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Comment Re:Wait a sec (Score 1) 772

In a way, it's just like Arthur - who also had a bunch of followers and who's legend was similarly embellished, although not quite to the same level.

So, yes, Jesus is quite mythical.

The existence of a historical Arthur is somewhat contentious. The existence of a historical Jesus is significantly less so, but otherwise the comparison is workable.

Neither person can be aptly characterized as "mythical", however, unless you determine (or believe) that they did not actually exist. Many of their attributed deeds and characteristics are likely mythical, but this is not grounds to categorize the person themselves as mythical.

Comment Re:IV fertiliztion != fsking (Score 2) 772

You should read what "speciation" is, and then maybe you'd grasp why a single comment such as the one you replied to really does close the debate on this subject.

Unfortunately, speciation is not as simple as you make it out to be. The fact that two animals cannot breed does not necessarily mean they are different species, and the fact that two animals CAN breed does not necessarily mean they are the same species.

I agree with globaljustin that in many cases those who seek to defend the elegant, transcendent concept of evolution against the slavering masses of religious extremists all too often stoop to the level of their opponents, using anecdote, exaggeration and condescension, which is a problem.

Comment Re:Disbelief in evolution=proof of science illiter (Score 1) 772

Its easy enough to prove that the universe was around for way longer than 6,000 to 10,000 years, just look at other galaxies that are millions of light years away.

For useful definitions of "prove", this is accurate, but YEC's often prefer non-useful definitions. One popular reality-bending theory is that God created the 'light streams' emanating from the galaxies that you mention in transit, which gives us the illusion that the universe is old.

When your priorities lean heavily towards preparing for an afterlife, the observable reality of this life takes a back seat. This seems to be a strong psychological driver of religious belief, allowing humans to escape from the terrors and hardship of the world.

Comment Re:stop calling it a "belief." (Score 1) 772

a belief is confidence in the truth or existence of something not immediately susceptible to rigorous proof. the scientific theory of evolution is grounded upon a mountain of scientific research so overwhelmingly exhaustive as to render it a fact of life, no different than gravity.

For the layman, the concept of evolution is certainly not immediately susceptible to rigorous proof - this is the source of the "controversy". A layman who believes in the overarching theory of evolution, as presented by relative consensus among the scientific community, places his faith in this consensus.

The theory of gravity, on the other hand, is immediately and easily observable as "stuff falls down". The layman has no need to believe in any of the details of the theory, because the manner of it's workings are of little importance, and do not conflict with his religious beliefs.

As Biosci777 stated, selection itself is not controversial for the layman, because he can observe it happening first-hand in dogs, cows, horses, or whatever. The mechanism of selection, and the process and timeline of it might be controversial, if he believes that his god has told him that life began shortly before the pyramids were built, and that humans (and other life forms) were created instantly in their current form.

Like it or not, most people trust anecdotes from their own lives far more than they trust science.

Comment Re:apples and oranges (Score 1) 688

We have a European-style public education system for K-12, and it delivers European-style mediocre results.

http://www.businessinsider.com...

Oh yeah, you're the chap who seems to come here to randomly hate on Europe for no discernable reasons. By the way: simply hating on another country or region you have nothing to do with doesn't actually have any bearing on your own problems. If Europe is bad as you claim, then that neither excuses the US nor does it make it more acceptable.

Also, you're flat out wrong: much of Europe comes above the US.

Well, not to invalidate your point that Euro-bashing is not a useful endeavor, but the US as a whole shouldn't be compared to the best performing areas of Europe, just as Europe as a whole shouldn't be compared to the best-performing areas of the US. European education systems are not centralized, just as the education systems in the US are not. Each state is essentially responsible for the education of their own population, with some (seemingly token, in some cases) federal guidance and oversight.

This is why this particular study is interesting, because it compares the individual US states to the individual European (and worldwide) countries. These comparisons are useful.

However, the headline and summary are rather sensational. The "deep south" states referred to are the usual suspects: Louisiana, West Virginia, Alabama, Mississippi. These particular states have pervasive problems impacting educational performance. They are somewhat economically depressed in general, and put very little emphasis on education. They also suffer from dramatic residential and educational economic segregation. The very poor in these states essentially all have their own schools, with minimal funding, that are little more than K-12 daycare centers, while the rich (and/or middle class) have their own schools which perform significantly better. If you look at specific school districts in metropolitan areas, you will notice peculiar boundaries in some cases, akin to gerrymandering. Also, rural areas in these states often have terrible educational performance, correlating with the abject poverty common in large swaths of these states.

Comment Re:public trans (Score 1) 626

Sorry, but there is ABSOLUTELY no way to connect even a small fraction of this country with "reasonable public transportation". The distances are just too large. It works in major urban centers and that's it.

If the US had not become so vested in automobiles and the infrastructure to support them, the country would likely be more urbanized, with public transportation a must. As it is, 82% of the US population lives in cities or suburbs. Without cars and interstates, that number would likely be higher, and the suburban sprawl that developed over the last 75 years or so would have been dramatically reduced.

As I said, it's a pipe dream at this point, but if certain decisions had been made differently in the mid-20th century, the transportation landscape of the US would be dramatically different.

Comment Re: (Score 1) 449

I would have considered him a hero if he hadn't offed himself, which is certainly a cowardly act. That aside, the rampage itself was as American as you get.

Suicide is generally caused by mental illness. Whether you characterize it as cowardice or not is a philosophical distinction, but portraying the "cowardly act" of a mentally ill person as a correctable character flaw vs. an illness that needs medical attention is unproductive.

Comment public trans (Score 1) 626

The issue could be framed equally usefully as "Public transportation could cripple law enforcement budgets". How silly.

The EV movement makes me somewhat sad, because we already have a solution for the "encourage people to use less gas" problem - public transportation. I would wager a significant portion of people would never drive if they had access to a functional public transportation system.

The problem in the US is that everything is so spread out public transportation is difficult and expensive to implement, and the infrastructure that we do have is geared around a massive fleet of personal vehicles. I almost wish the interstate highway system had never been implemented, because by now we would have reasonable public transportation instead.

At this point it's probably a pipe dream.

Comment Re:Good for them (Score 3, Insightful) 150

A company cannot help that there are problems, but it can help by trying to do the right thing afterwards, and trying not to be evil.

It's too easy to be cynical while living in the 1 percent of the worlds wealth.

Not sure if troll....

A company can most certainly adhere to basic safety standards instead of sacrificing a bunch of lives for profit in places where the safety standards are not legally mandated.

In this particular case, an organization owned and operated by a bunch of 1%ers wrecked the lives of numerous poverty-stricken workers and their families through gross negligence. And they are unlikely to suffer impactful financial consequences as a result.

Comment Re:Autoimmune disorder... (Score 2) 350

I'm less interested in actually learning about them than I am in understanding where people think that it's necessarily something that there are a plethora of ways that anyone could reasonably be able to accomplish.

Some of the available techniques are trivial, others less so, but there are a number of methods that I would consider reasonable to accomplish. I would consider TRS abuse, VOIP spoofing, and utilizing a spoofing service to be trivial.

Comment Re:Put this in perspective (Score 2) 258

What I have heard of so far in terms of likely submerged human settlements is the Black Sea before the Mediterranean spilled into it (possibly the origin of the Noah story), and land to the east of England.

Partial list of submerged human activity:

Doggerland was a rather large land area containing a not-insignificant amount of human activity, which now lies under the north sea.

Sundaland is another large landmass that is now submerged, with an unknown but suspected to be significant quantity of past human activity.

Coquer Cave off the coast of France is an interesting site, containing paleolithic cave paintings that can only be reached by diving.

The Black Sea is hypothesized to have expanded in the past, covering an unknown quantity of human archaeological material. The extent and suddenness of the expansion are currently subject to debate.

The original peopling of the Americas has been hypothesized to have been impacted by a coastal migration route, but much of the archaeological evidence (if it exists) for this hypothesis is currently under water.

Beringia itself, suspected to be the cradle of the Native American peoples, is now partially submerged under the Bering strait.

Comment Re:Autoimmune disorder... (Score 1) 350

Most of those may obfuscate the caller, but not the source of the call. Calls from a pay phone for instance, will trace to that pay phone, which may or may not be helpful in finding who used the phone to commit the hoax but that phone is still the source of the call. The person to whom I had responded alleged there are "numerous" ways to obfuscate the source of a call.

Well, Wikipedia lists exactly three methods of spoofing caller ID specifically.

One interesting technique is to use (abuse) TRS.

If you are interested in actually learning more about such techniques I would suggest typing "call spoofing" into your favorite search engine.

There are other technical and non-technical methods that, as you pedantically noted, do not actually hide the source of the call, but render that information unhelpful. Pre-paid "burner" cell phones are an obvious and popular choice for many circumstances where anonymous calling is desired, and in many cases payphones can also be used with relative anonymity.

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