Thursday, January 31, 2013
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Missouri Bill Would Require All First Graders To Take NRA-Sponsored Gun Class | ThinkProgress
See, this is good idea. Lets have every commercial lobby takes the
required classes:
The porn industry can sponsor the dildo class,
The condom industry can sponsor the sex Ed class,
And the drug cartel can sponsor the safe heroin usage class
---SPSmith
Thoughts on global warming deniers
The data irrefutably establishes humans as the dominant driver of environmental change, which is something that should worry us all.
The scientific method has proved a remarkable tool for clarifying our view and enabling us to develop an elaborate, objective consensus about how the world works.
It is unfortunate that a highly intelligent person such as yourself has no understanding of how science works or what constitutes a valid scientific theory. Your glorification of stupidity, and the refusal to think hard about real issues reiterates the deep chasm that separates those that face reality from those that can't think, can't reason from evidence, and don't even know what would constitute evidence.
Babylonian astrologers thought the stars governed our fates, a thousand years ago Western societies were largely religious and prayed to the skies for their salvation, and all pre-science cultures accepted ideological insights for truth rather than tested knowledge. And the results: Pestilence, famine, disease, high infant mortality, slavery, institutionalized rape, genocide, and war, in other words, each human being engulfed in extreme suffering embedded in societies that lacked basic justice and liberty.
History teaches us that conservative, backward-looking movements often arise under conditions of economic stress. Consider how conservative elements in American religion and politics refuse to accept scientific knowledge, deride their opponents for being "reality based," and ask yourself, "could that ideology come to rule the most powerful nation on earth? and if it did, what would be the consequences for the world?"
Civilizations do fail. We have never yet seen one that hasn't. Gibbon, in describing the fall of Rome, spoke of "the natural and inevitable effect of immoderate greatness" and of "the triumph of barbarism and religion". As Rome collapsed, or in the Ming Empire or under the Abbasid Caliphate, the triumph of faith over reason played a large part in turning relative into absolute decline in living standards.
So. if we follow your path, before us we have a world which falls into apathy about gun murders, disbelief in science and progress, and after a melancholy decline, a new dark age, a turning away from knowledge and discovery into a kind of political and religious fundamentalism. I prefer another path...one in which we take the science where it leads, and use our liberal democratic processes to honestly weigh potential actions against the social risks.
Edge.org
Developing a more realistic story about the good life will be an essential step towards a better life and a more sustainable society. These conversations will be complex and difficult. They will engage educators, scientists, economists, politicians, artists, entrepreneurs and citizens as well as philosophers. But we desperately need the debate as we try to imagine a better future for our children and their children."
'via Blog this'
Edge.org
But why is it so damaging to share and believe pleasant fantasies of an afterlife when nonexistence is both too horrific to confront and inevitable? It is damaging because it leads to bad decisions in this life—the only one we have. Knowing that our lives are so short makes each moment and each interaction more precious. The happiness and love we find and make in life are all we get. The fact that there is no supernatural being in the universe that cares about us makes it that much more important that we care about each other."
'via Blog this'
Edge.org
'via Blog this'
Edge.org
'via Blog this'
Edge.org
'via Blog this'
Edge.org
'via Blog this'
Faux news interviews
---SPSmith
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Article: The Bikes of the 2013 New York International Motorcycle Show - Popular Mechanics
The Bikes of the 2013 New York International Motorcycle Show - Popular Mechanics
http://www.popularmechanics.com/cars/motorcycles/news/bikes-of-the-2013-new-york-international-motorcycle-show
Sent via Flipboard
---SPSmith
Article: You May Be Forgiven For Thinking That Some Skeptics Are Taking A Firm Stance, But…
You May Be Forgiven For Thinking That Some Skeptics Are Taking A Firm Stance, But…
http://freethoughtblogs.com/tokenskeptic/2013/01/30/you-may-be-forgiven-for-thinking-that-some-skeptics-are-taking-a-firm-stance-but/
Sent via Flipboard
---SPSmith
Article: An Intervention Letter to Kate Moss, Fellow Hummus Addict
An Intervention Letter to Kate Moss, Fellow Hummus Addict
http://www.tabletmag.com/scroll/122863/an-intervention-letter-to-kate-moss
---SPSmith
Taylor & Francis Online :: Trying to be happier really can work: Two experimental studies - The Journal of Positive Psychology - Volume 8, Issue 1
'via Blog this'
Monday, January 28, 2013
No Fear Shakespeare: Macbeth: Act 4, Scene 1, Page 5
Shall come against him"
'via Blog this'
ScienceDirect.com - Trends in Cognitive Sciences - There is nothing paranormal about near-death experiences: how neuroscience can explain seeing bright lights, meeting the dead, or being convinced you are one of them
RDFRS: The Tyranny of the Discontinuous Mind - Christmas 2011
Saturday, January 26, 2013
Friday, January 25, 2013
The Federal Pie Chart
'via Blog this'
Nicholas Eberstadt: Yes, Mr. President, We Are a Nation of Takers - WSJ.com
'via Blog this'
Atheism Should End Religion, Not Replace It - Room for Debate - NYTimes.com
Thursday, January 24, 2013
What does fMRI measure, anyway? – Neurologism
'via Blog this'
Companion Animal Psychology
'via Blog this'
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Benghazi
Hillary chafes their asses in Congress:
For Barack Obama: his second inauguration - Yahoo! News
Truth-twisting is our Trojan horse.
---SPSmith
Slate: Amanda McKittrick Ros, the Worst Novelist in History
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/culturebox/2013/01/was_amanda_mckittrick_ros_the_worst_novelist_in_history.html
---SPSmith
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Poetry and History | Transitional Justice
History says, don't hope
On this side of the grave.
But then, once in a lifetime
The longed-for tidal wave
Of justice can rise up,
And hope and history rhyme.
---SPSmith
Awaiting a New Darwin by H. Allen Orr | The New York Review of Books
a scientific education is, to a considerable extent, an exercise in
taming the authority of one's intuition
---SPSmith
Awaiting a New Darwin by H. Allen Orr | The New York Review of Books
The history of science is partly the history of an idea that is by now
so familiar that it no longer astounds: the universe, including our
own existence, can be explained by the interactions of little bits of
matter. We scientists are in the business of discovering the laws that
characterize this matter. We do so, to some extent at least, by a kind
of reduction. The stuff of biology, for instance, can be reduced to
chemistry and the stuff of chemistry can be reduced to physics.
---SPSmith
Obama's speech lauds government, dismisses opponents | The Daily Caller
Confident Obama lays out battle plan as he launches second term | Reuters
"We cannot mistake absolutism for principle, or substitute spectacle
for politics, or treat name-calling as reasoned debate."
---SPSmith
Roe v. Wade at 40: Time to Push Back Against Those in the Stone Age | The Progressive
You can't shove young women, who have grown up believing that they ought to be able to have full, happy sex lives, good health care, rewarding work, and children, too, when they want them and can care for them, that they ought to return to the world of the double standard, early, forced marriages, and sex lives full of darkness, fear, and shame.
In fact, we just had a national referendum on this issue.
Women voted overwhelmingly against the Paul Ryan/Todd Akin/Foster Fries worldview: that telling women to hold an aspirin between our legs is a funny and piquant response to the demand for birth control, that a law student who dares suggest that university health care include contraceptives deserves to be shamed by a powerful man with a national microphone as a "slut," that rape victims are lying about being assaulted if they get pregnant--because only a woman willing to have sex can conceive.
---SPSmith
Court wary of warrantless blood tests in DUI cases - Yahoo! News
The court heard arguments Wednesday in a case about a disputed blood test from Missouri, against the backdrop of a serious national problem of more than 10,000 deaths from crashes involving alcohol-impaired drivers in 2010, about one every 51 minutes.
That number has dropped by 60 percent in the past 20 years because of a sustained national crackdown on drunken driving. Lawyers for Missouri and the Obama administration argued that dispensing with a warrant requirement would further that effort because any delay in testing a suspect's blood-alcohol content allows alcohol to dissipate in the blood.
Monday, January 21, 2013
Friday, January 18, 2013
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Article: Intel posts Q4 2012 earnings: $2.5 billion in profit on $13.5 billion in revenue
Intel posts Q4 2012 earnings: $2.5 billion in profit on $13.5 billion in revenue
http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/17/intel-posts-q4-2012-earnings/
Sent via Flipboard
---SPSmith
Right to peaceable assemble
I thought you'd like this azcentral article. Check it out:
A forgotten right
http://www.azcentral.com/opinions/articles/20130116editorial-forgotten-right.html
---SPSmith
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
The Q&A: Steven Pinker: The violent dangers of ideology | The Economist
Consciousness is increasingly seen as the origin of moral worth.
Empirically, the huge increase in abortions has not accompanied an
increase in the neglect or abuse of children. A common prediction in
the 1970s before Roe v Wade (a landmark decision by the United States
Supreme Court on the issue of abortion) is that abortion would
inevitably lead to legalised infanticide. We can say with confidence
that that prediction was incorrect, which supports the idea that
people's intuition doesn't equate abortion with murder, that legalised
abortion did not place people on a slippery slope. The slope actually
has a fair amount of traction and I think what gives it traction is
the equation of moral values with consciousness
---SPSmith
Presidential Proclamation -- Religious Freedom Day | The White House
'via Blog this'
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Us gun problem
http://www.cnn.com/2013/01/15/opinion/frum-guns-race/index.html
---SPSmith
Article: Reality Check: 5 Risks of Raw Vegan Diet
Reality Check: 5 Risks of Raw Vegan Diet
http://news.yahoo.com/reality-check-5-risks-raw-vegan-diet-193932952.html
Sent via Flipboard
---SPSmith
'The Whole Nine Yards' Of What?
I found the following story on the NPR iPad App:
http://www.npr.org/2013/01/14/169140590/-the-whole-nine-yards-of-what?sc=ipad&f=1008
by Geoff Nunberg
NPR - January 14, 2013
Where does the phrase "the whole nine yards" come from? In 1982, William Safire called that "one of the great etymological mysteries of our time."
He thought the phrase originally referred to the capacity of a cement truck in cubic yards. But there are plenty of other theories.
Some people say it dates back to when square-riggers had three masts, each with three yards supporting the sails, so the whole nine yards meant the sails were fully set.
Another popular story holds that it refers to the length of an ammunition belt on World War II fighters — when a pilot had exhausted his ammunition, he said he had shot off the whole nine yards. Or it was the amount of cloth in the queen's bridal train, or in the Shroud of Turin. Or it had to do with a fourth-down play in football. Or it came from a joke about a prodigiously well-endowed Scotsman who gets his kilt caught in a door.
The Internet is full of just-so stories like these. They're often shaky in their facts about ammunition belts or cement trucks, but they come with assurances that the information came firsthand from an old Naval gunnery instructor or a Scottish tailor.
It used to be hard to debunk these tales, since the only way to track the expressions down was by rooting around in library stacks and newspaper morgues in search of a revealing early citation. But with the vast historical collections of books and newspapers that are now online, etymology has joined the list of activities you can do in your pajamas.
Word-sleuths traced the modern use of "the whole nine yards" as far back as a 1956 article in a magazine called Kentucky Happy Hunting Ground. Now they've discovered an even earlier version of the phrase, "the whole six yards," which was used in the rural South as early as 1912. That's still how the phrase goes in parts of the South, but it was inflated to "nine yards" when it caught on elsewhere, the same way the early 20th-century "cloud seven" was upgraded to our "cloud nine."
The unearthing of those early sources was deemed important enough to warrant a story in The New York Times, not an organ that ordinarily treats etymological discoveries as breaking news. True, the findings don't actually settle what if anything the phrase originally referred to. But they put the kibosh on the stories about World War II and the one about cement trucks, which hadn't been invented yet — though, actually, none of these stories was very plausible in the first place. `
Of course there could be a real story behind the expression, even if it's no more than a family joke about the long scarves that Aunt Florence used to knit as Christmas presents. But it could also be that somebody just plucked the words out of the air one Tuesday morning. One way or the other, the real birth of the expression was when somebody passed it along without caring what "nine yards" referred to.
The fact is that once you've said "the whole" it doesn't matter what words you finish it with or whether they mean anything or not — shooting match, enchilada, schmear, shebang? "The whole ball of wax" first showed up in the 1880s, though some writers say it comes from a 16th-century ritual for dividing up an estate among heirs. If you believe that, I've got a caboodle I want to sell you.
A number of years ago I started saying "the whole kazonga," just because I liked the sound of it. Nobody ever called me on it, but when I finally looked it up it turned out to be the name both of an Italian adult comic book and of a Zambian minister who was involved in a fertilizer scam. In the somewhat unlikely event that "the whole kazonga" ever catches on, you can be sure someone will explain how it originally comes from one or the other of those.
Still, it's hard to accept that it doesn't matter where the expression came from. Whether the measure is six yards or nine, it has a tantalizing specificity. It cries out for an explanation, and there are plenty of them at hand. Is it merely coincidence that six yards is the exact diameter of a pitcher's mound? The amount of cloth in a Varanasi sari? The length of a parachute line?
But that profusion of possibilities is the key to the idiom's appeal. If "the whole nine yards" had a definitive completion — if it went on to mention yards of cloth, cement or ammunition — it would never have caught on in the first place. It's like a line of poetry; it resonates without resolving.
Except that we don't think of this as poetry. A poet's images can bubble straight up out of the imagination; we don't ask for explanations or backstories. Would it really help to know where Gertrude Stein got "pigeons in the grass, alas" from? "Let me see, that was the day when Miss Stein and I were walking in the Luxembourg Gardens, and I started to sit on the lawn but she said, 'No, Alice' ... "
But that's just the kind of story we expect when the phrase originates in the collective imagination. So we rummage around in old ships and cement trucks looking for a secret key, as if there couldn't be any poetry in everyday language that didn't begin its life as prose. [Copyright 2013 National Public Radio]
To learn more about the NPR iPad app, go to http://ipad.npr.org/recommendnprforipad
---SPSmith
Monday, January 14, 2013
Guns don't kill dictatorships, people do | FP Passport
Given the advanced deadly weaponry available to governments these days -- as opposed to the late 18th century -- most tyrants aren't all that threatened by citizens with conventional weapons. Like the Iraqis, Libyans were fairly well armed under Muammar al-Qaddafi -- 15.5 guns per 100 people as of 2007 -- but it still took an assist from NATO air power to finally bring him down.
On the other extreme, the country ranked last on the survey -- with only 0.1 guns per 100 people -- is Tunisia, which as you'll recall was still able to overthrow a longtime dictator in 2011. With only 3.5 guns per 100 people, the Egyptian population that overthrew Hosni Mubarak was hardly well armed either. On the other hand, Bahrain, where a popular revolution failed to unseat the country's monarchy, has 24.8 guns per 100 people, putting it in the top 20 worldwide. A relatively high rate of 10.7 guns per 100 people in Venezuela hasn't stopped the deterioration of democracy under Hugo Chávez.
---SPSmithArticle: Tea Party Rep: Gun Regulation Won't Work Because Hammers And Hatchets Exist | ThinkProgress
Tea Party Rep: Gun Regulation Won't Work Because Hammers And Hatchets Exist | ThinkProgress
http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2013/01/14/1441851/tea-party-rep-gun-regulation-wont-work-because-hammers-and-hatchets-exist/?mobile=wt
---SPSmith
Sunday, January 13, 2013
Americans Under 50 Fare Poorly on Health Measures, New Report Says - NYTimes.com
Car accidents, gun violence and drug overdoses were major contributors to years of life lost by Americans before age 50.
The rate of firearm homicides was 20 times higher in the United States than in the other countries, according to the report, which cited a 2011 study of 23 countries. And though suicide rates were lower in the United States, firearm suicide rates were six times higher.
---SPSmithBack When I Was Packing - NYTimes.com
Hypochondria - An Inside Look - NYTimes.com
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/13/opinion/sunday/hypochondria-an-inside-look.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1&
Lessig Blog, v2
we live in a world where the architects of the financial crisis
regularly dine at the White House — and where even those brought to
"justice" never even have to admit any wrongdoing, let alone be
labeled "felons."
---SPSmith
Noam Chomsky: The responsibility of privilege - Talk to Al Jazeera - Al Jazeera English
---SPSmith
Article: why guns won’t protect you from dictators
why guns won't protect you from dictators
http://worldofweirdthings.com/2013/01/13/why-guns-wont-protect-you-from-dictators/
Sent via Flipboard
---SPSmith
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Article: The inspiring heroism of Aaron Swartz
The inspiring heroism of Aaron Swartz
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/jan/12/aaron-swartz-heroism-suicide1
Sent via Flipboard
---SPSmith
Nuanced position
http://www.cnn.com/2013/01/11/opinion/jefferson-fake-gun-quotation/index.html
---SPSmith
Friday, January 11, 2013
This Isn't the Petition Response You're Looking For | We the People: Your Voice in Our Government
The Administration does not support blowing up planets.
---SPSmith
Anonymous Comments, Gutless Trolls, and Why It's Time We All Stop Drinking This Digital Poison | Common Dreams
Former US diplomat Christopher Hill, a man whose views normally make me cringe – he was ambassador to Iraq, special envoy to Kosovo and a Dayton negotiator – has observed these dangers. "Instant access to information does not mean instant access to knowledge, much less wisdom," he wrote recently. "In the past, information was integrated with experience. Today, it is integrated with emotion... Digital technology has played an important role "in fostering this atmosphere of bad manners, vicious personal attacks, intolerance, disprespect... Bullying has gone virtual".
---SPSmith
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Article: Instant View: Holiday PC sales slide for first time in over five years
Instant View: Holiday PC sales slide for first time in over five years
http://news.yahoo.com/instant-view-holiday-pc-sales-slide-first-time-234256414--finance.html
Sent via Flipboard
---SPSmith
Wednesday, January 09, 2013
Tuesday, January 08, 2013
The Riddle of the Gun : Sam Harris
In fact, it can be easily argued that original intent of the Second
Amendment had nothing to do with the right of self-defense—which
remains the ethical case to be made for owning a firearm. The
amendment seems to have been written to allow the states to check the
power of the federal government by maintaining their militias. Given
the changes that have occurred in our military, and even in our
politics, the idea that a few pistols and an AR 15 in every home
constitutes a necessary bulwark against totalitarianism is fairly
ridiculous. If you believe that the armed forces of the United States
might one day come for you—and you think your cache of small arms will
suffice to defend you if they do—I've got a black helicopter to sell
you.
---SPSmith
Monday, January 07, 2013
The Blessings of Atheism - NYTimes.com
NeuroLogica Blog » Morality – Religion, Philosophy and Science
The best approach to morality and ethics, in my opinion, is a
thoughtful blend of philosophy and science. I do not see a legitimate
role for religion itself, however, cultural traditions (many of which
may be codified in religious belief) is a useful source of information
about the human condition and the effect of specific moral behaviors.
There may be wisdom in such traditions – but that is the beginning of
moral thinking, not the conclusion. Religious traditions also come
with a great deal of baggage derived from the beliefs and views of
fairly primitive and unenlightened societies.
---SPSmith
Saturday, January 05, 2013
NSC Study Shows You are More Likely to Killed By a Cop Than a Terrorist
--You are 8 times more likely to be killed by a police officer than by a terrorist
---SPSmith
Friday, January 04, 2013
Don’t demonize Sam Harris | The Hellfire Club
---SPSmith
Richer Than Romney: Al Gore Scores On Sale Of Current TV - Forbes
Even Al Gore is a better business man than Mitt the Twit Romney.
Too bad George W. illegally stole the presidential election from him.
---SPSmith
Hammers Deadlier Than Rifles? FBI Releases Crime Stats For 2011
---SPSmith
Thursday, January 03, 2013
Republicans Apologize to Top 1.5 Per Cent : The New Yorker
WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—In the aftermath of the fiscal-cliff deal, Republicans in Congress issued a heartfelt apology to the top 1.5 per cent richest people in America, offering "messages of profound condolence" for allowing their taxes to increase slightly.
"Our hearts go out to them," said House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), still teary-eyed after hanging up the phone with a multimillionaire in Orange County, California. "We came to Washington to do the work of 1.5 per cent of the American people, and we didn't get it done."