This morning I intended to get an early start, including heading over to Sears to get a new car battery installed. (Ah, auto malfunction woes. Joy!) But Sean unintentionally waylaid me by turning on a DVD his dad had sent him, a conspiracy theory-themed documentary called Zeitgeist. I immediately got sucked into the doc and lost an hour and 45 minutes.
This particular documentary is not content to focus on one conspiracy theory -- no, it's chock-full of accusations. Part one deals with "astrotheology," the notion that many religions, including Christianity, are based on astrology. Part two is full of 9/11 conspiracy theories. Part three is about the cabal(s) controlling world finance. JFK's assassination is mentioned in passing, too. The conclusion sort of attempts to tie these ideas together, although it does an especially poor job linking part one to anything. It's not a new documentary; I guess it's been floating around the internets since 2007, and if you poke around online, you'll find people both passionately for and passionately against Zeitgeist. While I found it fascinating, I thought it was a little short on citing sources. It also had really cheap, lousy production values. It probably says something (although I'm not sure what) that Sean's dad mailed it to him along with a copy of the book MAD about the Seventies.
Conspiracy theories drive me crazy. Not crazy as in I get angry when I hear about them, but crazy in that they send my mind racing. They truly make me feel nuts: what am I to believe, that life is more or less what it appears to be, or that power- and/or money-mad individuals or secret organizations are controlling the destinies of everyone on the planet? The problem with a well-argued conspiracy theory is that it can make me accept the most outlandish stuff. Suddenly, I'll start to believe that the Federal Reserve is some creepy, shadowy organization that can cause depressions and world wars on a whim, or that the American military is reverse engineering captured alien technology to develop new weapons and flight vehicles. I mean, I don't devote my life to trying to spread the word about these conspiracies, but when I hear a reasoned, thoughtful, and supposedly well-documented argument in favor of such things, I can't help thinking, "Yeah, it could happen."
I do believe, truly, that there was a conspiracy to assassinate John F. Kennedy. I have no idea who did it or how it was carried out, but after reading and hearing about the many, many plots people have come up with over the years, it seems far more unreasonable to me to argue that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone than to acknowledge that two or more people must have planned and carried out the execution. After I saw the movie JFK, I read both Jim Garrison's account of the case Oliver Stone presents in the movie and the book Crossfire by Jim Marrs. Actually, I only read about half of Crossfire, which could be subtitled The Big Book of JFK Conspiracy Theories, because I was completely overwhelmed: every chapter presented another take on what may have happened, and after every chapter I found myself thinking that yes, yes, this is what really occurred! It was exhausting. Add to it The Men Who Killed Kennedy, a fascinating British documentary first released 25 years after the assassination, and the notion that Oswald was the only guy involved starts to seem ludicrous. Sorry, Vincent Bugliosi, but your fat book refuting everything I've just said ain't gonna change my mind.
On the other hand, I do not believe that the moon landing was faked. That really happened, although the moon itself may be an alien satellite! So there.
Sunday, May 31, 2009
Friday, May 29, 2009
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Specious argument of the week
"Are gay people forbidden from marrying members of the opposite sex in NY? Let's be careful when saying rights are unqeual. Just because gay people would generally not have an interest in marrying someone of the opposite sex does not mean their rights are infringed. Straight people are just as restricted from marrying someone of the same sex. This isn't a straight people are allowed to do something gay people aren't issue. It is a no one, gay or straight, can marry someone of the same sex issue. Let's be careful when saying someones rights are being limited."
from a comment to "The Ad That Will Halt Gay Marriage In Its Tracks"
Uh, no. Gonna have to disagree with you there.
from a comment to "The Ad That Will Halt Gay Marriage In Its Tracks"
Uh, no. Gonna have to disagree with you there.
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Over the rainbow
Hey, give the Munsell Hue Test a try! The idea is to drag and drop the colored blocks to form a spectrum, and you want to get as low a score as possible -- zero is perfect. I scored a 4; the highest score for my age and gender was 1520.I credit my success to looking at lots of clothing catalogs -- I have no trouble distinguishing between brick and oxblood.
Friday, May 22, 2009
Quote of the week

"The River Cottage Meat Book by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall. It had the word MEAT embossed on the cover in large letters and lots of pictures of meat inside. I have been known to cuddle it as I fall asleep." ~ Simon Majumdar
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Donuts and dinos and pie -- oh, my!
Longtime readers of this blog might recall that Norman and I visited the Wheel Inn a couple of months before the Donner Pass trip. Lucy, however, had never been there, and she was delighted by the notion of a dinosaur/"intelligent design" mashup at Cabazon Dinosaurs. So our day-long outing was set for this past Sunday: pie and dinos. My mother-in-law Heidi lives in Banning, which is very close to Cabazon, and she invited us to drop in and pay her a visit, too. Heidi also suggested, upon hearing of our aborted donut run, that we stop in Glendora at The Donut Man. I told Lucy about The Donut Man, but we decided to surprise Norman with our visit. His sharp intake of breath as he espied the shop's sign told us we had done the right thing.
As we drove on down the 210, we had a spirited discussion about donuts and cupcakes and whatnot, and I suggested trying to establish a hierarchy of pastries. Norman and Lucy seemed to have completely different ideas than I about the ranking of various baked goods, though, so I concluded that a spectrum of sugary goodness was probably the way to go and let the matter drop.
Heidi gave Lucy and Norman the nickel tour. Lucy said she liked the idea of moving into a retirement community like Heidi's because the idea of no kids running around is very appealing. Heidi seems to really like her house, which is a great little place just big enough for one person, but she described Banning as an "armpit" full of "old fogeys and meth addicts." Guess she won't be running for town council anytime soon.
I could continue with an account of the creep in the men's room at the Wheel Inn, but I think Lucy should tell that story.
Monday, May 11, 2009
Feeling low low low? Cheer up up up!
I'm feeling rather blue today. If you're in the same sort of funk, perhaps this video will brighten your mood. I know it has made me feel a little better.
Thursday, May 07, 2009
Do I really need ANOTHER hobby?
Not only do I not have time for a new hobby, I really don't have the room to display the finished products. But these Moebius Monster Scene Kits just look so fun! I especially like the hanging cage -- it brings back memories of merry olde England. I could lock my Matthew Broderick action figure in it!
Disturbing image of the week
Holy crap. This is the photo on the cover of the latest issue of GQ magazine. Who approved this? I mean, seriously. I have to question the taste, not to mention the judgment, of both Zac Efron's management team and the editorial staff of Gentleman's Quarterly. The poor kid looks like a 1970s British chat show host, only with better teeth. And didn't anybody notice that his head is about twice the size it should be? *shudder* I know two Zac Efron fans -- one a 9-year-old girl, the other a 38-year-old man -- and I can't imagine either one of them adding this pic to their scrapbooks.
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