Jul. 22nd, 2007

stoutfellow: (Murphy)
I appreciate your care for the health of your patrons. Also, I like broccoli quite a bit1. However...

Fettuccini alfredo is supposed to be a pure and sensual, panicking-arteries experience. Pasta, creamy sauce, and pepper are all that are required. Small chunks of chicken are not unwelcome, though they do dilute the quality of the event. However, a side dish of broccoli and carrots is entirely superfluous.

If I wanted a frozen Sunday dinner that actually promoted my health, I would purchase something from a different company. From you, I want luxurious excess. Please, recognize your ecological niche and stay in it.

1. And I liked it even before Bush the Elder denigrated it, in case you're wondering.
stoutfellow: (Murphy)
Rasmussen Reports fairly consistently produces results more favorable to the Bush administration and to Republicans generally than most other reputable pollsters. It is precisely for that reason that I read their website - they place a bound on the plausible.

A few days ago, I noted a rather misleading headline on their site. Briefly, having conducted a poll on popular perception of media bias, they found that 39% of respondents felt that the major TV networks showed a liberal bias in their news shows; 25% saw no bias, 20% saw a conservative bias, and 16% were not sure. The headline read, "Americans See Liberal Media Bias on TV News".

Today, in another article, Rasmussen Reports asserted that, and I quote, "Earlier releases showed that most Americans believe the major broadcast networks, CNN, and NPR have a liberal bias". This is flatly false. According to their own reported data, a majority of respondents do not believe there is such a bias.

Let me be precise. By "X does not believe Y", I mean "It is not the case that X believes that Y is true". By this definition, 61% (25%+20%+16%) do not believe the major networks have a liberal bias. Even by the more stringent interpretation, "X believes that Y is false", a plurality - 45% to 39% - hold that position.

Rasmussen has moved from being misleading in its headlines to presenting falsehoods in the body of its reports. I am deeply disappointed in them.
stoutfellow: (Ben)
Charlie Stross, in a discussion on Making Light of novel series:
"Teratology" is hereby designated as the official term for a trilogy or other reasonably contained multi-book sequence that metastasizes.

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