Losing the sense of the argument


I think we can all already see the defense the right wing is throwing up to rationalize Sarah Palin’s inane remarks about “fruit fly research in Paris, France”: she wasn’t disparaging all research into fruit flies, but only one specific earmark for studying agricultural pests.

Baloney.

The context of that comment was that she was claiming research had “little or nothing to do with the public good”, and she brought up these seemingly trivial little animals and a place the right wing despises as dogwhistles to her hoople-headed fans. Claiming now that she was making an informed criticism of a specific study is a feeble attempt to distract with a lie.

Remember, this is the crank governor of Alaska who denies evolution and global warming, the backup candidate to a man who mocks research into bear DNA and calls a multimillion dollar educational tool an “overhead projector”, from a party that ridicules people with Parkinson’s because they want more stem cell research, and idiots want to claim that she isn’t really anti-science because in this one case she was actually targeting an instance of applied research that directly benefits agricultural interests?

That’s insane. You have to be a purblind slavering zombie of the Rethuglican party to swallow that.

It goes deeper than just trying to belittle science, too — we are a technological society that is entirely dependent on the advancements science has brought to us, that is facing a new series of challenges that will require new science to overcome. The Assemblies of God churches are not going to come up with anything to help with global warming, alternative energy, new medicine, new reproductive technologies, new discoveries, new ideas. Science is our tool to help people, yet the Republican party only sees it as a kind of armament factory to help them kill strangers in foreign lands. As John Cole put it, “why is it that the people who claim to adhere to the culture of life are so filled with hate for…people?”

Comments

  1. says

    To hear the way she actually says it simply exudes derision and condescending hate on the scientific enterprise. The way she says it is much worse than the actual words. Maybe the right wing can try to argue her words meant one thing, but the way she says completely defeats that argument.

  2. blueelm says

    If nothing else she tried to create a parallel between the bridge to nowhere and fruit fly research. She didn’t say anything about what the research was about, so the most direct interpretation of her words is that fruit fly research (of any kind) sounds as ridiculous as the bridge to nowhere.

    It does… if you don’t know anything about fruit fly research.

  3. 2-D Man says

    You have to be a purblind slavering zombie of the Rethuglican party to swallow that.

    All I could think of was:

    Zombie eat brains…but zombie can’t swallow this injustice.

  4. says

    You’d have to be on about the intellectual level of a fruit fly to not see that

    “…sometimes these dollars go to projects that have little or nothing to do with the public good. Things like fruit fly research in Paris, France.”

    is most definitely meant to be disparaging. And you’d have to be a complete scientific illiterate to even say it. I wish I could say this lowered my opinion of Palin, but really, is there any possible way to do that?

    You have to be a purblind slavering zombie of the Rethuglican party to swallow that.

    That very same thought had crossed my mind.

  5. says

    Its very simple, really. The Republicans are afraid of change. Scientific inquiry fosters change. Thus – science is bad. You can also easily apply this logic to:

    * Gay rights
    * Atheism
    * People with funny names
    * Educating the poor (and middle class)
    * …etc.

  6. Bachalon says

    We know what she meant. All they can do is play damage control. I hope she runs for president in 2012 with Michelle Bachmann as her VP choice. It wouldn’t be an election, it would be a slaughter.

    I haven’t had this much fun watching people spin in a long time.

  7. Farb(-son) says

    McCain’s Rovite advisors and right-wing support base not only have demonstrated to me that his qualifications for the Presidency are suspect, but also make me fear for the future of science in the United States.

    Should this bunch actually win next week, I envision the loonys clamoring for heads to roll as payback. I figure I’ll have six months to liquidate my assets, learn Swedish, and apply for political asylum.

    Picture Katherine Harris on the Supreme Court, Michelle Bachmann as Handicapper-General, and Sarah Palin presiding over the anti-American congressional witch-hunt. Joe (the Tail-gunner) McCarthy would smile.

  8. Scott says

    Fruit fly research in France. It would be like wasting money on hunting for invisible objects on the border of France. :)

  9. raven says

    Science is the basis of our American civilization and the reason why we are the world’s last (and fading!) superpower.

    Palin is a Xian cultist Nihilist who would destroy the USA while chanting Jesus Loves You. And shooting something…or somebody. At some point, the (stupid-ignorant-crazy) complex becomes just plain old Evil. She’s there.

    old post on science and what it does for our society:

    The USA is the world’s last superpower, economic engine and so on. So what is our edge?
    A. Is it natural resources? No, we have our share but the former USSR has more.

    B. Climate? No. Europe is also temperate.

    C. Population? No. China and India have the cheap skilled and unskilled labor niche with 2.3 billion people between them.

    D. Is it science and technology? The USA spends between 1/3 and 1/2 of the total world R&D with 4.5% of the world’s population. Our edge is being the world leader in R&D. That coupled with a relatively free political system and an entrepreneurial capitalist economy gives us…us.

    Science + freedom + capitalism = prosperity.

    The cultists Xians want to kill science while flushing our freedoms into the sewer. This is stupid and suicidal.

    Toynbee predicted this. 18 of 22 civilizations that fell, fell from within. We might be looking at 23 here.

    Another way to look at it qualitatively. Evolutionary thought plays a critical role in medicine and agriculture. We almost had a pandemic with SARS and are now watching H5N1 bird flu. Evolution predicts that sooner or later, a new bug will kill millions or tens of millions. One already has within memory, HIV/AIDS. Evolution only matters if you eat and want to live.

    Look at highly religious societies and where they are. Most Moslem ones are still in the dark ages. The ones that are not are due to a geographic accident, they sit in deserts floating on oil. It is estimated that the Arabs imported a trillion dollars worth of western science and technology because they don’t do their own. This estimate comes from Arabs who are now starting to put some money into science because they have more oil money than they know what to do with.

  10. ddr says

    They are just afraid of science because the more we learn, the sillier their bronze age book looks. They just want to wipe out all knowledge so their book holds the top spot of ultimate reference for everything, just like they always imagined it did.

  11. says

    … idiots want to claim that she isn’t really anti-science because in this one case she was actually targeting an instance of applied research that directly benefits agricultural interests?

    Who needs agriculture? God will make manna fall from the sky and water spring from rocks for his chosen people.

  12. ggab says

    You can’t (at least I can’t) help but think about 1100 ad in the middle east.
    Although, this time it’s next to impossible to halt the spread of knowledge. I love the interweb!
    Fight for the enlightenment! Stop the knuckledraggers!
    Science is not the work of the debul.

  13. says

    I had this argument with a friend. He came in with all of his research showing that the project she was talking about was about fruit flies and olives.

    I had to point out to him that most people don’t even know how to do the research he just did, let alone would they want to. On top of that, many of those people wouldn’t understand why someone would study fruit flies if not for agricultural purposes.

    To most people, the obvious sentiment behind her statement was “Research on fruit flies is absurd!”

  14. Carlie says

    It was also another way of throwing a zinger in about France, too. Oh, it happened in France. You know, those people who didn’t support Bush. That was as much of a dog whistle as anything.

  15. llewelly says

    I hope everyone can see where this is headed. Don’t you all realize that when scientists invented birth control and abortion, it enabled women to have sex as if they were men, without fear of pregnancy? Scientists are making women more and more like men every day. If they are not stopped, scientists will soon enable women to purchase technology-enabled strap-ons which enable them to impregnate men!! This horror would turn the entire world upside down! Our noble patriarchs of yore would no longer be respected and admired. Instead they would be imprisoned in the kitchen and forced to make babies twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. Even on the day of Our Lord Jesus Christ men would be subject to the whims of women enabled by science.

  16. Rob says

    The Assemblies of God churches are not going to come up with anything to help with global warming, alternative energy, new medicine, new reproductive technologies, new discoveries, new ideas.

    Come on PZ, that’s a lie and you know it. ;)

    If everybody’s dead and earth is a nuclear wasteland, these cease to be problems.

  17. Sleeping at the Console says

    Ignorance and disdain for science should never ever be anything more than the opinions of fringe groups that no one takes seriously. When did the uninformed opinions of a misinformed crank become mainstream?

  18. Heather says

    Zinjanthropus- I agree. Many Americans likely think fruit fly (or other basic research) is absurd.

    Maybe our science communicators need to spend more time explaining to those not familiar with science why basic research is important. Also people who aren’t in science need to get a handle on the arguments so they can convince others of its importance. (I fall into the latter group and admittedly haven’t taken the time to educate myself on how to change others’ minds on this subject.) If enough of us talk about it maybe basic research will become more valued.

  19. Katkinkate says

    They crawled out of the woodwork and snuck up on you while you were Sleeping, embolded by Bush no doubt.

  20. says

    I contend that the speech she recited reflects very very poorly on John McCain’s science adviser. For just a coupla mavericks, these two are following in the ruts of the Bush Administration’s anti-science attitude.

  21. Newfie says

    Damn the Liberal Elites. Spending your money by sitting around watching fruit flies hump. Let’s go kill some animals from helicopters.

  22. EB says

    “As John Cole put it, “why is it that the people who claim to adhere to the culture of life are so filled with hate for…people?” ”

    …and let’s not forget the suspicious correlation between pro-life people and pro-death penalty people. hmmm….

  23. charley says

    The last paragraph of this post is excellent. I would add, however, that future scientific advances will provided new ways for us to inadvertently harm people as well as help them (or hurt them intentionally). We will need moral and ethical judgement more than ever before, not less, to regulate our new powers. The ancient religions built on ignorance, fear and hate are failing to fill that need now, and will fail us even more down the road.

    For a better world we need to do more than promote science and fight supernatural religions, we must promote rational shared moral values like those advanced by Humanism. Otherwise, individuals or groups will feel free to exploit scientific advances for their own gain at the expense of society.

    Sorry about the preachiness. I guess 48 years of Sunday morning church attendance has imprinted a rhythm in my brain that I can’t shake.

  24. Bob Munck says

    If the Zeiss planetarium is an overhead projector, then I suppose the Hubble is a pair of binoculars.

    What’s the LHC?

  25. Richard Harris says

    “why is it that the people who claim to adhere to the culture of life are so filled with hate for…people?”

    I’d guess that if they’re worshipping gods, then mere mortals aren’t worth a candle.

    They’re deeply flawed, jealous, genocidal, petty minded, capricious, and irrational. The humans are just as bad, but can’t do the magic.

  26. uncle frogy says

    I have a great difficulty when I personally encounter such arguments of any hope of remaining rational and usually devolve into some kind of a fool screaming incoherent insults and unconnected ideas!
    These people scare the shit out of me. They are at the root merely bullies and do not really believe in anything except themselves and will do anything to “win the argument” including physical violence.
    I would pray if there was any use to it but I can only watch.

  27. QrazyQat says

    So she was only denigrating a study which attempts to solve a multi-billion dollar problem for US businesses. That’s much better.

    Just like McCain attacks that Montana grizzly bear DNA study which showed that grizzlies are doing well there and therefore allows the opening of land for commercial use, therefore allowing tens or hundreds of millions of dollars of business use.

    I see.

  28. Elizabeth says

    This makes me so sad. Sad for what the United States has allowed itself to become. Sad because the people of the US will accept this disgusting behaviour and thought process.

    I’m glad that I have dual citizenship with another country. I am so close to removing myself from the United States. Is there hope? Or has the right wing ruined everything?

  29. says

    There’s an old joke among some of the more enlightened of the faithful:

    A very saintly man, good, and generous, and prayerful and beloved by the Lord found himself caught in a fierce flood. The waters were rising swiftly, when a friend arrived in a car, and asked if Bob wanted a ride to safety.

    Bob replied that he was not afraid, because the Lord would succor him, and so he dismissed his friends offer.

    A while later, when the water had risen so high that cars could no longer negotiate the roads, a neighbor came by Bob’s place in a skiff, and offered to remove Bob from danger.

    Bob replied that he was not afraid, because the Lord would succor him, and so he dismissed his friends offer.

    Then, when the flood was nearing its height, a helicopter spotted Bob on his roof, with the waters raging about himi. The chopper sent down a sling with which to rescue him.

    Bob replied that he was not afraid, because the Lord would succor him, and so he dismissed his friends offer.

    So Bob drowned.

    In due time he arrived at heaven’s gate, where St. Peter asked him why he had drowned in the flood?

    Bob replied that he was not afraid, because the Lord would succor him, and so he dismissed the offers of rescue.

    St. Pete was flabbergasted: “We sent you a friend in a car to rescue you, and then that guy in a skiff, and finally a helicopter. What did you expect?”

    And sent Bob to hell, mostly for presumptuousness…

  30. says

    Elizabeth said, October 26, 2008 12:54 PM:
    This makes me so sad. Sad for what the United States has allowed itself to become. Sad because the people of the US will accept this disgusting behaviour and thought process.

    I’m glad that I have dual citizenship with another country. I am so close to removing myself from the United States. Is there hope? Or has the right wing ruined everything?

    Take me with you, please?

  31. says

    Considering her background, Palin can’t be faulted for being clueless on fruitflies. She should be faulted, however,for failing to get professional scientific advice. In this respect she’s (blindly) following the Bush administration.

  32. valdemar says

    As a Brit, I hope America regains its collective senses after the sheer, staggering acid-trip idiocy of Bush. But I’m not convinced. So many outpourings of bile, so much hatred, so much irrational nonsense. Perhaps this is really ‘it’ for the USA. Amid an economic meltdown, voters might elect a vain old cynic with a short fuse and an ignorant narcissist in a designer outfit.

  33. dkew says

    Can anyone explain the Palin-autism meme? Was it just the McSame brainfart in debate #1? Far as I know her baby has Down’s and the older kids are what passes for normal.

  34. says

    This is really strange for me, as this woman claims to be a proponent of research for special needs, but she ridicules research for special needs.

    Republicans oppose research for medicine that can cure the most significant diseases of our time and she wants us to believe that she was making a specific point. Absolutely not.

    Obviously, this has been said before in the comments, but I’ll say it again. This woman is an idiot, and she got caught up in her own talking points.

  35. Ian H Spedding FCD says

    I think you’re missing the point. This is all good stuff. The more she opens her mouth, like Michelle Bachmann, the more votes she wins – for the other side.

  36. Pat says

    Dkew:
    McCain lumps all those people together. In his archaic brain, despite our designations today, they are retarded people. See, if you’re a religious republican, children with mental disabilities aren’t family members or even people who need help or understanding: they’re trials sent by God. It’s all about you, not about wanting to help them. If you try and help them, you’re defying God’s will and at the same time showing hubris.

  37. Sphere Coupler says

    Lets see…the fruit fly in question appears to be able to damage crops.hmm, So if I understand either the Republicans are looking for a “buzz word” to spread like wild fire amongst the gullible or perhaps it’s another (fraudulin/freudian) slip.Someone appears to want a good ole’ fashion round of pestilence.Some people just can’t get enough (drama/suffering). Just a humouras thought.

    P.S. How about a good ole’ fashion swarm of locust?

    P.S.S. By the way, to those of you who are concerned, the U.S.A. is still a Great country.Maybe our governmental system skips at times, but our determination and tolerance levels are pretty high.Regarding politics,It’s time for the pendulum to swing back the other way.

  38. rrt says

    I’m not familiar with there being a meme, except in the sense that she’s trying to claim the title of champion for “special needs” kids, which is lumping autism and Down’s, and some of the rebuttals to her statement have pointed out the use of fruit flies on autism research. I also suspect she’s trying to plug into the highly motivated, increasingly prominent autism community for votes. Given her attitude toward science and the general conservative attitude toward vaccines and government mandates, I’m surprised she hasn’t blamed vaccines for autism. Or have I missed that?

  39. says

    I really, really hate to defend Palin, especially since the intent of her statement was pure demagoguery regardless of the underlying details.

    But, from a strictly pedantic viewpoint the conservatives are correct. Palin’s use of “Fruit Fly” to refer to a Tephritid fly is the correct, orthodox use of the common name.

  40. Eric Atkinson says

    Apparently socialism is sometimes unpopular even among Obama supporters:

    In a local restaurant my server had on a “Obama 08″ tie, again I laughed as he had given away his political preference-just imagine the coincidence.

    When the bill came I decided not to tip the server and explained to him that I was exploring the Obama redistribution of wealth concept. He stood there in disbelief while I told him that I was going to redistribute his tip to someone who I deemed more in need-the homeless guy outside. The server angrily stormed from my sight.

    I went outside, gave the homeless guy $10 and told him to thank the server inside as I’ve decided he could use the money more. The homeless guy was grateful.

    At the end of my rather unscientific redistribution experiment I realized the homeless guy was grateful for the money he did not earn, but the waiter was pretty angry that I gave away the money he did earn even though the actual recipient deserved money more.

    I guess redistribution of wealth is an easier thing to swallow in concept than in practical application.

    From Hit&Run

  41. Jadehawk says

    eric, nice story; except you just punished the busser, the expo, the host, the bartender, and possibly any other number of people who get tipped out by servers. not to mention that there’s a tax on tips, so you’re actually making the server subsidize your meal.

    also, as an allegory for taxes it sucks and would be illegal, since you just performed an act of “double taxation”, since the server will pay taxes on the tip you’ve “taxed” out of him.

    you sir are an idiot.

  42. Jadehawk says

    also, it’s pretty invalid, unless you’ve also donated the same percentage of your own income at least… after all the point of taxes is that everybody contributes a part.

  43. says

    Erik:

    You know, when the left had a revolution in Barcelona in 1936, they banned the practice of tipping outright and raised everyone’s wages so they didn’t need to kiss strangers’ asses to get by.

    The correct point is that it’s one thing to take from Bill Gates and use it to build things useful for everyone. It’s another to take it from some poor schmuck who’s making $3/hr base and give it direct to some random addict on the street.

    Somehow I doubt you’ll share these little tidbits with the next server, though, because you’re an asshat.

  44. Huh? says

    “In a local restaurant my server had on a “Obama 08″ tie, again I laughed as he had given away his political preference-just imagine the coincidence.”

    On what planet does this sentence make any sense? Is it funny because you think he was trying to hide his political preference with that tie? You laughed “again”? What was the first laugh about? “Just imagine the coincidence”. OK, I’ll bite, what coincidence? That an Obama hater and an Obama supporter were both in a restaurant, AT THE SAME TIME?

    Or did you, as I suspect, just make up the entire story to try to get under the skin of all the librul idjits here?

    Your attempts at angering the lefties are getting weaker and weaker.

  45. Eric Atkinson says

    Hey dim wits! Anybody read the line “from Hit&Run?”

    And it worked too didn’t it “Huh?”

  46. Huh? says

    Yeah, I saw that line after I posted.

    But tell me again what worked? It’s still an idiotic post and a waste of your time and ours.

  47. Nerd of Redhead says

    EricA, you are presently reminding me of Baba. Baba got banned for just being a jokester, and not contributing to the discussion. If you quit trying for the snark effect you might get us to listen.

  48. Owlmirror says

    Apparently capitalism is sometimes unpopular even among McCain supporters:

    In a local restaurant my server had on a “McCain 08” tie. I laughed, as he had given away his political preference.

    When the bill came I decided not to pay and explained to him that I was exploring the McCain capitalism concept. He stood there in disbelief while I told him that I would be bailed out by someone who I deemed able to pay-the homeless guy outside. The server angrily stormed from my sight.

    I went outside, and told the homeless guy that the server inside would give him a free meal, on me. The homeless guy was grateful.

    At the end of my rather unscientific capitalism experiment I realized the homeless guy was grateful for the meal he wasn’t going to get, and the waiter was pretty angry that I stiffed him and gave away a meal that I wasn’t going to pay for.

    I guess capitalism is an easier thing to swallow in concept than in practical application.

    Heh.

    Eat it, Rethuglicans.

  49. Rey Fox says

    Worst political analogy ever. I mean, if your view of economics is this juvenile, then kindly stay the hell away from any voting booths.

    “Hey dim wits! Anybody read the line “from Hit&Run?” ”

    Ah, I forgot, quoting someone else’s words completely absolves you of any responsibility for bringing them to our attention.

  50. Janine ID AKA The Lone Drinker says

    Posted by: Eric Atkinson | October 26, 2008

    I heard you the first dozen times you said that Janine.

    Asshole does not even know how to count. I only said it twice.
    Oh! Hi Patricia!

  51. Scott says

    Heh, Eric, I have a better story. One night as I was walking out of a take out restaurant with my dinner in a box, a homeless guy on the sidewalk asked me for money. Instead, I handed him my dinner, and went back inside and bought another. I felt good about doing good (instead of feeling good about hurting someone), the guy in the restaurant felt good to see me back, and the guy on the curb thanked me profusely as I walked past again on my way the car.

    Redistribution of wealth doesn’t have to hurt. And the story is true, too.

    Oh, you might say that mine was a voluntary “redistribution of wealth”, instead of the forced taxes. But I don’t mind at all paying taxes, as long as I have some say in how the money is spent, or as long as I know the money is being spent well. It’s when the money is wasted that bothers me. Giving food to someone who needs it is better than giving cash to someone who won’t know how to spend it for his own good. And I assume that if someone is homeless he has already demonstrated that he doesn’t know how to spend money for his own good.

  52. Crudely Wrott says

    Palin’s folksy, delivered-with-a-wink dissembling is aimed squarely at a large bloc of voters who just happen to live mostly in small-town America. I know lots and lots of these people who are respectable, hard working and pretty good neighbors. I like a lot of them and a few I love dearly.

    What makes them a specific bloc is their scientific and technological ignorance. They are not stupid, they just never learned about things like Ohm’s Law, covalent bonds, chirality, orbital mechanics or the difference between a bacteria and a virus. Not understanding such fundamentals while being surrounded and directly affected by them and their applications appears to some, especially those enamored of ancient mythologies or “truths,” as a vague threat issued from some cabal of necromancers. Modern medicine is a source of my trouble for some.

    Along comes Sarah with her rambling, run-on, nondenominational delivery, her wry asides and insider winks to appeal directly to their angst. They are really quite taken by her. Their ignorance assures it.

    Damn. And they are really nice people. If they were better educated, would they change their voting preference? Or would they not in order to stay secure within their part of the bloc? I can’t say either way, but their acquiescence is more foreboding than the way they are taken advantage of.

  53. Janine ID AKA The Lone Drinker says

    Posted by: John Lloyd Scharf | October 26, 2008

    OK… is this a science blog or a political propaganda blog?

    It’s an ice cream topping and a floor wax.

  54. Rey Fox says

    Told ya. Dog whistle phrases. I mean really, any time a Republican says the word “France”, it should be a big red flag that they’re bullshitting.

    It reminds me of a few years ago, Bush Jr. was out West in the wake of a massively destructive wildfire season, and in criticizing forest management (because if we cut all those trees down, they wouldn’t burn, duh), he referred to the fires as a “holocaust”. The local newspaper’s letters to the editor featured a slew of people complaining about Bush’s usage of that word, but also a handful of sycophants who apparently did some research and claimed that the original meaning of “holocaust” had to do with “burnt offerings”, and therefore Bush was correct. I thought, “Look me in the eyes and tell me that George W. Bush knew that.” I wrote my own letter basically saying “A broken clock is right twice a day.”

    Meanwhile, I wish this election would pass already, because Sarah Palin brings out the worst in everybody.

  55. Rey Fox says

    “OK… is this a science blog or a political propaganda blog?”

    It’s a “Make John Lloyd Scharf Angry” blog.

  56. Nerd of Redhead says

    Posted by: John Lloyd Scharf | October 26, 2008
    OK… is this a science blog or a political propaganda blog?

    Read the masthead. A bit of each. And, on occasion, a bit silly if the FSM is blessing us with his noodlely appendages.

  57. Owlmirror says

    Apparently cannibalism is sometimes unpopular even among Kodos supporters:

    In a local restaurant my server had on a “Kodos 08” tie. I laughed, as he had given away his political preference.

    When the bill came I decided not to pay and explained to him that I was exploring the Kodos cannibalism concept. He stood there in disbelief while I told him that he could make a meal out of someone who I deemed nutritious-the homeless guy outside. The server angrily stormed from my sight.

    I went outside, told the homeless guy that the server inside was a Kodos supporter who wanted to eat him, and that if he went and told that Kang supporters, they would give him a free meal. The homeless guy was grateful.

    At the end of my rather unscientific cannibalism experiment I realized the homeless guy was grateful for the meal he was going to get, and the waiter would be pretty angry that his restaurant would be burned down by a ravening horde of Kang supporters, who would then barbecue him in the flames of his own restaurant and eat him with hot sauce, sharing some with the homeless guy.

    I guess cannibalism is an easier thing to swallow in practical application than in concept.

    From Twirl&Slither.

  58. Crudely Wrott says

    Sorry. That sentence in #69 should read, “Modern medicine is a source of much trouble for some.”

    I should preview twice

  59. Janine ID AKA The Lone Drinker says

    Owlmirror, I do not buy that. I happen to know that Kodos and Kang routinely exchange strands of DNA.

  60. says

    It’s not hard to figure out what kind of blog this is.

    It’s my blog.

    I really don’t understand those people who can’t grasp this simple concept.

  61. Anton Mates says

    When the bill came I decided not to tip the server and explained to him that I was exploring the Obama redistribution of wealth concept. He stood there in disbelief while I told him that I was going to redistribute his tip to someone who I deemed more in need-the homeless guy outside. The server angrily stormed from my sight.

    If you’re giving money to people in need, why didn’t you give to the server and the homeless guy? You do realize there are three people in this story, and one of them is you, the guy with the most money and the least need?

    Honestly, compassion’s like the fifth dimension to some people.

  62. craig says

    The problem is, politically this was NOT stupid. She was playing to her audience, and it worked. If you listen to the clip, the audience LOVED it.

  63. Owlmirror says

    Owlmirror, I do not buy that. I happen to know that Kodos and Kang routinely exchange strands of DNA.

    Ah, another conspiracy conjugation theorist! Come on, Kang loves kids. You can’t get more pro-family than that!

    Whereas Kodos claimed to love kids… while drooling the whole time. And then asking what was for lunch. Clearly a cannibalism reference!

  64. says

    It may be snowing in Minnesota, but in Alaska a snowball of lies has grown into an avalanche. Do we really have to wait nine more days? Ugh.

  65. Jacob says

    Palin is indefensible. There is no excuse for an American vice-presidential nominee to be this ignorant. Absolutely pathetic.

  66. Jadehawk says

    The way she has to point out that Paris is in France is also revealing of the intellectual level of her intended audience

    actually this has nothing to do with her or her supporters’ intelligence level (this time); “The Former Colonies” (America, Australia etc) are chokefull of places named after places in Europe, so there’s a whole bunch of Londons, Parises, Berlins etc. She was being specific, lest someone might think she WASN’T talking about that hateful ferrin place… and then she was vague about the research. which tells me she either wanted to be vague about it, or thought that just pointing out fruit flies per se would be enough. meaning she WASN’T criticizing a specific research, or a specific way of funding it, the way she WAS specific about criticizing the place where it happened. she was making fun of fruit fly research in general, using it as an example of “funding gone wrong”

    and the way they talk about earmarks, you’d think it all goes to science… and they try to make that sound like it’s a bad thing, too.

  67. BruceJ says

    Which of the seven definitions of “hoople” is intended here?

    The proper word is ‘hoopleheads’ and was popularized via the late, great HBO series Deadwood as a term of derision for the throng of drunken, slovenly, easy to raise for no good rabble of miners in the boom town.

    Here is an etymologic description of the word.

  68. says

    PZ said: It’s my blog.

    And it’s also a wonderful MAGIC Blog. Scroll down and find a picture of an enchanted squid, and POOF!, it’s a science blog.

    Or find a picture of an evil hockeymom, and abra-cadabra, it’s a political blog!!

    It’s fantastical !

  69. says

    Pat @ 43:children with mental disabilities aren’t family members or even people who need help or understanding: they’re trials sent by God.

    Like kids with napalm all over them ?

  70. Fernando Magyar says

    Elizabeth @ 33,

    I’m glad that I have dual citizenship with another country. I am so close to removing myself from the United States. Is there hope? Or has the right wing ruined everything?

    As someone who also holds dual citizenship I have to admit, that I too, often find myself struggling with similar thoughts.

    However at the end of the day I find hope by being with my friends and family and knowing that it would be cowardly of me to up and leave just because we are going through some very tough times.

    Now is the time to stand up and fight if necessary for what we believe in. I also find inspiration in the likes of people who post on blogs such as this one.

    There is still much good among the people of this country and there are bastions of rationality and humanity here seek them out!

    We can all travel to our other countries when times are good, right now I think the America that I know and love needs me even more than my country of birth. But it sure as fuck ain’t easy…

  71. blueelm says

    @56

    I was absolutely happy to see Biden get frustrated with those ridiculous questions. Laughing in the face of that kind of idiocy is EXACTLY what people should be doing.

  72. Nate says

    Time after time in this campaign McCain or Palin have made remarks whose attempts at later qualification come off as seriously disingenuous, to say the least (e.g., that McCain meant “the American worker” when he said that the fundamentals of our tattered economy were strong).

    If she really meant that a specific study was flawed, she would have qualified it then and there, and not followed up with, “Fruitflies… I kid you not.”

    This is at least the second time that she or McCain have cited valid scientific research as frivolity and pork-barrel spending. And then these ‘hats will, in the same breath, complain about the abysmal state of American science and math education.

    I can only describe my feelings as rage. Utter rage.

  73. Nate says

    Posted by: John Lloyd Scharf | October 26, 2008
    OK… is this a science blog or a political propaganda blog?

    What the last 8 years have clearly shown is that if we want there to be any science left 8 years from now, it has to become a political issue for the scientists too — it surely has been for lots of other groups.

  74. says

    They are not stupid, they just never learned about things like Ohm’s Law, covalent bonds, chirality, orbital mechanics or the difference between a bacteria and a virus.

    No, they’re stupid.
    All that stuff was covered in their school texts/classes.
    If they didn’t ‘get’ it, it was because they stupidly believed that it was irrelevant to ’em.
    I don’t trust anybody who has never travelled furether than 100 miles from their birthplace to recognize ‘relevant.’
    Yeah, they’re stupid, alright…

  75. Mike says

    I went to a good, public high school in a middle class town in New Jersey in the 1960s. I was taught the difference between a virus and a bacterium, and about Ohm’s Law and covalent bonds. I had to google chirality because I’d never heard or read the word before. I know a very little about orbital mechanics but only because I’ve read a lot of science fiction.

    Most Americans have had little exposure to science, even in school, and understand less than they’ve been exposed to. Stupidity is not a major factor in this lack of knowledge, ignorance and poor education are much greater causes.

  76. says

    Given that McCain is so keen to help Joe the Plumber and his ilk I find it slightly surprising that spending $211,000 on research on an agricultural pest in its natural habitat is so derided. I suspect that while the tax breaks would be nice for the olive farmers methods of controlling the fly are going to be of significantly more benefit to them.

    And if Palin had wanted to criticise using public funds to do research which will largely benefit private enterprise she could have added “all for the sake of a few olive farmers in California”, which would still have pushed all the right buttons for the supporters, but wouldn’t have made her look quite so ridiculous.

  77. says

    I’ve already posted this on my blog, but the more I think about it, the more convinced I am that the following inference is justified:

    I look at the intentionality of Palin’s statement, the way she emphasizes ‘FRUIT fly research, from Paris, FRANCE.’ See, she thinks this is a delicious triple whammy, since the France reference encourages a knee-jerk xenophobic reaction along the lines of ‘un-American’, while the use of the word ‘fruit’ is a code word for ‘gay agenda.’ And, of course, why would anyone bother spending tax dollars on something as insignificant as flies?

    If you’d like to argue the point or make another observation, drop me a line at my blog….Scott

  78. Crudely Wrott says

    I’ll give you half a point, woody. Within any demographic there is a broad range of knowledge and understanding of good scientific discipline. Sure enough, that makes some of my ad hoc bloc of voters pretty stupid. The same may be said of any group identified by common characteristics like, say, people who comment on blogs.

    While I’ve had the pleasure to know some highly skilled and quick witted redneck mechanics, I’ve also experienced the let down of highly credentialed professionals displaying ignorance and deep seated bias.

    Something a little bit kinder then the Sturgeon Principle is called for, since my experience indicates that somewhat less than 90% of all people are stupid. Maybe we could postulate that, in any given group, a “distressing” or “frightening” or simply a “disappointing” percentage are stupid. We just need to have good working definitions for these terms. We could call it the Wood-Wrott Conjecture, or some such.

    I agree with you about how stupid anyone can possibly be, but not that most of a given group is that stupid.

  79. Eric Atkinson says

    “Woody” A legend in his own mind.

    “I don’t trust anybody who has never travelled furether than 100 miles from their birthplace to recognize ‘relevant.’

    He suffers from the same fault that I do. poor spelling.

  80. Patricia says

    Eric if you leave your mommas basement, steal some lunch money from your grannies purse, and actually go to school you could learn to spell.

  81. Patricia says

    I never play with vienna sausages, it’s bearded behemoths or nothin. Someday, when you’re in big boy pants you’ll understand. Run along now sonny.

  82. clinteas says

    PZ,of course you are right,as are the commenters that cry foul and point out the “fruit fly in France” rhetoric.

    But we here are not the audience for this,we can cry and shout all we want,this sort of statement is aimed for the 80% of your population that are xenophobic,convinced the USA is the greatest country in the world,and hates the librul elitists.
    And they hear the message,be it fruit flies or overhead projectors.
    Cry all you like,elitists,they cant hear you.

    Oh,and raven,this :

    Science is the basis of our American civilization and the reason why we are the world’s last (and fading!) superpower.

    Military superpower,maybe,but economical,moral,scientific,innovative superpower,you are no more.

  83. Sauceress says

    Whew! Lucky Sarah Failin didn’t bring up the earthworms! She obviously isn’t onto the money spent on all the research using those…those..shock..horror..immoral transgendered nematodes called Caenorhabditis elegans!

    I’m sure there’s some funding for agricultural research into nematodeas crop pests that could be used ambiguously as an obvious attack on some of the science underpinning biomedical research.

  84. Patricia says

    Truly Eric, You are not fit to be one of Brownians basement dwelling step children.

    I’m beginning to think that you are a Romper Room drop out.

  85. Eric Atkinson says

    Pat. If indeed you are “beginning to think,” maybe you will stop with the child like insults.

    And respect your elders.

    Try to be more like Brownian.

  86. Patricia says

    Saint – You god soaked, ‘moonbat’ shit crazy christian, go pray to your blood drenched, woman hating, imaginary friend.

    When you get done with that, come back and show us your dragons and unicorns. Show up with either one, and I’ll mount the scaffold peaceably, so you can hang me as a witch.

    Blog traffic whore.

  87. Patricia says

    Sonny, at five you are the elder of my dog.

    Brownian, is most likely also my junior, but he can speak for himself on that issue.

    You, toad, are entirely boring. Grab your binky, crawl off, and watch your TV show. It probably matches your IQ.

  88. clinteas says

    Oh,and Eric Atkinson,

    I had a patient of that name yesterday,that was weird.He seemed pretty normal,tho.

  89. Eric Atkinson says

    I guess you weren’t “beginning to think.”

    BTW, Pat. Do you have these insults filled away somewhere?
    You seem to use the same ones over and over.

  90. scooter says

    I thought Saint was a swishy boring british cop in black and white.

    He stood out, instead of the Walther PPK, he packed a sausage from Vienna.

  91. Nibien says

    I’m beginning to believe if Eric is a truly suburb actor, fooling us all into thinking he’s a complete moron with the intellect of a typical republican.

    I doubt many people with the intelligent he shows could even turn on computer… unless, perhaps, it was a Mac.

  92. Eric Atkinson says

    Clinteas: I like to think I’m normal too. But being an Atheist and a Libertarian, I don’t fit in anywhere.

    But It’s OK. Everyone need someone to hate.

  93. says

    Eric @ 116: being an Atheist and a Libertarian, I don’t fit in anywhere.

    oh puuuuuulllleze, it’s just you and Penn Jillette, and that’s it.

    right.

  94. says

    But being an Atheist and a Libertarian, I don’t fit in anywhere.

    There are plenty of atheist libertarians out there, including many on this blog. Being openly hostile to anything that doesn’t fit the libertarian mantra is hardly going to endear oneself to a crowd of liberals.

  95. Nerd of Redhead says

    EricA, we don’t hate you. We are just very annoyed with you for disrupting threads with unnecessary mocking of everyone else. If you want be treated better, stop trying to annoy everybody. Add to the conversation, and if you have nothing to add, don’t prove it by adding something.

    Baba, who displayed some the same characteristics, was banned. So my advice, which I’m sure won’t be taken, is to calm down a bit, and quit trying to be the class clown. We don’t need one.

  96. Patricia says

    That is how children are taught the language Eric.

    I hope PZ becomes bored to death with you soon, because I sure am.

    End of comments to you short pants.

  97. Janine ID AKA The Lone Drinker says

    I took a visit to Saint’s site. He is the type of guy to post photos of an abortion from during the second trimester.

    And, yeah, he claims that the only scientists complaining about Palin’s statement are scientiste. Not the real working scientist but, instead the students and teachers. And he links to this article.

  98. Patricia says

    Scooter – Check out the Saints blog, he’s a christian traffic whore trying to play off PZ.
    These people crack me up. They’re so damned stupid they just HAVE to post their blog, and then they think no one looks at it.
    First up, PZ.
    What a dumb ass. He couldn’t kick over a tote goat.

  99. Mulder says

    yeah, I have seen ‘Saint’s’ site too.

    Other than verbal diarrhoea he really has nothing much to post.

    The use of his term ‘scientiste’ ..?(;-)) That’s basically peni$ envy when he sees the (fully paid for) megamansion the (godless liberal atheist) tenured faculty who lives in his neighborhood can afford, or the Lexus he drives ;_). It must hurt when all praying to all of Saint’s ten thousand Catlick Saints cannot assuage the sting of jealousy, unfulfillment and heartburn ….:)

    After Nov 4 its going to get much, much worse I’m afraid. Palin will be remembered as the ethically challenged, intellectually stunted eye candy that she is and will be relegated to the dumpster of history.

    Oh yeah, the atheist ‘librul’ ‘scientiste’s will be doing just fine, thank you.

    PZ, I wonder if ‘Saint’ had flunked out of your class – hence the animosity ;-)

  100. Patricia says

    Hey Janine, I’ve lost track of the thread where some dumbass, three titted, christian sow was trumpeting that you need to sober up, and you drink alone, *gasp*!

    err… I’m always ready to bosom up to the bar and consume the ol’ grog and swill with you, until we stagger out into the gutter and loosen our laces to puke.

    Gawd knows we’ll probably trip over tsg.

  101. DingoDave says

    Why would she belittle the efforts of scientists who are trying to combat a major agricultural pest, which does millions of dollars worth of damage every year?

    Is agricultural research something which Sarah Palin sees as being trivial and unnecessary?

    Why does Sarah Palin hate fruit?

  102. Wowbagger says

    Patricia, #124, wrote:

    What a dumb ass. He couldn’t kick over a tote goat.

    I’m intrigued. What’s a ‘tote goat’?

  103. Janine ID AKA The Lone Drinker says

    Well Patricia. I have no idea where she could get such a notion. But I doubt she is imaginative enough to come up with it. As for the drink, I will be drink glug. We just had our first ice storm of the season and I want something strong and fruity and I can set fire to it before I drink it down.

  104. Walton says

    I must say, I was unimpressed with Palin’s remarks. Although, as a libertarian, I don’t really like government spending on anything if it can be helped, I would concede that there are some research projects of great medical importance – which the private sector would not necessarily be motivated to engage in – which merit taxpayer funding, being in the long-term interests of everyone. While such funding must be carefully scrutinised, it isn’t particularly helpful or constructive to say “ha ha, research on fruit flies, what a joke” as if such research were incapable of being useful, without having actually bothered to listen to the experts and find out about the practical applications of such research.

    What worries me about Governor Palin is not that she is uninformed about the sciences, since I would admit the same of myself; rather, it’s that she seems uninterested in learning, or listening to the experts, or evaluating things critically. Neither Obama nor McCain is a scientist, or an economist, or a foreign policy guru, or an expert in any of the many other areas in which the federal government is engaged – but both of them are intelligent people who are likely to listen, learn and evaluate. I’m not sure that’s the case with Palin. And if she has this “don’t know, don’t care” attitude towards science, I’m worried that she might take the same attitude towards economics and foreign policy – which could be a total disaster for everyone in the world.

    I’m actually increasingly leaning towards the Obama-Biden ticket. Though I have little respect for Joe Biden, I don’t think he’d be as disastrous as Palin were he to become president (and there’s far less chance of Obama dying in office than McCain).

  105. Brachychiton says

    Check out the Saints blog, he’s a christian traffic whore trying to play off PZ.

    Why is someone in Sydney (apparently) so obsessed with the US election? Shouldn’t he be out in the streets shaking his fist at Kevin Rudd?

  106. says

    Hah. Can’t cope with the fact that you got it all wrong wrong wrong and just let your biases and bigotry get in the way. Palin, a politician, was talking earmarks. Hah.

    Behold the purveyors of research and critical thinking.

    Couldn’t spot a fact under your noses.

    You guys probably realise its Americans like you who give your country a bad name. And make the rest of the world laugh.

    Thank God the majority of Americans have far more common sense and decency than you lot.

  107. Nick Gotts says

    Why does Sarah Palin hate fruit?

    Well, apart from their Biblical association with knowledge – which she evidently hates with a consuming passion – her mythical “Lord” was a fruit-tree hater, judging by the tantrum in which he is alleged to have cursed an entirely innocent fig tree.

  108. Nick Gotts says

    saint,
    You’re a moron. Polls in just about every country around the world show that if the vote was in any of them, McCain/Palin would face complete wipeout. The world is laughing at those halfwit Americans who can’t even see it’s a bad idea to elect a semi-senile has-been with a serious anger-management problem and a creationist ignoramus.

  109. Nick Gotts says

    Everyone need someone to hate. Eric Atkinson

    What a revealing comment. No, Eric, it’s not everyone – it’s just people with the same kind of psychological problems as you.

  110. Vic333 says

    I just can’t believe how much disdain for science she (and many of the GOP) seems to have. Where do they think medicine comes from?

  111. says

    The research was into a pest that threatened a growing California multi-million olive industry (very much growing – it didn’t even exist a couple decades ago). There’s a USDA research facility in France since they know tons more about olives then we do. The 700k earmark put 200k to this French effort. In other words, only 50k more then Palin’s wardrobe. To research a pest that threatens an entire industry.

    Its really a great example of earmarks done right!

  112. Sadie Morrison says

    As John Cole put it, “why is it that the people who claim to adhere to the culture of life are so filled with hate for…people?”

    Good question. I think these people have idealized the concept of life (well, human pre-natal life, very specifically) to the point that actual life–non-pre-natal, non-human, what have you–just gets in the way. Can’t having anything blurring the lines between black and white.

  113. kermit says

    Walton @131 “Neither Obama nor McCain is a scientist, or an economist, or a foreign policy guru, or an expert in any of the many other areas in which the federal government is engaged”

    May I point out that Obama taught constitutional law for 12 years at the University of Chicago Law School? I should think that Federal Law is one area in which the federal government is engaged. And unlike McCain and Palin, he’s smart enough to listen to experts in other fields.

  114. Arnosium Upinarum says

    Walton #131 says, “I’m actually increasingly leaning towards the Obama-Biden ticket. Though I have little respect for Joe Biden, I don’t think he’d be as disastrous as Palin were he to become president (and there’s far less chance of Obama dying in office than McCain).”

    That is a pretty persuasive argument, isn’t it? One can almost throw everything else out on this one fret alone. Almost.

    But don’t forget the rest of it: just how capable, competent and “America First” can anybody really be who puts the country in that kind of potentially disasterous situation in the first place? That particular sewer is backed right up to the source.

    Now the argument is complete. You may proceed to complete your leaning.

  115. Patricia says

    Wowbagger – Sorry, I missed your comment.
    A tote goat is a little miniature, rudimentry motorcycle from decades ago that is tough as hell, can go almost anywhere, and is favored by hillbillies every where.
    They have a small Briggs & Stratton engine, it has one spark plug and one jug.
    So the compression on the thing is small – meaning that a man doesn’t need much lead in his pencil to kick the thing over (start it) – compared to say an old Harley shovelhead.
    To any hillbilly boy over the age of five, it’s fightin’ words.

  116. saint says

    If even the French think a potential future leader’s foreign policy is “utterly immature” and comprises “formulations empty of all content” ,this is more than just “problematic” for the ones who want the One who wants to heal the world.

    Unless you think, laughter is the best medicine. In which case: send for the French fruit flies!

    (And remember, Obama picked Biden! Bwahahahahaha!)

  117. says

    Obama the “law professor” – appointed straight out of uni, with no academic search process and under no research obligations. Do you actually know how many courses he taught when he wasn’t on leave of absence?

    And do you know what he thinks of your Constitution? Take it from another American who quotes Obama’s actual words:

    Now that’s just garden-variety socialism, which apparently is not a big deal to may voters. So I would appeal to any American who claims to love the Constitution and to revere the Founding Fathers… I will not only appeal to you, I will beg you, as one American citizen to another, to consider this next statement with as much care as you can possibly bring to bear: “And uh, to that extent, as radical as I think people tried to characterize the Warren Court, it wasn’t that radical. It didn’t break free from the essential constraints that were placed by the Founding Fathers in the Constitution — at least as it’s been interpreted, and [the] Warren Court interpreted it in the same way, that generally the Constitution is a charter of negative liberties: [it] says what the states can’t do to you, says what the federal government can’t do to you, but it doesn’t say what the federal government or the state government must do on your behalf.

    The United States of America — five percent of the world’s population — leads the world economically, militarily, scientifically, and culturally — and by a spectacular margin. Any one of these achievements, taken alone, would be cause for enormous pride. To dominate as we do in all four arenas has no historical precedent. That we have achieved so much in so many areas is due — due entirely — to the structure of our society as outlined in the Constitution of the United States.

    The entire purpose of the Constitution was to limit government. That limitation of powers is what has unlocked in America the vast human potential available in any population.

    Barack Obama sees that limiting of government not as a lynchpin but rather as a fatal flaw: “…One of the, I think, the tragedies of the Civil Rights movement was because the Civil Rights movement became so court-focused, uh, I think that there was a tendency to lose track of the political and community organizing and activities on the ground that are able to put together the actual coalitions of power through which you bring about redistributive change. And in some ways we still suffer from that.

    There is no room for wiggle or misunderstanding here. This is not edited copy. There is nothing out of context; for the entire thing is context — the context of what Barack Obama believes. You and I do not have to guess at what he believes or try to interpret what he believes. He says what he believes.

    We have, in our storied history, elected Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives and moderates. We have fought, and will continue to fight, pitched battles about how best to govern this nation. But we have never, ever in our 232-year history, elected a president who so completely and openly opposed the idea of limited government, the absolute cornerstone of makes the United States of America unique and exceptional.

    If this does not frighten you — regardless of your political affiliation — then you deserve what this man will deliver with both houses of Congress, a filibuster-proof Senate, and, to quote Senator Obama again, “a righteous wind at our backs.”

    That a man so clear in his understanding of the Constitution, and so opposed to the basic tenets it provides against tyranny and the abuse of power, can run for president of the United States is shameful enough.

  118. Dave Wisker says

    I wonder how Palin justifies her earmark request for genetic studies of harbor seals. Is it because they are somehow cuter than grizzly bears and fruit flies?

  119. Dillo says

    I’m surprised she didn’t bring up the fact that the research was for California olive growers. Not only could she have gotten in her dig about Paris, France, but she could also have scored points for highlighting the fact that the farmers benefiting from the research don’t even LIVE IN AMERICA!

  120. Nick Gotts says

    saint,
    The quote you link to is nowhere near socialism – as a democratic socialist, I know that. All Obama appears to be saying is that the courts are not the appropriate arena in which to pursue economic redistribution; that political organisation and action (like coalition building, fighting elections, lobbying, crafting legislating) are essential if that is your aim. He does not say, at least in the text quoted, that the courts should have pursued redistribution or that the constitution should be changed or reinterpreted to allow them to do so. If that’s the most alarming statement of “socialism” the NRO can come up with, the campaign to brand Obama a socialist is truly pitiful.

    In any case, you and your fear-mongering, theocratic and racist friends are going to lose, and lose big. Do come back and post on November 5 so we can all laugh at you.

  121. Steve_C says

    Saint. You’re a joke. NRO? Really?

    Obama was Editor of the Harvard Law Review. ANY university would be happy to have him teach constitutional law. He’s a truly inspiring and incredibly smart man.

    Bush? McCain? Palin? Not so much.

    Obama was saying that the Warren Court wasn’t radical and basically if it had taken steps to redistribute wealth, it WOULD HAVE BEEN RADICAL.

    He’s agreeing with conservatives, you tool.

    Reading comprehension isn’t so important to these guys.

  122. windy says

    Reading comprehension isn’t so important to these guys.

    Is simple. Obama use word that not Yang worship word. Clearly he pal around with Kohms.