Time for a PBS poll to go horribly wrong.
Bonus link! – “The Wright Stuff”. (h/t Joe B.)
True Story
A few years ago, I dropped in to my bank manager and asked her about throwing a few bucks a month into mutual funds. After going through all the various packages, she came to the last and explained, “This option is a little higher risk, but has been offering the highest returns.”
I looked at her over the desk and said, “If I was interested in ‘high risk, high return’ I’d be selling crack.”
Some useful context.
Open thread on today’s market meltdowns.
Not Waiting For The Asteroid
Do you think the economy will be better in 2009 than it was in 2007? Me neither.
So, how could the Newspaper Association of America predict that total advertising sales for the industry will drop by “only” 5.5% next year when they fell by 7.9% in 2007?”
The Financial Crisis Explained
Unfortunately, there’s more truth to this than many experts would care to admit.
The Silver Lining
It’s “every country for itself”;
The massive liquidity crisis in the banking system has already nudged the Irish Republic and Greece into unilateral – and probably illegal under EU law – action to guarantee the deposits in national banks. Faced with a choice between the possible collapse of their banking systems and violating EU competition rules, the two countries opted for what they saw as the lesser evil. Now Germany, which at the weekend rejected French plans for an EU lifeboat fund, has taken the decisive protective step, and it is said to be plain that other European states will have to follow suit.
h/t Maz2
“The episode of schadenfreude over America’s “cowboy capitalism” problems was very short-lived, wasn’t it?” Indeed.
Is There Nothing That Dear Leader Can’t Do?
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More – Welcome to Camp Obama.
You can check in any time you like.
The Incredible Gaffes of Sarah Biden
Say it ain’t so Joe:
In what has now become a disturbing pattern, the Alaska governor seems either unable or unwilling to avoid embarrassing statements that are often as untrue as they are outrageous. Recently, for example, in an exclusive interview with news anchor Katie Couric, Palin gushed, “When the stock market crashed, Franklin D. Roosevelt got on the television and didn’t just talk about the, you know, princes of greed. He said, ‘Look, here’s what happened.’ ” Apparently the former Alaskan beauty queen failed to realize that in 1929 there was neither widespread television nor was Franklin Roosevelt even President.
Reader Tips
Good evening ladies and gentlemen, welcome to SDA Late Nite Radio. Tonight, for your delectation and pursuant to our Sunday night classical music show, here are the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra performing Ludwig van Beethoven‘s Symphony No. 1 in C Major, Op. 21, Herbert von Karajan conducting (23:16)
| Today’s ΣVe/n: 7.43 » 6.74 (3.0 seat Majority) | ||||
| Angus: 9.75 |
EKOS: 7.2 |
Decima: 7.41 » 5.8 |
Ipsos: 8.4 |
Nanos: 4.41 » 2.56 |
Your Reader Tips are, as always, welcome in the comments.
The Stephane Dion Election Sign Generator
It’s back!
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The Stephane Dion Election Sign Generator
Note: you’ll need to save the image generated to your own computer, and host it yourself if you want to display it.
Logic R Us
The idea that Christianity and politics are a dangerous mix now passes for common wisdom. When a Liberal hack waved a stuff dinosaur during Stockwell Day’s campaign a few years ago, everyone knew what he was getting at: Day, a Christian, was superstitious and not rational. That idea still has legs, especially in the big city. Last night on SNL Tina Fey’s Sarah Palin said “We don’t know if this climate change hoozie-whatzit is man-made, or if it’s just a natural part of the end of days.” The audience — surely smart, witty urbane paragons of virtue and rationality compared to Palin’s upright, small-town Christian — hooted and applauded with a positive fervor of self-regard. They understood: Palin goes to church, so her beliefs are irrational.
As a lifelong non-churchgoer, I’ve never been able put my finger on why, exactly, such urbane, asserted superiority over Christians seems so mistaken, or why I get the unshakable feeling that such attitudes portend a rumbling, unpleasant cultural consequence-to-come. It might have something to do with the way noisier atheists believe they are rational because they are not Christian. Or it might be because their assumption that their views are the end product of rational examination flies so aggressively in the face of what is often so obvious, that their beliefs in many cases have been assembled piecemeal from a series of worldly, time-bound political fads.
Atheists believe they are free from the shackles of superstition, but are their beliefs actually more rational than those of Christians? Why, funny you should ask:
“(A) comprehensive new study released by Baylor University…shows that traditional Christian religion greatly decreases belief in everything from the efficacy of palm readers to the usefulness of astrology. It also shows that the irreligious and the members of more liberal Protestant denominations, far from being resistant to superstition, tend to be much more likely to believe in the paranormal and in pseudoscience than evangelical Christians.
Well yes, you might say, but “pseudoscience” could mean anythi…
The Gallup Organization…asked American adults a series of questions to gauge credulity. Do dreams foretell the future? Did ancient advanced civilizations such as Atlantis exist? Can places be haunted? Is it possible to communicate with the dead? Will creatures like Bigfoot and the Loch Ness Monster someday be discovered by science?
The answers were added up to create an index of belief in occult and the paranormal. While 31% of people who never worship expressed strong belief in these things, only 8% of people who attend a house of worship more than once a week did.
Okay, but maybe that’s because a lot of atheists are not educa…
Surprisingly, while increased church attendance and membership in a conservative denomination has a powerful negative effect on paranormal beliefs, higher education doesn’t. Two years ago two professors published another study in Skeptical Inquirer showing that, while less than one-quarter of college freshmen surveyed expressed a general belief in such superstitions as ghosts, psychic healing, haunted houses, demonic possession, clairvoyance and witches, the figure jumped to 31% of college seniors and 34% of graduate students.
If the idea that prominent individuals in public life might have superstitious beliefs is “scary,” then perhaps the statist/left has been barking up the wrong tree.
Caption Contest – We Have A Winner!

h/t to reader Ian for sending this along.
Honourable Mentions to:
“I will only Green Shaft you this much.” – Hans Rupprecht
“Try as he might Liberal Leader Stephane Dion can’t make the letter “L” to place firmly on forehead.” – BlueSweaterBrigade
And the winner, by popular vote –
“Teeth this long. She could be on the nickel.” – anort
Unfortunate Typo Of The Day Award
Goes to CNEWS: “Halton race turns nasty “

Palin Crowds In California

And without a pork chop tied around her neck.
Note: (in keeping with the decades old reputation of fairness and balance here at SDA) there were also Palin protesters.
Update – “But: thunder, hoots, an ovation.”
Ahmenidijad Street
Reader Tips
Good evening ladies and gentlemen, welcome to SDA Late Nite Radio. Tonight, for your delectation and pursuant to our Saturday night contemporary music show, here are Santana performing the cha-cha-chá Oye Como Va, from their album Abraxas (1970, 4:18, Oye Como Va, Tito Puente).
graph updated for the last week, with the addition
of the ΣVe/n mean value curve shown in black.
| Today’s ΣVe/n: 7.86 » 7.43 (11.6 Seat Majority) | ||||
| Angus: 11.6 » 9.75 |
EKOS: 7.20 |
Decima: 8.85 » 7.41 |
Ipsos: 8.40 |
Nanos: 3.25 » 4.41 |
Your Reader Tips are, as always, welcome in the comments.
He Shoots, Continued…
Get this man an air guitar!
How Do You Say “Suckers!” In Punjabi?
Canadian opposition leader Jack Layton has promised support for a new visa office in Mumbai and official status for the Punjabi language in Canada if he becomes prime minister after the Oct 14…
The Captain, On Radio
A note from Captain Capitalism – “I’m going to be on the radio if you guys are bored”.
Tentatively scheduled for between 4 – 5 pm Central.
Filter, Baby, Filter.
Call it one of the Great Unsolved Media Mysteries of our Time.
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I watched Tom Clark interviewed on Mike Duffy Live yesterday. I waited for him to round out his critique of the performers with a mention of the many stunning inaccuracies uttered by 35 year Senate veteran and head of the Foreign Relations Committee, Joe Biden. They never came.
Why was I waiting? Because, as a private, unaffiliated blogger in rural Saskatchewan, I receive alerts from McCain campaign. (Indeed, I receive more from their campaign than I do the Conservatives). I didn’t sign up for those – they found me.
Therefore, I can only assume the CTV Washington Bureau Chief would be among the thousands in media who received a copy of the rapid response that landed in my inbox in the hours after the debate; Joe Biden’s 14 Lies.
In addition, he’s being ripped far and wide for “hallucinations” like this;
IRAQ-AFGHANISTAN SPENDING: Biden said that the U.S. spends more in Iraq in one month than it has in Afghanistan in six or seven years.
That figure is off by 2000 percent.
Hell, even I noticed the nonsense about Hezbollah and the denial of his “rope line” statements on coal.
As CTV’s Washington Bureau Chief, with media status several orders of magnitude more important than mine, I find it inconceivable that Tom Clark was, over 12 hours later, apparently unaware of the factual errors and untruths uttered by Biden during the debate.
Thus, I can only assume that someone made a conscious decision not to share the information with viewers of CTV. That’s not editorial decision making, it’s filtering.
Just another brick in the growing wall between informed media consumers and the self-destructing profession we refer to as “mainstream” journalism.
They’re Not Anti-Recession
They’re on the other side.




