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Thog's Science Masterclass #16: Bachmann's Back!
Republican Minnesota Congressperson Michele Bachmann has a fairly fragile grasp on logic, so it's probably expecting her to have anything even that good when it comes to basic scientific principles such as cause-and-effect. Or maybe she lives in her very own little quantum universe . . .
Whatever, she's attempting now to politicize swine flu -- not the way in which the racists are, by blaming it on Mexican immigrants, but in her own unique fashion. The occurrence of epidemics of swine flu is, in the Bachmannian view, perhaps related to the political persuasion of the US President in office at the time.
Interviewed by the rightist Pajamas Media:
I find it interesting that it was back in the 1970s that the swine flu broke out then under another Democrat president Jimmy Carter. . . . And I'm not blaming this on President Obama, I just think it's an interesting coincidence.
You can watch the full video of the interview (18 excruciating twaddle-packed minutes) at Pajamas Media, or you can find the salient moments -- and relevant slice of transcript -- at Talking Points Memo.
The latter points out a historical factoid which it gleaned in turn from the Minneapolis/St. Paul City Pages: the swine flu outbreak of the 1970s occurred, to be more precise, in 1976 . . . when the US President was a Republican, Gerald Ford.
Oops.
They laughed at Galileo, they laughed at Einstein, they . . .
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"It's nothing but a treasonous propaganda arm"
Couldn't agree more.
I was pleased to note the other day that Fox News's very own sweetheart, Antonin Scalia, wrote the Supreme Court ruling that Fox TV should pay that completely bloody halfwitted fine to the FCC for Bono having said "fuck" on live television. You play with vipers like Scalia and sooner or later you get bit.
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