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atheists and "conspiracy" theories
RE: atheists and "conspiracy" theories
We do make a distinction between provoked and unprovoked insults.
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RE: atheists and "conspiracy" theories
(May 3, 2012 at 5:22 pm)Bgood Wrote:
(May 3, 2012 at 5:09 pm)jackman Wrote: come on man, don't get into that stuff.

What stuff? The Napoleanic Conspiracy???

just the name-calling and assumptions man. they don't help ... man, you already know what stuff! besides i don't know what you look like but, look at me - then look around this forum. i really don't want to start a group name-calling session. hahaha. just keep it civil man, thass all. even if it comes to u, just let it ride. be bigger.
they can land a rover on mars, yet they still have to stick a human finger up my ass to do a prostate exam?! - ricky gervais
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RE: atheists and "conspiracy" theories
OK Napolean Dynamite! You win another territory on the game of RISK! I offer a truce of peace if you can honestly spare 5 minutes to watch this 100% factual video. If you dispute or disagree with any of the facts , then you can have the keys to my Lexus Sonata.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yuC_4mGTs...edded#t=0s
You, yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection.

There are only two mistakes one can make along the road to truth; not going all the way, and not starting.

Buddha FSM Grin



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RE: atheists and "conspiracy" theories
I'm not seeing any actual fact in that video that proves that the US government had anything to do with 9/11. Maybe you can point them out to me, but all I am seeing is some guy raising wild speculation based on things that do not prove anything.

I said this before, all you conspiracy theorists do is raise questions (yes some of them may be perfectly valid) and fill in the gaps with your own imagination.

It's the gap filling part you need to provide evidence for.

So... you want me to PM you my address? So you can send me those keys?
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RE: atheists and "conspiracy" theories
napoleon. even if you won, he said he has a lexus sonata! that's an imaginary car.
they can land a rover on mars, yet they still have to stick a human finger up my ass to do a prostate exam?! - ricky gervais
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RE: atheists and "conspiracy" theories
(May 3, 2012 at 5:52 pm)jackman Wrote: napoleon. even if you won, he said he has a lexus sonata! that's an imaginary car.

Damnit. Now I feel silly.
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RE: atheists and "conspiracy" theories
(May 3, 2012 at 4:10 pm)Bgood Wrote: The usual shrieking psychotic bullshit that happens whenever you try to use logic against anyone incapable of understanding it.

Whatever, man. You're not convincing anyone here other than the zombies already enthralled to you and your ilk's pathetic half-assed pseudo-science-based garbage. You can go ahead and continue believing whatever you want to believe, it's not going to change anything and you'll constantly be searching for shit that isn't there. I've used scientific explanations over and over and over again to refute you and every time I do you continue clinging desperately to your half-assed fake-science shit, and frankly, I'm tired of arguing with someone who has the intellectual capacity and reasoning standards of a fifth grader. Not only am I done arguing with you, not only do I claim victory via logic, but I'm also ignoring you because I have to deal with enough barely-literate high school dropout idiots on a daily basis as it is. You're an insane psychopath with a warped view on the world who refuses to stop shitting on the graves of 3,000 people all because you can't accept that our government is not omnipotent and that sometimes things ARE what they seem, which makes you a heinous, disgusting piece of subhuman filth in my book.

Consider yourself ignored. I can't deal with your shit.
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RE: atheists and "conspiracy" theories



I'm jumping into a deep thread, so I hope I'm not repeating for not having read things, but here goes.

There is a sense in which conspiracy theories, of a sort, have to be taken seriously. I'm hesitant to apply the label "conspiracy" to them, but the U.S. and other countries have well documented histories of false flag operations, covert operations designed to undermine legitimate foreign governments (or prop up bad ones), and working to conceal the true nature of events from its people. (I just finished Jon Krakauer's book on Pat Tillman, whose death by friendly-fire was quite evidently concealed from the public through a campaign of misinformation, destruction of evidence, lies, and silencing of witnesses.) So one obviously can't just categorically conclude that all conspiracy theories are bollocks, because some of them do turn out to be real.

However, in general, 9 out of 10 such conspiracies turn out to be the imagining of crackpots. And we as a species reward people who come to useful conclusions and results, and punish those that don't (with job promotions, marriage proposals, friendships). Even without examining the evidence for a particular conspiracy, it's relatively probable that anyone who repeatedly comes up with the conclusion "conspiracy" is not someone we want sitting at the bottom of a tower in North Dakota with their finger on the trigger of a nuclear warhead. Maybe they can be a shift manager at McDonald's or something.

And examination of specific conspiracy theory claims usually bears this out with several kinds of flawed thinking being prominent in the arguments.

A short list:

1) Non sequiturs; reasoning that a conclusion follows from a set of premises when it in fact does not do so. (e.g. Arguing that Bush and America's involvement with the bin Laden family implied a similar relationship with Osama bin Laden.)
2) Argument from ignorance; the belief that if no better explanation is available, the one that one has must be correct. (This is a common theme even outside conspiracy theories, that if person B doesn't know why X, then person A must be on to something. Many times we don't know, we may never know. And this is exacerbated when people like 9/11 Truthers present details that people aren't familiar with and then imply that it means something when this person whom you've accosted with unfamiliar information can't explain it.)
3) Propaganda; appealing to emotion to generate a conclusion rather than facts, evidence and logic. (Despite having ample bad guys to draw from, 9/11 truthers inevitably look to people they don't like. To the best of my knowledge, the pope has yet to be implicated in 9/11.)
4) Fraud and lies (or simple mistakes); presenting facts which are either known to be untrue, or which one has omitted to check. (Much of the 9/11 conspiracy theories rest on heaping mountains of untruth; the propagandistic claim that fighter jets scram in 10 or 15 minutes, ignoring the confusion among the controllers and others involved at the time, ignoring that they simply don't, and ignoring that the 17 minutes between tower 1 and tower 2 strike would leave 2 minutes of flight time even if they had scrammed in 15.)

Anyway, I've written more than I intended, but even once one gets past the base rate at which conspiracies occur, relative to the rate at which your typical conspiracy theory nut asserts they occur, most such people are a cornucopia of bad thinking and bad logic; it would be unwise to trust their account even if a real conspiracy was suspected.

(I recently was asked to listen to an 11 minute youtube video by someone I've known for years on irc. Upon finding the material filled end-to-end with Truther bullshit, I confronted him. I had hoped it was merely a joke, albeit a not too funny one. Upon realizing it wasn't, and confronting him with the problem, he quickly found reason that further discussion with me was undesirable. That may be #5 - conspiracy theorists often form closed communities which don't tolerate questioning of the conspiracy arguments -- this is well known, for example, with regard to the "Loose Change" community.)

I don't know what I intended to say other than that, yes, you need to examine the evidence, but most often what you will find are cranks, liars, and idiots; there simply aren't enough real conspiracies, with enough real evidence, to support such a thriving community. And if there were, it would quickly be taken away from the lunatic fringe by some hungry journalist. (Or 10.)


[Image: extraordinarywoo-sig.jpg]
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RE: atheists and "conspiracy" theories
(May 3, 2012 at 6:26 pm)Creed of Heresy Wrote: You're an insane psychopath with a warped view on the world who refuses to stop shitting on the graves of 3,000 people all because you can't accept that our government is not omnipotent and that sometimes things ARE what they seem, which makes you a heinous, disgusting piece of subhuman filth in my book.

I never said our government was omnipotent! The rest I 'll agree with though.

Everything in this video I posted comes directly from the official story. The narrater just tells it with a wise ass voice. He's making fun of it. But all the facts are self evident. They come straight from the media and the 911 commision report. That's what I don't understand. It is not like I'm coming from out of left park with some shit that makes no sense. This is all documented in the official lies!!! The government lies about so much crap that it is not even funny! We live in a parasitic nation that feeds of third world country's resources and human suffering and we send them back all our garbage and waste. America is going down like a stack of a cards in the next 10 years or sooner. But who cares, fuck it! I' ll be in Amsterdam gettin stoked.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?list=LLaWpI...lpage#t=4s
You, yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection.

There are only two mistakes one can make along the road to truth; not going all the way, and not starting.

Buddha FSM Grin



Reply
RE: atheists and "conspiracy" theories
You should really stop spamming that video because it doesn't prove anything.
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