Would Charles Darwin Have Made a Good Congressman? 155
sciencehabit writes "It's a good 130 years too late to answer that question empirically, but at least symbolically Charles Darwin has won support from more than 4000 voters in the 10th congressional district of Georgia, thanks to an initiative headed by James Leebens-Mack, a plant biologist at the University of Georgia in Athens. Like many others, Leebens-Mack was deeply troubled by a speech his Congressman, Paul Broun (R-GA), gave at an Athens church in October deriding teachings on evolution, embryology, and the big bang theory as 'lies straight from the pit of Hell.' Broun, a medical doctor, is a member of the U.S. House of Representative's Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, and chair of its Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight. Leebens-Mack says the 'protest vote should make it clear to future opponents that there are a lot of people in the district who are not happy with antiscience statements.'"
We can't have good people (Score:5, Insightful)
It all comes down to this:
Who doesn't feel the same way? That's not quite rhetorical; turns out you probably know someone who doesn't agree with that. But they're also someone you probably don't like, aren't they?
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Exactly. That tells me that the politicians know the grass is greener where they are. Let's face it, they get a lot of amazing perks just for being a politician. I'm pretty confident those perks are more substantial than you and I think and those perks make working as a career politician far more lucrative than the "measly" job you and I have. And if you knew those perks were for the rest of your life, wouldn't you be willing to lie to a few people, maybe bend or break some rules, to enjoy those perks?
Y
Re:We can't have good people (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, the job of Congressman is crap; you get egoboo but you're a slave to fundraising and spend as much or more time in shabby political boiler room offices calling around begging for money as you do in your nice government office. It's stunningly degrading, and the average person wouldn't be able to stand it. You probably helps to be a major attention-hound, but it still stinks. It's much better when you get out of Congress and become a lobbyist who can afford to screen his calls.
Re:We can't have good people (Score:4, Interesting)
1) One of the most dangerous jobs in the world - 9% die for job related reasons (get killed).
2) Almost everyone blames you for everything even though you don't actually have that much power.
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It sure is a crappy job, but hey, for $450k salary for LIFE, wouldn't you do a crappy job for 4 years? I sure as hell would. I'd even lie and tell everyone how awesome it was for that kind of pay! I don't know too many people that wouldn't be dishonest for 4 years for that kind of money, and that's the crappy reality of it.
As much as I'd like to think I'm an honest and trustworthy person who would do the right thing, I think Presidents try to do the right thing. But at the same time there's limits(espec
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Actually, that's my opinion of how Congress should work. It should be like jury duty--your name is called at random from a nationwide pool of eligible voters to serve in Congress for a year or two. You, and the baker from Queens, and the auto mechanic from Des Moines, and the mini-mart owner from Phoenix, etc. You're there as often as the current Congress is. Your job is to pass the important legislation, balance the budget, and monitor and fund (or defund) the other two branches as necessary. Accepting mon
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You make a decent argument, and then provide the best reason why it is flawed.
If the current crop of politicians, who are mostly lawyers, are clearly and demonstrably unable to do a proper job, how do you know the baker and the mechanic won't do a better one?
Besides, politicians have to pass a lot of tests. The thing is that the electorate chooses to test on incredibly important subjects such as hair, teeth, flagpin wearing and the ability to spout immense amounts of bullshit instead of looking at minor det
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I can't find the original quote, but anyone who doesn't want political power should be obliged to have it.
Rational (Score:3)
Informed and educated opinions leading to decisions do not work with without rational politicians.
A democracy cannot function without rational politicians and citizens.
The first thing I would want in a politician is that they are rational.
If they are corrupt then ok, we have to figure out what motivates them and we can work with it.
Re:Rational (Score:4, Insightful)
That kind of job description has a hard time getting rational applicants who aren't motivated by goals of personal power.
Re:Rational (Score:4, Insightful)
And therein the problem: What rational person would go through the political process,
Someone who thinks they can make a change.
The 2010 batch of Tea Party representitives are a good example.
Despite holding political views way out in the fringe, they ran for office because they thought they could make a change.
They have: they've repeatedly stymied the Democratic agenda and, on more than one ocassion, have tripped up the Republican agenda too.
And I wouldn't call them irrational. Within their framework of ideas, they are very rational actors.
Elizabeth Warren is another example of a well meaning person who went through a bruising political fight to get a Senate seat.
She created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Republicans refused her nomination to head the agency,
so she ran for the Senate in Massachussetts.
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If you start from fundamentally rational positions you cannot be considered a rational actor. You may be considered consistent, but not rational.
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Some people want to have universal healthcare, others don't. There's nothing particularly rational about either one, it's about what people want.
There is something particularly ethical about universal healthcare and something completely immoral about a first world nation treating healthcare as a commodity. A good moral code is rational. Hence, universal healthcare is rational and our current system is not.
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It is rational to point out that the US healthcare system was one of the most expensive per-head in the world, one of the least efficient per-dollar in the world, and had one of the lowest coverages in the world. Championing a policy of reform to solve those issues is rational.
Arguing "keep the gubbermint oudda my life!" as a reason to not reform it is ideological and irrational.
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Trying to get the highest coverage in the world is a desire. It is not rational, it is a desire, but people who have that desire can make rational choices to achieve that goal.
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Most of the conflict in politics isn't about rationality, it comes from disagreeing desires. Some people want to have universal healthcare, others don't. There's nothing particularly rational about either one, it's about what people want.
See... This is why the debate is off the rails in America.
There absolutely is something rational about wanting universal health care. A healthy population is one that can work, and can stimulate the economy, so there's clearly a vested interest in being able to get all citizens as healthy as possible. It's been demonstrated in tons of other places that nationalised health care is a much more effective, and much cheaper way of achieving this. So yeh, it really is rational to want nationalised health care.
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This is something I have never understood. What's good for the economy is a healthy workforce; with enough money to spend (but not so much that they can squirrel it away where it does nothing); the ability to get your kids an education (for the next round of workers); making sure those with power, be it political or financial, are kept in check (to maintain the level playing field so important to vibrant capitalism) and keeping the commons intact so that it can continue to be used.
Absolutely none of those a
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Well, that's kinda the point. If they're a priority of the right, and the right still doesn't want nationalised health care, despite economic and social arguments in favour of it, then they're not acting rationally, and I wouldn't elect them.
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If those are the priorities of the right, they are poorly reflected in their actions.
Here in Canada, we have a government that is de-funding useful research programs, muzzling scientists, attempted to repeal banking regulations until the crisis hit (and then took credit for these same regulations keeping our economy from completely going down the toiltet), cutting education funding, reducing the government's ability to gather information about the populace so that informed decisions can be made...it's a lon
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To repeal Obama's healthcare plan, and make a 'better' one. Obama ultimately took ideas from John McCain's healthcare plan.
One thing that confuses foreigners (maybe not you, though, I'm sure you're smarter), is the difference between federal and state funding. A citizen can completely oppose funding on education from the national government, and yet still favor increasing it on the state level, because he feels states can more effe
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No, I already have nationalised health care, and have lived in countries which did not. I have many completely rational reasons for preferring the nationalised system. The economic arguments are just one of them, and the order that these arguments were realised in is irrelevant to how applicable they are.
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There are plenty of rational arguments against nationalized healthcare, but I won't bore you on a topic where you are unlikely to change your opinion. If you are interested, Milton Friedman has done a good job outlining the opposing arguments, you can look him up.
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Okay, so I went and looked up the talk, here's what I got from him:
1) "The spending for the provision of medical care inevitably leads to control over the fees that are charged for medical care"
This is simply false – a quick reccy at any other country with nationalised health care (I'm going to use the UK as my example, as I'm familiar with it, and because it's pretty much the poster child for nationalised health care), reveals that private health care providers are still going strong, and choosing th
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You're welcome to inform me if he had any better arguments, but I'd rather not waste my time further if he didn't.
I know, you already made up your mind before watching it. You only accept arguments in your favor as true, working diligently to find a way to reject any argument you don't like.
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That's fair enough. If you don't have any valid arguments, you're free to not argue. I'd suggest that the person who is making reasoned arguments is in fact the one who's more likely to be flexible, and not the one who's simply made up their mind and is unopen to any other idea ;)
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there's a remarkable correlation between wanting to forbid it and believing in invisible men in the sky, so let's at least have some *honest* reasons why it should be disallowed.
Oh yeah? Let's see your data on this, because it sounds like something you just made up. There are plenty of druggies who believe in god. Making up data is irrational.
Healthcare: there are definitely people who would prefer to let people die in the streets. You are mistaking 'current system' for 'system people want.' The current system is a compromise, and few people like it.
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You reap what you sow, in other words?
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A democracy cannot function without rational politicians and citizens. ... The first thing I would want in a politician is that they are rational.
Obviously a lot of your fellow citizens don't agree with you, or else they have a different definition of "rationality."
The fundamental problem lies the morons who vote wackos into office in the first place. Which might lead to questioning of the assumption of a functional democracy -- is that even a rational possibility? Unless we're going to require a logic test before certifying anyone's ability to vote, the most rational people in a society will always be subject to the tyranny of the less rational
rationality is overrated (Score:2)
Voting is intrinsically an irrational act, because the costs greatly outweigh the benefits, so if people behaved rationally, voter participation would be much lower than it is, and people wouldn't follow politics as much as they do. And no matter what you do, the vast majority of citizens is never going to understand science; they have neith
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No it hasn't, maybe you didn't notice, he said democracy.... what does that have to do with the past 230 years?
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If it was non-professional, we'd have people running for a single term, pissing the majority of their constituents off, but actually accomplishing at least part of their agenda
Not necessarily. It takes time to figure out how to get stuff done in Congress. By the time most of them have figured it out, their term would be up.
It sickens me (Score:3, Funny)
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I don't believe you have a right to lie. Further, not once in that guy's post did he actually call for government censorship. So your statement is nothing but an attack looking for an excuse.
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"It sickens ME that someone would call for suppressing the opinions of others simply because they don't agree with them."
It's its factual wrong, it's not an opinion, it's a lie.
You can have your own opinion, but not you own facts.
" Rather than supply a cogent, reasoned response to those opinions, they result to name calling and demands of censorship."
We have volumes and volume of books and warehouses of evidences of the facts.
"Oh, wait... I forgot how Democrats campaign nowadays, and, since they won, how th
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No one is calling for this congressman to be censored - If anything, his retarded comments have intentionally broadcast so that more people can understand how stupid they are. His comments have already been addressed over and over, and it happened long before he even said anything. Any of the books from Dawkins should be enough to answer any questions he raises. All that's really left is some ridicule.
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Perhaps you would care to illuminate what a cogent argument against characterizing "evolution, embryology, and the big bang theory as 'lies straight from the pit of Hell" would look like? In my experience, arguing with the willfully ignorant is less than productive.
He didn't call for anyone being censored, but he is absolutely correct that that kind of idiocy has no place in the very serious business of running a nation. This has nothing to do with right versus left politics and everything to do with having
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Actually, lots of answers in life can be found in that book. It depends on the questions you are asking.
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And whether or not you want coherent answers.
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You can suffer that problem no matter where you look for answers. It's also closely associated with your abilities.
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The religious like to think of the bible as a source of hermetic wisdom, something you can learn the answers to life's questions from if you are only open to the spirit. This is an easy way of dividing people into groups of "enlightened" or "unenlightened" based on whether or not they agree with you, with no need to explain oneself.
You can find nearly any answer you want in the bible, with a bit of knowledge and the ability to construct an interpretation. This makes it a terribly poor source of knowledge ab
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As I said, you can suffer the same problems elsewhere. The post I replied to was chastising someone for having a religious belief and the thread we are in was started by someone saying they were sickened that someone opens their mouth about certain things. Sounds to me like they found an easy way "of dividing people into
Ran unopposed?? (Score:2)
Is this actually true? If so, isn't it utterly pathetic that nobody stood up to this guy by running against him?
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Yes, when he was speaking to some Methodist group (or some other religious entity) he made those comments. Why no one ran against him, probably because he represents his constituents well and someone else wouldn't be elected.
BTW, the entire comments issue is blown out of portion. nothing he has done politically supports that ideology. It was pandering at its best but anyone who looks at his record doesn't believe he puts those views over science. It's more or less just a bunch of Atheists wanting attention
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Oh really?
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/112/hr212 [govtrack.us]
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/112/hjres45 [govtrack.us]
In 2008, Broun and 91 co-sponsors introduced H.J.Res.89, a proposition for the Federal Marriage Amendment. The proposed amendment to the United States Constitution would define marriage as "as consisting only of the union of a man and a woman."[
Broun proposed failed legislation that would have proclaimed 2010 "The Year Of The Bible".
When Broun explained his reasons for voting against climate change legi
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Wow, gay marriage and anti abortion is the best you have against him? lol.. Those are not even scientific issues, they are social issues. You are not trying to say Science says Gays should be or have to be married and that Abortion must be available as birth control are you?
As for the global warming, it is a belief held by many who are not what you consider religious either. The conspiracy surrounding global warming is very well documented. The entire science has been corrupted including attempts to mitigat
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lol.. because I'm not irrationally scared of religion or think it is some massive threat to science because someone thinks differently then I do? Go cower in fear before I thump you with the bible.
He would take one look at Congress . . . (Score:5, Funny)
. . . and decide that humanity was not evolving, but devolving.
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No such thing as "devolving." Any population-level adaptation over time in response to environmental pressures is evolution; given how succesful the H. sap. politicus subspecies has been in that adaptation (look at the re-election rate for incumbents) I'd say they're a nice example of evolution at work.
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Check your context (Score:2)
So -you- say!
No. (Score:2)
At least not GA-10. For better or for worse, Paul Broun represents his district.
depending on where his remains are ... (Score:2)
He might be perfect
1 he is old enough
2 currently resides in the correct state
okay so he is a bit deceased but ask anybody in Chicago Illinois that is not a problem. He at least can't be bought and won't try to pass any of the stupid laws we are getting nowadays.
Is that what they call Darwinism? (Score:2)
There [yahoo.com] is [go.com] even [cbsnews.com] precedent. [cnn.com]
It seems Americans will vote pretty much anyone into office. Really, I've heard worse ideas. [wikipedia.org] Zombie Feynman 2016, anyone?
Scientists would make horrible politicians (Score:2)
A good scientist's main concern is always the truth.
A politician, in a democracy, does care about the truth just is instead a mediator and a interpreter of the public's will.
A good scientist is unlikely to be able to turn off his knowledge and intellect and serve the peoples will, and instead would want to enact laws and projects that actually worked and were based on facts and truth.
Definition of a Good Politician (Score:2)
A good scientist is unlikely to be able to turn off his knowledge and intellect and serve the peoples will, and instead would want to enact laws and projects that actually worked and were based on facts and truth.
I'd argue that this is the definition of a good politician: one who acts in the best interests of the people even if is not exactly what they say they want. While I would agree with your description of a typical politician as a demagogue with mediation skills that does not make the typical politician a good politician.
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Except that is not the definition of a democratic politician.
You are talking about different, more totalitarian, government types.
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No, even in a representative democracy the idea is that your representative is supposed to exercise their powers for the wishes of the electorate.
In real world situations you never have pure ideologies being practiced, so you will always find some amount of acting in the best interests of the people even if is not exactly what they say they want.
But that idea is completely contrary to the democratic idea.
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No, even in a representative democracy the idea is that your representative is supposed to exercise their powers for the wishes of the electorate.
If that were the case why doesn't everyone have a system like Switzerland where the population has to vote on most issues? In fact with modern technology we could probably come up with a system where the population get to decide just about everything.
I would argue that the reason almost nobody has such a system is because, while it would exactly mirror what people want, it would not represent their best interests. Hence we have a system of choosing who will govern us and those people are supposed to act
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Well maybe everyone does not want a pure democracy. We absolutely could have most people vote on most issues, and that would be a pure democracy, but that does not mean that most people would vote for that or that that is a good idea.
No. (Score:2)
That was Mary Shelley's department [wikipedia.org].
Citing (Score:2)
By the way, it would be nice if the quote was an actual quote. Bear in mind that the Big Bang was initially proposed by a Catholic physicist/priest, and was roundly attacked as "anti-science" for sounding to much like Genesis, in contrast to the then-prevailing Steady State theory of the universe.
It's not clear to me what would be objectionable about embryology per se from any theistic stance, and it's reall
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"...on evolution, embryology, and the big bang theory as 'lies straight from the pit of Hell.'"
By the way, it would be nice if the quote was an actual quote. When I see a semi-quote like this one, I tend to think there's a bit of bias involved with the citation...
That was pretty much a direct quote. Here is a video [youtube.com] of him saying that and more.
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How about a fully-much direct quote? That's my personal preference for quotes, anyway.
Though it's more a question of editorial integrity than convenience, and I have only marginal interest in what Rep. Paul Broun says, out of curiosity I watched it. Granted, including "all that stuff I was taught about" didn't add much in terms of clarity.
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Would Isaac Newton have made a good mechanic? (Score:4, Funny)
Would Julius Caeser have worked out in a boy band?
Would Abraham Lincoln have been a good NASCAR driver?
Would Queen Victoria have been a decent haberdasher?
These, and the question posed by the article, are all equally important.
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However, Charles Darwin got 4000 votes in the recent election, hence the post. The incumbent, who won, is Paul Broun:
Here's an interesting excerpt from Wikipedia:
In a leaked video of a speech given at Liberty Baptist Church Sportsman's Banquet on September 27, Broun is heard telling supporters that, “All that stuff I was taught about evolution and embryology and the Big Bang Theory, all that is lies straight from the pit of Hell.” Broun also believes that the world is less than 9000 years
Well, It's Quite a Junket... (Score:2)
Boneheads (Score:2)
So some congressman says some boneheaded thing. There's a big surprise. Now the correct respose is the boneheaded idea to elect Charlie Darwin to congress? Would Gengis Khan make a good hostess at the International House of Pancakes? Now that makes sense.
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So some congressman says some boneheaded thing. There's a big surprise. Now the correct respose is the boneheaded idea to elect Charlie Darwin to congress? Would Gengis Khan make a good hostess at the International House of Pancakes? Now that makes sense.
Until you ask for the Puree of Mongol soup.
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All that raping and pillaging! Who knew all he wanted was a decent strawberry syrup!!!
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First person to laugh at Ghengis when he repeats your Rooti Tooti Fresh and Fruiti order finds out how hard it is to get a waffle iron out of the back of your throat!
Hannibal Lecter would be ideal (Score:2)
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No (Score:2)
Don't know (Score:2)
Why not? (Score:3)
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That's not a very nice thing to say about Charles Darwin. He was a brilliant naturalist and extremely well educated. You can't just dismiss all his theories simply because he believed in God.
I weep for the future (Score:2)
Because that was the dumbest question I've heard all year.
I woould dare say... (Score:2)
That Darwin's moldering corpse would make a better representative than Paul Broun.
Of course not (Score:2)
He was English, after all.
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I had the same exact question, so I read his Wikipedia article. If there weren't citations for everything in the article, I'd assume that some liberal had written it as a scathing parody of the Tea Party extremists in the Republican party. I'm still a little shell-shocked and experiencing some denial that people like this truly exist.
It's time for the North to secede from the Union. The South can have their theocratic confederation. I don't care any more. They can keep everything: the oil, the farms, t
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Rejecting evolution is willful ignorance of reality, and chosing to live in a world dictated by random beliefs rather than direct observation. Before you can even hope to have a nuanced discussion of the pros and cons of a particular law, and what course of action would best benefit the republic, it helps tremendously to have a grasp of reality and an understanding of the world we live in. How ca
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Fact means exactly what it means. You can use a dictionary if you are confused. Reading comprehension helps a bit though. Try understanding what was said and perhaps you might have a different understanding instead of appearing ignorant and unthinking.
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" ObamaCare causing thousands of companies to fire and reduce hours for millions of employees?"
false. as has been proven over and over again with actual numbers and math.
" Or any number of other issues that actually affect every day Americans."
like sickness, disease, cancer and a myriad of other medical issue? yeah, he should do something about that.
"Or, if someone says something stupid, we get rid of them as an elected official?"
if they are factually lies like this dickhead said? then yes.
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Those poor orchids, feeling the wrath of Darwin
"We found on St. Paul's only two kinds of birds - the booby and the noddy. The former is a species of gannet, and the latter a tern. Both are of a tame and stupid disposition, and are so unaccustomed to visitors, that I could have killed any number of them with my geological hammer."
- Charles Darwin, 'The Voyage of the Beagle'.
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In the margin he wrote:
"I don't like the gannet, they wet their nests!"~
Dead Guy vs. Idiot (Score:2)
Is this question really about whether Darwin in his prime would have been a good Congresscritter, or whether Darwin TODAY would be better than his opponent?
I think that today, what with being dead, he'd probably do less damage than the guy he ran against, so on balance he'd be better, but back when he was alive he'd really rather have spent his time away from Washington, sailing around looking for interesting flora and fauna. Still better than leaving That Idiot in charge.
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Yes, doctors just memorize the numbers. That's pretty much what medical school is.
Science and medicine work differently. Science is interested in learning why things work. Medicine doesn't care why, just if it works or not. It is a set of heuristics and tools. Science improves medicine, but an understanding of science is not needed to practice medicine.
Classic example: nobody knew how aspirin works until fairly recently. But doctors didn't need to know that. Take two and call me in the morning worked
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Funny, but I always though evolution was survival of the fittest. It almost seems like that is the position of the Republicans. The Democrats tend t
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That probably would be used against him.
However, remember that the entire rest of the world was full-bore racist at that point, even the ones who thought slavery should be illegal.
Darwin's science helped humanity in it's long climb out of that ignorance.
I have to laugh about people who point out problems with Darwin...or Lincoln or even Jefferson or the Founding Fathers for that matter. Back then, assuming you weren't a slave yourself, you'd be screaming epithets at the slaves, or maybe you'd be part of th