27 February, 2010
22 February, 2010
20 February, 2010
Which Is More Dangerous?
A. Running with pancakes
B. Using a hot tub
C. Letting Islamist nutjobs get nuclear weapons
Pencils down, please.
How to evaluate your score:
C: You are sane
A or B: You are an infantilized liberal or a left-wing government official.
19 February, 2010
Drawing the Line on Freedom of Religion
Freedom of religion is a founding principle of our culture and our country. But it is not a “Get out of Jail Free” card to let you do anything you want. I have no problem with religions teaching their beliefs of various and sundry deities, or teaching their followers how they should live. Religions should be able to preach and proselytize in the free market of ideas.
But when a religion seeks to impose itself by force, or usurp the rule of law, it has crossed the line and deserves no constitutional protections. As Andy McCarthy puts it:
Implementing sharia is the purpose of jihad. Sharia is antithetical to our Constitution in fundamental ways.
So if you want to preach sharia in your mosque, my country has both a right and a duty to listen in and to do something about it.
Citizens United Good News for Progressives, Too
Will Wilkinson lays out the case.
Progressives are right to worry about corporatist government. But they locate the problem in the wrong place, which is why their proposed solutions repeatedly miss the target. It would be a great tragedy for democracy if a commonsense reading of the First Amendment’s protection of free speech truly undermined democratic freedom. Thankfully, it does not. Ultimately, the Citizen’s United case will change very little about how our political system works. Election-season speech was never the chief means by which special interests did their dirty work. But in some modest measure, the decision actually sets the right example. By limiting government power, it protects our freedom.
Of course a deliberately dishonest, illiterate reading of the Constitution is a requirement for being a “progressive”.
18 February, 2010
An Open Letter to Senator Orrin Hatch
Dear Senator:
I don’t want your kind of help. Please just go home to Utah and shut the hell up.
Sincerely,
Me
16 February, 2010
Ain’t That Typical
Keith Ellison calls out Daniel Pipes and then vanishes when challenged to a debate. Doesn’t that just seem like an Islamist thug and/or Liberal Democrat? (Have you noticed how hard they are to tell apart some times?)
Update:
Andy McCarthy also seems to doubt that Ellison will accept the challenge.
Maybe Ellision, the great supporter of Israel and interfaith dialogue, can enlighten us about his activism on behalf of Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam; his support for Kwame Ture (Stokely Carmichael) to speak at his law school on the subject “Zionism: Imperialism, White Supremacy or Both?”; or, in more recent times, his support for Sami al-Arian, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad leader convicted for conspiring to support terrorism. Maybe Ellison, the great believer in peaceful resolution of conflict, can address his support for convicted cop-killers (including leading one courthouse demonstration with the chant of “We don’t get no justice, you don’t get no peace”), and for the “flying imams” who terrified the passengers and crew of a U.S.Airways flight in 2006. Maybe Ellison, the great believer in religious tolerance, can explain why he recently berated Dr. Zuhdi Jasser — an authentic Muslim moderate who opposes Islamist groups like CAIR who flock to Ellison — for being a traitor who licenses anti-Muslim bigotry.
Maybe . . . but I doubt it.
Can Atheists Be Good People?
This is an old trope of many religious people. To them, their religion or their deity is the source of morality, in which case those who reject gods and religion must be immoral.
New research shows that morality developed in humans independently of religion.
Considerable debate has surrounded the question of the origins and evolution of religion. One proposal views religion as an adaptation for cooperation, whereas an alternative proposal views religion as a by-product of evolved, non-religious, cognitive functions. We critically evaluate each approach, explore the link between religion and morality in particular, and argue that recent empirical work in moral psychology provides stronger support for the by-product approach. Specifically, despite differences in religious background, individuals show no difference in the pattern of their moral judgments for unfamiliar moral scenarios. These findings suggest that religion evolved from pre-existing cognitive functions, but that it may then have been subject to selection, creating an adaptively designed system for solving the problem of cooperation. (Emphasis added.)
Note that this sense of morality is found in children who have not yet had the possibility of religious indoctrination. There was a good episode of WNYC’s Radio Lab, Morality, dealing with this also.
15 February, 2010
Caption Contest
Over at the freethinker they’re having a caption contest.

You’ll find my entry if you scroll down far enough.
14 February, 2010
A Skeptic, not a Denier
And being a skeptic I want good data and open research. I also evaluate the credibility of sources when deciding on plausibility. The IPCC is part of the United Nations. The United Nations is a systemically-corrupt left-wing political organization. That is why I pretty much discount everything it has said about AGW.
As well you may imagine I am shocked — shocked — to read this.
“The temperature records cannot be relied on as indicators of global change,” said John Christy, professor of atmospheric science at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, a former lead author on the IPCC.
and
“We concluded, with overwhelming statistical significance, that the IPCC’s climate data are contaminated with surface effects from industrialisation and data quality problems. These add up to a large warming bias,” he said.
Oh, and this.
Professor Jones also conceded the possibility that the world was warmer in medieval times than now – suggesting global warming may not be a man-made phenomenon.
And he said that for the past 15 years there has been no ‘statistically significant’ warming.
AGW may be real. But I’m still skeptical.
11 February, 2010
Good Science is Open Science
As I mentioned before, the “Climategate” emails were not such a big deal. The computer code, on the other hand, was.
Here’s a good explanation (in The Guardian, of all places) of why it’s important to release the code.
Hatton and other researchers’ work indicates that scientific software is often of poor quality. What is staggering about the research that has been done is that it examines commercial scientific software – produced by software engineers who have to undergo a regime of thorough testing, quality assurance and a change control discipline known as configuration management.
By contrast scientific software developed in our universities and research institutes is often produced by scientists with no training in software engineering and with no quality mechanisms in place and so, no doubt, the occurrence of errors will be even higher. The Climate Research Unit’s “Harry ReadMe” files are a graphic indication of such working conditions, containing as they do the outpouring of a programmer’s frustrations in trying to get sets of data to conform to a specification.
You wouldn’t trust your encryption to software that wasn’t open. There’s no reason to trust any other critical software that isn’t, especially if the results might be influencing policy.
9 February, 2010
Two Brazilian Soldiers Killed
The President was just informed that two Brazilian soldiers were killed in Afghanistan.
He collapsed into a state of shock, slumping over his desk. Once He regained his composure he tearfully asked, “So exactly how many is a brazilian?”
8 February, 2010
Cracking Down on Supplements At Last?
A glimmer of hope over at SBM. The DSHEA, the deadly child of a couple of lame-brained Senators, may be getting a much-needed patch thanks to another Senator not normally known for his deep thinking.
Last week, I learned that yet another effort is being made to strengthen the DSHEA and close some of its loopholes. This effort comes in the form of a law under consideration, the Dietary Supplement Safety Act of 2010. It is a law proposed by, of all legislators, John McCain.
I’ll say it again here for the search engines to find: Orrin Hatch is an idiot. Of course, Tom Harkin is a moron, but our expectations are naturally set a bit lower for Democrats.
Meanwhile, here’s your Buttle’s World health tip for the day: If a product says “Supplement” on it anywhere, don’t buy it. You don’t need it, and it may well harm you. Especially if it’s made in Utah.
5 February, 2010
Lucky His Name Isn’t Bush
Can you imagine the reaction if Bush had said anything as embarassingly ignorant as “corpse-man”? This clip would have been in heavy rotation all weekend.
You’d think the Dumb Bastard would have someone on staff who has, you know, actually met someone in the military before.
3 February, 2010
Little Girl, Big Voice
Penn Jillette found this video from a couple of years ago, when Nora Foss Al-Jabri was only eleven years old. As he put it on his Facebook page, “How does an 11 year old make me cry my eyes out with music? Well, it helps to have Leonard find the tune and words for you, but still.”
I’ve watched it thrice now. I cry a little more each time. Have a hanky handy.
She’s clearly got a career ahead of her. Here she is at twelve:
And thirteen.
1 February, 2010
Avatar Review
The same guy who did those great Prequel reviews is back, and this time Avatar is in his sights.
Same language warning as before. But, again, you’ll actually learn a lot about film making. And the review is dead-on accurate.
Part 1:
Part 2: