Bio

I'm a computer graphics artist and programmer.  I work in open source (which, trust me, is very much a free market system, despite the FSF).  I'm politically right-of-center; I can't stand identity politics, the blue social model, American union activists, and Obama; and I hate the GPL (don't ask).

I'm more a policy wonk than a political fighter.  I could never compare to the likes of the National Review, the Weekly Standard, or Rush Limbaugh--to say nothing of Andrew Breitbart, whose greatness is far beyond anything a mere mortal could hope to achieve.


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Joseph Eagar
Name:
Joseph Eagar
Hometown:
Sacramento, CA
Joined:
Oct 18, 2010

Recent Comments

Joseph Eagar

viruscop

Joseph Eagar

viruscop: I'm Jewish and I'm not offended in the least. When I went to a private Jewish school from K-12, the entire student body and faculty frequently made jokes about the power of Jewish influence. In fact, we enjoy the stereotype. It is even put forward in the Jewish textbooks that I had to read in high school.

I do not understand this phenomenon of conservatives getting offended for Jews. · 7 hours ago

Edited 7 hours ago

There a difference between praising positive Jewish influence in the culture, and attributingpart of that culture as 85% the consequence of Jewish cultural leaders. · 27 minutes ago

Are you saying that you would have liked the speech if Biden had not put a number on the influence of Jewish culture, but had instead just called that influence "disproportionate?" · 2 hours ago

It would have given less fodder to Anti-Semites, that's for sure.

Joseph Eagar

Group Captain Mandrake

viruscop: I'm Jewish and I'm not offended in the least. When I went to a private Jewish school from K-12, the entire student body and faculty frequently made jokes about the power of Jewish influence. In fact, we enjoy the stereotype. It is even put forward in the Jewish textbooks that I had to read in high school.

I do not understand this phenomenon of conservatives getting offended for Jews. · 2 hours ago

Edited 2 hours ago

Hello Viruscop.  You've been quiet for a while, or perhaps I've not been attentive to your posts.  Anyway, my take on this is that Biden is such a schlemiel  that he actually thinks he's paying us a compliment.  For a change, Jonathan Chait has written something partially cogent on this matter.  · 4 hours ago

Yeesh, I can't believe I'm agreeing with Jonathon Chait.  I suppose he does write decent things from time to time.

Joseph Eagar

viruscop: I'm Jewish and I'm not offended in the least. When I went to a private Jewish school from K-12, the entire student body and faculty frequently made jokes about the power of Jewish influence. In fact, we enjoy the stereotype. It is even put forward in the Jewish textbooks that I had to read in high school.

I do not understand this phenomenon of conservatives getting offended for Jews. · 7 hours ago

Edited 7 hours ago

There a difference between praising positive Jewish influence in the culture, and attributing part of that culture as 85% the consequence of Jewish cultural leaders.

Joseph Eagar

And by the way, I'm not saying that fear of homosexuals necessarily means hatred of them.  Most people I know who fear gays do not hate them (one or two of them do, at least they did as teenagers, and for all I know they don't anymore).

Joseph Eagar

Stephen Hall

Zafar: 

If Christianity is intrinsically better that Islam, are Christians intrinsically better than Muslims?  Developing that, would this logic mean that Presbyterians are intrinsically superior to Catholics? 

Nice rhetorical (I think) question. No human being is 'intrinsically' superior to any other. What makes us better or worse are the choices we make in the exercise of our free will. Therefore, Christians are not intrinsically superior to Muslims and Catholics are not intrinsically superior to Presbyterians, and vice versa.

An Islamist is a person who has made a choice to impose a (false) religion on his fellow men by violence, or to kill them if they reject the imposition. Because of that choice, the Islamist is morally deeply flawed, and therefore morally (but not 'intrinsically') inferior. Even an Islamist may repent of his choice. · 4 hours ago

Edited 4 hours ago

And let's not forget that modern Islamism is a relatively new phenomenon, that popped up a mere hundred years ago (if I remember correctly).

Joseph Eagar

GayFreedomLover

Joseph Eagar

RushBabe49: Excuse me, but a "phobia" is a FEAR of a thing.  Dislike and fear are very different emotions.  Those of us who dislike homosexuality are probably not afraid of it.  Dislike comes of knowledge.  Fear comes of lack of knowledge. · 0 minutes ago

Oh come on.  Most people with negative attitudes toward homosexuality dofear it. · 3 hours ago

I would have said it the other way.  Most who dislike it, lack knowledge about it.  I've always been willing to agree that "homophobia" was an unfortunate (if well understood) term.  But if fear = lack of knowledge than "homophobia" actually fits right down to the greek roots. · 5 hours ago

That's not my experience.  People either fear homosexuals directly, or they fear the loss of male social trust—usually, they fear both.

Joseph Eagar

Vega Spur

Joseph Eaga

Oh come on.  Most people with negative attitudes toward homosexuality do fear it. 

Fear it in what way?  The fear it because they're really repressed homosexuals?  That's just an ad hominem attack, a favorite tactic of the gay rights movement. · 7 hours ago

Actually, there may some truth to that—but I think not.  By the way, fear of homosexuality is not quite the same as disapproval—I've met people who have no animus towards gays but nonetheless are a bit afraid of them. 

Anyway, the typical homophobic behavior I've encountered falls into two categories: people who find the reputation that homosexuals have lots of sex alluring, but are nonetheless straight themselves (they find the sex tempting, basically, but without any sense of attraction), and a much more rare group (at least among my age cohort) of people who simply hate gays.

Joseph Eagar

Roberto

Joseph Eagar

Mike LaRoche

Joseph Eagar

RushBabe49: Excuse me, but a "phobia" is a FEAR of a thing.  Dislike and fear are very different emotions.  Those of us who dislike homosexuality are probably not afraid of it.  Dislike comes of knowledge.  Fear comes of lack of knowledge. · 0 minutes ago

Oh come on.  Most people with negative attitudes toward homosexuality dofear it. · 53 minutes ago

Fear what?  That gays are going to break into my house and install track lighting? · 3 minutes ago

I honestly don't know, myself.  It's never made sense to me. · 6 minutes ago

It doesn't make sense period. Those who continually make this claim are simply engaging in lazy thinking.  · 8 minutes ago

Or just reporting what we see in our daily lives.  Now that I think about it, I suppose the negative stereotypes actively promulgated by the gay rights crowd may make people feel nervous (especially if they've only seen "feminine" gays, and view homosexuality as an attack on male masculinity).

Another possibility is the fear of eroding social trust among males. 

Edited on May 22, 2013 at 2:53am
Joseph Eagar

Mike LaRoche

Joseph Eagar

RushBabe49: Excuse me, but a "phobia" is a FEAR of a thing.  Dislike and fear are very different emotions.  Those of us who dislike homosexuality are probably not afraid of it.  Dislike comes of knowledge.  Fear comes of lack of knowledge. · 0 minutes ago

Oh come on.  Most people with negative attitudes toward homosexuality dofear it. · 53 minutes ago

Fear what?  That gays are going to break into my house and install track lighting? · 3 minutes ago

I honestly don't know, myself.  It's never made sense to me.

Joseph Eagar

My point was that political consultants used and abused social conservatives; SoCon politics reward people who fear homosexuality much more than it rewards people who, say, speak out against single motherhood, or no-fault divorce.

That's entirely a consultant-driven phenomenon, in my opinion.  In other words, Karl Rove ruined the social conservatism movement.

Joseph Eagar
RushBabe49: Excuse me, but a "phobia" is a FEAR of a thing.  Dislike and fear are very different emotions.  Those of us who dislike homosexuality are probably not afraid of it.  Dislike comes of knowledge.  Fear comes of lack of knowledge. · 0 minutes ago

Oh come on.  Most people with negative attitudes toward homosexuality do fear it.

Joseph Eagar

Caryn: Joseph Eagar, would you like, maybe, to rephrase what you said?

Homophobia?  Really?

I'm against homosexual marriage.  Bigot?  If you think so, I can live with it. · 2 minutes ago

I suppose I should.  Let's just say that political consultants encouraged homophobia to increase turnout for short-term electoral gain, at the cost of destroying the social conservative movement over the long run.

Joseph Eagar

Mendel

abula rasa: 

For a supposedly rational people, it's baffling why 60% of Americans consider it morally OK to have a child out of wedlock.

I think that question was phrased badly.  Having a child out of wedlock does not necessarily mean a child raised by a single parent, and many of the respondents may have assumed the question referred to unmarried parents who nonetheless remain in a committed relationship throughout the lives of their children.

So perhaps not all is lost? · 2 hours ago

That's not an American social norm, though.  If memory serves, the average American relationship involving out-of-wedlock children lasts less then 5 years.

Joseph Eagar

EstoniaKat

Joseph Eagar

A bit reactionary, are we?  I'd say this film is a vindication of the DS9 writing staff's vision of Trek: less utopian and thematically pure than Roddenberry's vision, but not as bland or insultingly simplistic, either.

Roddenberry is the Bible when it comes to Trek.

As far as the plot of this movie, it's no more than Star Trek 6 blown up on a larger scale. Federation Admirals plotting for war with the Klingons; Kirk getting in the way. after his original reluctance.

I wouldn't go that far.  Just because the two movies share a common plotline (an attempt to start a war) doesn't mean they are at all the same.

As for Roddenberry, I've always found his vision of the Federation to be bland beyond belief, little more than an anarcho-socialist fantasy.

Joseph Eagar

Part of the problem, I would argue, is that SoCons became overly politicized; political consultants played on their homophobia to entice them to the polls, at the cost of delegitimizing everything else they had to say.

Joseph Eagar
jonsouth: Meanwhile in Iran, the Islamic Republic is also having a marriage debate. It's a little... different to the one happening in Western countries, though. · 0 minutes ago

Can we invade the damn country, already?  This is getting ridiculous.

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