Buttle's World

21 October, 2008

Puncturing the Acupuncture Myth

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 22:21

Harriet Hall takes out a needle and skewers a phony treatment.

To start with, this ancient Chinese treatment is not so ancient and may not even be Chinese! From studying the earliest documents, Chinese scholar Paul Unschuld suspects the idea may have originated with the Greek Hippocrates of Cos and later spread to China. There’s certainly no evidence that it’s 3000 years old. The earliest Chinese medical texts, from the 3rd century BC, don’t mention it. The earliest reference to “needling” is from 90 BC, but it refers to bloodletting and lancing abscesses with large needles or lancets. There is nothing in those documents to suggest anything like today’s acupuncture. We have the archaeological evidence of needles from that era – they are large; the technology for manufacturing thin steel needles appropriate for acupuncture didn’t exist until 400 years ago.

Read the whole thing. It’s a lot newer than 400 years.

Machosauce Rides Again

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 21:05

More clarity than in any dozen ten-minute questions from Joe Biden.

Speaking of Federal Agencies with No Constitutional Reason to Exist

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 17:15

The boys and girls at BATFE have added intellectual property theft to their list of accomplishments. I’m not going to bother writing to Bush, though. Have you ever seen a lamer duck?

Meanwhile, in the Climate

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 16:50

Global warming has cooled down.

The Case Against Obama

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 12:22

If you still need convincing, take a look at the comprehensive case against Obama assembled over at Hot Air.

If you call yourself an AA (African American) check this out.

My warning to all Americans both white and black (those AA’s who can overcome the vote black impulse) is that in Barack Obama, you are not getting Bill Cosby, you are getting a very well disguised version of Louis Farrakhan.

Perhaps you prefer bullet points.

8 YEARS OF AN OBAMA-PELOSI-ACORN ADMINISTRATION WOULD GIVE AMERICA:

  • 8 YEARS OF SPREAD-THE-WEALTH SOCIALISM,
  • 8 YEARS OF CHICAGO-STYLE CORRUPTION, &
  • 8 YEARS OF UNITED NATIONS-STYLE FOREIGN POLICY

And if you like CW music, hit play on this:

I hope I’ve covered all the bases.

Update:

Of course I haven’t. There is so much we know about what’s not known about Obama that it’s crazy he’s this close to the presidency.

California Propositions

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 10:19

Once again, Tom McClintock is channeling me and making exactly the recommendations I would. Well, at least I think I’ll go along with him on Prop 6. His reasoning on each seems solid. Here he is, with my two cents in italics:

Prop. 1A High Speed Rail Bond.  NO: This is the most outrageously expensive boondoggle in California’s long history of outrageously expensive boondoggles.  The ultimate cost of this project could end up exceeding $90 billion – or $10,000 per family – all for a train that goes from Los Angeles to San Francisco in two hours longer than it takes to fly.  It’s brought to you by the same folks who botched Boston’s “Big Dig.”  (I’m one of the official opponents of this measure.)

Prop. 2 Farm Animals.  NO: Sorry, but farm animals are food, not friends.  Plan on somewhat happier cows and much higher grocery bills if this one passes.

Prop. 3 Hospital Bond. NO: Here’s a rather cynical measure that uses children as a front in order to lavish taxpayer funds on private hospital corporations.

Prop. 4 Parental Notification.  YES: Parents must give written consent before their teenage daughters use a tanning booth or get their ears pierced.  This measure simply requires them to be notified if their daughter is having an abortion.

Prop.5 Non-violent drug offenses.  NO: The fatal flaw in this otherwise decent measure would allow criminals to use their drug offense for leniency for other non-drug-related crimes.

And note that George Soros is paying for the ads.

Prop. 6 Police and Law Enforcement Funding. YES: This is a tough call.  My favorite provision is prohibiting the release on bail of illegal aliens charged with violent crimes.  Its principal purpose is to lock up an increasing portion of the state budget for local law enforcement.  Law enforcement should be government’s top priority, but I don’t like auto-pilot spending or using state resources for local programs.  I also don’t like its weakening of the hearsay rule.  On balance I think it does more good than harm, but it’s a very mixed bag.

My usual default position is “when in doubt, vote No on everything.” I worry about the mixed bag.

Prop.7 Renewable Energy Subsidies.  NO: This will send electricity prices through the roof.  It requires the most expensive energy generation to comprise 20 percent of our electricity needs.  Government should get out of the way and let simple economics determine the mix of energy generation in this state.

Any time they want you to vote for something the market is supposed to do, vote No!

Prop. 8 Defense of Marriage Act. YES: Marriage is a unique institution in which a man and a woman summon a child into the world – creating a unique tapestry of responsibilities.  Our marriage laws are designed to support those responsibilities and are simply inapplicable to any other kind of relationship.  Lincoln asked, “If you call a tail a leg, how many legs has a dog?  The answer is four.  Calling a tail a leg doesn’t make it one.”  And calling a homosexual partnership a marriage doesn’t make it one.

The family is the basic unit of society. Marriage is something we’ve evolved with, just as much as any other part of society. It really is the bedrock of civilization. Don’t mess with it. And don’t open the door to dangerous substitutes like polygamy.

Prop. 9 Parole Reform. YES: This requires the victim to be considered when a suspect’s bail is being set or a criminal’s parole is being determined.  About bloody time.

Prop 10 Fuel Subsidies.  NO: This $5 billion bond will cost taxpayers $10 billion with interest to subsidize “alternative fuel vehicles” and “renewable energy.”  I’m all for alternative fuel vehicles and renewable energy as long as the consumers who want them pay for them.  But don’t reach into my pocket to pay for somebody else’s choice.

Again – this is the market’s job. Anything that can’t survive without subsidies should be strangled. This is nothing but socialism or, as it’s now called, “spreading the wealth around.”

Prop 11 Redistricting.  YES: This should be the all-time no brainer: voters should choose their politicians and not the other way around.  This measure takes redistricting out of the hands of the legislature, removing an obvious conflict of interest.

Oh, please let this pass.

Prop 12 Veterans Bond Act.  YES: This is a self-liquidating bond (meaning taxpayers aren’t on the hook) to assist veterans with home purchases.  The state has done this for many years and it has never cost taxpayers a dime.  I co-authored this one.

Update:

For some reason lots of folks are finding their way here after the election. I welcome you all and suggest you may want to see what silver linings I found in the results.

John Bolton vs. Alan Colmes

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 9:29

Sean Hannity should feel guilty for hiring that dummy whose job, apparently, is to make everyone else on the program look smart by comparison. What an unappealing oaf he is.

Anyway, enjoy a good spoonfull of smart from John Bolton on Joe Biden, the gift who keeps on giving.

I also love Palin’s line:

But I guess the looming crisis that most worries the Obama campaign right now is Joe Biden’s next speaking engagement.  Let’s call that crisis scenario number five.

Update:

“The answer is quite clear … Biden is a plant of the McCain campaign.”

–Charles Krauthammer

The Ayers Ad that McCain Won’t Make

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 9:10

Kos Kids Stay Classy

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 8:50

I won’t link to them, so I’ll link to this.

This list contains information about those who are big donors to the Yes on 8 campaign—donors to the tune of at least $1,000 dollars. And, as you can see, there are a lot of them.  It also indicates if they’re Mormon or not.

If you’re interested in defeating the religious right and preserving marriage equality, here’s how you can help:

Find us some ammo.

Now, it’s not like all Mormons are as pure as the driven snow (Harry Reid is one, remember) so they may indeed dig up something. On the other hand the Kos Kids may find it’s not as target-rich an environment as they think.

Meanwhile, the anti-marriage forces have cranked up their spending. The Yes on 8 group has a very good ad here on a page where you can donate.

Hey, Colin!

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 8:10

You think Obama is “transformational”? You don’t know the half of it.

You must, must, read Roger Kimball.

I agree with Gen. Powell that Obama would be a “transformational figure.” But what sort of transformation are we talking about? The United States is the richest, freest, most powerful nation in history. What would it look like after Obama, abetted by a Pelosi-Reid Congress, got done with their transformation?

Yes, that’s right, Virginia, it would be poorer, markedly less free, and less powerful.

In my moments of despair I think this could be the end of the great American experiment. But Kimball is right: The moment for despair is after Obama wins. Until then we have to do everything we can to make sure he loses.

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