Thursday, October 26, 2006

This Is the Intermission

As those who read my other blog may know, I suffer from a rather severe heart condition. Unfortunately, after a brief respite, the symptoms have become steadily more frequent and more severe, requiring a change in treatment. With my apologies to you, I'll be taking a break for a while. I'll be back as soon as possible.

Monday, October 16, 2006

More on Richard Dawkins

American Sentenced to Death in Iraq

This is unbelievable. On the orders of two American military officials--including a soldier impersonating a representative of the Romanian government--an American citizen has been sentenced to death without trial. There are no words.

Sunday, October 15, 2006

I Thought I Was Joking

In my previous post, I asked the tongue-in-cheek question, "Is Memetics the New Scientology?" I thought I was joking. Really, I did. So, this makes what I discovered rather eery and bizarre. I've been reading a lot about memetics in part because I expect to include information on it in my book, as part of a possible chapter on the distortion of science. Then, I found this, The Church of Virus. Now, I'm frightened.

Sometimes, It Is Necessary to Mock

This is a passage from "Memes as Pseudoscience" from Michael Shermer's The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience. The author tackles a chapter from Aaron Lynch's Thought Contagion.

Lynch (1996) contains the chapter "A Missing Link: Memetics and the Social Sciences" on how a memetic approach might fit in with the established social sciences. However, Lynch's review of the social sciences is far from complete and even somewhat disturbing. Lynch offers a few pages of superficial analysis about, for example, economics and memetics, or sociobiology and memetics, and so on. These fields and nearly all that Lynch discusses are interesting areas of inquiry, with well-developed methodologies and well accepted findings. The exception is psychohistory. Some readers may be unfamiliar with psychohistory, and with good reason. Psychohistory is not a social science. Psychohistory is an idea from Isaac Asimov's (1974) highly acclaimed Foundation science fiction series. The basic premise is that in the far distant future humans will know enough about social change and history to predict, on a rather coarse scale, future events, similar to the way we can currently predict the weather. While Asimov's books and the idea of psychohistory are interesting and appealing, such an idea certainly does not belong on an equal footing with economics or sociobiology. More disturbingly, Lynch writes that psychohistory and memetics have "surprising similarities" (38) in their concerns and scope, though Lynch sees psychohistory as a more wide-ranging theory. I will leave it to readers to consider further the implications of this failure to distinguish fact from fantasy.

So, apparently it is now scientifically "acceptable" to use a fictional science drawn from a science fiction novel to validate your theories. Interesting. I think I have a few theories of my own that may fit quite well into this new form of "science." I'll list a few. What do you think?

*Linguistics: Klingon, Hebrew, and Arabic: A Comparative Linguistic Study of Guttural Sounds and Their Relationship to Hostility

*Physics: The Bajoran Prophets: What Do the Wormhole Aliens Reveal About the Nature of Space-Time?

*Politics: Agent Fox Mulder and the X-Files: What a Top-Secret FBI Project Reveals About Government Secrecy

*Politics: Is Iran a Proxy for the Cardassian Empire?

*Architecture: Darth Vader vs. the Borg Queen: Is the Sphere the New Cube? Or Is the Cube still King?

*Theology: Richard Dawkins and L. Ron Hubbard: Is Memetics the New Scientology?

Saturday, October 14, 2006

The Pseudoscience of Memes

I was just on Mitchell Stephens blog (as usual), this time discussing Richard Dawkins. Along the way, I brought up the pseudoscience of Dawkins' theory of memes. If you've been on the internet long, you've probably seen the word meme used quite frequently. Going into my own opinion on the theory and Dawkins' applications of it would take more time and energy than I have at the moment. In brief, I'll refer you to my previously posted opinions about f*cking for chastity. So, here are some links on why the idea of memes is so seriously lacking in scientific respectability.

A review of Thought Contagion by memeticist Aaron Lynch

Only a Game: The Trouble with Memes This has some interesting discussion as to whether memes are pseudoscience or protoscience and what those two terms mean in practice.

Memes as Pseudoscience from Michael Shermer's The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience

Doonesbury: The Voices of War

Doonesbury has started a new mil blog called The Sandbox, a collection of stories from those who serve.
Having read the first few stories, I'm reminded of two things: sitting with my two great-uncles, Jack and Bob, in early 2003 discussing the president's plans for war and of my old JROTC military instructor, Sergeant Taylor.
Sitting with my uncles that day, I'd thought that the best thing to do was to remain silent, listen, and learn from two men who had seen the fog of war and smelled the stench of combat more than most.
Uncle Jack served aboard the USS Alabama during World War II and saw continuous action in both the European and Pacific theatres. As a career navy man, he then went on to fight in the Korean War. Uncle Jack retired with a collection of metals most military men can only dream about, but continued to serve his country as a federal employee until his second retirement. He died of cancer that winter.
Uncle Bob enlisted to serve in the navy in World War II, but talked little of his time overseas. After the war, he returned to civilian life, spending more than three decades with the same company before a plant fire shut the company down. He died of cancer that summer, preceded in death by his beloved wife and all three of his children.
My cousin, Uncle Jack's daughter, would spend a year in Kuwait before being deployed on a classified mission to Qatar. (Of course, we wouldn't know where she'd been until after the mission was completed and declassified. There are some things we'll probably never know.)
It wasn't easy to stay silent on an issue I felt so strongly about (as anyone who knows me can attest). It was, however, productive. I was proud that day as I listened to these two men, heroes both of them, condemn the president and all those who called for war. They knew war and condemned it. I'd always admired them for their service to their country, especially as I came so very close to wearing the uniform myself. I admired them even more so on that day.

Longer ago than that, in 1991-92 when I was still a JROTC cadet snapping salutes and barking orders, Sergeant Taylor had taught me an important lesson about what it meant to be military: We leave no man behind. Sgt. Taylor served in Vietnam and had, I'm sure, seen his fair share of horror. I don't know if would have been different otherwise, but as it was, he had a way of teaching that I don't think can be adequately described. He had the habit of dropping in on us in Sgt. Vargas' class to give the profound lesson of the day. The door would swing open and Sgt. Taylor would burst in and (with Sgt. Vargas' permission) hold court for a few moments. One day he walked in and simply asked a question, "What would you do if your boss told you to pack your things because in an hour, you were going to get on a plane and probably die?"
A room full of uniformed cadets started clamoring that they'd tell their boss to go screw himself. Sgt. Taylor stood there, an odd smile on his face, before informing us that we were all full of it. If we were to continue wearing the uniform after high school, then, well, if our boss told us to do such a thing, we'd snap to and get on that plane. We would die on command.
That lesson struck home for me, as I'd decided to attend the academy after high school and use the GI bill to eventually pay for seminary. I'd intended to spend my life ministering to those who died on command. What struck home even more, however, was the T-shirt Sgt. Taylor was wearing with his Class C uniform. (That's battle dress uniform, camouflage, or "combat gear" for the uninitiated.) The sergeant had, in an uncommon occurrence for him, removed his jacket to reveal a shirt that was totally against regulations. In bold white lettering stretched across the sergeant's rather broad chest were these words, "POW. MIA. Bring them home or send us back NOW." And he meant it.
You will probably read a lot about men in uniform who condemn those who call for withdrawal. Some are of the "We don't cut and run." variety. Others simply know what Sgt. Taylor did. We leave no man behind. It's not that they support the war or don't want to go home. It's simply that they can't do it if it means leaving their brothers in the line of fire. These are men and women who will run into enemy fire to save a fellow soldier or, if necessary, to retrieve the bodies of the fallen.
In due respect for that commitment, we must find a way to get them out of there while honoring their oath to stand together and leave no man behind. It's a difficult task, one made even more so by the egregious failures of the Bush administration, but it's the least we can do.

Friday, October 13, 2006

Is Apple Stupid?

Considering the current climate, how unbelievably bereft of even basic common sense do you have to be to construct a building mimicing the Ka'ba at Mecca? Apple's just straight up asking for it and I fear the people of New York are the ones who will suffer.

More Abuse at Guantanamo Bay

It's not just that they do it, but that they seem to be completely devoid of any sense of guilt or any sense of the extreme dishonor of their acts. It is that they manage to laugh about it over drinks as if this isn't a shameful act unbecoming a decent human being. Deplorable.

Abu Ghraib: Just A Sex Ring?

Can you smell the desperation?

A Religious Test for Office in 2006!?

The Texas GOP has decided to "smear" a Democratic nominee for the 6th Court of Appeals. The accusation? He's an atheist. I don't know if calling someone an atheist would be considered a "smear" in civilized society but this is Texas. Of course, who would have thought that we'd be seeing a religious test for office in 2006 in the United States of all places?

The nominee, E. Ben Franks, disputes claims that he's a professed atheist, but really, should he have to dispute a claim that (regardless of its veracity) has absolutely NO bearing on his ability to judge cases fairly and impartially?

Of course, this is Texas. According to article 16 section 1(a) of the Texas state constitution, which prescribes the oath of office, a person taking that oath MUST end it with "so help me G-d." According to article 1 section 4 of the Texas state constitution, a person's religious beliefs cannot exclude him from holding office as long as he acknowledges the "existence of a Supreme Being."

Of course, this is the United States, so the Supreme Court decreed in Torcado v. Watkins (1961) that a religious test for office (such as requiring the acknowledgement of a Supreme Being) was unconstitutional. Surely, requiring an elected or appointed official to acknowledge G-d in the oath of office, thereby calling into question the ability of any atheist or nontheist (such as Buddhists) to honestly take the oath, must also be unconstitutional.

Some of you may say, "Well, it's just words. Say them and get it over with. Why make a fuss?" Well, let's just say there are some precedents a free, civilized nation would do well to avoid repeating. Such as that of the oath of office long used in our "mother country," England.

Until 1858, the oath of office for the British parliament required the phrase "on the true faith of a Christian," a phrase which obviously excluded Jews amongst others. Before that year, three Jews were elected to office but not allowed to take their seats because they could not swear "on the true faith of a Christian."

As in England, Texas politicians are using the wording of the oath to prevent a judicial nominee whose alleged beliefs they don't like from taking office. Is the English example one we wish to follow here in America? I would hope not. Obviously, the oath must go. So too must those who think that someone's religious beliefs or lack thereof are a proper test for their suitability for office. Even if it is Texas.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Plane Strikes Tower in NYC

I had hoped to never see that sort of headline again. Fortunately, this time (eerily on the 11th), it seems to have been an accident. Unfortunately, that distinction means little to the two people who have died and their loved ones. To the rest of us, however, that distinction makes a world of difference. So, breathe.

Iraq Dead: 655,000?

The results of the first scientifically conducted study of Iraqi war dead have just been released. The number is too much to even comprehend. 655,000. 31 percent killed by coalition forces = 203,050. If that number is correct, we're responsible directly or indirectly for more civilian deaths in three and a half years in Iraq than we were during the entire Vietnam War. It's so hard to give humanity to numbers like that. But here's just one voice from Baghdad.

UPDATE: More from Baghdad, here.

A Letter Home from the Front

Yes, I'm completely opposed to the Iraq War and think we need to get the hell out as soon as we can without making the situation far worse. Yes, I'm completely embarassed by the civilian leadership, especially Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld. Yes, I'm unbelievably ashamed of the far too many men and women in uniform who have disgraced themselves, the military, their country and their G-d with crimes against humanity in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Guantanomo Bay.
BUT... You have to give it to guys like this who are just doing their jobs as best they can in horrific circumstances and dreaming of home with every breath.

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Althouse: A Rational Basis for Banning Gay Marriage?

Ann Althouse, law professor and right-leaning blogger, asked her readers to answer a rather interesting question this past Thursday, "What is the rational basis for banning gay marriage?" It is sad, I think, that the overwhelming majority of responses were irrational and woefully ill-informed. In fact, they read like a catalogue of logical fallacies and stereotypes. Homosexuality was compared, in turns, to incest, bestiality, polygamy, alcoholism, murder and other criminal behaviors, etc. The homosexual "lifestyle" was described as self-indulgent and compared to gambling and drug dealing. I would probably manage to be outraged at these arguments if I hadn't heard them so many times before. It's actually disappointing, really, that no one's managed to insult us in some sort of original or creative manner.
So, instead of getting my dander up in an outraged rant at the absolute stupidity and irrationality of some people, let me take this opportunity to inform a bit. Here's a little rational dissection of SOME of the gay marriage/homosexuality mythology.

Gay marriage will have unintended or negative consequences.
Arguments from consequences are inherently illogical and they rarely lead to good decision-making. We can "imagine" any number of potentially devastating consequences arising from gay marriage, but that would lead us down a slippery slope, don't you think? We can also probably "imagine" many benefits from gay marriage, like increased business for wedding industries, but it's also illogical to argue from these benefits.

The gay lifestyle is somehow inherently less moral/productive/whatever than the heterosexual lifestyle, so we have a vested interest in privileging the heterosexual lifestyle.
Excuse me for my ignorance, but what precisely is this gay "lifestyle" of which you speak? Is this the one where we have lots of sex? I'd like to sign up for that! Seriously, people, there's NO SUCH THING as the gay "lifestyle" just as there's no one straight "lifestyle."
Also, whose standards will we be using to determine whether this imaginary gay "lifestyle" is moral or immoral as compared to the equally imaginary heterosexual "lifestyle."? There are hundreds of moral/ethical systems to determine morality. As these systems are based on assigning value/meaning, none of them are "rational" per se. Also, picking one for the purpose of answering this question would run us right smack dab into that separation of church and state/freedom of religion problem with which our founding fathers insisted on saddling us.


Marriage is traditionally between one man and one woman, a religious institution, etc.

Marriage (traditionally) was an economic/social contract carried out by two families with the husband and wife having little or no choice in the matter. Also, traditionally, marriage was restricted to people of the same religion, class, race, etc. It was also a contract by which ownership of a woman was transferred from her father to her husband, with the woman having no standing as a unique legal person under the law. Although religions often ruled on how people should behave toward their spouses just as religions ruled on all interpersonal relations, only recently in human history did marriage become a valued religious institution carried out by religious ceremony/rite. Even more recently, the state became involved in regulating private contracts including marriage, supplanting the church and opening the doors for interfaith unions. Even more recently than that, women gained the right to be considered legal persons both within the institution of marriage and without and to make the decision to marry of their own accord without coercion. And more recently still, people gained the right to marry someone of a different race.
Currently, marriage is predominantly a legal contract between two people establishing their legal/financial obligations to one another and the rights and benefits due them on the part of the state as well as their relationship to any child produced during the marriage. Religious institutions perform only those marriage ceremonies that are ratified by the state, with religious language included in the ceremony to honor the religious obligations an individual couple may choose to undertake. However, the state imbues the rights/benefits of marriage without consideration of religious standards and often without the participation of any religious institution.
Also, upholding tradition without consideration for its usefulness in modern society or whether it upholds or violates fundamental human rights is preposterous. Traditions we're better off without: slavery, women as property, indentured servitude for paying off debts, public executions, segregation, the monarchy, property requirements for political participation, etc.

Marriage is for procreation.
While marriage and procreation are related, there is no one to one legal relationship. First, marriage rights are granted to couples regardless of their ability or willingness to produce children through normal biological means. In fact, the legal benefits of parenthood as established through marriage apply even to children that are not the biological offspring of one or both parents and to those children produced through artificial means. Second, gay couples have children. Perhaps not together through normal biological means, but shouldn't this put them on the same legal footing as heterosexual couples who are incapable of natural procreation? Third, many married couples are obviously incapable of procreation at the time of marriage, often due to advanced age. Should we then deny them the right to marry or do we acknowledge that marriage has other non-procreative purposes that are as important if not more so?

If gay marriage is to become legal, it should be decided democratically through the vote or through the legislature, not through "judicial fiat."
It always amazes me how little people know of our system of government. Democracy is not just the ballot box or the legislature. Democracy includes basic structures that protect the many from domination by the few and the few from oppression by the many. Democracy also includes a founding set of principles generally agreed upon that are enshrined in a constitution and used as the measuring stick by which all laws are judged. Democracy also includes a generally agreed upon separation of powers by which each part of a government has a legally established role in the conduct of public life. Without these things, democracy is little more than rule by an often vicious and frequently unenlightened mob.
In our system of government, it is the judiciary's role to determine if any law meets the standards established by the United States Constitution or the constitution of a particular state. Some of the greatest moments of progress for the country were sparked by judicial decisions that certain laws did not meet the standards of justice established by our constitution. Abolished by judicial fiat: the poll taxes and literacy tests intended to prevent African-Americans from voting, segregation, prohibitions on birth control, prohibitions on private sexual acts between consenting adults, forced sterilization of the mentally challenge or disabled, laws abridging the right of freedom of speech, state constitutional provisions requiring a person to be a Christian to hold elected office, denial of equal educational opportunities to women, etc.
Currently, we in the gay marriage movement hold that prohibitions against gay marriage are unconstitutional as they violate the separation of church/state, violate first amendment prohibitions against establishing an official religion or legislating based on religious justification alone, violate our fourteenth amendment rights to equal protection under the law, etc. It is the judiciary's role to decide the answers to the consitutional questions we pose, not the people's or the legislature's or the executive's.

Why not civil unions or domestic partnerships?
These lesser institutions would establish gay people as separate from and not equal to heterosexuals. They would legally enshrine second class citizenship for gay people and perpetuate prejudice against us. Such a precedent must not stand.
Would you accept being legally defined as "less than" a full and equal citizen of the nation of your birth or as "less than" a human being entitled to the rights, freedom, and basic dignity to which all humans are entitled? Would you accept being told that you are inherently less than someone else based on such a paltry and irrelevant distinction?

Friday, October 06, 2006

In Response to Anonymous

THIS IS IN RESPONSE TO "ANONYMOUS", WHOSE COMMENTS ARE IN ITALICS. FORGIVE THE ALL-CAPS BUT WITH THIS BLOG'S FORMAT, THEY'RE EASIER TO SEE.

ANONYMOUS, YOU REMIND ME OF ONE OF MY FAVORITE CHANTS FROM MY MANY PEACE PROTESTS OVER THE YEARS, "FIGHTING FOR PEACE IS LIKE F*CKING FOR CHASTITY." GIVE ME A MOMENT AND YOU'LL SEE WHAT I MEAN.

Ah, cultural reletivism, the great disabler of actual discussion in America!

Here is the left's biggest problem, we've convinced ourselves that we're not allowed to question anybody's beliefs about anything because we are afraid of stepping on anyone's toes.

AHEM... I QUOTE "WE MUST BE HUMBLE ENOUGH... TO CHALLENGE OURSELVES WITH THE SAME VIGOR AS WE CHALLENGE OTHERS." THIS DOESN'T MEAN WE CAN'T QUESTION ANYBODY'S BELIEFS, ONLY THAT WE SHOULD QUESTION OUR OWN AS WELL. CULTURAL RELATIVISM (OR YOUR INNACURATE DESCRIPTION OF THE THEORY OF CULTURAL RELATIVISM) IS A LOVELY STRAW MAN IN THIS CASE, DON'T YOU THINK?

Well not all ideas are created equal! Some are better reasoned, better supported by evidence, and more likely to be correct and we have every right (if not the responsibility) to defend them and try to promote them. When we refuse to stand up for logic and reason, we open the doors to illogical extremism.

NOWHERE DID I SAY THAT ALL IDEAS ARE CREATED EQUAL NOR THAT WE SHOULD NOT DEFEND REASON. INSTEAD, I CONDEMNED CORRECTING THE INACCURACIES OF OTHERS WITH INACCURACIES OF OUR OWN, BEING SKEPTICAL OF OTHERS WHILE ACCEPTING WITHOUT THOUGHT WHAT WE WISH TO BE TRUE, AND DEFENDING REASON WITH IRRATIONAL MEANS/ARGUMENTS. IN OTHER WORDS, I THINK WE SHOULDN'T F*CK FOR CHASTITY.

This doesn't just mean that we should stand up to extremists. Moderate proponents of illogical ideas (such as supernatural entities) serve as validation for extremist variations of those moderate ideas. The moderate community also serves as the recruitment grouds for extremist groups.

LET'S APPLY THIS OUTSIDE OF RELIGION, SHALL WE? BY THIS LOGIC, WHICH IS NOT QUITE LOGIC AT ALL BUT A CAREFULLY WORDED APPLICATION OF THE GUILT BY ASSOCIATION FALLACY AND BOLD-FACED BIGOTRY, ALL FEMINISTS VALIDATE MALE-BASHING EXTREMISM BECAUSE WE'RE ALL VIRULENTLY OPPOSED TO PATRIARCHY, ALL VEGETARIANS VALIDATE THOSE WHO CARRY OUT VIOLENT ATTACKS ON THOSE WHO EAT MEAT OR WEAR FUR BECAUSE THEY CONSIDER THE KILLING OF ANIMALS MORALLY DEPLORABLE, ALL SOCIALISTS VALIDATE THE "CULT OF PERSONALITY" SOCIALIST GOVERNMENT OF CUBA, ETC. CAN YOU RECRUIT EXTREME FEMINISTS FROM NON-FEMINISTS? CAN YOU RECRUIT EXTREME VEGETARIANS FROM HAPPY MEAT-EATERS? CAN YOU RECRUIT SUPPORT FOR AUTHORITARIAN SOCIALIST GOVERNMENTS FROM CAPITALISTS? NO. SO, BY YOUR "LOGIC", WE MUST CONDEMN MODERATE FEMINISTS, VEGETARIANS, AND SOCIALISTS AS WELL BECAUSE THEY VALIDATE THE EXTREMIST FORMS OF THOSE IDEOLOGIES AND PROVIDE THE RECRUITING GROUNDS FOR EXTREMISTS.

I think that this (at least in part) explains the vitriolic response that many atheists had to your column of a few months back. A considerable portion of the atheist community feels (with very good reason) that moderate religious belief serves as an unwitting accomplice to extremist religious violence. Any person who holds up a book and says "this is the word of god" validates the extremist who attempts to carry out the violent actions towards un-believers, apostates, and other groups proscribed by the Bronze Age mythology contained within that book. This is why many atheists feel that it is their duty to challenge people on their religious faith and why so many of your readers were upset by your comments.

AND EVERY PERSON WHO SAYS PATRIARCHY MUST BE DESTROYED SUPPORTS MALE-BASHING. AND EVERY PERSON WHO CONDEMNS THE SLAUGHTER OF ANIMALS SUPPORTS THROWING PAINT ON WOMEN WEARING FURS OR TERRORIZING CHILDREN OUTSIDE OF KFC WITH PAMPHLETS VIVIDLY DEPICTING THE SLAUGHTER OF CHICKENS. AND EVERY PERSON WHO BELIEVES IN SOCIALIST THEORY IN ANY FORM SUPPORTS AUTHORITARIANISM.

AS FOR WHY SO MANY ATHEISTS WERE OFFENDED BY MY COLUMN, I THINK THERE WAS MORE THAN JUST ONE MOTIVATION BASED ON THE COMMENTS I RECEIVED. SOME OBVIOUSLY THOUGHT THIS "GUILT BY ASSOCIATION" NONSENSE WAS VALID. SOME SAW ONLY THAT I WAS RELIGIOUS AND THEREFORE LABELED ME "INHERENTLY INTOLERANT" IN THE WORDS OF ONE COMMENTER. SOME READ WORKS BY WRITERS WHO WILLINGLY DISTORTED WHAT I WROTE, CLAIMING THAT I TOOK STANCES THAT WERE NOT PRESENT IN THE COLUMN OR IN ANY OF MY OTHER WORK, BUT DIDN'T BOTHER TO READ THE COLUMN ITSELF. (HOW CAN I TELL? MANY DESCRIBED ME AS A CHRISTIAN, ALTHOUGH IT SAYS RATHER CLEARLY IN THE COLUMN THAT I PRACTICE JUDAISM. OR THAT THEY INSINUATED THAT I'M PROBABLY ALSO ANTI-SEMITIC AND HOMOPHOBIC WHEN I'M GAY AND JEWISH.) SOME WERE OFFENDED BASED ON THEIR READING OF SITES THAT CLAIMED I TOOK STANCES THAT ARE CONTRADICTED BY THE COLUMN, THE REST OF MY WRITING, AND MY MOST DEEPLY HELD BELIEFS. FOR SOME, IT WAS AN HONEST MISUNDERSTANDING ABOUT WHAT I PROPOSED DUE TO PROBLEMS WITH THE PRESENTATION AND TO THEM, I APOLOGIZED.

THE TACTICS, HOWEVER, WERE IRRATIONAL, EXTREME, AND DEPLORABLE BY ANY STANDARD OF COMMON DECENCY. IN THE PROCESS OF SMEARING ME AS A BIGOT ON THOUSANDS OF SITES, BLOGS, MESSAGE BOARDS, AND COMMENT THREADS, THEY DEPLOYED A VERITABLE ARMY OF LOGICAL FALLACIES: STRAW MEN, AD HOMINEM ATTACKS, APPEALS TO AUTHORITY, APPEALS TO CONSEQUENCES OF A BELIEF, APPEALS TO RIDICULE, APPEALS TO IGNORANCE, CIRCUMSTANTIAL AD HOMINEMS, FALLACIES OF COMPOSITION, GENETIC FALLACIES, GUILT BY ASSOCIATION, ETC. AD INFINITUM. AND LET US NOT FORGET THAT I'M A "CUNT," "BITCH," AND "JEW DYKE."

TO "DEFEND" REASON BY AN UNQUESTIONING ASSERTION OF LOGICAL FALLACIES THAT YOU WANT TO BE TRUE IS PREPOSTEROUS. IT IS NO LESS ABSURD THAN F*CKING FOR CHASTITY.