What I’m Reading, May 5, 2014

Paul T. [CC BY 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/)], via FlickrCreationists’ Neil deGrasse Tyson hysteria reaches fever pitch, Dan Arel, Salon, May 2, 2014

Not surprisingly AiG’s own Danny Faulkner, an astronomer by degree, but not in practice claims that if stars are being formed today that we do not need science to explain how because God has the ability to make such things happen on his own.

This kind of thinking is what stunts scientific growth in the US and around the world. Faulkner and those like him aren’t looking for natural answers to the amazing universe we inhabit and simply credit anything and everything to God. When science does make a massive discovery that happens to through a wrench in their faith based beliefs, they simply reject the science.

Saudi Arabia Clueless About Human Rights, Ed Brayton, Dispatches from the Culture War, May 1, 2014 Continue reading

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Mean-Girl-in-Chief

One might be tempted to hope that the recent invocation of the sacrament of baptism in defense of torture—which managed to anger the left and the right—heralds the end of America’s reigning mean girl’s moment in the sun.

I’m pessimistic enough, though, that I wouldn’t count on it. I like the way Robyn Pennacchia said it:

There’s something deeply unsettling about her, and it has very little to do with the fact that I disagree with her politically. There are people I disagree with firmly but could perhaps have a pleasant conversation with on a non-political subject. In fact, it’s something I try to do on the regular because I am not really comfortable with thinking anyone is completely terrible, because that makes me feel too hopeless. Sarah Palin is not one of those people. If she agreed with me on everything, she would still freak me out.

In her speech, Palin goes on about how they are our enemies, which means we should be able to do whatever to them. She then goes on to talk about her other enemies– “those clownish little Kumbaya-humming fairytale-inhaling liberals.” She has a lot of vitriol for people she perceives as being kind–and almost more for that reason, specifically, than any political position. Even the way she speaks of her God–as though she wants to use him as an instrument of punishment, as an instrument of her own vengeance. There are the people who are on her side, 100%, and everyone else is her enemy.

Where have I heard that last bit before?

Oh yeah. Cersei Lannister.

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Eek.

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Monday Morning Cute: Puppy Love

A baby elephant is called a “calf,” which is neither distinctive nor particularly cute, so I just went with “puppy” instead. Anyway, here are two baby elephants holding trunks:

I know what you’re thinking: it reminds you of this, right?

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Going to Purgatory for Your Dog: A Comic

“The Dog’s Sins,” a comic by KC Green, looks at what might happen if a person stood in judgment for the wrongs committed in life by their dog.

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(Cross-posted to Imgur, h/t BuzzFeed)

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Nature’s Way of Saying Step Off

Some day, they’ll be able to do this out of water, and we’ll have to answer for all that calamari and tako.

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What I’m Reading, May 2, 2014

But silence is political, PZ Myers, Pharyngula, April. 28, 2014

Somehow, silence on issues like feminism, abortion rights, and gay marriage are pushed by some as the only acceptable non-political response — anything but neglect of the issues is “mission creep” and is to be deplored. I’m afraid though, that if you don’t take a stand, you are taking a stand — on the wrong side of those subjects.

Consent: A Concept Apparently Unknown to Republicans, Scott Lemieux, Lawyers, Guns & Money, November 30, 2011

Not only have a lot of Republicans and journalists conflated sexual harassment and consensual affairs into indistinguishable “sex scandals,” the former seem to think that the consensual conduct is actually worse. When the Cain story first broke, I saw multiple people bringing up John Edwards and Monica Lewinsky, exemplifying the same mistake. Consent matters, and while the battle to preserve any substantial privacy for public figures has been lost in my mind it’s also the line where gossip turns into something of actual significance to evaluating a candidate.

(See also Conservatives and the Concept of Consent: A Permanently Estranged Relationship)

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This Week in WTF, May 2, 2014

– That’s, uh, subtle: Here’s a dress that supposedly becomes transparent when some electronic doodads detect that the wearer is becoming aroused. It’s from the not-all-all-pretentious-sounding INTIMACY 2.0 project (video more or less SFW):

I have two thoughts on the matter: (1) It looks profoundly uncomfortable, and (2) it looks like it’s made of the same material as overhead transparency sheets. Not seeing the “sexy” here.

– Kill it with fire!: (Wasp nest + wooden statue) × several years = nightmare fuel. You know what to do.

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What I’m Reading, May 1, 2014

By Pkg203 (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia CommonsThe Sharing Economy Isn’t About Trust, It’s About Desperation, Kevin Roose, New York, April 24, 2014

Wired‘s cover story this month is about the rise of the “sharing economy” — a Silicon Valley–invented term used to describe the basket of start-ups (Uber, Lyft, Airbnb, et al.) that allow users to rent their labor and belongings to strangers. Jason Tanz attributes the success of these start-ups to the invention of a “set of digi­tal tools that enable and encourage us to trust our fellow human beings,” such as bidirectional rating systems, background checks, frictionless payment systems, and platforms that encourage buyers and sellers to get to know each other face-to-face before doing business.

Tanz’s thesis isn’t wrong — these innovations have certainly made a difference. But it leaves out an important part of the story. Namely, the sharing economy has succeeded in large part because the real economy has been struggling.

A huge precondition for the sharing economy has been a depressed labor market, in which lots of people are trying to fill holes in their income by monetizing their stuff and their labor in creative ways. In many cases, people join the sharing economy because they’ve recently lost a full-time job and are piecing together income from several part-time gigs to replace it. In a few cases, it’s because the pricing structure of the sharing economy made their old jobs less profitable. (Like full-time taxi drivers who have switched to Lyft or Uber.) In almost every case, what compels people to open up their homes and cars to complete strangers is money, not trust.

Most of What You Think You Know About Sex Trafficking Isn’t True, Amanda Hess, Slate, April 23, 2014 Continue reading

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Great Moments on the Internet: “Google Image Search” Edition

  1. Do a Google image search for “search warrant,” filtered for free usage rights (for work reasons, duh).
  2. Get a picture of the band Warrant.

"Warrant" in EverybodyAwesome, by aerokay [CC BY 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)], via deviantART

Here are some memories for you: Continue reading

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