The ICR does law as well as it does science
An attorney evaluates their lawsuit and finds that it's as crazy as their science, and doomed to dismissal.
(Via Pharyngula).
Posted by Lippard at 4/22/2009 06:28:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: creationism, Institute for Creation Research, law, religion
Posted by Lippard at 4/18/2009 10:43:00 AM 3 comments
CMI and AiG are pleased to inform you that the dispute between the ministries has been settled to their mutual satisfaction. Each ministry is now focused on its respective mission, having put this dispute behind them in April of 2009.Nathan Zamprogno noted in a comment on my last blog post on this dispute that AiG still had some of its CMI-critical material about the case online, but it now appears to have been taken down as well.
Posted by Lippard at 4/15/2009 03:28:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: Answers in Genesis, Answers in Genesis schism, creationism, law, religion
Posted by Lippard at 4/15/2009 02:33:00 PM 3 comments
Labels: books, Goldwater Institute, history, Institute for Justice, law, politics
Posted by Lippard at 4/04/2009 09:02:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 3/28/2009 05:46:00 AM 1 comments
Labels: Arizona, James Randi, pseudoscience, psychics, SkeptiCamp, skepticism
Posted by Lippard at 3/21/2009 06:50:00 PM 1 comments
Via The Agitator. Officer Cujdik has other issues.ON A SWELTERING July afternoon in 2007, Officer Jeffrey Cujdik and his narcotics squad members raided an Olney tobacco shop.
Then, with guns drawn, they did something bizarre: They smashed two surveillance cameras with a metal rod, said store owners David and Eunice Nam.
The five plainclothes officers yanked camera wires from the ceiling. They forced the slight, frail Korean couple to the vinyl floor and cuffed them with plastic wrist ties.
“I so scared,” said Eunice Nam, 56. “We were on floor. Handcuffs on me. I so, so scared, I wet my pants.”
The officers rifled through drawers, dumped cigarette cartons on the floor and took cash from the registers. Then they hauled the Nams to jail.
The Nams were arrested for selling tiny ziplock bags that police consider drug paraphernalia, but which the couple described as tobacco pouches.
When they later unlocked their store, the Nams allege, they discovered that a case of lighter fluid and handfuls of Zippo lighters were missing. The police said they seized $2,573 in the raid. The Nams say they actually had between $3,800 and $4,000 in the store.
The Nams’ story is strikingly similar to those told by other mom-and-pop store owners, from Dominicans in Hunting Park to Jordanians in South Philadelphia.
Posted by Lippard at 3/20/2009 07:38:00 PM 1 comments
Labels: crime, drug laws, ethics, law, police abuse and corruption
Posted by Lippard at 3/20/2009 05:07:00 PM 3 comments
Labels: economics, immigration, science, technology
Posted by Lippard at 3/16/2009 08:01:00 PM 4 comments