Episode CCLIV: The worst song ever recorded


I don’t want you to play this video, it’s that bad. It’s a song lauding rape.

Perhaps instead of listening to it, you’re better off reading the Manboobz thread about it.

Now talk about something else. Anything.

(Episode CCLIII: Losing my edge.)

Comments

  1. Dhorvath, OM says

    I have maps in my head. It doesn’t take much to make them, generally any exposure to a trail network and I can find my way around. This means that I pretty nearly never ride alone, as evidenced by last night. Show up at the parking lot alone, no plans, find some people trying to decide where to ride on the map at the trailhead, offer to show a nice loop that we can squeeze in before the light disappears and we are away. It was a good evening.

  2. Mr. Fire says

    Just in case it hasn’t already been said (or at least said enough):

    There is job growth in Texas because Perry is specializing in creating low-paying jobs:

    Perry and Romney can duke it out over who created the most jobs, but governors have as much influence over job growth in their states as roosters do over sunrises.

    States don’t have their own monetary policies so they can’t lower interest rates to spur job growth. They can’t spur demand through fiscal policies because state budgets are small, and 49 out of 50 are barred by their constitutions from running deficits.

    States can cut corporate taxes and regulations, and dole out corporate welfare, in efforts to improve the states’ “business climate.” But studies show these strategies have little or no effect on where companies locate. Location decisions are driven by much larger factors — where customers are, transportation links, and energy costs.

    If governors try hard enough, though, they can create lots of lousy jobs. They can drive out unions, attract low-wage immigrants, and turn a blind eye to businesses that fail to protect worker health and safety.

    Rick Perry seems to have done exactly this. While Texas leads the nation in job growth, a majority of Texas’s workforce is paid hourly wages rather than salaries. And the median hourly wage there was $11.20, compared to the national median of $12.50 an hour.

    Texas has also been specializing in minimum-wage jobs. From 2007 to 2010, the number of minimum wage workers there rose from 221,000 to 550,000 – that’s an increase of nearly 150 percent. And 9.5 percent of Texas workers earn the minimum wage or below – compared to about 6 percent for the rest of the nation, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The state also has the lowest percentage of workers without health insurance. Texas schools rank 44th in the nation in per-pupil spending.

    Perry is bascially expanding the slave class, and claiming a miracle.

  3. says

    Reposting this here, in the new chapter of the TET. It was almost caught in the portcullis that closed the previous chapter. I did take out the description of Michele Bachmann, since her egregious spreading of misinformation about vaccines has earned her a thread of her very own. If you click on the link below, you will get Rachel Maddow’s take on the Bachmann idiocy, including a very nice takedown based on science.

    The Rachel Maddow Show opened last night with a round up of some of the non-facts that Republicans used to support their candidacies in the recent debate.

    Just a few examples:

    Republicans all hate Ben Bernanke, the head of the Federal Reserve, with most of them saying Bernanke should be tried for treason. Perry wants to send him to Texas where a mob will “treat him pretty ugly.” Newt Gingrich wants to fire Bernanke tomorrow because he’s “been the most inflationary, dangerous, and power-centered Chairman of the Fed in the history of the Fed.” Maddow followed those statements with a graph showing exactly how inflationary each Fed Chairman had been since the 1970s. Guess what? During Bernanke’s service as Chairman, inflation has been so low that it barely shows on the graph. In fact, Bernanke is the least inflationary Chairman of the Fed, the least by far. The least without question.

    They all say that the economic stimulus package did nothing to create jobs. In fact, the Republican candidates were in agreement in saying that the economic stimulus “did not create one job.” “He [Obama] has proven once and for all that government spending will not create one job.” According to the Congressional Budget Office, the stimulus package created between 1.0 and 2.9 million jobs. Yes, Rick Perry, it didn’t create one job. It created a whole Texas-sized lot of jobs.

    As Maddow summarized, “Republicanland is not Normalsville. …. They all debate on the basis of what they all agree to be facts, facts that are not true…”

    There’s an alternate set of false facts (otherwise known as “lies”) based on which the Republicans are all operating. They are repeating these lies over and over. Fox News doesn’t call them on it. These are not matters of interpretation, or facts in question. Real facts, non-faith-based facts, are non-partisan. Facts that are true according to non-partisan reports are not allowed to live in Republican Land.

    Maddow makes the point that the debate shows us Republicanland is not grounded in facts. What this means is that, quite apart from selecting a presidential candidate, they will prevent us from governing in the meantime. For the next 14 months we will be trying to govern this country based on facts, and they will be preventing governance because they are working from a set of false premises.

  4. says

    The first thing to greet me when I got to work this morning was an unrealistic demand by a buyer over property taxes that haven’t even been calculated yet, let alone assessed and billed.

    Sigh.

    I think it’s time for a big cup of iced tea. I brew a fantastic super strong pot of some delicious loose leaf tea using my Zarafina tea maker (and yes, I have a fancy teapot on my actual desk at work, sometimes it’s the only way to get through a day), add just a little honey and pour the whole thing over a full cup of ice.

  5. says

    There’s a poll on the Lancaster Guardian site that can be Pharyngulated.

    Should Mormons be allowed to carry out missionary work on board Lancaster district buses?

    Yes
    No

    Excerpt from the news article:

    Robert Preston, England Manchester Mission President for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, also known as the Mormon Church, said he considered the 140 young people in the North West of England actively engaged in trying to convert people as “persistent and couragous”.

    He added: “They will sit next to someone, and they will introduce themselves and try and have a good conversation to explain a point of view that someone might never have heard before.

    “We do encourage this, but we would not want people to feel intimidated.

    “If it becomes clear that someone does not want to hear that message they should move away.”

  6. Shinobi says

    Ugh Mormons. I once got mormonized at a laundromat. It was unfortunate because I had to wait like an hour for my laundry and all I wanted to do was read Snow Crash. (Which I think may have been the jumping off point for our conversation. I probably wasn’t very nice.)

  7. Mattir OM says

    I’m actually listening to the song. Remarkably, it makes classic James Bond look as radically feminist as Emma Goldman and as anti-racist as Stephen Biko.

    I’m listening to Michael Shermer’s The Believing Brain. Completely lucid and factual (at least insofar as I’m recalling my neuropsychology larnin’) about the patternicity and agenticity neural stuff, and reasonably cogent about how these relate tob belief in gods, aliens, and conspiracy theories. Then he manages to go off multiple deep ends at once whining about how academia is mean to those poor conservative intellectuals, employing bizarre cartoon versions of both conservative and progressive pundits, and (most bizarrely) idolizing Dennis Prager. I want to grab Shermer and shake until the gravel falls out of his brain and he can think clearly again and stop cherrypicking his facts. It would also help if he could refrain from dividing the interestingly complex world into binary categories…

    And I am now officially a fiber arts teacher, having started both sections of this month’s spinning classes. Everyone managed to leave the first class with about 20 yards of spun yarn and without having collapsed in frustrated tears. I’m busily compiling a list of what I want to do and/or get at Rhinebeck: another Bosworth spindle, a certificate for participating in the “knitting with chopsticks” competition, milk-protein yarn…

  8. says

    @Lynna, yeah that sounds about right. Although I do think there’s less fraud to take advantage of social programs or avoid paying property taxes and the like on the LDS side as opposed to the FLDS side.

  9. Mattir says

    Algernon – I’ve done Flylady for several years – it helped me finally finish my dissertation, among other things. System works great, people involved are a range, from sane to batshit crazy fundamentalists. When I’m more on than off, my life runs better, but that would be true of any actual system of getting stuff done.

  10. says

    I think you mean the highest proportion of workers without health insurance: 27%. The lowest prop. _with_ health insurance. Those conceptual double negatives (highest of something lowdown and bad) are tricky.

    Why post a disgusting song? Just so we know how bad things are out there?

  11. Bernard Bumner says

    I don’t want you to play this video, it’s that bad. It’s a song lauding rape.

    It is also monumentally racist.

    Wow. That anybody thought it would be a good idea. Wow.

    The entire album seems designed to be shocking and therefore funny. Apparently:

    LINER NOTES: A PERSONAL MESSAGE FROM JASON KING
    Peter Wyngarde’s personal blend of sophistication and the incurable ability to laugh at himself is epitomised in this album. The outrageous is never far behind and irrepressable when sex leers its inquisitive head as in Rape and the Hippie And The Skinhead. Cynicism has a sneaking glance too and the cruelty of such lyrics as Flight Number 10 and Try To Remember To Forget to Forget are given such a romantic sound that on first hearing they appear disarmingly innocuous which they certainly are not. This was intentional with the invaluable help of Hubert Valverde whose music has the intangiable lyricism that makes a love song that is felt and seen when it is heard.

    In Vic Smith they have found a partner who has brought his own cool mastery of connection – blending the two talents into a unique combination without distracting when he subtly injects his own particular sound in the marvellous arrangements. But of course it is Peter Wyngarde’s unique and personal magnatism that shines through. I can think of no other album that has brought such continuous pleasure than this outrageously funny, original and versatile one.

    Fucking hilarious.

  12. Richard Austin says

    Catching up, last thread seemed to end all about drinks.

    WRT – can’t drink, so won’t comment on beer. But most sparkling grape juice tastes, to me, like champagne smells. Does champagne actually taste that way? Because, frankly, I find it pretty disgusting.

    Coffee: I drink two kinds of coffee. If it’s 9 pm and I need to get to sleep but I’m not really tired, I’ll have a kona. That usually puts me out in about 20 minutes. If it’s the middle of the afternoon and I’m trying to really focus on something but can’t, I’ll do a double shot of espresso. Yes, ADHD is weird.

    Sodas: I don’t know that I prefer diet sodas, and I can definitely taste the sweeteners (and differentiate between them, usually), but as someone who “must” get slow doses of caffeine all day to keep my coworkers from killing me (and coffee doesn’t work, see above), having no or low calorie sodas is a definite benefit. So, they’re tolerated.

    Oh, and I’m not watching the video. That ‘stache is scary.

  13. says

    An annoying song all around, but probably meant to be a sort of joke. In bad taste, and it appears that the record was withdrawn soon after its release.

    Probably one reason why a copy of the album is quite costly.

    Glen Davidson

  14. David Marjanović, OM says

    Iced tea. Iced. “Iced” describes how the tea is served. It does not describe a tea made from ice. There is no such thing as “ice tea” unless we’ve come up with a tea that can be made directly from ice.

    Ice tea is tea with ice, or tea that is like ice in that it’s, you know, cold.

    What would “iced” even mean? Frozen? What does “ice” mean as a verb?

    Eistee, not geeister Tee, whatever geeist would mean.

  15. says

    Anybody here like lightning?
    I watched a thunder/lightning storm pass by and strike the mountain across the lake from my campground last week repeatedly and with extreme prejudice. I caught numerous strikes on video and have been fooling around with the images–I turned some strikes into GIF animations and broke one down frame-by-frame. Unfortunately it’s not hi-res and only 10 frames per second, but we work with the tools we have, right? It’s not like I planned the thing.
    Pretending to be a scientist has always been one of my joys. Of course no one here will be fooled…

  16. theophontes, feu d'artifice du cosmopolitisme says

    @ Lipwig [previous thread]

    *hugs* (Sorry they’re late.)

    ……………………………………..

    @ Lynna #8

    By your command, my Liege.

    If you have some time (over an iced tea) you can try hitting Shift+Ctrl+P prior to voting. This will clear your cache so that you can vote multiple times (hell, they are just pleading to be pharyngulated).

    (Speaking of mormons, I have not seen their ilk in these parts for many months now. I was so looking forward to taking the piss with them.)

    ………………………………..
    [general whinge]

    I am stuck in a cheesy hotel just north of Xiamen. As is often the case, the hotel doubles as a “KTV” (karaoke television) den of iniquity. The music in the bottom of the building is so loud, the teacups in my room are rattling (I kid not). I have a headache and feel exhausted but know I simply can’t get to bed with the vibrations and noise. Their all night pervigilium to the gods of chaos is robbing me of my beauty sleep. :'(

  17. Moggie says

    Iced tea. Iced. “Iced” describes how the tea is served. It does not describe a tea made from ice. There is no such thing as “ice tea” unless we’ve come up with a tea that can be made directly from ice.

    Tell that to this guy.

  18. says

    It sounds like an 80’s TV show theme song. Except for the rape part. That’s not cool (I’ll just save it in my head together with the dukes of hazzard).

  19. Matt Penfold says

    The odd thing is that Wyngarde can have been no stranger to prejudice since he was gay. It makes it even more bizarre that he could have made this record.

  20. ChasCPeterson says

    ice verb (used with object)
    9. to cover with ice.
    10. to change into ice; freeze.
    11. to cool with ice, as a drink.
    12. to cover (cake, sweet rolls, etc.) with icing; frost.
    13. to refrigerate with ice, as air.

    iced(iced)

    adjective
    [attributive]
    1 (of a drink or other liquid) cooled in or mixed with pieces of ice:iced coffee
    (of a surface or object) covered or coated with ice:we played hockey on the iced schoolyard
    2 (of a cake or cookie) decorated with icing.

  21. theophontes, feu d'artifice du cosmopolitisme says

    @ David Marjanović #20

    … whatever geeist would mean …

    Den Heiligen Geeist. Du Ateeist!

    (The Holy Ghost. You Ateaist! Bah, it doesn’t quite translate…)

  22. Otto says

    I genuinely giggled through half the song. I couldn’t get over the fact that the opening makes it sound like McGruff the Crime Dog is really, really stoked about rape.

    It’s funny and fascinating in an artifact sort of way. Heck, I’d like to finagle a copy so it can join ranks with my Prussian Blue and other mind-bogglingly offensive/obscene mp3s.

    When you’re fascinated by horrifying shit, the world becomes SUCH a treasure trove.

  23. Ms. Daisy Cutter says

    Ibis, #627 on last thread:

    It’s especially bad (is that possible?) because such a defence is actually heretical according to their own canon law. Augustine made his bones fighting against it (the technical jargon is Donatism). The orthodox doctrine is that the efficacy of the sacraments a priest administers has nothing to do with the sins or lack thereof of the priest.

    Doesn’t matter. They play theological Calvinball.

    First Approximation, #649 on last thread: Ellis Washington forgot to mention the Illuminati.

    Erulóra, #667 on last thread: I threw in one more time and gave up. As did my friend HappiestSadist, whose name is apparently likewise “offensive.” I’m not getting much out of the comments berating us except a lot of finger-wagging. Whatever… maybe that’s what floats his boat.

    Regarding the video in this post, and especially Bernard’s comment thereon at #17: I’m one of those GenX’ers who side-eyes Baby Boomers when they romanticize the 1960s and ’70s. Yes, indeed, in many ways, life was better back then: more economically secure, above all, and with much less state and corporate paranoia. However, privilege and oppression had just barely gotten onto any sort of national agenda.

    And they were as rife in the counterculture as they were elsewhere. Not a few Second Wave feminists have bitter words about how “sexual liberation” meant they were “free” to fuck any man who came along, whether they wanted him or not, because now they didn’t have “an excuse.” Rape jokes were considered acceptable. Warner Bros. and other cartoons I grew up on occasionally put characters in blackface or other racialized makeup/costume for lolz.

    It was great that “the Sixties” happened, it sparked a lot of much-needed sea changes that are still happening today, but, speaking as someone old enough to remember most of the ’70s, that era wasn’t all peace, love, and understanding, especially if you weren’t a straight white guy.

    Glen, #19: “It was a joke” doesn’t make it okay. Even if Wyngarde didn’t actually believe what he was singing, he was engaging in a proto-version of hipster racism and sexism.

    Matt, #25: Suffering one kind of oppression does not necessarily make one more understanding of victims of other kinds. Cis white gay men, in the grand scheme of things, are pretty damned privileged, especially if they’re affluent. Some are quite misogynist, and they direct it mainly against other cis gay men whom they consider “insufficiently” masculine or against trans people. Dan Savage, for one, has said any number of offensive things when he’s talking about oppressed groups other than cis gay white men.

  24. Ms. Daisy Cutter says

    Let me qualify something in my previous comment:

    Cis white gay men, in the grand scheme of things, are pretty damned privileged, especially if they’re affluent.

    Obviously, not all cisgendered gay men. Especially not those born into a homophobic family/subculture and/or who present as “unmanly.” I’m not trying to diminish the bigotry gay men that is still going pretty strong in the U.S. and elsewhere, just pointing out that it’s not as complicated as putting some people in the “oppressed” box and some in the “oppressor” box.

  25. says

    Although I do think there’s less fraud to take advantage of social programs or avoid paying property taxes and the like on the LDS side as opposed to the FLDS side.

    You could be right there.

    FLDS has an official, prophet-sanctioned, mandate to “bleed the beast.” So ripping off the state and federal government of the infidels is a positive good.

    The LDS Church teaches, officially, that self-reliance and honesty are good practices. However, most Church leaders and church members show by example that scamming one’s fellow church members, ripping off the government, cheating the state out of highway repair funds, and making semi-fraudulent use of federal support programs are all good because God loves mormons. Therefore, whatever you can get is whatever god intends for you to have.

    I personally know middle class parents with large homes, several vehicles, two jobs, elaborate vacation plans, and many children. These middle class parents are not rich, but are well off, and they are mormons who pay a 10 percent tithe to the church. In addition to tithing, they support mormon missionaries as well. They apply for and get assistance for school lunches, reduced fees for dental services, medicaid for children’s health services, assistance for eyeglasses, assistance to pay electric and gas bills, childcare support, and even occasional freebies from the Bishop’s Storehouse or from other food banks. They are living in the socialist society they rail against. And yes, they do cheat on their taxes.

    The difference between FLDS and LDS is that LDS members put up a nicer-looking front for their scams. The requirement for a cleaner false-front probably does discourage some from bleeding the beast.

  26. Revjimbob says

    Last I heard of Peter Wyngarde was a couple of decades ago when he was arrested for importuning men in public toilets.

  27. Bernard Bumner says

    It was great that “the Sixties” happened, it sparked a lot of much-needed sea changes that are still happening today, but, speaking as someone old enough to remember most of the ’70s, that era wasn’t all peace, love, and understanding, especially if you weren’t a straight white guy.

    If there is something that always surprises me about how far we’ve come since the ’80s (which is the first decade I really experienced) it is that we had to make the journey at all. The commonplace bigotry of the past is incomprehensible to me now. I simply cannot understand why open prejudice was even acceptable or tolerated, let alone that it was admired as “plain speaking” and “strong moral values”.

    I’m sure/I hope I will look back on the ’10s in exactly the same way in 30 years time (if the momentum of change is maintained).

  28. crowepps says

    The “teacher stepped on flag” comments are still going at the original site.

    “Only idiots like PZ Myers and his mindless, drooling band of fanboys would support this teacher.”

  29. chigau (***) says

    Ptarmigan turn white-for-winter from the bottom up.
    Right now they look like they’re wearing bloomers.
    haha

  30. crowepps says

    The commonplace bigotry of the past is incomprehensible to me now.

    There is STILL commonplace bigotry excused by “strong moral values” aimed at new targets and justified by the victims deserving to be stigmatized for their “choices”.

    Smokers, obese people, rape victims, “welfare” clients, the homeless, single women who use birth control, undocumented workers, abortion providers — I’m sure everybody here could add more

  31. lipwig says

    Thanks all for your reasuring words in the previous thread.

    (sorry, I haven’t figured out the blockquote coding yet)
    @Dhorvath #525 previous thread
    Or is it that you fear the harm to those you will eventually leave behind?

    Yeah, that. I have a 10yo son who has spoken to me in the past about what will happen to him when I die. He has not yet realised that he will be an adult then (hopefully) and will have different coping mechanisms . If I died tomorrow he would be in a very painful place for a long time (I am a single Mom and he is an only child)

    This may seem trite…
    Nothing you ever say is trite. Your words are comforting to me.

    @Bill Dauphin#545 previous thread
    Outside of my family, this place has been my most enduring personal relationship during the period since I started posting here.

    That. Right there.

    @chigau O #561 previous thread
    I plan to rage against the dieing of the light.

    Who was it Huxley who took acid on his deathbed?

    On a lighter note: we had a classic Monty Python moment at his funeral – his coffin (unopened ) was at the ceremony, very tastefully draped in a burgundy velvet cloth and topped with a beautiful arrangement of summer flowers ( no lilys). And placed on a rolling shelf that would apparently (at the touch of a button) cause the coffin to roll gently through a small curtained aperture in the wall and into the furnace beyond (we had him cremated) . At the end of all the weeping, tears and words the button was pressed… but nothing happened. After about a minute of awkward silence – a hand attached to an arm weaved it’s way out of the aperture and grabbed hold of the coffin and began to haul it inch by agonising inch out of sight. My Dad had a wicked sense of humour and I know that he would forgive me my giggles.

  32. says

    Around campus someone keeps leaving the 100,000,000 dollar Ray Comfort Bills. I’ve been shredding them as I see them and returning them on the ground where they were left in hopes that the leavers would pick up eventually that only one person bothers to pick them up and finds them annoying. Thinking of responding with a similar 100,000,000 bill that reads “You’re a Douchebag and Deserve to Die. HAHA” because it’s basically the same message.

  33. cicely, Inadvertent Phytocidal Maniac says

    Last Thread:

    How can anyone drink diet drinks?

    Easily. *sluuuuuurp* See. Very little effort involved.

    I can’t stand them. All I can taste with diet soda is the fake sugar.

    I’d rather have my Diet Rite Pure Zero (with Splenda™) than regular Coke; the Coke tastes syrupy-sweet, to me. Ick.

    It’s interesting; back in the dawnatime, when I was a kid and later as a teen/young adult, my favorites were Mountain Dew and root beer; in fact, if a restaurant didn’t serve root beer, I wasn’t interested in eating there. Nowadays, both of those beverages seem too thick and syrupy, and don’t quench my thirst. Yes, I do drink diet colas for the taste of it; stop sneering and give me my Super-Choco-Fudgey Brownie with chocolate ice cream and chocolate sauce, supercilious and skinny wait-person.

    I will not appall Josh another time by describing my morning “coffee” again.
    :)

    Oh barf. It’s shit like this that makes me want to see the Vatican burn.

    But not until after all the good art and stuff they’ve been squatting on has been evacuated!

    Oh, yes; and their records. So we can find out what bodies they’ve buried, and where.

    My favorite iced tea ever was what I used to make with Liptons as a base, with some Tea of Tut (which a friend brought me from a museum expo) added. The tea’s long gone, but I still have the tin.

    So, based on the data they have, they just offered me my own stuff :)

    :D

    And your little green dragon is cyoot.

  34. Dhorvath, OM says

    cicely,
    I can appreciate that there is a difference, I even prefer the flavour of diet Sprite say to regular, but aspartame does wretched things to my stomach. So no diet pop for me any longer. Sigh.

  35. Ms. Daisy Cutter says

    I can’t drink that much coffee. It makes me jumpy, it aggravates my insomnia if I have it any later than mid-morning, and it sends me to the toilet too often.

    However, I do like a big cup of Ethiopian Harrar or Yirgacheffe, the beans having been just ground for about 12 seconds, then steeped in a French press for three minutes. Add dairy product and Splenda.

    Because of my sensitivity, this is a weekend-only treat.

    I do drink caffeinated tea during the work week. I’m partial to Earl Gray; I really like the bergamot flavor. I’ll drink it with, again, Splenda. I also sweeten iced tea with Splenda, which I guess is sacrilege; it’s “supposed” to be drunk unsweetened. (Southern-style sweet tea, however, I just drink as it’s presented to me, which is with copious amounts of sugar.)

    I stopped drinking soda, diet or otherwise, years ago. Once in a very very great while I will have it as a treat, generally some esoteric flavor like blood orange, but then I wonder why I bothered. I prefer my sugar to have starch and/or fat as a vehicle, rather than just water. Why waste the calories on soda when you can have tiramisu?

    BTW, there’s a good article on Alternet about the effects coffee has on the body, in lay terms.

  36. says

    The “teacher stepped on flag” comments are still going at the original site…

    I fully approve of burning flags. Have for quite some time. And no, it’s not just that this so mirrors the advice of so many fine writers, from e. e. cummings to Arundhati Roy….

    It’s also that it has recently struck me that they’re such an incredible fuel. The heat of combustion in those things seems to me, even, to violate what should even be possible, from what we thought we understood of their chemistry, really…

    Absolutely. Consider their generally rather meagre mass. Then consider the furious heat that burning them inevitably generates…

    Really, we should all run our cars on flags.

  37. says

    Someone should ask the twits that if say a Genie came and said that he would destroy everything America stood for unless they burnt a flag, if they would light the match.

    Cause you know…that’s sort of what is happening…sans Jinn

  38. crowepps says

    @ Ing — well, it fits right in with “we honor life so much that we will refuse to interfere with the 9 week old ectopic fetus even knowing the result will be the death of the woman.”

    “The first thing a principle does is kill somebody.” Dorothy Sayer

  39. crowepps says

    The latest round in the Catholic sex scandal:

    http://ph.news.yahoo.com/church-condemns-naming-aussie-sex-claim-priest-050251238.html

    The latest quote showing the Church just does NOT get it:

    “In our view it is inappropriate and unfair for these matters to be aired in public whilst our investigation is not yet complete and when the priest concerned has categorically denied the allegation.”

    ‘Cause, you know, while it is possible the man might be a rapist, we can all be absolutely confident he wouldn’t tell LIES. (eyeroll)

  40. Erulóra Maikalambe says

    “The first thing a principle does is kill somebody.” Dorothy Sayer

    Fuck, I’m not sending my kid to that school. Oh, wait…

  41. Brownian says

    What would “iced” even mean? Frozen? What does “ice” mean as a verb?

    Let’s just say a guy who’s been ‘iced’ ain’t gonna run off to testify for the feds anytime soon, capisce?

  42. kristinc says

    I have no idea what is going on here but it’s bizarrely hilarious. I especially like the guy talking all kinds of smack.

  43. says

    @lipwig

    On a lighter note: we had a classic Monty Python moment at his funeral

    This is familiar. I was lucky growing up to have functionally three parents since we lived with my maternal grandfather, a pianist. He died when I was 12 after a rather grueling battle with cancer.

    At his funeral, we had planned to play a couple recorded pieces he’d played and it mostly went off without a hitch. But when it came to the last piece during the recessional portion, someone put the cassette tape in on the wrong side so instead of the more sober and pretty piece that my uncle had chosen, he was carried out to the chipper twinkling of “Alley Cat.”

    Given his mirthful disposition and fondness for sometimes startling jokes, it couldn’t have been a more appropriate send off.

  44. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    Back at work from dentist. A sherd of bone worked up through the gum and . . . .

    Sorry. Lemme try that again.

    WARNING: IF YOU ARE SQUICKED OUT BY GRAPHIC DESCRIPTIONS OF DENTAL PROBLEMS, OR IF YOU HAVE RECENTLY EATEN, OR ARE DOING SO NOW, DO NOT READ THIS!!11!1eleventy!1

    Back at work from dentist. A sherd of bone worked up through the gum and, when I closed my mouth, managed to wedge itself into the almost-gap between two of my lower molars. It pulled out of the upper gum but, despite my best efforts, remained firmly wedged between two of my bottom molars. My dentist told me it is the first time he has ever had a patient get his own bone wedged between teeth. Fine now, though.

  45. Richard Austin says

    Ms. Daisy Cutter:

    Why waste the calories on soda when you can have tiramisu?

    Because if it’s made correctly, some of us can’t have tiramisu (stupid liquor used as a flavoring *grumble*).

  46. opposablethumbs, que le pouce enragé mette les pouces says

    Brother Ogvorbis #62, that’s … disturbing, was probably actually excruciatingly painful and yet the way you describe it is somehow, um, funny. Possibly because my brain refuses to dwell on the reality of it and is taking refuge in the OMG-it-did-what?-ness of your description. I’m sure you’re really not supposed to cannibalise yourself.

    I suppose if you’re back at work and it’s “fine now” you must be OK….? I certainly hope so!

  47. walton says

    Why waste the calories on soda when you can have tiramisu?

    That’s why I drink diet soda. Then it doesn’t count towards one’s calorie intake. :-)

  48. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    I’m sure you’re really not supposed to cannibalise yourself.

    Autophagia is a recognized condition. And can be quite frightening. Though it is, luckily, rare. And no, I do not do that (and even if I wanted to, I don’t bend that way).

    The pain was minimal. Really. It felt like a sesame seed was wedged in between the teeth, but I could feel the point with my tongue. And yes, it was funny. Who, other than Ogvorbis, can get himself stuck between his teeth?

  49. Carbon Based Life Form says

    I just looked up Peter Wyngarde in Wikipedia, and he’s gay. (He also survived four years as a prisoner of the Japanese during WWII.)

  50. Brownian says

    My dentist told me it is the first time he has ever had a patient get his own bone wedged between teeth.

    Clearly, this is not Ron Jeremy’s dentist.

  51. Sili says

    “Al Gore” was really adorable on Colbert.

    I find myself wishing he’d run again. Unfortunately he blew it on getting Perry’s endorsement again. But perhaps he can still land Rick Parry-with-an-A.

  52. Sili says

    I fully approve of burning flags. Have for quite some time. And no, it’s not just that this so mirrors the advice of so many fine writers, from e. e. cummings to Arundhati Roy….

    If you approve of E.E. Fuckin’ Cummings, why don’t you fucking capitalise his name?

  53. changeable moniker says

    Nerd of Redhead, prevthread:

    Try a P4 from 2002 with 100 MHz bus, 20 GB HD, and a Rage 128 video card from the same era.

    Umm, I could print it out and maybe, uh, fax it to you?

  54. Thomathy, now gayer and atheister says

    One the ice/iced tea thing. It doesn’t matter what you call it if you’re drinking it in the States, because it will be simply disgusting!

    A commonality to all Canadians is the fond memory of the first and last (intentional) time they ordered, and drank (poor things), iced tea in the States.

    I recall vividly that I was at a diner in Detroit. I was a young kid and it was summer. I badly wanted an iced tea -something to quench my thirst and my sweet tooth. What was served to me looked like iced tea. I put my mouth on the straw, but what I sucked up wasn’t iced tea at all. Rather than my thirst being quenched, I instantly needed a drink of water. Rather than sweet, my taste buds were assaulted by bitter flavour. I had been served, unwittingly, (and much to the delight of my father) unsweetened and cold brewed tea. Bitter and dry and utterly disgusting. No amount of sugar would help, because it simply wouldn’t dissolve in the cold nastiness and a squeeze of lemon rendered it not just bitter, but sour to boot. It was an awful, awful experience.

    I love iced tea. My Mum used to boil tea and steep it for several hours, with sugar and lemon. I could hardly ever wait for the tea to get chilled enough to serve.

    Until that moment in that Detroit diner, I had never before experience culture shock nor had any idea that such close neighbours could have such significant differences. A part from iced tea, when I travel to the states, I never order a caesar* (because Clamato is invariably unavailable and a bloody marry is just disgusting), eat smarties (because they are not the candy-coated chocolates they should be), bother eating any chips (because the lack of ketchup and all-dressed make me highly suspicious of the other flavours), eat bagels (because it won’t be a Montreal bagel), or eat any kind of cereal (because, really!, corn pops -to name only one messed up kind of cereal- are crunchy spheres and not soft and oblong.

    *Well, I ordered a caesar once at a Marriott in Tampa. They actually had Clamato in a fridge behind the bar. I had to order it as a bloody marry and be quite explicit about the Clamato, but I got what I wanted. The bartender could not understand why I was so happy, or why it was that I wanted a drink so early in the day.

  55. says

    Nono, print it out, put it on a wooden table, take a picture and fax that.

    Then ask to fax it back, or you won’t have it anymore.

    (From The Daily WTF, which can be (warning!) a time sink).

  56. Aquaria says

    The LDS Church teaches, officially, that self-reliance and honesty are good practices. However, most Church leaders and church members show by example that scamming one’s fellow church members, ripping off the government, cheating the state out of highway repair funds, and making semi-fraudulent use of federal support programs are all good because God loves mormons. Therefore, whatever you can get is whatever god intends for you to have.

    Mark Hofmann comes to mind, in a most deliciously ironic way.

  57. says

    The LDS Church teaches, officially, that self-reliance and honesty are good practices. However, most Church leaders and church members show by example that scamming one’s fellow church members, ripping off the government, cheating the state out of highway repair funds, and making semi-fraudulent use of federal support programs are all good because God loves mormons. Therefore, whatever you can get is whatever god intends for you to have.

    You know, given our state propensity for all manner of fraud and Ponzi schemes, this is very applicable. I have a cousin who bilked a number of my extended family members for money* over the last few years. And suddenly the aunts, uncles and cousins who were stupid enough to trust him are all confused how it happened and why it didn’t happen to me or my parents. Hm, let’s see, because we’re not gullible fucking idiots who used “he’s a nice churchgoing man, I’m sure this opportunity he’s found out about will pay off big” to be sound investment strategy.

    *I’m pretty sure he was himself a trusting, ignorant victim to start with, actually, but it was long enough that 1. he’s just that stupid to think the money is still going to come 2. he deluded himself for a long time 3. he figured it out but was too ashamed to say anything later

  58. says

    It doesn’t matter what you call it if you’re drinking it in the States, because it will be simply disgusting!

    A commonality to all Canadians is the fond memory of the first and last (intentional) time they ordered, and drank (poor things), iced tea in the States.

    I’ve heard from many English people who leave the country under the impression that Americans don’t know how to make tea, and now, Canadians and iced tea. Many many Americans enjoy good tea, hot and cold, in their own homes. It’s only in restaurants that it’s hard to get tea made well. I don’t know why, except that coffee and soda are so much more popular than tea that restaurant managers never learn how to make it properly.

    I’ve never had acceptable hot tea in a restaurant in my country. It is occasionally possible to get acceptable iced tea, but it’s hard to predict where it’ll be, and just because you got good iced tea at a restaurant on Tuesday doesn’t mean that there will be anyone there on Wednesday who knows how to make it.

  59. Waffler, Dunwich MA says

    One the ice/iced tea thing. It doesn’t matter what you call it if you’re drinking it in the States, because it will be simply disgusting!

    It’s served highly sweetened in many, many places in the southern and mid-western U.S. (I.e. hot brewed with sugar). Cold-brewed iced-tea I think is probably quite unusual (maybe it’s a Michigan thing?). Hot-brewed but unsweetened is very common, though (indeed, sweet =/= thirst quenching, at least for me. Bitter == quenching).

  60. Erulóra Maikalambe says

    I don’t know many Americans that are satisfied with the quality of tea available in restaurants. If you want decent tea, you have to make it yourself. You do learn to tolerate that swill, though.

  61. says

    It’s only in restaurants that it’s hard to get tea made well. I don’t know why, except that coffee and soda are so much more popular than tea that restaurant managers never learn how to make it properly.

    QFT
    I really don’t dare order iced tea anywhere because I’m afraid to get dissolved powder in water. I like my tea less sweet than you can usually get them, so I brew it hot and strong, add a little honey (so it’s not too bitter when chilled) and pour it over a full cup of ice.

  62. says

    Holy shit that manboobz site is awesome. MRAs are some seriously weird dudes. Anyone read the post that references moustrap vagina theory? WTF.

  63. Sili says

    i will not kiss your fucking shift key.

    I’d be more convinced by your nonconformity if you’d typed arundhati roy.

    See that “.”? Kiss it! Kiss it reeeeel good.

  64. Sili says

    Interesting. I didn’t realise that “sordid” and “sorted” were perfect homonyms. Confused me there for bit, dr Maddow.

  65. says

    See that “.”? Kiss it! Kiss it reeeeel good.

    Come now. We both know you’re just being like this because you’re having your punctuation.

  66. says

    What the fuck is wrong with people complaining about iced tea being bitter? I guess you don’t drink yer coffee black either then? Its an acquired taste.

  67. says

    My iced tea, like my mother’s, is hot-brewed and lightly sweetened- a tablespoon of sugar for a pitcher of tea. We brew about 1/3 of the pitcher to make a nice dark tea, then fill it up with cold water and mix.

    My late grandfather liked sun tea- put the teabags, water, and sliced lemon in a glass jar and leave it in the sun for most of the afternoon. That was STRONG but good. Sometimes he would add a little cinnamon- I know that sounds strange, but it was tasty. When we came home from Grandpa’s funeral and had lunch, we realized that many of us were drinking tea Grandpa had made from the fridge- the last of his strong, strange sun tea. An odd moment.

  68. jonhendry says

    That really is terrible. I kinda suspect it was a 1970s attempt at transgressive humor. Reminds me a little of the tone of things like Michael Moorcock’s Jerry Cornelius stories.

  69. kristinc says

    skeptifem: Iced tea seems more bitter to me than hot tea (which I do like). And some iced teas are more bitter than others, depending on the tea itself and the brewing method. I find that cold brewing it makes even cheap tea bags (the usually unbearably bitter stuff) much smoother.

  70. John Morales says

    Huh. New dolphin species discovered in Victoria

    Dolphins living in Port Philip and the Gippsland Lakes have been declared to be a new species, researchers say.

    It is only the third time since the late 19th century that a new dolphin species has been recognised.

    The new species will be formally named Tursiops australis.

  71. The Lone Coyote says

    I like this one: http://manboobz.com/2011/09/12/bla-bla-pussy-cartel-bla-bla-cock-blockade/

    I used to buy into that crap myself, not too long ago even. I’ve learned better now, I’m still learning better, and it kinda freaks me out both how much of that resembles my own thinking from a few years back, and how pathetic, whiny, and sexually frustrated that hogshit looks to me now. Kind of embarassing.

    Ooooh, women use sex and withholding of sex to control you because you’re a man and women get off on playing games, right? It couldn’t possibly be that women with hold sex from you because you’re a creepy slimy douchebag that makes their skin crawl in the wrong way, right?

  72. says

    I’ve just caught up with 4:21 pm EST, so I’m going to assume everyone is being amused, if not happy, tonight. [/snoopy dance]

    The worst song in the western world is ‘Watching Scotty Grow’ followed quickly by ‘Yummy Yummy Yummy I’ve got love in my tummy’.

    Why yes, I am that old, why do you ask?

  73. says

    John Morales, I used to agree with your better half, the pop version was a very cheezy rendition. But if one listens to the lyrics, and the recordings by Nina Simone and Chrissie Hynde & The Pretenders, it’s a love song of a one night stand. I’ve grown to love it.

    I don’t think those women would have recorded a song they didn’t believe in. I could be wrong, we’re talkin’ about art.

  74. Algernon says

    I’m already *this close* to just being hopeful a virus will wipe out this entire species, myself included, and leave it to animals that at least don’t make pretenses about what they are…

    I think I’ll skip the song.

  75. starstuff91 says

    I’m already *this close* to just being hopeful a virus will wipe out this entire species, myself included, and leave it to animals that at least don’t make pretenses about what they are…

    Why is that?

  76. Algernon says

    I love tea, but you really have to hunt down a place that serves good tea in the US. I mean, I knew *ONE* place in my entire city and it is gone now.

    One… place…

  77. Algernon says

    Why is that?

    Because people are so motherfucking sad, and they do such awful things… and when I hit my threshold for it I just feel an awful mixture of sorrow, rage, and powerlessness… and it’s crappy.

    I’ll get over it.

  78. says

    Algernon – “I’m already *this close* to just being hopeful a virus will wipe out this entire species”

    Pfft, we are the virus on the planet. Give it some time, we’ll do the job on ourselves.

    In the mean time, make some popcorn and watch the show, OK?

  79. starstuff91 says

    Because people are so motherfucking sad, and they do such awful things… and when I hit my threshold for it I just feel an awful mixture of sorrow, rage, and powerlessness… and it’s crappy.

    Ah, I see. I know what you mean.

  80. Invisible Dragon says

    My nominee for the worst song is Having My Baby – Paul Anka. I will not attempt a link. *gags*

  81. chigau () says

    Katherine Lorraine
    re: kitty pix
    the first one looks positively satanic
    (in an adorable kitteh kinda way)

  82. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    So cute.
    I want a kitten. *tantrum*

    I’ll be happy to send you one. His name is Sherman. He is senile, neurotic, bulemic, semi-hairless, and selectively incontinent. And he has a broken nose and snores. Turst me. You want this kitten. Honest.

    ===========

    I think this song is pretty damn bad. One of the guys in my office has threatened to kill anyone in the office who plays or sings it.

  83. chigau () says

    I second the worst vote for Having My Baby.
    Followed closely by Three Times a Lady by The Commodores.

  84. Beatrice, anormalement indécente says

    I’ll be happy to send you one. His name is Sherman. He is senile, neurotic, bulemic, semi-hairless, and selectively incontinent. And he has a broken nose and snores. Turst me. You want this kitten. Honest.

    I’m tempted. Really. Selective incontinence sounded especially enticing. But I think I’m going to pass.

  85. John Morales says

    Brother O:

    I’ll be happy to send you one. His name is Sherman. He is senile, neurotic, bulemic, semi-hairless, and selectively incontinent. And he has a broken nose and snores. Turst me. You want this kitten. Honest.

    Imagine when Sherman grows up to be a cat.

  86. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    I’m tempted. Really. Selective incontinence sounded especially enticing. But I think I’m going to pass.

    I understand. Right now, he is in the basement. Yodeling. Which, with the echoes, sounds like a horror movie soundtrack.

    Which is odd, as we think that he has gone deaf.

    Imagine when Sherman grows up to be a cat.

    He started as a kitten. Then he became a cat. He has now regressed to kitten. Except he is evil. Truly evil.

    And he hates me.

  87. chigau () says

    Just before she was moved indoors permanently, the neighbor’s cat was mostly deaf and mostly blind.
    The poor magpies had to land and walk right up close in order to torment her.

  88. cicely, Inadvertent Phytocidal Maniac says

    I’ll be happy to send you one. His name is Sherman. He is senile, neurotic, bulemic, semi-hairless, and selectively incontinent. And he has a broken nose and snores. Turst me. You want this kitten. Honest.

    I’m tempted. Really. Selective incontinence sounded especially enticing. But I think I’m going to pass.

    Beatrice, you might want to take advantage of this fantastic offer before someone else line-jumps and scoops up the prize. Selective incontinence, bundled with bulemia? Where else will you find a deal that that? The rest is just gravy!

    (Um, can’t take advantage of this Special Offer myself; we are at our rated capacity for in-house felines, and the incumbents have made it more than crystal clear what they think of further subdivision of the territory. Really. Honest. I’d never lie about a thing like that. Hark! I think I hear my name being called….)

  89. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    The rest is just gravy!

    With matted hairballs.

  90. John Morales says

    Brother O,

    He started as a kitten. Then he became a cat. He has now regressed to kitten. Except he is evil. Truly evil.

    :)

    Something to look forward to; may you make it there yourself.

  91. BCat says

    I actually went through the entire, um, song. In addition to the subject matter, the thing is also a totally, horrid, LOUSY attempt at art in a technical sense. This is the sort of disco that made disco the infamous laughing stock it is today. I agree with PZ, the readers are better off applying a sander directly to the eardrum.

  92. Mattir says

    Ogvorbis, I’ve been wanting to ask this: why are you still caring for Sherman? Is he a particularly wonderful cat? Does he have secret superpowers? What, exactly, is the attraction?

    And lest anyone accuse me of being an evil cat hater, I have 2, the older is somewhere between 16 and 19 and spent much of last week peeing in Mr. Patriarch’s shoes. He hasn’t repeated that since I washed all of the shoes (good thing Mr. Patriarch wears mostly sneakers), but should it recur, we’ll seriously consider euthanizing him. We’ll all feel sad, absolutely, but he’s had a very good life, lots and lots of love, and there are limits. Peeing in shoes is one of them.

  93. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    Ogvorbis, I’ve been wanting to ask this: why are you still caring for Sherman? Is he a particularly wonderful cat? Does he have secret superpowers? What, exactly, is the attraction?

    Because, when he isn’t pissing on the throw rug, or puking strange stuff, he is a sweet cat. One skritch behind teh ear and he starts purring.

  94. Beatrice, anormalement indécente says

    Beatrice, you might want to take advantage of this fantastic offer before someone else line-jumps and scoops up the prize.

    I would feel terrible if I deprived another cat lover from such a prize of a kitten. No, no, I already declined the generous offer. It is only fair to stand back now and let others have a chance in getting that sweet bundle of joy.

    On a more serious note. No kittens for me until I move out on my own. My mother doesn’t feel comfortable around animals. Yes, that includes kittens. As long as it can unexpectedly jump on her, an animal makes her uncomfortable.

  95. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    Well, I’m heading off to bed. Barring another weird dental autophagia episode, I have an actual full day of work tomorrow.

  96. kristinc says

    So, if I have no idea what kind of beer I might like except that the smell alone of Mr Kristin’s beers (Guinness and Smith’s Nut Brown) make me want to gag, and I do like hard apple ciders and crisp sparkling wines, what might be a good type of beer for me to try?

    (I feel like we just had this conversation in a recent thread; if I’m right, my apologies).

  97. Beatrice, anormalement indécente says

    One skritch behind teh ear and he starts purring.

    Aw, now I feel bad for mocking Sherman.
    (Any cat I ever have will be able to manipulate me sooo easily.)

  98. Beatrice, anormalement indécente says

    Any cat I ever have will be able to manipulate me sooo easily.

    There is something very wrong with this sentence (grammatically), but I’m too tired to notice what it is.
    I can only stare at it dumbly.

  99. Mattir says

    Ogvorbis, I’m sorry if I sounded heartlessly mean about Sherman. I do feel really conflicted even considering euthanizing Updown, our shoe-peeing cat, who is also a delightful purrer when not yowling or peeing in Mr. Patriarch’s shoes or leaping in fright when someone moves in a way he didn’t expect, or…

  100. Josh, Official SpokesGay says

    Theophontes

    Phoenicia gathers her powers about her by night, growing more sinister and sour every day. Today she rose two fabulous baguette loaves of whole-wheat/white, and she wants more action.

    Send me an email with your mailing address; I think she’s strong enough and stable enough. The fermentation happens really quickly and she doubles in the jar within four hours. The longer you let her ferment at room temperature (discarding half the volume and re-feeding twice a day) the more stable and flavorful she’ll get, but she’s ready to go.

  101. says

    cicely:

    I’d rather have my Diet Rite Pure Zero (with Splenda™) than regular Coke; the Coke tastes syrupy-sweet, to me. Ick.

    I agree! Actually, I now limit my soda drinking almost exclusively to diet sodas from a small family-owned local company (craft-brewed soda!), and my favorite is their Diet Grapefruit (think Fresca)… but I entirely agree about sugared sodas tasting syrupy (and as near as I can tell, this is equally true with either HFCS or “real” sugar).

    As for iced tea, my wife is an huge fan, and for her the key is always specifically ordering unsweetened brewed tea; if the restaurant can’t accommodate that, she orders soda instead. It’s not that she doesn’t like her tea sweet, BTW: She just likes to add her own sugar.

    ****
    Bad songs: Some mighty good (if that’s the right word) nominations, but I’m quite sure this is the… er, winner?

  102. John Morales says

    kristinc,

    I do like hard apple ciders and crisp sparkling wines, what might be a good type of beer for me to try?

    I suggest anything labelled as ‘dry’ (or, given market-speak, ‘super-dry’) or those labelled as ‘low carbohydrate’ (ditto).

    Basically, the low sugar content of such beers is analogous to that of “hard apple ciders and crisp sparkling wines” — but in the end beer is beer. You may just not like beer (my better half doesn’t, but is quite appreciative of brut sparkling wines and dry ciders).

    FWIW.

  103. John Morales says

    Beatrice, re: “Any cat I ever have will be able to manipulate me sooo easily.”

    What’s wrong is the time tense.

    I suspect you meant ‘Any cat I shall ever have will be able to manipulate me sooo easily.”

    FWTW.

  104. John Morales says

    Bill, Nerd (or some other expert) may wish to correct me, but as I understand it, the higher the temperature, the higher the solubility of sugar in an aqueous solvent.

  105. John Morales says

    Um, I know that I’m monopolising TET right now (against Greta’s rules guidelines, but not PZ’s — so far), but I feel like mentioning how (even in my teenage years) I sneered at Von Daniken’s equivocation between carbohydrates and hydrocarbons (cf #145).

    (So I have done so)

  106. says

    John:

    Bill, Nerd (or some other expert) may wish to correct me, but as I understand it, the higher the temperature, the higher the solubility of sugar in an aqueous solvent.

    I’m far from an expert in terms of physical chemistry, but in actual practice it seems easy enough to get as much sugar as any sane person would want to dissolve even in quite cold tea.

    Bill, also, I find “Honey” to be rather enjoyable schmaltz. :)

    De gustibus…, eh? I always found it horrifyingly cloying, even when it was a brand-new radio hit and I was only a couple years older than its target demo… but after some growin’ up and consciousness raisin’, I also can’t bring myself to ignore the singer’s paternalistic attitude to “Honey.” YMMV.

  107. Kseniya says

    (So THIS is FTB. I think I’ll try to leave a comment, just to see if I can.)

    Honey? Bobby Goldsboro? Way before my time. I tried to pay attention to the song, but his hair proved to be a strangely fascinating distraction…

  108. Josh, Official SpokesGay says

    Happy 27th birthday to His Royal Highness Prince Henry Charles Albert David of Wales!

    Here’s a bowl if you need to spit up after gagging on it, Walton.

  109. Josh, Official SpokesGay says

    2. I don’t think you guys know “bad” from “BAD”.

    Who Are Parents?

    Heh.

    One of the comments is absolutely sublime and perfect:

    129.46/4 time and the key of 9 minor

  110. Classical Cipher, Murmur Muris, OM says

    Issues.
    Tried to change the email connected to my nym. FTB sent an email to the new address which told me to click on a link to confirm the change. I got the following message:

    You attempted to access the “Freethought Blogs” dashboard, but you do not currently have privileges on this site. If you believe you should be able to access the “Freethought Blogs” dashboard, please contact your network administrator.

    Sadface.

  111. Marie the Bookwyrm says

    Oh, hey; it’s John Byrne’s inspiration for Jason Wyngarde aka Mastermind. :)

    Now that I’ve proven myself a comics geek, I’ll go read the other comments.

  112. John Morales says

    Bill, no worries on the blockquotes… :)

    Point being, hot tea can be made sweeter than cold tea.

    [anecdote]

    When I was a tadpole, we’d (I lived with my (poorish) grandparents in Spain in the 1960s) make a whole pot of tea with but one teabag. No milk added (I had to come to Oz to acquire such an abomination).

    My idea of “sweet enough” was to keep spooning sugar in until the solute was (literally) saturated. Then a a bunch more for good measure.

    (Best bit was spooning the sugary sludge at the bottom!)

  113. says

    Kseniya:

    Yay, you’re here!

    Honey? Bobby Goldsboro? Way before my time. I tried to pay attention to the song, but his hair proved to be a strangely fascinating distraction…

    Hard to imagine he was a teeny-bopper idol in the likes of 16 and Tiger Beat magazines, eh? Ah, but those mags were no doubt before your time as well. </OldGuy>

    John:

    Point being, hot tea can be made sweeter than cold tea.

    Point taken; I just can’t imagine wanting tea any sweeter than cold tea can be made.

  114. Rey Fox says

    (I rather like What’s Up!)

    *violent retching*

    Now that I’ve proven myself a comics geek, I’ll go read the other comments.

    Feh, you’re no geek. Else you would’ve mentioned Mr. Six.

  115. says

    Hmmm… briefly the Recent Comments list looked like Dog intended it to… but then it automagically changed back to the newer too-short, tabbed format. Could it be that the Top Men™ are Working on a Fix® even as we speaktype?

  116. Invisible Dragon says

    @chigau

    I must have almost blocked that Commodores thing. Fortunately, being reminded brought it aaaaaalllll back. *headdesk* :)

    There is something I consider even worse, but I can’t remember the title, only that it was from the early-mid 60s, sung by a woman, with one line being “I don’t eeeeeven know hoooooow to hoooold your hand”. She… screeched. It was nails on a blackboard.

  117. John Morales says

    Bill, look down on the right sidebar for “Recent Comments”.

    (The most recent 15 are there, no tabs)

  118. Marie the Bookwyrm says

    Invisible Dragon @166–I think it’s called ‘Ready To Learn’. I hear it on the radio now and again, but it never gets introduced, so I’m not sure of the title.

    And to anybody who hasn’t read Dave Barry’s Book Of Bad Songs–find a copy!!! It’s hilarious!

  119. John Morales says

    (sigh)

    Invisible Dragon, want bad? Bad bad?

    I present: William Shatner’s “Rocketman”


    .

    (Beat that!)

  120. John Morales says

    guest:

    When is Richard (The Dick) Dawkins going to stop being a champion of RAPE.

    Whatever makes you think Clinton is a champion of (ALL-CAPS) rape?

  121. John Morales says

    Guest:

    Aren’t we all family here at Freethought.?

    Nah, you’re just scum who tries to latch onto us.

    So, scumbag, care to attempt to justify your vacuous malice?

  122. Classical Cipher, Murmur Muris, OM says

    Stop lying, guest, you tiresome little shit. We can all visit Almost Diamonds, and we can all confirm that you’re lying about it. Begone, pathetic insect.

  123. Classical Cipher, Murmur Muris, OM says

    If lil appetizer “guest” here is too scant, y’all can visit Butterflies and Wheels for more hearty troll fare. A self-identified “feminist MRA” is there lying about all kinds of shit. Got my spiked polka-dot waders and my gas mask.

  124. John Morales says

    Classical Cipher, heh.

    Looks like that Tom Martin has been well and truly addressed.

    (He may be an idiot, but that’s head-and-shoulders above this “guest” specimen :) )

  125. Classical Cipher, Murmur Muris, OM says

    He really has, John Morales, but he’s so much more chewy and substantial than that disappointingly meager “guest” that I figured I’d direct people toward him. :)

  126. says

    Ohhh, we got the recent comments back to a decent length!

    Good morning, btw

    Caine
    Thanx

    AJ Milne

    I fully approve of burning flags. Have for quite some time. And no, it’s not just that this so mirrors the advice of so many fine writers, from e. e. cummings to Arundhati Roy….

    I fully suport your right to do that, yet I despise the burning of flags and books.
    As a symbol it is powerful and it usually means “I’d like to burn the thing and people it stands for instead”. And I don’t think it’s possible to get away from that saying “oh but I intend it to mean that I oppose the politics of the current rulers”. As much as I enjoy Arundhati Roy’s writings, I disagree with her on this.

    Brother Ogvorbis
    OK, that is funny. Are you done now with those evil teeth and it was one final act of resistance?

    I’ve heard from many English people who leave the country under the impression that Americans don’t know how to make tea

    I’m actually under the impression that many English people think that nobody else knows how to make tea ;)
    Many Germans probably think the same about beer.

    Katherine
    If I knew what your kitten was thinking in the first picture I’d probably be afraid by now ;)

    TLC

    Ooooh, women use sex and withholding of sex to control you because you’re a man and women get off on playing games, right? It couldn’t possibly be that women with hold sex from you because you’re a creepy slimy douchebag that makes their skin crawl in the wrong way, right?

    The argument presented by the original author is wonderfully ridiculous (and smells of “I can’t get no pussy so you must get no pussy”).
    So, men want heterosexual intercourse because they value female sexuality (fascinating idea). And if the just stopped doing it and instead fucked themselves, making themselves the gatekeeper he deems women to be, everything would be reversed and women would be left powerless.
    I correct myself. The actual argument is: “I can’t get no pussy so you can’t have no dick”

    guest

    Aren’t we all family here at Freethought.?

    Yes, and as in all families, there are horribly awefull members nobody can stand and everybody wishes to stay away from family conventions.

  127. says

    From my readings on fat-positivity…

    The PTA Guide’s nutrition chapter gives recommendations for healthy food choices to prevent “costly and potentially disabling diseases, like heart disease, cancer, diabetes, high blood pressure and obesity.” Portions vary for each age group. Each day, children ages 2-3 years, for example, are to eat 3 ounces of whole grains, 1 cup each of fruits and vegetables, 2 cups of low-fat milk, and 2 ounces of lean protein. Portions increase with age so that teen boys are supposed to get 7 ounces whole grains, 3 cups vegetables, 2 cups fruits, 3 cups low-fat milk and 6 ounces lean protein each day. Parents are told to “make sure all dairy foods are low-fat or fat-free.”

    This is insane. Anyone with a cursory knowledge of how the human body works knows that there is no way you can make dietary recommendations that specific for one person, let alone a huge subset of humanity.

  128. =8)-DX says

    That “Czechoslovak” accent wasn’t even a parody. I am totally utterly offended by that, owning both British and Czech-English accents.

    And also the “rape noises” at the start are really disgusting.

  129. Therrin says

    Which, with the echoes, sounds like a horror movie soundtrack.

    Sherman can do the Wilhelm?

    CC

    You attempted to access the “Freethought Blogs” dashboard, but you do not currently have privileges on this site.

    (If this is still an issue) You’re probably still logged in under the previous e-mail address, which it no longer recognizes as valid. Try logging out or deleting saved passwords or something.

    Blockqutoe sounds like a birth defect (in addition to not being recognized as a tag).

  130. First Approximation (formerly Feynmaniac) says

    Well, the Census Bureau’s poverty report is out and the findings are very depressing:

    Household income fell in every region of the country from 2007 to 2010.

    Among people born in the United States, household incomes declined 6.1 percent. Among non-citizens, the decline was steeper — 8 percent.

    Poverty has risen especially fast among single mothers. More than 40 percent of households headed by women now live in poverty, which is defined as $17,568 for a family of three.

    That is the first time since 1997 that figure has been so high. Analysts attribute the rise in part to changes in the welfare system, enacted in the mid-1990s, which make cash aid much harder to get. Those changes were credited with encouraging recipients to work in good times, but may leave them with less protection when jobs disappear.

    “The business cycle is going to hurt them a lot more than it used to,” said Robert Moffitt, a Johns Hopkins University economist.

    Poor people not only grew more numerous — 46.2 million — but also poorer. Among the poor, the share in deep poverty (defined as having less than half the income to escape poverty) rose to the highest level in 36 years: 44.3 percent.

    But hey, it can’t be all that bad. A lot of those poors own a microwave!

  131. McCthulhu awaits the return of the 2000 foot Frank Zappa says

    Since I have been out of the loop (not that I was ever in it), what brought about the switch of Pharyn-julep to FtB? Better bandwidth? More readers? Free pie? I suppose they couldn’t do any worse than the old site did with the incongruent ads showing up.

  132. Therrin says

    McCthulhu, SciBlogs was acquired by NatGeo, and made some rules as to “appropriate” content. Probably some other things, too.

    Plus at last count, PZ had 80% of his previous readership here as well as 50% there, which means he’s earning an extra 30% worth of pennies in ad impressions.
    Kind of.

  133. Bernard Bumner says

    Just to respond to you, crowepps, because my earlier post seems glib.

    There is STILL commonplace bigotry excused by “strong moral values” aimed at new targets and justified by the victims deserving to be stigmatized for their “choices”.

    I certainly didn’t mean to imply that bigotry had magically vanished, but wanted to comment on my own inability to access the cultural mindset that I inhabited as a child. The level and types of very open bigotry I saw as a child and young adult certainly have diminished. The very obvious racism, sexism, and homophobia flaunted and vaunted on television during the ’80s is a good example which would never be tolerated now.

    I am baffled now by the fact that such things were so normal and seemed so natural, also that they seemed to be so important and permanent. The world didn’t end and no natural order was toppled by such things becoming unacceptable. I am now surprised in retrospect by how much stupid, ignorant, naked fear and hatred was permitted and encouraged. The culture around me and me within it have changed to the point that I simply cannot understand why those changes took so long, why the old attitudes were convincing to me, if not because I believed and espoused them, but because I thought they were normal and nearly immutable.

    Even as I better understand the mechanisms underlying privilege, for instance, I find myself less and less able to understand why such a situation is tolerated by well-meaning and good people. I don’t understand why bright and kind people allow themselves to be so ignorant to the plight of others. I don’t understand how it is that intelligent, social beings can selectively suspend empathy.

    I know that bigotry still exists, culturally, societally, and systematically. That is why I closed with the wish that I could see similar, or greater, strides over the next thirty years to further tackle bigotry.

  134. McCthulhu awaits the return of the 2000 foot Frank Zappa says

    Holy moly! You mean PZ does IMPRESSIONS TOO??? That guy is just freakin’ amazing!!!!!!1!!1!1!ONE!!1EXCLAMATIONMARK

    (I’m hoping that if free pie was part of the deal that he shares with fawning sycophants)

  135. says

    I have as most of you know a problem with going to the US, but if we’re going to have one big fucking awesome lovefest at this Reason Rally, I might reconsider…What are people’s plans here ?

  136. Nerd of Redhead, Dances OM Trolls says

    Bill #152, sugar (sucrose) has a fairly high solubility at room temperature, but the rate of dissolution is slow due to the large crystal size. Slow enough, that if you want sweet tea, add the sugar to the warm/hot tea before cooling. Otherwise, you would need continuous agitation, say from a magnetic stirrer, to approach the saturation point.

  137. drewl, Mental Toss Flycoon says

    lipwig @40 (et. al.)

    My deepest condolences for your loss. Thank you for the Pythonesque denouement. If I can’t be a fossil, I’d take inadvertently cracking up my friends and family at my own funeral any day .

    I just found out my dad most likely has lung cancer (never a smoker). He survived a heart attack ten years ago, and had a couple inches of his colon removed a few years back. He bounced back from those pretty well, so I have hopes, but it seems that the best bet will be partial lung removal.

    I’m not sure how to deal with most of this. Main thing is, my parents are the only reason I don’t completely despise christians. They are the ‘show your faith through good works, pray in private’ type of people. Lutherans in Mormon country, they have a tight-knit (although most are quilters) community. They help those in need, don’t make a big deal of it, don’t preach at the people they help. I’m not sure how to be supportive without accidentally sticking my foot in my mouth or being a hypocrite. My dad is a retired scientist and teacher, and encouraged me to ask questions, but I never asked him if he actually believed in the Sunday shit. The only thing I remember him saying was that ‘science says how, god says who’. Whether he actually believes that or not, I’m not sure. I don’t want to bring it up now.

    Sorry for the ramble. I have a lot of thinking to do.

  138. John Morales says

    drewl, don’t be sorry. You’re among friends.

    (You have a bunch to deal with, and you have my sympathy)

    Main thing is, my parents are the only reason I don’t completely despise christians.

    Shows you can’t just generalise; even religious people can be worthy of respect. Good for them.

  139. John Morales says

    PS re:

    I’m not sure how to be supportive without accidentally sticking my foot in my mouth or being a hypocrite.

    I suggest you just be honest; I’m sure they already know you love them for who they are and you respect them because of their character. Be there for them and support them for who they are, not for what they believe.

    (Religion doesn’t come into it)

  140. says

    drewl
    If it is of any help, my aunt was diagnosed with lung cancer 2 years ago and she is still out and about, although it ruined part of the rest of her body.
    I agree with John Morales. Just be honest, just be there for them. They probably wouldn’t appreciate you mentioning god since they know you wouldn’t mean it.
    But they know you love them.

  141. Moggie says

    SQB:

    Holy shit, Shatner doing Rocket Man is awesome!

    Duh. Anything Shatner does is automatically awesome. Even when he does something badly, it’s awesomely bad.

  142. says

    Crossposted for common amusement:
    Did you know that slignot is so evil to dismiss points made by gorillas, orang utans, chimps and bonobos (and some humans):
    By tushcloots:

    You went out of your way to make a judgmental posture and ad hominid.

    I’m sure the casus is wrong, too.

  143. says

    “Guest” is gone. He’s using a fake email account to make his aspersions against Richard Dawkins so I can’t quite ban him, so expect him to reappear…and get deleted again.

    Yet another argument for turning on the registration requirement…

  144. Tigger_the_Wing says

    Thank, PZ, for cleaning the place up! =^_^=

    Meatspace stuff has been getting in the way of online stuff so I’m afraid I’m not attempting to catch up with TET.

    Anyone having a hard time

    Great Big Granny-Hug and I hope you get through it OK.

    Katherine Lorraine,

    Love the kitty pics! =^_^=

    I’m confused as to how my left hand got into the second photo, though… ~:-|

    Giliell,

    After reading that, I’ve been trying to ‘go out of my way to make a judgmental posture and ad hominid’ but all I got was a bad back and an annoyed ape.

    Caine,

    I’m sooo glad there’s no cancer! =^_^=

    Sorry if I’ve missed anything/anyone important. Please fail to direct me to the spanking couch as punishment.

    This week I had a follow-up with my breast surgeon. She told me that the veeeeery slow growing (but painful) lump in my left breast, that is easily palpable but consistently fails to show up on X-ray or ultrasound, is probably harmless glandular tissue or something else benign; but she wants me to get a fine needle biopsy done next week anyway.

  145. Ms. Daisy Cutter says

    kristinc, #101:

    I find that cold brewing [tea] makes even cheap tea bags (the usually unbearably bitter stuff) much smoother.

    There is a device that cold-brews your coffee overnight, resulting in a much less bitter cuppa.

    Bill Dauphin, #144: “Honey” is redeemed solely by the Austin Lounge Lizards parody.

    John Morales, #169: I am impervious to the badness of Shat singing “Rocketman,” because that song will always remind me of Passive-Aggressive Notes.

    First Approximation, #185: In the discussion thread on the NYT, comment #5 is spewing right-wing talking points and “statistics” about how we’ve spent more money on the poor than we ever did on corporations. I wish I had the energy today to wade in…

    Drewl, #194: I am sorry to hear about your father.

    Also, no discussion of worst songs ever would be complete without a nod to Li’l Markie.

  146. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    OK, that is funny. Are you done now with those evil teeth and it was one final act of resistance?

    No, I have one more extraction of a half-tooth. Many years ago, I had a root canal done. I couldn’t afford to do the post and crown, so eventually the tooth outside the gum line disappeared. So in two weeks, that one gets yanked. Then I will go in for the fillings, many of which are for cavities which are under the old fillings.

  147. Moggie says

    Hey, is there some law of nature which says that every non-TET thread at Pharyngula has to contain at least one comment about the appropriateness or otherwise of the ads? Because that’s getting pretty old.

  148. says

    I fully suport your right to do that, yet I despise the burning of flags and books. As a symbol it is powerful and it usually means “I’d like to burn the thing and people it stands for instead”. And I don’t think it’s possible to get away from that saying “oh but I intend it to mean that I oppose the politics of the current rulers”…

    Tho’ you didn’t strictly say it was, let’s be very clear: a flag is not a book.

    You can argue with a book, as a book often is an argument–or several–good or bad.

    A flag, as a highly abstract symbol, is an incredibly flexible tool for demagoguery. It has no meaning of its own, explicitly represents no principle, no intention, beyond membership in and loyalty to a cause or tribe.

    So as the demagogue knows, if he wishes to induce others to commit horrors on his behalf–or merely to be systematically miserable and marginalizing and inhuman to those it is implied fly a different one–it is wonderfully helpful to give them a flag to salute while they do so. The flag will have no comment, either way, and so they may stare at it and swear ‘I am a patriot’ while they gas, while they bludgeon, while they blast the designated enemy to bits of blood and bone. And every moral monster who made his career on division and the savvy selection of scapegoats knows if he wraps himself in it before he demands every merely just social program be scrapped in order to further favour his funding oligarchy–he knows he will be applauded wildly, wearing that flag. Likewise, every authoritarian slimeball who ever told you ‘this regressive monstrosity of a law that doth cut the legs out from under minority X is a matter of national security/how we enforce our traditional values’ has at least a dozen flags in his closet, ready to wear.

    Burning a book carries overtones of the suppression of ideas. I’m generally uncomfortable with such acts, for this specific reason, I might add*.

    And generally, therefore, burning a flag is quite another matter from burning most books. True, it may well mean ‘I wish to burn those who fly it’, as you recall above…**

    However, it may also mean ‘I wish to burn this rag you manipulative sleazeballs attempted to wrap so tightly around my neck, the better to strangle my mind’.

    In the latter context, I must salute you for burning it, again. Indeed, in my view, you cannot possibly burn enough of these rags. Disgusting things, such flags. Me, I wouldn’t wipe my ass with ’em.

    (*With certain exceptions. A book they have sworn you must uphold as holy, and printed in massive runs of tens of millions, a book someone in authority has demanded you must place on the top shelf of your home and make a formal show of revering, much as you salute a flag, this book, I think, I will make an exception for, and I will not complain if you have the courage to burn it. As such a book is well enroute to becoming a flag anyway.)

    (**And note that, in this case, there is generally another flag in the picture, flown by those engaged in said burning.)

  149. Tigger_the_Wing says

    Katherine,

    Why, yes, your left hand is uncannily like mine. I inherited my pianist’s fingers from my paternal grandmother (a pianist who, sadly, I never met as TB took her several years before I was born) and passed them on to my eldest son who is a concert pianist. =^_^=

  150. says

    Brother Ogvorbis
    I’m sorry to hear. I have an incredible amount of 3 appointments at the dentist’s next week, one of them with my daughter, which is totally unfair, because she’s such a good girl about brushing her teeth. Seems like she inherited the full “Fritz Schlosser” paket from my grandpa.

    Moggie
    I find it rather amusing that the fundies are paying so that we can have Pharyngula

  151. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    I find it rather amusing that the fundies are paying so that we can have Pharyngula

    They are (possibly/likely) buying their way into heaven.

    “Honest, god, I done proselytized the shit out of them thar atheeists. I even paid to put adverts on that there piece of pure Evolutionist Ebil! But, god, you done hardened their hearts too much. They wouldn’t witness to the greater glory of you, so they are down in hell. But god? You got me to pal ’round with for all eternity, right?”

    God pauses and looks at the little man before him. And he thinks to himself, ‘Holy shit, have I fucked this up. No way do I want to spend eternity with this intolerant little piece of chickenshit.’ But, knowing that intollerance, bigotry, and fear are the only tools available to keep the faithful in line, god just sighs and says, “Yup. You’n’me. For eternity.”

  152. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    which is totally unfair, because she’s such a good girl about brushing her teeth.

    Me? I’m paying a fair price for 20 years of neglect.

  153. opposablethumbs, que le pouce enragé mette les pouces says

    ad hominid.

    :falls about laughing::

    Thank you for that, Gilliel, it’s brilliant.

  154. The Lone Coyote says

    What a night. I helped a friend of mine move some stuff, and in return he gave me a free tattoo. And it was his first time tattooing anyone but himself! What a deal, eh? ;) ;)

    Seriously though, the tat turned out pretty good. He was painfully amateurish, but in the right way- he took forever and went over lines a bunch of times, as opposed to messing up the lines. Now to recuperate with some pot and TET browsing.

    Boy, that old “P.Z. Myers’s sycophants” routine never gets old, does it? That one just keeps on popping up, I’ve noticed.

  155. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    Boy, that old “P.Z. Myers’s sycophants” routine never gets old, does it? That one just keeps on popping up, I’ve noticed

    Well, I, for one, am not a sycophant*! I am, like all the other irregulars here, just one of PZed’s many sock-puppets.

    * The first time I ever came across that word, in fourth or fifth grade (I think), my first thought was of an insane elephant**. And I still, some 35 years later, have that image.

    ** Which, come to think of it, describes modern conservatism in so very many ways. They suck up to authoritarians and are batshit crazy. And their symbol is an elephant.

  156. Love-Vani says

    Ok, so this is in no way academic. (fair warning)

    But one of the old X-Men’s villains was a guy named Jason Wyngard, went by the name of Mastermind, and looked EXACTLY like this rape singing fellow.

  157. opposablethumbs, que le pouce enragé mette les pouces says

    ad hominids and insane elephants! good thread today :)

  158. Algernon says

    I have as most of you know a problem with going to the US, but if we’re going to have one big fucking awesome lovefest at this Reason Rally, I might reconsider…What are people’s plans here ?

    Same question here.

  159. says

    When I came into work this morning one of my 5 terabyte external drives was 1/2 way across the shelf and attempting to throw itself over the edge and into the abyss.

    I corralled it with the others and it has since crept an inch towards the edge again. I think it is attempting death with dignity while it still has some control over its drive motor functions.

  160. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    When I came into work this morning one of my 5 terabyte external drives was 1/2 way across the shelf and attempting to throw itself over the edge and into the abyss.

    Well, what did you expect? You put a terabyte of photos of Sarah Palin on there, along with the Bachmann pictures. Suicide seemed a logical option with that in the drive’s memory.

  161. says

    I like metal, but this song is one of the worst I’ve ever heard. The music’s not to bad, but the lyrics — yuck! Sarah Silverman’s part at the end of that video is funny, though (“death to all butt metal”).

  162. Rey Fox says

    Aw dammit, I saw one “guest” post last night and now I have to miss the rest.

    Also, no one is allowed to talk about new tattoos unless they are willing to divulge some details about them.

  163. says

    After being on the run from law enforcement for about twenty years, one woman’s Moment of Mormon Madness has resulted in being fined $134,000 for providing “travel money” to her siblings so that they could murder defectors from her polygamist sect. A fine? What about the jail time?

    Blood atonement and murder by shotgun was incorporated into the plot of an episode of HBO’s “Big Love” series. At the time, some viewers accused the writers of going too far, of being unrealistic.

    A polygamous sect leader’s daughter was sentenced to three years in prison after pleading guilty to a charge relating to the shotgun killings in Texas of an 8-year-old girl and three sect members who had left the church, U.S. Attorney Jose Angel Moreno said Thursday.

    Jacqueline LeBaron, the daughter of Utah polygamist Ervil LeBaron, was originally indicted in 1992 but was a fugitive for almost 20 years before being arrested last year in Honduras. She had faced 14 counts, including murder, and could have faced life in prison.

    But she pleaded guilty in June to conspiracy to obstruct religious beliefs as part of an agreement with prosecutors. LeBaron, 46, faced up to five years in prison but received a lesser sentence from U.S. District Court Judge Sim Lake, Moreno said in a news release….

    Jacqueline LeBaron was among six family members charged in the killings. Authorities say she and her family were following their sect’s doctrine of blood atonement, in which defectors were killed. The U.S. attorney’s office has said that Jacqueline LeBaron assisted her siblings in the plot by giving them travel money.

    Moreno said LeBaron had admitted that in May 1988 that she followed the instructions of her brother and gave her sister $500, telling her to go to Houston and prepare for the murders of the “Sons of Perdition.”

    Ervil LeBaron had created the Church of the First Born of the Lamb of God in the 1970s. He taught that anyone who left the church would be called the “Sons of Perdition” and should be killed, Moreno said.

    Former sect members Duane Chynoweth, Mark Chynoweth and Ed Marston had left the church after Ervil LeBaron was convicted in Utah for murder. While in prison, Evril LeBaron drew up a document stating that the three had become “Sons of Perdition” and ordered his remaining followers — mostly his wives and children — to kill them. Ervil LeBaron died in prison in 1981, but his orders were preached after his death.

    In June 1988 in Houston, Mark Chynoweth was fatally shot three times by one of Jacqueline LeBaron’s brothers. At another location in the city, two other siblings shot and killed Duane Chynoweth and his 8-year-old daughter Jenny. Authorities said the girl was killed because she witnessed her father’s death.

    At about the same time, Marston was shot at an appliance business in the Dallas suburb of Irving. He died of his injuries about four hours later. All the victims were shot in the head.

    Jacqueline LeBaron is the last defendant to be convicted in this case. She was also ordered by the judge to pay $134,000 in restitution to the victims.

    LeBaron was part of a polygamist colony that was an offshoot of the mormon church.

    Her brother, William Heber LeBaron is in federal prison. He tells his story, which is fascinating, here: http://www.mazeministry.com/mormonism/testimonies/heberlebarontestimony.htm

    Excerpts:

    …I was born a fifth-generation Mormon. My father’s name is Ervil M. LeBaron. He was the founder and leader of “The Church of the Lamb of God,” the most notorious and violent of the polygamous offshoots of the Mormon Church…. My father’s ultimate goal was to subjugate all of the other polygamous offshoots of the Mormon Church, and to eventually overthrow the Mormon Church itself and take control of it as well. Yes, my father was a madman.

    My father was not the only madman in Mormon history, Brigham Young, the person who took control of the Mormon Church after Joseph Smith was killed, was also quite mad. After leading the Mormons to what is now Utah, Brigham Young began teaching a doctrine he called “blood atonement.” It was taught that some people’s sins are so bad that Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross could not atone for them. Therefore, in order for those persons to be saved and go to heaven, their own blood had to be shed. For decades the Mormons blood-atoned murderers, adulterers, and other “dangerous criminals” such as those who dared to disagree with Brigham Young or tried to leave the Mormon Church. A large number of these blood-atonement murders were carried out by a secret band of Mormon assassins called the “Danites.”…

    In 1972, when I was eight years old, my father and his followers went on a six-year killing spree in their efforts to subjugate the other polygamous offshoots of the Mormon Church. Numerous people were killed and injured. Because of these murders, I spent the rest of my childhood in a bizarre nomadic environment where local, state, and federal law enforcement raids were common. When I would ask my mother and other cult leaders why all this was happening, they would tell me that these law enforcement officials were servants of the Devil, trying to stop God’s work. During this violent period from 1972 through 1980, there were numerous cult members arrested and tried for the murders they committed. Unfortunately, most of these murderers were acquitted at trial…

    In 1975, right in the middle of this madness, when I was eleven years old I was taken out of school and put to work in one of the communal cult-operated used appliance businesses in Denver. This business was a sweatshop where cult members were put to work to support the cult first and themselves last. When things were going good, we worked 60 and 70 hours a week and lived at the poverty level. In bad times, we worked up to 100 hours a week and went hungry….

    My father, based on his own experiences, taught me that the crashing lows came when God withdraws the Holy Spirit because of His anger and lets Satan attack you, and that the euphoric rapture was when the Holy Spirit was with you the most.

    I have now come to know that the euphoria has the clinical name, “Mania.” People who cycle from depression to euphoria suffer from a hereditary chemical imbalance in the brain called “Bipolar Disorder” or “Manic Depression.” Those with severe Mania hear voices in their head, and many think it’s from God. I heard this voice only one time. My father said God spoke to him all the time. … He refused medication in prison because he thought the doctors were trying to harm him. In late 1999, I was finally diagnosed with moderate manic depression. I am currently on medication to control it and feel better than I’ve felt in a long time. I look back and feel a little foolish for believing my mental illness was a spiritual experience, and for clinging to Mormonism partly because of those experiences….

    William LeBaron discovered the truth about mormonism, only to fall prey to a more mainstream version of Christianity. Still, it’s an improvement over shotgunning rival polygamists.

  164. Janine, The Little Top Of Venom, OM says

    I am lighting up the Lynna signal. There is a mormon mommy blogger by the name of Jenny Hatch in the Bachmann anti-vaxxer thread.

  165. cicely, Inadvertent Phytocidal Maniac says

    drewl, sorry to hear about your father’s medical difficulties. We’re awfully good listeners/readers; don’t hesitate to shop for shoulders here.

    Utah polygamist Ervil LeBaron,

    I read that as “Utah polygamist Evil LeBaron”.

  166. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    Evil LeBaron

    I dunno. The convertible LeBaron was, for the time, a pretty cool car.

  167. Psych-Oh says

    The first time I ever came across that word, in fourth or fifth grade (I think), my first thought was of an insane elephant**. And I still, some 35 years later, have that image.

    Ogvorbis – As a kid, I pictured a green elephant. And to this day, when someone is being a suck-up, I see them as a green elephant.

    I need to work less. I can’t keep up on TET at all lately.

  168. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    As a kid, I pictured a green elephant

    So you saw it in terms of a ‘sick-o-elepant’? Weird. Especially considering your ‘nym. I remember it as ‘psycho-elephant’.

    There are other words which, in my youth, conjured up weird images. Floodplain, for instance, put me in mind of a really wet airplane. Jumbo jet had me looking for the elephant ears. I’m sure there were others, but I’ll have to think on it to remember them.

  169. Invisible Dragon says

    Marie the Bookwyrm:
    That sounds right – um, or correct. It’ll never be “right”. My local library happens to have the DB book; I have requested it. I will have popcorn and nightmares. :)

    John Morales:
    *waves white flag* I give! *crawls under bed with comfort chocolate*

  170. says

    Did you know that slignot is so evil to dismiss points made by gorillas, orang utans, chimps and bonobos (and some humans)
    @Giliell, yeah, I’m starting work with a vocal coach, strengthening the AH. It’s about standards.

  171. Classical Cipher, Murmur Muris, OM says

    Bad Cipher. No more Menz™, even if the one stinking up Butterflies and Wheels is super-juicy and fractally wrong. I have to do housing and financial aid today. I do not have time for a bad attack of SIWOTI, and I do not have energy to dedicate to ludicrous assholes who like upholding the status quo.

  172. says

    This week I had a follow-up with my breast surgeon. She told me that the veeeeery slow growing (but painful) lump in my left breast, that is easily palpable but consistently fails to show up on X-ray or ultrasound, is probably harmless glandular tissue or something else benign; but she wants me to get a fine needle biopsy done next week anyway.

    @Tigger, I shudder in sympathy. (Needles and I aren’t friends in the best of circumstances, but…) I’ve so far managed to avoid having anything biopsied despite having, as my doctor described them, “lumpy, bumpy breasts.” I’m pretty sure this is the reason my mom had a few biopsies as a teenager as well.

  173. says

    Janine, I posted in the Bachmann/vaccine thread, but I fear Jenny Hatch is a lost brain, one of those we cannot fix. She’s pretty far gone, and she’s deploying all of her don’t-think-critically skills, skills which are pumped to the max by mormonism.

    I advised her to lurk at Pharyngula until she learns how to think. Not holding out any hope.

    Feeling sorry for her children.

  174. Beatrice, anormalement indécente says

    He he, pope isn’t exactly going to be welcomed with open arms in his home country.
    Link to the article Pope visits Germany – but protestors are waiting

    Mr Wowereit [Berlin’s mayor] isn’t really able to officially condone the protests that are planned during the visit, but he says (not very diplomatically): “I understand, and it’s also in order, that citizens are using the Pope’s visit to draw attention here to the fact that the Catholic Church’s teaching represent theses that belong in past centuries, but not in the modern era,” he said. I have great understanding for these protests, assuming they take place within a peaceful and democratic framework. The Catholic Church will have to live with that. This also does not contradict the hospitality we should show during a state visit.”

    Yay for the mayor not mincing his words. He is also gay and living with a partner, and we don’t have to wonder much what pope thinks about that.

    Ratzy is also scheduled to hold a speech before the Bundestag. Some MP’s are not happy about it, link

    Around half the members of the Bundestag from the socialist Left party will leave the German parliament building before the Pope makes his address on September 22, according to MP Petra Sitte.

    Rolf Schwanitz, an SPD MP is spokesman for the group “Lay people in the SPD”, which calls for a rigorous separation of church and state. He will take part in the demonstration rather than hear the Pope’s speech.

  175. First Approximation says

    Mr Wowereit [Berlin’s mayor] isn’t really able to officially condone the protests that are planned during the visit, but he says (not very diplomatically): “I understand, and it’s also in order, that citizens are using the Pope’s visit to draw attention here to the fact that the Catholic Church’s teaching represent theses that belong in past centuries, but not in the modern era,” he said. I have great understanding for these protests, assuming they take place within a peaceful and democratic framework. The Catholic Church will have to live with that. This also does not contradict the hospitality we should show during a state visit.”

    Wow, kudos to the mayor!

  176. Vicki says

    I have what seems to be a mild/early case of carpal tunnel syndrome. I’ve just had a few unsatisfactory sessions with an occupational therapist. Not everything she suggested made things worse, but a lot did, and little if any of it helped. At the last session it felt as though she was trying to pressure me into reducing stress in my life, and not listening as I explained that I’d already done a bunch of that. Right. So, what I have now is one possibly useful stretch, and an ergonomic keyboard I need to return (it’s on the list of things that made matters worse, and being an object rather than activity, is returnable).

    I’m looking for suggestions on how to choose a good OT. I picked this one off my insurance company’s website because (a) her office is near where I work, and (b) she specializes in hand and arm problems. Clearly, this was not good enough.

    Alternatively, any recommendations in Manhattan, the northwest Bronx, or maybe downtown Brooklyn, Astoria, or Long Island City would be useful.

  177. cicely, Inadvertent Phytocidal Maniac says

    Vicki, I have carpal tunnel, and the best thing I ever did for it was to get a pair of wrist braces. I wore them pretty much 24/7 for about a year, then was able to drop back to just sleeping in them.

  178. lipwig says

    when I was 10, I misread pubic hair as public hair (in Gerald Durrel’s My Family and Other Animals) and, needless to say, the hilarity that ensued when I chose to discuss this outside my head, was mmmm.. hilarious.

  179. Dhorvath, OM says

    I missed cat barf gravy and all the truly horrible songs. I guess sometimes being elsewhere is a blessing.
    ___

    129.46/4 time and the key of 9 minor

    Err, scratch that. Good times were missed, that much is clear.
    ___

    Drewl,
    Cancer is a tough slog for everyone involved. Take care of yourself.
    ___

    Tigger,
    Oh, I hope that is just protocol and the doctor has your diagnosis correct. Let us know.
    ___

    As near as I can figure, Steel Panther is a parody band.

  180. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    As a youngster, I devoured maps. But I could never figure out just where Orientare was. As in, “We three kings of Orientare, Bearing . . . ”

    Of course, Wife can top that one. She wondered why the shepherds were washing their socks by night.

  181. says

    @lipwig, I’m reminded of a story of a friend of the family who during college was so tongue tied and nervous during a public presentation that inadvertent hilarity followed.

    She was speaking about the Heimlich Maneuver, but through some sort of bizarre mangling twice replaced this with “hymen remover.”

  182. says

    Good evening
    I’m having pancakes right now but I need them. My mum put on another “episode”.
    Wonderful example of passive-agressive behaviour?
    “I don’t care about the money, I never cared that your grandparents gave each of you (my sister and I) a new car and we got only a used one and didn’t even ever mention it”.
    Even my father is fed up with her.
    Fuck you, mum

    Popal visit
    I Freiburg considerable parts of the town-council have joined a protest against Ratzi being allowed to sign the golden book of the city.

    But you’ve got to love those bigots’ actual behaviour when confronted with homosexuals in power (same goes for all the homophobic muslim rulers that will welcome our minister od foreign affairs)

  183. Dhorvath, OM says

    Didn’t even ever, eh? Obliviousness is oblivious.

    I am so sad to hear about the guilt trips your mother keeps pulling out, she is not healthy, please don’t take it to reflect on yourself.

  184. lipwig says

    @Giliell
    I know where your at – I often have FUCK YOU MUM moments and then feal all creepy and guilty. Truth is, when I look it at it objectivly, she should have tried harder to be loving person. My reactions to her now are based solely on how she treated us as kids. What goes around, comes around.
    Sorry Mum.. I do love you nonetheless.

  185. Waffler, Dunwich MA says

    The convertible LeBaron was, for the time, a pretty cool car.

    I hear Jon Voight owned one.

  186. says

    Slignot:

    I shudder in sympathy. (Needles and I aren’t friends in the best of circumstances, but…) I’ve so far managed to avoid having anything biopsied

    I had my nose biopsied last year, specifically a funny growth on the end of it. Whee!
    It was benign, and merely resulted in (another) scar on my nose and a $900 bill that I had to put on a credit card. Oh, and a new scar on my knee from the bike crash I had on the way there. The dermatologist was kind enough to debride that for free.
    Funny thing about me and needles: I don’t mind being stuck myself; hell, I tend to watch the whole process pretty closely. Watching other people get stuck, even on TV, makes me turn away. When watching House I run at the mere mention of the words “lumbar puncture.”

  187. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    I hear Jon Voight owned one.

    I know I could ask the Pfft! of All Knowledge and get a coherent answer, but I’m more curious as to how the Threadizens would describe him. Who is Jon Voight?

  188. lipwig says

    Is’nt he Angelina Jolie’s dad or no wait… I think it’s Liv Tyler’s dad.. no no no it’s… somebodies dad…

  189. Dhorvath, OM says

    Jon Voight,
    Midnight Cowboy, Mission Impossible, Angelina Jolie’s father, so forth. Long career, often good, often forgettable.

  190. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    Wait. Wasn’t he in Deliverance?

  191. Vicki says

    Cicely–

    I’m sleeping with a wrist brace (the tingling/numbness is only in the left hand, so I’m just bracing that one), but when that plus anti-inflammatories didn’t fix the problem quickly the doctor suggested OT. It may just be that she’s impatient for a solution (which I sympathize with, but “avoid surgery” is significantly higher on my priority list than getting things fixed fast).

    Gilliel–

    Pancakes need no excuse: they’re tasty and nourishing (flour, eggs, milk, and a bit of maple syrup on top, what’s not to like?). I’m sorry you’re feeling the need for comfort food, though.

  192. Moggie says

    feralboy12:

    I had my nose biopsied last year, specifically a funny growth on the end of it.

    That’s your head. Most people have one.

  193. lipwig says

    Threadians, who is your ultimate scary guy…? Mine is that scarred-faced guy in that movie, you know the one, the one where he entices a young…(fuck – what was her name) you know the one where he… shit can’t remember what he does, but it’s something horrible…

  194. says

    *nomnomnom*
    *last of the pancakes vanishes*

    Thank you. No, she’s not succeeding in guilt-tripping anymore (mostly I stopped falling for that years ago. It’s not like that hadn’t been part of her character for a long time, it has only become much worse recently), but she makes me angry and she drains my energy

    lipwig
    Oh, I do love her, and I know she’s sick. But I don’t feel guilty anymore (mostly). I’ve done what I could, there’s no help I can give her, so I have to wait until she makes a move. But if she messes up my grandma, I might not be able to forgive her. I fear that this might be the end of our family. I fear that if this goes on, she will see her eldest daughter for the last time at our gran’s funeral.

  195. says

    @feralboy12, I’ve had my share of mole/wart/whatever biopsies (yay for pale skin and family skin cancer) but they’ve all been fine. Weirdly, I was better with the razor blade and cauterizing equipment when they cut off the pea-sized ball vein outgrowth thingy than when they numbed the area first.

    Needles have always caused some panic, but poor medical handling when I was young escalated everything up to full on phobias, whether it’s me, someone nearby, on screen, being near the blood drive, etc.

  196. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    who is your ultimate scary guy

    One of the three nightmares I ‘enjoy’ involves the scariest guy I have ever encountered (film, book, meatspace, dreamspace). I am at the WTC site, after the attack. It is a pile of rubble with grey smoke and dust billowing out of it. I can smell the burned metal, burned plastic, and decomposition. The smoke and dust gets thicker and the workers on the pile begin moving faster and getting smaller. Then the workers start fighting. Not one side against another, but just knots of hand-to-hand combat, getting faster and more frenetic. Then I see a large man, obscenely large, a hundred feet high, materializing out of the smoke. He is non-descript — his face is a combination of every person I have ever known or seen, he is everyman. And he has a grin on his face that terrifies me. As he drifts towards me, the fighting on the pile ends and all the workers look at the giant. The fighting stops in a wave moving concentrically from him. And then, as he gets closer to me, his grin turns to a smile and I wake up, soaked in sweat, terrified, panting, and I know I will not sleep again that night. I know that’s not what you were aiming at, but that is the most terrifying guy I have ever imagined.

  197. says

    Threadians, who is your ultimate scary guy…?

    Mr.’s evil twin. A nightmare I’ve been having. He looks like my husband but is really evil and violent. So it’s this “the safest situation you can possibly imagine turning into the worst scenario you can possibly imagine”.

    For fictional characters?
    Hard to tell. They are mostly plain evil, so evil you can practically smell it.

  198. Waffler, Dunwich MA says

    Brother Ogvorbis wrote:

    I know I could ask the Pfft! of All Knowledge and get a coherent answer, but I’m more curious as to how the Threadizens would describe him. Who is Jon Voight?

    In addition to the things various threadizens have mentioned about Jon Voight, he was once featured in an episode of (the ’90s US TV show) ‘Seinfeld’ in which a car salesman convinced a character to buy a used LeBaron, because Jon Voight once owned it.

    [/obscure reference]

  199. Classical Cipher, Murmur Muris, OM says

    Lipwig, I forgot to tell you – I’m sorry for your recent loss. *hugs*

    My scariest character… it’s is like a seven-way tie. Heavily from Joss Whedon series.

  200. kristinc says

    There is a device that cold-brews your coffee overnight, resulting in a much less bitter cuppa.

    I’ve used a French press to do that. If I’m stuck with cheap coffee, I still do it, as it’s the only way to render it drinkable. But the coffee I usually keep on hand (sublimely fresh from the tiny indie roastery down the street) is so smooth that cold brewing it makes it … too smooth. Weird but true.

  201. says

    Wow, I just watched a video about a woman who makes absolutely realistic looking animal heads out of construction foam and felt. And I mean realistic like in OMG call the WWF those murderers!
    I’m always amazed by what people are capable off in the positive sense

  202. Sili says

    It would appear that Denmark now has its first female PM ever.

    Not my favourite person in the whole world, but neither was the other guy.

    The far Left had a remarkable boost. This is not a nice thing to say, but the last time they did so they also had a very nice-looking young lady as their spokesperson. When they had the dumpy, moustachioed, middleaged guy who was obviously a Communist relic from the 70es speaking for them, they lost representation …

  203. says

    Dr Who – Blink is on BBCA right now. It is one of the horror episodes and the premise is scary, but it is as impossible not to blink as it is not to breathe. Sure, you can suppress it for awhile, but you’re going to do it.

    One of the things I like about the newer episodes is the higher production values.
    +++++++++++++++++++
    Waffler, I got your reference, I chuckled quietly to meself.
    +++++++++++++++++++
    Bro Ogvorbis, that nightmare is truly horrifying, I’m so happy/lucky I haven’t had a nightmare for 25+ years.

    I have unpleasant dreams, had one this morning, but nothing rising to the level of a nightmare that makes you turn on the lights and continue to be so scared even though you know it was just a bad dream.

  204. says

    Katherine
    Congratulations!
    Hey, my kids are called Ruth and Lydia, nothing against good old biblical names.
    Well, not actually called, those are their middle names.
    And those are also the names of their great-grandma and great-great-grandma.

    *yawn* Bed is calling

  205. grumps says

    Excuse me thread but…. Fuck, fuck, FUCK!
    Just been trying to find some help and support from The Addiction Recovery Guide http://www.addictionrecoveryguide.org/ and all I get is “hand it over to God”, “trust your higher power”…. bollocks! *scream*… sorry for the vent but what’s a secular addict to do?

  206. starstuff91 says

    …sorry for the vent but what’s a secular addict to do?

    That’s a good questions and I’ve heard it before. I’ve never found a good answer to it. The only answer I’ve seen is to just deal with the religious bullshit in most recovery programs.

  207. The Lone Coyote says

    Regarding the secular addictions programs: I’ve asked some about that, and they usually tell me “Well, the higher power can be anything, including ‘nature’ or ‘the earth’.” OK I guess, but it doesn’t exactly satisfy.

  208. says

    I also comment on Raw Story. My ‘Likes’ rating from others to my comment ratio has gone down. I think it’s because I’m getting sick of anti-vaxxers & liberturds (specifically Ron Paul advocates) that I’m no longer willing to be polite.

    Horrors.

  209. grumps says

    @ starstuff91 #277

    yeah I’ve been dealing with the bullshit 12 steps on and off for 25 years. Sure going along, putting yourself in a safe place is important, and at times helps. But I want to meet people who are addicts like me (to help and support each other), but the addicts i meet at AA meetings and elsewhere are usually not like me. They are fucking god botherers… handing their lives and wills over to their higher powers… I can’t stand it.
    I’ve been to a few meetings recently and at every one someone has recounted a story about how they prayed and then something good happened and they recite the mantra (AA has a lot of those) “I don’t belive in coincidences”. Well how can I begin to connect with anyone who doesn’t believe in coincidences? I can’t.

  210. starstuff91 says

    @ grumps

    Maybe you can stick with the program you’re in now but also join an atheist or secular group. You could even start a secular group for addicts in your area. It wouldn’t have to be anything really organized, but rather just something where you could get together with people like you and just talk about it (and maybe talk about how annoying the other recovery programs are).

  211. grumps says

    @ The Lone Coyote # 278

    Regarding the secular addictions programs: I’ve asked some about that, and they usually tell me “Well, the higher power can be anything, including ‘nature’ or ‘the earth’.” OK I guess, but it doesn’t exactly satisfy.

    Well exactly… the higher power (they say) can even be the “power of the fellowship (they love that word)”. But when you actually get in there and hear what they say it ain’t so. They recite St Francis’ prayer, the Serenity prayer, etc, and just because they say “using the word god as you understand it” doesn’t make it OK.

  212. says

    Grumps, I feel for you. I know what 12 Step programs say about a higher power, as TLC attests, but it sure feels different when you are in there and they make you hold hands and recite the Lord’s Prayer.

    It makes me go into the “fuck you, I got myself into this mess, I’ll take responsibility to get myself out” mode. I can use help, but not from ‘giving myself to a higher power’.

    There are a lot of people that that approach does not help. There are alternatives, just usually not in small communities.

    It’s funny about AA, first they expect you to worship a higher authority, and then one of the 12 steps is to apologize for what you have done.

    I take responsibility for both.
    ++++++++++++
    starstuff91 says:
    15 September 2011 at 5:15 pm

    “Fucking college libertarians, how do they work?”

    They don’t.
    This has been another edition of simple answers to simple questions.

  213. grumps says

    @starstuff91

    Yes. I’ve been meaning to get more involved with my local humanist group for a while primarily to try to organise a local secular recovery group but being a recurrently lapsing recovering alcoholic I haven’t actually done it yet (surprise, surprise)

  214. starstuff91 says

    I found a part time job that’s perfect and I really want it. The only problem is that it’s 10 miles outside of town and I don’t have a car. This really sucks.

    “Fucking college libertarians, how do they work?”
    They don’t.
    This has been another edition of simple answers to simple questions.

    That made me laugh. I’m just annoyed with college libertarians and the Cult of Ron Paul. There were a bunch of new “Ron Paul 2012” chalkings on the sidewalks on campus today. So I spend 30 minutes of my free time on campus researching crazy Ron Paul positions. I want to wright some of them next to the Ron Paul supporters’ chalkings.

  215. says

    Okay, enough overly personal posting for today. Maybe even for tomorrow; it was a stressful day in general. I’m headed to the liquor store.

  216. Dhorvath, OM says

    Starstuff,
    It’s a short hike by bike. You can often get them at garage sales for ten or twenty dollars.

  217. starstuff91 says

    It’s a short hike by bike. You can often get them at garage sales for ten or twenty dollars.

    I’m pretty sure that’s a terrible idea. I’d have to be there at dawn and I’d be leaving at dusk. I’d really like to avoid a 10+ mile bike ride or walk by my self in the dark.

  218. Dhorvath, OM says

    Starstuff,
    I don’t know what city you live in, but I have ridden to get to and from work over greater and lesser distances during rain, sun, dark, and what have you in a variety of urban, sub-urban and rural settings over the past twenty years. It’s not a terrible idea, and it can be done for cheap. If you don’t like riding, no problem, I can understand that.

  219. First Approximation says

    Anyone see the final episode of Torchwood: Miracle Day? Whatcha think?

    It was so-so but, in the interest of not giving too much away for those who haven’t seen it, I’ll just say that I couldn’t help but recall this quote from tvtropes article Strawman Has A Point:

    “You can’t have heroes and villains when the wrong side is making the best sense.”
    — Roger Ebert reviewing I Am Sam

  220. starstuff91 says

    @ Dhorvath

    Crime rates in my city are pretty high, but even if they weren’t as high I still wouldn’t walk/ride by myself at dark.

  221. grumps says

    Starstuff.
    I sympathise. I don’t have a car at the moment either. Luckily I am served by excellent public transport which gets me to work in 40 mins door to door (20 mins walk, 10 mins on the tube then 10 mins walk). I also like to cycle.. and that gets me to work in about 20 minutes (it’s 4 miles). 10 miles by bike is at most 50 minutes.
    Do you live in a scary place? Why is a 10 mile bike ride so worrying? Here it’s lovely.

  222. Erulóra Maikalambe says

    You know, sometimes missing one comment in TET makes others… uh… Well, let’s just say context is important.

    Also, no one is allowed to talk about new tattoos unless they are willing to divulge some details about them.

    Having missed Lone Coyote’s comment about the new tat (which looks pretty damned cool, btw), I thought Rey was hungover and looking for an explanation for what he saw in the shower this morning.

  223. starstuff91 says

    Do you live in a scary place? Why is a 10 mile bike ride so worrying? Here it’s lovely.

    Like I said, crime rates here are pretty high. Especially muggings and sexual assault. But unless I lived in a utopia, as a rather small female, I wouldn’t feel comfortable walking around at dark by myself. I get emails every month from my university about students getting mugged or sexually assaulted, and that’s just on campus.

  224. grumps says

    That’s such a different world from mine starstuff. Sorry I made assumptions based on my little view of the world. Shame you can’t take that job.
    To bed now for me.. goodnight.

  225. starstuff91 says

    @ grumps

    It’s ok. We all do that from time to time. I’m going to try to figure out how I can take the job.
    Goodnight.

  226. Pteryxx says

    @The Sailor: I was just watching Doctor Who – Blink on BBCA, too. Shows how slow-reading I am these days; but I’m glad someone else was watching it.

    @ gramps etc, re “higher power”… I dunno from Anon groups, but in counseling they may suggest talking to one’s younger self, or the person you wish to be; or an imaginary friend or presence evoked for the purpose. I think it’s a technique to evoke feelings of support, like a mantra serves to focus concentration, instead of an actual belief. (Or like imagining a safe place evokes feelings of safety.) Hope that’s of some use…

  227. starstuff91 says

    I’ve been in airplane bathrooms more spacious than that stall.

    I’ve been in broom closets more spacious than that stall.

    It must have been designed for a 100-pound person. And how many 100-pound engineers do you know?

    Lock the bathroom door, then knock down all the stall walls. Now you have one very large bathroom all to yourself.

  228. starstuff91 says

    @ chigau

    I like to imagine that you just called all the engineers you know and asked them how much they weigh.

  229. magicbullet says

    Hi there pharynguloids! I have a small question relating to a claim somebody made while having a chat with me. Here goes:
    Would taking a psychology class (and I’m pretty sure that’s what he meant, just a class) actually get one acquainted with…neurology?
    Yes, neurology. Anybody know by what measure that could be true?

    Seems silly, I know.

  230. starstuff91 says

    Would taking a psychology class (and I’m pretty sure that’s what he meant, just a class) actually get one acquainted with…neurology?
    Yes, neurology. Anybody know by what measure that could be true?

    To a very limited extent. I took AP Psychology in high school (5 on the exam, thank you very much), and we learned the very basics about how neurons work and about the parts of the brain.

  231. Classical Cipher, Murmur Muris, OM says

    I hate looking for housing. Beyond the fact that housing costs money and the fact that I have to meet a bunch of strangers, there’s the fact that even if I find a place that’s okay for me, I’m not at all guaranteed to get it, and I have no idea how long it will take to find out if I’m approved.

    I’ve been trying to figure this out all day. I have other important stuff to do, but I’m completely mentally drained, and it hasn’t even gotten to the hard part yet.

    Fuck.

  232. cicely, Inadvertent Phytocidal Maniac says

    My sister-in-law just had her second baby – I have a second nephew.

    Congratulations!

    His name is Jonah – to go with the nautical Biblical theme, yes they’re fundies, yes I still love them all the same.

    You’re allowed. :)

    grumps, maybe there’s a local Secular Humanists group or a Unitarian church near you? If so, perhaps there are others you could contact through them who are in the same boat, and can form your own support group?

    New tat, for anyone who wants to see.

    The Infinite Ouroboros? Do you plan to color it, or leave it as is?

  233. Pteryxx says

    :offers hugs to CC: nothing’s ever simple and willpower deficits suck.

    ot: and now Blade Runner is on. Doctor Who it ain’t, but still.

  234. ChasCPeterson says

    Would taking a psychology class…actually get one acquainted with…neurology?

    well,…?

    ‘Neurology’, strictly speaking, is a medical</i? specialty; disorders of the nervous system at the tissue and cellular levels, mostly.
    If what is meant is 'neurophysiology' (i.e. the study of mechanisms of how neurons, neural tissues, and nervous systems work), then, possibly: many introductory psychology courses include units on 'biopsychology', used as a synonym for 'neurophysiology'.

  235. Mattir says

    Cool, I have finally figured out the whole registration thing. Plus I have learned to spin cotton and had a productive day of administrative stuff. But really, I just wanted to say that I haz a gravatar.

  236. starstuff91 says

    What happened to that thing where I clicked a gravatar and something happened?

    I don’t know. I noticed that it was gone earlier today for me too.

  237. Algernon says

    What causes painful skin? Some times my skin just hurts badly, as if a large chunk of it has been sunburned.

    I used to think this correlated to infection, because frequently I’d be hurting a lot and then shortly after I’d be sick with strep or something like that.

    But right now, the skin all along my thigh hurts badly when touched at all (even by my folded or crossed leg) and it’s annoying. I don’t want to go to a doctor with something so stupid and vague. They’ll think I’m a junkie or neurotic or something. Well, I am neurotic but not so neurotic to bother about sore skin.

    All I know is that it isn’t shingles (I’ve had shingles before and it’s not that painful to me… I though a bee had stung me or something then I was like HOLY SHIT I HAVE HERPES because the shingles erupted on my thigh rather than my torso which I never knew was a possibility).

    Anyway, my skin hurts so much that I can feel it despite having drunk quite a bit.

    Hmmm… I read somewhere that pain can actually happen *after* a bout of shingles I guess maybe from nerve damage? Maybe that’s it (for my leg, wouldn’t account for the times my scalp or some other part has randomly felt like it’s been half-boiled).

    Meh… screw it.

    How the hell is a person supposed to know if the pain they feel is justified or not :/

  238. Therrin says

    Anyone see the final episode of Torchwood: Miracle Day?

    Didn’t really like the whole thing, it felt too drawn out. Would have preferred a season of five to ten 1-2 ep stories.

    “You can’t have heroes and villains when the wrong side is making the best sense.”
    — Roger Ebert reviewing I Am Sam

    Dunno how that fits, the whole thing was about the import role death plays in life. Or did you mean Oswald?

  239. says

    *tap tap* hello? I just posted a reply and it totally disappeared. Maybe because it has chemical names in it?

    Trying again with some breakup tags – a topical anaesthetic spray may help Algernon. There’s a non-prescription one in Australia. It is named “Ego SOOV”, “Burn Spray” and contains lignocaine. Ask a pharmacist for a US equivalent.

  240. Tigger_the_Wing says

    Hi Alethea!

    How is the smoke at the moment? Number 4 Son phoned me from the bus to say it looked as if it were drifting southwards. He sounded quite impressed by the vision of huge, billowing blackness.

  241. says

    Hi Tigger. It seems that the spam-eater doesn’t like the bike parts of my post. Drugs are OK but a Honda CB1100 test ride isn’t?

    No issues with smoke for me. We did have exciting kaboom noises in the middle of the night, and the misspelled emergency services text.

  242. The Lone Coyote says

    Cicely: I kinda like it just as a line drawing. If I do color it though, I’m thinking of ‘various shades of copper’ as a color theme- think Smyrgol from “Flight of Dragons”, if anyone remembers that one. And yes, infinite ouroboros: I know it’s pretty obvious and not at all an obscure reference, but I’m pleased as hell that someone instantly recognized it anyways!

    CC: my only experience with roommates is with that former friend of mine I always talk about, and needless to say it wasn’t really a good one. What kind of housing are you looking for?

  243. says

    Trying again – and adding some spam-eater-cheater empty italic tags because the spam-eater hates me. This is a review, with a nice picture, of the bike I test rode this morning. It features a very cute retro design, and it’s a nice smooth ride. But I’m not 100% sold. The petrol tank is a bit small, and you get a fair amount of wind-buffetting at a decorous highway 100kph.

    You’ll have to c&p the link.
    http://smh.drive.com.au/bike-reviews/honda-cb1100-review-20100609-xw2w.html

  244. Classical Cipher, Murmur Muris, OM says

    Hopefully a studio apartment, alone. (The smaller the apartment, the better I’ll be able to take care of it, is my theory. But I need a kitchen. Non-negotiable.) I don’t do so well with… well, people, but especially roommates. Even aside from the social anxiety, I’m told I’m very difficult to live with.

  245. says

    Good morning

    grumps
    I’m sorry to hear that there’s still no progress in search for a secular group.
    I don’t know, but would a regular therapist be an alternative?

    TLC
    Like the tatoo. I love dragons

    Algernon
    Good luck with the skin. I hope it gets better quickly.

    *gnarf*
    I wished my cycle would stop varying somewhere between 24 and 32 days. It’s driving me nuts. Never ever had this. Not as a young girl, not after I stopped taking the pill, not after the miscarriage, not after kid # 1. Kid #2 must have broken something.

  246. says

    I should use Twitter more often (I’m there under the old nym), maybe I’d find more interesting tweets like this one from Russell Blackford last night :

    “I totally support feminism (though not idiots who merely affect to be feminists such as the egregious Rebecca Watson).”

    (how does one link to tweets ?)

  247. Tigger_the_Wing says

    Alethea,

    Lovely bike. =^_^=

    WRT wind, I have always been a fan of screens; since my first bike in 1976 to my last bike (photo taken four years ago) I have preferred to attach one whenever possible.

    Of course, if I were still able to ride I would go for a Honda 1800 GoldWing. Easiest bike to ride that I ever sat on. I took one for an hour’s test ride through the mountains in Scotland and never wanted to return it. Sadly, finances didn’t permit…

  248. Josh, Official SpokesGay says

    “I totally support feminism (though not idiots who merely affect to be feminists such as the egregious Rebecca Watson).”

    Man, screw Blackford. I can’t believe he’s still going on like that.

  249. Sally Strange, OM says

    And how about that joke that Bill Maher and Michael Moore thought was so clever – “I voted for a black guy but I got a white guy.” The implications are so racist – perceptions of hypermasculinized black violence were more important than the content of Obama’s words. Even now people insist that he simply can’t fight as people are demanding – he can’t be seen to get angry, it would be to scary because, you know, brown skin. And whatever.

    It’s not okay. Progressive white guys, feel free to stop with the racist and sexist bullshit. Like, any day now. That would be fucking awesome, because then we wouldn’t all be standing here, wondering, do you really have my back or not? You say you’re feminist, but when I say, “Guys, don’t do this,” you freak the fuck out. That woman is egregious! Make her be quiet. She’s a faux feminist. Because she is so egregious. And he is a Big Feminist. Amazing. Just Amazing.

  250. The Lone Coyote says

    thanks OpposableThumbs and Giliell. I’ve always enjoyed older depictions of dragons, as opposed to the more elaborate modern style. Something charming about the older woodcuts and illustrations.

    Hmm, how interesting. It appears some guy is telling women how to be real feminists?

    I’m all for equality, but I tend to think women are just a tiny bit more qualified to comment on issues of feminism. A ‘progressive white guy’ like me would maybe be smart to just shut up and listen, but that’s just my uneducated opinion.

  251. Classical Cipher, Murmur Muris, OM says

    Adding to the list of blog posts I’m supposed to write someday when the world stops taking away all my writing energies: A heavily sarcastic open letter to Oppressed Menz™ explaining how, if they insist upon indulging their rampant persecution complexes and soiling their nappies, they can do that without being quite as obnoxiously stupid, using an extended discussion of how PHMT.

  252. says

    My sister-in-law just had her second baby – I have a second nephew.

    Congratulations!

    His name is Jonah (…)

    Wouldn’t that make her a whale?

  253. says

    CC
    Yep, I find Tommy over at B&W one of the most obnoxious brain-dead people I’ve ever encountered.
    Really, I have never seen patriarchy denial at this level comparable with evolution denial or AGW denial. The other MRAssholes usually at least admit that something like patriarchy existed in history and that there are places in the world where women do have it bad, it’s only in the west that women have become all uppity.

    *sigh*
    My sis came for a coffee and officially confirmed that the day gran dies our family will cease to exist. Well, I should be glad, I had to turn 32 to come from a broken home….

    bright notes:
    I have an afternoon/evening “off” and have the girly girl luxury problem of being unsure what to wear.
    Pirate Queen or Mother Nature?

  254. theophontes , flambeau du communisme says

    @ David M et al

    Eleven fragments show the progression from hair-like “filaments” to doubly-branched feathers of modern birds.

    God-of-the-gaps is now really getting squeezed. He is running out of evolutionary gaps to hide away in. (Link: Dinofuzz’ Found in Canadian Amber.)

    Why do the goddists even go down the anti-evolutionary road? They are in for such a drubbing.

  255. crowepps says

    @ Algernon — American spray-on pain relief is Solarcaine spray for sunburns. I use Aspercreme for muscle pain and it works well (generic: Sports Pain Relief Rub/Arthritis Pain Relief Rub).

    You could also try an anti-itch cream like Benadryl

  256. says

    All I know is that it isn’t shingles (I’ve had shingles before and it’s not that painful to me… I though a bee had stung me or something then I was like HOLY SHIT I HAVE HERPES because the shingles erupted on my thigh rather than my torso which I never knew was a possibility).

    Algernon, if it is the same thigh and the same area, it might be post-herpetic neuralgia. Shingles can erupt in any dermatome of the body, anywhere from head to toe. It’s the Varicella zoster virus persisting in nerve ganglia that causes this, and shingles can re-erupt after a period of dormancy, as well as leave a chronic dysaesthesia or pain syndrome behind.

  257. McCthulhu awaits the return of the 2000 foot Frank Zappa says

    Theophantes@345: I’ve read the comments in both the feathers in amber story and the Australopithecus Sediba stories in places as diverse as Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper and YahooNews. Doesn’t matter where you go, the goddists ask the same old stupid questions, won’t bother to look at links, quote bible verses, etc. We’re acutely aware they’re being drubbed, but the most ardently and stridently clueless are so stuck in the arrogance of ignorance that they haven’t even the slightest inkling they’ve been drubbed.

    “Why are there still monkeys?” Oh yeah, wow, you got me, Mr./Ms. Goddist with your AHA! GOTCHA! moment. It doesn’t matter what I say now, you’re too busy basking in the glow of your special smug satisfaction to bother looking at the reply that explained everything in great detail and used links with several journal citations.

    This crap will be around a long, long time, at least until anti-intellectualism, anti-science, news-for-hire (FAUX ‘News’), big money megachurches, Texas schoolbooks, blogs as news, Discover Institute, Kirk Cameron, and a million other things conveniently die in a fire, all at the same time. It’s why I have become so bitter and cynical. These things are growing, not diminishing. I’m starting to feel like Hitchens, may as well just keep drinking until religious assholes destroy life on the planet because of some superstitious bullshit prophesy that wouldn’t have happened except they did everything in their power to divert events until they matched.

  258. ChasCPeterson says

    She’s a faux feminist.

    fwiw, Blackford actually explains himself a couple of tweets later, to Miranda Hale, saying that Watson promulgates an ideology in which men are demonized and women are infantilized.

    I think clear-thinking people can agree that such a one-size-fits-all blanket ideology would indeed be rather egregious.
    I think most would also disagree that that’s a reasonable extrapolation from anything Rebecca Watson might ever have said; certainly not from the original Elevator vid or its immediate aftermath.
    No, Blackford is extrapolating himself into the Twilight Zone here, and I suppose the same is true for all of Watson’s absurdly ociferous critics.
    They just don’t get it, on account of they don’t want it.

  259. says

    Good morning everyone. My battle against Snip has gotten even more annoying, as he is now content to try to wake me up at 1.30. 2.00 AM. 3.30. 4.30. 5.00 AM.

    Annoying beast, I just wanted to sleep. I can’t shut him out of my bedroom since I’m in a studio, but I’m so completely exhausted.

  260. Rev. BigDumbChimp says

    PZ, I’d like to request that you increase the size of the recent posts section to include more than just 5 posts.

    I know it’s a nitpick but I liked being able to see the last 10 or so posts and not having to go back pages to find a post I wanted to come back to.

    thanks

  261. Algernon says

    Algernon, if it is the same thigh and the same area, it might be post-herpetic neuralgia.

    That seems likely. It is the same leg. How annoying.

  262. says

    That seems likely. It is the same leg. How annoying.

    That’ll be 250.-USD ! :D
    I would love to offer a cure or relief, but once this is established, it’s very difficult to treat, and certainly creams won’t do the trick. Some people use Carbamazepine or Amitryptiline, as pain modifiers, I’m not convinced of their efficacy, based on my own experience. Worth a try if you’re desperate.

  263. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    I want to apologize for my #263 (I think (this computer doesn’t show all three digits)). That was out of line and I really shouldn’t dump that shit on you. Again, sorry.

  264. 'Tis Himself, OM says

    So this Canadian decides to get away from it all. He gets on a plane and 24 hours later he’s in Alice Springs, Australia. He’s sitting in a pub having a drink when an Aussie comes up to him and says: “Where are you from, stranger?”

    The Canadian answers: “Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.”

    The Aussie goes back to his table and one of his mates asks: “So where is the stranger from?”

    “I dunno, he doesn’t speak English.”

    I’ll get my coat.

  265. Carlie says

    Super-quick drive-by without reading:
    On I-71 between Mansfield and Bellville Ohio, I saw an adopt a highway sign that was adopted by the “Mid-Ohio Atheists”. Go Ohio atheists!

  266. says

    @Katherine Lorraine: that sort of thing is why we make a policy of always adopting TWO kittens. So much less work than a single kitten. They can wake each other up, and you just have a mild sleep disturbance as you vaguely note kittens galumphing up and down the hallway, again, then go back to sleep.

    Tigger, the bike I rode today had a low screen, but not really enough. Tomorrow I’m trying something completely different.

  267. Minnie The Finn, avec de cèpes de Bordeaux says

    Hi thread, and Happy Weekend for all of you who go for that sort of nonsense!

    Good news: I have started to learn how to delegate work, so I will be enjoying a relatively work-free weekend (apart from this one translation job, but that’s not really work, is it? I mean, if it was, one would expect to get paid properly, you know…)

    More good news: the mushrooms are taking over the place! I have so much of them stewed that we just ordered a new, much bigger freezer to fit them all in; I have dozens of bags of dried boletes; I have rows and rows of jars of salted and pickled mushrooms on the shelves, and I haven’t finished yet – there are chantarelles still hiding somewhere in the neighborhood, and I’m gonna get them this weekend!

    AND the sun is shining.

    I hope y’all are fine, too.

  268. walton says

    I woke up this morning knowing I have chores and tasks to do, and lots and lots of work that needs doing. Yet I’ve just wasted the first hour-and-a-half of the day arguing with a libertarian on my blog, without having yet dressed, made coffee, or accomplished anything else even slightly productive. What is wrong with my brain?

  269. says

    Brother Ogvorbis, no apologies needed. Remember, on TET, nothing is ever off-topic and things are rarely out of line.

    From your description, it sounds like a mixture of 9/11 and Dr. Manhattan (bringing TET back to its original topic!). I think I’ve seen PTSS mentioned before, is this related? (Only, of course, if you like to share — I can imagine you’d rather not).

  270. Tigger_the_Wing says

    Walton,

    sounds like my life. =^_^=

    Although I did actually, eventually, get all the things done that I needed to do today; I just crammed it all into the last couple of hours before going to the theatre to watch ‘The Mousetrap’.

    Always wanted to see it, ever since I was a little girl and read about it being the longest ever continuous run of a play. Loved it.

    No, I’m not going to tell anyone whodunnit. =^_^=

  271. says

    @SQB:

    No! Don’t do that! If you bring he thread back to its original state then everything will revert!

    I’m going to go back to being a closeted, middlish-Pantheist with an unchecked gender identity program. Alan Clarke will show up to spout nonsense about Noah’s Ark being a real life event, and we’ll go through a few solid months of people arguing about incosequential crap!!

  272. chigau (...---...) says

    re: returning to the original state
    If I wake up and find this has all been a dream….

  273. Bernard Bumner says

    Johann Hari finally admits journalistic misconduct and smearing opponents via Wiki vandalism. He has apologised, returned George Orwell prize, undertaken unpaid leave until 2012, and is to pay to attend a journalism course.

    A reasonable display of contrition, I think.

  274. Classical Cipher, Murmur Muris, OM says

    I want to apologize for my #263 (I think (this computer doesn’t show all three digits)). That was out of line and I really shouldn’t dump that shit on you. Again, sorry.

    Brother Og, I don’t think there was anything wrong with that post. *hugs*

  275. Richard Austin says

    Random note, but I assume it’s somewhat abnormal to never really have nightmares. I attribute it to the fact that I can control my dreams while I’m dreaming (so-called lucid dreaming; I know that it’s a dream and can change it) and so, any time a dream starts going bad, I simply change it so that it’s not.

    … I wonder if this has any psychological effect on me when I’m awake. I mean, I’m not as “vulnerable” when I sleep; does that lead to me being more relaxed/low-key during normal hours? Never really thought about it.

  276. cicely, Inadvertent Phytocidal Maniac says

    Gilliel, I like ’em both, but the Pirate Queen outfit slightly edges the competition.

    @Katherine Lorraine: that sort of thing is why we make a policy of always adopting TWO kittens. So much less work than a single kitten. They can wake each other up, and you just have a mild sleep disturbance as you vaguely note kittens galumphing up and down the hallway, again, then go back to sleep.

    Yes. A bored kitteh will invent ways to amuse itself; a second kitteh provides a “butt” other than mommy/daddy.

    Bro Og, you posted nothing to apologise for. This is Teh Thread: The Next Best Thing To Therapy That You’d Have To Pay For.
    *hugs/booze/chocolate/bacon*

  277. magicbullet says

    @ChasCPeterson
    “…‘Neurology’, strictly speaking, is a medical</i? specialty; disorders of the nervous system at the tissue and cellular levels, mostly.
    If what is meant is 'neurophysiology' (i.e. the study of mechanisms of how neurons, neural tissues, and nervous systems work), then, possibly: many introductory psychology courses include units on 'biopsychology', used as a synonym for 'neurophysiology'…"

    Yes, I think that ,while this isn't how he expressed himself, it's likely what he meant…thanks.

  278. says

    @Kitty, you were worried about the smell in making cider and I thought I’d shift that here. There is a short period of very active fermentation that it’s more gassy, but I’ve never found the smell terribly bothersome. We keep out fermentation just around the corner from the kitchen behind a screen (along with the racks of empty bottles). It’s not been an issue.

  279. starstuff91 says

    Screen protectors are almost impossible to put on properly. I just spent an hour trying to put one on my phone. I destroyed two in the process. Good thing they’re really cheap.

  280. Richard Austin says

    @Starstuff91:

    Use a removable label (or cheap tape that won’t leave residue) stuck to the front of the screen protector to pick it up. If you have two, one at either opposite corner will allow you to align it without touching the sticky side. You can then use a ruler or something with a stiff edge to push out the bubbles as you press it on.

    (We use tablets here for the project I work on, so I’ve had a lot of practice with the damned things. I still botch one out of 4 give or take.)

  281. onion girl, OM (Social Worker, tips appreciated) says

    My only comment on the video: EWWW. Really, PZ, how about some nice videos of cute little kittens cuttlefish or idiots or more idiots or nice peaceful oceans? :)

    ∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
    In other news:

    DC/BALTIMORE PHARYNGULA FANS:
    Renaissance Festival this Saturday!

    The Faire address is: 1821 Crownsville Road, Annapolis, MD 21401.

    If you plan to carpool, please let me know and indicate where you are coming from.

    Details:
    We’re meeting at noon at the main gates.
    Tickets are $19 for adults; $8 for children 7-15; free for children under 7
    Parking is hectic, and the road to the faire will be a wait to get in.
    Most vendors accept credit cards, some take only cash.
    A Giant card or CVS card will get you a discount on tickets–some grocery stores also have coupons.
    Costume rentals are available for those interested. :)

  282. Vicki says

    I had hyper-chlorinated water for a while (in New Haven in the 1980s): we got in the habit of pouring tap water into bottles, uncovered, and just letting the chlorine gas out for a while. Of course, hyper- is relative: my comparison is New York City water, which is filtered but not at all chlorinated. I’ve also dealt with tapwater that has so many chemicals in it that it’s completely unpalatable. My mother lives in London, and her water is barely acceptable for toothbrushing. I can only drink it in the form of strong black tea with milk and sugar. I like strong tea anyhow, but at home I also drink a lot of plain water.

  283. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    I apologize because I used an unrelated comment to dump some personal shit. I know that many of you have far more complications than I, so I felt an apology was warranted as dumping my PTSD on you is, from my point of view, unfair. I appreciate the support, but I still apologize.

  284. says

    @Katherine, I’m not sure I understand about the water. At most we add a cup or two of water into over five gallons of juice (it’s to activate the yeast with sugar in water at a specific temp).

    I suppose you’d also use water to when you’re sterilizing the fermentation container (we use an oxidizing cleaner that is non-toxic).

  285. onion girl, OM (Social Worker, tips appreciated) says

    Reminder part II:

    If you haven’t already filled out the form, please do so!
    RHINEBECK: Rhinebeck 2011 Roomate Signup

    If you are attending Rhinebeck (or if you MAY be attending Rhinebeck), please fill out this form to arrange hotel rooms.

    ∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
    And with that, I’m off to dive back into the insanity of my fall training session and having to put one of my staff on probation. Again. :(

    *hugs*, chocolate, tea, and all that good stuff. :)

  286. Psych-Oh says

    Minnie – The mushrooms sound wonderful! I am inspired to make a mushroom dish for dinner.

    Walton – some days I make myself a rule that “No internet until X”. I have to or I’d never get anything done.

  287. Minnie The Finn, avec de cèpes de Bordeaux says

    Hi Psych-Oh o/

    Just back with the first chantarelle haul – not that much, but enough to make us a kick-ass omelet in the morning, mixed with some delicious wood hedgehog (no, not that kind of hedgehog! It’s a mushroom, hydnum repandum!)

    Also, another truckload of boletes to fry & freeze, and milk-caps to pickle. Psilocybes were spotted, too, but we left them for the needy =)

    Shifty decided to come mushrooming with us today. I wonder if it would be hard to teach a kitteh to spot chantarelles… he was very enthusiastic about the whole thing and seemed to pick up on the excitement every time me found some.

  288. walton says

    Johann Hari finally admits journalistic misconduct and smearing opponents via Wiki vandalism. He has apologised, returned George Orwell prize, undertaken unpaid leave until 2012, and is to pay to attend a journalism course.

    A reasonable display of contrition, I think.

    Meh… I couldn’t really care less about the whole Hari controversy. The right-wing commentariat has blown it all into a far bigger issue than it should have been. (In all fairness, if a right-wing journalist had done the same thing, the left-wing commentariat would probably have reacted exactly the same way: so I’m not being partisan here.)

    Let’s face it: in the modern world, “journalistic ethics” are more-or-less a dead letter, and there are far worse things going on in the world of journalism than anything Hari’s done. In Britain, the most widely-read papers – that is, the tabloids – devote most of their pages to spreading lies and bile, promoting sexism, homophobia, xenophobia and anti-immigrant prejudice, and trumpeting the cancer-scare-story of the week. If anyone really expected journalism to be an ethical enterprise, they’d be focusing their criticism on the systematic lie-machine that is the tabloid press, not on one broadsheet journalist having sporked a few interview-quotes from other people. The kinds of deliberate and malicious falsehoods spouted every day by the Mail and the Express are a great deal more harmful to society than any amount of plagiarism is.

    I refuse to judge Hari harshly because of this. He’s done a great deal of good journalism in his time – including drawing attention to serious issues like the maltreatment of asylum-seekers in Britain, an area that the rest of the mainstream media tends to ignore. To go after him for this, while ignoring the huge moral deficit of the British popular press in general, is akin to cracking down on unpaid parking tickets while ignoring a nationwide crime wave.

  289. says

    @Kitty, now that makes complete sense. I don’t like the taste of beer especially and spouse reacts badly to all the types he’s tried, so we gave up on beer. I’ve though about maybe brewing a beer for my parents as a present, but since I’ve never done homebrewing for beer before, I’d be worried I’d fuck it up.

    Now, I have to run wonderful work errands (title company emergencies are going to be the death of me). :( We’re painting the house this weekend, too. I’m pretty sure I’m going to be really tired and sore come Monday.

  290. Ibis3, féministe avec un titre française de fantaisie says

    Edmonton radio station The Bear has “win a wife” contest. No this isn’t some cutesy auction for charity with a playful name. They’re serious. Their plan is to send the winner to Russia with some spending money and an arranged hook up with a mail order brides “smoking hot foreign girl” (actually he can choose one from 3-5 possibilities.

    http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/1050819–alberta-radio-station-s-win-a-wife-contest-angers-mla

    Petition here:

    http://www.change.org/petitions/general-manager-the-bear-1003fm-edmonton-close-the-win-a-wife-contest-and-publicly-acknowledge-its-inappropriateness

  291. says

    Let’s do the fork in the garbage disposal!

    ####

    A kvetch: There’s no reason for iTunes to have an unclosable, unminimizable, always-on-top window when it’s checking its library, especially when it takes so damn long to check after a hard shutdown.

    ####

    Why a hard shutdown? Because my battery was like, “30%? HAHA, fuck that! I’m at 0%, bitch! I’m not even gonna let you sleep!”

    ####

    Ten page paper in 3 hours?

    Challenge accepted.

    (Granted, seven of those pages were full of images. Hooray for Digital Image Processing class.)

  292. Sili says

    Ack. Flights are DKK 1000 more than the last time I checked. Damn you, procrastination.

    If that’s alright with you.

  293. First Approximation says

    Yet I’ve just wasted the first hour-and-a-half of the day arguing with a libertarian on my blog

    I haven’t read the comments, but the post is really good. Like PZ-should-elevate-it-to-a-guest-post good.

    Edmonton radio station The Bear has “win a wife” contest. No this isn’t some cutesy auction for charity with a playful name. They’re serious. Their plan is to send the winner to Russia with some spending money and an arranged hook up with a mail order brides “smoking hot foreign girl” (actually he can choose one from 3-5 possibilities.

    Holy fuck.

  294. ChasCPeterson says

    ‘Tis @#365:
    You messed up the Canadian’s line.

    The Canadian answers: “Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, eh

    so I fify

  295. Dhorvath, OM says

    Giliell,
    Pirate queens are good for global warming so I think it’s a win either way.
    ___

    Katherine,
    Muse has been noted. Thanks.
    ___

    Win a wife? Lose and get a husband more like.

  296. says

    Katherine Lorraine, get a small spray bottle, fill it with water, keep it handy. When Snip wakes you, squirt him. Multiple times if necessary. He’ll get the idea you don’t care for being woken up.

  297. Brownian says

    The Canadian answers: “Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, eh”

    Not quite.

    ‘Eh’ isn’t used willy-nilly, eh? It’s used when you want to confirm the listener’s attention, eh, or to make a statement into a question, like “Poutine is great food when you’re curling, eh?”

    So a real Canadian wouldn’t use ‘eh’ at the end of a simple response to a question, even if he was from Regina, eh?

  298. Dhorvath, OM says

    Oh, Brownian,
    Silly. It was just a mistake with the punctuation. What he said was, “Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, eh?” As in, do you know what that place is like and if you do you should be able to guess why I am not there right now and lets share a beer so I can regale you with tales of flatness, cold and mosquitoes.

  299. Sili says

    So this Canadian decides to get away from it all. He gets on a plane and 24 hours later he’s in Alice Springs, Australia. He’s sitting in a pub having a drink when an Aussie comes up to him and says: “Where are you from, stranger?”

    The Canadian answers: “Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.”

    This Ontarian moves out East, but he does feel like he fits in, so he goes to his doctor. “Doctor, can you help me? I want to become a real Newfie.”

    The doctor thinks for a bit, and replies “Well, there’s this one thing we could try, but it’s very risky.”

    “Anything, doc, I just wanna fit in.”

    “I can try to remove a third of your brain, that should do the trick.”

    The man agrees and undergoes the surgery, but a terrible accident happens and the knife slips. When he comes around from the anaesthesia the surgeon confronts him very worriedly.

    “I’m sorry, sir, but we have a problem. I accidentally took out two thirds of your brain, rather than just one.”

    «Ou’est-ce que vous avez dit, m’sieur?»

  300. David Marjanović, OM says

    Planned all the flights and accommodations! Now I just need to find a map of LA so I can pick one of the many, many cheap hostels, and to wait for the € to rise again so I can actually book anything.

    Speaking of “anything”, what, if anything, can have made the software here so incapable of dealing with long threads?!?

    So this Canadian decides to get away from it all. He gets on a plane and 24 hours later he’s in Alice Springs, Australia. He’s sitting in a pub having a drink when an Aussie comes up to him and says: “Where are you from, stranger?”

    The Canadian answers: “Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.”

    I know a Texan who always answers “Texas” to that question regardless of where outside Texas he is.

    «Ou’est-ce que vous avez dit, m’sieur?»

    Q, not O. And spaces between the guillemets and the quote.

  301. chigau (...---...) says

    “Poutine is great food when you’re curling, eh?”
    No.
    Poutine requires two hands to eat.
    This cannot be done while curling.
    Food while curling is thus limited to beer and rum.

  302. The Lone Coyote says

    @407 That made me real sad too. A tragic death cheered by a bunch of soulless big-money repugnicans. I can’t even imagine how I’d react to that kind of thing, except ‘Not Well’.

  303. starstuff91 says

    @ Alethea
    That was interesting. It’s kind of weird to see the skeptic community reported on by a major news source in a positive light. It’s almost as if we’re real people.

  304. kristinc says

    The list of prominent atheist women at the end of that article was refreshing. I was pleasantly surprised, overall, by the tone.

  305. John Morales says

    David,

    Speaking of “anything”, what, if anything, can have made the software here so incapable of dealing with long threads?!?

    I have no problem whatsoever.

    Have you considered the issues you experience may lie client-side?

  306. KG says

    The far Left had a remarkable boost. [in Denmark’s election] – Sili

    You mean the party Wikipedia calls the “Red-Green Alliance” I assume; but at the same time the “Socialist Peoples’ Party”, which also appears to be green-left in orientation, lost almost as many seats. What’s the difference between these parties? From Wikipedia it looked as if the Red-Green Alliance started as a merger of various Leninist groups, but few of their members or voters now have that history.

  307. The Lone Coyote says

    I just saw the new trailer for the remake/prequel to John Carpenter’s ‘The Thing’.

    (warning: Nerd rage to follow)

    It’s exactly like I expected. Fucking stupid cinematic CG up the wazoo, and younger prettier cast, fucking everything that made Carpenter’s movie stand out is gone. And people still insist on defending it… “Just watch it, don’t judge it until you watch it…”

    Fuck that noise. The trailer is already showing us Gimicky CG, the concept is already ruined. The sheer squicky horror of all that foam rubber and practical effects, replaced by the same CGI we’ve already seen in Resident Evil. The practical effects in The Thing were fucking FLAWLESS, especially the kennel scene. There is no way CG can possibly get that photoreal for me. Everything about it felt REAL to me, from the normal looking, unattractive character actors to the scenery to the effects.

    I know this is to be expected. I know I can just ignore this crap and stick with my beloved 80s film, like I do every other time this happens, but The Thing is sacred to the nerdiest core of my heart. No other horror movie has ever scared me or given me nightmares like The Thing did. It radically warped my concept of horror. It’s my favorite horror movie ever.

    Oh Hollywood, why are you destroying everything I love?

    (end nerd rant)

  308. starstuff91 says

    @Lone Coyote

    Can you link to the trailer? I’ve seen the original and it’s a great movie. I’m always skeptical of remakes of great movies.

  309. starstuff91 says

    And a link:
    The Thing 2011

    Oh, that really is awful. Why would she not want them to take a DNA sample? And why would they let their specimen melt?!

  310. First Approximation says

    Remember the republicans cheering for the death of the uninsured man during their presidential debate?

    The same Republicans who were claiming that “Obamacare” was evil because there would be “death panels” denying people care*?

    * A complete lie, btw.

  311. cicely, Inadvertent Phytocidal Maniac says

    @First Approximation: Yes. Exactly those people. The righteous, moral, upstanding, by-and-large God-fearing folk of the Tea Party.

    Hypocrites.

  312. starstuff91 says

    The same Republicans who were claiming that “Obamacare” was evil because there would be “death panels” denying people care*?

    Yeah. It’d be pretty funny if they didn’t has so much power and weren’t fucking insane.

  313. McCthulhu awaits the return of the 2000 foot Frank Zappa says

    Ibis3, signed the petition against the radio station treating women like chattel. I’m embarrassed and disgusted, originally being from Alberta myself. I hope the local papers are heaping scorn upon them as well.

  314. McCthulhu awaits the return of the 2000 foot Frank Zappa says

    KG@421: I had a laugh out loud moment with the ‘Red-Green Alliance’. If they’re anything like the Red Green on the comedy channel, they’ll try to fix everything with duct tape. They need to adopt the motto, ‘If she can’t find you handsome, she can at least find you handy.’

  315. Rey Fox says

    Nothing will compare to a chest opening up and eating the cpr hands.

    On a cold wintry night in Moscow, Idaho, I went to the video store right as that scene came on the TV screens. It was not a good night for me.

  316. starstuff91 says

    Today is a day of much junk food for me. I’ve had cereal, pizza rolls, tatter tots, and freezy pops. I’m enjoying it while by body can still take that kind of abuse.

  317. Algernon says

    why bother trying if I’m going to be painted with a broad brush like that no matter what I do?

    That applies to all of us. All of us face that. And, well, frankly… I talked a person out of suicide only to have them destroy my life so I don’t know so much whether we can ever help another human being so much as maybe be there at just the right time when one or another of us uses one or another of us…

    but it’s worth trying because the only other alternative is blowing your head off and leaving a fucking mess for some poor human to clean up and the people you/we/I/any of us know to cry over it.

  318. says

    Oh Hollywood, why are you destroying everything I love?

    I think what’s much worse it that sometime in the mid-90s, Hollywood seems to have completely lost its ability to come up with anything new.

  319. John Morales says

    Algernon,

    I talked a person out of suicide only to have them destroy my life

    Sigh. “No good deed goes unpunished”.

    … but it’s worth trying because the only other alternative is blowing your head off …

    Look, you don’t need to justify your kindnesses on some utilitarian basis. You don’t even need to justify them!

    (There’s a lot more merit in doing the right thing because it’s right than in doing it because it’s creditable)

  320. Algernon says

    Sigh. “No good deed goes unpunished”.

    I don’t know if you are being sarcastic or not. But I actually don’t feel that way.

    It was hard, and it hurt.

    However, I don’t regret it.

    I’m glad that person is alive although I am also glad that they are not a part of my life right now.

    Does that make sense?

  321. Algernon says

    Look, you don’t need to justify your kindnesses on some utilitarian basis. You don’t even need to justify them!

    Technically you are correct. And I’m going to tell you up front that I have had too much to drink tonight to be coherent.

    At the same time though, I think there is a hopelessness that people feel (or at least I have) because they feel like they are going to be hurt/punished/judged no matter what.

    I’m pretty sure this kind of thinking comes from years of being punished regardless of whatever one actually does, but it doesn’t help that society at large seems to endorse this kind of thing.

    We go by identifiable characteristics, no?

    Kind of like profiling.

    Well, perhaps in this specific case it isn’t technically correct but I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that the people resonating with it may be doing so for valid reasons :/

  322. kristinc says

    So my kids are still not going back to school Monday. Apparently the teachers’ union has an injunction against them to go back to work, but only on the condition that the school board is negotiating in good faith — and the school board doesn’t feel like showing up for any negotiation sessions. So yyyyyeah.

    My rational, progressive, humanist side is all for the teachers here. But I have to admit the side of me that is a harried mom stuck in my house with both these kids kind of wishes the teachers would buckle under to 178-student classroom sizes, alligator pools in the hall, dunk tanks on Tuesdays and Thursdays, any damn thing, because I can’t take this much longer.

  323. Algernon says

    Lastly, my reasoning is thus (This is mostly for John):

    Why should I try to be decent?

    Well, because I care to be decent.

    But why should I try to be decent when people will judge me unfairly and punish me anyway?

    Well, because I care to have self-respect.

    What if that self-respect falters and you feel like it’s not worth it?

    Then I have a dilemma to face. I will either continue to do what I have told myself is right despite the fact that I am perhaps in enough pain to begin to lose the shape of what I might call decent or I will not. And if I will not I may loathe myself. And if I loathe myself I may decide to remove the loathesome thing.

    What if you kill yourself?

    I will have become truly loathesome. My worst thoughts of myself will be realized. I lose. People will be hurt. They will suffer and I will never get the chance to tell them I’m sorry or even to give them the distance that might keep them from being hurt.

    What if you don’t?

    No guarantees, no promises.

    So why is it worth trying?

    Because, life is stupidly binary and there’s no point in being some one you can’t respect so long as you’re “being” anything at all.

  324. Richard Austin says

    What if you kill yourself?

    I will have become truly loathesome. My worst thoughts of myself will be realized. I lose. People will be hurt. They will suffer and I will never get the chance to tell them I’m sorry or even to give them the distance that might keep them from being hurt.

    Interesting. This never went through my mind; quite the opposite in fact: the only way I saw to win, the only way I could not destroy the people I cared about, was to kill myself. Because I felt like I was the only thing holding up a mountain, and it’d be better to be dead and still holding it up (at least in perception) than living and and let go. I honestly felt like it’d be easier on them to die than to reveal the truth. To be frank, I still think it might have been, but what’s done is done.

    Back to Ben’s question, though:

    “why bother trying if I’m going to be painted with a broad brush like that no matter what I do?”

    My answer: Because if you don’t try, you’re saying they’re right: that every bad thing you think is wrong is actually true. Every lie we let pass, every falsehood we don’t challenge, every stereotype we don’t contradict makes it harder to challenge the next. It allows a shell of lies to build up, and that hurts people – people you’ll never meet, people who may not even be born yet.

    When you’re walking down the street and you see a piece of trash lying next to the trash can, are you going to be the guy who keeps walking, or the guy who picks it up and throws it away? Yes, it may mean you spend most of your time dealing with trash and feeling dirty – but someone is going to have to do it. If we want the benefits of a clean world, we have to do the work – even if we never get a chance to realize those benefits for ourselves.

  325. says

    “Because if you don’t try, you’re saying they’re right: that every bad thing you think is wrong is actually true.”

    Nobody listens to what I say either way, so does it matter?

    “Every lie we let pass, every falsehood we don’t challenge, every stereotype we don’t contradict makes it harder to challenge the next.”

    That’s all well and good, except that when I challenge the falsehoods, people (including people on TET) take that as an admission that the falsehood is actually true. “If they’re not talking about you, why do you care?”

  326. Algernon says

    This never went through my mind; quite the opposite in fact: the only way I saw to win, the only way I could not destroy the people I cared about, was to kill myself. Because I felt like I was the only thing holding up a mountain, and it’d be better to be dead and still holding it up (at least in perception) than living and and let go. I honestly felt like it’d be easier on them to die than to reveal the truth. To be frank, I still think it might have been, but what’s done is done.

    I can’t speak for you, but you have to remember that the perspective that you have is that of some one who is still there. For me, I’ve always seem myself as more of an aberration, not so much a lie… but the two seem similar. I don’t understand why these people would love me. And perhaps some one who holds up a mountain only thinks that people will love them so long as a mountain is there.

  327. John Morales says

    Algernon, it strikes me that you seem very harsh on yourself.

    Nobody listens to what I say either way, so does it matter?

    Since this very comment puts the lie to your premise (by counter-example), its sequent is vacuous.

  328. Richard Austin says

    Algernon:

    I can’t speak for you, but you have to remember that the perspective that you have is that of some one who is still there. For me, I’ve always seem myself as more of an aberration, not so much a lie… but the two seem similar. I don’t understand why these people would love me. And perhaps some one who holds up a mountain only thinks that people will love them so long as a mountain is there.

    Well, I never saw it as love, just “not abandonment” – but I was also approaching it with the emotional IQ of a 6-year-old (give or take). I was mostly just noticing the differences between us from an intellectual perspective.

  329. The Lone Coyote says

    I just see myself as a human animal, and like any animal, do whatever the fuck I want to do. Now, you’d think that’d mean I’d be a horrible, horrible person, but it turns out being nice and doing kind things for people is exactly ‘whatever the fuck I want to do’.

    I did go through a phase where I really wanted to be a bitter evil asshole who hated everyone, but truth be told I had to really work at it.

    Could it be that as a social animal, the vast majority of humans have an instinct to be basically good and decent?

    *pauses, takes a look at the current political climate, the news and media, and the state of religion these days…..*

    Um…..

  330. Rey Fox says

    I’ve been to Moscow, Idaho.
    I understand why it was not a good night.>

    That’s exactly what someone else said when I brought it up in another online venue. Why all the hate towards that little college town in a lovely area of the country?

  331. Algernon says

    Could it be that as a social animal, the vast majority of humans have an instinct to be basically good and decent?

    Actually I think this is probably true. It’s just that what actual actions we take, what things we think are the valid signifiers, or what society we see ourselves as belonging to are variable.

  332. chigau (...---...) says

    Not hate Rey Fox.
    Just that “little college town” pretty much says it all.
    Pullman, Washington, on the other hand…

  333. chigau (...---...) says

    Note to self: Irony cannot be conveyed in text only.
    Rey Fox
    Since you know Moscow, you also know Pullman.
    When I was there the only difference between them was the legal drinking age.

  334. Rey Fox says

    That’s right. You gotta follow up a sentence like that with multiple winky faces.

    At least Moscow has trees.

  335. Classical Cipher, Murmur Muris, OM says

    Well, today was not a good day. I tried to go to my first apartment visit/interview/thing, all dressed up and practiced and self-talked into feeling ready with my meticulously filled out rental application and notebook full of anxious questions in hand, only to stand there and wait… and wait… and wait… with my grandparents for an hour and finally leave because the apartment manager never showed up. He called twenty minutes after we left to tell me we “just missed each other” and reschedule. Thanks, dude. Really glad we left Sacramento so early in the morning to make this appointment in LA on time. And it was great to put so much psychological effort into a plan only to have it fall through utterly for no apparent reason. Then none of the other people I was hoping to meet with answered their phones. Fucking hell I hate housing.

    What if you kill yourself?

    I will have become truly loathesome. My worst thoughts of myself will be realized. I lose. People will be hurt. They will suffer and I will never get the chance to tell them I’m sorry or even to give them the distance that might keep them from being hurt.

    What if you don’t?

    No guarantees, no promises.

    So why is it worth trying?

    Because, life is stupidly binary and there’s no point in being some one you can’t respect so long as you’re “being” anything at all.

    Algernon, here you pretty much sum up the same sequence of thoughts that got me effectively back on my feet at the beginning of last year.

    MRAs? What does that stand for?

    *headdesk headdesk headdesk headdesk unconsciousness*

  336. Classical Cipher, Murmur Muris, OM says

    Didn’t finish that reply to Algernon. There was supposed to be a hug in it. And the hope that things will feel less crappy more often.

  337. says

    Well, today was not a good day. I tried to go to my first apartment visit/interview/thing, all dressed up and practiced and self-talked into feeling ready with my meticulously filled out rental application and notebook full of anxious questions in hand, only to stand there and wait… and wait… and wait… with my grandparents for an hour and finally leave because the apartment manager never showed up. He called twenty minutes after we left to tell me we “just missed each other” and reschedule. Thanks, dude. Really glad we left Sacramento so early in the morning to make this appointment in LA on time. And it was great to put so much psychological effort into a plan only to have it fall through utterly for no apparent reason. Then none of the other people I was hoping to meet with answered their phones. Fucking hell I hate housing.

    :-( I sympathize. I hate those kinds of situations: going to interviews is stressful enough as it is, and if the other person doesn’t turn up, I always feel stressed and neurotic in case I went to the wrong place, got the wrong day, etc.

    (I’m incredibly glad that I’ve had college accommodation throughout my time as a student, and have never had to seek private rented housing.)

  338. drewl, Mental Toss Flycoon says

    John Morales, Giliell, Daisy Cutter, Cicely, Dvorath:

    Thank you all for the kind words and support.

    Apparently, the cancer is localized in one lung and the rest of his bloodwork is looking good, so they’re hoping to get it all through surgery. I haven’t gotten the full rundown yet, but it’s sounding like one of the better possible scenarios. He keeps on bouncing back, but it has been a rough ten years for him.

    When he had his bout with colon cancer a few years back, I had no problem telling him I was praying for him, even though I was past agnosticism and well on my way to all out atheism. It’s the ‘language’ they speak, and I meant that I was thinking hard about all the good memories and all the things I learned from him.

    I can’t do that anymore, so I’m trying to keep everything about how I fell about him, and try to deflect the woo when it comes up (more with my mom).

    In better news, my sister is going to have her 2nd kid. Woohoo! Seven times an uncle, never a father. Must be doing right (heh). *Congrats, Katherine! I just saw your post after I typed that.*

    Thanks again. Off to check potential flights to North Mormon Land. *Rey Fox @492… that is really damn close to where I am headed. I know that area well. When were you there?*

  339. Rey Fox says

    CC: Ah yes, people who don’t keep their appointments. Truly a joy in life. Particularly on the phone. The #1 Most Told Lie Ever: “I’ll call you.”

    I thought the Palouse was north of the Morridor. Well, anyway, ’98-’02, drewl.

  340. drewl, Mental Toss Flycoon says

    @ Rey… right on. I got out of there in the ’80s, but the Palouse is still infested w/ LDS. Still, it was a nice oasis between the crazy up in the panhandle, and the loons down south.

    I like ‘Morridor’, I’ll probably be using that soon. Here’s a sniny internet for you (against future royalties).

  341. The Lone Coyote says

    Caine: Well I keep meaning to check out “The Thing from Another World”. But the 2011 remake isn’t NEAR clever enough to base anything on that gem. It’ll be like John Carpenter’s masterpiece had awkward drunken sex with an Xbox or PS3 game and regretted it the next morning.

  342. Sili says

    You mean the party Wikipedia calls the “Red-Green Alliance” I assume; but at the same time the “Socialist Peoples’ Party”, which also appears to be green-left in orientation, lost almost as many seats. What’s the difference between these parties? From Wikipedia it looked as if the Red-Green Alliance started as a merger of various Leninist groups, but few of their members or voters now have that history.

    The Socialist People’s party was formed from old Communists who were disillusioned by the ’56 invasion of Hungary. The Red-Green alliance was formed by the left-over hardcore Communists after the fall of the Iron Curtain – the far left had until then been exceedingly fractured, ensuring none of them would ever get elected on their own.

    The R-G are the furthest Left. Their leadership is still the old guard, but they’ve been canny enough to get young, attractive faces to be the outward face of the party. The newspapers report today that – not surprisingly – people voted for Johanne Schmidt, not the party. They did the same thing a decade ago when they had their first success. The bright young woman was then the very aristocratic sounding Pernille Rosencrantz-Theil – who’s now a Social Democrat.

    Now, just to make matters more amusing. The R-Gs have an internal rule that noöne can sit for more than seven years. That niftily frees up the seats for the dumpy, old guard after the bright young things have made sure the party get in.

  343. Sili says

    The Sailor

    Sili, is that kinda like the US electing the first person of color as the president?

    It’s certainly being billed that way. (C-C-C-C-COMBO BREAKER!)

    The leaders of the Centre-Right party (“The Radical Left” for historical reasons) and the far left “Unity List” (KG’s Red-Green Alliance) are women, too. And I did see a headline saying something about more young women having been elected. Here we go: 21 women under 35, 10 under 30. Interestingly both Greenland MPs fall into the category.

    I don’t know how many women were elected in total, but I’ll be it’s still significantly less than half the 179 total.

  344. Sili says

    OH! And of course the leader of the Rightwing opposition is a woman. She’s even the party founder.

  345. Sili says

    Q, not O. And spaces between the guillemets and the quote.

    Thanks. I realised I’d copied a typo after I logged off. The spaces are news to me, though. And this after I felt so proud when I remembered to turn the guillemets the wrong was around …

  346. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    And this after I felt so proud when I remembered to turn the guillemets the wrong was around …

    Wait. I is confuzzled. Guillemots. These things? And how, exactly, do you turn them the wrong way around? What is, for that matter, the wrong way with a bird?

    Oh, and Happy Thursday.

  347. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    We have a small group visiting my site. They arrived in three large black vans. Two older couples. About 20 much younger couples. The men are all dressed in blue jeans and plaid, button-down shirts. The women are all wearing prairie-muffin dresses, hair in braids, hidden by a white cap with strings hanging down. Not sure which sect of Christianity. Nice people.

    One of the older men has a clipboard. On it is a list of the young men and the young women. On the second page (I happened to notice this as he was working on it) was, again, a list of the young men. And the young women were penciled in next to the names of the young men. And he was moving the name of one young woman from one man to another and (again, I was right behind them doing something else, I was not intentionally intruding) mentioned to the other older man that this young woman needs a stronger, more forceful husband in order to remain true, and the first one she was assigned to (yes, that is the word he used) is to weak for a strong-minded woman.

    I was not raised in a conservative Christian milieu; I was raised culturally Christian as a Unitarian (though I have never regularly attended church). I know that, among some of the more quiet and conservative sects, ‘dating trips’, with a number of chaperoned couples, is not that unusual. Is my reading of the incident this morning correct? Are the older men actually decided which kids (the young women are 17 or 18, the young men 20 to 24) should be married? Are these hard and fast decisions? or can romance actually play a role?

  348. Rey Fox says

    Let me get this straight. I settle in for a good night’s sleep (shortened at the front end unfortunately), and I come back here to read…seven comments? Fucking A, are we having a douchebag invasion elsewhere?

  349. Brother Ogvorbis, Fully Defenestrated Emperor of Steam, Fire and Absurdity says

    The Sailor:

    Yeah, I figured it was one of the many Mennonite sects (there are at least a half-dozen, each with slightly different traditions). They come here on these trips a couple of times a year. This was just the fist time I saw what was on the clipboard, and the first time I have heard the chaperones discussing who should marry whom.

    Rey:

    If you want to put on some hip waders, the MRA-Team is over here. I already overrode all common sense and dove in, and I just know that I will regret it.

  350. says

    Obvorbis, I used to give airplane rides to Mennonites. The kids (generally young female/male couples with no chaperon (except me, tee hee)), and I was always amazed that for their first airplane ride they usually immediately grokked the overview with their ground orientation. And wanted to see their farms.

    As a beginning pilot I had problems with that orientation. As an experienced pilot giving rides to first timers (and maybe last timers) I was amazed at how they visualized the connection between the two. (of course it was a self-selected group.)

  351. Rey Fox says

    I’m already regretting possibly triggering another sniveling bucket of words from Rinus. Those shrieking harpies subjected Dawkins to a letter-writing campaign! *shockhorror*

  352. says

    Rejoice all ye Threadizens. There’s more good news from the morridor. Some BYU students are fighting against the Moments of Mormon Madness in their own lives.

    Once a month, at an undisclosed location in Utah County, a group of students predominantly from BYU gather to talk about agnosticism, secular humanism and other religious ideologies not accepted by the mainstream group on campus.
    It operates anonymously—known to its members simply as The Group—because a “disaffiliation” from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will result in an Honor Code violation if discovered by the university.

    Andrew Johnson, a junior in biotechnology at Utah Valley University, founded The Group in October 2010 as a safe place for secular humanists, agnostics and freethinkers in Utah County. Johnson started the group after returning from a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Indiana, disenchanted with the faith.
    “I ended up finishing my mission, but I tried to teach as little as possible and instead do service whenever possible,” Johnson said. “When I returned home, I felt like I was the only non-theist within Utah County as there were no gatherings of people like me.”
    The Group’s first meeting at a Starbucks in Provo garnered just six attendees, but its roster soon exploded with like-minded students—both from BYU and UVU…

    BYU students cannot be open on campus about their disbelief in Mormonism if they were admitted to BYU with an ecclesiastical endorsement from an LDS bishop. All students, regardless of faith, must have an ecclesiastical endorsement from a leader of their faith….
    “The Group allows you to be yourself for some part of your college years,” she [anonymous student] said. “It’s a nice reassurance that simply because you no longer ascribe to the Mormon faith, or any other organized religion, you can still strive for knowledge, fulfillment and happiness.”

    http://www.dailyutahchronicle.com/news/the-group-utah-countys-covet-secular-community/

  353. says

    From the comments below the article about BYU students who no longer believe in mormonism:

    I would say that these folks are a part of the movement to infiltrate a private university in order to undermine their religious freedom which is mandated by the US Constitution. I don’t understand why anyone would who takes the position they do desire to be a member of a university community that they are in total disagreement with concerning the rules of the institution other that a motive they do not desire anyone to know they have.
    One would expect that out of a religion the atheists that can’t seem to be honest with themselves. If they are dishonest with themselves they very definitely will be dishonest with their family and everyone they come in contact with. Is that what is wrong with the United States today? One would almost believe those in public office especially in DC are members of the religion of Atheism. If you desire to believe what you say you do why hide your actions or belief?

    This commenter has a reading comprehension problem. The female member of The Group noted that she attends BYU because of pressure from her parents, and because she is financially dependent on them.

  354. says

    Another clueless Utahan comments on the article about BYU students who no longer believe in mormonism:

    Do none of you Atheist and Atheist supporters believe in honesty. Atheist that are attending the Y are doing so when they know the rules and are violating the rules of a PRIVATE institution. None of them have a gun to their heads forcing them to go to BYU. Not one of them will be arrested if they stop going to this PRIVATE institution. The First Amendment to the US Constitution allows for people to assemble. That means that people also have the Constitutionally guaranteed right to NOT ASSEMBLE just like freedom of religion means that you have the freedom to be atheists or agnostics. BYU need not assemble with Atheists or fornicators or practicing homosexuals, or people with beards or people that wear torn Jeans or people that worship idols or cheer for the Ewets, just like you atheists have the ABSOLUTE right to keep me out of your group because I think atheist are morons that try to FORCE their religion (and Atheism is most definitely a religion) on people that don’t believe your garbage false faith cult.
    Communism (Communists are Atheists by the way) does not allow for people to leave. BYU encourages you to leave if you don’t like their rules. BIG DIFFERENCE!

  355. says

    As usual, Chino Blanco cuts right to the chase in the controversy over BYU students who not longer believe in mormonism:

    “Students wishing to disaffiliate from the church forfeit their place at the university.”
    In the face of bad policy like this, students should make whatever choices make the most sense for them (whether that’s staying at BYU or transferring out) and they should not fret about whether or not they’re acting with integrity. If you decide to complete your studies at BYU, it’s not “hiding” or “lying” to maneuver around a rule that unfairly targets you.

  356. Rey Fox says

    This commenter has a reading comprehension problem.

    I think the problem is more than her brain is upside down. I think it’s actually too much to ask of most news commenters that they actually read below the headline.

    Cavalcade of Lunacy:

    BYU need not assemble with Atheists

    They’re assembling off-campus in secret. Another point for us against the tone trolls: Even secret atheists are hated.

    or fornicators or practicing homosexuals

    Natch.

    or people with beards

    Like that Young guy?

    or people that wear torn Jeans

    Run, the ’80s are attacking! Also, I wasn’t aware that “Jeans” was a trademark.

    or people that worship idols or cheer for the Ewets

    The…wait…um…is that his word for people from the University of Utah? Dammit, you’re throwing off my rhythm with your unanticipated idiocy!

    just like you atheists have the ABSOLUTE right to keep me out of your group because I think atheist are morons that try to FORCE their religion (and Atheism is most definitely a religion) on people that don’t believe your garbage false faith cult.

    Yes, the media and legislature in that part of the country are just full of forceful atheists.

  357. Therrin says

    I just saw an amusing piece on how to stop your child becoming an “Athiest”.

    The name of the responder makes it doubly amusing.

  358. starstuff91 says

    @ Sili
    That’s way better than the US.
    In the House: 362 men and 76 women. In the Senate: 17 women and 83 men.

  359. Sili says

    And there aren’t many Muslimas in Saudi Politics, I’m sure.

    Doing better than the US is not exactly hard.

    But speaking of old white guys, Jimmy Carter is very nice and remarkably sharp.

  360. starstuff91 says

    But speaking of old white guys, Jimmy Carter is very nice and remarkably sharp.

    What makes you say that? Not that I disagree. I’ve always liked him.

  361. Sili says

    Nice. But I’d like to see him do Kunst der Fuge.

    –o–

    De rien, KG. I’m hardly an authority on Danish politics, though.

  362. chigau (...---...) says

    I’m developing a … notion about the word “rather”.
    Not when used to state a preference or choice:
    “I’d rather eat cake than pie.”
    but rather when used like “somewhat”.
    “rather disappointed in this blog”
    “rather disappointed in the language”
    “my life is rather different”.
    Is it a good indicator of a pretentious poop?

  363. Sili says

    Is it a good indicator of a pretentious poop?

    Speaking as a pretentious nincompoop who’s rather fond of using “rahter”, I rather agree with your assessment.