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Technology: Fueling Hatred and Misunderstanding

Red Leader. writes "This Thomas Friedman op-ed entitled "Global Village Idiocy" and this article by George Packer, entitled "When Here Sees There," both touch on some interesting observations regarding technology's impact on tolerance and understanding. My favourite quote from Friedman's piece is "the Internet, at its ugliest, is just an open sewer: an electronic conduit for untreated, unfiltered information."" We've previously posted the Packer piece, but combined with other story, I think it's worth a retread.

464 comments

  1. I hate having to give info to get the post by tmcmsail · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I wish I could say something about this, but I can't get to the story with out giving my life history to the nit wits at the paper....

    Guess I just have to go buy the pulp version of the fiction that they call news now at the times.
    ;-)

    --

    What OS do you want to abuse today?

    1. Re:I hate having to give info to get the post by z_gringo · · Score: 0

      Generate your own random info here

      http://www.majcher.com/nytview.html

      --
      -- -- Warning. Do not stare directly at the sun.
  2. i have a log in ID, here's the story by trollercoaster · · Score: 1, Funny



    May 12, 2002
    Global Village Idiocy
    By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

    JAKARTA, Indonesia -- During a dinner with Indonesian journalists in Jakarta, I was taken aback when Dini Djalal, a reporter for The Far Eastern Economic Review, suddenly launched into a blistering criticism of the Fox News Channel and Bill O'Reilly. "They say [on Fox], `We report, you decide,' but it's biased -- they decide before us," she said. "They say there is no spin, but I get dizzy looking at it. I also get upset when they invite on Muslims and just insult them."

    Why didn't she just not watch Fox when she came to America, I wondered? No, no, no, explained Ms. Djalal: The Fox Channel is now part of her Jakarta cable package. The conservative Bill O'Reilly is in her face every night.

    On my way to Jakarta I stopped in Dubai, where I watched the Arab News Network at 2 a.m. ANN broadcasts from Europe, outside the control of any Arab government, but is seen all over the Middle East. It was running what I'd call the "greatest hits" from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: nonstop film of Israelis hitting, beating, dragging, clubbing and shooting Palestinians. I would like to say the footage was out of context, but there was no context. There were no words. It was just pictures and martial music designed to inflame passions.

    An Indonesian working for the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta, who had just visited the Islamic fundamentalist stronghold of Jogjakarta, told me this story: "For the first time I saw signs on the streets there saying things like, `The only solution to the Arab-Israel conflict is jihad -- if you are true Muslim, register yourself to be a volunteer.' I heard people saying, `We have to do something, otherwise the Christians or Jewish will kill us.' When we talked to people to find out where [they got these ideas], they said from the Internet. They took for granted that anything they learned from the Internet is true. They believed in a Jewish conspiracy and that 4,000 Jews were warned not to come to work at the World Trade Center [on Sept. 11]. It was on the Internet."

    What's frightening him, he added, is that there is an insidious digital divide in Jogjakarta: "Internet users are only 5 percent of the population -- but these 5 percent spread rumors to everyone else. They say, `He got it from the Internet.' They think it's the Bible."

    If there's one thing I learned from this trip to Israel, Jordan, Dubai and Indonesia, it's this: thanks to the Internet and satellite TV, the world is being wired together technologically, but not socially, politically or culturally. We are now seeing and hearing one another faster and better, but with no corresponding improvement in our ability to learn from, or understand, one another. So integration, at this stage, is producing more anger than anything else. As the writer George Packer recently noted in The Times Magazine, "In some ways, global satellite TV and Internet access have actually made the world a less understanding, less tolerant place."

    At its best, the Internet can educate more people faster than any media tool we've ever had. At its worst, it can make people dumber faster than any media tool we've ever had. The lie that 4,000 Jews were warned not to go into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11 was spread entirely over the Internet and is now thoroughly believed in the Muslim world. Because the Internet has an aura of "technology" surrounding it, the uneducated believe information from it even more. They don't realize that the Internet, at its ugliest, is just an open sewer: an electronic conduit for untreated, unfiltered information.

    Worse, just when you might have thought you were all alone with your extreme views, the Internet puts you together with a community of people from around the world who hate all the things and people you do. And you can scrap the BBC and just get your news from those Web sites that reinforce your own stereotypes.

    A couple of years ago, two Filipino college graduates spread the "I Love You" virus over the Internet, causing billion of dollars in damage to computers and software. But at least that virus was curable with the right software. There is another virus going around today, though, that's much more serious. I call it the "I Hate You" virus. It's spread on the Internet and by satellite TV. It infects people's minds with the most vile ideas, and it can't be combated by just downloading a software program. It can be reversed only with education, exchanges, diplomacy and human interaction -- stuff you have to upload the old-fashioned way, one on one. Let's hope it's not too late.

    Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company | Permissions | Privacy Policy

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    1. Re:i have a log in ID, here's the story by tmcmsail · · Score: 1

      Thanks

      --

      What OS do you want to abuse today?

  3. things to consider? by tps12 · · Score: 1
    I guess I'd like to believe that the Internet brings people together. It's the first truly global community, where English is a de facto lingua franca and technology makes all things possible, from cybercommerce to e-sex.

    B2B, P2P, online auctions, email.

    But what of the dark side, the cloud of the silver lining, the other side of the proverbial coin? The fact is, the Internet is an aid to terrorists, drug addicts, child molesters, and fundamentalists.

    Sure, anything can be abused. But if the governments of the world don't catch up with technology, then the Internet is doomed to be just another place for evil to blossom. Don't get me wrong, I like freedom as much as the next man. As long as it doesn't come at such a price. Remember, the ends don't justify the means.

    --

    Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
    1. Re:things to consider? by NullAndVoid · · Score: 1

      I guess I'd like to believe that the Internet brings people together.
      ...
      But what of the dark side, the cloud of the silver lining, the other side of the proverbial coin? The fact is, the Internet is an aid to terrorists, drug addicts, child molesters, and fundamentalists.


      Well, yeah, but that's got nothing to do with the article.

      The problem with bringing people together is that it doesn't guarantee understanding and harmony: not everybody is going to like each other. And more to the point of the article, a tool that spreads information quickly also spreads misinformation quickly.

      --


      -- Sigs are for losers
    2. Re:things to consider? by ?erosion · · Score: 1

      TPS trolls again!

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      I assert ownership of all trademarks and copyrights on this page.
    3. Re:things to consider? by tps12 · · Score: 1

      Did you read the story? More like Hemos trolls again.

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    4. Re:things to consider? by RailGunner · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Don't get me wrong, I like freedom as much as the next man. As long as it doesn't come at such a price.

      No amount of liberty to give up is ever worth a false sense of security. The Government can pass as many laws as it wishes, and yet you are no more safer then you were before. From the uneducated "profeesionalized" goons patting down attractive single women at the airport in the name of security to the outright paranoia of not letting people take nail clippers to school, we are no safer then we were.

      Criminals will find a way to break the law if they want to bad enough. It's not worth any of your liberty, and it never will be.

    5. Re:things to consider? by tps12 · · Score: 1
      No amount of liberty to give up is ever worth a false sense of security.

      Typical knee-jerk conservative response. Did you ever consider the following: No amount of security to give up is ever worth a false sense of liberty. It goes both ways.

      Think about it.

      --

      Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
    6. Re:things to consider? by 00_NOP · · Score: 1

      No amount of liberty to give up is ever worth a false sense of security.

      Really?

      So one should be free to shout 'fire' in a crowded theatre - just in case there is one and nobody has detected it yet (or maybe the fumes have knocked them out already).

      All reasonable people accept that there are limits on freedom, because in a world of scarcity, freedom is not limitless.

    7. Re:things to consider? by fabjep · · Score: 1

      Actually, this comment: "But what of the dark side, the cloud of the silver lining, the other side of the proverbial coin? The fact is, the Internet is an aid to terrorists, drug addicts, child molesters, and fundamentalists." Has everything to do with the article. Recall, "Worse, just when you might have thought you were all alone with your extreme views, the Internet puts you together with a community of people from around the world who hate all the things and people you do. And you can scrap the BBC and just get your news from those Web sites that reinforce your own stereotypes."

      --
      - learn mathematics - shoot dope -
    8. Re:things to consider? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that has got to be the dumbest thing i've ever read...

      You're not 'giving up' security that you don't have...Maybe you mean the 'sense' of security they want you to have even though you don't have any actual security...

      "Well, we're all slaves anyway,but my bars are kinda wide on my cell...the other imates sometimes reach their arms in and steal my stuff...can I get a nice cell in solitary?? With just that slit to slide food in?"

      Enjoy your cell, slave...

    9. Re:things to consider? by RailGunner · · Score: 1
      How would you define a false sense of liberty? A window in your jail cell? And "typical knee-jerk conservative response"? I guess that would make you what, the typical elitist liberal snob?

      There is no such thing as true security. Any method of security can be broken, it's just a degree of difficulty. For example, do you think Fort Knox is secure? Could it keep out the Chinese Army if they invaded?

      Do you think the law making it illegal to yell "fire" in a theatre actually stops anyone from doing it? Anyone can still yell "Fire" and be an ass about it. They'll likely get arrested and charged, but nothing *stopped* them from doing what they wanted to do.

      No, sorry, I'd prefer to be in charge of my own security, and lot leave it up to an inefficient government.

    10. Re:things to consider? by RailGunner · · Score: 1
      When you go see Star Wars Episode 2: try and see if you are capable of yelling "Fire". No magic goverment forces are stopping you, the only thing truly stopping you is your own moral fiber, or a fear of the consequences.

    11. Re:things to consider? by tps12 · · Score: 1
      For example, do you think Fort Knox is secure? Could it keep out the Chinese Army if they invaded?...No, sorry, I'd prefer to be in charge of my own security, and lot leave it up to an inefficient government.

      So, you could keep the Chinese Army out of Fort Knox? The government may not be perfect, but they get the job done more often than not.

      --

      Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
    12. Re:things to consider? by NumberSyx · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No amount of liberty to give up is ever worth a false sense of security.

      Typical knee-jerk conservative response. Did you ever consider the following: No amount of security to give up is ever worth a false sense of liberty. It goes both ways.

      Think about it.

      Yes it does go both ways, in one version you have freedom and minimal security and in the other you have no freedom and minimal security. The problem is, when our liberty goes away, Osama Bin Laden will not be the biggest threat to our well being, it will be our own government. If you think the US government is above oppression of its people, I suggest you read some history, check out some books on how the government, in the name of security, treated the American Indians in the late 19th and early 20th century. While you are at it, read up on the fate of Japanese Americans during WWII and lets not forget the actions J. Edgar Hoover and Joseph MaCarthy. In all of these cases, freedom and liberty were taken away from American Citizens for a net gain of ZERO in security.

      The Founding Fathers did not trust the government and neither should you.

      --

      "Our products just aren't engineered for security,"
      -Brian Valentine,VP in charge of MS Windows Development

    13. Re:things to consider? by smagruder · · Score: 2

      The thing is, Libertarians, if they were honest, wouldn't actually want the world they would get if their desires were met.

      I prefer using the tools of democracy to find a common-sense balance between security and liberty.

      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    14. Re:things to consider? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And where do you think those consequences came from, jackass?

    15. Re:things to consider? by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      > Worse, just when you might have thought you were all alone with your extreme views, the Internet puts you together with a community of people from around the world who hate all the things and people you do. And you can scrap the BBC and just get your news from those Web sites that reinforce your own stereotypes.

      Cool! He's discovered Slashdot!

    16. Re:things to consider? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ohhh NOOOOOOOOOO!!!! Not the scary fundamentalists!!!!

      What is this, America (apologies to all non-Americans out there)? What do they think they deserve, religious freedom or something?

      Talk about hatred and misunderstanding....

    17. Re:things to consider? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the real concern of such people is that ordinary people who are uncomfortable with official dogma such as multiculturalism may find that most of those who feel the same way are not actually crazy neo-Nazi skinheads who hate anyone who looks different to them and go round blowing things up (per the media stereotype), but simply ordinary people too.

      The media have for a long time been able to subvert certain policies by associating them with unpleasant extremists, but this can only work as long as information is tightly controlled by the state and cooperative media firms; a situation which the Internet is rapidly eroding.

    18. Re:things to consider? by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      from societal constraints. the same place where the desire to believe unfounded rumors comes from. So you fit in with the crowd.

    19. Re:things to consider? by ekephart · · Score: 1

      So, you could keep the Chinese Army out of Fort Knox?

      That's not what I think the poster was saying.

      For example, do you think Fort Knox is secure? Could it keep out the Chinese Army if they invaded?

      This means that NO ONE could keep the Chinese Army out if it invaded. The point is that ironclad security is merely a pipedream. Guns could be illegal in some nation, but does that mean that a truly motivated individual or group of individuals couldn't obtain them and use them to the demise of others?

      If yelling "fire" in a theatre wasn't illegal then what person would actually use the legality of it as an excuse to yell "fire" in a theatre? And what is the difference? How and why do we need laws to knock some sense into people that would otherwise be blind to the fact that yelling "fire" would be stupid and endager people? It might be because some people act on a perceived social contract and utilitarian principles and others act on consequences alone.

      --
      sig
    20. Re:things to consider? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell yeah! Though technicaly, you should have linked to the libertarian part website. Here it is.

      And for those who care to, please /. <a href="http://flame.dnsart.com/">my website.</a>

      I thank you for your time, and your web traffic.

    21. Re:things to consider? by MoneyT · · Score: 2

      The problem is people don't realize that the internet isn't any different than the real world. Everyone who talks about cyber stalkers, people coning and stealing and people otherwise being evil online have forgoten the rules of the real world. Just as you wouldn't let your kid wander randomly through the streets talking to strangers and you wouldn't give some one your creditcard number on a whim, so the rules of life apply to the net. The internet is the real world reflected back at us without the safety bubble we put ourselves in everyday. No amout of law or legislation can really cange that.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    22. Re:things to consider? by anonymous_wombat · · Score: 1
      I don't think that the articles were meant to be a simplistic all-or-nothing debate about freedom of information. The simple fact is that as long as most of the people in the world are poor and ignorant, the Internet is not going to be a positive force in their lives. Pointing out the dark side of the Internet would not lead any reasonable person to try to outlaw it.

      There is an information divide in the world, and it is in the interests of all of us to try to find a way to cross it. This is not a matter of liberal do-gooding, it is a matter of survival.

    23. Re:things to consider? by slicer622 · · Score: 1

      That's because the Founding Father's had an overly authoritative monarchy to deal with. We have a free society, obscenely free actually. What rational person would protect someone's undeniable constitutional right to dress twenty year old women as children and then photograph them stripping? This country was founded when freedom was in short supply, now its a little too widespread, and we need to rein it in if we want a society that's acceptable for our children. I agree with what the foreigners are saying. We have a very dangerous, disturbing culture, and its our obsession with freedom that has enabled it to form.

    24. Re:things to consider? by NumberSyx · · Score: 2

      You make freedom sound like a bad thing. Let me ask you this, what freedoms are you willing to give up ? Owning a gun ? Free movement outside your resident State ? Privacy ? Fair Trial ? Are you truly willing to throw the contitution away ? If you want to give up your rights and freedoms, that is fine by me, but don't drag the rest of us down with you. I am personally not willing to give up any rights or liberites, not in the name of "Security" and not "For The Children".

      --

      "Our products just aren't engineered for security,"
      -Brian Valentine,VP in charge of MS Windows Development

    25. Re:things to consider? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I think you mix up freedom of the market and freedom of the individual. Humiliation and oppretion of women has nothing to do with freedom.

      And how free are we really? How free is the press for instance. Sure anyone can start up a newspaper without being thrown to jail, but who could really do it? Newspapers needs ads and if you criticize the big companies, who'd put in ads? Same goes for the government, you'd never get any info from them if you wrote what they didn't wanted you to write.

      So sure, there is freedom to have a gun, freedom of speach and so forth but just as long as you speak of what's on the agenda. If you want to speak up about what we do around the world none would write about it. Aren't we bigger terrorists than most other organizations? At least we've killed more than even the nazis!

    26. Re:things to consider? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what of the dark side, the cloud of the silver lining, the other side of the proverbial coin? The fact is, the Internet is an aid to terrorists, drug addicts, child molesters, and

      You forgott the worst dude, George W Bush, or was he in terrorists and fundamentalists?

  4. Maybe this is pointless by Yohahn · · Score: 2

    Maybe this is pointless, but I wonder if it's possible to have positive thread about this.

    I'll ask the question, and see if anybody replys.

    How can this be fixed? What can we do about it?

    1. Re:Maybe this is pointless by Interfacer · · Score: 1

      We can learn to try to see things from the other persons point of view. for instance if i try to utter some valid criticism about linux to my brother i will get flamed no matter what i say. he doesn't even want to hear what i have to say because the great linus is infallible in his eyes. i imagine it is the same when someone tells sharon and arafat that is would be great if they would jsut stop killing each other. always think, then act, and don't be afraid to admit error.

    2. Re:Maybe this is pointless by hagardtroll · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The only solutions to problems caused by free speech is more free speech. A little education and critical thinking can go a long way to dispell the crap that goes across the wire (or airwaves.)

      Don't just listen to what is said, learn about who is doing the saying. If you know the motivation of who is doing the communicating then you can go a long ways towards determining its value.

      How many people believe the car salesman when he tells you "This creampuff was only driven to church on sundays by a little old lady..." Look at the odometer, check the tires and check the engine. On every story you read and every comment you hear.

    3. Re:Maybe this is pointless by mochan_s · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, of course. It must be that Internet is "Fueling Hatred and Misunderstanding" because it says so on slashdot and hence, everything on the internet (and slashdot) must be true.

      Without a proper scientific study to back it up, it is pointless to even start a debate, this is just bad journalism. Take some inflmatory example and extrapolate it to every internet user and with a few logical leaps, voila, the internet is "Fueling Hatred and Misunderstanding". Jeez.

    4. Re:Maybe this is pointless by AppyPappy · · Score: 2

      Sometimes the cure is worse than the disease. As with everything in life, there is good with the bad.

      --

      If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem

    5. Re:Maybe this is pointless by Rolo+Tomasi · · Score: 1

      Kill everyone who disagrees.

      --
      Did you know you can fertilize your lawn with used motor oil?
    6. Re:Maybe this is pointless by CynicTheHedgehog · · Score: 2

      I think it will fix itself, in time. Really we've only been dealing with this for the last 10 years, which isn't that long. Sure, today's adults will take offense to just about every dissenting view on the internet, but their children will spend their whole lives amidst dissenting views and grow accustomed to the fact that not everyone has the same opinion. I think in this respect technology and integration is a good thing. We just have to phase out conservative, myopic viewpoints and usher in a new era of peace and understanding.

      That may sound like sugar-coated crap, but I've already seen evidence of this on IRC. Virtually nobody has the same ideas about anything, so in order to have any kind of meaningful interaction you pretty much have to compromise. At times it's a bit harsh, but overall it seems positive.

    7. Re:Maybe this is pointless by fabjep · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The essential problem with most arguments of this sort, is that they treat every new form of media as if it is an entirely unique phenomenon rather than seeing it simply another method of communication. Certainly, the internet has enough unique properties that it deserves particular consideration. But, when it really comes down to it, people have been lying and believing lies just as wildly and destructively for much longer than the internet has been around. TV and radio constantly broadcast partial truths, complete fictions, and truths expressed with bent language for decades. Some people believe everything TV, radio, newspapers, tabloids, etc. say already. Others are more selective. Just as we've learned to tune the signal from the noise with other media, we will adapt to the internet. When those with little technological experience begin to understand a little bit of the workings, they'll have as little faith in the validity of random online material as we do.

      --
      - learn mathematics - shoot dope -
    8. Re:Maybe this is pointless by smagruder · · Score: 2

      I say something similar about democracy:

      Here's the simple recipe for fixing democracy's problems: Add more democracy.
      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    9. Re:Maybe this is pointless by Stonehand · · Score: 2

      To cure a disease, you can...

      a) Wait it out, if it's the sort that goes away before doing permanent damage.
      b) Destroy the contagion within the host, if you can get to it without killing the host.
      c) Kill all the hosts.

      The contagion is misinformation. The carriers are people and their media sources. Take your pick of options.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    10. Re:Maybe this is pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, yeah, while most adults these days will be offended by pretty much anything, in the US they not only get offended, they also believe there oughta be a law against that.

    11. Re:Maybe this is pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only solutions to problems caused by free speech is more free speech.

      No you fool the only solution is to shut down the internet.

    12. Re:Maybe this is pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two possibilities:
      1. Hack every extremist site you can find. Replace all content with an audio loop of Elvis Costello's "What's So Funny (about peace, love and understanding)?". This won't do a lot to reduce the availability of hate on the web, but hopefully, those sites will retaliate by hacking an enemy extremist site, who will retaliate in turn and the whole thing will snowball until threre are no hate sites left.

      2. Improve your own knowledge and wisdom. Don't take everything you read on cnn.com (or nytimes.com) as gospel. Read sources and sites you agree with, but also sites you disagree with. Don't just absorb information. Use your own built-in bullshit filter. Consider the source. Trust information that goes against their prejudices more than claims that support it. Don't accept easy answers. Chances are, all the problems in the world are NOT caused by the Jews, the Muslims, the Fascists or the Communists.

    13. Re:Maybe this is pointless by jafac · · Score: 2

      How can this be fixed? What can we do about it?

      kill them all.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    14. Re:Maybe this is pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's silly putting down an article just because it has no scientific study to back up what is being said. It's like telling people with degenerative diseases that you shouldn't try some herbal supplement which has proved effective for thousands of people because it hasn't been scientifically proven. Both articles simply state the obvious. If uneducated people have access to television (or the Internet) and see something out of context,they may get the wrong idea and make choices that are not founded on the truth.Such people may be prone to extremism. It's not rocket science. You must know that you can't believe everything you read on the Internet.The examples are endless. Don't you watch TV or use the Internet yourself? Geez Louise!

    15. Re:Maybe this is pointless by mochan_s · · Score: 1

      What? Someone makes a bold characterization about the internet and has no scientific (or statistical evidence) to back it up, and you see a point in it. If I know 2 people who only use the internet to download porn, does that mean the internet is used only for downloading porn? This article is almost on that level of stupidity but with better sentence structure.

      Quote, "both articles simply state the obvious". "This is obvious" is the most notorious way of making logical jumps. I think you're making one right there. It is not obvious to me. You are saying uneducated people are more likely to get wrong ideas and follow up on them? You are saying uneducated people are prone to extremism and only poor people. I think we know a lot of well-educated extremists.

      Quote "You must know that you can't believe everything you read on the Internet." I think you need the sarcasm plugin to properly decode that part of my post.

  5. Speaking of idiocy... by mccalli · · Score: 2
    From the article:
    "They say, `He got it from the Internet.' They think it's the Bible."

    Or perhaps they even thought it was Koran? After all, Muslims don't put too much faith in the Bible...

    Cheers,
    Ian

    1. Re:Speaking of idiocy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >After all, Muslims don't put too much faith in the Bible...

      Are you sure ? I though Islam was also an Abrahamic religion, therefore having lots of respect for those old books... In fact, I think Islam is closer to Christianism than Judaism, because it acknowledges that Jesus was a prophet sent by God, while Judaism seems to steer clear of this matter...

    2. Re:Speaking of idiocy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think he meant they actually thought it was *THE* Bible, but rather the Holy Grail. No, no, not *THE* Holy Grail, but rather the Ark of the Covenenant. No, no, not *THE* Ark.... err, well, you see what I'm saying. It was an illustration of how important it was to them, not an actual statement of fact. To the average person reading this, the Bible would make sense in this context (important, holy book), where as Koran is less known to them.

    3. Re:Speaking of idiocy... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 2

      I though Islam was also an Abrahamic religion, therefore having lots of respect for those old books

      Yes, the Koran has specific passages saying to respect Jews, Christians, and other 'people of the book.' It's something that some Palestinians seem to have forgotten.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    4. Re:Speaking of idiocy... by mccalli · · Score: 2
      I don't think he meant they actually thought it was *THE* Bible...[i]t was an illustration of how important it was to them, not an actual statement of fact.

      I agree that was the intent. I just thought it was from the same school of diplomacy that had Bush standing stating that he was enlist help from Arabs nations to go on a crusade. A Crusade eh? And err, you'd like some help from the Arabs you say? Hmm...

      Cheers,
      Ian

    5. Re:Speaking of idiocy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      thomas l. friedman is little more than a bootlicking warmongering hack. he has called for ethnic cleansing and vengeful bloodbaths on several occasions, and he is rewarded with pullitzers (see article here).

      please.

      personnally i'd be more concerned about all the people treating the new york times like the bible (and friedman as the high priest at the altar of "freedom"). they do the world a lot more damage.

    6. Re:Speaking of idiocy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for the link ac. I too found his essay very biased, and it was worth being reminded about Freidman's facist views.

    7. Re:Speaking of idiocy... by jafac · · Score: 2

      No - they haven't forgotten it. In fact, the ones who seem to hate the Jews the most have learned to fully memorized verse by verse the entire Koran.

      It's a simple logical twist that allows them to hate the people the Koran commands them to love and respect. They're freely allowed and encouraged to hate the Zionists, because the Zionists are supposedly out to steal their homeland and destroy all arabs. Since all Americans and Jews are Zionists, it makes it a simple thing to hate them.

      I once sat on a 12 hour plane trip next to a Palestinian-American. He talked my ear off about how they don't hate Americans, they don't hate Jews, they don't want to kill all the Jews. They just hate the Zionists. Find a Jew that's not a Zionist in their eyes.
      I learned many, many things about the Arab/Muslim "viewpoint" on that plane trip. All of them, quite frightening.

      Of course I would be guilty of the same thing if I submitted this post without stating the obvious disclaimer; hopefully, not all Palestinians/Arabs/Muslims feel or think this way. Apparently, only the ones in positions of power, or with bombs feel this way.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  6. Hatred and Misunderstanding... by n4zgl · · Score: 0
    sniff

    hatred and misunderstanding? Mingled with some Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt? Is that Microsoft you're wearing?

  7. what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what is the internet?

    1. Re:what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hear they have the internet on computers now.

  8. Though this is old news... by ObviousGuy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is no secret that groups that have increased contact with another group will find something to complain about. Romantic thoughts about a group are certain to be dashed with closer contact. Those ideals are likely to be supplanted by the worst stereotypes that the other group falls into.

    In the South Central L.A. neighborhood, blacks who have no historical animosity about Koreans find themselves filled with anger at the stingy, disrespectful store-owners. The Korean store-owners, in their own right, harbor fears of the dangerous, thieving blacks. The result of this animosity was displayed during the Rodney King riots where blacks looted Korean stores with a vengeance and Korean store-owners shot back from the roofs of their stores.

    Right or wrong, these stereotypes arose out of *increased* exposure.

    --
    I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
    1. Re:Though this is old news... by swankypimp · · Score: 1
      It is no secret that groups that have increased contact with another group will find something to complain about.

      This reminds me of an article on group identity I read a while back. It argued that there isn't much antisemitism in South America, Australia, East Asia, etc. because people in those areas don't interact with Jews on a day-to-day basis. However in places like Europe or New York ("Hymietown" to quote the esteemed Jesse Jackson), people blame normal human failings- and their own misfortunes- on the visible minority: that Goldstein guy I sit by in class is rude to me because all Jews are snobs (not because he's simply a jerkwad), I lost the business account to Levinson firm because those people are shrewd (not because I did a poor job), etc.

      Somewhat obvious, of course (Newsflash: people blame others for their misfortunes to make themselves feel better), but I thought it was interesting.

      --

      --All your stolen base are belong to Rickey Henderson
    2. Re:Though this is old news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "blacks...find themselves filled with anger at the stingy, disrespectful store-owners."

      Okay...

      "The Korean store-owners, in their own right, harbor fears of the dangerous, thieving blacks."

      harbor FEARS eh?

      "The result of this animosity was displayed during the Rodney King riots where blacks looted Korean stores with a vengeance and Korean store-owners shot back from the roofs of their stores."

      Hmmm...seems the fears were well founded...
      I doubt the animosity caused them to act this way.
      More like their action CAUSED the animosity.

      "Right or wrong, these stereotypes arose out of *increased* exposure"

      Uhhh...is it a stereotype or just experiance..?
      Seems to be the latter

    3. Re:Though this is old news... by shilly · · Score: 1

      A lovely old theory that does bugger all to explain the prevalence of antisemitism in Japanese society (where there have been historically very few Jews), in many parts of Eastern Europe where there are virtually no Jews left due to the Holocaust, and large chunks of the Arab world, where Jews also don't live. The origins and causes of antisemitism are manifold.

    4. Re:Though this is old news... by electroniceric · · Score: 2
      The example is a good one to discuss, but I'm not sure I agree with you that increased exposure caused those stereotypes to exist.

      I think a good way to encapsulate what Friedman is on about is that someone who knows a little is much more dangerous than someone who knows nothing.

      The Korean-African-American animosity is pretty well explained as a case of people not really understanding each other, but where those people now have the strain of sharing a neighborhood. And it's sad but true that you can live right across the street from someone and not know a thing about that person, and remain suspicious of them for an entire lifetime. "Exposure" as you define it doesn't fix this. The kind of exposure that involves getting to know people's point of view does.

      That said, it's hard work getting along with your family, your girlfriend (boyfriend), your neighbors, and your countrymen. Just like it takes a lot of effort to understand why your friend gets upset when you make certain jokes, and still more to remember not do it so as not to offend (and likewise for your friend to put up with it when you do do it), it takes effort for anyone to tolerate anyone else. It seems ridiculous in retrospect to have expected that just because people could check out my bio page that they'd be able to get along with me any better.

      And that's not even a little beachhead against this "technology will promote understanding" infomercial we've lived for the past 5 years. For all of its "rich multimedia content", a 30 min IM session conveys less than 4 minutes of face to face conversation. We seem to think that we can keep doing exactly what we do now, and click through to the story about our neighbors every so often, and we'll all just be subsumed by grace and tolerance. I'm no fortuneteller, but I'd call that pretty unlikely.

    5. Re:Though this is old news... by Gaijin42 · · Score: 2

      I have never noticed any significant anti-semitism from Japanese people, although they are much more xenophobic than most groups I have interacted with.

      If there is some legitimate increased anti-semitism in Japan, it may be due to Japan's Axis status in WWII. Japan and Germany collaborated quite a bit on their propaganda, with some German propaganda refering to the Japanese as their Asian Aryan Brothers. It is concievable that the Japanese propaganda machine picked up on some of the Anti semitical propaganda of their allies.

      A simmilar situation is developing now with "La Raza", a group of people who want to cecede quite a bit of the southwest and form a new country for all the hispanics. Their real goal (hispanic unity and cecession) aside, they are politically allied with the palestine liberation movments and other arab groups. As a result, their website echos the anti-jewish rhetoric of their allies, even though the people in question have no real interaction (more than anyone else in the US) with jews.

    6. Re:Though this is old news... by Gaijin42 · · Score: 2

      One note, I may have over generalized.

      "La Raza" is the collective group taken by some hispanic americans. The viewpoint I presented above is almost guaranteed NOT to be the viewpoint of all hispanic americans, and perhaps is the viewpoint of only a small vocal minority of hispanic americans.

      The seperatist movment is the Aztlan movement, and their propaganda rich site can be found at http://aztlan.net

    7. Re:Though this is old news... by shilly · · Score: 1

      It's there and it's relatively significant. Do a google...

      As for the thrust of your post, you seem to be supporting what I said: that antisemitism has many causes, one of which you've elaborated.

    8. Re:Though this is old news... by danro · · Score: 2

      Uhhh...is it a stereotype or just experiance..?

      If you don't know someone personally, or at least by references fro others about this specific person. Then everything you think you know about that person is streotypes and prejudice.
      We all have them, all of us.
      Just deal with it!
      But it's a bit easier if one is aware of them, becasue a lot of the time they are oh-so-wrong, both positive and negative stereotypes.

      --

      "First lesson," Jon said. "Stick them with the pointy end."
    9. Re:Though this is old news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not the parent to your comment, but come on, when someone is looting your store, you don't have to "know them personally" to decide that action against them is necessary.

      To equate looting and self-defense is ridiculous to the extreme.

    10. Re:Though this is old news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jews are the only people who refuse to integrate with other races. They think they are God's chosen people, and everyone else is shit. Gee whiz, now I wonder why everyone hates them? Jews are the biggest racists in the world today.

    11. Re:Though this is old news... by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      You think the anti semitism in arab countries has anything to do with jews occupying arabs, killing arabs, torturing arabs, imprisoning arabs, denying arabs basic human rights etc?

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    12. Re:Though this is old news... by shilly · · Score: 1

      Possibly. But not solely. Plenty of homegrown reasons as well, such as political impotence, scapegoating, the rise of fundamentalism, poverty, propaganda etc etc.

    13. Re:Though this is old news... by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      Oh yes those things are much more important then being occupied and tortured.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    14. Re:Though this is old news... by shilly · · Score: 1

      Those reasons might be more important to Palestinians, but frankly, Saudis are a lot more worried about being tortured by their own government than the Israelis...

  9. FOX the US ambassador??? by kryonD · · Score: 1

    No wonder the whole world hates us...

    -----

    --
    I've dirtied my hands writing poetry, for the sake of seduction; that is, for the sake of a useful cause. --Dostoevsky
    1. Re:FOX the US ambassador??? by AppyPappy · · Score: 2

      If the whole world hated us, they wouldn't be dying to get here.

      --

      If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem

    2. Re:FOX the US ambassador??? by bmf033069 · · Score: 1

      Fox News: "We decide, you report"

      There is so much bias on this so called "news" channel it is unbelievable. The people that they have as callers are merely regurgitating exactly what they are told.

      Guide for News Programs:
      1. Journalists are not news sources. They are not a credible source of any factual information and are no different than anyone walking the street, except they have a camera / mic in front of them. These people have no particular credibility on most subjects and the average /.'er could be just as valid.

      2. Callers are not news sources. This is a classical advertising scheme where you can pitch a product based on the endorsement of people that are similar to the target audience. "If Bob from Iowa thinks that way, then it must be true".

      3. If you need to have a guest on so that you can debate "both sides", you are biased. Too many of these shows don't need two guests on each side of an issue because the commentator already represents the other.

      4. ....

    3. Re:FOX the US ambassador??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Our slavemasters just pay a little better than other slavemasters. Eat shit and die, you flag-waving retard.

    4. Re:FOX the US ambassador??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      communist, piece of shit. go watch the Communist News Channel (CNN), or any of the 3 networks.

    5. Re:FOX the US ambassador??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suppose youre saying cnn is innocent of the same thing

  10. Any got a cached copy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was really interested by this but after 6 posts it was /.'d
    Anyone got a cached copy we can see ?

  11. Filter by plarsen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "the Internet, at its ugliest, is just an open sewer: an electronic conduit for untreated, unfiltered information."

    Since most I know I've learned from Internet, my brain must be full off unfiltered intelligence :).

    But seriously, I think that has a positive sideeffect, because you have to develope your own filter, which isn't even close to standard (Radio, Television) filters.
    1. Re:Filter by sckeener · · Score: 1

      But seriously, I think that has a positive sideeffect, because you have to develope your own filter, which isn't even close to standard (Radio, Television) filters.

      True, but I don't think it'll be a personal filter. Political bodies (government, religious, or bussiness)don't want unfiltered access to information. They want us to have to turn to them for our information.

      I see the day (or nightmare) were each group creates a skin for their environment. Of course there'll be ways around the skins, but that would be unchristian, or unAmerican, or some other un. If caught getting around the filter, you'll have to do some kind of time for the crime...

      Mean while, those who have unrestricted access won't understand why " 600 Nigerians have been killed " is being ignored. They were muslims and your nice christian skin won't let you know about it....or it was an industrial accident and the company skin wants to keep it a secret....

      Welcome to Cyberpunk

      --
      "Only one thing, is impossible for god: to find any sense in any copyright law on the planet." Mark Twain
    2. Re:Filter by rpg25 · · Score: 1

      But where are internet consumers going to learn to develop these filters?

      And what happens if those filters are simply "this is (is not) in agreement with [insert dogma here]?"

      I'm sorry, but this doesn't look like much of a silver lining to me.

      I remember reading in the Wall Street Journal an interview with a madrassah student who asserted proudly that dinosaurs were real, created by Jews and Americans to kill the faithful. How's that for a filter?

  12. blah by alexc · · Score: 1

    if it is on the internet it has to be true.

  13. Babel fish from HHGTTG by mccalli · · Score: 5, Interesting
    From Douglas Adams on the universally translating Babel fish:
    "...the poor Babel fish, by effectively removing the barriers to communication between all civilizations, has caused more and bloodier wars than anything else in the history of the galaxy."

    From the article:
    "...integration, at this stage, is producing more anger than anything else."

    Hmm...

    Cheers,
    Ian

    1. Re:Babel fish from HHGTTG by larien · · Score: 2

      And in that link, you've pointed out what was so funny about that comment by Douglas Adams; it's immensly believable. The absurd can be funny, but when you add a hint of realism to the absurd, it's far better.

    2. Re:Babel fish from HHGTTG by crumbz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Good one Ian! I think Douglas Adams had a tremendous sense of both human nature and the absurdity of life.

    3. Re:Babel fish from HHGTTG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I may be remembering wrong, but wasn't the babel fish used as proof of God's existance, therefore precluding faith, and without faith God is nothing; Therefore, by his own argument God proved that he did not exist.

      Please ignore the mad man in the corner....

  14. Duh... by groupthink · · Score: 1
    ...the Internet, at its ugliest, is just an open sewer...

    Yeah, and to just name a few: MPAA, RIAA, and WIPO.

    1. Re:Duh... by cdupree · · Score: 1

      To name one more: anything written by Thomas Friedman, who would really have been happier at Pravda, where he could openly claim the title he has to hide in this country, Mouthpiece of the Government..

  15. It's not the Internet by paranoid.android · · Score: 2

    It's human nature. People believe what they want to believe, especially if they feel threatened or marginalized. As the author alluded to, the Internet is just a more efficient conduit for pure garbage.

    And, unfortunately in this case, we can't fight fire with fire. Spreading the "truth" will not convince the "believers," in fact it may make them even more incensed.

    1. Re:It's not the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technology is breaking down the walls as well as the way we communicate and live. People are beginning to question why are we doing things is their not a better way. Governments are now fighting to hold onto their monopoly trying to contol communication and free speech. They will use the ruse that its a big bad world let us protect you so that we can continue to tax you so we can continue to hold power over you. Third world countries feel like Linux often treat their people better but the Big Countries insert Micrsoft keep doing everything in their power to keep them down. The internet is a highway that connects us all but there are hucksters like your Government and Microsoft who want to own the highway force you to pay a bounty to them. Insert .Net a system that allows these hucksters to track you and extort money out of you, one huge fucking database that records everything you do, the books you read, and the thoughts you think. Bill Gates is the Devil and .Net is the BEAST. Go ahead laugh but think about it if you do not have a number well then we cannot help you so accept the number because we control you. Yes people will no put up with this shit and will revolt. Revolution is good if it results in positive change just ask the founding fathers like Washington, Franklin, Jefferson, Adams ect...

  16. Fueling hatred and understanding. by marlowe · · Score: 1

    Sometimes familiarity breeds contempt. But if you know nothing about other cultures, you can easily project onto them any sugarcoated fantasy that suits you. Tolerance is easy when there's nobody bothering you.

    The Internet brings people together who are best kept separated.

    --
    http://www.angelfire.com/ca3/marlowe Better a smartass than a dumbass.
    1. Re:Fueling hatred and understanding. by ObviousGuy · · Score: 1

      Interesting. Ever read D'Souza?

      --
      I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
    2. Re:Fueling hatred and understanding. by sisukapalli1 · · Score: 1


      Tolerance is easy when there's nobody bothering you.
      ...
      The Internet brings people together who are best kept separated.


      I think the process of change (with so much communication) is going to be painful, but eventually it will be for the ultimate good. There will always be cases of media exploiting sensationalism and stereotypes. As people mix more, there will eventually be less stark stereotypes.

      Meanwhile, we will keep getting articles like this posted on slashdot. There was one recently (about three weeks ago) about intolerance because of excessive media coverage (paraphrasing).

      S

  17. Allow more anonymous posting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If he thought the internet was a sewer now.. Allow more anonymous posting,.. Then watch the sh*t FLOW!!!

    :P

  18. The importance of speaking your mind by goingware · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I believe the best treatment for hate speech (on the Internet or otherwise) is more speech. Here's a couple of pieces, one that I wrote, the other a quote of a speech made 102 years ago that's as valid today as the day it was written:

    --
    -- Could you use my software consulting serv
  19. Americans and there "Freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You guys are saying 'i like my freedom, but not if it comes at a cost" well listen to yourself you moron. You are a typical american who is always willing to trade away some basic human rights for the illusion of saftey. Terrorists use the internet, or snail mail.. It doesn't matter .. its not hard for people to communicate. Government cant regulate the internet as it is in many countries, not just the us... that's all for now...

    1. Re:Americans and there "Freedom" by Batou · · Score: 1

      Can someone please explain to me how the above post is "insightful"? Well, perhaps how this is even on-topic?

      "You are a typical american ..."

      I think that about sums up what the author was trying to illustrate - whoever you are, you've just marginalized the entire American populance based on whatever was perceived from whatever media sources you've been exposed to. How do you presume to know how I think? Because I live in the US? I must obviously be some obese Anglo-Christian gun-toting sloth bent on world domination, right? And of course, I ALWAYS agree with the actions my government takes on my behalf around the world.

      Maybe you should read the article. I think it might do you some good.

      --
      "Oh my God! The dead have risen! And they're voting Republican!" - Bart Simpson
  20. So perfect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    the Internet, at its ugliest, is just an open sewer: an electronic conduit for untreated, unfiltered information.


    I bet he's really talking about slashdot here. THis is the best description of it yet.

  21. Does he preffer it filtered, a.k.a. censored? by Performer+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "untreated, unfiltered information"? Shock horror, maybe he'd preffer that The New York Times gets to filter our information for us? This is the biggest sin of liberal mouth pieces like the NYT, ommission. Read that paper and there's stuff you'll just never hear about, points of view they don't want you to hear.

    1. Re:Does he preffer it filtered, a.k.a. censored? by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 2

      "untreated, unfiltered information"? Shock horror, maybe he'd preffer that The New York Times gets to filter our information for us?

      Did you read the whole paragraph? Let me quote it.

      At its best, the Internet can educate more people faster than any media tool we've ever had. At its worst, it can make people dumber faster than any media tool we've ever had. The lie that 4,000 Jews were warned not to go into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11 was spread entirely over the Internet and is now thoroughly believed in the Muslim world. Because the Internet has an aura of "technology" surrounding it, the uneducated believe information from it even more. They don't realize that the Internet, at its ugliest, is just an open sewer: an electronic conduit for untreated, unfiltered information.

      This is the biggest sin of liberal mouth pieces like the NYT, ommission.

      Try putting someone's quote in context before you rant about how idiotic it is (without even backing up your statements). And try not criticising someone else for something while you're doing it yourself.

      Read that paper and there's stuff you'll just never hear about, points of view they don't want you to hear.

      Get your opinions from slashdot and short snippets of the article surrounded by rhetorical spin which completely ignores the intent of the snippet.

      Does that mean slashdot is bad? Not really. But it does tend to solidify the ignorant opinions of some of the people who read it and don't think for themselves.

      If you still decide you want "untreated, unfiltered information," try reading slashdot at -1 some time. Then come back to me.

    2. Re:Does he preffer it filtered, a.k.a. censored? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Newspapers are a weird mix of advertising and newsstand revenue - for many publishers journalism is secondary to getting advertising dollars or sales income. The web is a challenge to this old schol of journalism. Sure, some of it sucks. Some websites are very good, far more in depth and specialised than the NYT ever was.

    3. Re:Does he preffer it filtered, a.k.a. censored? by Performer+Guy · · Score: 2

      You obviously missed the part where he couldn't resist tarring Fox news with the same brush. You have heard of the NYT haven't you? The whole article backs up my statement you idiot. It is in context or did the opinion passed of as the comments of someone els totally escape you. Why don't you exercise some critical judgement next time instead of plucking out the snippets you like to read in an article.

      And I don't get my opinions from slashdot you patronizing dumb ass.

    4. Re:Does he preffer it filtered, a.k.a. censored? by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      And I don't get my opinions from slashdot you patronizing dumb ass.

      Wherever you do get them from, I think you should find a better source.

    5. Re:Does he preffer it filtered, a.k.a. censored? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ooh yeah, feel the understanding and critical thought occuring in THIS thread.

      HAHA you doomed apes.

    6. Re:Does he preffer it filtered, a.k.a. censored? by Performer+Guy · · Score: 2

      And your contribution is better how?

    7. Re:Does he preffer it filtered, a.k.a. censored? by Performer+Guy · · Score: 2

      Oh, I see you disagree with me so I should go find a better source for my opinion?

      I form my opinion from my life experience and varied information and sources. I don't need someone to tell me what my opinion is and because it doesn't conform to your narrow view of the world doesn't mean I should therefore go and find someone to tell me what to think.

    8. Re:Does he preffer it filtered, a.k.a. censored? by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      Oh, I see you disagree with me so I should go find a better source for my opinion?

      No, you call me an idiot and a dumb ass, so I don't give you the courtesy of a meaningful response.

    9. Re:Does he preffer it filtered, a.k.a. censored? by Performer+Guy · · Score: 2

      I'm glad we agree none of your responses have been meaningful. You think you can run around insulting people with impunity then sulk when you receive similar treatment. If you can't stand the heat stay out of the kitchen.

    10. Re:Does he preffer it filtered, a.k.a. censored? by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have Score:2 attached to it.

  22. Unfiltered :) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's what makes the free world beautiful, doesn't it :) Bask in the glory of total free speech.

  23. technology influence by z_gringo · · Score: 1

    ''They are galvanized by the images that they see on television. They want to be like the rock-throwers.''

    Why? What is it that makes someone want to throw rocks at TANKS or people with Machine Guns? It can't be technology.

    The article reads as a case of misplaced blame. I think that the technology actually does the opposite of what this article is saying. The chinese people fighting against their oppressive goverment is a good example of this.

    It's like blaming the music someone listens to for their actions. Like Chris Rock said. "Who cares what they were listening to? Why can't they just be crazy?"

    --
    -- -- Warning. Do not stare directly at the sun.
    1. Re:technology influence by ObviousGuy · · Score: 1

      Not to denigrate your point, but perhaps there are better luminaries to quote from than Chris Rock.

      --
      I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
    2. Re:technology influence by Stonehand · · Score: 2

      It can be technology, when the technology is used to spread rumors. Quite a few Arabs, for instance, believe that the 11-Sep incident was the result of a worldwide Jewish plot to frame the Arabs, and that bin Laden was perfectly innocent. Oh, and that Jews run the banks, and the media, and control the US Government, and eat children for religious rituals, and create chewing gum that drives Arab women horny but infertile, and so forth.

      And no, I'm not even making up the "chewing gum" myth, bizarre as it is. Do a google search; there was a Washingon Post article on it once, for instance.

      Hell, the Saudi government is basically pro-martyr. The Saudi ambassador to the UK even wrote a poem praising them, and one in particular, writing that "the gates of heaven were open to her", IIRC. And, like the Iraqis, they fund terrorists' next-of-kin these days, on the excuse that they're suffering and possibly didn't know what their family members were going to do. Short take? In the long run, they're more dangerous than the Iraqis, because they've got more oil, more friends, more money, and more religious fanaticism than the Iraqis; plus they're fully aware that short of their invading a neighbor or proof of Saudi gov't support in a major terrorist attack against the US, that the US has little excuse to strike out at them.

      It's not surprising, then, that people who listen to those ideas hate the Israelis, whom they see as controlling the world, and therefore the source of all their problems, and therefore the people to blame when anything remotely bad happens.

      Of course, throwing rocks at a tank is pretty stupid, unless those rocks are seriously wired with shaped charges or it's merely a distraction so the tank commander doesn't notice the RPG being aimed in his direction. It's probably not the geniuses that openly riot in the streets...

      (Likewise, the Falun Gong protesters are just being imbeciles. What, they think that the PRC government is just going to give up and go away, or that the Western powers or Russia will forgo the theoretically huge, if remarkably capricious and corrupt, market there and pressure the PRC on the behalf of what's basically a occultist cult? If you're going to fight a dictatorship, fight -- waving signs and staging sit-ins probably won't help.)

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    3. Re:technology influence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Care to justify this comment? Chris Rock can be pretty damned insightful, at times.

  24. THIS IS NOT A BAD THING! by takochan · · Score: 3, Insightful


    I am not convinced that the point (internet decreases tolerance)
    made in the article is a bad one.

    To take the case in point made in the article (Israel -vs-
    Palestinians). Before the internet, there was only one side
    of that story that most Americans would ever see, the one we would
    get on CNN and the big papers.

    But now though, with the magic of the internet, it is as easy as
    typing in (http://www.palestine-info.co.uk/index_e.htm) to see what
    the other side of the story is (and what a different story it is!).

    I don't see how this is bad. That is what the internet is supposed
    to do.. let all sides express their views and opinions, without
    requiring you to be a major media company to be able to do so.

    In the long run, I think that can be only a good thing..

    Takochan

    1. Re:THIS IS NOT A BAD THING! by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 2

      Oh, we always got the other side. Like when Co-president Hillary Clinton visited the women's international conference in the middle east, and Yasser Arafat's wife informed her (and through her, our entire nation) that those sneaky jews were poisoning palestinian wells late at night, and performing hideous vivisection on palestinian newborn infants in the hospitals (which mysteriously are always run by jews, a conspiracy?). Why, after I read that once or twice, it finally hit me... these palestinians were valiant freedom fighters trying to rid their land of oppression.

      (*Best Super-hero struggling voice*) "Must... turn... sar... casm.... mode.... off!!!"

      What you really mean, is the internet is a great medium for spreading the propaganda that you favor. Oh well. Humanity accidentally creates an even greater learning tool (internet) than the computer, and fools figure out how to use it to become even greater fools. There must be some principle at work here, that I just can't reduce to a single thought/sentence yet.

    2. Re:THIS IS NOT A BAD THING! by shilly · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You have not understood what the bad thing is. It is not that information is presented. It is that misinformation is presented, and not everyone knows how to read it. People are unclear that they cannot simply trust the information they find on the web. And lies are frequently more believable than the truth, especially when they can be fitted into an archetype such as "the underdog".
      Additionally, while it is true that the Web has allowed many new voices to shout, there's not actually that many new things being said. News from the Middle East is still dominated by the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, with two basic positions (corresponding to the two sides) being propounded. This despite the fact that there are other conflicts and other issues, some of which may be just as geostrategically important (eg Algeria, Egypt, Saudi Arabia). News from other places around the world is out there -- but you have to take a prior interest to find it, generally. It's not carried on the big media channels. So I'm not convinced by this argument about lots of viewpoints being real.

    3. Re:THIS IS NOT A BAD THING! by alan_d_post · · Score: 1

      In case you haven't noticed, Ms. Clinton has been attacking Bush for not supporting strongly enough Israel's attack on the Palestinians. You won't get any argument from me about the evilness of Ms. Clinton or Bush, but please go read up on these things before commenting.

    4. Re:THIS IS NOT A BAD THING! by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 2

      Dude, I'm citing very nearly facts here. I wasn't present to hear it myself, but most agree that Arafat's wife (an american, if I'm not mistaken) said these things there. I never commented on whether Clinton believed it or not, I think I remember even her acting shocked at something that was just too ridiculous to believe.

      I don't like Bush either. Or Gore, or Clinton (either one). I generally don't like the LP candidate, nor did I care for Nader or Perot. I'm not sure I'd vote for myself, since I truly know how big an asshole I am... at least with the other candidates, you can pretend they aren't.

    5. Re:THIS IS NOT A BAD THING! by MoneyT · · Score: 2

      So you mean that in order to become enlightened and intelligent people, we will actualy have to learn how to think for ourselves? We'll have to learn to weed through information and learn to tell fact from fiction? We'll have to use our brains? Heaven forbid

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    6. Re:THIS IS NOT A BAD THING! by shilly · · Score: 1

      Nope. The point is, we *don't* have to become enlightened and intelligent people. We can stay dumb and make bad decisions based on the misinformation we find on the Web. Sadly, our bad decisions may be about such tiny issues as the future of our country and we may therefore cause ourselves and many others to go to hell in a handbasket. That's why it's an issue. It's no use saying "anyone with half a brain would laugh at Goebel's rubbish" when we know that lots of people *are* listening...and that many of them have guns.

    7. Re:THIS IS NOT A BAD THING! by MoneyT · · Score: 2

      Welcome to the real world. People are stupid. Now let's work on correcting that problem. Educate your kids, and if Darwin holds true, the stupid people will kill themselves off.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    8. Re:THIS IS NOT A BAD THING! by Kwantus · · Score: 1

      >What you really mean, is the internet is a great medium for spreading the propaganda that you favor.

      So are the newspapers that one owns; how soon we forget the lessons from W. R. Hurst's monopolising. The NY Times has been caught distorting, bending, and ignoring the truth... PBS Newshour just tonight allowed some flagrant idiocies about Castro onto the air. The bosses of the NYT are pissed off that they're losing control over the information stream.

      Hello? This is the real motive behind installing filters in the 'net, and why they have to be fought tooth and claw. It's nothing to do with porn, that's just the panic-button pushed to muster support. How come we can see this so readily when China's buying packet-dropping routers but not when the US is doing it?

  25. Welcome to humanity by Coriolis · · Score: 3, Funny

    The Internet does nothing by itself (in fact, it could be argued the Internet does nothing period, but I digress). The Internet doesn't make information/rumor/lies, it's the people who use it. All that's going on here is he's being smacked in the face, apparently for the first time in his life, with the true nature of humanity, which is particularly easy to observe on the Internet. For those who haven't been keeping up:

    • Humanity is largely made up of lackbrained, slackjawed gawpers who'll believe any toss spouted by just about any authority figure.
    • Most of humanity talks toss most of the time.
    • I refer the honourable gentleman to Sturgeon's Law.

    People are this idiotic all on their own, all the time. People aren't just willing to fall into the "us vs. them" mentality, they're eager. All the Internet does is accelerate the process.

    On the Internet, no-one can hide from the true nature of humanity. Do something about it or deal with it.

    (phew, I needed that...)

    --
    Rgasuya aata! : I have been coding Perl and cannot tell where my fingers are now!
    1. Re:Welcome to humanity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen.

    2. Re:Welcome to humanity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      believe no one under 30.

  26. "I think it's worth a retread. " by selderrr · · Score: 1, Troll

    I think it's worth a retread.

    retread ??? retarded reread ?

    1. Re:"I think it's worth a retread. " by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From www.m-w.com:

      Main Entry: 1retread
      Pronunciation: (")rE-'tred
      Function: transitive verb
      Inflected Form(s): retreaded; retreading
      Date: 1907
      1 : to bond or vulcanize a new tread to the prepared surface of (a worn tire)
      2 : to make over as if new

  27. it seems the ball is in our court by g4dget · · Score: 1
    People in the third world see our affluence and freedoms on the new media and they compare it with their own lot. What are they supposed to do? For the most part, they don't have any democratic institutions, so they can't just vote their leaders out of office. If they overthrow their governments, it endangers their lives and risks the ire of international corporations and financial markets, making their economic situation even worse. If the acquiesce, nothing will change. Anger or depression seem the two most natural consequences.

    It seems to me the ball is in our court: the only way I see global poverty is going to be addressed is if we help these other countries and if we voluntarily give up some of our power. Maybe we should let third world nations unilaterally dump textiles on our markets without forcing reciprocal, "fair" trading arrangements. Maybe we should let them "violate" our copyrights and patents, just like we violated European copyrights and patents during the first few hundred years of our history.

    Or do you have any better ideas?

    1. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do you have any better ideas?

      Let them starve in their filth.

      Many of these countries that we have helped have turned into the biggest anti-American crusaders (Egypt, Saudi Arabia). On top of the fact that throwing money at the problem isn't going to garner any long term goodwill or international stability (help one, you've got to help them all (Israel)).

      Dropping the trade barriers with these countries is really the only way, barring conquest and installation of a satellite gov't, of setting up a system that will be successful in the long term.

    2. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Many of these countries that we have helped have turned into the biggest anti-American crusaders (Egypt, Saudi Arabia).

      Well, on the minus side, we have the US propping up an undemocratic regime in Saudi Arabia, shipping arms into the region, and having US companies drive local companies out of business. Now, how has the US helped these countries?

    3. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by Tazzy531 · · Score: 2

      Part of the problem is that the US government has had a long practice of suppressing the powers of foreign governments. (When you're at the top, you will do everything you can to stay where you are).

      The most recent event was the current administration's attempt at ousting Chavez, the President of Venezuela. He is a democratically elected president supported by the majority of the people in the nation. However, he has the potential to lead to major problems for the US. Unlike prior leaders, he has a strong leaning towards doing what is best for his people rather than for the US. Specifically, he wants to raise oil export prices against the wishes of the Bush administration. He is trying to pull the nation out of poverty. Think about it, the US, the crusader for the spread of democracy trying to oust a democratically elected leader to install a puppet regime.

      This isn't the only incident of this type that has happend. If you look at Fidel Castro, he was a puppet regime installed by the US government back in the 60s. Castro currently has a thriving biotech (medicine) industry which they sell cheaply to third world countries. The US sees this as a threat and is calling Castro a terrorist that is developing bio-weapons.

      Lastly, the US has criticized China for protectionist strategies and such. Earlier this year, the Bush administration has instituted a huge tariff on the import of steel from foreign nations (including Europe), which will hurt the economies of a number of foreign nations. This has set the entire world in an uproar and Europe has brought this to the World Trade Organization.

      Lastly, you mentioned that we should give up some power. Ideally that would be best to equalize the world. But that will NEVER EVER happen. The distance between the US and the third world countries will become ever increasingly larger which will further spawn off hatred towards the us, not out of jealousy, but of the techniques that we are using against the rest of the world.

      --


      _______________________________
      "I'm not Conceited...I'm just a realist..."
    4. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by Overd0g · · Score: 1

      Yes. Allowing them to remain poor, given your alternatives, is the superior approach.

    5. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by Overd0g · · Score: 1

      You forgot to mention that the U.S. is also the leading force for freedom and democracy in the world, and the most prosperous and moral civilization in human history. Minor points.

    6. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Wiping out the petty warlords and dictators and forcibly halting their perpetual squabbling would probably help. A Coke plant (and that's probably what would happen; that is, foreign companies would have the most capital to start new plants, although a ruthless government might invite them, then nationalize -- that is, forcibly steal -- the plants and try to run it itself) might not help that much if there's a civil war caused by hundred-year-old tribal, religious, or other feuds. Nor would it help if the local government just moves the proceeds to officials' bank accounts in the Cayman Islands.

      I'd say that in some cases, you do have to start with eliminating the local authorities. Then, probably some Marshall Plan-like reconstruction / investment in education and infrastructure.

      Would it take a long time? Hell yes. Expensive? Yup. Is there a simple, inexpensive solution? I really doubt it. Is it even possible to HAVE a complete solution? Probably not, other than the fairly extreme "eliminate all humanity" solution....

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    7. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by Tazzy531 · · Score: 2

      That may be in your eyes, but in the eyes of the rest of the world, the US is quite a dominating force that can even be looked upon as a terrorist nation.

      Take for example, the International Crimes Court that 139 countries worldwide have signed the treaties for. This is the new governing body that will try leaders of a country or soldiers in a conflict for crimes against humanity. If a soldier raped a girl while in conflict, they would be tried here. If a leader murders a large population of civilians, this is the court that they would be tried in. Now, you mentioned the "leader in freedom and democracy," who is the ONLY industrialized, democratic nation that has refused to sign, in fact "unsigned" what was previously signed this treat. Yup, the United States. The leader of the free world, the country that believes in "justice for all" (if you are American)

      In fact, recently, there's a bill going before Congress that will allow a President to order military force to "rescue" a "criminal" from the ICC. So, if you are an American soldier and you raped a Bosnian girl, don't worry, the US will rescue you. If you kill the POW, don't worry, you won't be convicted.

      So, what you are saying is true.."leading force for freedom and democracy" Only if you're an American

      --


      _______________________________
      "I'm not Conceited...I'm just a realist..."
    8. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by bnenning · · Score: 2
      Now, you mentioned the "leader in freedom and democracy," who is the ONLY industrialized, democratic nation that has refused to sign, in fact "unsigned" what was previously signed this treat. Yup, the United States.


      Yes, because we have this wacky notion that Americans accused of crimes should be afforded the protection of the US legal system, rather than being hauled before unelected and unaccountable UN bureaucrats with political axes to grind. (There's already been talk of bringing Sharon before the ICC, but none for Arafat, I can't imagine why...)

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    9. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

      That you truly believe this is part of the problem.

    10. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by g4dget · · Score: 1
      You forgot to mention that the U.S. is also the leading force for freedom and democracy in the world, and the most prosperous and moral civilization in human history.

      Oh my god, not by a long shot. The US is clearly not the most prosperous civilization; Switzerland and Canada, among others, have a higher standard of living. US citizens may collectively command the largest amount of aggregate wealth right now, but that would be a rather odd-ball measure of prosperity.

      The "most moral" by what measure? In terms of teenage pregnancies, legal system, percentage of population in prison, economic disparities, poverty, and race relations, the US is not particularly "moral". Neither is the vastly disproportionate use of resources or the per capita cost Americans impose on the environment. So, what sense of "most moral" were you thinking of?

      In terms of supporting freedom and democracy in the world (and at home), that seems pretty iffy, too. Take a look at the book "Blowback", which chronicles some of the US foreign adventures. Arguably, the Marshall plan was good, but even there, the US was not single-handedly responsible for freedom and democracy in Europe after WWII.

      The US isn't a bad country. In fact, on balance, it's doing pretty well. But your assessment seems way out of proportion with reality.

    11. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by Bake · · Score: 2

      It would seem unfair to take the person representing the victim of plain land-theft to court now wouldn't it?

    12. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Communist, faggot! Canada can kiss my rich, American ass!

    13. Re:it seems the ball is in our court by jafac · · Score: 2

      (There's already been talk of bringing Sharon before the ICC, but none for Arafat, I can't imagine why...)

      I think it would probably be in the best interest of every man woman and child on this planet if both of them were skinned alive and left for the rats to feast upon.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  28. He attacks the Fox news channel by Performer+Guy · · Score: 1, Troll

    This is how he starts! The NYT is totally biased towards the left. More biased left than Fox is right. The guy is even too cowardly to criticize Fox himself. He attacks Fox by quoting from a foreign resident who's political leanings we know nothing of then goes on to complain about the excesses of the Internet. What a hypocrite. If it wasn't for the internet and alternative news sources we'd only ever get the pap that the NYT and it's liberal elites and their ilk want to give us.

    1. Re:He attacks the Fox news channel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you prefer the pap that Fox wants to give you. Whatever you may think of its political leanings, the NYT does a better job with the news than most papers and pretty much all TV news in the country.

      I've heard people on the right complain about how liberal the NYT is and people on the left complain about how conservative it is. I guess they must be doing something right.

    2. Re:He attacks the Fox news channel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it wasn't for the internet and alternative news sources we'd only ever get the pap that the NYT and it's liberal elites and their ilk want to give us.

      The liberals? Their ilk? You've seen them too?

    3. Re:He attacks the Fox news channel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn those liberal elks!

    4. Re:He attacks the Fox news channel by Performer+Guy · · Score: 2

      No I prefer a diverse media that isn't censored. The NYT is a joke as are most of the other media outlets. The NYT complaining about Fox is the pot calling the kettle black.

  29. The net can only offer the choice... by Memetic · · Score: 1

    When visiting the US (Prior to 9/11) I had often been surprised by the limited depth of coverage and lack of context on news channels. (I'll be interested to see how this has changed.)

    It seemed typical to get, "A tidal wave wiped out half the villages along the coast of XXX today." Cut to pictures for 2 seconds.,"In local news a man was rescued when his car...." 2 minute slot, interviews etc etc.

    Perhaps the editorial / financial (Advertising revenue) judgement is that people are more interested in local news.

    However with a country the size of the US, reporting "local news" can sometimes be the equivalent in the UK of national news.

    However good or bad local broadcast media, the net offers us all options, we can now listen to view, read news feeds form across the globe (Assuming no local censorship!) it can be a real eye opener to re read the same news form the other side.

    That's how the net, Sat TV etc.can make a difference, but it requires us to make the effort not to rely on just one source.

    1. Re:The net can only offer the choice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not in the U.S. now. How much airplay is the North Korean refugee arrests at the Japanese embassy getting? From the content of MSNBC, it seems to barely register at all.

    2. Re:The net can only offer the choice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seemed typical to get, "A tidal wave wiped out half the villages along the coast of XXX today." Cut to pictures for 2 seconds.,"In local news a man was rescued
      when his car...." 2 minute slot, interviews etc etc.


      Sure, lets spend $10,000 sending a reporter halfway around the world to interview the victims of the tidal wave, who probably don't speak the same language as our reporters, and who are really interested in talking to an idiot foreign reporter.

      News always is more coverage of local events, because local events are more important to the viewers

    3. Re:The net can only offer the choice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the difference is between news and current affairs. The US doesn't bother with current affairs - which shows

    4. Re:The net can only offer the choice... by Memetic · · Score: 1

      An astute observation.

  30. The world getting nastier....? by Rahga · · Score: 2

    I really don't think the world is getting nastier. We created these global networks so we could improve the world, which clearly implies that it's been in a sad state of repair for quite some time. While it doesn't help some sitautions, such as fueling the greed-inspired hatred of those who simply refuse to look at how their own government brought pain and suffering upon it's own people. Or may be they simply never realized that before because of government controlled media where they live being a dominant force in their daily lives.

    Of course, now we are only starting to look at these problems and the potential solutions because of our global information networks. As far as "manifold suspicions, rumors, resentment, and half-truths" are concerned.... what do you really expect? Regardless of right or wrong, most of those who are willing to speak the loudes are those doing their best to promote their agenda and make change in the world that they see fit. It's always been like this. The main difference is now, scientists and educators can get their messages out too without the traditional bottleneck preventing content distribution. Of course, there's still a bottleneck on how much content the avarious audeinces can tolerate, but that's another matter altogether.

  31. The real cost of political correctness by redelm · · Score: 2, Flamebait
    OK, so some people around the World don't much like the ideas of some
    other people. I can see that Bill O'Rielly might upset some people.
    But they should understand that some others really do feel like that.
    If this journalist thinks the USA is represented by the NYT, then
    she's seriously misleading herself.

    The world may not be as nice
    a place as political correctness would have you believe. But then,
    it is not. Get over it, and work at overcoming differences if thats
    your thing. Nothing
    worse than not addressing something that could be addressed because
    you think it doesn't need to be. Wasted opportunity.

    If nothing
    else, information helps you know your opponent. This is always a
    good thing. So is a critical mind, unnumbed by state-controlled
    or editorially sanitized press.

  32. The problem with the Internet by jht · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Internet is strictly a technical medium, with no inherent bias, filter, or viewpoint. As a result, all "news" has the potential to be more opinion than news, and there's no inherent correction for bias.

    Take a look at the US for example, arguably the most tech-savvy nation of sophisticated media viewers on the planet. How many people do you personally know who take everything they read "on the web" as pure unvarnished gospel? How many people beileve the e-mailed virus hoaxes, chain letters, and Nigerian 419 scams?

    A lot more than you'd hope, that's how many. And that's here in the US, where supposedly they'd know better. They don't.

    Now take this human tendency to believe what's written, and take it to a repressive or technologically unsphisticated country that normally only sees the news their government wants them to see. Give them satellite dishes, but with channels that present events in the same fashion, agreeing with the prevalent viewpoint. Give them a media that exists at the sufferance of their host government, where if they stray too far from the party line they'll be shut down and possibly jailed. Give them no incentive to look at two sides of a story.

    And then teach the citizens that do have access to more sophisticated and independent news your point of view so thoroughly that they assume that anything outside of that narrow viewpoint they subscribe to is just lies, distortion, and propaganda.

    Watch what happens. We're even seeing it to a lesser degree here in the US - witness the rise of Fox News, the Washington Times, and all the specialty news presenters that have sprung up. People are not inclined to listen to viewpoints outside of their own worldview if viewpoints that correspond to it exist. Liberals think the media is too conservative. Conservatives are convinced the media is liberal. Both would rather get news from sources that tell them that their view is correct, and ignore the other side.

    And we wonder how people can't see through the obvious (to us) bias on Al-Jazeera?

    It's a similar problem here. It has nothing to do with the Internet per se, other than to say that it's easier than ever to confine your information sources to those that agree with you in the first place. What can we do about it? Very little, I'm sorry to say. The Internet is what it is, and humans seem to be by and large tribal in nature. I used to think that eventually all nations would be relatively harmonious, learing to live together as people from different traditions, religions, and cultures in the pursuit of happiness and prosperity together. But people don't seem to want it, and politicians won't let it happen even if the people did want it.

    The human race is screwed.

    --
    -- Josh Turiel
    "2. Do not eat iPod Shuffle."
    1. Re:The problem with the Internet by Roblimo · · Score: 4, Interesting
      "And we wonder how people can't see through the obvious (to us) bias on Al-Jazeera?"

      Bias is in the eye of the beholder. Bahrain has banned Al-Jazeera because the government there feels it is too pro-Israel.

      Is that the bias you meant?

      - Robin

    2. Re:The problem with the Internet by popeyethesailor · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Monday morning blues...


      Look at the +ve side.. The biggest advantage Internet has over other media is that both sides of the story are available, if you're willing to look.
      An American read an Arab news forum; an Indian can browse a Pakistani newspaper; What other medium provides such unbiased coverage ?
      It is upto the individual analyze different news sources, and form an opinion.

    3. Re:The problem with the Internet by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      The problem is with the human race, and yes the human race is screwed. WE have been for centuries. There has always been wars between factions, the middle east has NEVER been at peace, there has always been opressed, hated, and hungry people. and there always will be. It is human nature to hate that which they dont know about, It is human nature to be sheep that blindly follow some strong leader (Hitler,stalin,branch dividians.. they all followed some nut that had huge charisma and was a perfect example of being the alpha male.)

      and it will happen this way forever. People keep making the mistake that the human race is highly intellegent, it is not. a small percentage of the human race is, the bulk is dumb as a box of rocks, and therefore gladly hate an entire ethnic group because they blew up a couple of big buildings... AND the media told them to hate them.

      The internet just allows more wierdows and lunatics to post openly their twisted views and hate speech. nothing more... it does not breed anything except for information.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    4. Re:The problem with the Internet by pubjames · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It has nothing to do with the Internet per se, other than to say that it's easier than ever to confine your information sources to those that agree with you in the first place.

      This is related to a phenomenon that psychologists refer to as confirmation bias. The basic gist is that when someone comes across a fact that confirms something they already believe to be true, they give it greater significance than when they come across a fact that does not confirm what they already believe to be true, or disproves it.

      People gain more satisfaction processing facts that confirm what they already believe than facts that don't. I personally believe that this is related to another phenomenon that I have observed, but don't know if there's a name for it (I'm sure there is - someone please enlighten me). That is that our environment is very complex, making it difficult to interpret. We analysed the world by compartmentalising things, usually into two opposing groups. This human tendency is heavily reflected in the world of politics - the left and the right, for instance, and that most horrible of modern concepts, "Unamerican".

    5. Re:The problem with the Internet by hey! · · Score: 2
      This is why education is so important. Although it most cases it fails to do so, it is the only way to prepare somebody to look at "information" critically.

      I am impatient with the people who don't want children to learn the nasty side of the US subjugation of the American Indians on the grounds that children taught this way won't grow up to love their country. I'm also impatient with the people who push the idea of the Indians as noble savages. Education shouldn't be about teaching people to love their country, nor should it be about teaching them to abhor injustice. It should be about empowering them to to apply their values in the real world. I think it is safe to trust people to make the right decisions if they are informed and difficult to manipulate.

      Avoiding controversy cripples the critical faculties, and opens the door to mass delusion and hysteria. Stir in media for which inflaming emotions is an easy way to make a buck, and you and I may well be spending our golden years surrounded by ignorant savages. This can only be fixed by local involvement and support of education. Do you know anything about the people on your school committee? Where the local school budget is being spent? You'd better. Education may be an imperfect solution, but the only other one is to try to control the media so that it only presents salutory messages.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    6. Re:The problem with the Internet by Andrewkov · · Score: 2
      Take a look at the US for example, arguably the most tech-savvy nation of sophisticated media viewers on the planet.

      According to who, Americans?

    7. Re:The problem with the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The kicker is the "if you're willing to look;" notice the argument in the parent post is that it's not the medium itself, it's how people use it. The distressing (apparent) trend is that people are just going to the sources that tend to affirm the beliefs they already hold -- the internet doesn't change that.

    8. Re:The problem with the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah..so in that respect the internet wont change things...it wont make it worse though. In the past, people would just talk shit to each other. Now they can do the same, but people can point out which bits are shit, so they`ll now have to back up the shit with facts, or admit its shit and shut up!

    9. Re:The problem with the Internet by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 2

      Thinking critically is the key to everything.

      For example, I am about the staunchest support of the Catholic Church your likely to see (on /. anyway), however I can recognize that the current scandal is not just the media blowing a few cases out of proportion (even if they are). I also don't think that the Church is fundamentally flawed and am willing to ackowledge that members of it have done and continue to do very bad things... even at the top.

      However, being reasonably well-educated I can see the context in which things are happening and realize that a few bad apples won't spoil the entire barrel, and a failure on the part of some does not imply a predilection on the part of many.
      I can also recognize that it is the failure of people rather than ideals.

      The same holds for the U.S.. I'm not afraid to face the fact that bad things have been done on behalf of or even by my country, and even if I think some of its leaders are incompetant or even corrupt that it doesn't invalidate the ideals upon which the U.S. is founded. I am concerned at the plasticity that has been imparted on the Constitution since the latter half of the 20th century, but I believe that things will work out correctly in the long run.

      We need to remind educators that they need to teach _how_ to think, not _what_ to think. Education without values is hollow and not very useful, however dogmatic indoctrination that flies in the face of facts is even worse. Ultimately, the unbiased truth will serve people the best.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    10. Re:The problem with the Internet by pod · · Score: 1
      What other medium provides such unbiased coverage ?

      Now you're getting confused. There is still bias, just more of it. More bias all around does not mean the coverage is suddenly balanced.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
    11. Re:The problem with the Internet by bockman · · Score: 2
      People keep making the mistake that the human race is highly intellegent, it is not. a small percentage of the human race is

      Uhm : and I suppose you put yourself in the small percentage? :-)

      I agree with the general comment, anyway. Only, the 'small percentage' are so not because they are the smartest, but because they lived in an environment which let them develop some (relative) ethic.

      BTW : intelligent people can be (and often are) evil and unhetic. And racist.

      --
      Ciao

      ----

      FB

    12. Re:The problem with the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How could the above possibly be modded as 'flamebait'?

    13. Re:The problem with the Internet by peddrenth · · Score: 2

      "The biggest advantage Internet has over other media is that both sides of the story are available"

      Damned right! I've spent a lot of time watching TV (both government and commercial TV) and mainsteam websites, and it truly is a pity that many people can only rely on those outlets for information.

      When you listen to CNN presenters denouncing unpatriotic troublemakers and bemoaning the arbitarily-guessed figures for damage they're expected to cause, it just reminds me of stories about newspapers in Burma, Zimbabwe and all the other places we routinely condemn for their dictatorships.

      Sooner or later, everything you read will be owned by a group of people small enough to fit into a conference hall. When your internet access comes through the same company as your newspaper as your television news, and even the films you watch. When everything you own only works with the opinions they write.

      But what's wrong with that? Don't we all secretly want out MS/Intel computers to only play news recordings which originate at AOL-Time-Warner-Disney-CNN?

    14. Re:The problem with the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is very true. How smart you are does not mean you are immune to diseases of society. the inventors, scientists, and philosiphers. The hardware hackers, coders, and home researchers.. These are the brightest of the human race. it is not the politicians, CEO's, and Business owners.

      the smartest men and women on this planet are slaving away in factories.. they are stuck by the sheeps' design to opress the smart and reward the crooked.

    15. Re:The problem with the Internet by hgh · · Score: 1
      How many people beileve the e-mailed virus hoaxes

      Judging by my inbox, WAY too many :)

      hgh
    16. Re:The problem with the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah, what I really want is the world to be run by a bunch of myopic, knee-jerk, completely naive know-it-alls without an ounce of experience or apparent common sense.

      That would REALLY rule.

      Maybe I should say a different bunch...

      At any rate, I don't like you, and I don't even know who you pretend to be!

    17. Re:The problem with the Internet by Cally · · Score: 2
      Congratulations, you've just re-invented Social Psychology ;)

      google for that phrase and GAQ or Intro and "in-group" "out-group"... have fun... warning, you will become very depressed if you read and understand that material. Studying social psychology was what finished off the destruction of my youthful idealism that had begun a couple of years earlier when I discovered Behaviourism, B.F.Skinner, "Beyond Freedom and Dignity" and decided that 99% of psychology is bullshit, Skinner is the psychologist's Darwin, but that approach has been marginalised because of conflicting "real world" political factors (it pisses off both the traditional leftist and rightists.) But I digress...


      I do think there are still reasons to be cheerful. I take great comfort from absurdism, the Samuel Beckett-type view of life, plus a dash of zen and some discordianism. Nothing makes sense, and it's all good (especially when it hurts.)


      Nurse... the screens!

      --
      "None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free." -- Goethe
    18. Re:The problem with the Internet by peter · · Score: 2

      > People are not inclined to listen to viewpoints outside of their own worldview if viewpoints that correspond to it exist. Liberals think the media is too conservative. Conservatives are convinced the media is liberal. Both would rather get news from sources that tell them that their view is correct, and ignore the other side.

      It's not about where _I_ would rather get my news, it's that I wish the news other people got was biased toward causes that I support. An example that /.ers are familiar with is Free software and Micros~1. Often, the media neglects to mention that if MS didn't suck so much, those nasty bad guys wouldn't be able to wreak so much havoc with email viruses and worms like Code Red. Proponents of Free Software wish that, in general, a negative impression of MS was instilled in the audience of the news report. Obviously there is a limit, and it isn't sensible to want negative reporting about things that MS has done well, such as finally ditching DOS with winNT.

      > And we wonder how people can't see through the obvious (to us) bias on Al-Jazeera?

      I heard a recording of a Noam Chomsky lecture in which he described Al Jazeera as being more balanced than the US cable news networks. AJ has had interviews or panel discussions (don't remember which he said it was) with Israeli members of parliament. I don't know whether they gave the Israelis a chance to say anything useful, or got all hostile with them like CNN did with a Palestinian government guy in an interview a couple weeks ago. Given what Chomsky said, I would have to assume that it wasn't too bad.

      BTW, I'm a big fan of Chomsky, and am strongly inclined to take his word for things. I don't have the time to research everything myself, so I have to listen to somebody. Chomsky, Michael Parenti, and Michael Moore seem like reliable sources. Their view of how the world should work is one I like, and I guess it all boils down to getting information from from people who share my point of view. Still, part of the reason that I listen to Chomsky is that I think he's reliable, not just that I like what he's saying. I usually get news through the CBC and BBC, with a bit of American media thrown in. Thus, I'm not just getting Noam Chomsk's version of everything!

      --
      #define X(x,y) x##y
      Peter Cordes ; e-mail: X(peter@cordes , .ca)
    19. Re:The problem with the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and decided that 99% of psychology is bullshit...

      Rephrase that to 99% of psychology courses are bullshit.

      Remember that most psychology deals with the human mind/brain in an abstract manner. My professors like to point that two opposing/competing theories can both exist and be used when looking at some behaviour. (Think development of language with Piaget's theory against Vygotsky's theory. Sure, Vygotsky probably got more right than Piaget, but that doesn't mean Piaget was completely wrong, and both are useful during observation.)

      The brain is *way* to complex to be able to go from neurons to small neuron networks to large neuron networks to areas to the whole brain to behaviour to society, all in one go. So what do we do. We seperate each level, with only some interaction between them.

      Anyway. There is my bullshit post.

  33. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by proj_2501 · · Score: 1

    Liberal media? The one that constantly made a big deal about Clinton's sexual history but plays down the Enron deal? The one that gives plenty of attention to Bush's War on Terrorism and Cheney's will to keep fighting the Gulf War? Really, now?

  34. Lament for a Filter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It used to be that print and t.v. journalists were the filters that stood between the information and the people, so we only saw the world through their biases, not our own. Now, for better or worse, we get to create our own worlds from the unfiltered info stream.

    Friedman is simply lamenting his own obsolescence.

    Cheers,

    JHVH1

  35. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps you didn't notice since you were in a cabin in the hills making bombs, but Clinton isn't president any more...

  36. Killing time by elsegundo · · Score: 1

    The topic of rumor spreading through the Internet is one of the main topics in a sci-fi-ish novel, "Killing Time", by Caleb Carr. His characters try to create such outlandish rumors on the Internet that the world's population will realize that you can't believe everything you read. Predictably, this leads to disaster...;)

    An interesting quote from the book is: "Information is not knowledge."

    --


    The revolution will be televised. Blackout restrictions apply.
    1. Re:Killing time by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      His characters try to create such outlandish rumors on the Internet that the world's population will realize that you can't believe everything you read.

      Too late. See National Enquirer, or The Sun. The rumors are out there, and people do believe them.

      We are doomed.

  37. You Are A Sewage Treatment Plant by 4of12 · · Score: 2

    "the Internet, at its ugliest, is just an open sewer: an electronic conduit for untreated, unfiltered information."

    That's a correct assessment not just of the Internet, but of the the ideas communicated before the advent of the Internet.

    Nothing special there: porn, intolerance and deception have been around quite some time. The Internet only intensifies the speed of communication.

    It's incumbent upon every individual to become their own filtration plant amid the sewage of information.

    Parents and culture (school, church, TV) are supposed to help in developing this ability in young people, but there have certainly been instances where cultures have contributed and reinforced septic messages.

    --
    "Provided by the management for your protection."
  38. Until they see the ruins around them ..... by GodForGeeks · · Score: 1
    There are two roads I believe that global, internet-enabled hate mongering can travel:

    1. An organized group of "truth mongerers" can set out to counteract the hate. There are many groups in the United States and the world that do just that. The Arabs will have to develop their own if at this point they trust nothing Western.

    2. The hate mongering will stop when the Arab world sees the ruins about them, much like the Germans did after World War II. It's called a reality check. When the Germans saw the ruins that Hitler's hate led their country too, they knew the true payoff of facism.

    1. Re:Until they see the ruins around them ..... by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Can you prove that martyrdom does not lead to an afterlife in Paradise? AFAIK, that is one thing that the Germans did NOT claim -- all their conquests and goals were firmly in the actual during-life world, and the collapse of the Wehrmacht demonstrated that those goals were no longer even remotely attainable. Afterlife arguments are a bit harder to disprove...

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
  39. what a bunch of crap!!! by OklaKid · · Score: 0

    not only is it the New York Times, i refuse it give out my personal info (fear of spam) i think the idea if filtering information is worse than putting up with typos and mis-spelled words & vulgarity (sometimes good for a laugh) sounds like what geek.com do to some of the more zelous linux people they will block from posting replys to their articles, but geek.com sure lets those Windoze lubbers post & rant all they want... i want to hear both sides to any story and with NO filters, filters sould like gagging free speech to me...

    1. Re:what a bunch of crap!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can't fake your way through the NY Times' registration, you shouldn't be allowed to own a computer. I won't even start on the other idiocies in your post, since you're trolling (I hope).

  40. Old wine in a new bottle by Quixote · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The world has always been a very nasty place. Even before the Internet, people were finding new reasons to butcher each other. Anyone remember Rwanda? Somalia? The Iran-Iraq war? Gassing of the Kurds? These events happened just before the Internet really came into widespread use.

    Internet is just a new tool on the block, and it will cause new alliances to be formed, and old alliances to break. After the dust settles down, the butchery will continue unabated.

    In the end, it is the family that counts. It is upto the parents of young children to bring them up not to hate others based on the flimsiest of differences (skin color, shape of eyes, language, etc.). If you have been following recent events in Pakistan, you will see that kids over there are being trained to hate the west with a vengeance in 1000s of madrassas all over that country. It is as if the grown-ups have some unfinished business, and want the kids to grow up and finish it for them.

  41. Information is the most dangerous weapon. by fliptw · · Score: 0

    Espeically in the hands of a large group of humans. People in large groups are idiots, the majority feel the need to conform to the mass, for whatever reason. If you've ever wondered why conflicts go on, like the BS in Israel, its not because of a need for a nation, or personal security, its because everyone else is throwing rocks and blowing themselves up. One can say, this is because the majority of palenstitians are unemployed, but that just refenforces my inital assertion.

  42. why was this drivel modded up to 5?!?! by wobblie · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    You are woefully ignorant, and I suggest you read a little history. Christians have shed more blood in God's name than ANY other religeon, ever.

    1. Re:why was this drivel modded up to 5?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point is that the Christian leadership has grown out of the Killing for Christ phase.

      Islamic leaders are still living in the Murder for Mohammed era.

    2. Re:why was this drivel modded up to 5?!?! by swankypimp · · Score: 1
      Christians have shed more blood in God's name than ANY other religeon, ever.

      Christian Europe also-- and in large part because of these wars-- underwent a significant change in philosophy in the seventeenth and eighteenth century. This led to that whole separation of church and state thing, which is a concept that Islam does not have. While many of the West's laws derive from Judeo-Christian values (murder is illegal, theft is illegal, etc.), the laws aren't the Bible verbatim, and there is room for tolerating those who do not follow the Christian religion; women won't get beaten for not wearing a proper head scarf, as in Taliban Afghanistan, or stoned to death for committing adultery.

      --

      --All your stolen base are belong to Rickey Henderson
    3. Re:why was this drivel modded up to 5?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I take it you've heard the phrase "no-one's perfect". Obviously this includes Christians, Muslims, Jews.....

      I can't speak for Islam or Judaism but the bible says this:

      (Jesus speaking - Matthew chapter 5) verses 38-39:
      "You have heard that it was said, 'An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.' But I tell you, don't stand up against an evil person. If someone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to him the other cheek as well.

      verse 43:
      "You have heard that it was said 'Love your neighbour and hate your enemies.' But I say to you, love your enemies. Pray for those who hurt you."

      Now you tell me, were the crusades by Christians following their religion? Or were they erring as humans do?

      This is exactly the problem the articles were talking about. When the media only portrays certain types of people from different religions it implies that they are the way they are because of their religion. Sometimes they are the way they are regardless of their religion, and unfortunately some people are the way they are in spite of their 'religion'.

      Julian

  43. Re:Does he prefer it filtered, a.k.a. censored? by buckeyeguy · · Score: 1
    Friedman is, if I'm not mistaken, on the conservative side of the middle... since I think he's conservative, and I'm in the middle ;)

    Which I suppose would leave him on the censorship side of things... maybe not Ed Meese-conservative, but enough to be a PITA.

    --
    I'd have a personalized plate on my car, but "toxic bachelor" won't fit into 7 letters.
  44. Taking credit for these ideas... by EvilAlien · · Score: 2
    ... is intellectually dishonest.

    "Familiarity breeds contempt" is not a new concept. This shouldn't even surprise us. It is a fact for thinking beings (assuming that "imperfect thinking beings" is redundant, that there is no such thing as a perfect thinking being, and that no philosophy in the world will lead to complete tolerance). The important message has to be that we must all think critically and use our intelligence to realize that:

    1. an individual will learn more about other cultures through contact via History 101, Cultural Anthropology 101, the Internet, or other aspects of daily life
    2. there may be cultural trends that are repugnant to an individual
    3. it is quite possible to rationally and correctly take offence if there is such thing as "right and wrong"
    4. it is quite possible that the individual confronted with a new (repugnant or not) culture needs to keep an open mind and realize that #3 might be flawed if there is no absolute "right and wrong"
    5. sometimes it is necessary to agree to disagree
    6. sometimes agreeing to disagree still leads to hate or contempt
    ... but this is nothing new. The Internet is just another means of communication and learning, and although it makes it easier, we've always had access to a bucket-load of sources to fuel petty misundertanding and prejudice.
    --
    perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10)'
  45. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    unfortunately you seem to have been modded 'insightful', which you understandably didn't predict. Doubtless you didn't expect it because you knew that you were spouting off from a position of total ignorance of religion and history.

  46. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by popeyethesailor · · Score: 2
    Of course I'm going to get modded down for "being a racist" or "being flamebait"


    Proof that Reverse psychology works..

  47. Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Here is why Tom doesnt like the internet - because it makes his job irrelevant.

    See Tom has this really important job where he at the new york times tells people what to think and decides what information they should know.

    But now the internet is here and people do not need to go to the new york times and their free fuscking registration to get information. And people can gasp form opinions on their own. Well then Tom's job is kind of useless then aint it? Running a ministry of truth while you have free information exchange is very pointless, noone will listen to you.

    But the internet makes arabs angry and dangerous, because they see palestinians being beaten on cable!!! Now really, Tom dont you think that would be less of a problem if palestinians werent getting beaten by israelis soldiers all the time?

    But its out of context!!! Well and what is the alternative? The New york times will provide the context? Of course not. The new york times will just not report it.

    See thats the great think about the internet. People can provide their context. They dont need the official media to provide the context for them (ie tell them how to interpret the news).

    but with the internet bad people find other bad people with like views. Big fing deal. I will always choose freedom of information over propaganda even if freedom of information provides speech to some bad people. It is not suprising that almost every oppressive and racist regime tightly controls information exchange, between its people. Cults and extreme groups also have real trouble keeping their memberships up when they cant control what information their members can access. In fact the best way to stop islamic fanaticism is to give internet access to most muslims (isnt ironic that Tom complains about muslims who are in general are not very likely to be hooked up to the net?).

    Saying the internet spreads hate is stupid. Does he think that all this hate is due to the internet? Is it the gulf war with all its victims the internets fault? are the terrorist attacks and the bombing of afghanistan the internets fault? Were the israeli attacks on palestine the internets fault? How about terrorism?

    There is adifference between the internet and the new york times that tom has to grasp. The internet will usually reflect the real world.

    1. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by xyzzy · · Score: 5, Informative

      You really need to read more Tom Friedman before you go foaming off at the mouth, specifically "The Lexus and the Olive Tree", one of the best books ever written about globalization.

      Friedman completely realizes the power of the Internet, but that doesn't refute for ONE MINUTE the points he made. The Internet is, by and large, a refuse-ridden electronic drooling cup, and we haven't BEGUN to tap its power for good yet. There is no doubt in my mind (or Friedman's, if you read his book) that we can do so.

    2. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1, Troll

      i read some of the pages they have on amazon.com. Honestly it does not impress me. Looks like an undergrad essay to me.

      The insights are obvious and they are peppered with some really inane literary devices - "the equation for the cold war is e=mc2, but the equation for globalisation is moores law" ... yep.

      Well i see you like him so i guess everyone can have their opinions.

    3. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by beleg777 · · Score: 1

      The internet will usually reflect the real world. No, the internet will reflect real people. Like has been said above, the internet has no inherrant bias. It's just a communication tool, and as such it says whatever people want it to say. Unfortunately people generally want to use for decieving people or promoting their own closed minded ideas. You should try and take a step back and look at what he's saying without getting all upset about who he is. Regardless of what you think of him, what he says has some merrit. The average person isn't interested in promoting truth or togetherness, they are interested in tricking people into giving them money, and the internet doesn't change that.

      --

      Science may someday discover what faith has always known.
    4. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by X86Daddy · · Score: 1


      ... Is it the gulf war with all its victims the internets fault? are the terrorist attacks and the bombing of afghanistan the internets fault? Were the israeli attacks on palestine the internets fault? How about terrorism? ...


      and the Crusades! and the Inquisition! oh, wait...

    5. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

      ok so is he saying that the media are better at promoting truth?

      That we should just forget about the internet because all those self centered people use it for their own purposes but listen to selfless journalists? Well that sounds very suspicious to me.

      I can believe that many people will use the internet for their own selfish purposes. But the same is true about the press. And with the internet you can still be better informed, because you have access to more information, from different sources.

    6. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by Thumpnugget · · Score: 1

      Ahem... a bit of reflection...
      ----
      Here is why Slashdot reader Edmund Blackadder doesnt like the Tom Friedman - because Friedman makes his opinions seem irrelevant.

      See Edmund has this really unimportant job where he has time to sit around and post to Slashdot telling people what to think and deciding what information they should know.

      But the internet has been here a while and people do not need to go to Slashdot and their free fuscking registration to get information. And people can gasp form opinions on their own. Well then Edmund Blackadder's post is kind of useless then aint it? Running a ministry of truth while you have free information exchange is very pointless, noone will listen to you.

      But the internet makes Edmund Blackadder angry and dangerous, because he reads stories about people who see palestinians being beaten on cable!!! Now really, Edmund dont you think that would be less of a problem if palestinians werent getting beaten by israelis soldiers all the time?

      But its out of context!!! Well and what is the alternative? Slashdot will provide the context? Of course not. Slashdot will just not report it.

      See thats the great think about the internet. Edmund Blackadder can provide their context. They dont need other Slashdot readers to provide the context for them (ie tell them how to interpret the news).

      but with the internet Edmund Blackadder find other bad people with like views. Big fing deal. He will always choose freedom of information over propaganda even if freedom of information provides speech to some bad people with his same views. It is not suprising that almost every oppressive and racist regime tightly controls information exchange, between its people. Cults and extreme groups, much like Edmund himself, also have real trouble keeping their memberships up when they cant control what information their members can access. isnt ironic that Edmund complains about people who are in general are not very likely to be hooked up to the net?.

      Saying the internet spreads hate is stupid. Does he think that all this hate is due to the internet? Is it the gulf war with all its victims the internets fault? are the terrorist attacks and the bombing of afghanistan the internets fault? Were the israeli attacks on palestine the internets fault? How about terrorism?

      There is adifference between the internet and the readl world that Edmund has to grasp. The internet will usually reflect a distorted version of the real world.
      ----
      There's some reflection for you, Edmund.

      --
      Free yourself. Everything else will follow.
    7. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by apwingo · · Score: 1
      I agree completely. There are some points which you neglected to mention, however.

      Who is Thomas Friedman? A "hired prizefighter" for the establishment. With his flowery verbiage and effusive analogies he paints the canvas of human affairs, but distorted as in fun-house mirrors -- a fine article on the varied exploits of our favorite hack can be found on ZNet Do hit that link, it's really well done in my opinion.

      It's tough to see through his prose, but Tommy advocates war crimes, assassinations, bombing campaigns, yes even terrorrism in support of "American interests." Internet controls and filters are certainly within the interests of the establishment, to keep our illustrious sage of globalization in place on his throne as universal arbiter of truth.

      What a hack.

    8. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by xyzzy · · Score: 2

      So we are to be surprised that an anti-globalization site posts an article signed "Socialist Worker" that is anti-Friedman? Yea, those Socialists really helped out the third world. Oh, yea, baby -- people are just clawing to get into THOSE countries, with all their opportunities.

      Other than a few quotes ripped from Friedman's columns, the znet article doesn't provide ANY actual specific criticism of Friedman's ideas, or of any of the realities on the ground. Speaking of hacks. It's not well-done -- it's a lot of whining.

      And although YOU side with Blackadder, you haven't refuted any of the premises of the original Friedman article cited -- that falsehood spreads as quickly, in fact *faster*, on the Internet than in conventional media.

    9. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by foghorn19 · · Score: 1
      The Internet is, by and large, a refuse-ridden electronic drooling cup, and we haven't BEGUN to tap its power for good yet.

      IMO the NYT is worse than the internet, and HAS NO power for good until it only prints the news "fit to print."

    10. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by xyzzy · · Score: 2

      ok so is he saying that the media are better at promoting truth?

      No, go back and reread the article. I don't understand why you persist in saying this. Friedman specifically cites television (an old-guard media if there ever was one, but a VERY POWERFUL one) as central in spreading disinformation. You seem to be mistaking the messenger for the message.

      The Internet is definitely a vital tool for those who live in repressed countries or those with strangleholds on the local media (for instance, most Arab nations). So is satellite TV -- many Middle Eastern nations hate Al Jazeera as much as western nations. But make no mistake: there is a boatload of crap out there, and it's incredibly easy to fall prey to it.

      The speed with which globalization moves information these days indicates that we have to follow up with other avenues of contact. Friedman doesn't say anything about traditional media: what he does call for is traditional human contact -- in the next to last line of the article:

      It can be reversed only with education, exchanges, diplomacy and human interaction -- stuff you have to upload the old-fashioned way, one on one.

    11. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But now the internet is here and people do not need to go to the new york times and their free fuscking registration to get information.

      Yeah, life before the internet really sucked. If you think registering to read nytimes.com is a pain, now, you should have seen it before the internet when we had to go in person to the NY Times offices in New York to register before we could read their newspaper. Of course it was horribly inconvenient, but since the Times was the only news source in existence, we had little choice.

      Saying the internet spreads hate is stupid. Does he think that all this hate is due to the internet?

      Saying the KKK spreads hate is stupid. Does he think that all this hate is due to the KKK?

      Saying Slashdot spreads tech news is stupid. Does he think that all tech news is due to Slashdot?

      Saying knives spread jelly is stupid. Does he think that all this jelly is due to knives?

    12. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by alan_d_post · · Score: 1

      That book sucks big time. My favorite bit was about how widespread ownership of mutual funds provides democratic control over the behavior of corporations. As if the majority of Americans were big-time stockholders! They are slowly drowning in credit card debt, not piling up the winnings on E*Trade.

      Friedman has been doing more than his share of hate-mongering (remember his "World War Three" columns right after 9/11?), and been doing it from a position that many consider (foolishly) to be one of authority -- the front page of the NYT. The ability of individuals to communicate directly threatens his ability to mislead us.

    13. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The Internet is, by and large, a refuse-ridden electronic drooling cup, and we haven't BEGUN to tap its power for good yet."

      What is good?

    14. Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish little idiot by zebul0n · · Score: 1


      couldn't have said it better myself.

      zeb.

  48. Positive Thread by blankmange · · Score: 2
    You ask:

    How can this be fixed? What can we do about it?

    Why does this need to be fixed? This is a great opportunity for a knee-jerk reaction to "Oh my God, look at what is going on here; there should be a law" reactionary thinking. The beauty of the Internet is the fact that it is, at its most basic level, a pure democracy. Anyone with a voice/idea/concept can post it for the world to see. Whether you agree with it or not is not the point. If you don't like it or disagree, that is your opinion, your right to dislike/disagree. Granted, there are things on the 'net that, for the most part, we would all agree should not be there (child porn, cruelty to animals, Pokemon, etc) but there is no legislation/enforcement that will eradicate anything from the 'net.

    "Fixing" the 'net is not possible. You also ask "What can we do about it? You can ask your ISP not to carry sites that you find offensive. Once again, however, we cannot legislate morality.

    --
    ...we are from the government - we are here to help...
    1. Re:Positive Thread by Random+Feature · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You can ask your ISP not to carry sites that you find offensive.

      And if we use the same ISP and I don't find it offensive, then what?

      In the words of Metal Church, what gives you the famous final word? to think that your opinion is preferred?

      Just like television, radio, newspaper. If you don't like it - don't watch it/listen to it/read it. Why should anything on the net be different?

      Do I like pr0n? No. Should it be banned? No.

      I am no so arrogant as to believe that my repressed, mid-west ethics should be the deciding factor in what is and what is not allowed on the Net. While I of course secretly hope (as do most people) that my morals would propagate and take over, I'm NOT willing to legislate that and destroy the right of others to enjoy whatever hedonistic or perverse content they desire. As long as it isn't violating any laws, it's not my decision.

      And it shouldn't be yours.

      Asking ISPs to not "carry" sites that I find offensive is the same as asking FOX not to air the Simpsons or my local radio station to not play pop-music because I find these things offensive.

      Wouldn't happen and shouldn't happen.

      Voltaire had the only right answer in these situations.

      --
      I don't have a solution, but I certainly admire the problem.
    2. Re:Positive Thread by blankmange · · Score: 2
      That is why I said to ask, rather than demand or jump up and down with your MidWest ethics and say that you will boycott and flame everybody who has an opinion different than yours, etc.... That is why I suggested asking....

      Please read before posting...

      --
      ...we are from the government - we are here to help...
    3. Re:Positive Thread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I love pr0n, and I am, as we speak, downloading tons of barely-legal teen MPEGs. If you deny me my pr0n, you are going to have a large, sexually frustrated white man in your face, and I know you don't want that.

    4. Re:Positive Thread by Random+Feature · · Score: 2

      I did read your post.

      Your suggestion to "ask" implies that you condone such an action.

      I do not.

      And before you go whack on that... While asking to have a site blocked should be an option, I don't believe that anyone actually should ask for such a thing.

      --
      I don't have a solution, but I certainly admire the problem.
    5. Re:Positive Thread by blankmange · · Score: 2

      I see -- I do not condone the act of asking for 'questionable' material to be removed from anywhere -- Internet, library, television. My suggestion of asking the ISP to remove a questionable site was in response to the poster asking "What can we do about this"....

      --
      ...we are from the government - we are here to help...
    6. Re:Positive Thread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > You can ask your ISP not to carry sites that you find offensive.

      "asking" for such things is an attempt to inflict your personal worldview on the life of others, without their consent or recourse. Your "suggestion" telegraphs an insidious, remarkably self-agrandizing, and terribly informed worldview.

      It is also cowardly since you are looking to inflict something upon others, via an irresponsible 3rd party, in a way they cannot defend themselves.

      By "asking the ISP" you admit the requested technical action can be taken. If so, they you are fully enabled to take similar action on your own behalf, without forcing your own, twisted, worldview on others' lives. But you choose, rather, to harm (yes, harm) others.

      "asking" is force, a mild one, perhaps, but force nonetheless. You blatenly seek to remove freedom of choice from others, when neither their choices or the facilities on which they're made, have absolutely no impact on you.

      > Once again, however, we cannot legislate morality.

      But you are trying to legislate morality. Only you seek to do it clandestinly, without all that dirty business of public discourse. Your concept would open the door to the vocal "moral minority" controlling world access to information.

      Bad. Just bad.

      In many ways, attitudes like yours are the reason the 'net, and the world at large, is so full of hate and misunderstanding. Basically, most people spend too much time trying force their worldview on others, one way or another. Nothing but loathing comes from being treated like a child by self-appointed "grown-ups" with a half baked "fix" for "The Problem".

      Want a world of understanding? Hey, try this...

      Understand.

      Then, agree or disagree. If you disagree, simply accept others' right to exist is just as good as yours, and they are just as "grown-up" as you. Swallow your pride, move on, leave them alone, and tend to your own business.

      Above all, never, ever, afflict your views on others unless they have a material and substantial tangible impact on your own, personal, life.

  49. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by RailGunner · · Score: 1
    The reason the media got so quiet on Enron is because the Bush Administration did nothing to help bail them out, while there is an incredible amount of evidence of Enron getting special favors from the CLINTON Administration.

    The Media is just protecting their boy Clinton.

    For a true eye-opener on the liberal media, I suggest you read "Bias" by Bernard Goldberg.

  50. Reformation Movements by Mad+Man · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Both Christianity and Judaism went through reformation movements.

    Islam, being the youngest of the three Western religions, has not.

    As for the cliche about "Christians have shed more blood in God's name than ANY other religeon, ever," I would like to see a number -- especially compared to belief systems like Communism or Naziism.

    It may be true, but I've never seen anything to back it up.

    1. Re:Reformation Movements by Random+Feature · · Score: 2

      That's probably because we don't have numbers for things like the Inquisition or the destruction of entire tribes of people destroyed in the name of Christianity when we decided to take over the Americas.

      I think the cliche is true, but only in the sense that it's from both sides - those who died for Christianity and those who have been killed in the name of Christianity. There's no distinction made in that cliche, unless you infer one. Historians generally don't.

      The latter is probably MUCH larger than the former.

      --
      I don't have a solution, but I certainly admire the problem.
    2. Re:Reformation Movements by FreeUser · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As for the cliche about "Christians have shed more blood in God's name than ANY other religeon, ever," I would like to see a number --

      As would I. Islam ran rampant across two of the largest continents in the world (Africa and Asia) and large portions of a third (Europe). Christianity has killed many, many people, but so too has Islam. Which is the greater offendor? I'd be curious to know, but I suspect the point doesn't really matter a whole lot. What is of more relevant concern is who is killing today in the name of religion, and Christians, as much as I despise their belief systems, haven't been engaged in mass killing since World War II, 60 years ago.

      especially compared to belief systems like Communism or Naziism.

      Contrary to popular myth being propogated by the Catholic church and other Christian groups, the Nazi's were not athiests at all. In point of fact, Hitler was a devout Catholic (which helps explain the Church's rather despicable collaboration in much of the holocaust), and the Nazi mysticism promulgated by their propoganda was a mixture of Christian and earlier European myths (including some real absurdities like Germans being descended from the original inhabitants of an asteroid that wiped out Atlantis ... go figure).

      The only legitimate example of "athiestic" regimes engaged in mass murder is communism, though it appears little if any killing was done in the name of religous intolerance (though plenty of discrimination was). Far more was done in the name of 'national security' and petty politics, but even so, the communists simply haven't been around long enough to have committed anywhere near the number of atrocities as Christianity and Islam have.

      You are absolutely right about the reformation movements, which Islam needs to go through rather soon, before they destroy themselves with their religious intolerance and, quite frankly, madness.

      --
      The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
    3. Re:Reformation Movements by Mr.+Fred+Smoothie · · Score: 2
      Be careful when you ascribe the destruction of Native American populations to actions "in the name of Christianity." While it may be true that many people used Christianizing as an excuse for cultural domination of indigenous peoples in the Americas, the simpler root cause of the oppression of native people is that European colonists wanted to exploit the riches of the new world, and any time native popluations made that more difficult (with claims on land or other natural resources), they we persecuted.

      Really, this is no different than any other colonial power (Greece, Rome, China & it's neighbors at various times). It's about the money, not the religion. Religion (whatever the religion) is simply used as a pretext to convince people that the oppression which is going to happen no matter what is "justified."

      --

    4. Re:Reformation Movements by Tazzy531 · · Score: 2
      As for the cliche about "Christians have shed more blood in God's name than ANY other religeon, ever," I would like to see a number -- especially compared to belief systems like Communism or Naziism.

      "I believe that I am acting in accordance with the will of the Almighty Creator: by defending myself against the Jew, I am fighting for the work of the Lord.."

      Hmm..Who could have said that? The author of this sentence was Adolf Hitler in Mein Kumpf.

      My feelings as a Christian points me to my Lord and Savior as a fighter. It points me to the man who once in loneliness, surrounded only by a few followers, recognized these Jews for what they were and summoned men to fight against them and who, God's truth! was greatest not as a sufferer but as a fighter. In boundless love as a Christian and as a man I read through the passage which tells us how the Lord at last rose in His might and seized the scourge to drive out of the Temple the brood of vipers and adders. How terrific was His fight for the world against the Jewish poison. To-day, after two thousand years, with deepest emotion I recognize more profoundly than ever before in the fact that it was for this that He had to shed His blood upon the Cross. As a Christian I have no duty to allow myself to be cheated, but I have the duty to be a fighter for truth and justice.... And if there is anything which could demonstrate that we are acting rightly it is the distress that daily grows. For as a Christian I have also a duty to my own people.... When I go out in the morning and see these men standing in their queues and look into their pinched faces, then I believe I would be no Christian, but a very devil if I felt no pity for them, if I did not, as did our Lord two thousand years ago, turn against those by whom to-day this poor people is plundered and exploited. -Adolf Hitler, in his speech on 12 April 1922
      Read more at: Hitler's Christianity

      Hitler and the Nazi regime was a major believer in the Christian faith. In fact, the Church at the time was a major supporter of the Nazis. In fact, a number of major businessmen and politicians in the US were supporters of the Nazis.

      Secondly, you are comparing apples and oranges. Communism and Naziism are not religions, but rather social/political structure. What you are asking is the same as saying: Who has killed more people, Muslims or Democracy?

      To answer your question:
      • Crusades - estimated at well over 9 million
      • Inquisition - 1 million
      • Witch Hunts - 3 million
      • Holocaust - 6 million
      (Source) Note: the source is rather unofficial so take it with a grain of salt

      In addition, this doesn't take into consideration the "missionary" work that a number of explorers have taken upon themselves. For example, the Aztec civilization was entirely wiped out by the Spanish explorer Hernan Cortes
      --


      _______________________________
      "I'm not Conceited...I'm just a realist..."
    5. Re:Reformation Movements by Random+Feature · · Score: 2

      Ahhh, very true.

      The reasoning for ascribing the decimation to Christianity semms then that it was a "convenient excuse" to alleviate the conscience.

      After all, wasn't it easier (and more acceptable) to kill pagans because they refused Christ than it was to kill them in the name of expansionism?

      While religion may not have been the impetus to destroy, it seems to have been used often as an excuse to cover more secular aspirations.

      --
      I don't have a solution, but I certainly admire the problem.
    6. Re:Reformation Movements by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      60 years ago?

      wow for a 2000 year old religion that must be a really long time, good thing your using that as your example of how perfect they are.

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    7. Re:Reformation Movements by FreeUser · · Score: 2

      60 years ago?

      wow for a 2000 year old religion that must be a really long time, good thing your using that as your example of how perfect they are.


      I think you need a remedial reading course.

      I was discussing how f*cked up both Christianity and Islam are, not how "perfect" either one is. Both are an afront to humanity, as is any religion that elevates its belief system above the value of human life, be they Satanists, Christians, Muslems, Jews, or Hale Bopp Comet Worshippers.

      As an aside, right now, Christianity appears to have benefited from having gone through a reformation, something Islam is severely lacking (with said lack rather apparent in their incredibly self destructive behavior, such as flying large planes into the symbols of the worlds most powerful country and being the wrath of the same down upon them, sending suicide missions into Israel likely to send the Israelis into fits of madness, etc. These are not the acts of a sane culture, but rather one bent upon its own destruction).

      Christianity isn't much better (cf. Nazi Germany 60 years ago, Yugoslavia more recently, etc.). My point remains ... the Arab and Islamic cultures better get their philisophical shit together and learn how to respect and live peacably with other cultures very quickly or they are likely to find themselves on the wrong end of the Extinction Stick.

      --
      The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  51. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by tmcmsail · · Score: 1

    Gee, that is a really fair statement. Of course Anonymous Coward is a title that fits you...

    Clinton may not be president, but he is in the news alot. Also, I don't have a cabin... That is more the style of the Una-bomber (A liberal).

    Maybe one day you can grow a spine, and make an argument that you are willing to sign your virtual name to :-)

    --

    What OS do you want to abuse today?

  52. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by ElvenSmith · · Score: 1

    If the lady in India ... INDONESIA, dude, INDONESIA NOT India.. and DON'T say "whatever".. It is that ignorance of us Americans that leads to all kinds of misunderstandings.....

  53. A insightful book by the author by jay_rod20 · · Score: 1

    In college I rectently took a globalization politics class and was required to do some reading of Thomas Friedmans works. For anyone who enjoyed this article I recommend Friedman's "The Lexus and The Olive Tree". The book is very insightful to the Internet Revoultion, Capitalization, and Middle East Affairs. Its one of the best books I ever read.

    1. Re:A insightful book by the author by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have mixed feelings about the book. On the one hand, it does provide some insight. On the other, it's basically a collection of a lot of his columns strung together (or at least it reads that way). Like his columns, it's great at providing interesting ideas and man-on-the-street perspectives from various parts of the world, but it's a little short on real analysis and putting things in historical context.

  54. Communications 101 by Dragoness+Eclectic · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Welcome to the real world, techno-idealists!

    The Internet is nothing more or less than a global medium of communication. There is nothing intrinisic to the Internet that dictates whether what is communicated is good or bad, truth or lie, hateful or loving. The same is true of speech, writing, radio, telephone, or any other mode of two-way communications.

    We are in a transition phase, where society around the world is still adjusting to this new, rapid communications medium. Obviously, there is a chunk of the world that has to re-learn the lesson of "don't believe everything you hear/read/etc--check the facts." Some will learn; some people will be perpetually gullible. That's life in the Real World.

    By way of illustration, one of the nastiest, most persistant bits of inflammatory propaganda in the last three centuries, one that is still circulating and accepted as fact in some circles, is the infamous Protocols of Zion. That text, originally created by the Russian Czar's secret police in the late 19th century, circulated as a printed work decades before radio or television, let alone the Internet. (I believe you find it on the Internet, however). It was the basis of much of the Nazi's anti-Semitic propaganda, and provides the themes and lies for the current, virulent anti-Semeticism of the Middle East.

    The point? The only thing new about the Internet is the rapidity of global communication; the same old evils are still here. On the flip side, the Internet gives everyone with access the chance formerly open only those who could afford global travel: the chance to talk to people in distant places, to read their local news, to hear their views and see their problems. However...

    At the end of the day, the Internet is still only a communications medium. It won't magically grant you understanding of those problems, nor will it give you compassion for or empathy with people who face the same basic problems common to all humanity. Neither will it magically force you to hate what you don't understand, or brainwash you into believing rumors without thought.

    The so-called "problems of the Internet" are the same problems people have always had with themselves and each other. That these two editorialists are shocked to discover this is rather like the French inspector being shocked to discover gambling in Rick's Cafe... one wonders what the ulterior motive is.

    I believe in the strengths of a free press, for the same reasons as the authors of the U.S. Constitution--among other things, a free society is not possible without free communications/free press. I am aware that a free press has its drawbacks, but like the founders of the United States, I believe that an educated citizenry is capable of telling the good from the bad, and that, to such a citizenry, the downsides of a free press are no more than an annoyance.

    I believe the Internet is potentially the most powerful free press in the world. I also know that there are governments and other interests that are terrified of the threat represented by a global free press, who would like to see it muzzled by any means possible. The excuse that an unfettered free press causes division and disturbs public order/encourages "agitators"/etc. has long been used by many governments to censor the printed press in their countries.

    Traditionally, even the press in most "free" countries has been limited by the high barrier to entry: TV broadcasters have to jump through hoops to get government licensing and permission to use the EM spectrum, expensive equipment has to be bought, highly-paid technicians and support staff have to be hired, etc. Printed press requires a printing press, highly-paid staff, extensive, expensive channels of distribution, etc. TV broadcasters can't offend the government too greatly, or they don't get the licenses and spectrum. Printed publications can't offend the majority tastes too greatly, or they can't get enough customers to pay the cost of entry. Thus, freedom of the press traditionally belonged (as was once said) only those who could afford a printing press. It limits "the press" to a small, select group, and a small, select group is easier to sway to one viewpoint/keep under control than "everyone in the world with enough literacy to string two sentences together".

    That's the threat and promise of the Internet as a free press: anyone who can get a website and the trivial technical skill to code a web page can put their views out for the entire to see, ignoring the even simpler methods of spreading news and rumors such as IRC/Usenet/web boards. It's still not a zero-difficulty barrier to entry, but it opens up the "free press" to an uncontrollable number of potential publishers.

    As such, the Internet is a grave threat to governments and other bodies who have reason to fear a free press--either because their political model depends on a gullible, uneducated citizenry that only hears what it is believed to be safe for them to hear, or because they really do have something to hide. It is also a threat to the traditional press, who don't seem to welcome competition in their hard-won positions of influencers of public perceptions from a huge bunch of brash upstarts. (God knows they don't want the public deciding for themselves what is worthwhile news and entertainment!)

    I ask again: what is the real agenda of these editorials? Keep an eye on whether or not this meme spreads, and what "solutions" are proposed and pushed to "solve" the "problem".

    --
    ---dragoness
    1. Re:Communications 101 by CaseyB · · Score: 2
      We are in a transition phase, where society around the world is still adjusting to this new, rapid communications medium.

      I think that this is the important point. It's not that the net has changed nothing in people's nature, or made it worse. It's that the change has only begun.

      Right now, the same old ignorant garbage that people have always believed is being posted. What's new is that suddenly the other side can see it! So of course anger is going to flare, as the real levels of igorance, hate, and intolerance that have always existed are finally seen firsthand by either side. Of course it's going to be a painful phase.

      But this is where the potential for progress begins. Hopefully, the "shock" will wear off in time, and the mutual awareness will lead to dialogue, which will lead to understanding.

  55. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Diabolical · · Score: 2

    With dismay i read your article.. i'm an atheist so i don not believe in any kind of god (notice the lower case g). However, i do not _ever_ mistake an extremist religieus idiot with being a spokesperson of _any_ religion. Besides christians aren't so great themselves.. (remember WWII where bishops of both sides blessed the armys that went to war and kill each other in the name of god and country).

    I agree that the Islam calls hatred into ones mind but i have spoken alot with muslims lately and most of them deny categorically any kinship with (their words) "those extremist pigs". The koran on itself does not preach hatred or intolerance it's those who abuse it who do this.

    I have been a christian most of my life until i decided i didn't want to be a part of such nonsense. I do however respect another who does care for a religion. Whether one believes in Jahweh/Jehovah, Allah, Boedha or any other of those gods above is up to them, not me. Nor is it up to me to judge a religion solely by the acts of fools.

  56. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't get your panties in a bunch. What's the big difference?

    They're both Fundamental Islamic regimes. One of them just happens to have nukes.

  57. Not at Slashdot by Publicus · · Score: 4, Funny

    At least you have sites like /.

    Intolerance and extremism may run rampant no the rest of the internet but not here!

    Oh, wait...

    --

    My Karma was at 49, then they switched to words. All that work for nothing!

  58. The Revolution WILL Be Televised by gelfling · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And ultimately the Internet will be a weapon of tyranny.

    We watch we read we absorb like sponges. Uncritical, unreflective only having an emotional response to the next car ad or half naked chick. Burning buildings, quarter pounders, sports highlights, political arguments...we can't call them apart any more. Rage in the street, pick up a rock, loot burn kill. The kid with the Nike T-shirt and the gun could be Compton, Ramallah, Freetown, Kuala Kampur, Seattle, Buenos Aires.

    A rose by any other name would smell as sweet.

    1. Re:The Revolution WILL Be Televised by Kintanon · · Score: 1

      Mmmmm.... half naked chick.....

      Oh, what? Were you saying something?

      Kintanon

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    2. Re:The Revolution WILL Be Televised by swankypimp · · Score: 1

      Instead of bread and circuses, it'l be quarter-pounders and porn. Where do I sign up?

      --

      --All your stolen base are belong to Rickey Henderson
  59. Random NYT registration generator by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 2, Informative

    http://www.majcher.com/nytview.html

  60. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Bootsy+Collins · · Score: 1

    The reason the media got so quiet on Enron is because the Bush Administration did nothing to help bail them out, while there is an incredible amount of evidence of Enron getting special favors from the CLINTON Administration.

    The Media is just protecting their boy Clinton.

    HTH with the irrational obsession. HAND. And watch out for the black helicopters.

  61. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, this is the first time in a loooonngg time I've seen any kind of intelligent thought on Slashdot regarding religious type debates. While I claim to be a "Christian" (not by "religion", but by my faith in Christ alone), I can completely agree with everything you had to say. I may not be "on your side" in terms of belief system, but I sure as hell would fight for your rights as an American citizen, because you're at least promoting coexistence with the normal people of the world, regardless of race, creed, or ethnicity.

    "Christianity" (please don't lump Catholics in that group) is not perfect either (we've got our share of hypocrites too), but it certainly isn't out to kill every muslim on the face of the planet. I may believe my faith is the only way to find eternal life after death on earth, but I leave that as a choice each person must make on their own, and they alone get to deal with the consequences and/or rewards of their decisions, ultimately. It's not up to me to put people to death for believing in something different than me that cannot be physically seen, as the islamics seem so intent on doing.

  62. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by tmcmsail · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    There was no ENRON deal, unless you talk about Clinton and his cronies taking money and getting them some loan deals (that they have defaulted on now). Clinton's sexual history was news because he lied under oath. But that only showed how democrats are corupt to the core (look at the results of the impeachment trial). The war on terrorism is a US war, not Bush's. With 10 years in the Navy, I was just as much at risk as the current people. Maybe you can look at the book Bias. It is a good review of the state of current american journalism.
    Have you really heard a good counter point on the networks for drilling in ANWR, against 1.5 million abortions a year, telling the truth about AIDS on the decline since 1992 (and the fact that it gets more funding that heart and cancer research)?

    What a country we could be if people would use the brain for thinking instead of the Knee jerk emotional reaction that the left loves.

    --

    What OS do you want to abuse today?

  63. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by eyegor · · Score: 1

    It's nice to know that sheep-like behavior is apparently universal. Not.

    One the biggest reasons that I've walked away from religion is the absolute intolerance and rabid bigotry shown by nearly every religion. When you add ignorance and xenophobia into the mix, the whole situation is out of control.

    It's amazing how many "one true gods there are" and even more amazing how much evil has been carried out in the name of god.

    There's no easy cure. Challenging peoples core beliefs, no matter how wrongheaded, will usually result in even more unreasonable behavior. People hate being reminded they're fools.

    --

    Don't anthropomorphize computers, they don't like it.
  64. Consider religion over time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever hear of the Crusades or the Inquisition?
    Sodom and Gomorrah?

    Neither Christianity nor Judaism is guilt-free of periods of zero-tolerance.

    It just may be that Islam is still a young religion and enough adherents haven't seperated Church from State, or in this case, Mosque and State?

    1. Re:Consider religion over time by fizbin · · Score: 2

      I must say that I find your Sodom and Gomorrah reference truly bizarre.

  65. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by ElvenSmith · · Score: 1

    They're both Fundamental Islamic regimes Lord what fools we allow on this forum... both India and Indonesia fundamentalist Islamic regimes..!!!!!!!! get some basic facts straight man.. Ok I rest my case.

  66. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by ObviousGuy · · Score: 1
    --
    I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
  67. And who will filter the data for us. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "the Internet, at its ugliest, is just an open sewer: an electronic conduit for untreated, unfiltered information."

    And how much will that filtering cost? Not just in dollars, but what will the cost be toward our freedoms?

    Who will guard the guards? How do we know that the ones who filter the data for us won't be pushing their own agendas?

    I think that we should be give full access to all data in it's pure raw form and let people do their own filtering and come to their own conclusions. The thing that pisses me off about most news programs is that they are not just reporting facts, but they are reporting conclusions which are often in error.

    A prime example of this is that our media keeps coming to the conclusion that the Palestinians are terrorist and that the Jews are defending their homelands... but they convienently don't mention that half the Palestinians that are killed or injured are children under the age of 12, or that most of the alledged terrorist groups are from refuge camps where they were forcibly relocated to after everything they ever owned was taken from them, including land which had been in their families for 2000 years. Or the fact that Palestinians have no right to trial, no right to free movement, do not have the right to keep and bear arms for their own defense, and can be kidnapped, or tortured for information without even a trial or any judicial oversight. Or the fact that the first thing that the Jews bomb are water processing plants, hospitals, schools, roads and police stations.

    But these are just facts, draw your own conclusion as to who the terrorists are.

    1. Re:And who will filter the data for us. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suppose you think that because A is bad, B must be good. After all, otherwise the world might be - shudder - complicated!

      By the way, "Jews" != "Israeli hard-liners"...

  68. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by pwagland · · Score: 3, Insightful
    *Sigh* I know I am only responding to flamebait, but it has been modded "insightful" so...

    Look at your Spanish history before the Spanish Inquisitions. Before the inquisitions there were Jewish, Muslim and Christian cities in Spain. Or more precisely, city states.

    During the growth of the Spanish empire, Spain took most of these cities over, however, they were still not properly integrated into one kingdom, they were a little bit more like the UN is today. Still, to some extent, autonomous but beholden to the Spanish crown.

    One of the things that Queen Isabella did to change this was to impose a state religion (Roman Catholic), and then later to cause the inquistions to enforce the crowns will. This was done with the knowledge and encouragement of the state church (which was at this time, not Muslim).

    [The Muslim religion] should be excluded from the global debate on how to make the world a better place because it has a truly horrific history

    And your argument is that the christian religion better on the history stakes? Or should I mention the crusades as well? Those wars to fight the "infidel Muslim", in which the goal was to retake Jerusalem, and reduce the influence of the Turk (Islam) powers.

  69. Internet drivers license by mrhandstand · · Score: 1
    This thread more than ANY other I've encountered re-affirms my belief that you should be licensed to use a computer and should require a separate license to access the internet. And next week I be even surer that the book banners are right. After that I'll believe that speech should be banned.

    Alright folks...rumor and hatred are NOT new...We survived Gutenburg and we'll survive the internet and Al-Jeezera. If for no other reason than we are breeding faster that even the radicals can kill each other off.

    --
    Always value the individual over the system. --Bruce Lee "I don't need a Sig - I have a custom 191" - me
  70. The only filter required is your own by sat985 · · Score: 1

    We don't need some pricks to tell us what is useful information and what isn't. We can decide for ourselves, the internet belongs TO THE PEOPLE. no government has the right to step in and censor anything. They can kiss my ass. These people use scare tactics so they can put the general public into a fear stricken panic in order to pass new bullshit laws.

  71. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by DaoudaW · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Some of what you describe is true today. But in an historical context, it's total drivel. Judaism flourished when Spain was under Moslem control, there was a holocaust when Christians took over.

    There is a significant Christian minority to this day in middle-eastern countries which have been under Islamic rule for over 1000 years. The history of these Christian communities has mostly been peaceful co-existence with their Moslem neighbors.

  72. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by tmcmsail · · Score: 1

    My mistake. Sorry to piss off a billion people (almost) in India. I was only off by 4 letters, and a thousand miles.

    Thanks for the correction, but it does not change my point that the dial on the TV can work wonders on the ability to change what is on the TV.

    --

    What OS do you want to abuse today?

  73. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heh heh heh. Like shooting fish in a barrel.

  74. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, *all* religions should be excluded from the debate on how to make the world a better place. Apparantly, the concept of "peace" is not a religious concept. Thus, no religion is qualified to assist in its institution. Secularism and rationalism is the answer, not religion.

    Except for Scientologists :)

  75. The perfect insult: by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

    Let the man speak his mind - it won't take him long...

  76. OT: spelling by JAVAC+THE+GREAT · · Score: 1
    We've previously posted the Packer piece, but combined with other story, I think it's worth a retread.

    Well, at least you're using a spellchecker.

  77. the downward spiral by t0mmyb · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that in all things, it is, and always has been, easier for humankind to gratify it's base urges than the (often) more constructive alternatives. Please - give me some examples to show me I'm wrong on this one.

    The mighty internet and television makes realization of this tendency faster and thus even easier. What do we find on the web or on the tube? Intolerant opinion, born of hatred. Pornography. Violence. The technology of mass media has made it trivial for this sort of indulgence to reach anywhere, and in little time. The marketing of mass media (and the quest for higher rating$) has made it a certainty.

    A shame, really. Finding goodness on the web or TV is the exception to the norm. It's out there, but it's limited and hard to find. But we shouldn't be surprised, given our track record.

  78. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by paranoid.android · · Score: 5, Insightful
    you don't see conservative Christians and Jews lining up to strap C4 to their bodies and suicide bomb their "enemies."

    I beg to differ:
    These may not be "suicide bombings" but they are fueled by the same thing: fanatical hatred and intolerance.

    Every religion -- even non-religion -- can have its zealots willing to do anything for "the cause." Your average Muslim, just like your average Christian, Jew, or atheist, is at least tolerant of other faiths. On the other hand, every religion has nutjobs that take its dogma to violent extremes.
  79. your view of islam is wrong by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1

    Seriously you should actually try to learn about islam.

    In the last half century there has been an increase of hard core islamic religions, but that has to do with many things, and ironicaly its been mostly due to western policies.

    But islam has not always been so extreme. and as far as extreme muslims go, you can always find an extreme hindu, christian or jew that is just as bad as them.

    But the spotlight is on the muslims.

  80. A little knowledge... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ... is a dangerous thing.

    In my evolving "theory of civilisation", I can't help noticing that the fact that something is written down means that people give it more importance than if it weren't. Hence the importance of the Bible and Koran: they're written down, so they must be true. The fact that it is written in "the book" is the basis for a point of view, neglecting the fact that the person or persons who wrote that book are as human as the rest of us.

    In the Academic world, one is expected to churn out loads of "papers" in order to justify ones place there. It's a "paper-generating" industry and for the most part quantity is more important than quality (profiles of Academics say things like: "he has written 250 papers and 10 books on the subject". How many of them were actually useful, though? And, if you were to read them, how many would be re-writes of old papers?).

    Literacy and elitism seem to go hand-in-hand in many cultures. The fact that someone can read and write (particularly if they can read and write long words) lends them status. Osama bin Laden is a scholar. Scholars would seem to be very important in the Muslim world. But what does it mean to be a scholar? It is very easy to impress the poorly-educated population of a war-torn country (Osama bin Laden's formal education is in Engineering, not Islam, isn't it?).

    Once again, the solutions to this imbalance would seem to be infrastructure and education: if more people have the opportunity and ability to absorb many points of view, they should be able to make their minds up as to which they actually believe in. Otherwise they are more likely to bow to the "superior intellect" of someone else just because that person can read and write.

    The readers of Slashdot are among a privileged minority in the world who have the ability and resources to see many sides to an argument. They tend to have a technical background and so are not in awe of it. And any readers who have debugged code also know that just because something is written down, that doesn't necessarily mean that it's true ;-)

    1. Re:A little knowledge... by Weh · · Score: 1
      In my evolving "theory of civilisation", I can't help noticing that the fact that something is written down means that people give it more importance than if it weren't. Hence the importance of the Bible and Koran: they're written down, so they must be true. The fact that it is written in "the book" is the basis for a point of view, neglecting the fact that the person or persons who wrote that book are as human as the rest of us.


      In the case of the bible and the torah this is not true, there have been extensive debates in both Judaism and Christianity about exactly which books to include in the bible and torah. The bible and the Torah are not just a collection of stuff that was written, some books were rejected, some included. In the case of the Koran I have heard that indeed non-western logic like "it is written therefore true" is used but I am not too sure on this so don't flame me on it.
  81. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by adubey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    First, I don't think the parent is flamebait. I think the author is truely and honestly lost.

    because it has a truly horrific history

    Before talking about history, I suggest you learn some. Pretty much all religions had a horrific history.

    Other religions like Christianity, Judaism, [more religions] allow for secular coexistance and equal rights.

    They do TODAY. Christians slaughtered Jews and Muslims during the Inquisition. Jews slaughtered the Cananites in the early history of Isreal.

    Now, read This essay. One of the author's points is that the Protestant Reformation brought Christianity into the modern age. Perhaps Islam, a much younger religion, is going through the same phase now. They key point is: don't compare Islam today against Christianity or Judaism today and extrapolate backwards. If you want to know what happened in the past, actually read about what happened in the past.

    They may shake their fists in anger, but they don't kill you for insulting or denegrating their religion.

    Almost all other religions have done this in the past. Read the essay and find out how different sects of Christians did this to one another. Read your history.

    Now, get outside the West and do that in Saudi Arabia...Before you die, try to take a bet on where the AK-47 rounds are flying from that kill you.

    You have an extremely perverted world view. Once you're done reading the history books, TRAVEL a bit. Geez. Most of the planet's population is peaceful and friendly. Only the violent bits get reported on CNN. That doesn't mean the rest of the planet is like it is on CNN. If you actually TRAVELLED to some Muslim countries, you might be able to think more coherently!

  82. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Actually, throughout most of the history of Islam, it was far more tolerant towards the other religions of the book than Christianity. For example, Jews lived unmolested in Spain while it was under Islamic rule, but shortly after the christians took over, the jews were expelled.

    As for the 'truly horrific history', check out the history of Christianity - rampant antisemitism, progroms - and don't even get me started on the crusades. Oh, and while conservative christians in the US don't do suicide bombings (yet? Maybe they haven't got the guts?), some of them do go out and shoot people they disagree with - e.g. doctors providing abortions.

    Perhaps if you put a little more thought, more research and a little less prejudice into your posts, we can appreciate your POV better.

  83. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Bootsy+Collins · · Score: 2, Informative

    Islam's interaction with other religions has always been with its followers holding a sword to the followers of the other religion's necks.

    I can't tell whether you're thinking of the Crusades, when all those horrible Muslims kept marching deep into Europe over and over with a stated intention of killing as many Christians as possible to "liberate" their holy land, or Britain and France in the first half of the 20th Century, when all those Muslims colonized Britain and France and treated their residents brutally until after World War II.

    What? Backwards? What about a history class? Huh?

    Other religions like Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism, Wicca and probably a lot more allow for secular coexistance and equal rights. They allow for freedom and tolerance. They make it easy to believe and yet be a rational human being.

    Hmmm. I'm a research scientist and educator by training and profession. I've never had any problems with Muslims, or Jews, directly. I and my associates in my field have, however, had lots of problems from Christians. These have ranged from being told in a shopping center parking lot that I was going to hell for working on cosmology and "believing" in the Big Bang, to the Tennessee state legislature, acting with biblical justification, passing a law that teachers in Tennessee could go to jail for teaching that evolution is an accepted paradigm of the scientific community (thank heavens for a gubernatorial veto).

    Not that I think that such problems with intolerant Christians tar all Christians or the entire faith; but when you make absurd blanket statements about all of Islam, and then simulataneously make blanket statements that Christians are tolerant and encourage reason, I don't know whether to laugh or cry.

  84. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by dirtyhippie · · Score: 0

    > Other religions like Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism, Wicca and probably a lot more allow for secular coexistance and equal rights.

    No they don't. All religions say that their way is the "one true way" to live in heaven/be at peace with Earth/whatever else. The only difference is that religion means a whole lot less than economics (and the political structure that is so delicately intertwined with it) in Europe and the U.S. as compared to most Islamic countries. Money is the new religion in the West. When the developing world starts catching up economically, I'm sure religion will mean less there as well (for better or worse).

    > Let's be honest, Christianity and Judaism haven't been as bad to us as many seem to think.

    Ever heard of the crusades? How about the inquisition?

    > When people insult Christianity and Judaism and proudly declare themselves to hate Christianity or Judaism, you don't see conservative Christians and Jews lining up to strap C4 to their bodies and suicide bomb their "enemies."

    No you don't. Instead you see the IDF killing innocent Lebanese and Palestinians, and the Americans killing hundreds of thousands of civilians in Iraq through blockades. This is not flamebait. A good friend of mine was in an elite "special forces" unit when he did his (mandatory) service in Israel, and he doesn't like to talk about it. When I asked him what exactly he did, he said, point blank, "my job was to kill Arabs." (We haven't spoke about it since).

    The only difference I see is that Christians and Jews have a little more technology on their side (including the means to broadcast news of such incidents faster).

    > I dare you, go to Mecca and yell "Fuck Muhammad!"

    I highly doubt you would get hit by AK-47 rounds. You might get your ass kicked, but I expect you'd have similar results if you went to the white house and yelled "Fuck George W. Bush." And I don't imagine they'd like it very much if you cried "Fuck Jesus Christ" in the vatican either.

    I think you're a perfect example of what these articles are talking about. You have absolutely no context, basing your opinions on what you see on the idiot box (and perhaps what you read on Slashdot).

    PS - For what it's worth, I consider myself a Deist as well.

  85. US morality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are only 3 countries in the whole world with death-penalty for children : Iran, saoudi-arabia, and the united states, is that moral ? Or is this country run by the KKK ?

  86. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Archie+Steel · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    The Bush administration did nothing for Enron because it was too late (therefore too dangerous). However, when you look at the past history of Enron, it is closely entertwined with that of the Bushes. The Republicans are just mad at Clinton because he stole their program. But there's no question that the Bush administration is that of Big Oil - every aspect of the Bush foreign policy is dominated by this: the upcoming Desert Storm sequel, the non-condemnation of (and probable involvment in) the failed Venezuelan coup, Arctic Drilling, the privileged relation with the saudis, the many members of the cabinet who come from Big Oil companies, etc.

    BTW, if the media were so liberal, then the liberals wouldn't complain about it being so pro-conservative. The fact is, most media are private corporations, and they follow a pro-corporate bias. For example, NBC never presented news reports of anti-nuclear demonstrations when it was owned by General Electric (who built the motors that powered cruise missiles). Also, a TV network that counts McDonald's as one of its major sponsor would be hard-pressed to run a story critical of McDonald's and risk to lose that account. It's pretty simple, really.

    At best, the major media are centrist with a pro-corporate agenda, and at worst (like Fox) they are clearly right-wing. Of course, if you're to the right of them, then you'll find them "liberal", but that's only relative to your own point of view. Bernard Goldberg's book is itself a pretty biased text - for a better-written counterpart (which gives a lot more sources to prove its point), try Manufacturing Consent by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky.

    --

    Reminder: find a new sig
  87. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Tazzy531 · · Score: 2

    As the other responder suggested, this has been the most ignorant thing that people actually modded up. Secondly, just like the article talks about, you are just fueling more biased opinions and pawning them off as truths.

    As a disclaimer, I am spiritual, but against all forms of organized religions. I believe that the "message" itself gets distorted as it passes through the people that are trying to spread it. I have read the bibles, quran, and other books and each of these have an inherently good message.

    The truth is, Christianity has murdered more people throughout history than any other religion. Look at the crusaders and the Spanish Inquisition. Secondly, the only religion that has practiced forceful conversions of other people through missionaries are the Christians. Lastly, every religion has faced a point in which they have to fight for their own survival. For the Christians, it's the Roman era. For the Jews, it was the crusades and the holocaust. For the Muslims, it was also the crusades and maybe even now.

    Now, it is totally unfair to say that because a minority group of people have hijacked the religion and used it towards their extremist purposes, to say that the religion is inherently evil. In every religion, a number of passages can also be analyzed that way. And because a minority views it in that perspective, doesn't mean that the message is corrupt. (Again, rings back to my original belief that the messenger corrupts the inherent good of these religions stated above)

    Are we going to say that the abortion clinic bombers are representative of the Christian religion? How about the KKK and the Aryan Nation? They believe that they are the crusaders for the christian cause. Also remember, the Nazis believed they were fighting for their faith. In addition, at the time in the US, many top politicians and business men support the Nazis. In fact, George W Bush's grandfather, Prescott Bush has been a long supporter of the Nazis.

    Now it comes to another point. Why do people honor those that go out there to fight and die for their country..but we look at the Palestian bombers as uneducated savages? Is it honorable to risk your life for the better future of your family and/or your country? If not, try telling the soldiers that as they head off to Afghanistan. Are human bombs any worse than carpet bombing a large area indiscriminately as they did in Afghanistan?

    That brings up another point. Throughout history, the underdogs (or the oppressed) have always needed to find new ways of fighting to take advantage of the opponent's vulnerability. Look at the 1770s. The British felt the same way about the Revolutionary fighters as we now do towards the human bombs. The "standard" way of fighting was to stand up in 2 lines directly in front of the enemy and fire on command. The revolutionists fought from behind trees as individuals and moved to dodge the gunfires. All I'm saying is it is a failure on everyone's part when a group of people feel that they have to turn to bombing to get their point across (ie Palestinian bombers, abortion clinic bombers, unabomber, and the kid that they just arrested the other day for the mailbox bombs).

    Now to wrap this up and relate it somewhat to the article. Don't believe everything that you read on the internet (including this). Verify stuff yourself. And if you believe all US news channel are unbiased, you are clearly wrong.

    --


    _______________________________
    "I'm not Conceited...I'm just a realist..."
  88. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by benjymous · · Score: 1

    He got modded up as flamebait instead :-/

    --
    Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!
  89. holding a sword by samjam · · Score: 1

    "Islam's interaction with other religions has always been with its followers holding a sword to the followers of the other religion's necks."

    This is not true. Early Muslim states defended christians minorities living around.

  90. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by proj_2501 · · Score: 1

    The US having plans to invade Afghanistan back in July for easier access to oil? This isn't even a War on Terror. That's just a convenient excuse.

  91. Sewers, etc. by Observer · · Score: 1
    It's not just the Internet. As Tom Lehrer remarked once,
    Life is like a sewer.
    (pause)
    What you get out of it depends rather a lot on what you put into it.
  92. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by 00_NOP · · Score: 1

    Don't get your panties in a bunch. What's the big difference?

    They're both Fundamental Islamic regimes.


    Hey, POTUS is posting to /.

  93. Well, Duh! by Eagle7 · · Score: 2

    Geesh - I'd love to get paid for writing down stuff that the majority of moderatly intelligent people in this world already know. Where can I sign up?

    Seriously, this isn't news, this is common-fucking-sense. Bad information with apparent credibility, whether from the 'net, religion, slanted news sources, revolutionary leaders, etc causes hate and misunderstanding. An objective and skeptical pursuit of truth and understanding (and aplication of your own intelligence, rather than trusting someone elses) erases same.

    This guy needs to stop writing editorials, take a few history courses, and realize that his views are nothing new, and nothing amazing.

    --
    _sig_ is away
  94. hogwash by afferoman · · Score: 1
    Just because something got published by the NY times... It doesn't mean its deserves to be taken seriously.

    Let's see if I got this right.

    Cable broadcasts propanda.

    Internet transports propaganda.

    So...words transport propaganda.

    Every since people began talking...people began using those words to spread hatred and fear!

    As a society, we've really got to do something about this unrestrained use of words! What can we do?

  95. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by SacredNaCl · · Score: 1

    Let's be honest, Christianity and Judaism haven't been as bad to us as many seem to think. When people insult Christianity and Judaism and proudly declare themselves to hate Christianity or Judaism, you don't see conservative Christians and Jews lining up to strap C4 to their bodies and suicide bomb their "enemies.">>>>>

    Christianity and Judaism have been just as bad ... when they are allowed to run a state. I don't want to live in Pat Robertsons America any more than I want to live under Sharia law. They aren't all that much different to be honest. We've seen that when any religion gets control of the wheels of state power they abuse others with it. Christians killed millions -- both in Europe, America, South America, and Africa. Jews are doing the same thing in Israel today.

    The only solutions I see are keeping religious wacko's out of power.

    --
    Freedom is merely privilege extended unless enjoyed by one and all.
  96. Please use the correct byline by Zigurd · · Score: 2

    Please put Katz articles under his byline. If I wanted to read worrywart handwringing digital divide why they all hate us crap, I'd read the Katz crap. As it is, I filter it out and find Slashdot mostly informative. Please keep Slashdot useful and usable.

  97. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just wanted to tell you that although I think you have a valid point, you come off really arrogantly. So annoying and condescending that I almost couldn't finish reading your post. Something you might want to think about next time you respond to someone you disagree with.

  98. I'm sure Freidman .... by SacredNaCl · · Score: 1

    Doesn't like images of Palestinians being beaten, tortured, humiliated at check points daily -- to be televised. But they wouldn't be televised if they didn't happen. ...and even with them happening, they still aren't televised here (USA).

    I'm sorry the internet isn't censored to his particular likes, but the reality is the internet may be even more accurate than the mainsteam news. At least the internet reports the stories that they don't because of omission. Even in the stories they do cover they simply omit the opposing view.

    If TV news wants the internet to go away they have the means to do it -- do a better job. :)

    --
    Freedom is merely privilege extended unless enjoyed by one and all.
  99. Technology Can Be Used for Good and Evil by PineHall · · Score: 2

    Technology like the Internet is a neutral. Like a knife it can be used for good (surgery) or for evil (murder). The Internet allows information both true and false be spread fast and widely. This is good because we find out about others and their needs and emphathize with them and help them. Unfortunatately it also spreads falsehoods just as rapidly which bring division.

    The alternative is to censor the Internet so that a few will give us only what they want us to hear. They may do it with good motives but information is lost and only their view is given. And if done for selfish totalitarian motives people are controled. There will always be people who use the internet for evil purposes. Reality is people are not naturally good. Free spread of information (true and false) is best.

  100. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is the most biased ahistorical piece of tripe I've seen in a long time. No world religion has more claim to tolerance -- or violence against unbelievers -- than the other. Certainly not the big three of the 'Western World'. Christianity, Judiasm and Islam. I could offer you head-to-head examples of tolerance of others, or violence toward "nonbelievers" in each of them -- it almost makes you think there's something "human" about such behavior. This post's rhetorical appeal to neutrality (a 'deist' -- that is, not a partisan...) is nothing but rhetoric and should be convincing to no one.

  101. hate red & MiSunderstanding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    see also: Godless greed/fear based sellfish egoceNTric megalomaniacs.

    see also: deceptive PayPer LieSense FUDgePacking/dogooder bashing, buy IT's fineasp.

  102. Thank you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thank you for your service. I really wonder why some idiots have modded your posting down :-(

  103. Printer Friendly my Arse by donnacha · · Score: 2, Funny


    I know this is OT, but have any of you noticed the latest shit that the Guardians of Content are pulling: running space and paper-wasting graphical adverts down the side of the printer friendly versions of articles!

    I guess being able to track our identities isn't enough for the NY Times.

    And, seriously, a STARBUCKS ad to accompany THIS particular article? C'mon!

  104. Christians, Jews, and Islam. . . by Salgak1 · · Score: 1

    Yes, they have. But have they done it LATELY ?

    The last major Judeo-Christian religious war was several centuries ago. I think it can be argued that the Judeo-Christian family of religions has matured sufficiently to allow co-existence, although I'll admit the re-appearance of anti-semitism in Europe is a troubling development.

    But I'll note that the vast majority of present wars, worldwide, are Muslims vs. someone who isn't Muslim. Proselytation via armed force, or more traditionally, the sword, is a long tradition in Islam. I'm not sure Judiasm EVER had it, and Christianity dropped that 4-500 years ago. . .

    1. Re:Christians, Jews, and Islam. . . by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      There is a pseudo-Christian (it deviates somewhat, IIRC, such as having leaders who claim the usual magical powers -- invulnerability to weapons, most notably) fanatical rebellion in Sudan, but then the Sudan government is heavily Islamist, and I don't recall who started it...

      Other than that, yup, it's mostly Muslims, and to some degree, Hindus against Muslims in one part of the world, if you count rioting, train-burning and that sort of thing. 'tho again, I don't recall "who started it" there.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    2. Re:Christians, Jews, and Islam. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course they haven't.

      Their two religions are based on the sole ideal of profit.

      Their priests and rabbis can't get fat and wealthy with blood being spilled all the time.

      Remember, kids, you aren't peasants! If your priests are eating steak each night, when your nuns who take oaths of poverty are driving around in a Lexus after getting laser eye surgery.. There's something wrong.

      Moneychangers in the temple.

  105. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by lmfr · · Score: 1
    "ne of the author's points is that the Protestant Reformation brought Christianity into the modern age."

    I disagree. They tried to bring christianity back to its earlier ages, before it got mingled with the romans' church.

    Anyone who associates catholicism to christianity knows not the history of catholicism nor what being a christian is about.

    Mind you, too many reformers have failed to know Christ, as well..

  106. We need some good Arabic Internet hoaxes by sethg · · Score: 2

    Someone with Net access who is fluent in Arabic needs to come up with some really good Internet hoaxes that will thoroughly and publically embarrass whoever falls for them. If enough such hoaxes are propagated, fallen for, and then publically exposed, more people in the Arabic-speaking world will learn not to trust everything they see on the Net.

    --
    send all spam to theotherwhitemeat@ropine.com
    1. Re:We need some good Arabic Internet hoaxes by xyzzy · · Score: 2

      Oh yea, that's worked so well for English speakers!

      Would you like a cookie recipe? And, have you seen that photo of the guy on the WTC!?!? OMGFG!!*@#?!@!!

      :-)

  107. More than technology by Muttonhead · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    The fact that Internet technology rebalances the Jewish dominated media machine is what upsets Friedman and many in the mainstream media. Friedman's argument demonstrates once again that complaining about Israel is bad and even worse because of the speed and power of the Internet, yet criticism of others is okay.

    The fact that Israel has been practicing ethnic cleansing on the Palestinians for many decades is a fact documented by may scholars, non-Jewish and Jewish alike. The Internet simply makes it easy to bypass mainstream media and get the word out. This is what upsets Friedman. He fears the democratization effect of the Internet. Arab viewpoints don't become magically invalid simply because they are expressed over a powerful medium such as the Internet.

    To further the point, the Palestinians have no army, are manginalized, killed, tortured, have no hope, etc., thus, as guaranteed by international law they fight back against an occupying army in the only way they can, with suicide bombs. It IS deplorable, but it is also deplorable that Israel practices ethnic cleansing. Somehow Israeli atrocities get whitewashed or not reported in U.S. mainstream media. In Europe the news is more balanced, but then they get criticised for anti-Semitism.

    When Arabs worry that they will be killed by Jews and Christians, this *IS EXACTLY* what is happening -- at least in Palestine. The U.S. sends military equipment to Israel and Israel carries out it's 100 year old Zionist goal of an Arab-free Israel. It IS a reality. It isn't hard to see that Arabs are worried about what will happen next. Thus the great sin committed by the Arabs is that while they once worried privately, not they are worrying publicly using new Internet technology.

    The "4,000 Jews not showing up to work" story may very well be a lie -- it's not entirely clear at this point because of allegations of the interception of instant messages coming from Israel -- but the fact that the rumor exists -- even if false -- points to the suspicion many have of Israel and the fact that they have acted as an agent provoceteur in the past to achieve their goals.

  108. The internet brings people together more than IRL by HanzoSan · · Score: 2



    Someone who lives in say Idaho whos grew up around the KKK and so on whos never really spoken to anyone diffrent, could get on the net and see the REAL world for the first time and begin thinking for themselves.

    or of course, they can go to their KKK websites.
    But chances are they'll go to an AOL chatroom and meet diffrent people. Thats the first step to increasing tolerance.

    You cant teach people to tolerate other races if they only know what the KKK grand dragon tells them.

    (Black people are mud people. Jews are the devil)

    Unless they meet people for themselves and decide. They will never know.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  109. Isn't this a bigger problem? by El+Camino+SS · · Score: 2

    I've been thinking about how we are hating each other more virulently recently, and I think it comes down to the fact that we are tribal.

    What I mean by that is that human beings simply don't have all the mental capability to keep up personal relationships with more than a tribe-sized group of people... my idea is somewhere between ten to twelve persons. What I mean is this... it is very natural for you to be tight with ten to twelve people and then the rest you just don't heve the time for. I think it is in human nature, and it leads to the "screw the rest of those guys" attitude in general. That general trend *really* manifests itself if something appears as a threat.

    Anyway, it feels right to me. I am not a social scientist.

    Now teaching to hate is a totally different matter. That is really complex. Does anyone feel like the cold war was better? When you didn't have an open border, and you were in a struggle with a non-aggressive nuke, non-integrated group into your society? I mean, at least the Soviets actually sat down with us to talk. They sure as hell weren't going to attempt an attack on a Tuesday morning and risk the whole world.

    It appears that the whole Arab-Israeli mess will boil over in a guaranted less than ten years into world war. They are making too much of an effort towards it by teaching their children to hate. Both sides are trying to drag their friends into it, egging each of their bigger brothers for weapons and someone to back them up. Both sides believe they are a superior race, and we know what happens when you start thinking that.

    I personally don't like what the Israelis are doing right now, I think that using tanks against people throwing rocks is insane and terrorist in nature. However, the fact that the Palestinians are attacking elderly people on holidays in restaurants is by its very definition terrorism. Sitting back on a helicopter and gunning down innocents is about as cheap as you can get. But so is trying to steal ambulances to make them into "after bombing" weapons to attack emergency workers.

    I honestly believe if every wingnut and every whacko religious group goes after all (meaning general populace) of us, then they (meaning the Israelis, too, by their hatred and humanistic negligence) are setting us up for WWIII, big time.

    How does this deal with communication? Well, the more worldwide your viewpoint, the more you can get offended by... and the more likely you will attack, as I guess we have all recently learned.

    Good luck, humans (please note I didn't say nationality or race). We're all going to need it.

  110. An Information Utopia ... by rlp · · Score: 2

    All the inhabitants of the earth would be brought into one intellectual neighborhood.

    ... the instantaneous highway of thought between Old and New Worlds.

    "We are one!" said the nations, and hand met hand, in a thrill electric from land to land.

    The above quotes are of course referring to the worldwide deployment of the telegraph in the nineteenth century. (See The Victorian Internet by Thomas Standage). Many writers of the day viewed the telegraph, radio, television, and even the airplace (e.g. H. G. Wells) as technology that would usher in a utopian age. In many ways, the predictions echo those about the Internet, including many postings here on Slashdot. And they were all equally wrong. It's important to remember technology is a tool - just like a hammer. You can build a house with a hammer, or you can whack someone on the head with it. Technology cannot create a new utopia - that is up to the people of this planet. At the moment, the probability seems quite low ...

    --
    [Insert pithy quote here]
  111. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you must not read slashdot much.

  112. Sharing ideas? by racerx509 · · Score: 1

    I would really have to agree on this one. The internet allows for ultimate freedom, which is good, but also allows for ultimate idiocy.

    Ultimate idiocy can proliferate freely if you find the right crowd to hang with online. I was recently trying to do a report about Martin Luther King, and I stumbled onto this site. It was without a doubt the worst craziest load of drivel ever contrived. It turned my stomach. It just goes to show you that the Internet exists for sharing ideas. You probably won't agree with all of those ideas, but it provides the ultimate freedom of speech. By providing this, you can "preach to the choir" of your group and find more like minded individuals for your idea to spread

    --
    13 year old white supremacists are shitty web designers.
  113. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by swankypimp · · Score: 1
    I agree with you that "every religion has nutjobs that take its dogma to violent extremes." However, Islamic extremists are a bigger danger because Islam has not had a tradition of a secular state. When a Catholic bombs an abortion clinic or an Evangelical Christian kills a homosexual, the vast majority of people in the respective religion denounce the act; by contrast, suicide bombers and terrorist groups are lauded as heroes by the state-controlled medias in the Middle East. "Great job! You will surely enjoy a bevy of virgins in Allah's Kingdom!" The leaders of these countries whip their citizens up in a religious frenzy in order to maintain their power, and without a tradition of secular government to reflect upon* the people don't realize that there can be an alternative structure. This combination of religious intolerance and media brainwashing (anti-Western textbooks in schools, for example) is a huge problem.

    *Exceptions I can think of are Turkey, which has a pretty decent secular parliament, and Egypt, Syria, and Iraq, which are fascist and anti-Western/anti-Jewish but not particularly religious.

    --

    --All your stolen base are belong to Rickey Henderson
  114. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sigh, the country with the nukes is hindu,
    not Islamic. They even have these nukes
    to throw them on some moslims (read: Pakistan).

  115. Societies get the religions they deserve by henben · · Score: 1
    "you don't see conservative Christians and Jews lining up to strap C4 to their bodies and suicide bomb their "enemies.""

    You do see Judaeo-Christian bombers sometimes.

    Jewish extremists in Israel tried to bomb a school

    And Christianity has inspired extremists in the US and other countries to violence - against abortion clinics, or in the militia movement for example.

    Don't forget that Hinduism has inspired anti-Muslim violence in India too.

    "Other religions like Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism, Wicca and probably a lot more allow for secular coexistance and equal rights"? The societies where those religions are dominant do, perhaps. But don't forget that the social changes in Western society which promoted tolerance weren't necessarily inspired by religion.

    Look at Christianity in the UK - the Church of England was hardly active in promoting social change, even in the 20th century. It was decades behind the rest of society in female equality (as far as actually allowing them to be priests, anyway).

    Arguably there is more glorification of terrorism and acceptance of propaganda in the Islamic world.

    What will hopefully happen as Islamic countries get more prosperous is a secularisation process where religion becomes less influential.

  116. No thats because of the jews by HanzoSan · · Score: 2


    The jews believe they are the choosen people and didnt respect the Palestinians first.

    This war between these two groups is not one sided, Just because Palestinians are terrorists doesnt mean they dont have REASON to do so, its not like they have an army so what else can they do really.

    If you looked at the news, the latest news say that isreal doesnt want to make peace just like the palestinians dont.

    People will follow the Koran, but when you take their land and attempt to push them out of the middle east because you refuse to respect them, they dont have much choice but to fight you or be pushed into the desert somewhere.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:No thats because of the jews by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      > Just because Palestinians are terrorists doesnt mean they dont have REASON to do so, its not like they have an army so what else can they do really.

      Umm... when an autonomous region (whether it be a "country" in the diplomatic sense of the word) doesn't have an army, and wants an army, there's always the option of, gee, I dunno, raising an army.

      You raise an army in one of two ways: conscription (your cops go door-to-door and say "Abdude, you're getting a job in the army!"), or voluntary enlistment (you put out a big sign saying "Uncle Yasser Wants You").

      Armies then defend their territory against other armies, or attack the armies of other nations in order to gain their territory.

      Key concept here: other armies.

      If your leaders encourage (whether through tacit support, rabble-rousing speeches, or even direct orders) you to target noncombatants, you're not part of an army. You're a murderer, thug, or an assassin.

      The difference between armies and murderers is that if you're in an army and start blowing away noncombatants, God help you, because your commanding officers won't.

      Now, we could go on forever about how the PA doesn't have enough resources to raise an army.

      Fair enough, but why's that? How come a bunch of Jews get plunked in the only place in the Middle East without oil, can manage to raise their citizens' standard of living in the space of a generation, far outstripping their nearby competitors, despite their competitors' overwhelming advantage in terms of population and natural resources.

      It's not a Zionist Conspiracy, it's just simple economics. Private property and free markets beat kingdoms every time.

      > when you take their land and attempt to push them out of the middle east because you refuse to respect them

      What about Jordan? Gobs of land mass, plenty of like-thinking Moslems there, and it's 90% of what was originally "Palestine". What was wrong with that? Oh, right. Jews next door. Can't have that.

      If Yasser had set up a market system and concentreated more on the economic development of his people, rather than the extermination of the Jews, he might be worthy of respect.

      Until then, to hell with him and all who follow his way.

    2. Re:No thats because of the jews by electroniceric · · Score: 4, Insightful
      If your leaders encourage (whether through tacit support, rabble-rousing speeches, or even direct orders) you to target noncombatants, you're not part of an army. You're a murderer, thug, or an assassin.

      This is exactly the problem - this issue is not cut and dried at all. It is intolerable that these so-called martyrs go attack civilians in the guise of being an army. On the other hand, there's ample precedent for taking up arms against your oppressor in ways outside the standard guys-in-camo definition, from Jewish uprisings in the Nazi ghettos to the American and French revolutions. And given that Israel has long used assasination and torture as tools of war, it's pretty hard to argue that this "war" has been kept inside those guys-in-green line.

      If Yasser had set up a market system and concentreated more on the economic development of his people, rather than the extermination of the Jews, he might be worthy of respect.

      This is an excellent point, Yasser Arafat does not seem at all effective in broadening the economic base of Palestine. However, the same point goes goes doubly for us and trebly for Israel, who are, after all, paying for all this monkey business. You want to see an end to the bombers, you gotta put all those smart people to work at something, or they'll work on their own plots and machinations. Food for thought, given that our foreign aid is 0.1% of our GDP (even worse if that 0.1% includes military aid).

    3. Re:No thats because of the jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry to burst your bubble but the Jews/Isralies are God's chosen people. How else can you explain their 3000+ year existance?

      The Isralies want peace, but they will not back down to anyone.

      Yes, people will follow the koran, and there will be more terrorists since that is what the koran itself preaches. http://answering-islan.co.uk For more details.

    4. Re:No thats because of the jews by Bake · · Score: 2

      Cockroaches have been around for millions of years, does that make them God's chosen creature? Also, the chinese have been around for even longer than the jews so (by your logic) they are God's chosen people.

    5. Re:No thats because of the jews by DrZogg · · Score: 1

      Umm, if you visit the site mentioned here, please keep in mind the original source of all this discussion -- at its worst the Internet is like an open sewer. That site's only purpose is to promote more hatred and bias against Muslims. If you honestly want accurate information about what the Quran teaches, ask a knowledgable Muslim. And if you really believe the IDF does not deliberately target noncombatants, I would urge you to read something other than American newspapers. At its best the Internet offers access to real journalism from all over the world. Read Chris Hedges' Oct 2001 Harpers article, "A Gaza Diary." "http://www.harpers.org/online/gaza_diary/?pg=1"

    6. Re:No thats because of the jews by Steve525 · · Score: 1

      I strongly agree with the second half of what you said, but I disagree with the first half. The reality is attacking civilians has historically been done all the time by true armys. What would you call all the firebombing and the atom bomb during WWII? However, the label terrorism is generally only used when the attack is not done by a state run military.

      The real distinction of terrorism is there is no way to defend against it. How are you going to attack back? If you are attacked by a true military orgainization, you can attack the country in charge of that military. When the attack is done by an terrorist organization the only thing you can do is consider the perpetrators of the attack as criminals. In the case of suicide bombers, the perpetrator is already dead. Perhaps you go after the people that sponsored them? This can be nearly impossible to do if the terrorists are being harbored. Every time Israel tries to get to the terrorists, the entire world gets in an uproar about the damage that gets inflicted on those people harboring the criminals (and some innocents caught in the cross-fire).

      Furthermore, with a terrorist organization it's nearly to impossible to negotiate an end to the conflict. When negotiating with a country you know who to negotiate with. Who is Israel supposed to negotiate with? Arafat? Hamas? One of the several other terrorist orgainizations attacking them? Arafat is probably the best choice at the moment, but there are certainly doubts. At best, he is unable to control the Palestinians, to keep peace. At worst, he is a liar who has no interest in peace. (I suppose the last statement might be true even if he was the leader of a true country).

      Just for the record, having spouted all this pro-Israel rhetoric, I also beleive the Palestinians have some justice for their outrage. They have been treated like shit for a long time, (and hardly just by Israel). They really should have their own country. (However, I don't think they should fully have their own military - kind of like Japan). Unfortunately, this would probably solve few of their problems, but at least they wouldn't have Israel to blame.

    7. Re:No thats because of the jews by jafac · · Score: 2

      um - WHO pays for this? Certainly not taxpaying American citizens of all races and creeds. Surely their US $3bln/year has nothing at all to do with it.

      I totally agree with what you're saying, but you can't discount the US's role. In fact, I wish we would just shut off that aid, just so we could shut the critics up, because I'm sure that it wouldn't make one damn bit of difference.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    8. Re:No thats because of the jews by jafac · · Score: 2

      Also, the chinese have been around for even longer than the jews so (by your logic) they are God's chosen people.

      ask a few Chinese, and they'll agree with that.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  117. The problem with people by ChenLing · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem with people is that we fear the unknown.
    What did Yoda say? Fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate, and hate....leads to suffering!
    How true that is.

    Global communications, and the Internet in particular, is creating an odd kind of de-segragation.
    However, it is desegration without real direct interation.
    It is kind of like desegragating the schools in Alabama, but ONLY Alabama -- how do you think the people in Mississippi would feel?
    They just hear about it, but don't actually interact with the "other side" -- and so will only breed distrust, fear, anger, and hate.

    Before, people distrusted others who were different, but they were separated -- either geographically or socially, and were not in their mental world.
    Now however, these "others" are forced down their throats, and can't ignore them.

    It is so easy to marginalize, make fun of, and distrust those that are different from ourselves, even in this "enlightened country".
    Why? Because putting others down makes us feel just a bit superior and better.
    Having something to hate also makes you feel you have a purpose...and in those countries with limited opportunities, freedoms, and low quality of life...having a bad purpose is better than trying anything else.

    As for people who believe everything on the Internet to be true? Well, I hate to sound like a troll, but half of the population IS below average in terms of intelligence.....

    --
    "You have the option of insanity. I do not. And that makes me crazy!" - Brian to Angela, My So-Called Life
  118. The Rethoric of Reaction by HrVad · · Score: 1

    I'm reminded of a book I once read, named as the subject. Basically, the rethoric of reaction asserts that the status quo is "good" while whatever-new-thing is "evil".

    Thomas Friedman doesn't notice that a genuine freethinker might benefit tremendously from seeking out peers on the internet. Whereas he might be kept ignorant and unstimulated (even persecuted) in normal everyday life (see Phenomenon with Travolta). Most societies, including Western ones, are repressive and intolerant of differenct ideas.

    He also asserts that the Internet is more corrupting than say, the newspapers, TV, Bible or Koran. Yet the many people blindly following those media are rarely seen exercising caution, having already surrendered their moral judgement to third parties. If anything, Internet surfers know to be skeptical.

    I feel his great mistake is blaming the internet scape goat for the blatant lack of education of the public, as well as some of the more insidius underlying tendencies of our self-righteous Western thinking. Take the new UN children's charter: here the USA is on the same team as the most fanatical Moslem nations in denying children the right to know about sex.

    But such is the rethoric of reaction. It doesn't help us humans to embrace and deal with the multitude of changing circumstances of life. It only teaches us to fear and hate, and eventually run into greater problems than we would have, had we dealt with things as the arose. Reactionaries aren't dealing with life, they're bracing against it.

    --Vad

  119. OK, listen up... by DerekTheRed · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Listen up, people. We Americans are funny. The only reason we get along with one another at all is because we are too dumb to understand what everyone else is thinking and saying. We are all so certain that our neighbors are decent people, but we are not at all possessed of the necessary intellectual curiosity to investigate what the hell it is, exactly, that our neighbors stand for. And even if we did know what it is that our fellow Americans stood for, we'd be far too ignorant about how logic works and just plain too gutless to follow these facts through to their natural conclusions. We Americans prefer comfort far more than intellectual honesty. We dread the idea of confrontation so much that we don't have the balls to draw the line, even when there is no other real choice! And so the Internet forces you to come face to face with other people's real beliefs, with the personal facade removed, and everyone is so astonished at what they find: there are all kinds of people out there, really! What a bunch of dysfunctional pansies we've become. All the Internet is doing is forcing us to do things we should have been doing already: argue! Fucking ARGUE! What is wrong with that? Buck up, you fucking nerds. A little hostility isn't gonna kill you.

    --

    "Thank you, God, for your healing gift of religion."

    1. Re:OK, listen up... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah! Nobody ever got hurt cause someone got angry! I swear I'm going to beat the next guy that even THINKS to bring up this whole "Isn't there a bit too much hate on the Internet?" thread!

      RARGH! RARGH!

      Apes.

  120. tech shares half the blame.. by pamri · · Score: 1
    The media cannot be a substitute for human judgement & thought. Period. Most people, like the guy in sierra leone, are those, who think less & rather form an opinion by taking the face-value of what the media potrays.

    And also, you only hear what you want to know. So, a guy in India (I am an indian too) hears only the negative side of Pakistan (though there are exceptions) like sectarian killings, it' dictators, their hatred for india, etc., Ditto for a guy in Pakistan.
    The media in pakistan (esp the state-run TV & films) potryas the indian muslim as living under shadow of the hindu majority, whereas the indian media (esp the state-run Tv & films) potrays muslims as having comfortable relations with the hindu-majority. Both instances are in tune with their national values, India's being guided by a secular one & pakistan's being guided by it's two-nation theory. Rather the truth is, there are stories, where hindus & muslims have lived under one roof, following their respective faiths & stories like the situation (communal riots) in gujarat. Basically, people tend to see things in black & white, which distorts the real situation.

    Another example nearer home is, everytime a story on India comes up in slashdot, one does see a lot of trolls posting, why india doesn't spend it's money on it's poor rather analysing why it is spent & the long term benefits of such a thing.prosper till to date by spending on technology & for a country

  121. The power of the net by HanzoSan · · Score: 2


    A gang member from south central LA can buy a computer, get addicted, cease their gang activities, and eventually after a few years, make friends with a korean person on the internet.

    Stuff like this happens on the internet alot easier than it would happen IRL. Understanding can only happen when you talk to people of diffrent races and cultures, On the net I've spoken to people of every race, I know all people are the same on the inside even if they are diffrent on the outside.

    This isnt something you can teach an ignorant person in real life, they have to go online and learn this.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:The power of the net by 56ker · · Score: 2

      If you've ever looked at your Freaks list, Foes list and Friends list you'll find people aren't as understanding once they get on the net as you think!

    2. Re:The power of the net by Happy+go+Lucky · · Score: 2, Interesting
      A gang member from south central LA can buy a computer, get addicted, cease their gang activities, and eventually after a few years, make friends with a korean person on the internet.

      I'm willing to accept, for argument's sake, the general case: that it can be easier to keep an open mind without face-to-face contact.

      In the specific case of the inner-city gang member, I have to disagree. They tend to be as paranoid as the Kremlin or the Communist Chinese, and only slightly less so than us cops. It's actually a relatively rare one who's been more than five miles from his place of birth, not counting hospitals and correctional facilities. People who get drawn into gangs tend to have a worldview that almost denies the existence of a world outside of their own turf and maybe that of their rivals.

      Smaller cities (like my own, a city of under 150,000 in Colorado) tend to have gangs with less of an insular worldview, but it's still a much smaller world for them than for us. And there's not a whole lot of desire to expand that either.

      You also have to remember that a number of these gangs are multigenerational, and especially California-based Hispanic gangs. There are plenty of people who are actually the third generation of their family to be inside. Grandpa, if he's still alive, is decidedly a veterano and that's one source of prestige for his grandson.

      I'll give the internet this: I don't see how it's making things worse. The nazis, communists, and other related scrotesacks may have an easier time joining each other, but it also makes it easier for the rest of us to watch them.

  122. Without the internet... by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    We would have no clue what sort of propaganda those that have been set against us face and thus, no clue as to wy they are doing what they are doing.

  123. Not just religions by Mr.+Fred+Smoothie · · Score: 2
    Before talking about history, I suggest you learn some. Pretty much all religions had a horrific history.
    I'd generally agree w/ that statement, but go a little farther and say "almost all human societies" in place of "all religions." You don't have to do anything more than open your local newspaper to see plenty of people doing horrible things to each other without any religious motivation (i.e., murder, assault, theft).

    The fact is, people throughout history have had a difficult time getting along, particularly if there's some overt physical or cultural difference for the parties to focus on which allows them to abstract their rivals into a philosophical "them." I'd go so far as to suggest that linguistic differences are actually the basis of more prejudice and violence than any other difference including race and religion (though I think that the latter two often get conflated w/ linguistic differences -- it's a lot easier to hate someone who's a different color or religion when you have difficulty communicating w/ them).

    I'd say that one of the most insightful things that Chrisitanity and Islam both have to say (in slightly different ways -- "original sin" in Christianity, or the maxim that the devil is "as close as your heart" in Islam), is that humans are fundamentally f**ked up.

    --

  124. Re:He correctly attacks the Fox news channel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lucky for us liberals that we have elites

    we have an elite force The right only have bozos
  125. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only appropriate response to something like this is...

    "I didn't expect a kind of Spanish Inquisition..."

    The only way you cannot know what I mean by this is to hold the same opinions as the author of the original that precipitated this.

  126. The internet is diffrent! by HanzoSan · · Score: 4, Insightful


    You dont know which one of us on slashdot is a jew, hell I could be a jew, or you could be, or anyone here.

    Because I dont know "WHAT" you are, i cannot judge you in an ignorant fashion. ALL i know is, you are human.

    IF you are on the net long enough and make enough friends online, try asking them what they are at some point and be surprised when one of them is a jew, you could have hated jews all your life and find out one of your friends online is a jew and it all could change.

    People who have never had positive experiences with jews learn to hate jews, I know some online and they arent bad people, I know some koreans too, along with south americans, asians, australians,

    Its experience with all of these people, which lead me to the conslusion that all people are the same inside and diffrent outside.

    The internet gives you a bridge to the religious, racial, and cultural gaps, the offline world does not.

    An ignorant person hates the culture, the religion, or the race, but never the person.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:The internet is diffrent! by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Not if you're browsing Stormfront, or Hizbollah's website for that matter.

      Or, if your messages comes primarily from sources regurgitating the "Protocols of the Elders of Zion", for that matter

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    2. Re:The internet is diffrent! by swankypimp · · Score: 1
      I think there is a difference between individual communication (which you seem to be addressing) and mass communication, however. If Bob the Potential Racist is talking to jbl547 on IRC, Bob has no idea what jbl547's racial identity is; if that person later reveals that she's Asian/Jewish/black/etc. then Bob might come to the "all people are really the same" conclusion, like you mentioned. If Bob gets infuriated by Adam Epstein's website, however, that might confirm some budding anti-Jewish prejudice that Bob has.

      And by the way, on the Internet, no-one knows you're a dog ;)

      --

      --All your stolen base are belong to Rickey Henderson
    3. Re:The internet is diffrent! by shrikel · · Score: 1
      ALL i know is, you are human.

      What about AOLiza?

      --
      Any sufficiently simple magic can be passed off as mere advanced technology.
  127. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by paranoid.android · · Score: 1

    I would tend to agree with you, but the original poster made it sound like fanatical Islamofascism was representative of the whole religion, when that is definitely not the case.

  128. The Asian cultures arent very open by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

    They dont just hate jews, they are racist toward ALL non asian races.

    They are NOT a good example, they also avoid the internet so not to try to understand diffrent cultures.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:The Asian cultures arent very open by zanshin993 · · Score: 1

      I think that perhaps you are overgeneralizing.

      First, you're equating all Asian cultures, which is kind of unreasonable. China does not share the same political background as Japan, for example.

      Secondly, as I understand it, you're saying that every member of an Asian culture acts the same. 'They' avoid the Internet, after all. Every single one of them. Right. Yup.

      Perhaps you need to re-evaluate who's trying not to understand different cultures here.

    2. Re:The Asian cultures arent very open by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

      I never said every single one of them, i said their culture is not open, they dont like to share it or intergrate

      --
      If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    3. Re:The Asian cultures arent very open by Surlyboi · · Score: 2

      They dont just hate jews, they are racist toward ALL non asian races.

      They are NOT a good example, they also avoid the internet so not to try to understand diffrent cultures.


      Nice generalization there, pal. Where'd you pick that
      one up, the internet? =P

      The Japanese don't need other races to be prejudiced
      against, they do it to themselves in equal measure. Do
      a google on Burakumin. And don't get me started
      on Koreans, Southeast Asians of any nationality
      or anything else.

      Hell yeah, the Japanese are prejudiced, (And some,
      including one or two of my relatives, are rather
      proud of it.) But to posit that they avoid the
      internet to remain prejudiced is ludicrous. I'm
      sure some do, but the same can be said of many
      Americans or pretty much any other nationality.

      Your post only lends credence to the thrust of the
      article. Some people could read it and take it
      as gospel.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine...
  129. What idiot modded up this Troll??? by hellfire · · Score: 1

    nt

    --

    "All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"

  130. Sure I do... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It just means I get to blow him away with my shotgun...All in self defense, you know?

    1. Re:Sure I do... by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      why don't they make suicide legal and easy? I am a drug addict, and therefore useless to society. I accept this judgment and am ready to remove myself from the competition for survival. But killing yourself is difficult and uncertain. If the powers that be would just let those of us who want to kill ourselves quickly and painlessly without fear of discovery, a lot of worthless baggage would be eliminated and the world would be a better place for normal people.

  131. Wait? this is bad? by Telastyn · · Score: 2

    Seriously. Sure there is a ton of communicative trash on the internet. There's a bunch of lamers on the internet. There's plenty of illegal/immoral/inhuman things on the internet. Most people suck. Get used to it.

    One of the things I loved about IRC for example was that this was true. Sure it meant there was tons of human waste I had to deal with, but it also meant the good people where honestly good, since there was nothing beyond themselves to "make" them good.

  132. Hasn't this happened before? by A.Soze · · Score: 1

    Not that I was around then, but I can't imagine that this is much different than when the printing press became prevalent in the "modern" world. True, fewer people had literacy then, but is the Internet's believability any different from the literacy then?

    "They say, `He got it from the Internet.' They think it's the Bible."
    Now I can go down to Kinko's, print out several thousand pages of my own words, walk to a binder down the street, and have those words leather bound. I can then have "Holy Bible" stamped in gold on the cover and spine and pass it out to people on the subway. How many people would believe that this is the word of God? (On that note, how many people believe the present, "real" Bible is the word of God?) The point I raise is simply that belief is all in the perception of the medium. Calling the Internet a "sewer" at its worst may be accurate, but it takes certain liberties.

    --
    "Goodness, how did you people live long enough to invent tools?" -Hobbes (the tiger, not the philosopher)
  133. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Tazzy531 · · Score: 2

    It doesn't matter whether it is a secular state or not. If you are oppressed and have your back towards the wall, you will do anything to fight for your survival.

    Come on, think about it. Why do we give ticker tape parades to the soldier coming back from war? Why do we honor people that kill for the good of the nation? It's the same reason that these 'suicide bombers' are respected. They are giving up their lives for the good of the family/nation. What is more respectable/honorable, carpet bombing a civilian population from afar or going in to fight? We look upon them with disdain because we don't respect that they are giving up themselves for others. We see them as savages. The same way that the English looked upon the American Revolutionists as savages during the American Revolution. The "correct" and "honorable" way of fighting was to march up in 2 lines, the front kneeling and the back standing up and firing into the enemy lines. The American revolutionist decided that was stupid and fought running from behind trees.

    --


    _______________________________
    "I'm not Conceited...I'm just a realist..."
  134. Say again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Normally, when you reply to a post, you respond to points made in that post, or at least make points of your own pertinent to the topic...

    Third world countries feel like Linux often treat their people better

    Bill Gates is the Devil and .Net is the BEAST.

    What the hell is this?

    1. Re:Say again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Peru have you read the piece by the Representative of Peru advocating Open Source Software a Representative who is serving the People instead of serving himself waiting for the next payoff from xyz company so he can go cast his vote. .Net is the BEAST Bill Gates is the Devil well imagine a world where Bill Gates owned the internet protocals and it you could only connect with Micrsoft Products and all others would be banned out of the ruse of Keeping You Safe got to have a State Approved OS. Laugh the BEAST is the huge fucking data base that keeps track of were you shop, what you eat, what you read ect... You can only do these things if you have a smart card, smart chip or some fucking assigned number and if you want anything you must provide your number. Goodbye privacy hello Big Brother all under the ruse that we need to Protect you so give us your fucking number. Imagine what would happen if these insecure smart cards and huge database where implemented without proper testing and verification. How would you feel when your personal information was trashed and you now could not conduct business or get a cup of coffee because the BEAST says sorry wrong number or it spits out fucked up information. Do you trust your Government to give a damn about getting it right perhaps you should read abould the state of government IT be reading some reports by the GAO. Why should anyone have to give a fucking number to get a cup of coffee. I know that Guy from Oracle is pushing for this and has testified before Congress to implement it.

    2. Re:Say again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, I get it now. Stream-of-consciousness Linux zealotry. Set that to a techno beat and you could make a killing.

      the BEAST is the huge fucking data base
      whomp whomp whomp
      the BEAST is the huge fucking data base
      whomp whomp whomp
      the BEAST is the huge fucking data base
      whomp whomp whomp

  135. Muslims on slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The lie that 4,000 Jews were warned not to go into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11 was spread entirely over the Internet and is now thoroughly believed in the Muslim world.


    Well let's use this marvelous communication medium to ask any Muslim readers of slashdot: is this true? Is it really "thoroughly" believed?

    Because that comment sounds awfully condescending, kind of "backward third-world people will believe anything".

    1. Re:Muslims on slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't be such a politically correct wimp. Most people who are told something by their leaders will assume it's correct, and they have no means to verify it or dispute it. So... "backward third-world people will believe anything" their leaders tell them, since they have no other source of information.

    2. Re:Muslims on slashdot by rpg25 · · Score: 1

      There was a story by Peter Maass in Slate some time ago that indicates this not to be just more internet blather. I quote:

      Although the Israel-destroyed-the-World-Trade-Center theory is absurd, most people I speak to in Pakistan believe it. It's not just the headband rabble who sense the hand of the Mossad at work. I even heard the conspiracy theory during a visit to the posh Islamabad home of Ijzal ul-Haq, vice president of a major political party. As it happens, Ijzal ul-Haq is also the son of Pakistan's late military dictator Zia ul-Haq; an oil portrait of the old man hangs a few feet from the front door.

      Also, though I am not able to find pointers (ok, I'm too lazy, fine), there were reports of a public opinion poll of the Islamic Middle East, that purported to find in no location, more that 40% willing to believe that Muslims were responsible for 9/11.

      Then, of course, there are the Saudi state papers that publish reports about Jews making matzah out of the blood of Gentiles....

    3. Re:Muslims on slashdot by foolish+youngster · · Score: 1

      Isn't this what a corporate, finacially motivated press is all about in the United States? The first amendment only applies to the folks that have the money to pay for public relations propaganda. Any intellegent, educated and rational person without money is labeled a communist or something similiar and vilified as such in the news media. Free speech, my ass.....

      Fast Food Nation, Author: Eric Schlosser
      ISBN#: 0-06-093845-5
      Read it!

      --
      -- Defenestrate Microsoft!
  136. PC: preferring sensitivity to truth by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    Let the sewer of unfiltered information flow, I say. I like to know what other people *really* think - instead of the make-believe world of pop-media.

    As for the terrorists and child-porn people. The internet also makes a great way to track those people.

  137. Critical thinking by Mr.+Fred+Smoothie · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The problem with "unfiltered" information is simply that most people are unable to think critically. I think that this is a pervasive problem in many parts of the world, not the least of which is parts of Western society. People just aren't generally encouraged to think for themselves, or to question auhority. Even in the US, our whole system of public education is geared toward rote memorization and conformance to ideals handed down from authorities.

    In fact, I think it's largely thanks to the canons of journalistic ethics (check & report sources, get confirmation, etc.) that we've managed to have as informed a public as we have in Western society as these practices at least impose some discipline on the "authority" that's providing information which people will inevitably swallow without a moment's reflection. So in a sense, we all owe The Western Press some small amount of gratitude.

    However, Mr Friedman should really be directing his rant at the way we brainwash people into taking anything stated by someone wearing a suit, or on TV, or on the internet at face value.

    I don't know how many times I've chastised my friends and family for forwarding inane spam about Congress on the verge of taxing email at 5 cents a message without even bothering to analize the claims for even the faintest patina of credibility (gee, according to thomas.loc.gov, that sponsoring senator doesn't exist, the number of the "bill" cited doesn't follow the bill numbering conventions for either house of congress, etc).

    We need to find a way to teach people how to think. Of course, that's anathema to the power structure of our society (we can't have men between the ages of 15-24 realizing that drinking Mountain Dew won't cause silicone-enhanced sluts to fall from the sky and fawn over them, can we?) for that to ever happen.

    --

    1. Re:Critical thinking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every journalist or tv anchor is biased. If they tell you otherwise then either they are a liar or an idiot.

  138. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I sense much anger in this one.

    Fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate, hate leads to right-wing ravings...

    Oh, and she was in Indonesia, dumbass, not India. If you weren't getting all your info from O'Reilly, you might be able to spot the difference.

  139. A question of valuing truth by wytcld · · Score: 2

    What's disturbing about Friedman's editorial reporting is that the majority of Muslims, throughout the Muslim world, are ready to believe stuff like the Protocols of the Elders of Zion (on sale in the main Saudi airports) and the theory that 4000 Jews skipped work in the Trade Center on 9/11.

    Now, living in a country where the chief law enforcement officer believes that certain cats are agents of Satan, and the president has doubts about evolution, I'm hesitant to condemn another culture for a haphazard relationship to standards of truth and critical thought. On the other hand, as /. shows, we are hardly the sheep being led to slaughter here that, say, the Palestinian children are - and anyone who believes that Hamas is not thoroughly evil for leading children to suicide attacks has no morality at all.

    Okay, so the first problem about current Muslim cultures is that something over 90% of the populations, according to polls, has no standard of objective truth. The second thing wrong with Muslim culture is that the religion itself is centered on the long-term goal of utter obliteration of all worship of anything or any being outside of Allah and his alleged One Prophet. Like Nazism or Trotsky-ism or Leninism or Maoism, there is no place in Mohammedist doctrine for anything like an ecumenical approach.

    There is plenty of beautiful architecture, art, poetry, even philosophy from the Islamic past (the philosophy was actually Greek, and the math Indian, but at least credit them with a fine sense of design and verse). But theirs was a religion of crusade and slaughter far moreso than the free nations of Europe ever were. And turnabout is fair play. If Muslims can learn to discern truth according to modern standards of science and critical thought (even as primitive as these standards will seem from a few centuries hence) then we need not conquer them nor undermine the other aspects of their religion - especially if they also open to the spiritual possiblity that this may be a world in which there are many things and beings truly beautiful and worthy of worship, and that any "prophet" who would deny that beauty or holiness is seriously derranged, and leading others into not just danger, but evil. If, after admitting the scientific standard for mundane facts, and recognizing the diversity of the holy, they still want to call themselves 'Muslims,' that shouldn't be a problem.
    ____

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
  140. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by ChaosDiscordSimple · · Score: 2
    Of course I'm going to get modded down for "being a racist" or "being flamebait" because God forbid someone should say that a particular religion is inferior to other religions and that it should be excluded from the global debate on how to make the world a better place because it has a truly horrific history.

    And Christianity doesn't? Christianity brought us the Crusades. Hilter attempted the genecide of Jews to purify the German empire from Christianity. "Heathens" around the world, be they asian or native american, have died for failure to convert to Christianity. Assassinations and bombings against doctors and clinics which perform abortions are done by men and women who believe they are doing God's work.

    Just because someone claims to represent a religion doesn't mean that they really do. There are extremists prepared to engage in horrific actions in every religion. The label all of Islam as evil is to label a great many good people. It's would be more constructive to focus on labelling those extremists which engage in terrorism and enact opposive governments as evil. Furthermore, people and religions change. The Catholic church recent apologized for their implicit support of the holocaust.

    Furthermore, if you exclude Islam from the global debate, you give the extremists more arguments toward extremeism. "See, they refuse to try and reach a peaceful solution with us. Clearly they plan on 'peace' with us by killing us. We must fight back now!" When you stop talking with someone, war

    When people insult Christianity and Judaism and proudly declare themselves to hate Christianity or Judaism, you don't see conservative Christians and Jews lining up to strap C4 to their bodies and suicide bomb their "enemies."

    I didn't think that the middle east unrest was the result of insults and name calling. I doubt your average suicide bomber's primary goal is to simply silence open criticism. Sure, they're like to silence criticism, but that's not why they are willing to die. They're fighting over diverse politic issues including the ability to form a sovereign state, freedom from undesired foreign military bases on their land, and fear that they are being marginalized by the world. Perhaps their beliefes on these matters are wrong, but they can't be dismissed.

    The moment you decide another group of human beings cannot be reasoned with and you close off dicussions with them, you become the group unwilling to discuss. At that point there can be only war. Be damn sure you're willing to pay that price. Are you prepared to fight in an all out war against Islam? Are you prepared to label the many Muslims in the United States (or whereever you are) "enemy"?

  141. Before the Internet by Lucas+Membrane · · Score: 1

    We knew that intellectual activity was increasing according to an exponential curve, but useful and true information was increasing only linearly. This means that the useful and true information becomes a very small fraction of what is available in the information age. The internet makes this obvious. For any crackpot idea, be it a religion, a pseudo-science health fad or swindle, extremist political party, a conspiracy theory, or an ineffable New Age world view, you will find ten sites in favor for every one opposed.

  142. I've went to stormfront by HanzoSan · · Score: 2


    And Because I went there to see what they are like, I'm sure most of those Nazis went to see what everyone else is like, just because they were curious.

    I learned about hateful people. The really truely hateful people just hate because they live to hate. Its not a race thing to them its a hate thing.

    They enjoy hating, and they will hate all their life, if all the miniories were killed, they'd hate their own people, until every human was destroyed.

    You see, hate is evolutionary suicide, because all humans are the same species, when you hate on humans, you are actually hating on yourself, and when you want to kill all jews, you want to kill yourself subconciously.

    You cant save them all but the ones who can be saved, will most likely be saved by the net.
    The ones who dont actually hate other races, but who just dont understand them, will be saved.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  143. A different point. by Stoutlimb · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "you don't see conservative Christians and Jews lining up to strap C4 to their bodies and suicide bomb their "enemies.""

    Just a little thing I would like to point out. The violence going on between Isreal and Palestine has very little to do with religion. It's going on because Palestinians have foreign soldiers on their streets imposing martial law, bulldozing houses, to make way for their own people. It's called ethnic cleansing. It's happened many times in history, and it's quite moral to oppose this in the most violent way possible. Were Allied pilots terrorists because they deliberately targeted German civillians?

    I hate to say it, but in an all out war, civillians are valid targets, because they feed and control their armies. Look at it from the perspective of a war. Palestinians just want their own land. Israel wants to kick them out and build houses for their own people. Suddenly this sounds very similar to almost every other war in history, because it's primarily about economics and property, and religion is a wonderful excuse and scapegoat.

    Remember, it's every Israeli's dream to have a nice apartment in the West Bank or Gaza, without any Palestinian in sight.

    1. Re:A different point. by Stonehand · · Score: 2

      It has everything to do with religion, when one religion is being used to teach that the other side must be destroyed, that death for the cause results in going to heaven and a few score of willing virgins, and that their cause is the only true cause in the entire world.

      And yes, Bomber Command and Bomber Harris were, basically, war criminals for favoring the not particularly useless "firebomb German cities" approach -- the elitist justification was to demoralize cities and try to panic the lower classes, but smashing factories, airfields, et al would have been more useful... That's why historians like Keegan castigate them today, instead of praising them as heroes.

      Oh, and Barak offered one hell of a peace deal, despite his own side telling him that the offer was too good. Arafat turned it down, despite his own negotiators telling him to accept it, and to this day, certain Palestinian leaders keep Israel off the map and insist on a Palestine from the Jordan river to the sea.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    2. Re:A different point. by Stoutlimb · · Score: 1

      I suppose that's where we differ. I consider the factory workers who make guns just as much willing participants as soldiers who point the guns. Same goes for any taxpayers. Same goes for the factory worker's wife, who packs his lunch. This was the mentality of the second world war, and I don't believe it's wrong. People these days forget that all out war is ugly, and one must do whatever it takes to win.

      As far as the religious issue goes... I mention it as not the root cause because without the religious aspect, I believe this war will still go on. But with out the social, political, territorial and economic part of it, this war would fizzle.

      The only part of this where I would agree with you that Religion caused this mess, is regarding Zionism. The religious belief that you can steal land people have been using for centuries because of some misdeed 2000 years ago is not helpful to a situation.

      Bork!

  144. Re:The problem with the Internet QWZX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The man said "arguably". If you don't think so, then provide a counter-argument. As it stands, all you did was post a idiotic "nya nya" post that makes you look like a moron.

    Otherwise, just shut the F up.

  145. Fight back! by sulli · · Score: 2

    Post goatse.cx redirects to all those anti-american message boards!

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  146. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by dirtyhippie · · Score: 1

    What crackhead moderated me -1 overrated, when my post was hanging happily at 1?

  147. people believe in UFOs, Elvis lives and Angels by crovira · · Score: 2

    People have always been morons.

    The average IQ is only 100 (yeah I know, its only 100 in a room full of Einsteins. Grading on the curve, sheesh.) But lately it seems to be sinking into a kind of neanderthal imbecility and lack of critical facility that makes me wonder just how much fuckin' stupider and more ignorant is the average schmuck out there compared to ten years ago.

    The lack of critical rationation combined with the improved availability of weapons and ammunition have set the stage for bloodier and bloodier episodes with less and less accomplished per shot fired.

    The willingness of leaders to waste the lives of their followers and their follower's children, sometimes their followers ARE children, is another factor.

    And through it all, the weapons manufacturers keep making money.

    You want peace on earth? Blow up the munitions factories.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
    1. Re:people believe in UFOs, Elvis lives and Angels by WNight · · Score: 2

      Blow them up with what?

      If you want peace, try killing anyone who tells you to kill someone else.

      If someone needs killing for the security of a group it should be obvious enough that the group can see it themselves and all decide independently to act, perhaps with others who have also personally decided to act.

      Whenever you pass the responsibility for your actions to someone else you're inviting injustice.

      What really chokes me these days is that countries try not to kill each others leaders. In fact, the US has a law that forbids assasination of enemy leaders, regardless of a state of war.

      I'd rather that my country, if they decided to go to war, would try to stop the war with the minimum of bloodshed, by taking out the freak at the top.

      But no... We'd rather mow down wave after wave of conscript troops, starve and kill civilians, destroy cities and farm and more, just to capture the enemy leader where we'll subject him to a rigged trial and toss him in jail for life (these days).

      But if we'd have just dropped a huge bomb on them in the first place there'd have been a lot less casualties in the process, people that likely didn't want to be there and were forced at gunpoint.

      But if our leaders used that policy, they'd invite similar reprisals. And instead of simply not going to war, to avoid pissing anyone off they'd rather waste the lives of hundreds of thousands.

  148. All we need is a space invader... by ywl · · Score: 1

    Yes. The human race is screwed. I won't be too surprise to see WWIII within one or two decades.

    All we need is a common foreign enemy, e.g. an invader from outer space or an autonomous AI. Well, then we, the whole human race would be united together...

    I know it's silly. I can dream, right?

  149. Cliff Stoll was right... by KC7GR · · Score: 1

    After reading the article, and having already read Cliff Stoll's "Silicon Snake Oil" and "High-Tech Heretic," I can see that this is one of the things he was worried would happen: That without the skills of critical and analytical thought, without the ability to interpret what the Internet can present in a proper context, people are very likely to take what they find on it at face value.

    One example: It's easy to turn up porn sites with a search engine like Google. Someone notices how easy it is, gets all offended and huffy, and starts trumpeting about how the Internet is full of porn.

    While true to some degree, they're taking it way out of context. Specifically, one has to go LOOKING for such material to find it. It does not (unless you've got some really racy wallpaper) just "pop up" on one's screen, as some politicians seem to believe.

    Another example: Taking any story on any of the news sites at face value. The same problem of media bias and spin exists on the 'net, just as it does in any other mass media news outlet. No matter what's presented, you still need to be able to think logically and ANALYZE what you're seeing and reading to make some sense out of it.

    So when are the public schools going to start teaching critical thinking and analysis skills? And I wonder if there are any parents left who make it a point to impart good common sense to their kids?

    --

    Bruce Lane, KC7GR,

    Blue Feather Technologies

  150. No Penalties for Lies by Josh · · Score: 1

    I find it disappointing that 99% of slashdot is concerned with defending the internet (as if the internet could be under attack) instead of reacting to the shitty state of the world. But the nature of the problem is clear: there is no penalty for spreading lies via the internet, so anyone with an agenda other than the truth can choose to do that. Readers can likewise tune in to 'information channels' that fit comfortably into their own distorted version of the truth. The problem isn't with the internet, but rather with groups of people who don't place an inherent value on objectivity and truth. Too bad for us that most of humanity falls into that category.

  151. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Stonehand · · Score: 2

    No, that's just yet another liberal lie.

    --
    Only the dead have seen the end of war.
  152. Seeing Reality and Getting Angry About It by scruffy · · Score: 2
    You see one group of people beating up another group of people that you identify with, and then you get angry. To solve this obviously unjustified anger, you need "context". What a farce!

    The real problem is that the powers-that-be have always maintained their power by brutality. Whether or not the brutality is justified, the Internet/satellite TV and any amount of openness in your country ensures that the world will see it. Maybe "context" will help people understand it better. Maybe the recipients of the brutality deserved it. But it will always make the recipients and anybody who identifies with them angry and hungry for revenge. It would be stupid to expect anything else.

  153. But it will only be on pay-per-view by swb · · Score: 2

    ...isn't that ironic?

  154. Two quotes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Religion.. Oh, that wonderful word, which has been warped to stand for, "My imaginary friend says I should kill you, because I'm too much a coward to think for myself."

    Have some quotes.(tm)

    "When politics and religion are riding in the same cart, they cannot be stopped."

    (Yeah, yeah, not exact, but I'm too lazy to dig through Herbert's collective works.)

    "Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups."

  155. Freedom of thought? by AB3A · · Score: 1
    The Internet is good for making points of view available. But anyone who thinks this will automatically improve understanding is too busy singing Kumbaya to realize that something else is missing.

    Before reading another point of view, one should understand one's own. And damned few people know enough about themselves to make an honest apprasial of someone else's beliefs.

    --
    Nearly fifty percent of all graduates come from the bottom half of the class!
  156. Understanding Leads to Hate When... by Baldrson · · Score: 2
    Why didn't she just not watch Fox when she came to America, I wondered? No, no, no, explained Ms. Djalal: The Fox Channel is now part of her Jakarta cable package. The conservative Bill O'Reilly is in her face every night.

    So? The channel is easy enough to change. This is no answer. The answer is that it is the wrong question. The real question is: How are people going to react when they see others broadcasting hatred of them into their own homes?

    Speaking as someone who is part of a group type-cast as bad guys (if you see a blond haired blue eyed heterosexual male in a movie made between 1972 and 1999 you can bet it was not a positive role) I can sympathize with Islamics and a lot of other groups on their hatred of Hollywood and the US's mass media of news and entertainment.

    Understanding sometimes leads to hate.

    1. Re:Understanding Leads to Hate When... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh no! Are you saying Luke Skywalker was GAY?! Man, I feel so confused! :P

    2. Re:Understanding Leads to Hate When... by Baldrson · · Score: 2

      The fact that the motion picture industry didn't have more casting along the lines of the phenomenally successful original Star Wars movies is strong evidence that something other than pure profit motive was behind those decisions during those years.

  157. Edmund Blackadder vs. the Pulitzer Prize. by jerryasher · · Score: 2

    I'll watch this post throughout the day. It's either a troll, or just envy, and it will be interesting to see at what point the moderators catch on.

    Will it still be modded a 5 by 5:00? I bet not.

    1. Re:Edmund Blackadder vs. the Pulitzer Prize. by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

      For the record i have never wanted to win the pulitzer prize neither am i a journalist. I would never wear a mustache either. Any other reason why i should envy Tom?

      Why would you think i am trolling?

      In any event it is completely possible that this post gets moded down by 5 pm. If that happens i hope that brings you a nice satisfactory feeling of justice.

    2. Re:Edmund Blackadder vs. the Pulitzer Prize. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I totally disagree with at least half of the things you say in your comment, but the 5 is well-deserved.

    3. Re:Edmund Blackadder vs. the Pulitzer Prize. by jerryasher · · Score: 2

      Why do I think you're trolling? Cause your post was so mean spirited. Maybe it just had too much attitude in it.

      Friedman has never spoken ill of the net, just because it's the net. It's not his domain. He has never said the hate is due to the internet. You're putting words in his mouth. My read is that he loves the ideal of the net. He wants to encourage education, knowledge, and communication. But he is pointing out that the net is just technology, you can't solve all political/social problems with technology, and sometimes a piece of technology comes with its own problems.

      All he did, as someone here has already pointed out, is make the exact same point as Douglas Adams made 20 years back.

    4. Re:Edmund Blackadder vs. the Pulitzer Prize. by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

      well when he said there is the I hate you virus going around the internet i interpreted as meaning that the internet is causing all this hate. It seemed like a reasonable interpretation.

      Him comparing the internet to a sewer is quite telling as well. Technicaly a sewer is not a good analogy for large ammounts of unprocessed and unfiltered things. Its a bad metaphor to say the least but he obviously (to me) uses it to set a tone.

      As you can see i dont hold too high opinion of him but my opinion of him is based entirely on his articles previous and no personal prejudices.

  158. Friedman vs. O'Reilly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is Tom Friedman afraid of Bill O'Reilly?

  159. Internet is big by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It isn't good. It isn't evil. It's just really big.

    Find what you like. Find what you don't like. It's all there.

    "It's on the internet, therefore it's true". Wow. How many contradictory truths can a human hold?

    Let any who believe that everything on the internet is true heed my words: "Everything on the internet is a lie."

  160. Small Pieces Loosely Joined by Jeff+Knox · · Score: 2

    The sewer part, sounds almost exactly like a quote out of Small Pieces Loosely Joined, the new book by David Weinberger from The Cluetrain Manifesto faim, in which he calls the internet a open sewer as well. More info on the book can be found at http://www.smallpieces.com/.

    --
    Jeff Knox
  161. Re:fp! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    mmmmmmmm open sewer

  162. Didnt the USA do the same thing? by HanzoSan · · Score: 2



    Doesnt the US constitution even say to go to your local militias to arm yourselves?

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  163. Re:fp! by blue+trane · · Score: 1

    The real problem this author has is with human nature; the internet may facilitate some of the less rational charactersitics of human nature, such as spreading rumors faster, but the internet doesn't create rumors on its own.

    So the problem of believing rumors without evidence to back it up was not created by the internet. The problem may be made more obvious because the internet is very efficient at distributing information. But the problem is not the internet; the problem is the human tendency to believe what we want to, without requiring any rigorous evidence.

    It can be reversed only with education, exchanges, diplomacy and human interaction -- stuff you have to upload the old-fashioned way, one on one. Let's hope it's not too late.

    This makes me feel ill - human interaction used to be the best way to spread rumors before the internet.

  164. Re:He correctly attacks the Fox news channel by Performer+Guy · · Score: 2

    The people who control the media, and in particular Dan Rather Biased and anchors like him think they are elites. They don't report the news, they advocate and promote an agenda. Their contempt (and yours) for anyone with a view they don't find politically correct is manifestly obvious. But of course you're only to happy to have a biased news media which agrees with your agenda, and are able ot point to Fox as right wing merely by contrast to the crap the alphabet channels put out.

    If you think they give you the real deal you are a fool. It would never occur to you that their daily censorship of diverse views merely serves the hateful.

  165. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by tmcmsail · · Score: 1

    OK, Coward, Let me say this:

    I fear not, thus your pattern is not followed.

    Failing to reply to stupidity is what led to Clinton in power. The people that pay attention to the news knew that he was lying. The dumbasses (to use your term) on the left just followed like lemmings. I didn't inhale. I did not have a relationship with Flowers. Whitewater was a deal that we lost money on. All lies but the left continue to venerate the most successful grifters ever.

    Sorry to stop your left wing rant, but truth usually does that to a person blinded by ideology...

    P.S. in the future, have the balls to post using your name, Oops, I forgot Leftists have no balls.

    --

    What OS do you want to abuse today?

  166. CORRECTION -- Re:Tom Friedman is a selfish littl by foghorn19 · · Score: 1

    The Internet is, by and large, a refuse-ridden electronic drooling cup, and we haven't BEGUN to tap its power for good yet. IMO the NYT is worse than the internet, and HAS NO power for good AS LONG AS it only prints the news "fit to print."

  167. Typical Net Newbies by Gorimek · · Score: 2

    Isn't the internet population in these countries very recent?

    Most people are pretty gullible when they first get online, as can be seen by how they forward all wacky virus scare emails and other myths. When I first got online I spent a fair amount of time "learning" about some crazy stuff.

    After a while people get their bearings and learn to tell the good from the bad. And once these people get burned a few times, they'll also know how to that.

  168. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by letxa2000 · · Score: 2
    The Bush administration did nothing for Enron because it was too late (therefore too dangerous).

    Or, perhaps, just not appropriate.

    But there's no question that the Bush administration is that of Big Oil - every aspect of the Bush foreign policy is dominated by this: the upcoming Desert Storm sequel, the non-condemnation of (and probable involvment in) the failed Venezuelan coup, Arctic Drilling, the privileged relation with the saudis, the many members of the cabinet who come from Big Oil companies, etc.

    Many liberals have been complaining about this since the Gulf War.

    Has it ever occurred to you that the reason EVERY administration is a "big oil" administration is because the U.S. is a "big oil" country? News flash: Without oil our country would collapse. It's strategically important to our politics, military, and economy.

    Now, I'm not going to delve into the business dealings of the Bush, Clinton, or any other political family.

    Any president that doesn't show the same level of concern about oil is a president that shouldn't be president. We are dependnent on it. If a candidate has prior investments before becoming president is he supposed to abandon the national interest in oil just because he's invested? That'd be absurd.

    And, finally, believe me, it IS possible for people to be invested in something and still do what's right for the country. It's also possible for people in power to do what's right for the country and also have their investments benefit. The fact that someone's investments earn money by him doing something he'd have done anyway doesn't lessen the validity of what he did.

  169. Oooohh... scary elite by Performer+Guy · · Score: 2

    BILL O'REILLY: And I want to ask you flat out. Do you think President Clinton's an honest man?
    RATHER: Yes, I think he's an honest man.
    O'REILLY: Do you really?
    RATHER: I think -- I do. I think he's an honest man.
    O'REILLY: Even when he lied to Jim Lehrer's face about the (unintelligible)?
    RATHER: Listen, who among us have not lied about something?
    O'REILLY: Well, I didn't lie to anybody's face on national television. I don't think you have. Have you?
    RATHER: I don't think I ever have. I hope I never have. But look, it's one thing--
    O'REILLY: How can you say he's an honest guy, then?
    RATHER: Well, because I think he is. I think at core, he's an honest person. I know that you have a different view. I know that you consider it sort of astonishing anybody would say so. But I think you can be an honest person and lie about any number of things.
    --Dan Rather on O'Reilly Factor May 15, 2001

    1. Re:Oooohh... scary elite by cje · · Score: 2

      Yeah, that O'Reilly is definitely full of himself.

      --
      We're going down, in a spiral to the ground
    2. Re:Oooohh... scary elite by Performer+Guy · · Score: 2

      I don't disagree with you on that one. All anchors are full of themselves, but Dan Rather is a hypocritite and a fool.

  170. Re:The internet brings people together more than I by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Someone who lives in say Idaho whos grew up around the KKK and so on whos never really spoken to anyone diffrent, could get on the net and see the REAL world for the first time and begin thinking for themselves.

    there's no kkk in idaho you dumbass. that's primarily a southern phenomenon. learn to use stereotypes a little better from now on.

  171. Eat your words by cHiphead · · Score: 0

    If you're going to fight a dictatorship, fight -- waving signs and staging sit-ins probably won't help.

    You mean like using any avaiable weapons, such as, oh I dunno, ROCKS, to fight an enemy with much superior force, say, TANKS?

    You just said we should use our own force to fight them, what if I feel the United States Government is acting as a dictator? If I picked up a gun and went after a big government, I would be labelled a terrorist or a nutcase militiaman, would I not?

    The communication technology (the internet, specifically) allows outweighs ANY disadvantages.

    --

    This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  172. Mod Parent Up! (+1 Funny) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it wasn't for the internet and alternative news sources we'd only ever get the pap that the NYT and it's liberal elites and their ilk want to give us.

    So the Fox Network and the CNN channel are 'alternative news sources'?????

    Actually "Performer Guy" illustrates an important point. Even if the facts themselves are accurate, any nutcase can still twist them to support his own paranoid world view.

    1. Re:Mod Parent Up! (+1 Funny) by Performer+Guy · · Score: 2

      Oh so CNN run by Ted Turner is right wing in your opinion?

      You're obviously not from America. Then again your rhetoric is typical of the American kneejerk left, I point out the blindingly obvious, the bias in the NYT and you're calling me a nutcase. What happend to all that intelligence the left wing insist they have? Is "nutcase" what passes for reasoned debate in your part of the world?

      Go read Bernie Goldberg's book "Bias". I don't care about Fox, but the other major news outlets in the USA are unadulteratedly left wing, they are biased news sources and the fact remains that the NYT is a left wing mouth piece. If you don't understand American domestic politics then don't even try to debate this because you have no basis for informed comment.

      If you can't see through this article then you're the nut. Did you miss the part of the article where the "reporter" who tarred Fox with the same brush as all these web sites spreading unadulterated rubbish? Yea, the NYT is REAL objective there. The interesting part here is the story is completely unrelated, the guy just couldn't help himself, he had to drag Fox into the preamble and didn't have the balls to make the statement himself. He wrote the criticism, but he hides behind an anecdote about some foreigner he met, just incase we might think he's expressing an opinion. Ofcourse it IS an opinion, but this is the game that get's played. A selective quote from someone he "interviewed" and he thinks he can say anything and appear objective. Then morons like you call anyone who points this out a "nutcase".

      Well I preffer real journalism to this crap, and I really object to some biased reported taking shots at a news outlet that he could take lessons from.

      Maybe I should have said "I ran into a stranger the other day who said the NYT was a left wing mouthpiece and THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN is a propagandist not a reporter.", it isn't honest but it's the kind of shit you like to swallow.

  173. I agree. by danro · · Score: 2

    I'm not the parent to your comment, but come on, when someone is looting your store, you don't have to "know them personally" to decide that action against them is necessary.

    I agree, but if someone is looting your store in plain sight, it's not prejudice anymore, you now know that this specific person is looting you!
    And since you have caught him red handed you're in your full right to take whatever action is permitted by law. (And I assume that this in the US would probably involve guns.)

    I don't really have a problem with that, it's treating someone like a criminal without proof I don't like.
    (You know, driving while black type "offences")

    --

    "First lesson," Jon said. "Stick them with the pointy end."
    1. Re:I agree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to clarify a small point about American jurisprudence and the law:

      No, its not OK for a store owner to shoot someone who is looting it... The only permitted defense of killing another person is immediate self-defense, as in: It was me or him, and he attacked first.

  174. You forgot Time-Delayed and Region Coded... by cHiphead · · Score: 0

    ... and if you try to tape it, you'll be shot.

    --

    This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  175. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, but you do fear, young Reaganite, you do fear. You fear a world ruled by liberals. A country where you can't have your guns to keep the pinkos at bay.

    You fear a world where the Indonesians and Indians have the power walk all over you and confuse you with an Armenian.

    You harbor deep fears that your lilly wihte world will someday crumble around you and the brown people will take over. I have seen your fear and that of all of your kind.

  176. Be very careful . . . by Lagrange5 · · Score: 1

    . . . where you get your news from.

    Me? The only source I trust is Pierre Salinger.

    --
    "Folks just call him Buckethead." -- Les Claypool
  177. What's the problem? by Animats · · Score: 2
    It's not a worry for the US. Americans can look at the rest of the world without any real obstacles. Even at the depths of the Cold War, you could subscribe to Soviet Life or find the Great Soviet Encyclopaedia in major libraries. Today, you can read Pravda or Al-Jazeera (which you can get translated.)

    The parts of the world with heavily censored media (which includes China and most of the Arab world) are the ones scared of the Internet. With good reason; they have governments that need a totally ignorant population to survive. In time, the people there will sort out the blithering from the reality.

    In the US, we have spin control in the major media, but almost everything important gets reported somewhere.

    The Friedman article grumbles that anti-Israel propaganda is getting a forum. But pro-Israel propaganda has a forum too. Quit complaining.

  178. Re:Tom Friedman is just an idiot by GooseKirk · · Score: 2

    That book sounds like it has potential, but I have still never seen the Friedman column that didn't leave me appalled. I can't believe the guy actually gets paid money for writing that swill, and that people actually read him. He's a shitty writer and a half-assed conservative hack, and by all rights deserves to be writing columns for some backwoods Iowa newspaper, not the NYT. If the guy's ever strung together an insightful sentence in his life, I haven't seen it yet...

  179. Re:The internet brings people together more than I by Beliskner · · Score: 2
    Someone who lives in say Idaho whos grew up around the KKK and so on whos never really spoken to anyone diffrent, could get on the net and see the REAL world for the first time and begin thinking for themselves.

    or of course, they can go to their KKK websites. But chances are they'll go to an AOL chatroom and meet diffrent people. Thats the first step to increasing tolerance.
    How is a new-born foetus going to know that Indymedia.org is uncensored? How is he gonna know that CNN is a major news site?

    Simple: Education, culture, media, friends and associates.

    For every American, CNN and MSNBC are de facto news areas. Same as IP. "Internet Service Provider rebels against IP, starts using proprietary protocol" simply ain't gonna happen, it's like swimming against the flow, or eating sweet and sour dog meat. But in other countries, they've never heard of CNN and Yahoo. The websites and news sites they use are completely different. Their education system is censored according to Sharia law or whatever so they cannot comprehend the full scale and breadth of the Internet. If their ISP sets AlMuhajiroun as their portal homepage then THEY ARE SCREWED! But this does happen.

    --
    A caveman dreams of being us, the incalculable power and riches. We dream of being Q, then what?
  180. Sewer? by bondjamesbond · · Score: 0

    the Internet's not a sewer... it's a MIRROR.

  181. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Archie+Steel · · Score: 2

    Has it ever occurred to you that the reason EVERY administration is a "big oil" administration is because the U.S. is a "big oil" country? News flash: Without oil our country would collapse. It's strategically important to our politics, military, and economy.

    Of course it would. So it seems to me that instead of messing up the whole world in order to secure its access to cheap oil, the U.S. should do the responsible thing and find ways to lessen dramatically its addiction to oil. America is pretty much the same as a heroin addict right now: ready to lie, cheat and steal to get its fix, instead of doing the responsible thing and checking in at a rehab center. You say that a president who doesn't have the "same level of concern" for oil shouldn't be president? Well I say: if he's not concerned about breaking America's dependency on the black gold, an only with providing her with it, then he's nothing more than a drug dealer.

    It's not up to the rest of the planet to have a hard time just because the U.S. can cure its addiction.

    And, finally, believe me, it IS possible for people to be invested in something and still do what's right for the country. It's also possible for people in power to do what's right for the country and also have their investments benefit.

    Yeah, too bad it rarely happens, and when it does happen, it's to the benefit of HIS country, not the Earth and humanity as a whole. Hydrogen Fuel Cells have been known since the 70s, and they're still not in consumer vehicles. Why is that? Because they would help break the lucrative business of the new oil barons. Sure switching to fuel cells would cost a lot of money up front - so what? You guys are the richest, most powerful nation in the world! Surely you could afford this...

    Before someone mods us as off-topic again, consider the headline: Technology: Fueling Hatred and Misunderstanding. My point is that the technology that has "fueled" the most hatred and misunderstanding in the twentieth century is the modern car engine.

    --

    Reminder: find a new sig
  182. Disintermediation by pussyco · · Score: 1

    One tiny little word, with only seven syllables, says it all. In the past, if the Supreme Court handed down a controversial decision, ordinary folks read about it in the newspapers. Now they go to the Court and read the Judges' own words. Journalists are right to be scared of the internet.

  183. Ignorance Feedback by weston · · Score: 2

    Here's the phenomenon I'm afraid of:

    People have point of view. The internet makes publications that cater to all points of view more easily available. Many people (most?) will seek out publications that cater to their own points of view -- after all, those are the ones that are insightful and have things straight, right? These publications reinforce their views, making it harder for them to accept other views. They get progressively narrow minded.

    There's a few weblogs I visit out there that cover the Israeli-Palestinian conflict which seem to beleive that one side or another is carrying on a completely righteous/just war against an evil/insane opposition. It doesn't matter which is which. The rhetoric is pretty much the same, even some of the supporting facts are the same (though obviously not all), but the interpretations are different. I've gone to these sites and played devil's advocate, and let me tell you, there's no quarter on the part of frequent visitors.

    Of course perfect objectivity is a myth; we all filter things through webs of personal significance, and desire validation. But it's just a little scary to me to see people who are so sure they're right they're willing to reject any outside point of view -- and convinced they're justified, meanwhile feeding only their own point of view.

    And yes, this happened before the internet, but I think the internet makes it easier.

    Of course, Microsoft really is evil and the DMCA is one of the worst travesties to ever leave congress, and anyone who says otherwise is some sort of right-wing idiot pig.

  184. Japanese version of Schindler by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    Historically, there were too few jews in the far east for there to be any significant reaction to him that might be called anti-semitism. In fact, the major enclaves of jews in China were almost completely assimilated. Within SE Asia these past centuries, the oversea Chineses were perceived in stereotypes more analogous to the Jews of Europe. Forced away from political power by their small numbers, many have achieved financial success. They have also kept their native customs for many years until the recent rise in nationalist sentiments.

    On the Japanese side, I also do not see any strong historic anti-semitism. There was a Japanese consul who in fact saved many jews by issuing to them visas to Japan so that they could escape Europe, very similar to Schindler. In addition, Tezuka's manga masterpice "Adolph" had as its main characters 2 boys who grew up in the port city of Japan. They were both named Adolph and became friends. One was Jewish and the other was the son of a Nazi officer. But they were not treated much differently by the Japaneses when they were boys.

  185. Thomas Friedman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is a piece of dung. His biased articles are on a snooping website and he's always trying to stir the pot. He is not a journalist, he is a propagandist. I'll bet he uses windows as well, that should tell you a lot about the intelligence of him. If your trying to write for an english paper you should use Thomas Freidman, cause english teachers love him but if your like me and you use alternative sources you should not expect an "A." So what you have is a bunch of politically correct zombies who read his drivel. But you all can go right ahead and put your faith into a pile of dung, just don't pile it up more than 25' on a streecorner in San Francisco or you could be arrested.

  186. a conservative response? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    news to me. or are you talking about libertarians.
    I doubt the religious right is on the same boat on this issue.

  187. Re:The problem with the Internet QWZX by Andrewkov · · Score: 2

    Whoa. Easy big fella. It's been well documented that countries like Canada, Sweden and Finland (to name a few) have more Internet usage per capita than the US.

  188. Segregationist logic by jafac · · Score: 2

    People who are in favor of racial segregation will argue that increasing contact between two races or groups will increase friction and conflict, and that groups should be kept separate, and not mixed, in order to prevent such conflict.

    I think that where groups have been thrown in together, they DO fight over their differences. But eventually, they learn that they need eachother to survive. I'm just afraid that before we get to that point, we may get to the point where our actual survival has to be at stake. Not that I'm arguing for segregation. I'm of the opinion that we should all keep fucking eachother untill we're the same color.

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  189. New Google Translator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google should create a hatred/prejudicial/sexist/etc.. translator that would turn any offensive words into ******* or !@%%$^&%^*

  190. Mrs. Arafat not an American by chipotle_pickle · · Score: 1

    She is a christian. There is still a difference.

  191. Re:He correctly attacks the Fox news channel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They don't report the news, they advocate and promote an agenda.

    I see.

    Can you give me an example of Dan Rather using the CBS Evening News to advocate and promote an agenda? Most of the right-wing attacks on the mainstream media take the form of "Dan Rather voted Democratic in the last election, therefore CBS News is biased to the left" or "Ted Turner donated a billion dollars to the UN, therefore CNN is a Communist propaganda organization." In other words, they are ad hominem attacks so stunningly ridiculous that they boggle the mind. Do you think that reporters and news anchors are robots, devoid of any personal opinions and political views of their own? Do you think that they are unable to separate these views from their profession?

    Let me put this another way. Tony Snow of the "fair and balanced" Fox News Channel is occasionally a guest host on the Rush Limbaugh radio show. This is a program with an obvious right-wing bias. Does this bother you? Bill O'Reilly, the network's flagship loudmouth, writes a column for WorldNetDaily, an extremist right-wing hate site masquerading as a news organization. Does this bother you? I'm willing to bet the farm that it doesn't. But I'm also willing to bet that if Dan Rather spoke in front of a group of, say, handgun control advocates, you would be calling for his head on a platter.

    See, I'm willing to stipulate that Snow and O'Reilly are capable of objective reporting, their right-wing biases aside. A lot of times they don't succeed, but I'm not going to dismiss them out of hand simply because they hold personal opinions that differ from mine. You and those like you, on the other hand, believe that reporters and commentators who hold your opinions are "objective", and that those who do not are "biased." This is blatant hypocrisy.

    When a group of people attacks a news organization for being "too liberal" and another group attacks it for being "too conservative", that's a pretty sure sign that they're doing something right. I don't think I've ever heard anybody call Fox News "too liberal."

  192. they cought up frickin quicly my friend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    mao and stalin are in the top 3 murderers of a century that has been the bloodiest of all time

  193. this is coming from a person by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    from a country that fines people for saying 'the holocaust never existed'. ridiculous statement yes
    but speech is free. and youre scolding him on trading away freedoms?

  194. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Snake · · Score: 1
    While other posts do a good job to... err... refute this highly inflammatory comment, I would like to add a notion.

    Let's be honest, Christianity and Judaism haven't been as bad to us as many seem to think. (...)

    An important thing is to note that both these religion are "relatively mature". (Hold on that flamethrower for a while as I explain)

    Islam was born circa 632 AD and spread relatively far and would probably have done so in the European kingdoms if Martel didn't defeat the muslim forces at Poitiers (732 AD)

    It was at this time that the Europe was plunged in the Dark Age and immobilism by the Catholic Church (a bout or two of plague didn't help, too)

    The Dark Age lasted for more than 1,000 years before being dispelled by the Age of Reason and Enlightenment (Le siècle des lumières).

    It then took about 200 years to reach a "relative maturity" where the religious institutions now have to answer for their actions.

    Islam splintered and entered itself its Dark Age about 200 years after Christianism.(See Sh'ia and Sunnism, among other events)

    My motion is that Islam is "a bit late" (200 years). Maybe, we are seeing the last spasms of radical Islamism and we'll see dramatic improvements in important areas (women's rights, religious tolerance, etc)

    Disclaimers:

    • I type this in a hurry. You're welcome to do your own research.
    • Women rights: catholics were much worse than current muslims extremists.
    • While I'm catholic, I don't recognize the Vatican (and, given the current scandals, probably never will)
  195. what's slashdot coming to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a wholly redundant "me too" post gets modded up to "4: Insightful"?

  196. It's purim cakes by chipotle_pickle · · Score: 1

    It's Purim cakes, not matzo bread that is claimed to be made with gentile blood. Purim is just before Passover (and the matzo). Of course, neither is made with any blood at all. This is such a wild story. An observant Jew will not eat a meal cooked by a gentile, let alone one cooked out of a gentile.

    1. Re:It's purim cakes by rpg25 · · Score: 1

      Actually, we're both right.

      I believe that you are right, that the article from Saudi Arabia claimed that Hamentashen are made with blood.

      But the "standard form" blood libel is about matzah, not purim cakes.

      this kind of literary criticism of hate literature is pretty weird....

  197. Specific info. by Apuleius · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Actually, no. The first "disrespecting"
    was done by the Palestinians, who in the
    1870's through 1920's had a habit of going
    to the Al Aqsa mosque yard, looking at
    the Jews who were down below at the Western
    Wall, and pelting them with garbage. However,
    that is largely irrelevant. The Mideast mess
    wasn't caused by "disrespect." It was caused
    by the massacres incited by Haj Amin Al Husseini
    in 1929.

  198. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by jafac · · Score: 2

    I really despise the logic that tries to equate the suicide bomber with an "heroic" guerilla fighter.

    If you look at the methodology of the suicide bomber, and the reaction it encourages, it's an otherwise ordinary civillian-looking person, who walks into a place full of civillians on the other side, and murders them, and himself. Which encourages a defense methodology of - search all civillians, harass them, impose rules on them, shoot them if they give you any hassle.
    This makes no distinction at all between combattants and non combattants. Which is why we're seeing the happily used photographs of mangled women and children as propaganda to prove the inhumanity of the defenders.

    The guerilla fighter uses stealth, and even deception - but does not infiltrate civillian areas, does not hide amongst civillians, does not pose as a civillian. The guerilla fighter's targets are military targets. Or civil infrastructure. Not non combattants.

    There is an honor difference. There is a moral difference. But most importantly - when you endanger the very people you're professing to be fighting to protect - you lose all credibility to your cause. This is exactly why, with all the propaganda from both sides to choose from on the internet, I tend to side with the Israelis.

    I suggest you read up on Che Guevera's Guerilla Warfare book.

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  199. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by jafac · · Score: 2

    Now, read This essay [berkeley.edu]. One of the author's points is that the Protestant Reformation brought Christianity into the modern age

    Oh yeah, your Tim McVeighs, and abortion clinic bombers are real modern.

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  200. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Tazzy531 · · Score: 2

    I totally agree with you. I personally don't see honor in attacking civilians or using civilians as a place to attack. What I meant was this is their current mindset. What they honor is people that go out and actually do something instead of just rolling over and let the oppressor take advantage. But you are absolutely right.

    --


    _______________________________
    "I'm not Conceited...I'm just a realist..."
  201. Nazi's and atheism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually the view that the Nazi's were atheists comes from the fact that Hitler's political ideals were lifted almost verbatim from Nietzsche. (See Nietzche and Hitler's views on morality, cruelty, common good, supermen, etc.) And primarily it's been the philosophers promoting this line not the church. But I suppose you haven't read works such as The Closing of the American Mind by Allan Bloom, now have you?

  202. Seen the hoax that asks you to delete java? by slicer622 · · Score: 1

    I got this forwarded to me by 3 or 4 friends, who all deleted their java manager files because an email/instant message told them it was a virus. Nobody was bothered by the fact that Norton or some other program didnt pick it up, or that they had never downloaded anything from AOL or Email, like the hoax said. Blind acceptance is the evil in this situation, and education is the solution. If we stop waiting for people to solve our problems for us, we'll be better able to effectively filter information. The people in other countries are having such averse reactions to what we import because it is coming so fast and hard. Slashdotters and the media are able to absorb and defray these falsifications, because we've been at the mercy of the torrent of media for so long. We are accustomed to the deluge, and can find the nuggets of truth among all the falsehoods and simple wastes of bandwidth. The vast majority of culture in America, and especially the rest of the world, has been hit with the wave all at once, as the internet has literally flooded to all corners. They still lack the skills to decide sense from nonsense on the net, and buy into whatever fits their stereotypes. Also important, but on a different note, is the "Clash of Civilizations" predicted by Samuel P. Huntington that is being accelerated by the media and the internet. Civilizations are revealed to be the last and most pivotal differences between people, and it is these divisions that will cause the next wars. More than ideology, power, greed, or anything else, culture will be the battleground and the spoils. Palestine doesn't want land, really, they want their culture, their holy lands. Albanians don't want military glory, land, or political power, they want to have a society of Albanians. Chechnya, Tibet, Falun Gong, Israel, East Europe, the Balkans, Africa, all are gripped in these conflicts. The internet gives other cultures a window to the big, benevolent wests society, and these people are apalled by what they see. They don't see liberty, freedom, equality, opportunity, or any of the values we profess. They see our children, photographed for the pleasure of older men. They see our teenagers, half naked dancing on MTV. They see our politicians and pundits, going back on their words, and decrying the nations they try to help. They see an America that they, frankly, don't want to be helped by. That is why they bomb us. That is why they attack us. They don't want that for their children, for their friends, and I don't blame them.

  203. Re:The problem with the Internet QWZX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I knew there was something wrong with them.

  204. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by tmcmsail · · Score: 0

    I am not a "young" Reaganite. Liberals will never rule the world, since they are just not capable of achievement at that level. Liberals fear those of us that are armed against the oppressions that Liberals seek to enforce through big brother government.

    I have no racist fear. I am live a color blind life. It is only the left that uses race as a dividing force in the world.

    I hope one day you can get to OZ and get a brain to learn the truth, a heart for your fellow man, and some courage to use your name instead of posting in the blind (like all the other liberals that hide from daylight).

    --

    What OS do you want to abuse today?

  205. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by letxa2000 · · Score: 2
    So it seems to me that instead of messing up the whole world in order to secure its access to cheap oil, the U.S. should do the responsible thing and find ways to lessen dramatically its addiction to oil.

    Actually, oil is not the problem. It's WHERE we get it.

    The U.S. should do the responsible thing and obtain as much as possible from within our own borders, including Alaska, and import it--when necessary--from more stable and friendly countries such as Mexico.

    Sure, alternative energy is a good goal. But it doesn't help us today. For the time being we need to exploit our own oil reserves and reduce our dependency on unstable, Arab oil while we look for a good alternative.

    1 Yeah, too bad it rarely happens, and when it does happen, it's to the benefit of HIS country, not the Earth and humanity as a whole.

    I don't feel like getting into an environmental debate today; suffice it to say that not all of us are convinced that using carbon fuels is as bad as some environmentalists would have us believe--which is, in large part, why no-one is really all that interested in paying more for alternative, more costly fuel.

    Hydrogen Fuel Cells have been known since the 70s, and they're still not in consumer vehicles. Why is that? Because they would help break the lucrative business of the new oil barons. Sure switching to fuel cells would cost a lot of money up front - so what?

    Hello, McFly... You suggest that fuel cells aren't in use because it would help break the lucrative oil barons, then recognize that fuel cells would cost a lot of money up-front...

    Has it ever occurred to you that the reason we don't use fuel cells is precisely BECAUSE it is more expensive and it's a cost that we don't feel, on balance, is worth it? It's not the "oil barons" that are preventing the implementation of fuel cells... it is society that doesn't see a big enough benefit to justify spending the entire money.

    You guys are the richest, most powerful nation in the world! Surely you could afford this...

    Perhaps, but we'd rather spend our money on something else and that's our right. If you want to use fuel cells, go for it. I don't. Gas is currently cheaper and more efficient and I'm happy using it. Don't expect me, in those conditions, to be eager to switch to fuel cells that are going to cost me more...

    My point is that the technology that has "fueled" the most hatred and misunderstanding in the twentieth century is the modern car engine.

    Heheh, you must be related to Algore... While I see where you're coming from it's NOT the modern engine that has fueled so much hatred and misunderstanding--it's our source of oil. Much of that hatred and misunderstanding would go away if we'd just use our own domestic oil and oil from Mexico and maybe Venezuela.

  206. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Archie+Steel · · Score: 2

    Actually, oil is not the problem. It's WHERE we get it.

    Ah, semantics. Gotta love it.

    Sure, alternative energy is a good goal. But it doesn't help us today. For the time being we need to exploit our own oil reserves and reduce our dependency on unstable, Arab oil while we look for a good alternative.

    It's not a question of "alternative" energy, it's about a "renewable" energy source. At least you agree that it is a good goal. But since it is a long-term goal, concrete action needs to be take now, not tomorrow! America's dependence on oil has caused enough political, economical and environmental damage (most of it outside of its borders) already.

    I don't feel like getting into an environmental debate today; suffice it to say that not all of us are convinced that using carbon fuels is as bad as some environmentalists would have us believe

    Despite ever-increasing scientific evidence to the contrary. Hey, even Bush and the oil companies acknowledge that burning fossil fuel is bad for the environment and that the reserves of fossil fuel are finite. Not only that, but new reserves will be costly to exploit, especially if environmentally-sensitive drilling is required (as it would in the ANWR). To believe otherwise is, I believe, wishful thinking fueled by an understandable (if dangerous) reluctance in changing energy-consumption habits.

    Hello, McFly... You suggest that fuel cells aren't in use because it would help break the lucrative oil barons, then recognize that fuel cells would cost a lot of money up-front...

    Yes, Biff, that is what I'm saying. There is no contradiction there. Of course it will be expensive to change to fuel cells. However, there is this great thing called a "to amortize" I believe ("amortissement" in french). That is, costs can be spread out over a couple of years, until the actual cost benefits start kicking in. So the transition wouldn't be as costly as they first seem. However, people who make a profit (and a hefty one at that) preserving America's addiction to oil will make less money, just as the dope dealer loses money when one of his addict goes clean. The fact that you (as a person) don't feel that the cost is worth it is irrelevant: this is something that will have to be done, and sooner than later. Those "cheap oil prices" won't stay that way, and getting them will carry and increasingly higher political and environmental cost as well.

    Perhaps, but we'd rather spend our money on something else and that's our right. If you want to use fuel cells, go for it. I don't. Gas is currently cheaper and more efficient and I'm happy using it. Don't expect me, in those conditions, to be eager to switch to fuel cells that are going to cost me more...

    Yes, you have the right to be irresponsible. But america does not have the moral right to destabilize the entire world just so it can get its oil fix. Also, as I said, you're being incredible near-sighted if you believe oil will stay cheap. For your own good, you should encourage the quick implementation of fuel cells and other renewable energy sources right now!

    Much of that hatred and misunderstanding would go away if we'd just use our own domestic oil and oil from Mexico and maybe Venezuela.

    Right, Venezuela...as long as a friendly president is in place. And if not, the Bush administration will try to topple him again, huh? See what I mean about the increasing political cost? The problem is, the world is beginning to be fed up with being there only to satisfy America's energy needs. You guys are going to have to start behaving more responsible very soon...

    --

    Reminder: find a new sig
  207. My favorite line from the article: by shrikel · · Score: 1
    "They say, `He got it from the Internet.' They think it's the Bible."

    No, they most certainly don't think it's the Bible. If they did, they would give little or no credence to it. Muslims don't use the Bible! Okay, they may concur with a lot of Christ's teachings, but to them the bible isn't scripture. ;)

    --
    Any sufficiently simple magic can be passed off as mere advanced technology.
  208. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evidence is plentiful that McVeigh was an athiest and a non-racist. He may have been an anti-government loony, but he wasn't either a white-supremacist nor a religious nut.

  209. So sorry. I need to brush up on the classics. by chipotle_pickle · · Score: 1

    So many mean lies getting woven into cultural identities these days, I have a myopic focus on today's lie. The Saudi professor was certainly slandering over purim, not passover. Really, the old story was about matzah? You just need to look at the things.

  210. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by letxa2000 · · Score: 2
    Me: Actually, oil is not the problem. It's WHERE we get it.
    You: Ah, semantics. Gotta love it.

    It's not semantics. It's a major difference. If we got our oil from within our own country and our close neighbors we wouldn't be as inclined to get tangled in regional conflicts on the other side of the world.

    ... it's about a "renewable" energy source... But since it is a long-term goal, concrete action needs to be take now , not tomorrow!

    I agree. I would love to see a few billion dollars a year invested into searching for alternative energy sources. I personally like nuclear and solar; although to make solar work we need more research into effective batteries. But solar seems like a silly source to pass up.

    America's dependence on oil has caused enough political, economical and environmental damage (most of it outside of its borders) already.

    While we're searching for an alternative energy source, I think we should exploit our own oil reserves. This isn't a long-term solution. It's a short- to medium-term solution while we're finding better energy.

    Despite ever-increasing scientific evidence to the contrary.

    Show it to me. Good hard facts. I have seen no evidence whatsoever--and believe me, I've looked. Beyond smoke and mirrors and very science-lacking news reports I have found little in the way of evidence that carbon is doing anything drastic to the eath. Please show me to that data.

    Hey, even Bush and the oil companies acknowledge that burning fossil fuel is bad for the environment and that the reserves of fossil fuel are finite.

    They acknowledge it is finite, because it is--although probably not as much so as we think. We were supposedly going to run out by 2000, but we're supposed to run out by 2050 or something. Funny thing that.

    As for acknowledging that burning fossible fuel is bad for the environment, I can't speak for them, but my guess is they say that because the current fad is "carbon fuels pollute the environment." And sure, they do. The question is how much. Given the current success of some environmentalists at convincing an uninformed public as to weak or non-existant correlations of data it would be political suicide for him to say anything else.

    That is, costs can be spread out over a couple of years, until the actual cost benefits start kicking in. So the transition wouldn't be as costly as they first seem.

    I'm not talking about companies that can amortize. I'm talking about individuals that are going to see a $15k gas-based car or a $35k cell-based car and say, "Screw that."

    The reason why fuel cells haven't gone anywhere is it can't be done cheap. Companies know consumers won't go for it given those prices so they don't even try, which makes good business sense.

    Those "cheap oil prices" won't stay that way, and getting them will carry and increasingly higher political and environmental cost as well.

    And when the cheap oil prices go up and fuel cells become, for that reason, more attractive they'll have more success. Free market at work.

    But america does not have the moral right to destabilize the entire world just so it can get its oil fix.

    I agree. We should get our own oil from within our own borders, or very close neighbors as previously mentioned.

    Also, as I said, you're being incredible near-sighted if you believe oil will stay cheap. For your own good, you should encourage the quick implementation of fuel cells and other renewable energy sources right now!

    As I've said, I support research. We need to find out how to make alternative energy sources practical and cheap. When they become practical and cheap then the free market will take care of implementing them.

    But you can't roll out solar powered cars, etc. today and expect them to be used. The free market will reject them because they aren't mature yet.

    Right, Venezuela...as long as a friendly president is in place. And if not, the Bush administration will try to topple him again, huh? See what I mean about the increasing political cost?

    Venezuela sells to us regardless of what president is in power. I'm not going to tuch the Bush-wanted-Chavez-gone debate. It hasn't even been touched in Mexico where I live; if there was any truth to that, believe me, the Mexican media would be all over it--they love to report anything that makes the U.S. look bad. :)

    The problem is, the world is beginning to be fed up with being there only to satisfy America's energy needs.

    Perhaps, but it'll be interesting to see what they think when we STOP buying their stuff. For better or worse, our buying makes many otherwise poor countries either tolerable or downright rich (depending on the country.

    You guys are going to have to start behaving more responsible very soon...

    Whatever. If everyone was so "fed up" with us buying their stuff they could just stop selling it to us. Me thinks YOU are fed up with what we buy. I think the world is more fed up with our global politics, not with what we buy or what fuel we burn.

  211. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Archie+Steel · · Score: 2

    Show it to me. Good hard facts. I have seen no evidence whatsoever--and believe me, I've looked. Beyond smoke and mirrors and very science-lacking news reports I have found little in the way of evidence that carbon is doing anything drastic to the eath. Please show me to that data.

    Are you an climatologist expert? What kind of data is needed to convince you? I personally doubt that you've been seriously looking for it. Anyway, here are a few links you should investigate:

    IPCC 2001 Report
    (Note: these are links for "policy makers", so they're probably lighter in scientific data than the Technical Summaries also included on the site. Even then, the evidence is compelling.)

    "Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis"
    "Climate Change 2001: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability"
    "Climate Change 2001: Mitigation"

    There is also a HTML summary here. However, I suspect you really don't want to be convinced, so you'll probably dismiss these studies as "environmalist propaganda". Or perhaps you can point to the factual errors in the studies...Well, the encouraging thing is that policymakers are slowly getting up to speed and starting to do something about it.

    I'm not talking about companies that can amortize. I'm talking about individuals that are going to see a $15k gas-based car or a $35k cell-based car and say, "Screw that."

    Well, that's why we have a government, isn't it? If they can heavily subsidize american industry through the Pentagon system, surely they can help automakers in making such cars affordable to the general public? Well, at least we both agree that research into making such cars cheaper and more available is a priority.

    As far as Venezuela is concerned, the links between the White House and the coup leaders are becoming clearer: see this article for more info...btw, Newsweek has never been known as being a pro-left, conspiracy theory-prone media source. Anyway, we're not bound to agree on everything, but at least we do on the importance of affordable fuel cell technology. So I'll leave it at that for now - you're welcome to add more comments if you want, though.

    --

    Reminder: find a new sig
  212. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by letxa2000 · · Score: 2
    Are you an climatologist expert?

    Nope. But neither are most of those responsible for drawing up the IPCC report, so I guess I'm equally qualified to speak on the subject.

    What kind of data is needed to convince you? I personally doubt that you've been seriously looking for it.

    Believe me, I have been looking for it. In my spare time I'm preparing a website that specifically talks to the subject of global warming. However, it is my goal to only reference sites that would either be considered unbiased or actually promote the theory of global warming--my idea being to use their own data against them which would make it hard for my site to be criticized since I'm using their data. But it turns out I'm having a tough time preparing my site because there is so little real data offered by the pro-global warming people. Lots of conclusions based on scientists I've never heard of, but no hard data presented to the reader. Call "global warming" a matter of faith, because there is an absence of evidence being presented.

    Again, that's what my experience has been. I'm still working on it, but getting any data out of those people is like pulling teeth.

    Note: these are links for "policy makers", so they're probably lighter in scientific data than the Technical Summaries also included on the site. Even then, the evidence is compelling.

    There are major holes in the IPCC. They disregard the satellite record and the radiosonde record and instead use the error-ridden surface record. Sure, if you use a broken record all kinds of weird science can result.

    The IPCC (and many environmentalists) seem more eager to prove why the satellites are wrong than to consider what it would mean if they are right. And considering the satellite record coincides very well with the radiosonde record it's really hard to avoid the conclusion that they're pushing an agenda, not a pursuit of science.

    Or perhaps you can point to the factual errors in the studies...Well, the encouraging thing is that policymakers are slowly getting up to speed and starting to do something about it.

    Yeah, they're getting up to speed. Unfortunately they've been pointed down the wrong highway.

    I do plan on reading the information you've provided. I've seen it summarized (by biased parties) but I will read it myself.

    Well, that's why we have a government, isn't it?

    To force people to do what they don't want to do? Perhaps that's your vision of the role of government, it's not mine.

    As far as Venezuela is concerned, the links between the White House and the coup leaders are becoming clearer: see this article [msnbc.com] for more info.

    I read it. It doesn't seem to have any new information that hasn't already been mentioned in certain circles except that there might be a congressional investigation.

    That said, are you familiar with Chavez himself? The article you just cited indicates how he blames the media for the coup d'etat. In fact, I remember watching reports live from Venezuela (in Spanish) that the media itself was taking credit for this. Chavez claims they were spreading lies, the media claims they were spreading the truth.

    The article also says that the administration told the Venezuelans "No golpes" (No coup d'etats).

    Any way you look at it, Venezuela was an internal affair. There was no U.S. military support, no real political support. At worst, the U.S. didn't fulfill it's typical "policeman" role when it failed to act on behalf of Chavez.

    But when a dictator-in-the-making that is threatening the freedom of the press is toppled, is it really surprising that the U.S. wouldn't be entirely displeased? I would agree, Chavez brought it on himself--it wasn't forced on Venezuela by any foreign country.

  213. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Archie+Steel · · Score: 2

    And considering the satellite record coincides very well with the radiosonde record it's really hard to avoid the conclusion that they're pushing an agenda, not a pursuit of science.

    What agenda could they be pushing? It's not as if they were going to make money off this (if, like you said, they are not climatologists). So I fail to see what they would have to gain in this: no fortune, no fame (really, it's not as if they became rock stars). This doesn't make much sense. There is, however, plenty of incentive on the other side to say that global warming is just hogwash. And if the Big Oil companies have not funded so-called "scientific" studies to discredit the opponent's view, then they are just plain stupid. But you go ahead and show me a valid scientific study that gives me conclusive proof that global warming isn't happening, or that it isn't related to fuel fossil emissions. When the consequences are so grave for the collective people of the world, then the burden of proof is on the few who invoke privilege to make a profit as an excuse not to change their ways.

    You might not agree (and I believe you are mistaken about that) but fortunately, that is becoming the prevalent view among policymakers, who now need only to stand up to the powerful industrial lobbies - who are much, much more powerful than the environmental lobbies, btw. If you believe otherwise you are either a) quite ignorant of the lobbying world or b) part of such an industry lobby who opposes regulation of fossil fuel emissions. However you put it, the truth is we are witnessing an increase in surface temperature (including oceanic temperature). Now you might be willing to risk the planet's future on the fact that there is no defnitive proof that this is linked to fossil fuel emissions. I say it's a foolish chance to take, given the possible repercussions, just to save a few bucks.

    >Well, that's why we have a government, isn't it?

    To force people to do what they don't want to do? Perhaps that's your vision of the role of government, it's not mine.


    Not to force people, to give incentive. To lead. To act responsibly for the common good, not the privileges of the oil industry shareholders. But of course right now the U.S. government is made up of such shareholders, so I'm not hoping for much...

    (About Chavez) But when a dictator-in-the-making that is threatening the freedom of the press is toppled, is it really surprising that the U.S. wouldn't be entirely displeased? I would agree, Chavez brought it on himself--it wasn't forced on Venezuela by any foreign country.

    The Bush administration's hardly-concealed joy at Chavez' temporary overthrow had nothing to do with freedom of the press. Come on! Venezuela has the world's third largest oil reserves! (And Iraq had the second...do you see a pattern here?) For your information the press in Venezuela isn't free. It belongs to the richest South American media magnate, who happens to be an outspoken adversary of Chavez. Do you really believe these media have any editorial independence from their owner? Think again. If they did, they wouldn't have shown soaps on the television as massive pro-Chavez protests spontaneously took place in the capital - while they had extensively covered more modest (but anti-Chavez) protests the day before...The truth is, the Venezuelan media are just a mouthpiece for a corrupt, greedy business elite, nothing else. Even then, Chavez treats them with a lot more respect than some of the U.S. allies do theirs. Would the U.S. cheer if these regimes do theirs (i.e. Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Colombia, Israel in its recent military operations, etc.) were overthrown? I don't think so...

    Whether the Bush administration likes Chavez or not is irrelevant. He was elected, and if the people don't want him anymore they can vote him out during the next election. If he breaks the law they can try to impeach him. What happened, though, cannot be denied: while the entire world was condemning the coup, the U.S. didn't (at least not until it was clear that it failed). For a country that would like to see itself as a beacon of democracy, that is totally unacceptable behavior. I do hope it blows up in his face (figuratively speaking, of course). Bottom line is, a coup against an elected leader can never be democratic: it's a fundamental contradiction! If the people go and elect want to elect a left-leaning ex-airborne officer, then that's what they want. Nobody's saying that George Bush shouldn't be president even though he probably is an ex-alcoholic, ex-drug user who is quasi-litterate and has never been able to keep a job that wasn't handed out to him before...(he did steal the election, but that's another story, another debate...)

    --

    Reminder: find a new sig
  214. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by letxa2000 · · Score: 2
    What agenda could they be pushing? It's not as if they were going to make money off this (if, like you said, they are not climatologists). So I fail to see what they would have to gain in this: no fortune, no fame (really, it's not as if they became rock stars). This doesn't make much sense.

    If you look at the Kyoto Protocol, it is clear there would have been no positive impact to the environment. None. Since many developing countries--including China and India, which make up 1 of 3 people on this planet--were exempt. It is obvious that polluting industries would just pick up and move to those areas of the world where labor is cheap and they'd be exempt from the Kyoto restrictions. On a global level the pollution would be the same, just in their backyard instead of ours.

    Since that obviously doesn't help the environment at all, all we're left with is looking at what we know it will do: It will shift industries, jobs, and wealth from developed countries to developing countries. It doesn't require an economics degree to figure that out.

    So... If it's obvious that Kyoto wouldn't have helped the environment but would have led to a redistribution of jobs and wealth on this planet, what could the motivation or goal be? I'll leave that as an excercise for the reader. I don't think it's necessary for me to connect the dots for you...

    There is, however, plenty of incentive on the other side to say that global warming is just hogwash.

    There is incentive on both sides. I'd say 95% (or more) of all reports on both sides are more political thant science. The best we, the outsiders, can do is look for the data in all reports, look for the biases, and try to make sense out of it.

    That said... you responded with two paragraphs to my text: "And considering the satellite record coincides very well with the radiosonde record", but didn't speak to that fact at all. The fact is that the two most accurate methods we have of recording global temperature--satellites and radiosondes--both indicate flat or even slight cooling in the last 23 years. Why is that? And please don't tell me that's big oil bias. That comes from NASA.

    However you put it, the truth is we are witnessing an increase in surface temperature (including oceanic temperature).

    See above. Until you realize that the most accurate methods for recording global temperature do NOT indicate warming, you will be spinning your wheels and repeating the environmentalist party line.

    We are NOT witnessing an increase in surface temperature. Please explain to me why the satellite and radiosonde records both show global cooling and only the relatively unreliable surface record shows any warming whatsoever? Those that push the idea of global warming inevitably ignore the two most accurate temperature records because they are not convenient for their arguement and they haven't been able to discredit them. Discrediting the surface record is much easier since the stations are not equally distributed over the earth, don't exist at sea, are subject to poor record-keeping, are not priorities that are given high importance in many countries, and are subject to the effect of local changes in the environment including the heat islands of cities, trees coming and going, etc..

    Not to force people, to give incentive. To lead. To act responsibly for the common good, not the privileges of the oil industry shareholders.

    "Incentive" is just another way of saying "force." Sure, it's not made law, but taxes or tax breaks are made that essentially push people to do something they would not otherwise do.

    I'm not a believer in the benevolance nor the superior intelligence of government. I believe in the people. When someone says "free market" it should be translated to "free people." I believe that when free people see that alternative energy is worthwhile they will start using it all by themselves. If the government has to push people to do it beforehand with "incentives" it's because the technology isn't mature enough yet. Instead of spending money on the incentives, they should spend money improving the technology so that people will adopt it without the incentives.

    My government's job is NOT to herd me like a cow in the direction that someone else has decided my life should take.

    The Bush administration's hardly-concealed joy at Chavez' temporary overthrow had nothing to do with freedom of the press. Come on! Venezuela has the world's third largest oil reserves!

    So what? He hadn't stopped shipping oil to the U.S.

    For your information the press in Venezuela isn't free. It belongs to the richest South American media magnate, who happens to be an outspoken adversary of Chavez.

    Oh brother, you think "free" means that the press doesn't belong to someone? The press always belongs to someone. The question is whether or not they have the freedom to print/say/report anything without government approval.

    Do you really believe these media have any editorial independence from their owner?

    Probably not. That's not the point. Freedom of the press doesn't mean freedom from the owner of the press. It's the right to report whatever needs to be reported. I know the press in Venezuela is controlled by a Chavez opponent. That's a GOOD thing. I'd much rather have a press that reports and criticizes the bad things about the government than just goes along and paints a pretty picture and covers up the truth.

    The truth is, the Venezuelan media are just a mouthpiece for a corrupt, greedy business elite, nothing else.

    And Chavez is just a mouthpiece for a poor, numeros and uninformed population. He said what he had to say to get elected. Sounded good to uneducated poor people. But he can't deliver. Believe me, if he stays president long enough it'll only be a matter of time until the rest of the country--rich and poor--overthrows him as well.

    Populist leaders generally are popular (by definition) until the end of their reign when they are often overthrown by the people that used to love them.

    Whether the Bush administration likes Chavez or not is irrelevant. He was elected, and if the people don't want him anymore they can vote him out during the next election.

    It's irrelevant in the sense that it's an internal issue. I agree the correct way to get rid of a president is to vote him out or impeach him. But if the people of Venezuela were to decide that they've had enough and that they were going to overthrow their own government, that's their internal problem, as long as no-one external instigated it.

    My opinion.

  215. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Archie+Steel · · Score: 2

    If you look at the Kyoto Protocol, it is clear there would have been no positive impact to the environment. None. Since many developing countries--including China and India, which make up 1 of 3 people on this planet--were exempt.

    That is conveniently ignoring the fact that China has actually reduced their carbon emissions while developing their economy, as well as the fact that the U.S. was and still is the biggest polluter in the world. That excuse is getting old. It's not China and India that are polluting the planet, it's the U.S. But you're right, Kyoto won't change things, because the U.S. has pulled out of it using the fallacious "China" argument (how convenient) and therefore will keep on poisoning our atmosphere.

    We are NOT witnessing an increase in surface temperature. Please explain to me why the satellite and radiosonde records both show global cooling and only the relatively unreliable surface record shows any warming whatsoever?

    I'd like you to give me your sources on this, I'd be curious to read it. Meanwhile, it seems not everyone at NASA agrees with you (see also this for an alternate scenario). In fact, the only thing the discrepancy in surface measurments vs. satellite/radiosonde results indicates is that the real atmosphere is more complicated that the computer models we have of it so far (duh!). Still, as this NASA page indicates, "it does not by itself substantially alter the expectation that some amount of global warming will occur in the future." The thing is, satellites and radiosonde measure changes in the atmosphere, not the surface. The fact that there is a discrepancy doesn't mean that the surface temperature isn't in fact increasing - the only thing that has been questioned following the discovery of these differences is the computer model used to predict atmospheric changes, not the surface measurements!

    At the risk of repeating myself: yes, we do not have complete, conclusive proof. So I'll be generous to your point of view (which seems to be entirely based on that surface/atmosphere discrepancy, which according to NASA does not invalidate the fact that surface temperature are increasing) and say that it's a 50-50 chance. Now, how much would you be prepared to risk on 50-50 chance? I know I'm not prepared to risk it, and fortunately policymakers are less and less inclined to do so. Sure, there will be some people on the fringe that believe that global warming isn't real, despite the mounting evidence to the contrary (even if the computer models are not quite accurate). Even if it is not as bad as we may have thought, that doesn't mean it's not there - it just means we've bought some time to do the right thing.

    "Incentive" is just another way of saying "force." Sure, it's not made law, but taxes or tax breaks are made that essentially push people to do something they would not otherwise do. I'm not a believer in the benevolance nor the superior intelligence of government. I believe in the people.

    Well, as faulty as it is, the government is the only representation the people as a whole have. Even if it's imperfect, it's better than nothing! Incentives are not at all a way to "force" people. You don't have to follow them. No one is forcing you. Similarly, when a state puts tax incentives to draw a company to build a new factory, they are not forcing that company in any way. It may choose to go somewhere else instead. Another example: China forces people to have only one child (by punishing those who have more than one). India gives incentives so that people will have only one child. The fact is, a lot of people in India have more than one child, despite the incentives. They are not being forced, and it does not have the same impact. You're just playing on words to try to get out of a losing argument. Give it up.

    When someone says "free market" it should be translated to "free people."

    What a load of bull! You confuse companies with actual citizens. Case in point: capital is now much more free in its international movement than people are. Markets are freer than populations. You can have a dictatorship that has a free market and prosperous economy. There is absolutely no relationship between the two concepts! Either you're a businessman, or you're being very naive.

    My government's job is NOT to herd me like a cow in the direction that someone else has decided my life should take.

    No, but it is its job to balance the needs of individuals with the common good. In other words, to limit your freedom so that it does not go against those of others. Political Science 101. But anyway that's not what I was talking about, and you know it. I'm talking about incentives, like any government always use for a variety of purposes. I'm sure you already have taken up on government-sponsored incentives, wether it's tax breaks for retirement funds, or whatever. So that argument doesn't seem to be getting you anywhere.

    >Venezuela has the world's third largest oil reserves!

    So what? He hadn't stopped shipping oil to the U.S.


    No, but he's not particularly friendly towards the United States and that could affect oil prices. It's a variable the Bush administration could do without, for sure. This is a clear case of national interests.

    Probably not. That's not the point. Freedom of the press doesn't mean freedom from the owner of the press. It's the right to report whatever needs to be reported.

    Well, it seems to me that the job of the media should be to report the truth, not try to manipulate public opinion against an elected leader because a single person (the owner) has decided so. Freedom of the press means freedom of the journalists to write what they think is true - if the journalists are pressured, either by the government or by the owners, into writing something they don't think is true, then the press cannot be said to be free. That's called editorial interference and it is frowned upon in any democratic society. Of course there are always the Op-Ed pages where one can say whatever he wants, as long as it is not slanderous. But we're talking about factual reporting here.

    I know the press in Venezuela is controlled by a Chavez opponent. That's a GOOD thing. I'd much rather have a press that reports and criticizes the bad things about the government than just goes along and paints a pretty picture and covers up the truth.

    That doesn't seem to be the case, here. Quite the opposite: the press covers up the truth and paints a darker picture than there really is, because its owner has a clear (and avowed) political agenda, showing soaps instead of images that would disprove its fabricated editorial line. Is that what you are defending? Because that is the analysis of about every independent media, despite the official Bush administration line.

    But if the people of Venezuela were to decide that they've had enough and that they were going to overthrow their own government, that's their internal problem, as long as no-one external instigated it.

    But in this case (and we are talking about a precise case, not some hypothetical future) the people didn't want him out - they demonstrated after the coup, causing it to misfire and fail. And if the people get tired of him they have a way to take him out of office: it's called voting, and in a democracy - even an grossly imperfect one - it is the only legitimate way to do it. The people who organized the coup are part of a well-organized and well-funded minority. They do not represent the will of the majority...and in a democracy, the majority has the final say. Even though it can be wrong, even though it can elect a tyrant (or a Yale drop-out). That's the basic principle of democracy, and you can't say it doesn't apply when the situation doesn't suit your own interest. That is simply undemocratic, and nothing you have said challenges this argument.

    --

    Reminder: find a new sig
  216. an example by Kwantus · · Score: 1

    For instance, the NY Times described Milosevic's trial as "the first trial of a head of state for war crimes." In fact it's the second. Somehow the Times overlooked the verdict, delivered in NYC 1992 Feb 29, against Pappa Bush, the present VP and State Sec'y, and others for war crimes in Iraq. Nineteen crimes, and not `trivial' ones either.

    http://www.casi.org.uk/discuss/2002/msg00246.htm l

    http://deoxy.org/wc/warcrim3.htm

  217. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by letxa2000 · · Score: 2
    That is conveniently ignoring the fact that China has actually reduced their carbon emissions [peopledaily.com.cn] while developing their economy

    The article you cite is very strange. In one section it talks about reducing emissions by 17% while in another part it says that it's emissions have increased by half the rate of growth of the economy. In other words, their emissions are still increasing, just not increasing as fast as the economy. That'd still be good, but it's curious which is right: Did their emissions decrease 17% or did they increase 18% (which is half the 36% rate of GDP growth?).

    These are the kind of inconsistencies that you will constantly find in most of these articles. As the article also mentioned, this information was in rebuttle to President Bush citing the problem of emission exemptions in third world countries. Obviously they had to come back with something to rebut that. The fact is, the article itself says that since the 1980's China's emissions have increased 18%.

    Regardless of whether or not they have reduced or increased emissions, the concern of the U.S. remains valid. If you slap emission restrictions on the developed world, the third world WILL pollute more. Whether or not China has done well in the last 5 years or so is irrelevant. If you chase industries out of the industrialized world with emission limits, believe me, past performance will be no indicator of future success.

    as well as the fact that the U.S. was and still is the biggest polluter in the world.

    We also are the most productive. If you look at it from a per-capita standpoint, UAE pollutes more than the U.S.. If you look at it from a per capita GDP, U.S. falls way down the list. I don't have a link for that because I haven't found that information published; but simply divide carbon emissions by per-capita GDP to get a better idea of how U.S. ranks.

    You can't expect the largest, and one of the most efficient economies in the world to be so without polluting. Sure, an American might pollute 20 times as much someone from Sudan, but that American probably also generates 100 times more income (these are examples, I don't have the numbers handy).

    I will not dispute that the U.S. is the largest polluter. I will dispute whether that single evaluation matters. You must compare pollution on a per capita GDP basis. Otherwise you are comparing apples to oranges.

    Me: We are NOT witnessing an increase in surface temperature. Please explain to me why the satellite and radiosonde records both show global cooling and only the relatively unreliable surface record shows any warming whatsoever?
    You: I'd like you to give me your sources on this, I'd be curious to read it.

    Sources on what? I believe I already provided a link to the radiosonde/satellite/surface record. But let me give you some links:

    NASA: Radiosonde/satellite show cooling, surface record whows warming
    Cooling trend found, slight warming due to strong El Niño

    I'd like to provide more, but my wife is waiting so I must make this fast. Getting all these links together in one place is why I'm working on a site that will provide all this information quickly and easily without having to go to Google each time.

    In fact, the only thing the discrepancy in surface measurments vs. satellite/radiosonde results indicates is that the real atmosphere is more complicated that the computer models we have of it so far (duh!).

    Uh, the satellite/radiosonde record not coinciding with surface measurements has nothing to do with computer models. The surface record itself is inaccurate. That is to say, not surprisingly, it is much more accurate to send up electronic radiosondes and calibrated satellites than to depend on thousands of people checking thousands of different stations at thousands of different locations subject to thousands of potential anomolies.

    That the computer models are broken isn't even an issue. The fact is, if you feed a working model broken (surface record) data it'll obviously break. If they want to come up with a valid model, they ought to be using valid data--and that would come from the radiosonde/satellite data. And that data shows a slight cooling trend over at least the last 23 years.

    I don't doubt that the environmentalists could turn that satellite cooling trend into global warming over the next 50 years though. It's amazing what their models can produce, so leave it to them to take data that shows cooling and somehow conclude that there will be warming and rising sea levels 50 years from now.

    it does not by itself substantially alter the expectation that some amount of global warming will occur in the future."

    Can you not see the inherent bias? They are saying, "Well, here's data that shows global cooling over the last 23 years. But don't get complacent! That doesn't mean there won't be global warming." The disclaimer itself is telling.

    The fact that there is a discrepancy doesn't mean that the surface temperature isn't in fact increasing - the only thing that has been questioned following the discovery of these differences is the computer model used to predict atmospheric changes, not the surface measurements!

    Again, you're jumping the gun. We're not talking about computer models that are broken. We're talking about historic surface record data from the last 150 years that is the only record which suggests global warming is occurring--and that record seems to be substantially flawed when compared with what we know to be very accurate measurements of radiosondes and satellites.

    If the satellites and radiosondes for the last 23 (satellites) to 50 (radiosondes) years are showing a slight cooling and the surface record shows heating, the surface measurements are not reliable. If the recent surface record over the last 25-50 years isn't even reliable, are we really to believe it was any more reliable 100 or 150 years ago?

    I'm not even discussing whether or not the models work or not. I'm saying that even if the models were right, the environmentalists are feeding it bad data--GIGO. If you feed the models corrupt data that shows warming in the last 23 years during a time where satellites have shown that there hasn't been any, what do you expect the models to produce?

    which according to NASA does not invalidate the fact that surface temperature are increasing

    Please re-read the article and check for yourself what "satellite record" and "surface record" refers to. The satellite record is the temperature of ALL the atmosphere (from the surface on up) as recorded accurately by satellites. The "surface record" refers to measurements made by mini-weather stations around the world subject to individual station-by-station errors, human errors, expanding cities.

    It's not a matter of the temperature of the surface. It's a matter of how the temperature was taken. The "surface record" is not reliable.

    Even if it is not as bad as we may have thought, that doesn't mean it's not there - it just means we've bought some time to do the right thing.

    In other words, "Global warming is probably real. But if it isn't, we should act like it is since all it means is that it isn't happening now but will probably happen someday."

    I can't argue with that logic. If that's the way you see it then we might as well abandon all research--if our actions with or without global warming are the same, there's no reason to research it.

    Incentives are not at all a way to "force" people. You don't have to follow them.

    True, that's why I said they were incentives and not truly "forcing" anyone to do anything.

    Let's say it another way. "Incentives" are a way of making a minority (or majority) do something they wouldn't otherwise do because the "majority" (government) thinks it's right.

    I'm sure you already have taken up on government-sponsored incentives, wether it's tax breaks for retirement funds, or whatever. So that argument doesn't seem to be getting you anywhere.

    Actually, I haven't. I work for myself and instead of getting tax breaks I get hit with unemployment tax. I'm funding someone elses incentives, apparently. Which is why it further pisses me off when they give incentives for something I don't even agree with. They're taking MY money to push ME to do something I don't want to.

    Anyway, we're drifting. My real interest is in debating global warming. The whole "how big should government be" is a topic for another thread; and actually a topic I don't usually get into because it's a matter of opinion.

    No, but he's not particularly friendly towards the United States and that could affect oil prices. It's a variable the Bush administration could do without, for sure. This is a clear case of national interests.

    Perhaps you see it as such. I haven't seen Venezuela much affect oil prices except during the coup itself. Oil prices seem much more sensitive to the middle east, war on terror, demand, etc.

    Well, it seems to me that the job of the media should be to report the truth, not try to manipulate public opinion against an elected leader because a single person (the owner) has decided so.

    I agree. But what if the truth happens to agree with the owner? Then it's not manipulating, it's just a matter of the owner being right and the truth affecting public opinion, not "manipulating it."

    the press covers up the truth and paints a darker picture than there really is, because its owner has a clear (and avowed) political agenda, showing soaps instead of images that would disprove its fabricated editorial line. Is that what you are defending? Because that is the analysis of about every independent media, despite the official Bush administration line.

    First, I don't even know the Bush administration line.

    Second, have you lived in Latin America? I currently live in Mexico and have for the past 6 years. I can assure you, the type of media you are describing in Venezuela is not unique to Venezuela. It's pretty much the norm for most Latin American countries because the governments are downright corrupt. It's difficult to find anything encouraging to report about any of them. And that's the TRUTH. I live here and can attest to it.

    But in this case (and we are talking about a precise case, not some hypothetical future) the people didn't want him out - they demonstrated after the coup, causing it to misfire and fail.

    And as such he's back in power and I accept that as much as him being out of power.

    it's called voting, and in a democracy - even an grossly imperfect one - it is the only legitimate way to do it.

    Let me answer my own question above: It is clear you haven't lived in Latin America and don't have much knowledge about what you're talking about.

    That's the basic principle of democracy, and you can't say it doesn't apply when the situation doesn't suit your own interest. That is simply undemocratic, and nothing you have said challenges this argument.

    Well, we really have diverged from the global warming debate and I'm not going to put much effort into the political side of this for the reasons mentioned above.

    I also want to say that I'm in favor of emocracy 100%. I think it's the greatest thing since capitalism.

    That said, having lived in Mexico which is now "moderately" democratic (having finally escaped 60+ years of domination by a single "democratic" party), I can also tell you that there comes a time when it becomes clear to a society that the government is so corrupt and the voting process so fraudulent that the only way to create a democracy is to tear it down and start again.

    I truly believe that. So did the founding fathers of my country. Your mileage may vary. :)

    I probably won't respond to anything else you say on the politial part of this subthread since what I'm really interested in debating is the global warming part.

  218. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Archie+Steel · · Score: 2

    I probably won't respond to anything else you say on the politial part of this subthread since what I'm really interested in debating is the global warming part.

    Agreed. Anyway, as much as I enjoy this challenging exchange (I do, really), it's probably time to move on. I would just like to say one last thing about the whole Chavez affair. While I agree with you that Latin America government are corrupt in general, that paints only half of the picture, i.e. that businesses in those area also tend to be corrupt. After all, to use an appropriate analogy, it takes two to tango. This is why sticking to due process (and in the case of Venezuela, the constitutional process) is essential, and should be encouraged. In my view Bush failed to encourage the constitutional process because his administration clearly dislikes Chavez. That was a blatant faux-pas on the government's part.

    In other words, "Global warming is probably real. But if it isn't, we should act like it is since all it means is that it isn't happening now but will probably happen someday." I can't argue with that logic. If that's the way you see it then we might as well abandon all research--if our actions with or without global warming are the same, there's no reason to research it.

    Well, that's not exactly what I meant. What I believe would go more along these lines: "Global warming is probably real. Until we know for sure that it isn't, we should act as if it was in order not to make the situation worse. It just so happens that in changing our habits in order to avert this probable catastrophe, we also solve another problem: our dependence on fossil fuels, which has dire economic and geopolitical consequences. So we kill two birds - or at least one and possible other one - with one stone (to use a non-politically correct saying... :-)

    If the satellites and radiosondes for the last 23 (satellites) to 50 (radiosondes) years are showing a slight cooling and the surface record shows heating, the surface measurements are not reliable.

    Read the stories again: radiosondes measure atmospheric, not surface, temperatures. In the NASA papers, they clearly show that the difference is not between recorded surface temperatures, but between recorded surface and atmospheric temperatures. The surface indeed is warming up, but the atmosphere is not warming up at the same rate, and parts of it are cooling instead. As I said, this shows that the computer models used to predict atmospheric changes are incorrect, which may mean that global warming is slower than expected (let's hope that's what it means). However, the radiosonde data does not invalidate surface temperature records, because it doesn't measure surface temperatures. The discrepancy is with the expected atmospheric warming and the actual recorded one, which is lower than expected. Thus the question of reliability does not apply to surface temperature measurements (save for the so-called "asphalt effect"), but rather to the computer models used to predict atmospheric changes.

    In one section it talks about reducing emissions by 17% while in another part it says that it's emissions have increased by half the rate of growth of the economy.

    Actually, the arctile says the country's energy consumption has increased by half the rate of growth of the economy, not its emissions. Those are two different things. Emissions did increase in the first part of the 90s, mind you, but they have been decreasing in the second half. A few more links about a piece of news that was quite underreported in the U.S.:

    World Carbon Emissions Fall

    Carbon Emissions Data | China

    China and Climate Change

    And here is an analysis by the US NGO that published the original report. In this analysis the researchers said they cross-examined their data a second time after the Washington Post claimed that China had underreported its actual emission figures while inflating its actual economic growth. The NRDC still found that China had in fact decreased its carbon emissions while enjoying a healthy economic growth. So the two are not irreconcilable, and the "China excuse" is not a valid reason for the U.S. to drop out of Kyoto...unless you are suggesting that americans are somehow less capable at taking on the environmental challenge than the chinese are...

    Sure, there will be short-term costs, but these will be quickly recouped, and the goal is quite worthy of those small sacrifices (energetic independence and reducing the likelihood of a probable global warming).

    Anyway, that's my opinion. We probably won't be able to see eye to eye on this, but still I respect your position.

    --

    Reminder: find a new sig
  219. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by letxa2000 · · Score: 2
    Having said I wouldn't touch the political discussion, I will reply to the following just because this section isn't so political in nature inasmuch as "how much should government do" or "how big should government be." Plus it touches on something I've been exposed to for the last 6 years and it's nice to vent. :)

    While I agree with you that Latin America government are corrupt in general, that paints only half of the picture, i.e. that businesses in those area also tend to be corrupt. After all, to use an appropriate analogy, it takes two to tango.

    You are right. It's a "which came first, the chicken or the egg?" issue.

    My take is that the companies aren't so corrupt in and of themselves. They treat their customers like dirt and take advantage of their customers because the government won't do anything to stop them; but they're still responsible to their stockholders like any other company.

    I see it more as the Latin American society vs. their governments. THAT'S where the tango takes place. It's nasty to condemn an entire society, but Latin American society is corrupt. I honestly don't know whether Latin American society corrupted their governments or if their governments corrupted their societies.

    From what I've seen, companies do as best as they can with a corrupt society and a corrupt government. Any given individual doesn't want to be corrupt, but the "system" forces them to be. There is a saying in Mexico, "El que no tranza no avanza." That means "He who doesn't cheat doesn't get ahead." If everyone else is cheating/bribing to get ahead, he who tries to be honest WILL fall behind. So it's dang near impossible for an honest person to get ahead; most people eventually just give in to the "dark side" and accept it as an inevitable part of life... and so the whole problem continues.

    Here in Mexico everyone recognizes corruption as a problem, but no-one has a solution and I don't really either. Actually, I do. I plan to move back to the United States later this year. :)

    What I believe would go more along these lines: "Global warming is probably real. Until we know for sure that it isn't, we should act as if it was in order not to make the situation worse.

    So how do we know for sure it isn't happening? At what point do we say, "Ok, it's not happening."

    I myself am already ready to say it isn't happening. The satellite and radiosonde record don't show any global warming in the last 23 years.

    I'm certainly in favor of continuing to monitor temperatures, of course. But at this point I see nothing to convince me that global warming is currently happening.

    It just so happens that in changing our habits in order to avert this probable catastrophe, we also solve another problem: our dependence on fossil fuels, which has dire economic and geopolitical consequences

    And as I've said, I'm in favor of looking for alternatives. I believe that, ultimately, the alternatives will be cheaper and will not just make environmental sense but will make economic and political sense as well.

    In the meantime, however, it'd be unreasonable to go "cold turkey" and push an immature technology and punish those that continue to use what works for the time being. It's an unnecessary burden on our economy--and when the economy is burdened, less funds will be available to move that alternative technology forward.

    In the NASA papers, they clearly show that the difference is not between recorded surface temperatures, but between recorded surface and atmospheric temperatures. The surface indeed is warming up, but the atmosphere is not warming up at the same rate, and parts of it are cooling instead.

    I think there's two ways of looking at this.

    My way: Everyone has decided that the temperatures recorded for the last 150 years are right. Damn-near perfect, actually. So perfect that they conclude that these stations are able to detect a 0.6C degree rise in temperature over the last 100 years. Considering absolute zero is -273.15C (0K) and the average temperature on earth is about 15C or 288K (IIRC), then to detect a 0.6C temperature change is talking about a true variation of 0.21%. Even if we assume that only values between -90C and 60C are valid, we're still talking about a variation of 0.4%. I don't know about you, but I believe that all the possible errors at those little white boxes around the world are more than 0.4% and certainly more than 0.21%. Changing urban areas, changing "readers" who may read the stations at different times (especially 80+ years ago), humidity affecting the actual mechanics of the stations (especially 80+ years ago). All of these things affect the validity of the data colleted and I think it's entirely possible, if not downright probable, that these errors are larger than the observed "increase" in surface temperature. I.e., the potential margin of error, especially for older readings, is larger than the the observed increase and is statistically insignificant.

    Your way: Assuming that the surface temperature record for the last 150 years is pretty much perfect (a big assumption) and the temperature on the surface has increased, so what? Weather and pretty much everything that happens in the climate happens in the atmosphere, not at ground level. I don't doubt that the cities are warmer than they were. I DO doubt that that makes any difference to the climate if the only change is on the surface.

    However, the radiosonde data does not invalidate surface temperature records, because it doesn't measure surface temperatures. The discrepancy is with the expected atmospheric warming and the actual recorded one, which is lower than expected.

    I agree that radiosondes don't measure surface temperature. Satellites, however, measure the temperature of the entire "column" of air, from the top down to the surface.

    But again, the problem I see is that the surface temperature has no bearing on the atmospheric temperature. This is even MORE true if the surface record is right.

    The whole global warming theory suggests that increased CO2 and other greenhouse gasses will cause global warming of the atmosphere--not just of the surface. In fact, this HAS to be true. If the surface is warming and the atmosphere isn't, well, ok, we have surface warming--but it can't be due to increased greenhouse emissions because if greenhouse emissions were the cause, ALL the atmosphere would be warmed--not just the surface.

    Thus the question of reliability does not apply to surface temperature measurements (save for the so-called "asphalt effect"), but rather to the computer models used to predict atmospheric changes

    Please forget computer models for now.

    The point is, the question of reliability is of UTMOST importance and is completely applicable. How can you use temperature data from the last 150 years if there isn't some reasonable assurance that that data is correct? As mentioned above, there are plenty of potential errors in the temperatures that were taken at stations. Even MORE errors a hundred years ago when the "station" might consist of a cowboy at a post office sticking his head out the window and looking at the temperature at high noon (+/- an hour or two depending on his workload).

    The whole point is that the 150 year-old surface record most likely contains errors. Potentially very big errors. Whether the computer model (i.e. the method) is right or not is irrelevant if you feed it bad 150-year-old-data.

    The NRDC still found that China had in fact decreased its carbon emissions while enjoying a healthy economic growth.

    First of all, the first article you mentioned confessed that the reason for the drop is not fully known. Before assuming that this means you can abandon fossil fuels and have a growing economy it would be vital to KNOW what happened.

    Second, that same article mentions that worldwide carbon emissions fell by 0.5% while the world economy expanded by 6.8%. Considering they mention that China is the second largest polluter, I would assume (dangerous, I know) that a large portion of that 0.5% decrease was China's mysterious decrease.

    Finally, the world economy was expanding by leaps and bounds in 1998 in the tech and dot com industry. Obviously that produced a lot of "phantom" growth with very little additional emissions.

    I'd say various circumstances coincided to produce an anomoly in 1998. You certainly can't conclude that because a third would country had a mysterious decline in emission while their struggling economy had growth that it automatically means we can reduce fossil fuels with no adverse affect on our economy.

    So the two are not irreconcilable, and the "China excuse" is not a valid reason for the U.S. to drop out of Kyoto...

    It IS a valid reason.

    As I mentioned before, even if China and India aren't currently large polluters (and it appears China holds second place), the fact that Kyoto would not apply to them INSURES that those companies polluting the developed world would move to those countries where they can pollute as much as they want and probably at lesser cost.

    Whether China had a reduction in the mid-90s is completely irrelevant. If you give companies an incentive (there's that word again!) to move to China and India, they will. They'll pollute China and India, take jobs with them, the world won't be any cleaner as a whole, more Americans will be out of work, and once again Americans will be accused of exporting their pollution overseas. Instead of creating political/environmental problems due to our use of fossil fuels, we'll create political/environmental problems because our companies will move to exempt countries and pollute there.

    What would have been the advantage of the U.S. accepting Kyoto?

    ...unless you are suggesting that americans are somehow less capable at taking on the environmental challenge than the chinese are...

    Actually, yes. We've achieved a standard of living that requires a certain level of energy--whether it be fossil, nuclear, solar, or whatever. But we need energy. For now fossil and nuclear is what works best for us. Hopefully someday it will be solar. But if you take our energy away from us, YES, it's going to kill our economy and that will have worldwide reprecussions.

    Many countries and many societies haven't achieved the same level of industrialization as we have (yet). It would not be arrogant, inaccurate, nor wrong to say that if you take away fossil fuels from someone who scarcely uses it they won't miss it as much as if you take it away from somebody who does. Likewise, if their current system doesn't require it it won't be affected. But the economy that depends on it WILL be.

    We probably won't be able to see eye to eye on this, but still I respect your position.

    Likewise.

  220. Re:NEWS ALERT: Buttons on the TV can change channe by Archie+Steel · · Score: 2

    Oh well, at least we agree on a few things. I still think that businesses play an important role in Latin America corruption, and that global warming is a real (if somewhat delayed threat). It was nice discussing these things with you...I guess it's time to move on, though. I'm pretty sure we're the only ones left posting comments on this story. Until next time, I bid you adieu!

    --

    Reminder: find a new sig
  221. another example by Kwantus · · Score: 1

    The US Post Office is used as a censorship organ. See what Wade Frazier set out in
    http://home1.gte.net/res0k62m/medicine.htm

    That booklet [Stale Food vs Fresh Food] saved my father's life. The mail stop order made it illegal to send it through the US mail system, effectively banning it in America. In effect, it was similar to the Nazi/Catholic book burnings. Using the US Post office is an effective tactic to wipe out alternative health practitioners, as I have discovered. It is only one weapon in the medical establishment's arsenal, but it is an effective one.

  222. Re:These disease is of course mindless idiocy..... by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

    No, you're the one getting confused. "Christian" is used far too loosely and has since the middle ages. You can't really say Catholics and Christians are the same when you really study. When the Catholics took over France, they killed, stole from, and basically drove out the Heugenoughts. Many of these men (and women) were Christians, in fact most of them were.

    Muslims take over and kill people when they come to power, however when they don't think they can win, they just immigrate. The whole islamic doctrine is violent, a Islamic person who is not violent is not a true Muslim.

    Many Christians don't have guts now, some do. Remember, abortion doctors are killing people, and while I'm not about to shoot any of them, I don't pity them at all, anyone killing innocent children (no matter how young they are) has a hard heart.

    Islam encourages suicide bombers, with their silly idea that you'll get a better reward if you die in battle. I say it's silly, because you could be of a lot better use fighting, and not dieing.

    --
    "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
    1 John 4:14