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User: misanthrope101

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  1. Re:But it's all physics? *snark* on Why Doesn't Exercise Lead To Weight Loss? · · Score: 1

    "If you're fat it's because you're lazy!"

    I agree it isn't all that simple. But after you continue to meet fat people who don't work out at all (or barely) that conclusion isn't all that astounding. I know men and women who have lost 50+ pounds by changing their diet and working out. I myself have lost 30ish. The people who want to get healthier eat better and work out. The ones with the most significant effects are the ones who are most committed--intense, frequent workouts, etc. Then I see way overweight people walking slowly on the treadmill or track, and I hear them at work saying "I work out all the time, but can't lose any of this." They grasp at these "exercise doesn't work" or "it's all genetics" arguments as an excuse to not work out more, or more intensely.

    No, it's not going to be fair. I know muscular, well-defined men, who can run a 7 minute mile, who work out (and run) far less than I do. And that means nothing as far as *my* health goes. I have very little sympathy for fat people who don't even try because they're convinced that it won't do anything anyway. Do some have metabolic disorders? No doubt. But we also look for excuses to be lazy, and futility is one of the best excuses going.

  2. Re:interesting responses on Save the Planet, Eat Your Dog · · Score: 1

    Why the heck did you post such a wonderfully insightful thing anonymously? That was one of the most interesting things I've read in some time.

  3. hardly evil on Save the Planet, Eat Your Dog · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm mostly with you on this one, but prisoners aren't random normal humans. They are generally evil.

    No, they aren't. A significant percentage are there for drug crimes, prostitution, etc. You can be labelled as a sex offender and go to jail because you peed in an alley. We have moved well beyond the stage where everyone in jail can be considered evil. Are there bad people in jail? Certainly. But being convicted by a jury doesn't mean you really did it, or that it went down the way the prosecutor said. Cops lie, witnesses lie (or misremember), evidence gets planted|lost|tainted|misinterpreted, etc. Many have been released from death row after they were exonerated by DNA evidence. In short, the system is far from infallible, and even when it works flawlessly many who are far from "evil" are caught up in it. Don't fool yourself.

  4. interesting responses on Save the Planet, Eat Your Dog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm not saying that eating pets is viable or necessary, but I find the responses interesting. When people say "we might as well eat neighbors|kids|whoever" they are pretty much putting the lives of animals on the level, value-wise, with the lives of humans. I'm a shameless speciesist (or is it species chauvinist?) and I'm always jarred by people treating animals as if they're as valuable, as humans. I know people who would rather use prisoners for medical research than animals. Seriously.

    This thing goes pretty deep, and always amazes me. I used to work in an ER, and I had to sew up a child's face after she was bitten by a dog. After she was discharged , I was criticizing the family for having a 100lb carnivore that was bred for aggression living in the house with their 4 year old child. One of my co-workers got really angry at me, saying "we don't know that that child did to provoke the dog! Did you even ask that?" She blamed the kid and sided with the dog. I was dumbfounded. It fascinates me that people can work alongside one another and have profoundly divergent value systems. I'd have been less shocked to find that an otherwise amicable co-worker belonged to the Aryan Nation than to hear her side with the dog over a mauled child.

  5. Re:Shock Horror - the climate changes! on Captain Bligh's Logbooks To Yield Climate Bounty · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Have any of these climatologists considered climate change is a natural cycle of the planet?

    Do you seriously think that hasn't been considered? Seriously? Do you seriously think that climatologists all over the world are so mind-numbingly stupid that that hasn't occurred to anyone? Yes, that has been addressed, time and again. We are *worsening* and *accelerating* the warming. No one has said that climate never ever changed until humans screwed stuff up. The only way you can ask that question is if you've only gotten your information from right-wing BS sources like Beck.

    The idea that we as humans can control or even reverse this process is highly egotistical

    The idea is that we are having a negative impact on our environment, and that we should try to minimize that as much as possible. No one said we can master global climate and roll back the clock. The simple acknowledgement that human action can degrade the environment in which we live is not egotistical--it's pretty much the opposite of that. It's not arrogant to say we have the capacity to damage our environment. If you think we can have no impact on the environment, then sit in a closed garage with a car running for a few hours. Should you turn off the car and open the garage door, or would it be arrogant to think you can avoid killing yourself by cutting back on the pollution you're pouring into your immediate environment?

  6. Re:Waste MORE time!? on Obama Makes a Push To Add Time To the School Year · · Score: 1

    First, what's wrong with expecting a monetary return on your education?

    Nothing. Most of us need to make a living. That doesn't mean that only knowledge that translates directly into higher salary has value. Also, college isn't the sole source of education and general knowledge. A person with intellectual curiosity reads books, and would eventually come across references to figures such as Stalin and Freud.

    think that nurse's lack of knowledge on Freud and Stalin says more about the nurse personally and less about her formal education

    My point was that her formal education was entirely vocational. It seems that yours was as well, but since you can converse on a variety of subjects, you seem to have taken the effort (or had the curiosity) to give yourself a general education, via reading or whatnot. I don't blame vocational education. Most of us need jobs, and most of those jobs need training. Fine. I don't ask that an engineering program teach Proust.

    And I think your choice of Freud and Stalin to make your point says quite a bit about you.

    Yes, you caught me. I'm actually smoking a cigar right now, hopped up on cocaine, sending dissidents to the gulags. Seriously, I used those examples because I was so taken aback at the time that she had no idea at all who these people were. I don't fault her nursing school for not teaching general cultural literacy. I blame her for having so little intellectual curiosity that she never read a book she wasn't assigned in school.

  7. Re:Waste MORE time!? on Obama Makes a Push To Add Time To the School Year · · Score: 1

    Look down on ignorance? That's a little arrogant if you asked me

    I wasn't saying we should put ignorant people in the stocks in the public square. My point was that when people are ignorant about something they don't think "hmm, maybe I should look that up." No one can know everything, but general intellectual curiosity is a good thing. Few people have it, because in our culture being ignorant carries no negative connotations. When people say "I've never read a book in my life" and they don't feel any shame about that, I consider it a problem.

  8. Re:Waste MORE time!? on Obama Makes a Push To Add Time To the School Year · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Employers care about the breadth of education from 4-year degree because it shows the student has the ability to learn subjects outside of the core competencies

    I worked with a registered nurse who did not know who Freud or Stalin were. At all. They came up at various times in our conversations (not work related, but still....) and she had no idea. Didn't know them by name or picture. She had a master's degree, but her education was entirely vocational. I feel sick to my stomach admitting that more school won't help the problem, but I think the underlying cause is that our culture does not look down on ignorance. Any knowledge that doesn't translate directly into dollars is considered "useless" by almost everyone. Even if someone is dead wrong about something they still have "a right to an opinion," so even pointing out that they're just ignorant makes *you* a presumptuous jerk.

  9. I miss being a libertarian on Heart Monitors In Middle School Gym Class? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I miss being a libertarian, because the world was so much simpler. Government=bad. Business=freedom. But the entire libertarian viewpoint (capitalize it or not, your choice) is basically blind to any abuse of power that is motivated by financial profit. They correctly see the dangers in government power, but non-government coercion, especially when money is involved, doesn't even register. I had to break with it because I felt that I was achieving clarity at the expense of ignoring what was right before my eyes.

    Related to the story, I'd guess the heart monitors in question are pulse monitors, not cardiac monitors that give you an EKG reading.

  10. Re:Popular, or useful? on How To Make Science Popular Again? · · Score: 1

    Or something that only boring socially inept people are interested in.

    You forget about Tony Stark, CSI, Numb3rs, etc. TV and movies are full of beautiful, suave people doing what is ostensibly science.

  11. doesn't have by be cyber or nuclear on Could Cyber-Terrorists Provoke Nuclear Attacks? · · Score: 1

    There was a story some time ago saying that the US military suspected Ahmed Chalabi of being an Iranian double agent who deliberately fed the USA government bad intel on Iraq to start a war that would destabilize the region and benefit Iran and the Shiites. I saw that story in the print news (I don't watch TV, so I can't speak to that) for about 2 days, and then it vanished.

    Anyway, the war in Iraq certainly helped anti-US elements (Al Quaeda etc) with finances and recruitment. It removed Saddam Hussein, which was one of Bin Laden's goals. It killed thousands of US military members, caused us to spend hundreds of billions we couldn't afford, and lowered our international standing. Heck, it even drove us to embrace torture and undermine our own principles. I'd say that, if that fleeting story on Chalabi was true, he was far more successful than he would've been by building a single bomb.

  12. Re:Good. on Pickens Calls Off Massive Wind Farm In Texas · · Score: 1

    I still find using this as an argument against wind farms to be grasping at straws, and rarely does it ring of sincerity as opposed to just finding any excuse for maintaining the status quo.

    This same straw-grasping shows up whenever you discuss wind power, solar, electric cars, hybrid cars, recycling, human-exacerbated global warming, or really any environmental issue at all. Basically opposition to any efforts to reduce energy usage counts as the new common sense, political incorrectness, speaking truth to power, etc.

  13. Re:"Right" to a private cell phone? on Cellphones Increasingly Used As Evidence In Court · · Score: 2, Funny

    Why are we even talking about the 'silent' setting, as though that should make an iota of difference in either direction?

    True. I suppose the police could still respect your wishes and arrest you quietly.

  14. lawbreakers on Homeland Security To Scan Citizens Exiting US · · Score: 1

    People don't like illegal immigrants because by definition those people are breaking the law.

    When driving I frequently notice that considerably more than half the drivers are breaking the law by speeding, not using signals properly, not changing lanes properly, etc. Add in jaywalking, littering, etc, and a staggering number of Americans are criminals. Where is the hue and cry over all these criminals? When will THAT wall be built? Why aren't the Minutemen and Sheriff Joe clamoring for these people to be arrested and/or deported? THEY'RE BREAKING THE LAW!!!!!!

    Oh wait, that's BS, and we know that Americans are not especially committed to scrupulous adherence to the law. A huge number of Americans break the law every day without any conservative going on any talk show demanding that something be done. So no, it's not just a conscientious committment to following the letter of the law. There is a bit more involved here, and everyone knows it.

  15. I probably have it covered on Bitterness To Be Classified As a Mental Illness · · Score: 1

    Misanthropy has an ICD code of 301.7. Even if there was a pill for it, I wouldn't bother to ask anyone for it. Maybe if you left it on the table and didn't talk to me or anything... but why would I want to get over who I am? What some call cynicism I call basic lucidity. Why would I want a pill to get rid of that?

  16. Re:Most of us are criminals on Adult Website Use At Work Leads To Hacker Conviction · · Score: 1

    So yeah, basically, if you have an employer who is a big enough dick, most of us are criminals.

    Yes, one of the great things about a police state is that people with power can just put you in jail or ruin your life for pissing them off. In some school districts kids can get criminal records for stuff that used to get us detention. Employers seem to be getting the power to charge you with a crime for goofing off.

    This stuff will be unevenly applied, as are all excessive powers, and used only against those they don't like. Achieving that discretionary power is the point. It's hard make people care, because no one really hears what you're trying to say. So many are yelling "socialism" and "tyranny" over universal health care or fuel efficiency standards that protesting actual abuses of govermenet power, like frivolous prosecutions to torture and indefinite detention, just gets lost in the noise.

  17. why is this one war off limits? on Konami Announces a Game Based On a 2004 Battle In Fallujah · · Score: 1

    I'd guess most battles are horrible at the time, and only get turned into noble grit-and-moxy John-Wayne (Or Achilles) stories over time. I've seen plenty of games based on WWII. I'd wager that Stalingrad was a bit worse than Fallujah. As abhorrent as I find the fact, people think war is cool, so long as it isn't them getting shot. The historic proximity of Fallujah may make it harder to sterilize the vicarious fantasies of heroism and noble sacrifice, but I can't fault this one game for our basic tendency to lie to ourselves about stuff that is a bit further in the past than the horror that happened in recent memory.

  18. patients are just customers on Believing In Medical Treatments That Don't Work · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm sure doctors are performing some treatments that aren't warranted. However, I assure you that patients want treatment. I work in the medical field, and the psychology of medicine is weird. Parents want antibiotics for their children, and they don't really care about research that says the antibiotics aren't necessary or may even cause harm. Everyone wants a pill for what they have, and they want it now. I've seen people demand x-rays for their pinkie toe, even though the doc told them outright that it wouldn't make a bit of difference. If the doc doesn't order the x-ray (or fork over the pills), the patient is unhappy, and unhappy patients are vastly more likely to sue.

    I've had a woman bring her kid to the ER with an cold and tell me in the triage room "I can't get in to see the pediatrician till Wednesday, and by then she'll get well on her own." I'm not making this up---she was rushing to make sure her kid got seen by a doctor, because she knew the kid would get well if she waited too long. She wasn't a drooling idiot, but part of her mental checklist of being a good parent included "If kid is sick, see doctor." If docs don't hand out antibiotics for every earache and sore throat, the patient will just come back tomorrow or the next day and complain "I'm still sick." If the second doc gives them pills, they'll tell everyone they know about the first doc, who is obviously an idiot who didn't have the intelligence to see how direly ill they were. "I needed antibiotics, and he didn't give me anything!"

    So all told, I don't blame the docs too much. They are working against hypochondriac patients who demand a pill for everything. In a weird way, people want to be sick, or at least they want their routine aches and pains dignified with snazzy medical terms. I've actually had patients get mad at me when I told them that a contusion is just a bruise, and cephalgia is just a headache.

  19. Re:Let's clarify something... on ACLU Wins, No Sexting Charges For NJ Teens · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The ACLU has joined the NRA on gun rights cases before. However, part of the reason they routinely ignore 2nd amendment cases is because the NRA already has it covered. I have always found it odd that conservatives revile the organization that supports 90% of the bill of rights while championing the one that supports only %10 instead. Oddly, they say they do it because the ACLU doesn't support the 2nd amendment, ignoring the fact that the NRA ignores 90% of the bill of rights altogether.

  20. Re:Human interaction on Best Grad Program For a Computer Science Major? · · Score: 1

    Whatever you pursue, add some psychology to the mix. Coding can be outsourced, but human interaction can't. There will always be a need for people who can understand both the human mind as well as computers, at least until the two merge... ;)

    Yes, I've often felt that my boss gleaned significant insights from the Zimbardo Prison Experiment. He seems to have modeled my workplace on something eerily similar.

  21. no problem on Mixed Outcome of Texas Textbook Vote · · Score: 1

    Ask the questions, and see if they can get answered. I've been dealing with the creationist thing for some time, and I've found that all their questions are rhetorical. Even when they get answered (or were answered decades ago) they just keep getting asked again and again, as if they were some fresh, cutting-edge insight.

    I went to school in TX, and I know full well how this will play out. Evangelical teachers will say "evolution can't explain x" and then if a student has the stones to do some research in the scientific literature and shows that evolution has, in fact, already explained x, he'll get a poor grade and be labelled as an attitude case. The point of this is to give teachers the opportunity to teach kids that evolution (and naturalism in general) is riddled with holes, and when kids will be expected to learn that particular lesson. If kids start bringing articles to school refuting the teacher's claims, it won't go well for those kids. This is very much about saving the kids from materialism. It's just another footnote to the Wedge Document.

  22. good luck on Mixed Outcome of Texas Textbook Vote · · Score: 1

    Hopefully it would be interpreted that way and not just be a vehicle to introduce creationism. Afterall, scientific dogma is still dogma.

    Not a chance. That verbiage is meant only for evolution. You won't find any teachers who have an axe to grind over the germ theory or the heliocentric solar system. But you'll find scads of teachers who are eager as heck to teach kids all about the weaknesses of evolution, and maybe carbon dating as well.

    Kids are not graduate students working at the edges of science, nor the foundations. Kids have to first learn the basics and then later learn why it is the way it is. Teachers don't have the time or inclination to teach the "holes" in a theory, unless it happens to conflict with their religion. What are the "holes" in plate tectonics or special relativity or quantum mechanics? Not only do creationists not know, they also don't care, because this entire charade is just to give evangelicals an angle to continue attacking evolution.

  23. Re:Pardon but... on Mixed Outcome of Texas Textbook Vote · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It would be different if by "weakness of a theory" creationists don't mean the already refuted arguments they've been using for decades. It is a problem when I meet someone who thinks that it's a "weakness of the theory" that the 2nd law of thermodynamics makes evolution impossible, and they want that taught in class.

    If there are weakness in evolutionary theory, creationists won't be the ones to know them, because they don't understand the theory in the first place. Many of the arguments used by creationists are false--for example their claim that there are no transitional fossils, or that we've never witnessed speciation.

    They want to present these lies in class and act as if they're only presenting the weakness of the theory. They're just lying for Jesus. Every few years they have to change their wording because their tactics become known as baseless smears. Hence ID, the wedge strategy, etc.

  24. more to it than money on Progress On Electric Cars · · Score: 1

    Every dollar I spend at the gas pump sends money to Saudi Arabia and other countries that in turn fund terrorism, torture their citizens, suppress democracy, etc. Exhaust from internal-combustion engines contributes to asthma and other respiratory ailments, which kill thousands every year. Wanting an electric car is not just a gee-whiz feel-good thing.

  25. thank you on Intel Testing Solar Power For Data Centers · · Score: 1

    Thank you for multiple things. You've provided an example to show that taxes do not kill business, but motivate owners to reinvest in the business. You've provided an example of alternative energy being cost-effective and good for the bottom line, even to the extent of increasing employment. Thank you for being at least a temporary antidote to the shrieking we normally get about environmentalism being the death of capitalism.