Nice. There's no reason why your being quite sure BF exists and my opposite stance should neccesitate ill feelings. I've come to know your personality through your posts as well as one can and I'm sure same is true for me. I often feel it's your way to employ more social aspects when participating in a debate on the subject. Yet, I can appreciate your frustration with skepticism even if I disagree with its foundation.
As a sceptic myself I'm not opposed to scepticism. I check out everything I can. Tonight the real-life discussion covered everything from "sleep driving" under Ambien to the molecular clock.
I do obect to name-calling and rudeness. When that started tonight, I got up from the table and left.
I don't think scepticism is well represented by some of the posters on JREF (or on other boards, for that matter).
I'm no less human and my endless back and forth with such as SY shows that. As you've known from the beginning of your interactions with me, I'd love for BF to be there but there's simply no reliable evidence to indicate that.
In your opinion there's no reliable evidence. In my opinion there is.
Sometimes when I look at your sig I really wonder if you come back to that level of thinking where BF seems ridiculous.
Not really. I just like Richard Greenwell's sense of humor.
I can understand how a city dweller with no knowlege of the phenomenon but what he's seen on TV would think the very idea preposterous. I can see how it might challenge the beliefs of creationists and scientists alike, but having lived in sasquatch country and known law enforcement officials who were in on investigations, I find the whole thing quite normal. I don't remember ever being particulary surprised by it all.
What's ridiculous to me is that it's not taken more seriously and the willingness of some to jump on Long's book or Crowley's plaster pouring as some kind of proof the whole thing's a hoax and proponents are out of their trees.
Someone asked about scientific confirmation coming in my lifetime. I think it already has.
Nevertheless, I'd welcome your input anyday.Don't forget, though, it wasn't 'I', it was 'us'. Regardless, I can't fathom locality as a reason not to be into yowies for one so ensconced in the belief of bigfoot.
I'll look into it further, but I really know more about the Orang Pendek.
When you sideline it you undermine a great many of your arguments.
Why? I think that areas of the world that have many reports of bipedal primates , or "wildmen" very likely have bipedal primates, or "wildmen". We know they existed in the past. I see no reason why they can't exist in the present. Is there some reason all bipedal primates had to become extinct so glorious man could stand alone (on two feet)?
BF has to come from somewhere and when people consistently report it in areas outside of NA, including places where gigantos could not have gotten to, to not address that with the same type of effort as you do for Iowa and left and right, it puts the fizzle on the plot. If you take my meaning.
For starters, I don't think it's all the same species. If Australian Yowies match the description or Giganto-type creatures (and I don't know that they do), I don't see an insurmountable problem in Giganto getting from Vietnam to Australia.
Ocean levels dropped with water tied up in ice and Australia lost its isolation in the late Pleistocene, which is when the Giganto camp thinks the migration over the Bering land bridge occured.
How impossible does this look?
"The Australis, i.e. Australia and its surroundings, during the last glacial maximum about 18000 years ago (approximation). At that time, the sea level was probably about 150m or more lower than today, and most of the Sunda Shelf (Malaya/South-East Asia), the Sahul Shelf (Australia/Papua[=New Guinea]) and the Bass Strait were above it. Furthermore, parts of southern Aotearoa, the Tasmanian highlands and the Australian Alps were glaciated, and the ice of the Antarctic reached much further north than today."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistory_of_Australia