Posterous theme by Cory Watilo

Filed under: dumb

Palin Slams Michelle Obama Again, This Time For Anti-Obesity Campaign

Take her anti-obesity thing that she is on. She is on this kick, right. What she is telling us is she cannot trust parents to make decisions for their own children, for their own families in what we should eat.

Palin is now going beyond uneducated, beyond ill-informed, beyond just plain wrong ... she now adds weirdness to her list of attributes. Somehow she mistakes the "bully pulpit" ability of the first family to encourage good behavior for the rule making function of government.

Sarah Palin: "We gotta stand by our North Korean Allies"

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Let's see ... she can see Russia from her house, on Glenn Beck's show (of all places) she gets North and South Korea mixed up, and in the well researched book by John Hellemann and Mark Halperin, "Game Change", they note: "She knew nothing. She had to be taken through World War I, World War II, the Cold War, and Palin was not aware there was a difference between North and South Korea. She continued to insist that Iraq was behind 9/11; and when her son was being sent off to Iraq, she couldn’t describe who we were fighting."

Read the rest of the link. It's short ...

An Epidemic of Fear: How Panicked Parents Skipping Shots Endangers Us All | Magazine

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So true. This really, really is scary. I've had this argument with some other parents at the boys' various schools. For the record, Noah and Ben are up-to-date on all their immunizations, as are Elene and I. As a matter of fact, I've had extras so I can travel to places in Asia and the Middle East that still have outbreaks of "obsolete" diseases.

"The rejection of hard-won knowledge is by no means a new phenomenon. In 1905, French mathematician and scientist Henri Poincaré said that the willingness to embrace pseudo-science flourished because people “know how cruel the truth often is, and we wonder whether illusion is not more consoling.” Decades later, the astronomer Carl Sagan reached a similar conclusion: Science loses ground to pseudo-science because the latter seems to offer more comfort. “A great many of these belief systems address real human needs that are not being met by our society,” Sagan wrote of certain Americans’ embrace of reincarnation, channeling, and extraterrestrials. “There are unsatisfied medical needs, spiritual needs, and needs for communion with the rest of the human community.”
Looking back over human history, rationality has been the anomaly. Being rational takes work, education, and a sober determination to avoid making hasty inferences, even when they appear to make perfect sense. Much like infectious diseases themselves — beaten back by decades of effort to vaccinate the populace — the irrational lingers just below the surface, waiting for us to let down our guard."