Puppycow
Penultimate Amazing
John Stewart is a personal friend of Weiner, apparently, but he pretty much had to cover this on his show:
The Daily Show, June 2
The Daily Show, June 2
Pay attention. Its been pointed out multiple times that the left, right and non-partisan security experts all agree that Weiner has not handled a security breach as it should have been handled. Unless at some point down the road, Weiner comes up with some unexpected revelation that would explain his irrational handling of this, he has justifiably raised suspicions.
Except that he has discussed it and made remarkably equivocal statements and handled the response with smoke and mirrors rather than someone concerned about having been hacked.
Amusing how sometimes the left demands an end to speculation, insisting on hard core, verified proof, except when condemning someone on the right...
I notice that a lot of non-skeptics like to post semi-cryptically, rather than spell things out clearly. If one's main interest is in winning a debate, that's understandable and a good strategy. If one's main interest is in trying to discern what is true and what is false, it's decidedly unhelpful.
<>
Joseph Cannon does a good point-by-point refutation of Gooding's arguments in his June 2 post
Pay attention. Its been pointed out multiple times that the left, right and non-partisan security experts all agree that Weiner has not handled a security breach as it should have been handled. Unless at some point down the road, Weiner comes up with some unexpected revelation that would explain his irrational handling of this, he has justifiably raised suspicions.
No, just no. This is the same stupid argument, no matter how hard you try to mask it.
No reacting well is evidence of nothing. I'm actually glad you linked all that stuff from the security experts, I learned something. My guess is that if you polled Americans, especially those over the age of 40, less than 5% would know the proper steps to take when hacked.
Just because someone behaves wrongly, that doesn't mean they behave "irrationally" or "suspiciously." Weiner's behavior is perfectly consistent with 1) not knowing what to do, and 2) being a human being.
And unfortunately for Weiner, there are no people sympathetic to his political views telling him what to do.
![]()
Or maybe he's waiting, hoping that it blows over before it is proven that he sent the tweet publicly by mistake.Or maybe he is waiting for that worthless little excuse for a man who did the stunt to say "Uh-uh! THat wasn't how it happened" and expose something that only the low-life who actually faked the tweet would know.
What "security experts" are you citing?
Mr. Koretz, CEO of Mykonos Software, a vendor that secures websites and applications. Security expert David Koretz. http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2011/0602/Anthony-Weiner-Twitter-hack-What-he-should-have-doneUm I recall your quote used the term 'security experts', what did you mean by that?![]()
Aww, poor retarded Weiner, could and can't figure out what to do, despite being lawyered up.TraneWreck said:Just because someone behaves wrongly, that doesn't mean they behave "irrationally" or "suspiciously." Weiner's behavior is perfectly consistent with 1) not knowing what to do, and 2) being a human being.
Except answer the questions without equivocation, and act rationally by calling the police when you've been hacked. What a never ending gift of entertainment from the Weiner defender and apologists!There is nothing Weiner could have done to rebut the "behave suspiciously" argument
Exactly.Brainster said:And unfortunately for Weiner, there are no people sympathetic to his political views telling him what to do.
Except answer the questions without equivocation, and act rationally by calling the police when you've been hacked. What a never ending gift of entertainment from the Weiner defender and apologists!
To be serious for a moment, why all the partisan interest in this tiny scandal? It's not clear that Wiener did or didn't do something which was minor. Have Wiener's critics considered how they'd fare if they had the same kind of scrutiny that Wiener is under?
Even the Dems are becoming increasingly frustrated with his antics, yet the defenders here keep grasping at straws: http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/06/03/house-democratic-leadership-privately-push-weiner/
Argumentum ad ignorantiam fallacy and Argument By Vehemence with the caps fallacy.I have never known anyone personally who has EVER called the police because they were hacked, and I've known lawyers who were hacked.
Yes, in fact, I have. Which is why I don't send pictures of my package around the internet.
Weiner lied at first but has decided that the lies will catch up with him if he continues and hence he refuses to answer any more questions. He didn't contact the cops because he knows making a false statement to the police or FBI is a crime. He hired a private security company to investigate because said private security company, knowing the check will clear, will issue a report exonerating him and his defenders will claim the affair is settled.
I am sure that both sides will find something to verify their pre-existing biases.
Your glib and inaccurate version of Weiner's reaction - and complete glossing over of his accusers' behavior and history - seems to indicate that if anyone has their head in the sand it's you.
For starters - and it's pretty sad this has to be so adamantly and repeatedly stated on a skeptic's forum - nothing Weiner has done is proof of guilt. Nothing.
Secondly, your characterization of Weiner as someone who "lied at first but has decided that the lies will catch up with him if he continues and hence he refuses to answer any more questions" doesn't follow from what actually happened.
One of the oddest things he's done is refuse to deny the picture is of him. So if he's a liar who was just scrambling to cover his ass, why not simply lie about that as well?
Correct. But additional lies do change that. When he was asked if that was a picture of him, that was a new question, not something that he had lied about previously.And furthermore, once you tell a lie, it's out there. Refusing to tell the lie again doesn't change that.
If Weiner did what he's accused of, he's still a liar if he denied it once or a hundred times. So his refusal to talk about it anymore is in no way an indication he was lying. It might just be an indication he doesn't want to talk about it anymore.
Yes to the latter, no to the former. They'll issue a report that will have an embossed seal on it, running 125 pages with lots of anecdotes about hackers and identity theft, and citing Joe Cannon's impeccable research, and they'll ignore all the evidence that points to culpability.Also, you seem to be implying a report issued by Weiner's security firm wouldn't be subjected to scrutiny. Do you assume the firm will issue a statement merely saying "He didn't do it" and all his defenders will be satisfied?
Well, let's come up with some minimal requirements for that report. I would expect, at a minimum for the security company to establish:What reputable security firm would do that? In order for him to be exonerated, the report will need to offer proof to that effect. So the idea that this is part of some cover-up (conspiracy indeed) is ludicrous.
And I just love the fact that we're not allowed to scrutinize the motives of his accusers, despite the fact that they're established right wing provocateurs and muckrackers.
Legally, of course not. But that doesn't stop me from thinking that OJ killed Nicole. I am sure you are pressing for Obama to step down for killing Osama Bin Laden because he assumed Osama was guilty, even though that had not been established in a court of law.What a perverted world view and sense of justice it must take to assume someone is guilty until proven innocent.
No, it's more.. I wouldn't use Evergreen -anything- as a primary source when it comes to anything that has a political viewpoint.