Posts Tagged ‘boycott’

Cease and Desist

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

[Edit: Is THIS irony, stupidity, bravado, or just plain funny?]

[The above link will now get you a 404 error (it originally linked to the infringing site's plagiarism of this very article). Apparently, the owner or operator of the infringing site finally saw the C&D letter (delivered by automatic RSS theft and reprinting) and complied with it. I am still reviewing the site for State of Protest material, but it looks to have been removed. If you're reading this, owner/operator of The Atheist Mind, thank you for complying, and I strongly suggest you cease and desist with your continued infringement regarding all the other sites from which you are stealing content and reposting it as your own. I will personally be looking up every website that you are stealing from, and I will be contacting those owners to let them know about the infringement. For everyone else, if you see a site stealing content, please contact the true owner of that content to let them know.1]

If you are reading this post on a website or other content provider other than stateofprotest.com or an RSS reader with the RSS link being either http://feeds2.feedburner.com/StateOfProtest or http://www.stateofprotest.com/feed/, the site/provider you are reading from is guilty of copyright infringement, and I request that you boycott and report that site/provider and in the future acquire State of Protest work from the source or an authorized RSS feed. (Short excerpts with direct links to this site are generally acceptable, as are reprints of posts on the State of Protest myspace page).

If you are one of the sites infringing upon my rights, if you do not cease and desist from such infringement, I will send you a C&D letter, and I will follow up on it with legal action if necessary. In addition, I reserve the right to post the C&D letters that I send, as well as any other information about the sites that infringe upon my rights, such as Whois information, so that others can be aware of your presence.

Today, I was alerted to a site that has been stealing content since 2006 from sites like Pharyngula, Freethought Radio, State of Protest, and others. It’s called “The Atheist Mind,” located at http://theatheistmind.info . I found this out because I got an alert that the Twitter entity “@atheistmind” started following me, and I was amazed to see that the site was full of full articles from State of Protest without permission, proper credit, or linkage back to State of Protest of any kind (thus why I could not detect it before). I sent a Tweet to @atheistmind stating:

Giving you a chance to cease & desist from unauthorized use of State of Protest material before I send C&D letter to your site host. Respond

I thought that it would be polite and proper to give the owner a chance to quit the infringement before I took action. I waited, and @atheistmind posted yet another Tweet with a link to the Atheist Mind website, so I took that as a “fuck you,” and I proceeded to send the cease and desist letter.

Here is the letter I sent, in full, to the email address of the registrant and the hosting provider’s “abuse” email:

To Whom it May Concern:

It has come to my attention that website “The Atheist Mind” (at theatheistmind.info), apparently hosted by Dreamhost.com, has made repeated unauthorized use of my copyrighted work located on my blog “State of Protest” (at stateofprotest.com). Examples include “The Government Doesn’t Run Anything Well,” originally published at http://www.stateofprotest.com/government/the-government-doesnt-run-anything-well on June 10, 2009, and “Dear Murderer,” originally published at http://www.stateofprotest.com/morality/dear-murderer on May 31, 2009. The website “The Atheist Mind” at http://theatheistmind.info has reprinted in full these and other copyrighted materials without permission (example links: http://theatheistmind.info/2009/06/10/the-government-doesn%e2%80%99t-run-anything-well , http://theatheistmind.info/2009/05/31/dear-murderer ). I have reserved all rights to the content originating on my website, State of Protest, and I have not given The Atheist
Mind permission to reprint any content originating from State of Protest.

The Whois contact information for the registrant of The Atheist Mind website indicates that the registrant is Jay Cunningham at 144-90 41st Ave. Apt. #516, Flushing, NY 11355, with a phone number of 917-558-0929 and an email address of payments@huelab.com. Because the email address appears to be potentially unreliable, I have made the decision to contact both the registered party at the given email address as well as the hosting provider for the website, which Whois indicates is Dreamhost.com.

Infringement of Copyright is violative of Title 17, Chapter 5, of the United States Code. The owner of The Atheist Mind website (at theatheistmind.info) must immediately cease the use and distribution of all works derived from State of Protest (at stateofprotest.com), and destroy all copies of same, electronic or otherwise; and the owner must desist from this or any other infringement of my rights in the future.

If I have not received an affirmative response from the owner, operator, or host by June 15, 2009, indicating that the requirements have been fully complied with, I shall take further action against the owner/operator of The Atheist Mind and the hosting provider.

Very truly yours,

Please join me reporting theft of intellectual property, informing others of who is perpetrating the infringement, and boycotting the perpetrators. Also let it be known that I am utterly serious about pursuing legal action to protect my rights.

Thank you.

UPDATE: I’ve already contacted an attorney to represent my interests in this matter, and a DMCA Notification will be drafted and ready to send in case the owner of the infringing website does not comply by the date indicated above.

  1. PS, some sites explicitly allow for such reprinting of content, and some don't care. Most make their position on content rights known somewhere on the website. [<]

Condoms Exacerbate AIDS says Most Popular Asshole on Planet (aka The Pope)

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

I’m going to curse a bit, so, if you mind, you might want to skip this one.

What the FUCK?

First, why is this man speaking, let alone speaking on behalf of one of the most populous organizations in the world? Second, why is anyone listening to him? Why are we giving him the attention and quite often the deference he so craves?

This is a follow-up to my post on If the Pope Changes His Mind…

Here are some updates regarding how the Pope is an idiot, and how, despite that fact, he’s still “in charge,” and the media keeps giving him attention and, indirectly, credence:

UPDATE: More evidence and support of my notion that people rely way too heavily (which is any at all) on what the Vatican has to say has been cited by PZ Myers on Pharyngula:
Eluana Englaro has been in a vegetative state for 17 years, and her family has finally won the battle to take her off life support. Prime Minister of Italy Silvio Berlusconi consulted with the Vatican to impose an emergency decree blocking the suspension of life support, based on the excuse that she is “in the condition to have babies.”

This is a great example of why religion should not be respected by law, and how people still view the Vatican and Pope as some supreme authority on morality and other issues.

UPDATE 2: Pope declares that condom use increases AIDS problem.

“You can’t resolve it with the distribution of condoms,” the pope told reporters aboard the Alitalia plane headed to Yaounde. “On the contrary, it increases the problem.”

That’s a classic Pope line. Even John Paul II thought similarly about sex. But what really pisses me off is that the richest church in the world, to which its members tithe 10% of their income, has this to say about the economic difficulties facing those members:

The pope also said Tuesday that he intends to make an appeal for “international solidarity” for Africa in the face of the global economic downturn.

He said that while the church does not propose specific economic solutions, it can give “spiritual and moral” suggestions.

Describing the current crisis as the consequence of “a deficit of ethics in economic structures,” the pope said: “It is here that the church can make a contribution.”

Fucking bullshit.

Common Sense Catholics need to get off their duffs and boycott this angry little man, and, in turn, perhaps the media will start ignoring him.

UPDATE 3: Vatican edits the Pope.

But yesterday the Vatican website published an edited text changing his words to say that the use of condoms “risks” aggravating the problem.

Reporters who taped the Italian-language interview said the Pope, who speaks fluent Italian, did not say the word “risks” on Tuesday and he was unequivocal in saying that condoms aggravate the epidemic.

Hell, in my previous article, I asked What if the Pope changes his mind? Today, I have to ask, What if the Vatican changes it for him?

Oh, how I would love to see the Catholic church dissolve in my lifetime.

Boycott “Homeland Security USA” on ABC

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

The Rights Working Group, an American human rights interest group, has targeted Homeland Security USA, a new ABC “reality” show which premiered on January 6, for its egregious depiction of immigration in the U.S. Specifically, the Rights Working Group asserts that the show is full of propaganda for official behavior that tramples human rights.

Rights Working Group’s Communications Director, Priya Doshi, distributed a template letter for expressing disappointment and disgust to ABC affiliates who broadcast the show:

Dear ABC Affiliate,

I am writing to express my concern over ABC’s new “reality” show called “Homeland Security USA.” Please consider what the show does not cover. The show’s Executive Producer said the show was “not investigative journalism” but what he doesn’t say is that the show is pure propaganda to promote a better image for a government agency whose practices routinely violate the human rights of people in this country.

“Homeland Security USA” has not, and based on what I’ve seen, will not air scenes from immigration raids where (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) ICE agents descend with helicopters and guns drawn and throw unresisting people to the ground. The program won’t show how those detained don’t get a phone call to their families or access to a lawyer before they are thrown in detention. It won’t take viewers inside overcrowded detention centers used to lock up immigrant detainees where access to basic medical care is often denied even to those with chronic and serious conditions. This reality series won’t show viewers the asylum seekers, pregnant women, mentally and physically disabled people, and families with small children who are among the hundreds and thousands currently in ICE detention facilities. And ICE agents aren’t likely to deliver on air apologies when they arrest and detain legal immigrants and even citizens because they fit a certain ethnic or religious profile.

Please express my deep objections over the reality that is missing from this so-called “reality” program to the ABC network.

Regards,

Learn more about the group’s campaign to hold the Department of Homeland Security accountable by visiting the Rights Working Group website and signing a petition or helping educate others about the human rights violations of the DHS, which, according to RWG, include:

-Warrantless and aggressive raids on homes and workplaces, often without granting detainees the right to a phone call or counsel.
-Detainees being held in inhumane and overcrowded conditions, often without charges, and for months and even years.
-The backlogging of naturalizations due to FBI security name checks linked only to race, religion, or natural origin.

image from Rights Working Group
(image from Rights Working Group)

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Call in Atheist! The Call in Gay Day Was Seriously Flawed

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

Not surprisingly, the campaign to highlight the importance that gay people have in the work environment by having them “call in gay” was not much of a success. The organizers perhaps fail to realize the repercussions of doing so on a small scale: job loss. In this trying economy, there are hundreds of thousands, literally, of people lining up for jobs, and why would any employer put up with a “recognize me because I’m gay, and because I am, I’m taking the day off” employee, when that employer wouldn’t (and shouldn’t) do the same for a Buddhist, a Libertarian, an avid book collector? A gay person might argue that there should be an exception for gays, because, unlike being a Buddhist, Libertarian, or book collector, being gay is not a choice. Irrelevant. Having hazel eyes is not a choice, either, and we’re not boycotting and striking because of that.

Then the gay person might go on to argue that no one discriminates against the hazel-eyed, unlike how people have and still do discriminate against women, ethnic minorities, and homosexuals, so that, in itself, is justification to try to do something about it, to be heard; and showing businesses that without gays, they won’t be able to operate will be a painful lesson to the world that they should respect gays and treat them equally.

Perhaps. But, if it makes it easier, think of it in playground socio-economic terms. Joey is popular, and the other kids like hanging out with him, and he likes the attention, but he can only have ten immediate followers at a time, due to various constraints. His followers are attractive and somewhat popular, themselves. All except for Chris, who is somewhat bumbling and not quite attractive. Joey keeps Chris around because Chris is useful, and gets sodas and runs other errands for Joey. One day, convinced by a few other unattractive nerdy kids, Chris tells Joey that he’s taking the day off from being Joey’s gopher boy, so that Joey and others like Joey will recognize the worth that Chris has, despite his various differences from the others, and that lots of kids just like Chris will be doing the same to their Joeys that very same day, so there. And Joey says, “Don’t come back.” And easily fills in Chris’ former spot.

Brutal? Perhaps. True? Absolutely. When we live in a society where going to vote for the next president is sometimes not an option because you might lose your job or not have enough money to feed your kids, it’s not realistic to ask gay people, or any other people, really, to put their jobs on the line, even if it’s to possibly increase their respect in that society. Some contractors in DC, for instance, actually pay their workers $8 an hour to strike, and many other unions do the same. People taking a day off in protest because they’re gay is not something that will ever be acknowledged as worth paying for by employers while the gay worker population is relatively low (and not, overall, more vital than any other population), and the economy is still in the dumps. Sure, it’s potentially a nuisance while the employer looks for a replacement, but is staining your personal image worth a very slim potential chance for a group image?

It’s good to think of unique ways to protest, but this one just doesn’t cut it. If the number of gays in important positions was amazingly high, and losing those gay workers for one day would bring much of the marketplace to a grinding halt, then it may work. But, of course, if that were the case, gays would, by that very fact, already likely be respected to the level of their satisfaction. That’s not absolute, but more likely. If not, then the campaign would be worth contemplating.

Similarly, I’d never advocate a “call in atheist” day to garner more respect for non-belief. Ultimately, that would just add to the argument that there’s something wrong with us, that we’re a detriment to society, and that we lack morality. One underlying problem is that by protesting in such a manner, it’s almost as if you’re saying “treat me differently,” when what you really want to be saying is, “treat me the same.”

Does anyone else think the call in gay day was an awful idea?

Talk me down.

StOP

Should We Boycott the Brainless?

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008

Note: This is one of the places that I learned the lesson I am trying to share with other self-proclaimed skeptics today. So, if your kids are fearing sculptures of DNA, now’s your chance to learn well the lesson of Poe Read below for more details.
(Article Updated below!)

I’ve advocated boycotting stores that support evangelical right-wing fundamentalist entities,1 and I firmly believe in doing everything possible to remove the taint of religion from the decision-making process of government and its presence in our law, public schools, and courthouses. I’ve also asked the question, how far should we rational thinkers go in countering religion?2

Today, I ask, should we also figure out who the brainless are, and boycott them, even if they’re not politicians or evangelists or school board members?

What if you were fond of a certain actor’s work, and you read an interview where that actor was asked, “When was the earth created?”, and the actor responded, “about 4000 B.C., but possibly 10,000 years ago”? Would you seriously consider not watching movies in which that actor starred? Take, for example, Tom Cruise, who, at least publicly, asserts the belief in the existence of an alien being god-equivalent, and all the other nonsense with which Scientology brainwashes its victims.3 Certainly, he got some heckling and negative reaction to his odd behavior and beliefs, but that didn’t incredibly diminish his standing as a Hollywood A-Star. Where he truly got criticized, though, is when he tried to tell others how to live their lives — don’t take pharmaceuticals; don’t see psychiatrists, etc. That imposition on his part was the equivalent, to many, of an offense.

Something gave me a slight shock today. It was the same shock I endured when I read about Ben Stein (whom I actually enjoyed as the brainiac on Win Ben Stein’s Money) extolling the virtues of his pro-Creationist movie Expelled. I had thought to myself, “This must be a joke.” After I was convinced that it wasn’t, I told myself that I’d do my best to avoid ever sending that man a dime. Today’s shock was similar, and I’m curious as to whether there is or should be a distinction that would discourage me from employing the same reaction.

Q. When was the earth created?

A. Archbishop James Usher, working out a chronology from the Bible, calculated in 1654 that the earth was created on the night of October 23, 4004 B.C. Other timetables reach back as far as 10,000 years.

Who answered this way? A priest? An evangelist? Sarah Palin? It could have been any of those, and more. But what’s shocking is that it was uttered, as it were, by the Pulitzer Prize-winning American film critic and screenwriter Roger Ebert.

“What about oil and coal…?”, he’s asked. “They are evidence of a Great Flood,” he replies. Apparently he firmly believes that a fossil claimed to be 200 million years old shows a shoe print, proving that all layers of sediment were laid down all at once, about 4,400 years ago.

Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon Man? “Created at the same time as man.”

And 600-year-old Noah had an Ark filled with pairs of 5,400 land-based mammal species, plus eight people (from whom we are all descended). Dinosaurs walked the earth with man, but drowned in the Flood. 4

At first, again, I thought this was a joke. This couldn’t be Roger Ebert’s own website! I opened a new browser window, typed in “rogerebert.com” and clicked my way back to the Commentary. Okay, it could be a hack attack, sure, but this time, there’s no Rickroll, and it coincided with Ebert’s Roman Catholicism. Fine. He’s a young-earther. The question, though, is whether I should ever listen to the man’s suggestions again. It’s not like I was previously an Ebert fan, but I did occasionally catch his show and I listened. Now he has books and other writings about movies.

Should my rejection of his beliefs as being brainless give me reason to reject everything about him? If yes, then is it my responsibility to determine the world view of anyone with whom I interact, in order to accept or reject that person? If no, then where do I draw the line, and why? I know that when I see a Televangelist, I reject that person by changing the channel (and usually by griping). Someone like Sarah Palin, who is oh so objectionable for many other reasons, I initially reject based on her biblical literalism. Even if she appeared experienced and wise in other matters, I probably wouldn’t want her visiting my home or serving as Vice President if she outwardly (and more frighteningly inwardly) believed in and advocated belief in Creationism.

So, is my line a finely drawn one, based exclusively on whether a person is using belief to infringe upon my way of life, or is it a broader, grayer line that also includes rejection based on affiliation as well as infringement? Is the latter sort of line an acceptable one for someone who purports to be a rational thinker? Perhaps I favor the latter because the mere existence of those who believe in such nonsense are a potential threat, whether direct or indirect (I mean, they make lots of babies, and they indoctrinate those babies in “the way,” so the threat of suffocation by superpopulation could warrant some reaction). I think I honestly could use a bit of guidance on this issue.

UPDATE:

Invisible Quotation Marks

This seems to be a Poe’s Law trend. I wonder why.

Apparently, on his online journal, Roger Ebert has written a scathing rebuttal to the criticism and misunderstood responses filling the web full of vitriol over his pro-Creationism FAQ, stating that his purpose in writing the apparently facetious FAQ was to “to discuss the gradual decay of our sense of irony and instinct for satire, and our growing credulity.”5

Bravo?

It seems Ebert was more than disappointed with evolutionists, who took him at his word (how dare we!), when he concluded, “The adventure with the Creationism article has been enlightening, and a little depressing. I expected better from evolutionists.”

To his credit, however, he did admit not being aware of that little nugget of emoticonology that would have made the distinction between what’s commonly accepted as blind faith and extremely subtle satire, described by Poe’s Law. Ebert wrote, “A postscript and confession. As I said, everyone has blind spots. Many of my supporters cited Poe’s Law, which I was completely unfamiliar with.”

So, the scoreboard for Roger Ebert looks a bit confusing. +10 for decent movie reviews, -10 for wacky Creationist rhetoric (without even a hint of invisible quotation marks visible to anyone but six of his loyal readers?), -10 for insulting the rest of us for not “getting it”, +10 for admitting that maybe we had a pretty good reason for not “getting it” (via our dutiful nod to Poe’s Law), and perhaps +5 for taking the time to explain his reasoning in a lengthy and descriptive journal entry. So, Mr. Ebert, I leave you with +5. And I probably won’t boycott you, since I think your intentions were ultimately good.

One thumb up, one thumb kinda sideways, unsure of where to point.

What’s even more enlightening is the variety of responses to Ebert’s journal entry, ranging from “Oh, I knew what you were doing,” to “I honestly thought you might be telling the truth.” I’ll quote a few excerpts (all from the same page):

As you mention in your article, I did see the quotation marks in your article. But it was based on a ridiculously thorough reading of your previous writings (I haven’t taken the time to search your reviews for the term ‘Creationism’ but I am positive you’ve slighted the concept previously). I knew enough to think “This is so inherently ridiculous that Roger does not need to add any text stating so.” But I will confess that if I stumbled upon the article without a diploma in Ebertology, I’d have been duped. The old adage “Consider the source” made me look smart.

Oh, and in later the same thread, I bemoaned your use of an emoticon as the fall of the last bastion of grammatical holdout. Now I see that it may have been a concession to the above. -Mike S.

Mr. Ebert:

Point taken.

You actually had me going for a while.

However, the problem as I see it is that your satire was indistinguishable from the real thing. Creationists actually believe this nonsense, and they repeat it constantly.

As such, there was reason to believe that you actually believed what you wrote. Especially for someone like me, who had no idea about your actual position on the matter.

You could of course counter with “why didn’t you research it, then?”, to which I reply: Because, again, what you wrote was what a creationist would have written. -Wapper

The problem with the article is that it mimics claims made by Creationists perfectly. That’s not satire. Satire contains an element of the absurd; Creationism is already absurd, recited with a straight face.

By your own standards, we should regard Ben Stein’s EXPELLED as satire. After all, we have a preconceived notion of Stein from his Comedy Central game show. Shouldn’t we expect him to be reasonable? I did. I think my preconceived notion of Stein was valid, which explained the almost universal surprise when his movie came out. Nobody expected Stein to take up such an insane stance. My reaction to your own article was the same: I can’t believe it, but I’ve seen smart people say the same dumb things before. -John W.

I’ll admit, Mr. Ebert, I was so busy worrying about the thought that one of my favorite intellectuals had gone over to the academic dark side that I missed the quotation-marks. I think Poe’s Law is a very apt observation (second in importance to all-wise Godwin’s Law). When such an emotionally charged issue as fundamentalism vs. empiricism arises we tend find ourselves blinded by our gut reaction, forgetting there’s probably a “wink wink, nudge nudge” in there somewhere. In retrospect, I can look over the article and crack a grin at the absurdity of believing that you had jumped the fence. Comments like Noah’s age, and your “steadfast” belief in the story of the Ark, combined with your assertion that man and dinosaur had roamed the Earth at the same time should have slapped me into awareness given your past articles. -Gene D.

Do you really believe that any of what you have written is outlandish enough to pass as satire in an age when 67% of Americans believe in the existence of angels and you have a woman running for vice president who’s a member of a cult that speaks in tongues ?
I say you are entirely out of touch with the reality of relgious thinking in this country. -Issitoq

One need only look at the reaction to the recent New Yorker cover featuring the painting of the Obamas to see that we’re living in a world where irony, sarcasm, and satire are no longer appreciated. As an Obama supporter, I thought it was a brilliant counterattack against the types of people who believe and perpetuate the crazy rumors about the Obamas, and I was sure the readers of the New Yorker would feel the same. But, I quickly realized that many didn’t get the joke, and many of those who did were still incensed because they felt that the Obama detractors wouldn’t—and would just use the cover to further their own cause. I just sighed with disappointment as I wrote this. -Jason

so basically you were trolling. How “clever” of you. And yes, i meant you to see the quotation marks there. -Ian Rennie

Roger, I’ve been a devoted and regular reader of your site since I was 13 years old. I know full well what you think of creationism and your love of all things Darwin since you’ve mentioned it many times- and your article confused and shocked ME!

You really had me worried for a few minutes and I knew what you thought of evolution vs. creationism and figured it *had* to be satire- so you can’t blame other readers.

Now, I knew that you must have been being ironic since I knew you couldn’t possibly be serious but I didn’t see the joke, try as I could. It sounded like you were being serious.

Except for the moose line, that is.

It’s not a good joke if even people who know you have to be kidding don’t understand it. -Agatha

StOP

  1. Don’t Buy Their BS, and Don’t Buy Their Stuff, http://www.stateofprotest.com/2007/12/07/dont-buy-their-bs-and-dont-buy-their-stuff/ [<]
  2. How Much is Too Much? http://www.stateofprotest.com/2008/08/15/how-much-is-too-much/ [<]
  3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Cruise#Scientology [<]
  4. Roger Ebert quotes from RogerEbert.com, http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080921/COMMENTARY/809219997 [<]
  5. http://blogs.suntimes.com/ebert/2008/09/this_is_the_dawning_of_the_age.html?swift [<]