose other than
simply noting what they would accept as factual and noting what they thought was non-factual.
That's not the case. The whole point was that you had messages, postings that were demoted,
and were made far less visible because of their content.
One of the leaders of these fact-checking organizations pointed out that it was meta
that made the ultimate decisions based on policy,
but nonetheless, the advisories were given by these outside groups.
Now, I just want to return to the fundamental fact,
and I lean into fact that Christianity is predicated upon not only the existence of truth
and the noability of truth, but the revelation of truth,
in Holy Scripture, and also ultimately in the Lord Jesus Christ.
When we talk about truth, we're talking about what the late Francis Schaefer referred to as
true, truth. We're not talking about truth as a claim. We're not talking about truth as an opinion.
We're not talking about truth as a power play. We're talking about truth as true.
But we also understand that in the free exchange of ideas, in the public square, there are
going to be arguments, there are going to be conflicts, there are going to be conflicts, they're going to
be contradictions, they're going to be rival claims made. And the point is that when you have an
elite privileging one argument over other arguments, even when it is done in the name, supposedly,
a fact-checking, the big problem is you have to define what is a fact, and behind that kind of
definition is ideology. And when the fact-checkers deny that they're operating with any
ideology, well, here's another fact. That's just not honest. By the way, one of the words used in this
conversation in the press and in policy is counter disinformation. Sounds like something out of a James
Bond movie, to counter what is described as disinformation. Well, once again, there are important
issues there. But the important thing right now is that meta or Facebook or Instagram is not going
to be, at least according to Mark Zuckerberg, using these outside firms to basically decide what is
and is not a fact. Well, just a moment ago, we were talking about.
about a fish species that turns out not to exist and therefore not to be at risk of going extinct.
But I want to conclude today by pointing to how expensive one fish can be.
The Washington Post has reported that one Japanese tuna has now sold for $1.3 million.
That is, one fish selling for $1.3 million at the Tokyo fish market.
Now, that reminds me that with my wife, our family was able at one point to tour,
a fish market for Asia. And the fish market was in Honolulu. And most of the customers were from
Japan. And we were dressed like surgeons by the time we were able to enter the facility, a very
chilled facility in which there were hundreds of giant tuna and sushi buyers were walking around
and they were sampling the fish and they were paying unbelievable amounts of money for some
of those fish. They would be put on a plane flown to Tokyo or to other cities in Asia where they
would be sold, not intact, but sliced into countless slices. Now you're talking about one fish in the
Tokyo fish market that has sold for $1.3 million. It was a bluefin tuna, 6808 pounds, which, by the way,
the Washington Post tells us, is, quote, equivalent in weight to a typical male grizzly bear.
End quote. But no one's paying a lot of money to eat grizzly bear. They are paying a lot of money
to eat bluefin tuna. And just in case you did not know the taste of the taste of the
this omah tuna, a Pacific bluefin tuna, is prized by sushi eaters, precisely because it is a
rather rare fish, it has a very rare taste, and its taste has a good deal to do with a diet of squid
and a particular fatty fish. That, according to the Post, combined with its colder water
habitat, quote, gives the tuna a unique balance of fat that makes it a favored sushi meat
ingredient, end quote. Well, now you know, $1.3 million. I don't know about you, but I feel the urge to go
fishing. Thanks for listening to the briefing. For more information, go to my website at Albert
moler.com. You can follow me on Twitter or X by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert
Mueller. For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbtsd.u. For information on
Boyce College, just go to Bois College.com. I'm speaking to you from Davenport, Florida. And I'll meet you
again tomorrow for the briefing.
