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International Bigfoot Symposium

DaytonCIM writes "Yup, that's right the creature that took on Steve Austin (no, not the drunk and bloated pro wrastler, but the REAL Six Million Dollar Man) has legions who gather to debate and discuss his furriness. The International Bigfoot Symposium is going on right now. SFGate also has a nice article on the grand meeting."

10 of 215 comments (clear)

  1. Andre the Giant? by bearl · · Score: 4, Funny

    On The Sixe Million Dollar Man, wasn't Bigfoot played by a drunk and bloated wrastler?

    Now you've made it way too confusing...

  2. Welcome! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I, for one, welcome our new hyperpodiatric overlords!

  3. heh by OrthodonticJake · · Score: 4, Funny

    Sam & Max Hit the Road references are not allowed.

    --
    I regularly report MSN spam to the Hotmail admins.
  4. Best book on the subject by heironymouscoward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well, the only one I ever read. My parents had it when I was a toddler, but I think it's as relevant today as it was in the 1960's.

    On the Track of Unknown Animals by Bernard Heuvelmans.

    --
    Ceci n'est pas une signature
  5. Big foot is about as real as by Jacer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    .... a sexy, available, female nerd. We would all like it to exist. The fairy-tale aspect of it is too grand to not want, but sooner or later we come to terms with the truth.

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    --fetch daddy's blue fright wig, i must be handsome when i release my rage
    1. Re:Big foot is about as real as by JessLeah · · Score: 4, Informative

      Ceren Ercen. Not sure if she's AVAILABLE, per se, but she IS sexy and she IS female. And she's a nerd.

      There are actually lots of female nerds; we're just not Sports Illustrated models (though some of us are cute). And, of course, most of us are taken...

  6. Somebody sure's having a good weekend by GillBates0 · · Score: 4, Funny
    An authentic Native American open pit salmon barbeque (salmon run permitting) will be offered on Friday evening. Lunch on Saturday will be the Willow Creek version of a mall food court. Various fund-raising groups will provide a wide variety of luncheon choices, including Indian tacos, hot dogs, hamburgers, desserts, and snacks. A classic pit-barbequed beef dinner by the Willow Creek Kiwanis Club is on tap for Saturday evening.

    If only the /. editors had posted this before the weekend, I could've presented my research on big feet at the conference. :(

    --
    An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
  7. um.... by c4ffeine · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This makes me think... I can see both way's points of view. I see that there is a LOT of evidence for Bigfoot' existence and that some of it might be hard to fake, but we must wonder: why haven't we got more than 1-2 pieces of video footage of the damn thing? We really should just thouroughly comb the woods where it is supposed to be. Even if we don't find it, we'll probably find some drug caches and convicted felons on the run... It's worth a try

    --
    "73% of quotes on the Internet are made up" -Ben Franklin
  8. I think this sums up the article... by Narphorium · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "In any event, it's a good excuse to go camping, and it adds some color to our mundane lives."

    That's just about all there is to it.

  9. Various kooks by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have a relative who is really into the Bigfoot scene. The Bigfoot believers are quite committed. They make a lot of mistakes because of that, though. What is really interesting to me is how so many of the same thought errors get made in radically different areas of human belief.

    Carl Sagan's The Demon-Haunted World is an interesting investigation of the entire phenomenon.

    It is a terribly complex mental exercise to absorb all of the information in modern life and make intelligent decisions. The fact is that there are far too many claims to investigate for anybody to examine all of them with the necessary care. So we have to rely on the consensus of experts to make decisions. And the organizations necessary for consensus have the same flaws as all human hierarchal bodies.

    Here are some of the various brands of kooky ideas that I have come across:

    The AIDS Myth The medical analysis is surprisingly deep. A lot of qualified people have weighed in on this idea.
    Carbohydrates not calories. They claim that our genes are still adapting to the modern high-carbohydrate diet, and that is why so many of us are so fat. (Enter Atkins.)
    Democracy is not good government
    Global Warming. Discussed on Slashdot a number of times
    Shakespeare did not write Shakespeare Joe Sobran thinks that the Earl of Oxford wrote everything attributed to Shakespeare of Stratford on Avon.
    Race and IQ Probably true, but kooky nonetheless.
    Multiregional Evolution You can find most of Wolpoff's papers that are cited here somewhere online. I recommend "Bottlenecks and Pleistocene Human Evolution" and "Modern Human Ancestry at the Peripheries: A Test of the Replacement Theory." Wolpoff is kooky because there are very few anthropoligists left who will side with the Multiregional theory over the Out of Africa theory. (Wolpoff technically supports an Out of Africa theory, but that is how everyone refers to the debate.)

    And here is one that I will actually advocate: Bohmian Mechanics It is about as kooky as you can get for a physicist, but I am convinced that it beats QM on the merits.