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  1. #651
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    Powerful ad, thanks for posting.

  2. #652
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    Are they all the result of failed abortions?

    I suspected, but didn't know for sure.

  3. #653
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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    I bet Barry is loving this stuff...

  4. #654
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Actually, I don't think it's a "fairly common view" that a woman's body is capable of "shutting down" the conception process in the case of rape.

    I think Akin's statement is inaccurate and was a stupid thing to say.

    I also think Akin's statement was a butchered way of expressing an idea that is a bit more common (if not "fairly common") that acute stress can prevent conception.

    His idiotic remark about "legitimate rape" causing a woman's body to "shut down" the conception process is probably born of the idea that acute stress can prevent conception.

    Still, he should have never opened his mouth. And, I certainly don't ascribe to the notion that abortion should be avoided because the woman's body takes care of the conception in cases of "legitimate" (probably meaning forcible) rape.

    So, No, I don't think Akin's statement is a commonly held view by anyone -- Republicans included.


    I think they're wrong.
    I didn't ask you your opinion on whether you think they are correct or not.

    I asked you what you think about the rather large swath of Republicanists who seem to eschew basic scientific facts when forming opinions.

    Is it a good thing to base your politics and public policy solutions on beliefs that are provably laughable, given the vast amount of evidence to the contrary?

    Yes or no will do.

  5. #655
    Displaced 101A's Avatar
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    I didn't ask you your opinion on whether you think they are correct or not.

    I asked you what you think about the rather large swath of Republicanists who seem to eschew basic scientific facts when forming opinions.

    Is it a good thing to base your politics and public policy solutions on beliefs that are provably laughable, given the vast amount of evidence to the contrary?

    Yes or no will do.
    Went and looked at a Christian school for our youngest (7th grader).

    Specifically asked to see the science textbooks:

    (paraphrasing)

    We, the Science Faculty of Bob Jones University believe the Bible to be the true unerring Word of God, literally written. If we observe something that appears to disagree with the bible therefore, we understand that what we are seeing is an illusion; since the Bible is unerring.
    So, to answer your question, good or not, there are certainly people who DO - and they even write in text books that they are doing it; and no matter what you, me, or EVIDENCE says, they aren't going to change their minds.

    We gave the books back. Our son is still in the sucky public school.

  6. #656
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Actually, I don't think it's a "fairly common view" that a woman's body is capable of "shutting down" the conception process in the case of rape.
    Ok, fine.

    It isn't a "fairly common view".

    It certainly is a recurring idea among some circles of the Republican party, Mr. Akin included.

    Why has the Republican party not disowned these asshats prior to now?

    You don't see it, but I see, once again, the stink of groupthink where suppression of debate so that a unified face can be presented takes priority over getting at the truth.

    You want me to find a few quotes from Republicans to the effect of "don't criticize the party or other Republicans" to support this?



    This stinky is always there, swimming in the toilet bowl of extreme right-wing politics.

    The only reason any of you give rat's ass now, is that you so committed to winning the presidency at all costs.

    If it didn't hurt you in the polls, I genuinely don't think you or the rest of the GOP establshiment would care.

  7. #657
    Displaced 101A's Avatar
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    Ok, fine.

    It isn't a "fairly common view".

    It certainly is a recurring idea among some circles of the Republican party, Mr. Akin included.

    Why has the Republican party not disowned these asshats prior to now?

    You don't see it, but I see, once again, the stink of groupthink where suppression of debate so that a unified face can be presented takes priority over getting at the truth.

    You want me to find a few quotes from Republicans to the effect of "don't criticize the party or other Republicans" to support this?



    This stinky is always there, swimming in the toilet bowl of extreme right-wing politics.

    The only reason any of you give rat's ass now, is that you so committed to winning the presidency at all costs.

    If it didn't hurt you in the polls, I genuinely don't think you or the rest of the GOP establshiment would care.
    I, honestly, had NEVER heard this claim about Rape/Conception before; and I'm on some pretty wack mailing lists; and have LOTS of relatives that listen to Limbaugh.

    Seriously, not saying you haven't seen it, but you must be running in some unique circles.

  8. #658
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Went and looked at a Christian school for our youngest (7th grader).

    Specifically asked to see the science textbooks:

    (paraphrasing)



    So, to answer your question, good or not, there are certainly people who DO - and they even write in text books that they are doing it; and no matter what you, me, or EVIDENCE says, they aren't going to change their minds.

    We gave the books back. Our son is still in the sucky public school.
    These are the people who are writing the party platform.

    These are the people who are getting elected to textbook selection committees.

    These are the people that I see the GOP giving the keys to.

  9. #659
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    I didn't ask you your opinion on whether you think they are correct or not.
    You weren't specific, you simply asked what I thought of them. I think people who believe the earth is only 6,000 years old are wrong. That's what I think of them.

    I asked you what you think about the rather large swath of Republicanists who seem to eschew basic scientific facts when forming opinions.

    Is it a good thing to base your politics and public policy solutions on beliefs that are provably laughable, given the vast amount of evidence to the contrary?

    Yes or no will do.
    Well, that's not what you asked and I'd ask you to prove that belief is held by a "large swath of Republicans" because, I reject the premise.

  10. #660
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    Ok, fine.

    It isn't a "fairly common view".

    It certainly is a recurring idea among some circles of the Republican party, Mr. Akin included.

    Why has the Republican party not disowned these asshats prior to now?

    You don't see it, but I see, once again, the stink of groupthink where suppression of debate so that a unified face can be presented takes priority over getting at the truth.

    You want me to find a few quotes from Republicans to the effect of "don't criticize the party or other Republicans" to support this?
    No, I'd rather you produce examples of Akin's view being "a recurring idea among some circles of the Republican party."

    It's be great if such views had been previously known to a wide audience so that your secondary assertion that Republicans haven't "disowned this asshats prior to now" can be supported.

    Go!

    This stinky is always there, swimming in the toilet bowl of extreme right-wing politics.

    The only reason any of you give rat's ass now, is that you so committed to winning the presidency at all costs.

    If it didn't hurt you in the polls, I genuinely don't think you or the rest of the GOP establshiment would care.
    Well, when your crazy uncle pokes his head out of the attic and says something bizarre, you explain how his rantings don't represent the entire family, apologize for the distraction, take the Uncle some milk and cookies, and move on.

    It's only been the Democrats that keep bringing up Akin. Republicans have, for the most part, moved on.

  11. #661
    The D.R.A. Drachen's Avatar
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    Went and looked at a Christian school for our youngest (7th grader).

    Specifically asked to see the science textbooks:

    (paraphrasing)



    So, to answer your question, good or not, there are certainly people who DO - and they even write in text books that they are doing it; and no matter what you, me, or EVIDENCE says, they aren't going to change their minds.

    We gave the books back. Our son is still in the sucky public school.
    I don't blame you, I would have probably thrown the book at them (literally). Are there no other private schools in the area?

  12. #662
    Veteran Th'Pusher's Avatar
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    It's only been the Democrats that keep bringing up Akin. Republicans have, for the most part, moved on.
    Mike Huckabee says hi. Is he not speaking at the RNC tonight?

    Huckabee, Akin's Biggest Backer, Has Primetime RNC Speaking Slot

  13. #663
    Esse quam videri ploto's Avatar
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    And, you're being disingenuous to suggest the "Pro-Life" moniker has ever included the death penalty discussion.
    Of course it has -- for many people pro-life involves a commitment to oppose abortion, the death penalty, assisted suicide... Only for Republicans, does pro-life = anti-abortion alone.

  14. #664
    Bosshog in the cut djohn2oo8's Avatar
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    Of course it has -- for many people pro-life involves a commitment to oppose abortion, the death penalty, assisted suicide... Only for Republicans, does pro-life = anti-abortion alone.
    exactly

  15. #665
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    Yoni, etc show once again, he's extreme fringe and dramatic minority.

  16. #666
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Well, when your crazy uncle pokes his head out of the attic and says something bizarre, you explain how his rantings don't represent the entire family, apologize for the distraction, take the Uncle some milk and cookies, and move on.

    It's only been the Democrats that keep bringing up Akin. Republicans have, for the most part, moved on.
    The Republican party is made up of crazy uncles.

    Of coures you ass-hats have "moved on". You don't want everybody to notice that your party is run by the nutballs.

    I would want to move on too.

  17. #667
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    You weren't specific, you simply asked what I thought of them. I think people who believe the earth is only 6,000 years old are wrong. That's what I think of them.


    Well, that's not what you asked and I'd ask you to prove that belief is held by a "large swath of Republicans" because, I reject the premise.
    Do you really want me to provide quotes that a large swath of the Republican party thinks the earth is 6000 years old and/or the theory of evolution is a made up secularist plot?

    Define a "large swath" then, if you want me to prove it. I will take up the gauntlet, if you want to go there.

    Put up or shut up.

    Last edited by RandomGuy; 08-30-2012 at 10:39 AM.

  18. #668
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    We could start with the crazy uncles that draw cheers from Republican rank and file.

    Republican Candidates Don't Believe in Evolution


    Not a scientific sample to be sure. But hey, its a start.

  19. #669
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    A 2007 poll asked respondents if they believed that “Evolution, that is, the idea that human beings developed over millions of years from less advanced forms of life,” is “definitely true, probably true, probably false, definitely false?” (That’s a very odd and constrained definition of evolution, of course, but responses would still provide a useful view of broader at udes on the theory.)

    Newport said the 2007 survey found that 53 percent of Americans said this particular framing of evolution was either definitely or probably true, while 44 percent said evolution was definitely or probably not true.

    Then he wrote this about Republicans:

    Of importance to us here is the breakout among Republicans. We found in 2007 that a whopping 68 percent of Republicans did not believe in evolution when using this question wording.
    http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/20...ience-problem/

  20. #670
    Board Man Comes Home Clipper Nation's Avatar
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    It's only been the Democrats that keep bringing up Akin. Republicans have, for the most part, moved on.
    No, the neocons simply dropped the subject because it's embarrassing for them.... meanwhile, they're STILL harping on Obama's misquoted "you didn't build that" soundbyte weeks later, so much for "moving on".....

  21. #671
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    A 2010 survey with a different approach still found a majority of Republicans, as opposed to much smaller percentages of Independents and Democrats, believing that humans were created in their present form about 10,000 years ago. Here’s the summary of the overall finding:

    Four in 10 Americans, slightly fewer today than in years past, believe God created humans in their present form about 10,000 years ago. Thirty-eight percent believe God guided a process by which humans developed over millions of years from less advanced life forms, while 16%, up slightly from years past, believe humans developed over millions of years, without God’s involvement.
    same article


    Anyone want to define "huge swath"? Anyone?

    I will give Yoni a chance to respond. Not that I think he will directly. I fully expect some chicken- prevarication/obfuscation, as usual.
    Last edited by RandomGuy; 08-29-2012 at 09:37 PM.

  22. #672
    Veteran Th'Pusher's Avatar
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    I will give Yoni a chance to respond. Not that I think he will directly. I fully expect some chicken- prevarication/obfuscation, as usual.
    Gonna have to wait. That joker is in a recliner jerking off to Paul Ryan on Fox News as we speak.

  23. #673
    Displaced 101A's Avatar
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    I don't blame you, I would have probably thrown the book at them (literally). Are there no other private schools in the area?
    No. Well a prep school @ 50k per...

  24. #674
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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    Unrelated, but I was all morning in PA today... was wondering if 101A was living in one of the houses we passed by...

  25. #675
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Still waiting Yonivore.

    If you don't think a "large swath" of Republicans think the world is 6000 years old and/or think the theory of evolution is some sort of secularist/satanic plot, then define what would cons ute a "large swath".

    Maybe after we settle this, we can get to the other question you want to run away from, because you don't want to explore the implication:

    Is it a good thing to base your politics and public policy solutions on beliefs that are provably laughable, given the vast amount of evidence to the contrary?

    Yes or no will do.

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