1. Just sit and wait, then, eh, Eric. The record in both the Florida and California cases is presumably available to the public. However, I don't think there's a requirement that a complete copy of the record be personally delivered to every member of Jazzfanz.
It's also not a requirement that every person taking a position support it with evidence.
Or maybe you can just keep checking the article Meese wrote in the Washington Post every day to see if it's been revised to include 1000 pages of the court record. Could happen, I spoze.
Or, it could happen that a support of Prop 8 come up with some evidence that would support Meese's claim. I don't expect either to occur.
2. No it is not a guarantee that those bodies actually undertook said action. Are you under the impression that any such guarantee is required? Read it again, it explains what the "rational reason" test requires a court to do (hint: not much, in fact nuthin, in the way of demanding proof that the legislature is implementing the best conceivable policy).
So, we agree that the legislature and the sate courts may have had no rational reason for their actions, and the appeals court wouldn't no the difference. Works for me.
Been takin lesson from Biley, Eric? You once again demonstrate the hopelessness of rationally discussing a topic with an ideologue.
I find there to be a difference between people who reason from the evidence to a conclusion, and people who choose a conclusion and then pick evidence to justify it. The second style is a denialist style. By behavior, you have always treated both methods as being equally reliable.
Eric, this whole tactic of referring to highly respected scientists as "denialists" and "cranks," simply because you have ideological reasons for preferring different "scientific" findings than they arrive at, really doesn't merit a response.
Since that is not my tactic anyhow, you shouldn't respond to it. No sense setting up straw men. But then, why should sense enter the picture now?
What are my "ideological reasons" for saying that global warming is real, and humans do cause it, BTW? What are my "ideological reasons" for saying that mechanisms that have been verified by experiment can be relied upon? What are my "ideological reasons" for saying that sexual orientation is unchangeable for the majority of homosexuals? What are my "ideological reasons" for saying that the geometirc interpretation of General Relativity is valid, useful, and accurate?
Let me give you a list, and using what you know of my "ideological reasons", see if you can figure out who I think would be a denialist. I'll leave out the usual suspects (DI members, etc.) Make sure to use which "ideological reasons" apply in making these determinaitons.
Ariana Huffington, of the Huffington Post
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (son of the former US Attorney general)
Ayn Rand, author of
Atlas Shrugged
Bill Maher, host of
Politically Incorrect and
Real Time
Christopher Hitchens, author of
God Is Not Great
Deepak Chopra
Victor Reppert, of the blog
Dangerous Idea
Dr. Jay Gordon, Hollywood pediatrician
Oprah Winfrey
Penn Jillette, magician
I'll send the answers to moevillini, just so you don't have to worry about me changing my answers after-the-fact.
But, for the benefit of others here, who may not be ideologues, I will note the following:
Contrary to your assertion, Dr. Rekers in not a "founding member" of Narth, but even if he was, so what?
I agree, his being a founder is not relevant.
In fact, my understanding is that it was founded, in part, to offset continuing cliams by the APA that " no major mental health professional organization has sanctioned efforts to change sexual orientation and many have adopted policy statements cautioning the profession and the public about treatments that purport to change sexual orientation."
So, it was founded to support a specific conclusion.
As was noted in an earlier post, the view now seems to be that virtually all "scientific research" on the topic is tainted by bias and no definite conclusions have been produced by that research.
Actually, that was a view of same-sex parenting research, not reparative therapy.
But any suggestion that NARTH members are biased while homosexual advocates are NOT biased is preposterous.
Is it as preposterous as the claim that all such stuides are biased? I think not.
Just as preposterous is the suggestion that any statement made by, or position taken by, NARTH is, ipsto facto, incorrect and unwarranted.
Not at all. It is ipso facto untrustworthy and dedicated to a pre-dertermined conclusion.
In the interest of saving your time, I will make note of this sentence in the introduction: "Although some critics will remain skeptical and perhaps some even antagonistic, others desire accurate information." If you're not one of the "others," don't bother.
Well, as long as they say the information is accurate, that settles it for you, Hopper?
BTW, I found a site which did examine various studies, and came up with some success rates for reparative therapy. The largest was 0.5%
https://www.religioustolerance.org/hom_exod1.htm