Title: Alas poor Feynman, I knew him well. Source:
none URL Source:http://freedom4um.com Published:Feb 18, 2006 Author:me Post Date:2006-02-18 20:00:49 by Hmmmmm Keywords:Feynman,, well., Alas Views:554 Comments:23
Next time you post that stuff .. ensure you create the links correctly; don't assume you can just drag crap from anywhere and pray that everyone applauds you. Man, you are pissing me off.
"We will also learn to understand the true meaning of conservatism...I do not mean the pietistic and selfish libertarianism into which much of the conservative movement has lately descended. I mean instead the ethic that cherishes and sustains the resources and proven best institutions of a community. In other words, true conservatism, an idea that can be applied to human nature as well as to social institutions."---E.O. Wilson
"The scientific method will not enable you to hold exact opinions on matters in which you lack sufficient data, but it can keep you from being certain of your opinions and make you aware of the value of your data, and to reserve your judgment until you have amplified your data." --Robert A. Heinlein
"For all the corruption it has suffered from public financing and infection by campus political fads, science is, I shall always believe, a fundamentally conservative profession. Pseudoscience and wishful thinking they are usually the same thing have their natural home on the political left, Marxs scientific socialism being only the best-known example. True science doesnt care what we believe or what we wish for. It just tells us what is, and leaves us to come to terms with it as best we can."---John Derbyshire
Parade of the Rationalist Right
Top row, l to r: George Santayana, Milton Friedman, Ludwig Von Mises, Sydney Hook. Bottom row: Ayn Rand, Penn and Teller, John Byrne.
FAQs
Q:Why your screen name? A: Because it's accurate, and it ticks off both fundies and liberals.
Q: Why are you a right-wing atheist? A: Because organized religion is too liberal for me
Q: But if you don't believe in (a)god, doesn't it me you don't believe in a common morality? A: A frequent fallacy epoused by both theists and atheists is that the rejection of religion automatically means the rejection of traditional morality. I totally reject the utilitarian "blank slate" model of ethics put forth by secular humanism, and instead maintain that morality is innate, something which has helped our species thrive and survive. Read Robert Wright's The Moral Animal and James Q Wilson's The Moral Sense if you want to understand my beliefs on this matter further.
Q: So you're a libertarian? A: Nope. I consider myself a conservative, in that I believe in a strong but limited government. In particular, I strongly support some of the security measures taken in the War of Terror which has served in many ways as the "delineating point" separating conservatives and libertarians. I'm also anti-abortion, anti-drugs and anti-tobacco, and support federal funding of scientific research, a firm law-and-order policy on crime prevention and punishment, and limited but strong environmental protection policies, which places me at odds with most libertarians but not too many conservatives. I am, of course, a staunch believer in the free market, and firmly believe in a strong national defense, but just about the only social issues at which I'm libertarian are gun ownership and gay marriage.
Q: But this is a conservative website! A: Yeah, but there are many rooms in the conservative house, OK? I'm as hetero as can be, but if two men or two women are in love with each other, and are law-abiding, tax-paying productive citizens, I have no business telling them how to live anymore than the happily married Christian couple who are just as productive and law-abiding. I don't see it as being the same as demanding special rights or protections for people for their lifestyles, beliefs or backgrounds. And it doesn't stop me from making fun of the more extreme or ridiculous elements of the radical gay groups (Half the keywords on the Morford threads? I put 'em there. Hope you enjoy them).
Q: Don't you feel out of place being an atheist on FR? A: Nope. FR is a diverse place, and JimRob welcomes conservatives of all stripes here. On a single thread, you have more diversity of opinion than you do in your typical university faculty. As long you treat people here with respect, they'll treat you the same, and by and large, I've been welcomed with open arms by even the most devoutly religious FReepers.
Q:You aren't on the religion threads very often A: Well of course not, they usually don't interest me. With the exception of the crevo threads, where I loudly and forcefully defend the secular-materialist viewpoint, I don't spend much time on them. It's partly because I don't want to start any flamewars, but also partly because the issues which consider to be of paramount importance, outside of science education, have little or nothing to do with religious belief or lack thereof
What's your main claim to fame of FR? A: It would have to be being the first to post about The Flying Spaghetti Monster on FR. It has since become one of the most popular FR memes, especially among the crevo list, and helped boost an already popular site into a web institution. FReeper Gerard S. Harbison (aka RightWingProfessor) even wound up being quoted by the website!
Q:Are you on any ping lists? A: Currently, I am on the South Park ping list and the Eco-Ping list. FReepmail EveningStar if you want to be on the former, and GreenFreeper if you want to be on the latter. Physicist and I run the Bibliopath ping list (for book lovers). FReepmail either one of us if you want to be on it.