viernes, 10 de octubre de 2014

Again, here is an excerpt from an article within the Dallas Morning News:
Here’s a fact about Ebola that ought to be reassuring: About 99.999 percent of Americans who aren't health care workers or headed to West Africa need to do exactly two things today to avoid the illness: 1. Stay away from visibly ill strangers. 2. If someone you know is ill, has been to West Africa in the past month, and has not been to a doctor, stop wasting your time reading this and call 911.
Simple, yes? Maybe too simple, given the conspiracy theories that have sprouted since the Dallas discovery of the first Ebola case in America.
Okay, as our Founders once declared, it is our right, our duty to be watchful over tyranny.  This is why I treat every article written by the media as potentially poisonous.  In the above article, the writer speaks naively of conspiracy "theories."  Yet, a conspiracy theory is an experienced based argument which runs counter to, or in opposition to another experience based argument.  Those who function within government not create theories, but they establish political motivated truths.  Even further, the majority of lawyers who function within the government today aren't rational as they are law makers, law administrators, and law adjudicators.  While, on one hand, the processes of government has never been rational, on the other, it establishes the official reports as absolute conclusions.  The reason government functions in this way isn't because it knows better, but because it will beat you if you disagree with them.  In contrast, science is rational and, in being so, it reduces towards the best principled answers.  That best principled answer is going to be a theory, not an absolute conclusion.

Because this article has been deemed deceitful and subversive by me, I have chosen to spit out the rest of out leaving it unread.    

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