I blogged a while back on the proliferation of errant beliefs in the information age in viral internet memes: Sticking My Finger in the Dike (many love it, and you might too). I thought it was time to take a moment to briefly debunk astrology, that most repugnant of memes and pseudoscience adhered to by quite literally millions of Americans. According to Gallup in the fall of 2005 , 25% of Americans and just as many Britons buy into the pseudoscience. That’s ONE IN FOUR OF us! At 300 million Americans, that’d be about 75 million Americans who virtually believe that THE EARTH IS FLAT! I know! Completely inconceivable! Are you surprised really, given that 44% of Americans in 2008 said they believed God created man in his present form? It just goes to show you how grossly ignorant the average American is when it comes to science… Worse yet, in the Information Age, it could be argued there is no excuse for such glaring and gross ignorance, non? And willful ignoranc
My annual re-post of one of my more popular blogs. "Considering that virtually none of the standard fare surrounding Thanksgiving contains an ounce of authenticity, historical accuracy, or cross-cultural perception, why is it so apparently ingrained? Is it necessary to the American psyche to perpetually exploit and debase its victims in order to justify its history?" – Michael Dorris Ah, our lovely annual turkey day celebration of one of the greatest ethnic cleansings in all of human history (caveat: by genocide, I refer not to population decimation by disease which was not deliberate save the single extant example of Lord Jeffrey Amherst, commander of British forces during the French-Indian War [and the image of U.S. Cavalry doing the same originates in Ward Churchill’s spurious scholarship and has been exposed as deceit], although the decimation wrought by disease was what informed Manifest Destiny ), but instead the long history of exterminationist and assim