1/19/2011 2:25:38 PM
1/19/2011 2:30:04 PM
1/19/2011 2:31:23 PM
you guys still can't see how ridiculous you sound, please keep going because its amusing to me
1/19/2011 2:34:09 PM
Yep, verifying whether things are true before reporting them is totally ridiculous. My journalism friends told me so.
1/19/2011 2:36:18 PM
i'm talking about this situationdoing what you want is ridiculoussometimes i get tired being the smartest person in almost every thread
1/19/2011 2:37:55 PM
If you think CNN has lent any credibility to the miracle in the way they reported it, you're ridiculous.[Edited on January 19, 2011 at 2:55 PM. Reason : .]
1/19/2011 2:55:31 PM
1/19/2011 2:56:14 PM
I thought that I already had responded, but let me try again. In no way can CNN's story be construed as any kind of endorsement or even acceptance of the aforementioned miracle.
1/19/2011 3:00:49 PM
I don't get what the argument is in this thread...In any first world country, reporting on this "miracle" is only going to weaken religion in most peoples' eyes. Even a stupid person is going to hear this, and think "WTF??!?" and question religion ever so slightly more.[Edited on January 19, 2011 at 3:16 PM. Reason : a]
Honestly? How many people got bent out of shape that their horoscope changed? How many people bought those power bracelets? How many people are Catholic?I somehow doubt the reporting of the possibility that JP2 would be beautified due to a miracle is going to make any Catholics question their beliefs. Any Catholics in the thread like to chime in?My guess is they would prefer *more* stories about miracles and saints.
1/19/2011 3:05:49 PM
Perhaps.Maybe i'm too generous.
1/19/2011 3:17:03 PM
1/19/2011 3:50:44 PM
i have never once claimed there is no problem, it fact i have made statements that it is probably exceptionally easy to find examples of it. this, however, is not an example of it. there is absolutely nothing wrong with the way the CNN anchor conducted the interview.
1/19/2011 4:19:33 PM
This argument strikes me as remarkably ridiculous.
1/19/2011 4:38:00 PM
^^Unless the comparative discussion included claimed medical miracles, then I wouldn't think it be necessary to change a thing. I of course would prefer they not spend any time discussing religion outside of "that crazy thing we used to do" but I digress.Once again, this isn't about belief. It's about what is true and what isn't. Take the current anti-vax movement as an example. Andrew Wakefield is getting taken to task for lying about the connection between vaccinations and autism. Someone interviewing Wakefield would not be obligated to call him out on his bogus claims? I mean, there are still some people that believe his claims. Or is this different because it's .....not religious in nature? Or as Grumpy says, curing a disease with a freaking miracle from a dead guy isn't a big deal?^brilliant observation and addition to the thread as always.
1/19/2011 4:44:44 PM
1/19/2011 4:53:05 PM
1/19/2011 4:53:33 PM
I don't even understand how this argument is still going. Obviously, I understand the "anti-theist" side of the argument. Yes, religion is dumb. It can be hard to believe that it exists and so many people buy into it. It is destructive, we'd be better if it didn't exist and people were rational instead, and it would be better if people would question it, rather than just let people to believe whatever they believe without question.None of that was the point of the interview. The point was to figure out how, exactly, the whole transformation from regular person to saint played out. There has never been a legitimate miracle in the history of the universe, unless we define a miracle as "any event that someone couldn't explain." In an ideal world, a journalist/interviewer would have raised all the objections that you guys are raising in this thread. In reality, cable news is not actual news, it's just entertainment packaged for mass consumption, and unfortunately, the viewers (for the most part) have no intention of thinking about things critically, they want to have easily digestible sound bites and talking points fed to them.
1/19/2011 5:00:35 PM
^^^^why do only some things need to be discredited? the idea that some people are infallible manifestations of god has led to conflicts and deaths, shouldn't that be discredited by the anchor?
1/19/2011 5:02:11 PM
1/19/2011 5:14:05 PM
the reporter reported on what the supposed miracle was. the things you mention are important facts in a story about the miracle. in a story about the beautification process when it seems the church already believes in the miracle, they don't need to be brought up.
1/19/2011 5:17:21 PM
Funny because the story I got the quotes from WAS ABOUT THE BEATIFICATION PROCESS...^beautification? auto correct sucks sometimes doesn't it? [Edited on January 19, 2011 at 5:21 PM. Reason : asdfad]
1/19/2011 5:19:27 PM
its beautification on android
1/19/2011 5:23:38 PM
I take exception at the accusation that the only type of unscientific garbage I oppose is religion. In this thread alone I have called out anti-vax, the power bracelet, and astrology. Elsewhere on tww, you'll find me trashing 2012 doomsayers and unscientific claims regarding the rock quarry expansion, and those are just what's in my recent memory. We just happen to be in a thread regarding the treatment of religious claims in the media. I unilaterally oppose woo in all of its forms. I think Grumpy is so touchy about it because he regards himself as an intelligent, critically-thinking skeptic but is upset by the cognitive dissonance caused by not appling those skills to his faith as he does to every other claim he encounters.[Edited on January 19, 2011 at 6:47 PM. Reason : s]
1/19/2011 6:45:47 PM
1/19/2011 6:48:56 PM
1/19/2011 6:55:28 PM
1/19/2011 7:12:27 PM
A. You didn't give any specifics you simply stated it was a comparison between two beliefs. You failed to note specific events of ridiculous claims that were going unchallenged by the media. In other words your analogy SUCKED and was largely irrelevant. It could have been another example of religions exemption from critical media and it might not have been. You gave no information.However in response to your claim:
1/19/2011 8:08:27 PM
well now that i have clarified the analogy, what should CNN have done differently?
1/19/2011 8:10:08 PM
^ they should have segued to a segment debunking the existence of miracles, obviously. This would surely have convinced people.
1/19/2011 8:12:35 PM
1/19/2011 8:14:42 PM
what post of yours did i miss? its pretty tough to cut through the retard, so i may have missed something.
1/19/2011 8:21:19 PM
1/19/2011 8:28:53 PM
there is nothing wrong with including it, and in web media a more in-depth look is great, but in an interview its not needed if you are trying to move through things quickly. (its not needed in any media, but web media doesn't have the same length or time criteria that spoken and print media have)its really common sense. i believe in you. i'm confident that if you try you can figure it out.
1/19/2011 8:33:46 PM
So you are ok with the national catholic reporter lying and no correction being called for?BTW the article description of the "miracle" and allegations surrounding it is actually shorter btw so nice try but FAIL again. [Edited on January 19, 2011 at 8:39 PM. Reason : P.S.]
1/19/2011 8:36:04 PM
well, i mean, he didn't. he said what the supposed miracle is. that's what the supposed miracle is.
1/19/2011 8:39:21 PM
1/19/2011 8:45:34 PM
so now your argument is that the she saw a vision that told her to write which showed her she was cured instead of the writing causing the curing. and instead of calling that a mistake it is a lie. and you don't notice how that is different from before? is it because you noticed how ridiculous you were being?
1/19/2011 8:58:25 PM
According to one account she dreamed of pope NO WRITING.According to the other account she wrote on a prayer card no mention of dreaming.There is no statement of seeing a vision and being told to write it down in either account so now you are the one making shit up. According to one account there were significant allegations that she never had parkinsons disease.In the other account there was no mention of these allegations. (so surprising it was from the same guy who was talking about the prayer card bullshit...)Why am I having to explain these basic concepts to you?Oh and before you start repeating the same arguments. THEY WERE BOTH STORIES ABOUT THE BEATIFICATION OF THE POPE AND THE MORE COMPLETE ONE WAS ACTUALLY SHORTER...[Edited on January 19, 2011 at 9:12 PM. Reason : and just to clarify]
1/19/2011 9:10:43 PM
1/19/2011 9:13:28 PM
as an fyi:
1/19/2011 9:18:12 PM
1/19/2011 9:21:24 PM
triple post suspend.So now the story has several different versions. In other stories she was cured simply by praying to JP. A story that is apparently in constant flux should be questioned EVEN MORE. Goddamn why is this so hard for you. It is interesting that in MULTIPLE VERSIONS OF HER STORY THERE IS NO MENTION OF A PRAYER CARD OR WRITING ANYTHING.AAAANNNNNNDDDDDD Even in your triple post bonanza you still haven't addressed why the issue of her possibly never having parkinson's disease was never addressed. Why did CNN not feel the need to address this and the issue that the story has apparently undergone multiple changes??It was addressed in other accounts of the beatification of the pope and those accounts of the miracle were actually shorter...
1/19/2011 9:35:37 PM
she probably wrote on a prayer card[Edited on January 19, 2011 at 10:00 PM. Reason : they don't have many things to write on]
1/19/2011 10:00:09 PM
1/19/2011 10:16:21 PM
her account has her writing somethingis this really what your argument has dissolved to? arguing about what some nun said? lets get back on topicthe CNN Anchor was completely appropriate and did nothing wrong
1/19/2011 10:18:35 PM
1/20/2011 12:44:37 AM
Reporter: So, what is this about Hispanics supposedly being made of mud?Guest: Well, according to a statement from the Grand Wizard of Northwest Kansas, God made Hispanic people out of wet dirt, also known as mud.Reporter: Very interesting. Well, thanks for coming on! Now to other news...Ain't his job to weigh in on religious beliefs!Technically, he's just reporting facts!No one takes Grand Wizards seriously, except for Klansmen!He said "supposedly"!Perfectly fine reporting, in my opinion. Calm down already.[Edited on January 20, 2011 at 9:03 AM. Reason : ]
1/20/2011 8:57:52 AM
1/20/2011 9:00:03 AM