I wrote a tremendously long thread, but I snipped most of it. We are going way off topic, and frankly I couldn't give two turds in a clenched fist about your opinions on God or GWB-- certainly not enough to continue arguing over it. I wanted to talk about Scientific American. I am a former subscriber, so I feel I have vested interest in the future of the magazine. Up until recently my money went to support their publication.
However, I would like to address this:
Aaaah, the old slippery-slope argument.
It wasn't a "slippery slope" argument. I put in some suggestions and some policies that I have seen advocated on the Internet and heard on Air America. If this were a slippery slope argument, I would have started at one point and stated what could or would happen.
There. I feel better now. Now on with the show.
I would be hard pressed to find the words to convince Chicken Little that the sky is not falling. Same goes for the global warming myth.
I guess the world loves an apocolypse, whether it be from a "righteous God" or car emissions... or gigantic rocks from space... or over population, or insecticides, or bioengineered food, or hyper contageous superdiseases that melt internal organs, or whatever.
I used to read SA monthy, and ALL of these apocolyptic theories (aside from the God smiting the wicked) have graced their pages at one time or another (along with slavery, poverty, and a bunch of leftist pet causes). If you actually read SA (or my original post on this topic) you would know this. And THAT, my friend, is my problem with SA.
You might not care if someone worships Papa Smurf, but I DO care when a once legitimate scientific journal embraces junk science in order to sell magazines, and I DO care when they get snarky when someone calls them on it. SA is over 150 years old, and their opinion on scientific matters is weighty on legacy alone.
What do you do when a trusted friend starts lying to you? I don't know about you, but I certainly would not call that person a friend anymore. When a magazine starts lying to me, or selects scientists and researchers to publish based on their scare factor, I would no longer call myself a subscriber.
You seem to be under the impression that SA is merely reacting to what you see as a increase in theocratic tendancies, but the problem is that the scare articles and the belittling of the religious came years before the 2000 elections. Maybe one issue out of the year didn't address climate change in one way or another. They decided all-of-a-sudden that modern human behaviour (sociology and psychology) is now hard science.
I had always thought that the business of science is to find out "what is" and "what isn't". They won't even give voice to any scientist that challenges their views (unless it is to berate or humiliate them). That isn't helpful scientific dialogue. That's agenda pushing.
If I get a religious tract in the mail, I know precisely what I am going to see if I upen the cover-- persuasive attempts to believe in God, embrace some religion or another, obey some screed and whatnot. But when I get a magazine that professes to report science, I don't expect to see yet another theory on global warming or some glib, smart-alecky op ed about religion.
Imagine if you have a child that recieves "Nickelodeon Magazine" in the mail. When he or she opens it, it endorses the philosophies of the Republican party, promotes religion, and endorses Republican candidates by name. Heck, put any non-political magazine in that place. Better Homes and Gardens. Car and Driver. Parents. Cat Fancy... Whatever.
You go on the Internet to see some yahoo say "it's about time! We need to fight back against those evil Democrats, and this is just backlash against the Dems promoting gay marriage! I hope this is just the beginning!" despite the fact that it is obvious that this person rarely if ever reads the publication in question. He or she just loved to see his or her personal agenda pushed by any means possible.
You seemed to lament the "great political divide" in this country, but let me tell you brother, you aren't part of the solution. Nor is this laughable Op ed or the bigoted anti-religious nutjobs who seem to have an underdog complex.
The problem, my friend, is that the "live and let live" attitudes of yesteryear are toast, and the new creed is "live and let live, as long as you keep your stinkin' life and beliefs out of my face. Oh, and obey the politically correct speech codes on your way out the door or suffer the consequences."
We have managed to rewrite the free exercise clause to mean that people are free to exercise religion in their homes or in their churches as we gleefully rip head scarfs off of Muslims and tear crucifixes off from public schoolteacher's necks... all the while claiming that it is in the name of "religious freedom"... or "freedom from religion", if you want to be more accurate.
Yay us. Stifling scientific thought and a war on religion, and we redefine it as "freedom".
We humans are so clever.
Schmokes- I was merely trying to link scientific theory to faith. I don't see much difference in the longs and short of it in some cases (dark matter, for one).
APf