More on HIV/AIDS Denial and Eliza Jane Scovill
Posted by Lippard at 11/29/2005 09:26:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 11/26/2005 03:31:00 PM 3 comments
Labels: lottery winners and losers
Posted by Lippard at 11/26/2005 12:46:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 11/23/2005 03:17:00 PM 1 comments
Posted by Lippard at 11/23/2005 02:47:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 11/23/2005 02:27:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: arts
Posted by Lippard at 11/21/2005 10:23:00 AM 7 comments
Posted by Lippard at 11/21/2005 09:20:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: medicine
I think we've been dividing the world along the wrong axes. It's normal for us to dichotomize our interactions along simple, one-dimensional lines—liberal-conservative, men-women, atheist-theist—and while that is a useful way to categorize (as long as we don't get so committed to the extremes that we fail to recognize them as continua), I fear that we've neglected to notice one dimension that is extremely relevant to the current discourse.
... I need a label, so I'm going to call those people who consider material evidence paramount and regard the real world as a mostly sufficient container of phenomena that define our existence the Naturals. ...
What's the contra position? There are those who think inspiration and intuition and all the internal imagery of their minds define their external reality; that what they wish to be so will be so if only they can articulate it and select and distort evidence for the purposes of persuasion. ...
I'm going to call them Unnaturals, plainly enough.
More at the source. Needless to say, we're Naturals here...
Posted by Lippard at 11/20/2005 06:45:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 11/19/2005 07:00:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 11/19/2005 06:23:00 PM 6 comments
Labels: ACLU, Arizona, civil liberties, FCC, law, Multics, NSA, politics, privacy, security, technology, TSA incompetence, wiretapping
Posted by Lippard at 11/19/2005 01:07:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: science
Posted by Lippard at 11/18/2005 09:00:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: politics
In the sharpest White House attack yet on critics of the Iraq war, Vice President Dick Cheney said on Wednesday that accusations the Bush administration manipulated intelligence to justify the war were a "dishonest and reprehensible" political ploy.Yet it was Cheney who was rewriting his own 2001 history in 2004 (quoting here from an az.general newsgroup posting I made on June 24, 2004):
Cheney repeated Bush's charge that Democratic critics were rewriting history by questioning prewar intelligence on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction even though many Senate Democrats voted in October 2002 to authorize the invasion.
"The president and I cannot prevent certain politicians from losing their memory, or their backbone -- but we're not going to sit by and let them rewrite history," said Cheney, a principal architect of the war and a focus of Democratic allegations the administration misrepresented intelligence on Iraq's weapons program.
Cheney said the suggestion Bush or any member of the administration misled Americans before the war "is one of the most dishonest and reprehensible charges ever aired in this city."
Here's another recent example of a lie from Dick Cheney (both are on video, and were shown on Comedy Central's "The Daily Show" night before last)--this text is quoted from http://www.spinsanity.org/:On "Meet the Press" on November 14, 2003, Cheney stated that "I have not suggested there's a connection between Iraq and 9/11." What else could he have meant when he claimed a "pretty well confirmed" Mohammed Atta link to Iraq?During the CNBC interview, Cheney also dissembled in the following exchange about Mohammed Atta, an Al Qaeda member who was allegedly involved in the September 11 attacks (a witness claimed that Atta met with an Iraqi intelligence officer in Prague in the spring of 2001, a heavily disputed assertion that the FBI and CIA have questioned):So in December 2001 he said the Atta/Iraqi meeting in Prague was "pretty well confirmed," but in 2004 he says he never said that, and that "we have never been able to confirm that nor have we been able to knock it down."BORGER: Well, let's get to Mohamed Atta for a minute because you mentioned him as well. You have said in the past that it was, quote, "pretty well confirmed."But as a White House transcript demonstrates, Cheney said in a December 9, 2001 interview on "Meet the Press" that, "Well, what we now have that's developed since you and I last talked, Tim, of course, was that report that's been *pretty well confirmed*, that [Atta] did go to Prague and he did meet with a senior official of the Iraqi intelligence service in Czechoslovakia last April, several months before the attack." (our emphasis)
CHENEY: No, I never said that.
BORGER: OK.
CHENEY: I never said that.
BORGER: I think that is...
CHENEY: Absolutely not. What I said was the Czech intelligence service reported after 9/11 that Atta had been in Prague on April 9 of 2001, where he allegedly met with an Iraqi intelligence official. We have never been able to confirm that nor have we been able to knock it down, we just don't know.
So he was lying in December 2001 when he said it was pretty well confirmed, and lying again in 2004 when he said he never said that it was pretty well confirmed.
BTW, up until very recently the Bush administration was denying the content of Seymour Hersh's story in the New Yorker which was the first report of Rumsfeld's memo approving these techniques. They were lying.In that USA Today story, the Bush administration response to Hersh's charges, now confirmed, was:
E.g., look at the quotes attributed to "The Pentagon" and Condoleezza Rice in this USA Today article from May 15:
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2004-05-15-rumsfeld-abuse_x.htm
I think the most blatant evidence of dishonesty by the Bush administration is found by just comparing their own statements over time, and watching them contradict themselves.
The Pentagon said that story was "filled with error and anonymous conjecture" and called it "outlandish, conspiratorial." National security adviser Condoleezza Rice, in a German television interview, said of The New Yorker report, "As far as we can tell, there's really nothing to the story."In the Washington Post, May 17, 2004:
CIA spokesman Bill Harlow called the Hersh story "fundamentally wrong" in its assertion that there was a "DOD/CIA program to abuse and humiliate Iraqi prisoners." Harlow added, "Despite what is alleged in the article, I am aware of no CIA official who would have or possibly could have confirmed the details of the New Yorker's inaccurate account."Compare what's in the news these days (Washington Post, November 1, 2005) about CIA prisons to what was said in May 2004:
On Friday, the Pentagon announced that the U.S. military will not use certain prisoner interrogation procedures in Iraq and Afghanistan, including sleep and sensory deprivation, as a result of the Abu Ghraib prison scandal.Nor is it clear whether the ban applies to secret prisons in other countries...
...
It remains unclear whether the ban applies to accused Taliban and al Qaeda detainees held by the U.S. military in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Posted by Lippard at 11/17/2005 08:08:00 AM 0 comments
Posted by Einzige at 11/14/2005 09:15:00 PM 3 comments
Posted by Lippard at 11/13/2005 05:16:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: Arizona, civil liberties, crime, law, politics, prayer, security, technology
Posted by Lippard at 11/11/2005 09:24:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 11/11/2005 08:56:00 PM 1 comments
Labels: creationism, intelligent design
Today CNN quotes President Bush:
Bush has a terrible habit of going on the offensive even when he's in the wrong, as he is in this case. Here, he is conveniently forgetting that much of what his Administration presented as solid fact was already discredited prior to its presentation to the American public, but it was used anyway. He forgets that this wasn't a matter of objective intelligence assessments, but of reports that were assembled by a new special intelligence analysis unit set up for the White House by Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith (#3 man in the Pentagon, who resigned on January 26, 2005), David Wurmser's Policy Counterterrorism Evaluation Group, which cherry-picked intelligence to find anything that suggested a link between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda, while ignoring all evidence to the contrary, as documented in James Bamford's book, A Pretext for War: 9/11, Iraq, and the Abuse of America's Intelligence Agencies (2004, Doubleday)."While it's perfectly legitimate to criticize my decision or the conduct of the war, it is deeply irresponsible to rewrite the history of how that war began," the president said during a Veterans Day speech in Tobyhanna, Pennsylvania.
"Some Democrats and anti-war critics are now claiming we manipulated the intelligence and misled the American people about why we went to war," Bush said. "They also know that intelligence agencies from around the world agreed with our assessment of Saddam Hussein."
Posted by Lippard at 11/11/2005 07:10:00 PM 1 comments
Labels: politics
Posted by Lippard at 11/11/2005 01:53:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: creationism, Dover trial, intelligent design
Posted by Lippard at 11/11/2005 12:30:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: copyright, security, technology
Posted by Lippard at 11/10/2005 10:01:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: copyright, law, security, technology
Posted by Lippard at 11/10/2005 09:02:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: history, NSA, security, technology, wiretapping
Posted by Lippard at 11/09/2005 05:20:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: creationism, Dover trial
I’d like to say to the good citizens of Dover. If there is a disaster in your area, don’t turn to God, you just rejected Him from your city. And don’t wonder why He hasn’t helped you when problems begin, if they begin. I’m not saying they will, but if they do, just remember, you just voted God out of your city. And if that’s the case, don’t ask for His help because he might not be there.Nothing like argumentum ad baculum...
Posted by Lippard at 11/09/2005 05:00:00 PM 1 comments
Labels: creationism, Dover trial, intelligent design
Posted by Lippard at 11/07/2005 09:37:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 11/03/2005 09:26:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: botnets, security, technology
Posted by Lippard at 11/02/2005 08:08:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 11/02/2005 07:26:00 PM 3 comments
Labels: copyright, security, technology
In addition, after a careful review of the Discovery Institute’s submission, we find that the amicus brief is not only reliant upon several portions of Mr. Meyer’s attached expert report, but also improperly addresses Mr. Dembski’s assertions in detail, once again without affording Plaintiffs any opportunity to challenge such views by cross-examination. Accordingly, the “Brief of Amicus Curiae, the Discovery Institute” shall be stricken in its entirety.A fuller quote (as well as a Fuller quote) may be found at Stranger Fruit.
Posted by Lippard at 11/02/2005 08:56:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: Discovery Institute, Dover trial, intelligent design
Posted by Lippard at 11/02/2005 07:29:00 AM 1 comments
Labels: crime, strange deaths
Posted by Lippard at 11/02/2005 07:14:00 AM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 11/01/2005 07:00:00 PM 1 comments
Labels: ACLU, creationism, Dover trial, intelligent design, law, politics
Posted by Lippard at 11/01/2005 06:55:00 PM 2 comments
Labels: creationism, Dover trial, intelligent design, religion
a) Sincerely believe that your roommate is telling the actual truth?
b) Decide that, because you didn’t actually see your roommate fire the gun, you just can’t know one way or another whether Santa did it?
c) Consider your roommate a murderer, and the claim to be the rationalization of a mind that has snapped?
If my point isn’t glaringly obvious, I think that the Christian/Muslim/Jew/whatever ought to take position A, since, according to most religious beliefs, faith is a virtue. The agnostic ought to take position B, because certain knowledge about anything is denied us. That leaves C, the only rational, reasonable, explanation, for the skeptics/atheists.
If you’re not a skeptical atheist, but you still chose option C above, well, then I applaud you for being reasonable. But I think you need to explain why you choose the analogous A or B when it comes to the equally dubious claim that there is a God.
Posted by Einzige at 11/01/2005 08:39:00 AM 27 comments