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Daily Archives: June 3, 2017
A journey to reckon with – The Hindu
Posted: June 3, 2017 at 12:15 pm
The Hindu | A journey to reckon with The Hindu He is, I would like to believe, disturbed over the growing amnesia about the Dravidian movement's commitment to rationalism, the scientific spirit. The austere Periyar is a living being for him. He must be worried on whether that is so for his party ... |
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Evergreen State President Doesn’t Seem To Understand Free Speech – The Daily Caller
Posted: at 12:14 pm
The president of Evergreen State College, the site of heatedstudentprotests at the end of May, initially defended safe spaces and trigger warnings in 2016.
George Bridges, president of Evergreen State College in Washington state, championedconcepts that many see as threatening to free speech and academic inquiry in an op-ed for The Seattle Times.
Trigger warnings can alert students to genuinely distressing content that could otherwise cripple their learning, Bridges said in the op-ed. Colleges and universities must change as the society changes.
The Evergreen president introduced victims of sexual assault and veterans returning from combat as two groups of people who could benefit from trigger warnings.
These students can make critically important contributions to their classrooms, but if we refuse to acknowledge that they also have unique barriers to participating in that discussion, we send the message that they are not welcome, Bridges said.
Bridges asserts that 90 percent of Evergreens students are traditionally underserved, meaning that they are low-income, first-generation college students, students of color, disabled students, veterans, and students that do not fall within the usual college age demographic.
The president proceeds to define safe spaces as places and contexts in which they [underserved students] can reflect on and address these unfamiliar issues without fear of failure or rejection by others.
This desire to prevent students from feeling failure or rejection may explain Evergreens use of narrative evaluations administered by faculty instead of standard letter or numerical grades. However,the qualitative grading system may be indicative of less academic rigor, as Evergreen has a 97 percent acceptance rate and only 20 percent of applicants have a grade point average over 3.50, according to The Princeton Review. Fifty-sixpercent of the colleges students graduate within six years.
Despite Bridges attempt to make Evergreen State as accommodating as possible, students do not seem to appreciate his orotherfaculty members efforts.
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How Trump’s War on Free Speech Threatens the Republic | Mother … – Mother Jones
Posted: at 12:14 pm
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On May 17, while delivering a graduation speech to cadets at the Coast Guard Academy in New London, Connecticut, a scandal-plagued President Donald Trump took the opportunity to complain, yet again, about the news media. No leader in history, he said, has been treated as unfairly as he has been. Shortly thereafter, when the graduates presented Trump with a ceremonial sword, a live mic picked up Homeland Security chief John F. Kelly telling the president, "Use that on the press, sir!"
Kelly was presumably joking, but the press isn't laughing. Presidents have complained bitterly about reporters since George Washington ("infamous scribblers"), but Trump has gone after the media with a venom unmatched by any modern presidentincluding Richard Nixon. At campaign rallies, Trump herded reporters into pens, where they served as rhetorical cannon fodder, and things only got worse after the election. Prior to November 8, the media were "scum" and "disgusting." Afterward, they became the "enemy of the American people." (Even Nixon never went that far, noted reporter Carl Bernstein of Watergate fame. Nixon did refer to the press as "the enemy," but only in private and without "the American people" partan important distinction for students of authoritarianism.)
Trump has called for the loosening of libel laws and jailing of journalists: "Very dishonest people!"
On April 29, the same day as this year's White House Correspondents' Dinner (which Trump boycotted), the president held a rally in Pennsylvania to commemorate his first 100 days. He spent his first 10 minutes or so attacking the media: CNN and MSNBC were "fake news." The "totally failing New York Times" was getting "smaller and smaller," now operating out of "a very ugly office building in a very crummy location." Trump went on: "If the media's job is to be honest and tell the truth, then I think we would all agree the media deserves a very, very big, fat failing grade. [Cheers.] Very dishonest people!"
Trump's animosity toward the press isn't limited to rhetoric. His administration has excluded from press briefings reporters who wrote critical stories, and it famously barred American media from his Oval Office meeting with Russia's foreign minister and ambassador to the United States while inviting in Russia's state-controlled news service.
Before firing FBI Director James Comey, Trump reportedly urged Comey to jail journalists who published classified information. As a litigious businessman, the president has expressed his desire to "open up" libel laws. In April, White House chief of staff Reince Preibus acknowledged that the administration had indeed examined its options on that front.
This behavior seems to be having a ripple effect: On May 9, a journalist was arrested in West Virginia for repeatedly asking a question that Tom Price, Trump's health secretary, refused to answer. Nine days later, a veteran reporter was manhandled and roughly escorted out of a federal building after he tried (politely) to question an FCC commissioner. Montana Republican Greg Gianforte won a seat in the House of Representatives last week, one day after he was charged with assaulting a reporter who had pressed Gianforte for his take on the House health care bill. And over the long weekend, although it could be a coincidence, someone fired a gun of some sort at the offices of the Lexington Herald-Leader, a paper singled out days earlier by Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin, who likened journalists to "cicadas" who "don't actually seem to care about Kentucky."
Where is all of this headed? It's hard to know for sure, but as a lawyer (and former newspaper reporter) who has spent years defending press freedoms in America, I can say with some confidence that the First Amendment will soon be tested in ways we haven't seen before. Let's look at three key areas that First Amendment watchdogs are monitoring with trepidation.
The First Amendment offers limited protections when a prosecutor or a civil litigant subpoenas a journalist in the hope of obtaining confidential notes and sources. In the 1972 case of Branzburg v. Hayes, a deeply divided Supreme Court ruled that the Constitution does not shield reporters from the obligation of complying with a grand jury subpoena. But the decision left room for the protection of journalists who refuse to burn a source in other contextsin civil cases, for instance, or in criminal cases that don't involve a grand jury. Some lower courts have ruled that the First Amendment indeed provides such protections.
Unlike most states, Congress has refused to pass a law protecting journalists who won't burn their confidential sources.
The Constitution, of course, is merely a baseline for civil liberties. Recognizing the gap left by the Branzburg ruling, a majority of the states have enacted shield laws that give journalists protections that Branzburg held were not granted by the Constitution. Yet Congress, despite repeated efforts, has refused to pass such a law. This gives litigants in federal court, including prosecutors, significant leverage to force journalists into compliance. (In 2005, Judith Miller, then of the New York Times, spent 85 days in jail for refusing to reveal her secret source to a federal grand jury investigating the outing of Valerie Plame as a CIA agent. The source, Miller eventually admitted, was Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby.)
Trump will almost certainly take advantage of his leverage. He and his innermost circle have already demonstrated that they either fail to understand or fail to respect (or both) America's long-standing tradition of restraint when it comes to a free press. During the campaign, Trump tweeted that Americans who burn the flaga free-speech act explicitly protected by the Supreme Courtshould be locked up or stripped of citizenship "perhaps." In December, after the New York Times published a portion of Trump's tax returns, former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski declared that executive editor Dean Baquet "should be in jail."
Trump took over the reins from an executive branch that was arguably harder on the press than any administration in recent history. President Barack Obama oversaw more prosecutions of leakers under the vaguely worded Espionage Act of 1917 than all other presidents combined, and he was more aggressive than most in wrenching confidential information from journalists.
Over the course of two months in 2012, Obama's Justice Department secretly subpoenaed and seized phone records from more than 100 Associated Press reporters, potentially in violation of the department's own policies. Thanks to the rampant overclassification of government documents, Obama's pursuit of whistleblowers meant that even relatively mundane disclosures could have serious, even criminal, consequences for the leaker. Under Obama, McClatchy noted in 2013, "leaks to media are equated with espionage."
The Obama administration went after leakers with zeal. One can only assume Trump will up the ante.
One can only assume Trump will up the ante. His administration's calls to find and prosecute leakers grow more strident by the day. He and his surrogates in Congress have repeatedly tried to divert public discussion away from White House-Russia connections and in the direction of the leaks that brought those connections to light. It stands to reason that Trump's Justice Department will try to obtain the sources, notes, and communication records of journalists on the receiving end of the leaks.
This could already be happening without our knowledge, and that would be a dangerous thing. Under current guidelines, the Justice Department is generally barred from deploying secret subpoenas for journalists' recordssubpoenas whose existence is not revealed to those whose records are sought. But there are exceptions: The attorney general or another "senior official" may approve no-notice subpoenas when alerting the subject would "pose a clear and substantial threat to the integrity of the investigation."
The guidelines are not legally binding, in any case, so there may be little to prevent Jeff Sessions' Justice Department from ignoring them or scrapping them entirely. Team Trump has already jettisoned the policies of its predecessors in other departments, and it's pretty clear how Trump feels about the press.
The use of secret subpoenas against journalists is deeply problematic in a democracy. Their targets lack the knowledge to consult with a lawyer or to contest the subpoena in court. The public, also in the dark, is unable to pressure government officials to prevent them from subjecting reporters to what could be abusive fishing expeditions.
As president, Trump sets the tone for executives, lawmakers, and prosecutors at all levels. We have already seen a "Trump effect" in the abusive treatment of a reporter in the halls of the Federal Communications Commission, the arrest of the reporter in West Virginia, and the attack by Congressman-elect Gianforte.
We are also seeing the Trump effect in state legislatures, where the president's rants may have contributed to a spate of legislative proposals deeply hostile to free speech, including bills that would essentially authorize police brutality or "unintentional" civilian violence against protesters and make some forms of lawful protest a felony. A leader who normalizes the use of overly broad or abusive subpoenas against journalists could cause damage all across the land.
A second area of concern is the Espionage Act of 1917, a law that has been used for nearly a century to prosecute leakers of classified informationfrom Daniel Ellsburg and Julius and Ethel Rosenberg to Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning. The government hasn't ever tried to use it to prosecute the journalists or media organizations that publish the offending leakspossibly because it was seen as a bad move in a nation that enshrines press protections in its founding document. But free-speech advocates have long been wary of the possibility.
The successful prosecution of a journalist under the Espionage Act seems unlikelya long string of Supreme Court decisions supports the notion that reporters and news outlets are immune from civil or criminal liability when they publish information of legitimate public interest that was obtained unlawfully by an outside source. "A stranger's illegal conduct," the court's majority opined in the 2001 Bartnicki v. Vopper case, "does not suffice to remove the First Amendment shield about a matter of public concern." But like any appellate decision, the Bartnicki ruling is based on a specific set of facts. So there are no guarantees here.
Very, very rich people with grievances against the press are as old as the press itself. But the number of megawealthy Americans has exploded in recent years, as has the number of small, nonprofit, or independent media outletsmany of which lack ready access to legal counsel. In short, billionaires who wish to exact vengeance for unflattering coverage enjoy a target-rich environment.
Win or lose, a billionaire with an ax to grind and a fleet of expensive lawyers can cause enormous damage to a media outlet.
Trump did not create this environment. But from his presidential bully pulpit, he has pushed a narrative that can only fuel the fire. The Trumpian worldview holds that the media deserves to be put in its place; the press is venal, dishonest, and "fake" most of the time. It should be more subject to legal liability so that, in his words, "we can sue them and win lots of money."
Win or lose, a billionaire with an ax to grind and a fleet of expensive lawyers can cause enormous damage to a media outlet, particularly one with limited means (which, these days, is most media outlets). Some lawsuits by deep-pocketed plaintiffs, like the one filed against Mother Jones by Idaho billionaire Frank VanderSloot (a case I helped defend), are ultimately dismissed by the courts. Others, such as Hulk Hogan's lawsuit against Gawker Mediafunded by Silicon Valley billionaire and Trump adviser Peter Thielsucceed and put the media outlet out of business. Another recent suit, filed by Las Vegas casino magnate Sheldon Adelson against a Wall Street Journal reporter, ultimately settled.
Regardless of the outcome of such cases, the message to the media is clear: Don't offend people who have vast resources. Even a frivolous lawsuit can stifle free speech by hitting publishers where it hurts (the wallet) and subjecting them to legal harassment. This is especially so in the 22 states that lack anti-SLAPP statuteslaws that facilitate the rapid dismissal of libel claims without merit.
The VanderSloot lawsuit is instructive. Although a court in Idaho ultimately threw out all the billionaire's claims against Mother Jones, the process took almost two years. During that time, VanderSloot and Mother Jones engaged in a grueling regimen of coast-to-coast depositions and extensive and costly discovery and legal motions. Along the way, VanderSloot sued a former small-town newspaper reporter and subjected him to 10 hours of depositions, which resulted in the reporter breaking down in tears while VanderSloot, who had flown to Portland for the occasion, looked on. VanderSloot also deposed the journalist's ex-boyfriend and threatened to sue him until he agreed to recant statements he had made online.
Trump has not brought any libel lawsuits as presidentbut his wife has.
Victory did not come cheap for Mother Jones: The final tab was about $2.5 million, only part of which was covered by insurance. And because Idaho lacks an anti-SLAPP statute, none of the magazine's legal costs could be recovered from VanderSloot.
Despite his threats, Trump has not brought any libel lawsuits as presidentbut his wife has. First lady Melania Trump sued the Daily Mail in February over a story she said portrayed her falsely "as a prostitute." The Daily Mail retracted the offending article with a statement explaining (a) that the paper did not "intend to state or suggest that Mrs. Trump ever worked as an 'escort' or in the sex business," (b) that the article "stated that there was no support for the allegations," and (c) that "the point of the article was that these allegations could impact the U.S. presidential election even if they are untrue."
So which billionaire will be next to sue, and who will the target be? The question looms over America's media organizations like a dark cloud. That is an unacceptable situation in a nation whose Constitution guarantees "robust, uninhibited and wide-open" discussion of public issues, as Supreme Court Justice William Brennan wrote in the landmark First Amendment case New York Times v. Sullivan.
Trump has yet to act on his most outrageous rhetorical attacks on the media and free speech, but it's likely only a matter of time. When he does act, it will be important to remember that constitutional protections are quite broad, and that there's only so much any White House can do to the press without the backing of Congress or the courts. Such cooperation is hardly out of the question, though. Stranger things have already happened in this strangest of political times.
The author's views do not necessarily reflect those of the First Amendment Coalition's board of directors.
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Quiz: Is hate speech free speech? – CNN
Posted: at 12:14 pm
(CNN)Let's get one thing out of the way: Hateful, nasty, vitriolic speech, even when it's bigoted or homophobic, is often protected.
But for the most part, telling people to go back to their country or that their race is inferior or that they're less human because they are gay, Latino, female, whatever -- that's legal, not that it should be encouraged in civil society.
Whether it should be legal is another question, and while we won't wander too far down that path, it's important to remember the US Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that it's the most offensive idea -- and not the notion with which everyone generally agrees -- that deserves protection.
In the words of Justice William Brennan in 1989: "A principal function of free speech under our system of government is to invite dispute. It may indeed best serve its high purpose when it induces a condition of unrest, creates dissatisfaction with conditions as they are, or even stirs people to anger."
Added Chief Justice John Roberts 22 years later: "Speech is powerful. It can stir people to action, move them to tears of both joy and sorrow, and ... inflict great pain. On the facts before us, we cannot react to that pain by punishing the speaker. As a Nation we have chosen a different course -- to protect even hurtful speech on public issues to ensure that we do not stifle public debate."
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Speaking freely: College free speech bill heads to governor – The Daily Advertiser
Posted: at 12:14 pm
Matt Houston, Manship School News Service Published 8:48 p.m. CT June 2, 2017 | Updated 14 hours ago
The Young Americans for Liberty chapter at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette invited students to write anything on a 9-foot beach ball called a on campus. Chapter founder and president Joe Shamp explains. Young Americans for Liberty UL Lafayette Chapter
Lance Harris, R-Alexandria, explains his bill that would protect free speech on college campuses.(Photo: Sarah Gamard/Manship School News Service)
BATON ROUGE The Senate passed a bill, 30-2, Friday that is intended to ensure college students can choose to hear all speech, especially speech considered unwelcome.
The House Bill 269, authored by Lance Harris, R-Alexandria, requires state institutes of higher education to state their support for the First Amendment and create a system of disciplinary sanctions for students who interfere with speakers' campus speech.
MORE:Students say college policies violate their right to free speech|College free speech bill falters
Additionally, a special subcommittee of the Board of Regents will be appointed to report the status of freedom of speech on Louisiana campuses annually to the Legislature. The schools would have had to inform students of their policies during freshman orientation.
Freedom of speech seems to be increasingly imperiled, Harris said during the bills House introduction.
Some legislators, including Reps. Rob Shadoin, R-Ruston, and Sam Jones, D-Franklin, expressed concern during the House debate that the legislation isnt necessary.
Whats wrong with the First Amendment? Jones asked.
Shadoin made reference to an event at University of California-Berkeley, in which conservative commentator Ann Coulter canceled a speaking event due to threats of violence from students. Shadoin said hes unware of similar events in Louisiana.
Louisiana hasnt had any problems with this, so if thats the case, do we really need any enforcement that allows the universities to do what theyre already allowed to do?
Similar questions did not come up during the Senate debate. The bill now goes to the governor for a signature.
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Sean Hannity will defend freedom of speech, but doesn’t like The … – Salon
Posted: at 12:14 pm
Fox News host Sean Hannity said Thursday that he was going to deliver one of the most important opening monologues hes ever given in support of free speech. That was just a few hours after he erupted over The Onion writing a story about him.
On Hannity Thursday night, the right-wing commentator addressed Kathy Griffinspicture of President Trumps severed head, saying that he didnt condone the comedians actions, butnever thought she should be fired over it.
Its a pretty consistent position Hannity has had, and he reminded viewers that he didnt agree with comedian Stephen Colbert, but didnt want to promote the #FireColbert movement either. Hannityalso played clips of himself defending Bill Maher for inappropriate comments hes made over the years, once again reminding everyone that though he may not agree with whats being said, he would never take away their right to say it.
But afterasking viewers why the left wasnt supporting his right to free speech when he clearly was supporting theirs, he brought up something that bothered him from earlier in the day: an article, published two weeks earlier, that featured a photoshopped picture of a bunch of minature Sean Hannitys emerging from the desiccated corpse of Roger Ailes.
The article, by the way, was written by The Onion.
The end of Hannitys monologue attacked the satirical websitefor posting such an image.
What is wrong with the left that they think these sorts of things are funny? he tweeted Thursday night.
Twitter, of course, couldnt help but point out the glaring irony between Hannitys monologue and the tweets that surfaced later.
There were some who were sympathetic to Hannitys remarks, but for the most part, Twitter users pointed out that his tweets and complaints didnt make him an advocate for free speech, instead they just made him a snowflake.
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Free Speech Is For All, Not Just For People You Like – The Libertarian Republic
Posted: at 12:14 pm
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In the past several months we have seen a debate on free speech that has had been festering for several years. With speech codes and free speech zones prevalent at colleges across the United States, the 1st Amendment right to freedom of speech has been restricted. We have seen this debate on my own campus, with the Free Speech Wall and the invitation of Milo Yiannopoulos by the Cal Poly College Republicans. The Free Speech Wall was subjected to vandalism, being taken down several times, while various groups on campus tried to get Milos event cancelled. And when those attempts failed, they showed up in black masks and waving anarcho-communist flags pretending theyre making a difference.
Conservatives were the original anti-free speech defenders. Joe McCarthy and his witch hunt against communism in our government (who was defeated in part by Dwight E. Eisenhower.) Or the FBIs constant monitoring and assault on communist and progressive groups in the Red Scare. Ronald Reagan was elected partly on the base of dealing with the Berkeley problem where the original Free Speech Movement began in response to restrictions on academic freedom and political activities. They still are in a way; just as Reince Priebus and Donald Trump about libel laws and the 1st Amendment. Or banning books they dont like because it has LGBT characters.
However, even with all this, conservatives and other speakers now find themselves under assault both in their freedom of speech and sometimes physically. Like Ann Coulters speech was cancelled at UC Berkeley or Charles Murrays speech at Middlebury College, the author of the Bell Curve, which was rocked by violent protests where a progressive professor who had attended the speech was assaulted and injured. Richard Spencer basically got the U.S District Court to force Auburn to host his speech because they tried to cancel it and it was rocked by violent protests.
Do these speakers sometimes hold views that most people would fine horrible? Yes. Especially Richard Spencer who has somehow gained prominence because the media keeps talking about him. But attacking him, by throwing punches and committing violence against his supporters and others you dont like, youre not helping your cause.
We live in the United States, a country built on the freedom that you should be able to speak without the government silencing you and that you have a right to hold views that are morally wrong and repugnant. John Stuart Mill in On Liberty defended speech because if you silence an opinion, you are essentially elevating it. He wrote,If any opinion is compelled to silence, that opinion may, for aught we can certainly know, be true. To deny this is to assume our own infallibility.
Free speech should be defended to the utmost. College is about learning and refining our ideals and beliefs. I myself, have gone through this transition, with spirited debates and exchanging of ideas. And yes, protesters have used their freedom of speech as well, by voicing their opposition or support. The groups who protest outside of Milo events without violence are good. The ones who have beaten up his supporters, pepper sprayed them, and caused property damage are not.
And by using violence or government force against your opponents is sending a message of intolerance and that you are afraid. It is the tactic used by fascists in the early 1930s when they used violence against screenings of All Quiet on the Western Front and then banning it when they came into power. Or how modern and historic communist regimes suppress speech despite the father of modern communism, Karl Marx, defending it .
Free speech is for all people, not just the ones you like. Its for people like Richard Spencer and Linda Sarsour. For people like you and me. Defend it for all.
AntifaCommunismDonald Trumpfree speechmiloRichard Spencer
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Could Atheism Survive the Discovery of Extraterrestrial Life? – Discovery Institute
Posted: at 12:12 pm
Recently, NASA granted amillion dollars to the Center of Theological Inquiry to study the theological, humanitarian, and social implications in the event that extraterrestrial life isever discovered. It was another reminder of related discussions, over the years, of whether religion could survive the discovery of life on other planets.
I think, though, that the concern is misdirected. The real question is whether atheism could survive.
There are at least two points to consider here. First, God is the Artist of Hidden Beauty. Second, getting mind-staggeringly lucky twice would strongly suggest that something is going on here.
The Artist of Hidden Beauty
In the early 1980s I spent many a fascinatinghour down on my hands and knees in the forest undergrowth, engaged in macrophotography of all sorts of wonderful, tiny things. It occurred to me, about 35 years ago as I was polishing my 65 Ford Custom that God wasnt like us when it came to making things look nice. Ford Motor Corp. only made the sheet metal look nice on the outside where people would see it, but nature was filled with beauty that no one would ever see.
At that moment, the question popped into my head, What about all those possible planets throughout the universe? Amazing plant and animal life on other planets would be exactly what I would expect to see from the One who creates beauty simply for the sake of beauty, even if no human will ever enjoy it. Consideration of alien beings with eternal souls does raise some deeper issues, however space here prevents me from an adequate discussion of this possibility. Suffice it to say that, from my own Christian perspective, plant and animal life on other planets would not be in the least surprising, God being the Artist that He is.
Mind-Staggeringly LuckyTwice?
A friend of mine worked for the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation and occasionally entertained me with stories of how they would identify and solve cases of lottery fraud. In each case, the tip-off would be something unusually improbable, such as an unusual number ofwins from the same store.
When it comes to the idea that life spontaneously self-assembled itself in the past, thousands of our brightest minds have worked on the problem for over half a century with no prospect of success in the foreseeable future. In fact, the more we learn, the more we realize how difficult the problem is.1 The challenge is three-fold. First, we have to figure out how intelligent scientists can create a simple life form from scratch in the lab. Second, having done it ourselves, we have to see if realistic natural processes can do the same thing. The third problem is vastly more difficult: figure out how the information to build life forms gets encoded in these self-replicating molecules without an intelligent programmer. We are still working on the first problem, with no hint of success on the horizon. That might be significant, right there.
A 2011 article in Scientific American, Pssst! Dont tell the creationists, but scientists dont have a clue how life began, summarized our lack of progress in the lab.2 Of course, there are plenty of scenarios, but creative story-telling should not be confused with doing science, or making scientific discoveries. With regard to thousands of papers published each year in the field of evolution, as Austin Hughes wrote, This vast outpouring of pseudo-Darwinian hype has been genuinely harmful to the credibility of evolutionary biology as a science.3
Evolutionary biologist Eugene Koonin, meanwhile, calculates the probability of a simple replication-translation system, just one key component, to beless than1 chance in 10^1,018 making it unlikely that life will ever spontaneously self-assemble anywhere in the universe.4 His proposed solution is a near-infinite number of universes, something we might call a multiverse of the gaps. My own work, using data from the Protein Family Database, produces results consistent with Koonins estimate.5 Indeed, we would need a vast number of universes all working on the problem to get lucky enough to see life spontaneously assemble itselfin just one of them.
Heres the Point:
The probability of life spontaneously self-assembling anywhere in this universe is mind-staggeringly unlikely; essentially zero. If you are so unquestioningly nave as to believe we just got incredibly lucky, then bless your soul.
If we were to discover extraterrestrial life, however, then we would have had to get mind-staggeringly lucky two times! Like the forensic detectives at the lotteries commission, a thinking person would have to start operating on the well-founded suspicion that something is going on.
On the other hand, the existence of life and beauty elsewhere in the universe is not at all surprising under the hypothesis of a Creator who is the Artist of Hidden Beauty. Indeed, logic dictates the existence of a supernatural creator, as I have shown here,6 and our observations of the universe indicate it was specifically designed to support life.
Conclusion:
The discovery of extraterrestrial life would be the death knell for atheism, at least for the thinking atheist. On the other hand, such a discovery should not be in the least surprising, if there is a supernatural Creator who has designed the universe to support life, and has brought about life and beauty throughout the universe, even if no human ever gets to see it.
References:
(1) The RNA world hypothesis: The worst theory of the early evolution of life (except for all the others),Biology Direct, 2012.
(2) Pssst! Dont tell the creationists, but scientists dont have a clue how life began,Scientific American, 2011.
(3) The origin of adaptive phenotypes,PNAS, 2008.
(4)The Logic of Chance: The Nature and Origin of Biological Evolution, Eugene V. Koonin, 2011.
(5) Computing the Best Case Probability of Proteins from actual data, and the falsification of an Essential Prediction of Darwinian Theory, Kirk Durston, Contemplations.
(6) A simple but elegant argument for the existence of God, Kirk Durston,Contemplations.
Photo credit: Kirk Durston.
Cross-posted at Contemplations.
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Could Atheism Survive the Discovery of Extraterrestrial Life? - Discovery Institute
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When an atheist past didn’t deter DMK from cleaning temple ponds – Times of India (blog)
Posted: at 12:12 pm
There were more questions than claps when the DMK in April end announced that the party will desilt water bodies on temple premises. With atheism being a core value of prominent DMK leaders, it came as a surprise when the party chose temples as its place of public service. Barbs came flying from rival political parties including the AIADMK and the BJP. Their target was DMKs working president M K Stalin, who has been criticising the Centre and the state government for neglecting the state. DMK is desilting temple tanks as God has made them to do that work. The party is seeking pava vimochanam (salvation for their sin), said BJP state president Tamilisai Soundararajan a few days ago.
DMK leaders, however, say the party has never propagated atheism and has believers in its fold. Even though many leaders and cadres of the party have followed in the footsteps of Dravidar Kazhagam founder Periyar, they say, their beliefs have never kept them from executing their duties. Many of us are followers of Periyar and thus dont believe in God. But that does not stop us from cleaning temple tanks. It is the governments responsibility to desilt the tanks and as it has failed to execute its duties, as the opposition it is our responsibility to carry out the work, says DMK spokesman and Rajya Sabha member T K S Elangovan.
The party has several believers, both cadres and leaders, who wear sacred ash and kumkum.
Elangovan clarifies that it is not the first time that the party has taken decisions related to temples. The DMK introduced ISO certificate for several temples when it was in power (2009). We also repaired the Tiruvarur temple car (Aazhi ther), the biggest in Tamil Nadu, says Elangovan.
Since April, all 89 MLAs and district secretaries of the party have been involved in desilting temple tanks. Nearly 100 water bodies have been desilted so far. Stalin led the way by inaugurating the desilting of a pond in Kolathur.
Activists have lauded the efforts of the party. DMKs initiative has not come as a surprise as the party did not propagate atheism neither in the past nor now. Several leaders were followers of Periyar but that did not prevent them from having a separate minister for Hindu Religious & Charitable Endowments department, says political analyst Badri Seshadri.
If someone has to oppose DMKs present initiative, it has to be the AIADMK government. But they are silent. Its good that the work is being done so that people living around the tank will be benefited when it rains, he adds.
DISCLAIMER : Views expressed above are the author's own.
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When an atheist past didn't deter DMK from cleaning temple ponds - Times of India (blog)
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Jackal – Summer In Your Arms – EDM Sauce
Posted: at 12:12 pm
Following up on the release of his lead single Feel Itin early April, Jackal returns with a summer smash hit entitled Summer In Your Arms, the second single from his forthcoming Endorphins EP.
Born as Mikey Pennington, is no stranger to the spotlight. From chart-topping releases to touring and performing at numerous nightclubs in the world, there isnt much that he hasnt accomplished already. An artist with roots in hip-hop and trap, Pennington's recent string of releases show a maturation and transformation that is representative of an artist undergoing a conscious evolution in style. Summer In Your Armsis more on the melodic side of the spectrum, focusing more on emotion.
Endorphins isn't just a collection of songs. It's my first-ever real cohesive project, he says in regards to his EP.
He set out with a goal to produce a mini-album that tells a story, and his newest single is the latest step in the tackling yet another landmark in his impressively developing journey as an artist. To celebrate his EP release, Jackal is also announcing a trio of EP release parties in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and last but not least, New York City. For tickets + more info, click HERE.
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Meagen Surowiecki, also known as Tookie as my close friends call me. I am 27 years old and a recent graduate from Lynn University in Boca Raton, FL. I have a passion for the music industry, I love EDM, I came to the realization that I have always loved "EDM" it just wasn't called EDM when I was a teenager. My range of EDM artists range from Adam Beyer, Nicole Moudaber, Chris Liebing, Carl Cox, Saeed Younan, Green Velvet, Claude VonStroke, Justin Martin, Pretty Lights, Oliver Heldens, Tommy Trash, Arty, Diplo, Tritonal, Vicetone, Tchami, Danny Howard, Sam Feldt, Kill the Noise, Bassnectar, Fedde Le Grand, Fatboy Slim, Daft Punk, Above and Beyond, Dash Berlin, Sander Van Doorn, Simon Patterson, Bryan Kearney, Deorro, Showtek, Firebeatz, Dada Life, Eric Prydz/ Pryda/ Cirez D, Audien, Markus Schulz, Ferry Corsten, Tiesto, Avicii, and so much more.
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Jackal - Summer In Your Arms - EDM Sauce
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