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Thursday, May 31, 2007

The Dangers of Non-Secular Morality

In recent articles, I have taken on the challenge of describing the benefits and possible causes of what is referred to as "secular morality", (The second article being here, and the first here). In this article, I shall attempt to describe a few dangers of 'traditional' morals or "religious conservatism" that aren't necessary obvious at first glance.

This is somewhat shaky ground for anyone to walk on, and of course the bias in opinion is blatant here -- but that's what makes arguments, well, arguments. This one might wind up being a bit brief, but that's how these things go. Recently, a good deal of study has been going into the area of moral judgment, at least according to the Evolutionary Psychology blog. Here's a few snippets of information, snagged from that resource:

Moral judgments come more from an emotional basis than a reasoned one:

Psychologist are currently debating the underlying processes involved in our moral judgments. Some psychologists believe that our moral judgments are caused by automatic unconscious moral intuitions whereas others believe they are due to conscious reasoning and reflection.

Traditionally, psychologists subscribed to the rationalist perspective. Rationalist proponents have included Jean Piaget, Lawrence Kohlberg, and James Rest. According to their perspective, moral reasoning follows a cognitive-developmental trajectory in which individuals progress from basing their moral judgments on selfish issues early in development to basing them on universal ethical principles later in development.

More recent evidence, however, suggests that moral judgments may result from quick, automatic flashes of emotion. The intuitionist perspective assumes that moral reasoning serves as a post hoc rationalization rather than a cause of moral judgments.

In support of the intuitionis perspective, Jonathan Haidt found that when participants were asked to imagine a scenario in which a brother and sister have a sexual encounter, participants invariably label the behavior as morally wrong. However, they have a difficult time explaining why they find immoral. Participants often cite the danger of inbreeding and the emotional damage that could be caused by the sexual encounter. When the researcher reminds them that the brother and sister used two forms of protection and neither of them was emotionally affected by the encounter, the participants respond by saying something like “I don’t know, I can’t explain it. I just know it is wrong.”

So if it is not moral reasoning that causes our moral judgements, what is it? Haidt suggest that it is our moral emotions. These emotions include empathy, guilt, embarassment, anger, disgust, etc.
This idea is further supported here:


I recently posted some of the findings from my thesis, which suggests that moral emotions are more predictive of moral judgments than moral reasoning. Specifically, people who are high in disgust sensitivity and high in moral development are just as prejudice toward homosexuals as those who are low in moral reasoning, which indicates that disgust can overwhelm our ability to reason.

In the second study of my thesis, I found that inducing disgust can make certain individuals more prejudice toward homosexuals while making other individuals report less prejudice.

Participants in this study were asked to read one of two scenarios and write a brief paragraph describing their physical and emotional reactions. Half of the participants imagined what it would be like to consume a bowl of maggots and the other half described what it would be like to eat a bowl of lettuce.

Following the experimental manipulation, the participants completed measures of prejudice toward homosexuals, disgust sensitivity, and authoritarianism. Authoritarianism was measured using the right-wing authoritarianism scale, which assess conventionalism, authoritarian submission, and aggression toward out-groups. Traditionally, individuals who score high on the right-wing authoritarianism scale are more likely to be prejudice toward homosexuals, minorities, and more likely to be politically conservative.

So, of course, what this means is fairly simple; our 'emotional' or 'unreasoning' responses are what dictate our moral reactions to scenarios. Is this a phenomenon, however, that is merely limited to moral responses, or is it one that perhaps has greater implications? Consider; those whom are less "authoritarian" tend to become less prejudiced by exposure to reactions of disgust, while those whom are more authoritarian tend to become more prejudiced by reactions of disgust. This seems, prima faciae, to be support of the idea that extremist conservatism has in its roots prejudice of many varieties (said idea supported by the conservative/liberal schism over foreign relations, be it immigration by non-english speakers of different color, or be it the general "gut-reaction" to Muslims. It is a safe bet that anyone reading this has heard at least once the phrase, "All Muslims hate Americans", or at least a variation on it). Similarly, it is a familiar axiom that those of the "political left" will bend over backwards to appear tolerant. This is one area where the Evolutionary Psychology author and I disagree; liberals are just as authoritarian as conservatives -- by only testing for social authoritarianism, the test was skewed. Mandated egalitarianism is just as "authoritarian" as politicized moral invectives -- but that is neither here nor there.

Today, we are facing what could only be readily described as a loosely organized movement to suppress the successes generated by the secularization of society as we know it. An example of this scenario's accuracy can be found here:

The Creation Museum open[ed] in Petersburg, Kentucky on May 28. Designed by a former Universal Studios exhibit director, they do have the theatrics right. For in nearby Tennessee, the famous Scopes Trial, the subject of the play "Inherit the Wind," was held in 1925. Some thought the trial disposed of creationism as something other than a religious story, but think again, folks. It's baaaack, with a vengeance.

As the museum's president, Kenneth Ham of "Answers in Genesis-USA," said ("Biblical creation museum to rise in Kentucky in 2007" Michael Powell, Washington Post, 9/27/05): " ‘Evolutionary Darwinists need to understand we are taking the dinosaurs back. . . . This is a battle cry to recognize the science in the revealed truth of God. . . [In] the post-Flood world dinosaurs lived with man.' [The museum presents the view that] the world and the universe are but 6,000 years old and that baby dinosaurs rode in Noah's ark." As Powell said further: "Creationists believe man became mortal when God cast Adam and Eve out of Eden 6,000 years ago. Death did not exist before that."

This refers to something called, "Creation Science", and refers that it isn't exactly the same as what the rest of the scientific community refers to as science. So what's the difference? Quoth Wikipedia:
Creation science is the attempt to find evidence and rationales to support a literal interpretation of the Biblical account of creation.
The real kicker to this can be found later in the same article:

Some advocates have spent many years arguing for the inclusion of creation science in the science curriculum of U.S. public schools; however, in 1987 in the case Edwards v. Aguillard the Supreme Court of the United States held that a requirement that public schools teach creation science alongside evolution as an alternative theory violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.[12]

And there it is in "black and white" as it were -- Creation Science is an attempt by religious groups to endorse in the language of science a thing which is anything but science. And it isn't really a surprise, when you get right down to it. As discussed By Paul Bloom and Deena Skolnick Weisberg, the simple truth is that there are some people who will always resist "Science." That isn't really news. What is, however, is their approach to explaining just why that is:
The main source of resistance to scientific ideas concerns what children know prior to their exposure to science. The last several decades of developmental psychology has made it abundantly clear that humans do not start off as "blank slates." Rather, even one year-olds possess a rich understanding of both the physical world (a "naïve physics") and the social world (a "naïve psychology").
All of this, of course, is leading somewhere -- that's what makes an argument an argument, after all. And we're almost there, so bear with me whilst I quote a little bit more at you, dear reader.

Bruce Schneier recently wrote, in his blog, that people react to the wrong threats due to their perceptions on what is and is not a greater danger:
  1. We over-react to intentional actions, and under-react to accidents, abstract events, and natural phenomena.
    That's why we worry more about anthrax (with an annual death toll of roughly zero) than influenza (with an annual death toll of a quarter-million to a half-million people). Influenza is a natural accident, anthrax is an intentional action, and the smallest action captures our attention in a way that the largest accident doesn't. If two airplanes had been hit by lightning and crashed into a New York skyscraper, few of us would be able to name the date on which it happened.
  2. We over-react to things that offend our morals.
    When people feel insulted or disgusted, they generally do something about it, such as whacking each other over the head, or voting. Moral emotions are the brain's call to action.

    He doesn't say it, but it's reasonable to assume that we under-react to things that don't.

  3. We over-react to immediate threats and under-react to long-term threats.
    The brain is a beautifully engineered get-out-of-the-way machine that constantly scans the environment for things out of whose way it should right now get. That's what brains did for several hundred million years -- and then, just a few million years ago, the mammalian brain learned a new trick: to predict the timing and location of dangers before they actually happened.

    Our ability to duck that which is not yet coming is one of the brain's most stunning innovations, and we wouldn't have dental floss or 401(k) plans without it. But this innovation is in the early stages of development. The application that allows us to respond to visible baseballs is ancient and reliable, but the add-on utility that allows us to respond to threats that loom in an unseen future is still in beta testing.

  4. We under-react to changes that occur slowly and over time.
    The human brain is exquisitely sensitive to changes in light, sound, temperature, pressure, size, weight and just about everything else. But if the rate of change is slow enough, the change will go undetected. If the low hum of a refrigerator were to increase in pitch over the course of several weeks, the appliance could be singing soprano by the end of the month and no one would be the wiser.
So what does all of this, when put together, mean? Simple: One of the greatest dangers of religious, "traditional" morality having sway over our society is that the reasonable truth of things is simply set aside in favor of the fears which are driven home by those who control the dissemination of information; the religious leaders as it were, rather than the statistics or information.

This is, partly, why you have, on the liberal left, the rampant drive for increased gun control laws despite the adverse impact increased gun regulation has on the rate of violent crime. This is also, why such incidents as this happen at all:
Utah Supreme Court justices acknowledged Tuesday that they were struggling to wrap their minds around the concept that a 13-year-old girl could be both an offender and a victim for the same act - in this case, having consensual sex with her 12-year-old boyfriend.
The conclusion is fairly simple; so long as religion remains the sole legitimate source of morality in society, such absurdities as children having their lives ruined by labels meant for pedophiles and rapists will continue -- all in the name of protecting said children -- even while such real dangers as the widespread growth of Caulerpa taxifolia, the loss of arable water resources for irrigation and food production, and other serious, life-threatening problems will fail to gain purchase.

Joke of the Day

A meme used one time too many, it would seem:
"Darpa is planning to build/grow "Terminator"-esque moths.

Meanwhile, Britain is busily constructing a new platform to remotely control their weaponized unmanned vehicle network.


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Storage of Information in Cultured Neurons

Article from the Neurophilosophy blog, on a development in the use of cultured neurons as a temporary data storage medium. Click on the "read more" link below to read the full article.



read more | digg story

New Jersey Government Issues Fines Against Records Custodians

This fine line brought to you by the efforts of the LPNJ, under the guise of Open Government "advocacy". The world could use a few more such souls. Read the actual article by clicking the "read more" link below.



read more | digg story

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

"Tony Soprano Earmarks" -- How Congress Wants to Hide Spending Your Money?

The Cato Institute's blog-take on the new twist on an old game; instead of writing earmarks into legislation, they're just calling up members of the Executive Branch to get the funding for their pet projects -- the catch is, none of this gets exposed to the light of day, as it were. Ain't government great? Article CNP'd below:

A commentary from Jeff Birnbaum of the Washington Post aired on American Public Media’s Marketplace yesterday. The topic was the evolving alternative to earmarks, what Birnbaum calls “phonemarks.”

Here’s the basic idea (from the transcript available at the Marketplace website):

Eager to avoid the bad publicity of legislative earmarking, lawmakers are secretly calling or writing bureaucrats and demanding that they fund their pet projects by fiat. These projects-via-telephone, or “phonemarks,” are the hottest new gimmick on the Washington scene.

Executive branch officials can dole out millions of dollars with impunity. And they avoid the scrutiny of the public, since they are done quietly and without any disclosure.

Earmarks actually have to be written down in a public law. Phonemarks, on the other hand, are accomplished through bureaucratic sleight-of-hand and nobody but the lawmaker and the bureaucrat need to know for sure.

My preferred descriptor is “Tony Soprano earmarks.” As I wrote in a January 22 column for Business Week:

Even if transparency leads to fewer earmarks, there are no promises these projects won’t reappear in other ways and other places. The congressional budget process is nothing if not a game of reinvention. You could call spending items Happy Funtime Projects instead and sock them away in another part of the budget, but they will remain the coin of the realm on K Street.

Of course, Congress could simply give a bucket of money to an agency with no strings attached. But then a member of the Appropriations Committee would write a letter to the department head suggesting something like: “Gee, wouldn’t it be nice if Project X got some of this pot of money?”

Can you really blame a government department head who reads a letter like that—from a member of Congress who controls his budget and oversees his agency—and obliges? It would strike anyone in that position as similar to Tony Soprano saying to the corner grocery store owner: “Nice little place you got here. Damn shame if anything were to happen to it.”

Now for a secret. The big problem in Washington isn’t earmarks. They’re just a symptom of the real problem: policymakers who believe the federal government should be all things to all people. Pork projects – disclosed or not – are inevitable in such an environment no matter what you call ‘em.

read more | digg story

Identity: "Google" Sousveillance vs. REAL ID

According to C|Net News.com, a recent study indicates that 1 in 4 'HR People' have rejected a candidate for the positions they were looking to fill, due to the results of a Google Search.

The study was conducted by a company called Viadeo. This is a trend that, apparently, has been developing for a few years now, and is of course growing stronger. This of course means that your days of claiming that you spent a year reforesting the tropical jungles of Saudi Arabia are, basically, over.It also apparently matches the rough percentage of individuals whom are "'avid' tech users" in general. This technique has its flaws, of course (from lifehacker.com):
A recent poll here on Lifehacker shows that for about half of you, information about someone else with the same name or a web site you don't control gets returned in search results for your name.
That certainly does count as a "doozie" of a flaw in the technique. One can make a general assumption, though, that as technology becomes more and more ubiquitous in our lives, then it will also be more and more possible to refine searches to be somewhat more 'specific.' All of this of course basically means that whether we like it or not, there will be a (nearly) universal, comprehensive identification system replete with individual histories; we are already contributing to its existence, right now. This adds to the development of what is coming to be called sousveillance:
(IPA: [suːˈveɪləns], French [suvɛjɑ̃s]) [...] the recording of an activity from the perspective of a participant in the activity (i.e. personal experience capture).
Whether or not this is necessarily a good thing, is certainly up to debate. But it definitely allows for something of which there is far too little of these days; "Sunlight", or "transparency", in government actions on all levels. One sterling example of the dangers, however, of employing such technology against government agents can be found in online archive of The Daily Tribune of Bartow County, Georgia.

Lee and Teresa Sipple spent $1,200 mounting three video cameras and a radar speed unit outside their home, which is at the bottom of a hill. They have said they did so in hopes of convincing neighbors to slow down to create a safe environment for their son.

The Sipples allegedly caught Kennesaw police officer Richard Perrone speeding up to 17 mph over the speed limit. Perrone alerted Bartow authorities, who in turn visited the Sipples' home to tell them Perrone intended to press charges against them for stalking.
This happened some time ago, and Officer Perrone has dropped all charges -- but this demonstrates a very real trend; the same observation techniques used by government agents (police in this case), speeding cameras, when turned around by private individuals to observe government agents, resulted in "legal action" being taken against them. One can only wonder what would have happened if no one had reported this incident (or if it hadn't received 3000 "diggs" on Digg.com, as of 5/30/2007).

To turn this story in another direction, however, one has only to look at the "controversy" over the REAL ID act, which is supposed to be a tool to combat illegal immigration, and terrorism. From the section, "Documentation required before issuing a license or ID card":
Before a card can be issued, the applicant must provide the following documentation[7]:
  • A photo ID, or a non-photo ID that includes full legal name and birthdate.
  • Documentation of birthdate.
  • Documentation of legal status and Social Security number
  • Documentation showing name and principal residence address.

Digital images of each identity document will be stored in each state DMV database.

Consider the following: It is possible that a "google search" of the hijackers of the planes of "9/11" could have found suspiciousness about them. But could the above information do so? Were, for example, the hijackers themselves illegal immigrants? (They were not.) Does having this information all collated into one place make people any safer, more secure, or make illegal immigration any harder? The answer there is not necessarily obvious, but rather than taking the word of this author, try looking to the Burton Group, an identity security specialist, for exactly that:
I’d make explicit the conclusion which the Data Privacy and Integrity Committee left readers to infer from their report:

The REAL ID act is a bad idea. The problems with the REAL ID act listed in the Committee’s report should not be fixed, because fixing them will not address the core issues the REAL ID act raises. Fixing the problems the Committee has identified will simply produce the best possible version of a very bad system. If the REAL ID act is implemented, there is no chance it will meet its stated goals; there is every reason to believe it will have many unforeseen adverse consquences; and there is every reason to believe its costs will be huge in proportion to its benefits.

There's plenty more where that came from on that article, but that is a decent summarization. The Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, has been working on "rallying the troops" against the act. (See this article by means of example) -- and it would seem it is, in fact, working. A recent opinion article also mentioned by Cato's blog, found at the Baltimoresun, shows exactly that.

This shows just another sterling example of how a "free market" or "open source" approach is superior to the approach of a centralized bureaucracy, however; just like "the Wikipedia" -- at the very least, the "name search" approach is more likely to catch troublesome elements of one's history, that the universal REAL ID database won't. And as is so often the case, when a database is non-centralized, it is virtually impossible to create systematic bypasses into the process; they get exposed for what they are far too quickly -- and that doesn't even begin to touch on the RFID chips that were at some point proposed to be embedded into every REAL ID-qualifying identification card, which would broadcast your personal identification information to anyone with a radio receiver. Imagine the identity theft possible there!

EDIT: Yet another sterling example for, your consumption, of how sousveillance saved the day when dealing with a government representative. H/T to SSaoR.

See more on this vein, from this blog, here:
-- Information Suffrage: Why The Lou Dobbses, Bill o'Reillys, Keith Olbermanns, and Glenn Becks of the World are the Enemies of Freedom
-- US Government To Use East German Spy Tech on American Citizens?
-- Open Source with a Bullet: John Robb’s Brave New War
-- This Just In: Hackers NOT "Too Smart" for Libertarianism!
-- Ethics of Cyberization

May Round-Up

Howdy, folks.

If you're a regular reader at this blog -- or just like to pretend you are (I'm not all that picky, here anyhow) -- I'd appreciate it if you would go ahead and leave a comment with your chosen "nickname", something saying whereabouts in the world you are in, and maybe a sentence describing yourself if you feel so adventurous. I'll pop the cork on this one myself to get the ball rolling.

Oh, and if you have any suggestions, ideas, or complaints about where I'm taking this beast, let me know. Bloviation isn't just for the elites! (I never said I was humble.) :)

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Hybrid Sheep -- Twice the Slumberland Mileage per Gallon!

Recent developments in Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation have lead to results indicating that it might be possible to pack an eight-hour night of sleep into two or three hours.

While no one is suggesting that this be done on a routine or permanent basis -- at least, not quite yet anyhow -- this sort of technology is the early sign of "things to come." Through a combination of pharmaceutical approaches and electromagnetic stimulation, it seems to be possible to induce the specific, most restorative, kind of sleep -- and bypass the rest. It should come as little surprise to anyone that DARPA is one of the most active players in this field of research; the military's project to "conquer" sleep has made waves with the sponsored development of Provigil, which already has a shaky history: there are reports of athletes using it as a "doping agent"; similarly, there are the concerns of the health risks associated with prolonged reduced sleep rates. So, needless to say (always an ironic turn of phrase), this is wholly new ground being broken.

But TMS -- and modafinil, aka Provigil, have more potential benefit than merely reducing the requirement for sleep. According to recent research, it might just be possible to facilitate learning & memory through the use of these techniques. By way of example (Author's note: Always be careful of The New Scientist -- hyperbole abounds here; but still, there is material of worth if you know how to screen the chaff for the wheat):
Could magnets make the mind grow stronger? In mice at least, stimulating the brain with a magnetic coil appears to promote the growth of new neurons in areas associated with learning and memory. If the effect is confirmed in humans, it might open up new ways of treating age-related memory decline and diseases like Alzheimer's.
And of course you always have the pharmacological field of nootropics -- which, by the way, it is said modafinil is one of the more powerful examples of that are available today. Either way; seems those pesky guys in long white coats just don't want to leave our psychological states alone. There's even renewed interest in the medical benefits of LSD, psylocibin, and other such psychedelics, nowadays. Either way, certainly insomnia is on its way to going the way of the Dodo. And nobody could say that's a bad thing. But once again, the question arises; unlike the medications of the past, which could only correct a problem, we have begun as a society to delve into the arena of medications which augment or enhance, rather than merely normalize. If the Francis Fukuyamas of the future have their way, these sorts of "benefits" will be criminalized; much to the woe of frantic undergrads with thesii due tomorrow everywhere. It's not even as though the have/have-not "disparity" is that much of an issue -- over time said drugs and machines become cheaper and more available (See this Wired News article by way of example of the increasing utility of TMS), but still such views persist.

Obviously, this author feels that those whom wish to push their body's limits ought to have the means -- and tools -- to do so; it is their life to live, after all -- and if someone wants an extra 5 or 6 hours a day to live and learn, then so be it. Thankfully, the controversy over techniques such as this are far, far less than what is coming over BCI, but that's another story.

Related subjects, from this blog here:
-- Information Suffrage: Why The Lou Dobbses, Bill o'Reillys, Keith Olbermanns, and Glenn Becks of the World are the Enemies of Freedom
-- This Just In: Hackers NOT "Too Smart" for Libertarianism!
-- Ethics of Cyberization
-- Much Ado About Nothing
-- The Revenge of the Ovis Maxwellius!
-- BBC News is a Techno-Geek's Best Friend
-- NeuroArm -- Robotic Surgical Tool for Neurologists
-- Dr. Berger & The 120-watt Sheep

Friday, May 25, 2007

Global Warming & The Scientific Process

It's a dead horse, surely: the science is in, the consensus is there, and that's that. Global Warming is manmade, it's going to destroy the world as we know it, and the only way to stop it is to destroy all industry and agriculture everywhere, Right Now.

Certainly it's a dead horse here, anyhow. It's heard everywhere in one form or another: The consensus is in. The consensus says, "thus." And it is treated as just so. There's just one problem; science is not a democratic process. From the Wikipedia entry on scientific consensus:
Scientific consensus is not, by itself, a scientific argument, and is not part of the scientific method;[...]
See also, from the same article:
For example, in physics there exists scientific consensus on general relativity and quantum mechanics. Special relativity and quantum mechanics are unified in the framework of quantum field theory (QFT). There exists scientific consensus that QFT is a very useful description, but it is not a final theory.
And yes, there is a consensus on anthropogenic global warming, this is true. This consensus was "finalized" as it were by the IPCC. There's been a common rallying statement that this proves that anthropogenic global warming is just "the way it is." -- As stated previously by this blog, there have even been arguments that now, global warming denial is on par with Holocaust denial. There was even an Australian Journalist who suggested that global warming denial ought to be made criminal:
Perhaps there is a case for making climate change denial an offence - it is a crime against humanity after all.
Consider this question: Is a scientific consensus valid if it is legally forced into existence, because even questioning it is criminal? Much of this, of course, rests on the concept of "proof"; which truly has no place in science.

But let's go back to the question of the IPCC, the definitive "source" as it were for the scientific consensus on global warming. For it to be a valid resource, it would have to have derived its consensus wholly from scientific processes alone, with no input from any other source -- such as, say, political processes. But remember; this is a scientific body, right? There's no shenanigans going on: it's totally clear. That's the message repeated over and over elsewhere (and, to be fair, denied elsewhere.) But there are some prominent individuals whom are raising their objections to what's going on here, trying to shed some light on this process. One such is Doctor Christopher Landsea, whose open letter to the scientific community is readily available online. His letter opens up, quite boldly:
After some prolonged deliberation, I have decided to withdraw from participating in the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). I am withdrawing because I have come to view the part of the IPCC to which my expertise is relevant as having become politicized. In addition, when I have raised my concerns to the IPCC leadership, their response was simply to dismiss my concerns.

And this was the man whom was the head of the meteorological section of the IPCC through its first, second, and third assessment reports. Not a trivial figure or minority voice, in the least. Another man whom whom needs to be considered, as well, would be Steven McIntire. He, not too long ago, found a rather disturbing piece of information about the IPCC, which was squirreled away in an obscure location. On his blog, Climate Audit, he made the following revelation:
Changes (other than grammatical or minor editorial changes) made after acceptance by the Working Group or the Panel shall be those necessary to ensure consistency with the Summary for Policymakers or the Overview Chapter.
This was taken from the document entitled, "PROCEDURES FOR THE PREPARATION, REVIEW, ACCEPTANCE, ADOPTION, APPROVAL AND PUBLICATION OF IPCC REPORTS" and the quote is located on page 4, third paragraph, fifth sentence. There's really just no denying it any longer; the delay can only be for one reason: to edit the science to match the statements. You'd think that sort of thing would be emblazoned across the news media; after all, it's fraud, isn't it? Well, maybe it's a mistake, or certainly it's a unique circumstance, at least. Sadly, neither is the case.

And it is for precisely this reason that things such as this, and this, are denied airtime at all, and aren't included in the IPCC's reports; they would "damage the consensus."

Because it bears repeating: a consensus is irrelevant if it is forced to exist. This author, of course, is a skeptic; but it is worth mentioning that this state of affairs only came about after my investigations into global warming, to learn the science for myself. I wasn't always a skeptic: I honestly believed in anthropogenic global warming. But every day, as I learn more, and see more, always with my eyes open -- I cannot help but realize that there is something more going on here.

For the brave, or bored; see more on this topic in the following posts of this blog:
-- Thoughts on Organization
-- Energy Scarcity & Government Action: Happy Bedpartners?
--
A Hidden Truth
--
Cashing In on a Trend

EDIT: See further material on this topic over at Classically Liberal, at "The grapes of math: Global Warming Fraud?"

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Add Slashdot Social Bookmarking Button to New Blogger

One of the few social bookmark buttons not widely available out there, for "new" Blogger.com blogs anyhow, seems to be for Slashdot.

If you would like the below icon to be added to your site,


You'll need to add the following code to your site:

<a expr:href='"http://slashdot.org/bookmark.pl?url=" + data:post.url'>
<img src='http://images.slashdot.org/favicon.gif'/> Slashdot It!</a>


If you've never added a social bookmark to your site, no sweat -- here's what you do: open up your template, and go to "edit html". You should see, just above the upper right hand corner of the text-box with the code in it, the below "click-box":



You will want to click that box. After this, you will need to look for the following code in your html:

Basically, all you need to do is cut and paste that first 2 lines of code right before the very next instance you find of the following piece of code, after you've found the one I just mentioned, that looks like this:

</p>

So, cut and paste that first to lines of code right above the first

that shows up after the "post-footer-line-3" piece of code, and you'll be good to go, with your shiny new bookmark for Slashdot.org!