That was my immediate impression too.Apples wrote:Pepsi is reminding me of Eucliwoo.
Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Are you saying that Pepsi...is not the real thing?Apples wrote:Pepsi is reminding me of Eucliwoo.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
MZcWi6wEbG0/quote]Pitchguest wrote:codelette wrote:I have noticed that before. Most of them move to white enclaves (cough, MN) and then complain about lack of brown peeps.Jack wrote:With the usual bit of racism thrown in for good measure:)Apples wrote:Interesting Twitter convo re: cunt, etc.
These people are the most racist I have ever come across and I live in an area with 50% non-whites. What a surprise that their bigoted dogma allows that. It's a complete scam.
You went there? Fine, I am going to raise the ante with this:
[youtube]vUNFzsNdphQ[/youtube]
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
I think using the name Pepsi is a bit too on-the-ball for it to be Eucliwood.Apples wrote:Pepsi is reminding me of Eucliwoo.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Thirded.Lsuoma wrote:That was my immediate impression too.Apples wrote:Pepsi is reminding me of Eucliwoo.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Hang on, I really need to be told about pseudonyms on the Internet... for the sixth time.jjbinx007 wrote:Thirded.Lsuoma wrote:That was my immediate impression too.Apples wrote:Pepsi is reminding me of Eucliwoo.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
1) Steersman, check your PMsSteersman wrote:Thanks.Jack wrote:Sure. I'll let Skeptickle know.Steersman wrote:Jack: I've posted several responses to the opening statements and have received an e-mail response from the Moderation Team on one of them. I just responded by e-mail and just got back this error message:Jack wrote: <snip>
A problem on my end or something with e-mail addresses for the moderators? I'll probably pass this along to Michael as well, but I wonder, could you maybe look into it as well? Thanks.The following message to <> was undeliverable.
The reason for the problem:
5.1.2 - Bad destination host 'DNS Hard Error looking up ****.com (MX): NXDomain'
In passing though, I probably shouldn’t have posted that e-mail address – my bad. If Lsuoma wants to edit that out then I’m ok with that, and it might be a good idea to do so.
2) Oops, the email address worked fine when the mods emailed to it :)
I'll let Michael know about the bounce-back, but it's past midnight in Ireland now.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Yup, my bad. It was Strawkins.Steersman wrote:I think it was Strawkins who he was quoting, unless there's something I missed in skimming through the article ...Skep tickle wrote:FWIW, my post at Lousy Canuck is still in moderation; mentioned here >24 hrs ago: viewtopic.php?p=80575#p80575
(I was replying to his OP, which quotes Steersman quoting me from here, and PZ's response #1 making assumptions about what I said & meant, apparently w/o going to read the cited post).
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
you can even do it while having a real job: http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0740791427AndrewV69 wrote:Oh FFS!ERV wrote:Last week was bemoaning the fact 'things were tight' and she and hercodelette wrote:Sometimes I wonder if Hensley is just mocking the "poor little rich girl" meme. The other she was so sad over not being able to adopt a second pug...Cabbage Patch Dollhusband couldnt afford to eat out every meal anymore. And they 'dont cook', so BAAAAAAAAAW.
But literally like two tweets earlier she was suggesting her friends get laser hair removal treatments because it worked GREAT for her (costs thousands of dollars).
She is so gross.
You can be lazy about it and still turn out great tasting meals with a rice cooker and a crock pot and at a fraction of the cost of eating out.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Wonderist wrote:[Post 13576]
...But I am always open to critique, positive or negative
Wow. In consecutive posts you reveal yourself as a complete hypocrite.Wonderist wrote:[Post 13579]I know, eh? :roll: It's so booorrring. So tedious. It kind of sucks the wind right out of the debate. When can we get the excitement and drama back?! This shit is seriously a drama killer!!!!1Michael K Gray wrote: ...Being polite did not work with cultish theists, (after a 4,500+ year trial), and I doubt that it will work with the FTB cultists whose behaviour I oppose.
... oh, wait. :think:
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
rorschach/Wagner on ... something?: http://furiouspurpose.me/atheist-courty ... -gentiles/
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
No fresh veggies? Just dump some mixed frozen veggies into a pot of hot water to thaw them out, drain while they are still crisp, dump some butter and the drained veggies back into the pot, mix them into the melted butter, sprinkle some black pepper over it and you are done.Tigzy wrote:So Melody and her Cabbage Patch Doll ( :lol: :lol: :lol: ) don't cook? WTF??
And this is someone who, presumably, has the gall to lecture others on 'privilege'.
I guess they must eat out at restaurants, get take-out or, if they're feeling really adventurous, pop a ready-meal in the microwave. Might explain Mel's size - as well as the illnesses she frequently complains about.
Seriously, if Melody's looking to get healthier, regularly cooking for herself is one of the best things she can do. Starting with the base ingredients from scratch will cut out a lot of the hidden fats and sugar she's liable to get from take-out, processed meals and certain restaurant fare (especially if it's a chain restaurant). If she can get her meats and vegetables as fresh as possible, then all the better.
Damn, she is one strange lady.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
I've lived in places that didn't have a kitchen...but I guess I'm just a privileged cis white dude bro.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Seriously, Melody and Simon should get an allotment. I admit it's kind of difficult to see Hensley shovelling out the compost, but I reckon it would do her the world of good. Fresh air, exercise, and fresh seasonal veggies all year round if she plants right. Though I don't believe they have allotments in the US, she and Si could probably make a fairly decent sized plot in their garden if they're earning enough to not have to cook.AndrewV69 wrote: No fresh veggies? Just dump some mixed frozen veggies into a pot of hot water to thaw them out, drain while they are still crisp, dump some butter and the drained veggies back into the pot, mix them into the melted butter, sprinkle some black pepper over it and you are done.
my hyperimportant mangina is offended
Peezus picked up on a blogger who was criticizing him about his hating on Reddit and saying, perhaps stupidly, that if you are "offended by something on the Internet," you should just move on.
Fine - but what particularly offends PZ about this piece is the notion that he was "offended" by something on Reddit. PZ's post is titled, "Have you noticed that we're always getting offended.?" (Recall Zvan's bit this week in which she was offended by people suggesting she was offended by Atheist Alliance's tweet of vjack's harassment article.)
As Svan said in her post about the vjack kerfuffle: 'We described the post as wrong or bad, not “offensiveâ€. We note that the content of the post has relevance for our situations. But when the time comes to characterize our response, we’re “offended†or “sensitive.â€'
Anyway, Peezus wants to drive this point home: when he says something is bad - it's not because he was offended by it - it's because it was wrong. And, oddly enough, he doesn't even seem to mean morally or ethically wrong (which is, after all, what many people have in mind when they say something is "offensive") -- he means "wrong" in this sense:
http://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/ ... -offended/
http://www.freezepage.com/1364854531PTQALAACTU
Fine - but what particularly offends PZ about this piece is the notion that he was "offended" by something on Reddit. PZ's post is titled, "Have you noticed that we're always getting offended.?" (Recall Zvan's bit this week in which she was offended by people suggesting she was offended by Atheist Alliance's tweet of vjack's harassment article.)
As Svan said in her post about the vjack kerfuffle: 'We described the post as wrong or bad, not “offensiveâ€. We note that the content of the post has relevance for our situations. But when the time comes to characterize our response, we’re “offended†or “sensitive.â€'
Anyway, Peezus wants to drive this point home: when he says something is bad - it's not because he was offended by it - it's because it was wrong. And, oddly enough, he doesn't even seem to mean morally or ethically wrong (which is, after all, what many people have in mind when they say something is "offensive") -- he means "wrong" in this sense:
That's right - if you do something PZ doesn't like, you are no different from a student who has gotten a wrong answer on an exam that he wrote. Because, after all, life, the Internet, and everything is nothing more than a test administered and graded by your Lord and Professor, PZ Myers.Peezus wrote:Why do you assume I’m offended? Why don’t you recognize that I’m pointing out that something is wrong?
I’m waiting for a student to come in and complain that I took points off for an incorrect answer on an exam. “Why were you offended at my answer, Dr Myers?
http://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/ ... -offended/
http://www.freezepage.com/1364854531PTQALAACTU
Re: rape statistics
well done. good work, Sherlock. That is the best response I've ever received on this subject.AnonymousCowherd wrote:FWIW.Dick Strawkins wrote:I agree.sacha wrote:I agree that may be the only way to even begin to have any idea of unreported cases, although I find it significantly flawed, and certainly not evidenceDick Strawkins wrote: In response to Sacha's question about evidence for the levels of false claims compared to unreported rapes, I think it is reasonable to use anonymous surveys and police data to try to get a handle on this. It is a difficult question and probably impossible to answer completely correctly but it should be possible to get some kind of generalized figure for the prevalence of each type of incident.
my questions were in regard to the declaration that "there is a large number of unreported cases than the other way around." stated as fact.
Anything I state as fact can easily be backed up with evidence, and if it turns out my evidence is flawed, I will be more than happy to withdraw my statement and give reasons for the withdrawal.
This is a sceptic/skeptic website and thread, after all.
If anyone has a good data source, paper, survey result etc, that answers this question, could you link it here please.
The issue of the reporting of sexual assault is notoriously difficult to overcome. The best that anyone has come up with is the various Victims of Crime surveys conducted in various places. These vary in quality, but one of the best is done by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (one summary of "personal crimes" here This is a large survey, done by trained interviewers, who can (technically) get you fined if you refuse answer, so about as good as these things get. The take-away number is that 31% of sexual assaults (which includes male victims) are reported to Police.
Some objections are;
a) it only applies to Australia. But other juridictions show results in the same general range so, while there may be variation, there is no reason to dismiss the ABS result out of hand.
b) it underestimates the actual amount of sexual assualt because, although more likely to report to the interviewer, some people are still reluctant to report at all. This is likely true, but we can't estimate that number.
c) it conflates "sexual assault" with "rape". This is a problem if there are reporting differences between non-rape and rape assaults. Getting respondents to give details of their sexual assaults to an interviewer is not easy, to say the least, so we are unlikely to find out of there are such reporting differences. One difficulty is that after an "incident" occurs, one person may label that a sexual assault, another a rape, and (in theory) the law may disagree with both of them (and vice versa). Technically we can't talk about "unreported rape" (or any other offence) because no offence has been shown to be committed, we can only talk about "unreported incidents" and these may vary in interpretation.
Moreover, we don't really know that the character of the unreported incidents is the same as the reported ones. Radfems tend to assume that they are similar in there various statistical "posters", but there is little evidence of that beyond gross generalisations. If they aren't similar, then conclusions drawn about rape figures based on those reported to police don't generalise to the unreported ones (e.g. conviction rates may be very different for the two cases, even if they were suddenly all reported).
Whatever the actual figure for unreported "possible rape incidents", there is no survey that suggests that the majority of such incidents are reported to police (the closest is the US DOJ which seems to say about 46% are reported, but with a large relative standard error).
False reports, on the other hand, are (by definition) a subset of all reported incidents. To claim that there are more false reports than unreported incidents implies that the number of unreported incidents is less than the number of reported ones, even if every report is "false", which no-one accepts. The more reported incidents that are admitted as "not false", the lower the number of unreported cases there must be to keep them less than "false" reports and, therefore, the greater the ratio of reported to unreported incidents.
Or, in even less clear English, false reports can't outnumber unreported incidents unless the reporting rate is greater than 50+% and, if there are any true reports (which we assume), that number will be higher. So, for example, if there are 100 reports to police, but we think 50% are false, there can't be more than 49 unreported incidents, which implies a reporting rate of 100/(100+49) or about 67%. If the "false" report rate is 20%, then there can't be more than 19 unreported incidents, for a reporting rate of 100/(100+19) or about 84%, and so on. These figures are well outside any survey findings.
Even without knowing the actual false reporting rate, there is no empirical support for the idea that false reports can outnumber unreported incidents. The evidence doesn't conclusively prove that the idea is false, but the weight of evidence makes it very unlikely to be true.
There is more to all this, but surely that's enough!
As I've said the best way we currently have to determine the statistics is significantly flawed and at best a provisional conjecture.
There is a vast difference in numbers depending on who is conducting the survey, and the same people will respond differently when the question is worded another way. Rape statistics should not include inappropriate touch, sexual harassment, sexual assault without rape, and so on, but it almost always does.
In the western world there is far more of a stigma attached to a man reporting being a victim of rape, whether the offender was male, or female, and I absolutely believe there are huge numbers of unreported rapes when the victim is male. Prior to the change in perspective regarding a woman being raped, and the change in how she is treated when reporting it, which was 40 years ago, I would agree that there were far more unreported rapes against women. Perhaps much more than were reported at all.
Times have changed. In the present, in the western world, I'd rather be raped, than be a man accused of rape.
When flawed statistics are repeated as fact-based evidence, and no gender is specified, the assumption is a female victim, and a male offender, and it perpetuates the notion that women must be believed without any evidence, and that men should be condemned without evidence. That women are inherently "good" and men are inherently "evil".
It also leaves a door wide open with a welcome mat for malevolent, vindictive reporting of rape by women, against innocent men. This is not uncommon. The statistics do not include the reporting of rape, if the police find she is obviously lying, or if she recounts her accusation prior to a full report being made.
It also allows male victims of rape to be so marginalised as to almost not exist, which increases the unreported cases by a significant amount. What is being considered as "rape" against women, would never be taken seriously if a man were to report the same incident.
It does an enormous disservice to women who have truly been raped, and to men who have been raped when those statistics are not gender specified, and repeated as evidence-based fact. Rape is not a woman's issue. It is a human issue.
There is a considerable advantage to those who happen to have female genitalia, both as accuser and as potential victim, that advantage is maintained, supported, and defended by a good majority of women as well as men.
There is some bizarre code of Omerta among women. We all know how easily the current system can be used against innocent men, and we all know women who wouldn't hesitate to make false allegations against men who they felt scorned by.
The pussy pass has a massive amount of power, and very little responsibility.
I simply cannot let anyone perpetuate the inequity without speaking up.
For those of you who are new, I'm an attractive older woman who knows first hand just how easy it is to use that power, and I will continue to be a lifelong outspoken Gender Traitor until I'm dead.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Thank you Barn Owl!BarnOwl wrote:Done as well, but it's 7:20 AM here, so no getting drunk.Michael K Gray wrote:Done.sacha wrote:Slymepit fundraiser for Muttville Senior Dog Rescue
any amount will make a difference. please help them[/b]
I hope you lot feel guilty now.
You know how to assuage that feeling.
1) Get Drunk
2) Donate
Blueberry pancakes and espresso instead.
I'll finish knitting/crocheting three or four dog blankets and send them to Muttville in one package. My dogs will preferentially lie down on or curl up with hand-knit items, regardless of the yarn type.* Cats will do this too.
* Though I received some camel yarn last month as part of a natural fibers club, and the dogs went mad for it when I opened the package. If I knit the blanket pattern that came with the yarn, the dogs will never leave it alone.
I'm working on a new link for PayPal donations, and for the ability to donate any amount one chooses to. I will add the amount already raised to the totals of the new donation site. I apologise for the difficulty this has caused. I deliberately waited for the donation director to recommend a donation site, but apparently she does not have much experience with this sort of online fundraising. She is quite the expert on other ways of raising money, so I cannot disparage her. I'm disappointed in the stop of momentum this has caused, but I will have it sorted very soon. Thank you for your patience. The dogs thank you as well.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Over at Nugent's:
http://www.michaelnugent.com/2013/03/26 ... ent-210894I wrote:Pitchguest April 1, 2013 at 10:38 pm
Your comment is awaiting moderation.
#258, #270 A Hermit:
No, I am not saying they’re comparable. I’m sure that would be considered a crime somewhere. I am saying they’re both *satirical.* You said your wife had to confiscate drawings by students used to mock other students. You said our approach was indistinguishable from a 9-year old schoolyard bully. Well, what do you think Gulliver’s Travels was? What do you think A Modest Proposal was? While “Peezus and O†pale in comparison to these masterpieces, they have one thing in common: mocking their opponents.
Jonathan Swift, one of a kind, constantly mocked his ideological opponents. In Gulliver’s Travels, he saved the queen of the Lilliputians (and their inhabitants) by “making water†(pissing) on them, and then taking a brief moment to describe the stench. (Possibly to further their humiliation.) He depicted the upper class most of all as villains, either as sophisticated narcissists who cared nothing for the struggles of man (horse-people in Gulliver), as unscrupulous and vicious (Lilliputians) or vile (the rich purchasing and eating the poor’s children).
In Gulliver, he even depicted how, given a bit of power, you become like them (like when Gulliver started calling humans ‘Yahoos’ after spending too much time with the horse-kind). Now don’t tell me none of that was supposed to mock his opponents but simply make a social commentary. It was meant to mock, plain and simple. Mocking, which you and your wife thinks is nigh indistinguishable from a schoolyard bully. Call it what you will. If “Peezus and O†is harassment, is hurtful, is schoolyard bullying, then so is Jonathan Swift.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
I'm bribing MKG with my feminine ways. I'm just fine with using my pussy pass to help animals.Michael K Gray wrote:Wow! Another $50 bux.BarnOwl wrote:Done as well, but it's 7:20 AM here, so no getting drunk.
Blueberry pancakes and espresso instead.
Only (lemme see: 50+50=100. 5000-100=4900. 4900/50=98)
Erm, only 98 more donations to go!
Might we enlist (say) some rivalry between SP & FTB to see who is the most generous?
I know that FTB spies review these top secret blog posts, via the wizardry of Dr. Laden's sooper-sekret password skillz,
so:
What about it?
Think about the poor animules, eh?
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Pretty common phenomenon here in the good ol' USA. Excellent article describes it here (along with the tendency of Americans to be oh-so polite and not talk about it):codelette wrote:I have noticed that before. Most of them move to white enclaves (cough, MN) and then complain about lack of brown peeps.Jack wrote:With the usual bit of racism thrown in for good measure:)Apples wrote:Interesting Twitter convo re: cunt, etc.
These people are the most racist I have ever come across and I live in an area with 50% non-whites. What a surprise that their bigoted dogma allows that. It's a complete scam.
http://www.phillymag.com/articles/white-philly/
By the way, I'm in love:
http://i.imgur.com/btkS8Hh.jpg
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Wonderist wrote:rorschach/Wagner on ... something?: http://furiouspurpose.me/atheist-courty ... -gentiles/
Yes - if you are not currently licking Stephanie Zvan's bum and loving it (which makes you "normal,") you might as well be 1) trying to ban abortions, 2) advocating the wholesale murder of gay people, and 3) trying to prevent black people from having access to public transportation. Brilliant.Rorschach wrote:Let’s bring together normal people and proponents of banning abortions. Or how about, normal people and those who think gays should be killed in Uganda. Or how about this one, normal people and those who think letting Blacks on the bus was a bad idea in the first place, let alone to allow them to sit down.
That said, Wonderist - are you still trying to suggest Rorschach/furiouspurpose.me is Martin Wagner? Seems important to get this right.
Re: my hyperimportant mangina is offended
I can't imagine why anybody would assume that Peezus and his commenters were offended...Apples wrote:Peezus picked up on a blogger who was criticizing him about his hating on Reddit and saying, perhaps stupidly, that if you are "offended by something on the Internet," you should just move on.
Fine - but what particularly offends PZ about this piece is the notion that he was "offended" by something on Reddit. PZ's post is titled, "Have you noticed that we're always getting offended.?" (Recall Zvan's bit this week in which she was offended by people suggesting she was offended by Atheist Alliance's tweet of vjack's harassment article.)
As Svan said in her post about the vjack kerfuffle: 'We described the post as wrong or bad, not “offensiveâ€. We note that the content of the post has relevance for our situations. But when the time comes to characterize our response, we’re “offended†or “sensitive.â€'
Anyway, Peezus wants to drive this point home: when he says something is bad - it's not because he was offended by it - it's because it was wrong. And, oddly enough, he doesn't even seem to mean morally or ethically wrong (which is, after all, what many people have in mind when they say something is "offensive") -- he means "wrong" in this sense:
That's right - if you do something PZ doesn't like, you are no different from a student who has gotten a wrong answer on an exam that he wrote. Because, after all, life, the Internet, and everything is nothing more than a test administered and graded by your Lord and Professor, PZ Myers.Peezus wrote:Why do you assume I’m offended? Why don’t you recognize that I’m pointing out that something is wrong?
I’m waiting for a student to come in and complain that I took points off for an incorrect answer on an exam. “Why were you offended at my answer, Dr Myers?
http://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/ ... -offended/
http://www.freezepage.com/1364854531PTQALAACTU
4
Caine, Fleur du mal
29 March 2013 at 4:06 pm (UTC -5) Link to this comment
Lovely. Their version of Girls Gone Wild Good. It just never stops. Women, you are girls. Women, you must not be uppity. Women, if you have a brain, do not use in front of men. Women, remember your worth, tits or GTFO. Women, be decorative at all times – remember, your ability to cause boners is the most important quality you have, next to being a handy receptacle.
18
The Mellow Monkey
29 March 2013 at 4:35 pm (UTC -5)
So a good woman is…
A. Infantalized by the label “girl.â€
B. Conventionally attractive and cheerfully topless.
C. And she does not offer her political opinions unless asked, presumably by a man who is allowed to share his political opinions prior to asking, because otherwise no one would ever talk about political opinions at all.
I need to go flail and punch a wall or something.
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imkindaokay
29 March 2013 at 10:02 pm (UTC -5)I agree that reddit should be moderated and that all subreddits that are actively offensive (eg mra) should be deleted.No, it is not. FFS, this post is not about this one “memeâ€
165
robpowell
29 March 2013 at 11:58 pm (UTC -5) Link to this comment
John Morales
I think the quote from Melissa McEwan, slightly modified, fits here:
A PERSONS HUMANITY IS NOT A DEBATABLE ISSUE
177
Caine, Fleur du mal
30 March 2013 at 12:24 am (UTC -5) Link to this comment
subreddits dedicated to being offensive should be deleted.
Yes, yes. However, reddits which aren’t dedicated to being offensive are free to be as offensive as they like, after all, they aren’t totes dedicated to it.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Nerd of Redhead, the been-there-done-that, ultra-scientist-in residence at Meyers's blog, doesn't understand the meaning of "null hypothesis":
I’m still waiting for them to evidence that feminism is wrong, not just presuppose it ... you and the horde have shown evidence for the conclusion that the null hypothesis is that patriarchy exists, and male privilege exists
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
I know that may be difficult for you, and I would understand if you are unable to.Phil_Giordana_FCD wrote:I will donate soon. It's the end of the month in my hemisphere. Well, ok, here, "end of the month" starts around the 15th...
This is one of the reasons I am furious that Causes forces one to donate at least $10. I'm just beginning to recover financially from a few slow months, and I donate small amounts at a time. If everyone here donated $5, we would reach our goal easily.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
I watched the entire lot of that expecting a lulz pay-off to come at some point. There really isn't one. If you don't count Carrier's continual insistence that actually the atheism+ idea pisses rainbows, shits golden retriever puppies, and gives you a hand-job whenever it's bored. Sounds nice actually, until you remember that scratching the surface off, this is not at all what A+ currently is, and that Dr. Richard Carrier has done the square-root of precisely fuck all to actually build it into his utopian visions.justinvacula wrote:Richard Carrier's Atheism Plus speech has been uploaded to Youtube. I wonder, was the conference policy violated with this one? Lol. Anyway...I am listening now. This is such a great gift.
[youtube]au2i3xxgv7U[/youtube]
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
http://lh3.ggpht.com/-8Q2jkYGNDN8/UVn02 ... ppydog.jpgsacha wrote: I'm bribing MKG with my feminine ways. I'm just fine with using my pussy pass to help animals.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
There is the Threat Displays thread that is a museum for some offensive comments.Parody Accountant wrote:Is there a running list of gaffes from the call-out culture? That 'rag-head' comment is pretty messed up. I'm aware of 'science it works bitches', and a few others. How long would a comprehensive list be though?
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Apples wrote:http://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/ ... ent-594483Cerberus: Fucking Oppression, Man wrote:That’s because they want one true “movement†that they can use as a personal badge. Something that’s safely a “He Man Women Hater’s Club†and thus not tainted by non-white, non-normative, and/or female participants. Where, in fact, said minority members know better than to even try to belong if they aren’t spending the entire time praising the “real movement†for what intellectual dexterity it takes to not believe in things that those group members were not personally raised in.
Because, by having been at one time a white male dominated group, they invested in it as a source of alternative masculinity in the toxic masculinity sense. What I mean is that by the rules of toxic masculinity, this group was feeling pressure and reduction and so invested in atheism a sort of alternative way of separating themselves from femininity and arguing that belonging to this male-dominated group made them way smarter than everyone and totally manly because everyone knows that only men are smart and so on.
In other words, they’re having a tantrum because they were using atheism to try and go to toxic masculinity “hey, we might not be jocks, but we’re still willing to kick the women and hang out in homosocial-only spaces! So we still count as manly enough to be considered ‘men’, right?†and now there are all these chicks running around wanting to talk about girly shit and making them feel dumb and very similar to the people they were lording over because on certain issues they are almost exactly the same.
This. This. A thousand times - what?
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
He is a joke. The way he idly skips from rape threats to looking through someones published online statements to find something to make fun of. Its the kind of bait-and-switch bullshit we have come to expect from these people; dishonestly moving the goalposts of a debate in order to make sure you can lump any dissenting voice in with the (ilkely rare) instances of genuine abuse.cunt wrote:I watched the entire lot of that expecting a lulz pay-off to come at some point. There really isn't one. If you don't count Carrier's continual insistence that actually the atheism+ idea pisses rainbows, shits golden retriever puppies, and gives you a hand-job whenever it's bored. Sounds nice actually, until you remember that scratching the surface off, this is not at all what A+ currently is, and that Dr. Richard Carrier has done the square-root of precisely fuck all to actually build it into his utopian visions.justinvacula wrote:Richard Carrier's Atheism Plus speech has been uploaded to Youtube. I wonder, was the conference policy violated with this one? Lol. Anyway...I am listening now. This is such a great gift.
[youtube]au2i3xxgv7U[/youtube]
I'm appalled that he still believes he owns some kind of moral high ground, after his initial Atheism+ blog post. It was shockingly totalitarian.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
I've noticed this too. He's fucking demented. He's like a Christian claiming that the null hypothesis is that Jesus rose from the dead.ConcentratedH2O, OM wrote:Nerd of Redhead, the been-there-done-that, ultra-scientist-in residence at Meyers's blog, doesn't understand the meaning of "null hypothesis":
I’m still waiting for them to evidence that feminism is wrong, not just presuppose it ... you and the horde have shown evidence for the conclusion that the null hypothesis is that patriarchy exists, and male privilege exists
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
No, I doubt it. Obviously can't predict perfectly, but I expect the process to evolve rather dramatically, over time. Here we are taking things slow, trying to build up some trust in the process, so people don't feel like they'll get screwed over by it. I'm expecting that things will rapidly speed up (again, over time, 'rapidly' being relative here), and that most of the discussion will switch over to the open-to-everyone less-moderated discussion threads.Dick Strawkins wrote:What exactly is the next step in the process?Wonderist wrote: (NB: Tim Skellett has recently withdrawn from the formal process, and will be doing his own thing I imagine; he's expressed that he does not feel he can fully support the position that was posted; I'll leave it to him to say more from his POV; I get the feeling it's not a personal thing, but an issue of how the 'structured dialogue' is structured into two 'sides', and he's not fully comfortable being put in that position/grouping).
Are you planning to keep doing the remaining 4 sections exactly like the first stage, the only difference being the absence of Tim Skellett?
The way things progressed on Nugent's prior threads, from initial distrust, to tentative participation, to full and open discussion, seems likely to me. But this time around it will start from a stronger basis of understanding, based on these opening 5 steps (which is why going strong on principles in the first step was important, IMO). Instead of basically a lightly-moderated free-for-all mishmash, we should have a lot more structure to work with this time around. Most of the issue have been brought up. They are just disorganized, repetitious, and coming from (more than) two vastly different starting positions/perspectives.
To get more specific, I think that one positive outcome of this structured, common-ground process is that we'll end up dispelling and marginalizing a lot of the vilification and dehumanization that's been going on. For example, one clear point to be made on common ground is that we're all human, all fallible, all make mistakes, all play the 'fool' on this or that issue, and that we should therefore be a bit more forgiving of each others' imperfections and irrationalities (provided, of course, and crucially, that the same courtesy is extended to us in return). This is the result that understanding the Pavlov Strategy, and the problem of noisy signals, can achieve. Sadly, that article is paywalled (as are many articles on this topic; need open access to this stuff!). But some detail can be found here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prisoner%2 ... 27_dilemma
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/prisoner-dilemma/
http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?PrisonersDilemma
The Evolution of Cooperation, by Robert Axelrod http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN= ... patternrA/
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
That Carrier is such a tool. He's promoting the supposed great values of Aplus and under the same breath he's telling atheists to do charity cause PR? Cause we all know that the best thing we get from helping people in need is marketing.cunt wrote:I watched the entire lot of that expecting a lulz pay-off to come at some point. There really isn't one. If you don't count Carrier's continual insistence that actually the atheism+ idea pisses rainbows, shits golden retriever puppies, and gives you a hand-job whenever it's bored. Sounds nice actually, until you remember that scratching the surface off, this is not at all what A+ currently is, and that Dr. Richard Carrier has done the square-root of precisely fuck all to actually build it into his utopian visions.justinvacula wrote:Richard Carrier's Atheism Plus speech has been uploaded to Youtube. I wonder, was the conference policy violated with this one? Lol. Anyway...I am listening now. This is such a great gift.
[youtube]au2i3xxgv7U[/youtube]
What a useless cunt.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
What is more annoying that these thinking-challenged people apparently don't know that there are several branches and three waves within feminism:Apples wrote:I've noticed this too. He's fucking demented. He's like a Christian claiming that the null hypothesis is that Jesus rose from the dead.ConcentratedH2O, OM wrote:Nerd of Redhead, the been-there-done-that, ultra-scientist-in residence at Meyers's blog, doesn't understand the meaning of "null hypothesis":
I’m still waiting for them to evidence that feminism is wrong, not just presuppose it ... you and the horde have shown evidence for the conclusion that the null hypothesis is that patriarchy exists, and male privilege exists
Wikipedia wrote:Feminism is a collection of movements and ideologies aimed at defining, establishing, and defending equal political, economic, and social rights for women
SEP wrote:Feminism is both an intellectual commitment and a political movement that seeks justice for women and the end of sexism in all forms. However, there are many different kinds of feminism. Feminists disagree about what sexism consists in, and what exactly ought to be done about it; they disagree about what it means to be a woman or a man and what social and political implications gender has or should have.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Yes, I read that SEP article. As I alluded to (but did not overtly state) in my last video, Feminism is a philosophy.Aneris wrote:SEP wrote:Feminism is both an intellectual commitment and a political movement that seeks justice for women and the end of sexism in all forms. However, there are many different kinds of feminism. Feminists disagree about what sexism consists in, and what exactly ought to be done about it; they disagree about what it means to be a woman or a man and what social and political implications gender has or should have.
You know, like Christianity.
[youtube]5PH09hgb7DQ[/youtube] :whistle:
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Still watching the Richard Carrier car crash.... his ideas about black atheists (at ~24:00) are cringeworthy. Apparently, there is a list of concerns (inner city poverty etc.) which black atheists are supposed to care about, seperate from the ones white atheists are supposed to care about. Maybe he wants to make them feel welcome by giving them their own drinking fountains too?
I'm not entirely sure that treating ethnic minorities as homogenous groups, with collective interests determined by their ethnicity, is quite as socially just as you think it is, Richard.
I'm not entirely sure that treating ethnic minorities as homogenous groups, with collective interests determined by their ethnicity, is quite as socially just as you think it is, Richard.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Right. They speak of feminism as if it were denotative rather than connotative, which is highly ironic given their sneering attitude towards dictionary definitions.Aneris wrote:What is more annoying that these thinking-challenged people apparently don't know that there are several branches and three waves within feminism:Apples wrote:I've noticed this too. He's fucking demented. He's like a Christian claiming that the null hypothesis is that Jesus rose from the dead.ConcentratedH2O, OM wrote:Nerd of Redhead, the been-there-done-that, ultra-scientist-in residence at Meyers's blog, doesn't understand the meaning of "null hypothesis":
I’m still waiting for them to evidence that feminism is wrong, not just presuppose it ... you and the horde have shown evidence for the conclusion that the null hypothesis is that patriarchy exists, and male privilege exists
Wikipedia wrote:Feminism is a collection of movements and ideologies aimed at defining, establishing, and defending equal political, economic, and social rights for womenSEP wrote:Feminism is both an intellectual commitment and a political movement that seeks justice for women and the end of sexism in all forms. However, there are many different kinds of feminism. Feminists disagree about what sexism consists in, and what exactly ought to be done about it; they disagree about what it means to be a woman or a man and what social and political implications gender has or should have.
What I mean by that is, they put forth the concept of feminism as if its given meaning is universally understood to fit within their narrowly defined world view. Yet, they have no problem switching to the connotative when it suits them. It means whatever they want it to mean. On this day, the definition is rigid, and the next it is nebulous.
It's the same with concepts like "patriarchy," and "rape culture." They mean whatever they want them to mean. They concepts become infinitely maleable and unfalsifiable all at the same time.
Yet, they pretend everything they are saying is denotative.
I don't know that I would call that dishonest, because I honestly believe they don't see the conflict.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Hmm, in scanning that Wikipedia article on Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma (IPD), I noticed this link at the end. Fascinating. :ugeek: This is very much what we've been talking about. Interesting to see the connection to IPD: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_trap
That article also leads to this one, which concept I'm more familiar with http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_dilemma
I think a Kafka Trap is probably a sort of social trap (as well as being a rhetorical tactic), because it's used to enforce a sub-optimal condition of mutual oppression of healthy dissent. Would probably be worth looking deeper into this concept.
More good stuff at the article, snipped for brevity.Social trap is a term used by psychologists to describe a situation in which a group of people act to obtain short-term individual gains, which in the long run leads to a loss for the group as a whole. Examples of social traps include overfishing, energy "brownout" and "blackout" power outages during periods of extreme temperatures, the overgrazing of cattle on the Sahelian Desert, and the destruction of the rainforest by logging interests and agriculture.[citation needed]
Origin of the concept
The term social trap was first introduced to the scientific community by John Platt's 1973 paper in American Psychologist,[1] and in a book developed in an interdisciplinary symposium held at the University of Michigan.[2] Building upon the concept of the "tragedy of the commons" in Garrett Hardin's pivotal article in Science (1968),[3] Platt and others in the seminar applied behavioral psychology concepts to actions of people operating in social traps. By applying the findings of basic research on "schedules of operant reinforcement" (B.F. Skinner 1938, 1948, 1953, 1957; Keller and Schoenfeld, 1950), Platt recognized that individuals operating for short-term positive gain ("reinforcement") had a tendency to over-exploit a resource, which led to a long-term overall loss to society.
The application of behavioral psychology terms to behaviors in the tragedy of the commons led to the realization that the same short-term/long-term cause-effect relationship also applied to other human traps, in addition to the exploitation of commonly held resources. Platt et al. also introduced the terms social fence and individual trap. Social fence refers to a short-term avoidance behavior by individuals that leads to a long-term loss to the entire group.[1] An example is the anecdote of a mattress that falls from a vehicle on a two lane highway. Motorists tend to back up in a traffic jam behind the mattress, waiting for a break in the oncoming traffic to pass around the mattress. Each individual motorist avoids the opportunity to exit their stopped car and pull the mattress to the side of the road. The long-term consequence of this avoidance behavior is that all of the motorists (except for perhaps one) arrived at their destinations later than they would have if an individual had removed the mattress barrier.
An individual trap is similar to a social trap except that it involves the behavior of only a single person rather than a group of people. The basic concept is that an individual's behavior for short-term reinforcers leads to a long-term loss for the individual. Examples of individual traps are tobacco smoking leading to lung cancer or alcohol ingestion leading to cirrhosis of the liver.
That article also leads to this one, which concept I'm more familiar with http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_dilemma
Good stuff there as well. The distinction between a social trap and a social dilemma is interesting. The dilemma is the end result: People behaving in ways that go against their long-term interests in pursuit of short-term gains. The trap is the psychological mechanism that attracts people to fall into the dilemma in the first place, if I'm reading it correctly.Social dilemmas are situations in which collective interests are at odds with private interests.[1] Such situations arise when faced with prioritizing either short-term selfish interests or the long-term interests of a group, organization, or society. Many of the most challenging issues, from the interpersonal to the intergroup, are at their core social dilemmas. Conflicts arise when motives concerning the group are overcome by individual motives. When this happens, others will intervene to restore the balance of the group.
Definition
Social dilemmas describe situations in which the rational behaviour of an individual—defined in pure and simple economic terms—leads to suboptimal outcomes from the collective standpoint (Dawes, 1980; Kollock, 1998). Researchers frequently use the experimental games method to study social dilemmas in the laboratory. An experimental game is a situation in which participants choose between cooperative and non-cooperative alternatives, yielding consequences for themselves and others. These games are generally depicted with a pay-off matrix representing valuable outcomes for participants like money or lottery tickets. Social dilemmas are in fact a "conflict in which most beneficial action for an individual will, if chosen by most people have a harmful effect on everyone" (Aronson, Wilson, Akert,& Fehr, 2007), or vice versa.
Examples
Consider these examples. As individuals we are each better off when we make use of public services such as schools, hospitals, recreational grounds, and highway systems without contributing to their maintenance. However, if everyone acted according to their narrow self-interest then these resources would not be provided and everyone would be worse off.[2]
I think a Kafka Trap is probably a sort of social trap (as well as being a rhetorical tactic), because it's used to enforce a sub-optimal condition of mutual oppression of healthy dissent. Would probably be worth looking deeper into this concept.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Hey, do you know how to really find out what black atheists think? How about actually inviting them to talk at your event instead of..oh, I don't know...you, Dr. Carrier? Change starts at home, amiright?EdgePenguin wrote:Still watching the Richard Carrier car crash.... his ideas about black atheists (at ~24:00) are cringeworthy. Apparently, there is a list of concerns (inner city poverty etc.) which black atheists are supposed to care about, seperate from the ones white atheists are supposed to care about. Maybe he wants to make them feel welcome by giving them their own drinking fountains too?
I'm not entirely sure that treating ethnic minorities as homogenous groups, with collective interests determined by their ethnicity, is quite as socially just as you think it is, Richard.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Its just hit me. I know what is going on with the SJWs like Carrier when they talk about different groups having collective interests - it is good old fashioned, Leninist, Democratic Centralism
You don't get to have a personal opinion.You have to take your concerns to representatives of your socioeconomic group/workers' soviet, where it will be almagamated with the concerns of other people in your subgroup, converted into a group agenda by your group leader, and passed up the command structure until the guys at the top of the SJW movement can determine what the goals of 'the community' should be. From here instructions as to what each group should be doing filter back down the command structure.
And anybody stepping outside this command structure incurs a 'high social cost' as Carrier puts it.
You don't get to have a personal opinion.You have to take your concerns to representatives of your socioeconomic group/workers' soviet, where it will be almagamated with the concerns of other people in your subgroup, converted into a group agenda by your group leader, and passed up the command structure until the guys at the top of the SJW movement can determine what the goals of 'the community' should be. From here instructions as to what each group should be doing filter back down the command structure.
And anybody stepping outside this command structure incurs a 'high social cost' as Carrier puts it.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
For some reason, the recommended videos for that one showed this:AndrewV69 wrote:
You went there? Fine, I am going to raise the ante with this:
[youtube]vUNFzsNdphQ[/youtube]
[youtube]s5hSGOpF2to[/youtube]
Poor doggy. :( What is the world coming to when such mutt smut is on YT? :evil:
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Relevant: viewtopic.php?p=50476#p50476EdgePenguin wrote:Still watching the Richard Carrier car crash.... his ideas about black atheists (at ~24:00) are cringeworthy. Apparently, there is a list of concerns (inner city poverty etc.) which black atheists are supposed to care about, seperate from the ones white atheists are supposed to care about. Maybe he wants to make them feel welcome by giving them their own drinking fountains too?
I'm not entirely sure that treating ethnic minorities as homogenous groups, with collective interests determined by their ethnicity, is quite as socially just as you think it is, Richard.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
AbsurdWalls wrote:...I think it is important to notice (probably most people do) how much the "deep rifts" are really dozens and dozens of personal issues. I think that's the reason why it has not extended into the wider community. There's no real impetus to "pick a side" until somebody wrongs you, and then once you are being called a rape apologist or a chill girl or a mangina or whatever it becomes harder to remain neutral. Of course other people are drawn in without being personally attacked, but that can be as a result of feeling sympathy for somebody who is being unfairly victimised.
Behold the rotten fruit of the doctrine of "the personal is political". It elevated butthurt to a philosophy.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Heh, I figured I might not to be the first person to raise an eyebrow at this rubbish.codelette wrote:Relevant: viewtopic.php?p=50476#p50476EdgePenguin wrote:Still watching the Richard Carrier car crash.... his ideas about black atheists (at ~24:00) are cringeworthy. Apparently, there is a list of concerns (inner city poverty etc.) which black atheists are supposed to care about, seperate from the ones white atheists are supposed to care about. Maybe he wants to make them feel welcome by giving them their own drinking fountains too?
I'm not entirely sure that treating ethnic minorities as homogenous groups, with collective interests determined by their ethnicity, is quite as socially just as you think it is, Richard.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
I'm still trying to figure out if this was a freudian slip...EdgePenguin wrote:Heh, I figured I might not to be the first person to raise an eyebrow at this rubbish.codelette wrote:Relevant: viewtopic.php?p=50476#p50476EdgePenguin wrote:Still watching the Richard Carrier car crash.... his ideas about black atheists (at ~24:00) are cringeworthy. Apparently, there is a list of concerns (inner city poverty etc.) which black atheists are supposed to care about, seperate from the ones white atheists are supposed to care about. Maybe he wants to make them feel welcome by giving them their own drinking fountains too?
I'm not entirely sure that treating ethnic minorities as homogenous groups, with collective interests determined by their ethnicity, is quite as socially just as you think it is, Richard.
... if atheism is good for people, it ought to be good for racial minorities as well.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
No. Honest, but sloppy mistake: viewtopic.php?f=29&t=286#p81150Apples wrote:Wonderist wrote:rorschach/Wagner on ... something?: http://furiouspurpose.me/atheist-courty ... -gentiles/Yes - if you are not currently licking Stephanie Zvan's bum and loving it (which makes you "normal,") you might as well be 1) trying to ban abortions, 2) advocating the wholesale murder of gay people, and 3) trying to prevent black people from having access to public transportation. Brilliant.Rorschach wrote:Let’s bring together normal people and proponents of banning abortions. Or how about, normal people and those who think gays should be killed in Uganda. Or how about this one, normal people and those who think letting Blacks on the bus was a bad idea in the first place, let alone to allow them to sit down.
That said, Wonderist - are you still trying to suggest Rorschach/furiouspurpose.me is Martin Wagner? Seems important to get this right.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Haven't seen your last video, but enjoyed the other ones. Wikipedia in all its wisdom sums it up as a "collection of movements and ideologies", not a philosophy. The point there is, it isn't a monolithic entity where everyone agrees on everything. The previous Slymepit quip "the radical notion that women are people AND adults" was also feminist, in PZ Myers sense.Submariner wrote:Yes, I read that SEP article. As I alluded to (but did not overtly state) in my last video, Feminism is a philosophy. You know, like Christianity.
5PH09hgb7DQ
:whistle:
The definition PZ put forth once was very basic. I haven't met a single person yet who disagreed with it. On occasion he throws these curve-balls with other terms that are more contested, but I haven't seen him explaining how they fit into his world view (as pointed out before). I know that the effect of monopolizing a view, and declaring anyone who disagrees "somehow", without really knowing where we actually really disagree, has the unfortunate effect of sending some people the other direction.
I dislike the notion that all my views have to be categorized neatly and that I have to carry them around on my name-tag. My views are complex, in motion, sometimes I haven't made up my mind and withhold adopting a view. Labels have the habit of acquiring all kinds of additional meanings and imagery or they mean something else to another person, making them often more confusing than helpful. I have asked my friends recently, whether they see themselves as feminists (I'm speaking of women here). They said: no. Yet their views are technically very well within feminism.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
sigh.justinvacula wrote:Freethought Blogs to go offline, Rebecca Watson admits hoax
http://www.skepticink.com/justinvacula/ ... mits-hoax/
at least try to be original with April Fool's jokes.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
christ his voice is EXACTLY what I thought it would be.justinvacula wrote:Richard Carrier's Atheism Plus speech has been uploaded to Youtube. I wonder, was the conference policy violated with this one? Lol. Anyway...I am listening now. This is such a great gift.
youtube]au2i3xxgv7U
That's not a good thing.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
But they're so pretty when you douse them in coleman fuel and set them alight. Little sparklers running to and fro, you don't even have to do much but keep them in the road. The screaming's a bit annoying, but I think it adds the right touch to any celebration.Angry_Drunk wrote:I barely consider people "people"Tony Parsehole wrote:BUT WHY DON'T YOU AGREE THAT WOMEN ARE PEOPLE?Angry_Drunk wrote:I've had an epiphany! How could I have been so wrong for so long. Instead of exposing the flawed logic and lack of rational thinking on the part of woo-addled religionists I should have been focusing on enumerating the things we agree on. Let's get started:
- The sky is blue.
- Water is wet
...
Hells, we'll have this problem licked in no time.
Fuck the whole lot of ya'.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
ERV wrote:Last week was bemoaning the fact 'things were tight' and she and hercodelette wrote:Sometimes I wonder if Hensley is just mocking the "poor little rich girl" meme. The other she was so sad over not being able to adopt a second pug...Cabbage Patch Dollhusband couldnt afford to eat out every meal anymore. And they 'dont cook', so BAAAAAAAAAW.
But literally like two tweets earlier she was suggesting her friends get laser hair removal treatments because it worked GREAT for her (costs thousands of dollars).
She is so gross.
Gimme one a' them high-powered handheld blue lasers, I'll do that for free. Fuck, I'd buy the laser myself. All I want are the youtube rights.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
...and they wonder why no one wants to go to these things.welch wrote:christ his voice is EXACTLY what I thought it would be.justinvacula wrote:Richard Carrier's Atheism Plus speech has been uploaded to Youtube. I wonder, was the conference policy violated with this one? Lol. Anyway...I am listening now. This is such a great gift.
youtube]au2i3xxgv7U
That's not a good thing.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Aneris wrote:
Haven't seen your last video, but enjoyed the other ones. Wikipedia in all its wisdom sums it up as a "collection of movements and ideologies", not a philosophy. The point there is, it isn't a monolithic entity where everyone agrees on everything. The previous Slymepit quip "the radical notion that women are people AND adults" was also feminist, in PZ Myers sense.
The definition PZ put forth once was very basic. I haven't met a single person yet who disagreed with it.
Might have relevance :John Brown wrote: It's the same with concepts like "patriarchy," and "rape culture." They mean whatever they want them to mean. They concepts become infinitely maleable and unfalsifiable all at the same time.
Yet, they pretend everything they are saying is denotative.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXOLbh3soIg
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
US set for dramatic change as white America becomes minority by 2042codelette wrote:I'm still trying to figure out if this was a freudian slip...EdgePenguin wrote:Heh, I figured I might not to be the first person to raise an eyebrow at this rubbish.codelette wrote:Relevant: viewtopic.php?p=50476#p50476EdgePenguin wrote:Still watching the Richard Carrier car crash.... his ideas about black atheists (at ~24:00) are cringeworthy. Apparently, there is a list of concerns (inner city poverty etc.) which black atheists are supposed to care about, seperate from the ones white atheists are supposed to care about. Maybe he wants to make them feel welcome by giving them their own drinking fountains too?
I'm not entirely sure that treating ethnic minorities as homogenous groups, with collective interests determined by their ethnicity, is quite as socially just as you think it is, Richard.
... if atheism is good for people, it ought to be good for racial minorities as well.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/au ... ation.race
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid= ... LRFXgzpFoY
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2012/12 ... year-2043/
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-201_162-575 ... s-by-2043/
*shrug*
Wait a few more years and all he will have to do as far as minority outreach is concerned is go knocking on doors in his own neighbourhood?
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
Btw I could barely stand to listen to that whole thing, but I also listened to the Amazing Atheist answering questions for three minutes and learned more in that than in Carriers entire screed on The Way Things Ought To Be.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
it could be how they're doing antispam? but if so, it would be a really dumb way. (tl;dr some antispam methods involve DNS searches against the IP address of the sending mailserver. While in theory, a great way to tell if someone's using a nonexistent server, it tends to blow up a lot, and is really just a pain in the ass.)Lsuoma wrote:Network problem, likely way beyond your control unless you're running your own network and mail servers at home, in which case this would likely not be Greek to you.Steersman wrote:Jack: I've posted several responses to the opening statements and have received an e-mail response from the Moderation Team on one of them. I just responded by e-mail and just got back this error message:Jack wrote: <snip>
A problem on my end or something with e-mail addresses for the moderators? I'll probably pass this along to Michael as well, but I wonder, could you maybe look into it as well? Thanks.The following message to <REDACTED> was undeliverable.
The reason for the problem:
5.1.2 - Bad destination host 'DNS Hard Error looking up REDACTED (MX): NXDomain'
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
This. They could be the change they want to see by giving their blog space, their speaking spots, to some people who might not have the exposure that they do. But no, the goal is to make the other guy sacrifice for their beliefs.John Brown wrote:Hey, do you know how to really find out what black atheists think? How about actually inviting them to talk at your event instead of..oh, I don't know...you, Dr. Carrier? Change starts at home, amiright?EdgePenguin wrote:Still watching the Richard Carrier car crash.... his ideas about black atheists (at ~24:00) are cringeworthy. Apparently, there is a list of concerns (inner city poverty etc.) which black atheists are supposed to care about, seperate from the ones white atheists are supposed to care about. Maybe he wants to make them feel welcome by giving them their own drinking fountains too?
I'm not entirely sure that treating ethnic minorities as homogenous groups, with collective interests determined by their ethnicity, is quite as socially just as you think it is, Richard.
Re: rape statistics
sacha wrote:well done. good work, Sherlock. That is the best response I've ever received on this subject.AnonymousCowherd wrote:FWIW.Dick Strawkins wrote:I agree.sacha wrote:I agree that may be the only way to even begin to have any idea of unreported cases, although I find it significantly flawed, and certainly not evidenceDick Strawkins wrote: In response to Sacha's question about evidence for the levels of false claims compared to unreported rapes, I think it is reasonable to use anonymous surveys and police data to try to get a handle on this. It is a difficult question and probably impossible to answer completely correctly but it should be possible to get some kind of generalized figure for the prevalence of each type of incident.
my questions were in regard to the declaration that "there is a large number of unreported cases than the other way around." stated as fact.
Anything I state as fact can easily be backed up with evidence, and if it turns out my evidence is flawed, I will be more than happy to withdraw my statement and give reasons for the withdrawal.
This is a sceptic/skeptic website and thread, after all.
If anyone has a good data source, paper, survey result etc, that answers this question, could you link it here please.
The issue of the reporting of sexual assault is notoriously difficult to overcome. The best that anyone has come up with is the various Victims of Crime surveys conducted in various places. These vary in quality, but one of the best is done by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (one summary of "personal crimes" here This is a large survey, done by trained interviewers, who can (technically) get you fined if you refuse answer, so about as good as these things get. The take-away number is that 31% of sexual assaults (which includes male victims) are reported to Police.
Some objections are;
a) it only applies to Australia. But other juridictions show results in the same general range so, while there may be variation, there is no reason to dismiss the ABS result out of hand.
b) it underestimates the actual amount of sexual assualt because, although more likely to report to the interviewer, some people are still reluctant to report at all. This is likely true, but we can't estimate that number.
c) it conflates "sexual assault" with "rape". This is a problem if there are reporting differences between non-rape and rape assaults. Getting respondents to give details of their sexual assaults to an interviewer is not easy, to say the least, so we are unlikely to find out of there are such reporting differences. One difficulty is that after an "incident" occurs, one person may label that a sexual assault, another a rape, and (in theory) the law may disagree with both of them (and vice versa). Technically we can't talk about "unreported rape" (or any other offence) because no offence has been shown to be committed, we can only talk about "unreported incidents" and these may vary in interpretation.
Moreover, we don't really know that the character of the unreported incidents is the same as the reported ones. Radfems tend to assume that they are similar in there various statistical "posters", but there is little evidence of that beyond gross generalisations. If they aren't similar, then conclusions drawn about rape figures based on those reported to police don't generalise to the unreported ones (e.g. conviction rates may be very different for the two cases, even if they were suddenly all reported).
Whatever the actual figure for unreported "possible rape incidents", there is no survey that suggests that the majority of such incidents are reported to police (the closest is the US DOJ which seems to say about 46% are reported, but with a large relative standard error).
False reports, on the other hand, are (by definition) a subset of all reported incidents. To claim that there are more false reports than unreported incidents implies that the number of unreported incidents is less than the number of reported ones, even if every report is "false", which no-one accepts. The more reported incidents that are admitted as "not false", the lower the number of unreported cases there must be to keep them less than "false" reports and, therefore, the greater the ratio of reported to unreported incidents.
Or, in even less clear English, false reports can't outnumber unreported incidents unless the reporting rate is greater than 50+% and, if there are any true reports (which we assume), that number will be higher. So, for example, if there are 100 reports to police, but we think 50% are false, there can't be more than 49 unreported incidents, which implies a reporting rate of 100/(100+49) or about 67%. If the "false" report rate is 20%, then there can't be more than 19 unreported incidents, for a reporting rate of 100/(100+19) or about 84%, and so on. These figures are well outside any survey findings.
Even without knowing the actual false reporting rate, there is no empirical support for the idea that false reports can outnumber unreported incidents. The evidence doesn't conclusively prove that the idea is false, but the weight of evidence makes it very unlikely to be true.
There is more to all this, but surely that's enough!
As I've said the best way we currently have to determine the statistics is significantly flawed and at best a provisional conjecture.
There is a vast difference in numbers depending on who is conducting the survey, and the same people will respond differently when the question is worded another way. Rape statistics should not include inappropriate touch, sexual harassment, sexual assault without rape, and so on, but it almost always does.
In the western world there is far more of a stigma attached to a man reporting being a victim of rape, whether the offender was male, or female, and I absolutely believe there are huge numbers of unreported rapes when the victim is male. Prior to the change in perspective regarding a woman being raped, and the change in how she is treated when reporting it, which was 40 years ago, I would agree that there were far more unreported rapes against women. Perhaps much more than were reported at all.
Times have changed. In the present, in the western world, I'd rather be raped, than be a man accused of rape.
When flawed statistics are repeated as fact-based evidence, and no gender is specified, the assumption is a female victim, and a male offender, and it perpetuates the notion that women must be believed without any evidence, and that men should be condemned without evidence. That women are inherently "good" and men are inherently "evil".
It also leaves a door wide open with a welcome mat for malevolent, vindictive reporting of rape by women, against innocent men. This is not uncommon. The statistics do not include the reporting of rape, if the police find she is obviously lying, or if she recounts her accusation prior to a full report being made.
It also allows male victims of rape to be so marginalised as to almost not exist, which increases the unreported cases by a significant amount. What is being considered as "rape" against women, would never be taken seriously if a man were to report the same incident.
It does an enormous disservice to women who have truly been raped, and to men who have been raped when those statistics are not gender specified, and repeated as evidence-based fact. Rape is not a woman's issue. It is a human issue.
There is a considerable advantage to those who happen to have female genitalia, both as accuser and as potential victim, that advantage is maintained, supported, and defended by a good majority of women as well as men.
There is some bizarre code of Omerta among women. We all know how easily the current system can be used against innocent men, and we all know women who wouldn't hesitate to make false allegations against men who they felt scorned by.
The pussy pass has a massive amount of power, and very little responsibility.
I simply cannot let anyone perpetuate the inequity without speaking up.
For those of you who are new, I'm an attractive older woman who knows first hand just how easy it is to use that power, and I will continue to be a lifelong outspoken Gender Traitor until I'm dead.
From what I've read, underreporting of rape by male victims bounces anywhere between 50% to 90%. It's a real problem in the US military as well, where only 1 in 15 male victims will report as opposed to 1 in 5 female victims. (http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2 ... shame.html for what it's worth on that one.)
That's why I've been telling friends who ask why I keep bringing up male victims of rape/sexual assault "Because it's a HUMAN problem. You can't tell men "it only matters when it happens to a woman" and be seriously surprised that they don't take rape as seriously as you want them to. I GUARANTEE you know a guy who's been raped/molested/sexually assaulted, and yet you've told them, in different ways "yeah, no one cares". Well, if you don't care about them, why should they care about you."
It's a human problem, not a women's problem, not any gender's problem. The sooner we start talking about it as such, the better a chance we'll have to improve things.
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
I transcribed a couple minutes of it, didn't hear that line but there's plenty else.codelette wrote:I'm still trying to figure out if this was a freudian slip...EdgePenguin wrote:Heh, I figured I might not to be the first person to raise an eyebrow at this rubbish.codelette wrote:Relevant: viewtopic.php?p=50476#p50476EdgePenguin wrote:Still watching the Richard Carrier car crash.... his ideas about black atheists (at ~24:00) are cringeworthy. ...
... if atheism is good for people, it ought to be good for racial minorities as well.
Around 23:00 he's talking about "What are we doing to meet the social needs of atheists?" Special interest groups in large local organizations; he favors bowling and roller skating.
Then, "So to get back to that first goal, increasing the number of atheists…"
Transcription from 23:17 – 26:25:
Haha, April Fools, what he really said in the last part was:Obviously focusing on education in (or and] science, reason, and skepticism…but if you want to make atheists, that’s one of the first things you’ve got do, I mean that besides getting people to read the Bible… [laughter]
But the other is broadening the appeal of atheist organizations and atheist events to women and minorities. And that’s been improving lately. And one way to do that, of course, actually probably the chief way to do that, if not the only way it can be done, is to start giving them leadership roles, be responsive to their concerns, and treat them well when they show up. You know, those kind of obvious things. These were issues that we were talking about 3 or 4 years ago, there’s been a lot of improvement on this, a lot of understanding of this goal, but this has been a part of what atheism plus has been trying to advocate.
Now, to give an example, if you want more black atheists in your membership of your organization, then you have to show that you actually care about their concerns. To give you an example of some concerns I’ve heard from black atheists is that local black atheist communities are very interested in - their main issues that they’re struggling with are not creationism in schools, they’re more concerned with inner city poverty and prison reform, for example, those aren’t the - that’s not the whole list, but that’s an example of these things that are very seriously important to their community, and so we might want to at least give an ear to this and think about - if there’s anything we can do to help them with these issues.
And that just brings out the whole general concept that you should actually ask women as organizations, local organizations and national organizations, actually ask women and minorities - a lot of them, not just a few of them - what would get them to attend your events, become members of your organization, and financially support it, and then take their answers seriously. And this is something that we have been talking about over the past 3 years, and I think atheist organizations are starting to get it.
But to give you a bonus example, that goes back to what I was talking about before, about that education, the importance of our promoting the ideas of teaching logic and critical thinking and science and whatnot. If education is a major factor in making more atheists, and there are studies and statistics that suggest that it does, and making more atheists is your goal, then shouldn’t the disparity that often exists in education between white and black neighborhoods be of major concern to the atheist community. [applause]
So this is an example of something that’s flown under our radar because we’re focusing on science education, critical thinking, and we’re sort of not noticing the fact that there are already huge disparities in these social scenarios that we really should pay attention to and try to figure out a way that maybe we as atheists and the atheist community, can do something about.
Certainly if you want more atheists we’re going to have to do that.
So the basic idea is, are we as a community – a community of atheists - going to care about stuff like sexism, deception, poverty, crime, corruption, injustice, or only care when it has to do with increasing membership and revenue? Well, the answer is, only when it has to do with increasing membership and revenue, of course.
So the basic idea is, are we as a community – a community of atheists - going to care about stuff like sexism, deception, poverty, crime, corruption, injustice, or only care when it has to do with religion?
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Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
The word "dweeb" comes to mind.welch wrote:christ his voice is EXACTLY what I thought it would be.justinvacula wrote:Richard Carrier's Atheism Plus speech has been uploaded to Youtube. I wonder, was the conference policy violated with this one? Lol. Anyway...I am listening now. This is such a great gift.
youtube]au2i3xxgv7U
That's not a good thing.
Re: Jim the Pleb Made Me Do It
EdgePenguin wrote:Still watching the Richard Carrier car crash.... his ideas about black atheists (at ~24:00) are cringeworthy. Apparently, there is a list of concerns (inner city poverty etc.) which black atheists are supposed to care about, seperate from the ones white atheists are supposed to care about. Maybe he wants to make them feel welcome by giving them their own drinking fountains too?
I'm not entirely sure that treating ethnic minorities as homogenous groups, with collective interests determined by their ethnicity, is quite as socially just as you think it is, Richard.
Every time I tell my non-honkie friends about that shit, their response is "Yeah. That's what white folks think. What can you do."