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        <title>Yep, they won&#039;t let it die... - Neurognosis - Crobar&apos;s Blog - Victoria Advocate</title>
        <link>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/Crobar/5574</link>
        <description>When I saw this article headline, I knew I was right...they won&#039;t let it go.&amp;nbsp; They want to perpetuate the mystery, latching onto every little term of possible ambiguity such as &amp;quot;possibly&amp;quot; or &amp;quot;most likely&amp;quot; instead of the absolute language most people are used to.&amp;nbsp; Well folks, in science there aren&#039;t any absolutes - no matter what you&#039;ve been told nothing is 100%.&amp;nbsp; You can have 99.9999999999999~% but not 100%.

However, people who are used to stark contrasts such as black and white, it is or it isn&#039;t sniff out those words utilized to specifically stay away from making absolute claims.&amp;nbsp; They pounce on them and hold them up as a weapon to support the accusation of great uncertainty.

Sadly in this age of home genetic tests (still having to be sent back to a lab for analysis though), the majority of the populace have no understanding of what is involved let alone a decent grasp of basic genetics itself.&amp;nbsp; Yet, when it comes to something such as this, people are quick to voice their opinions and claim &amp;quot;mistake&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;inaccurate&amp;quot; or sometimes even &amp;quot;fraud&amp;quot; when many don&#039;t even know what DNA stands for.

Which is one of the many reasons I am so passionate about scientific literacy as was one of my personal heroes, the late Dr. Carl Sagan.

The results could come back from UC-Davis as being positively identified as a coyote but the same will happen as it has in this instance.&amp;nbsp; The &amp;quot;mundane&amp;quot; answers will not be accepted.&amp;nbsp; People will hold on to that mystery that folklore - why?&amp;nbsp; Because it is much more appealing to have some mystery animal that is linked to a folklore creature than to have a small band of coyotes with a dermatological disease.</description>
        <itunes:summary>When I saw this article headline, I knew I was right...they won&#039;t let it go.&amp;nbsp; They want to perpetuate the mystery, latching onto every little term of possible ambiguity such as &amp;quot;possibly&amp;quot; or &amp;quot;most likely&amp;quot; instead of the absolute language most people are used to.&amp;nbsp; Well folks, in science there aren&#039;t any absolutes - no matter what you&#039;ve been told nothing is 100%.&amp;nbsp; You can have 99.9999999999999~% but not 100%.

However, people who are used to stark contrasts such as black and white, it is or it isn&#039;t sniff out those words utilized to specifically stay away from making absolute claims.&amp;nbsp; They pounce on them and hold them up as a weapon to support the accusation of great uncertainty.

Sadly in this age of home genetic tests (still having to be sent back to a lab for analysis though), the majority of the populace have no understanding of what is involved let alone a decent grasp of basic genetics itself.&amp;nbsp; Yet, when it comes to something such as this, people are quick to voice their opinions and claim &amp;quot;mistake&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;inaccurate&amp;quot; or sometimes even &amp;quot;fraud&amp;quot; when many don&#039;t even know what DNA stands for.

Which is one of the many reasons I am so passionate about scientific literacy as was one of my personal heroes, the late Dr. Carl Sagan.

The results could come back from UC-Davis as being positively identified as a coyote but the same will happen as it has in this instance.&amp;nbsp; The &amp;quot;mundane&amp;quot; answers will not be accepted.&amp;nbsp; People will hold on to that mystery that folklore - why?&amp;nbsp; Because it is much more appealing to have some mystery animal that is linked to a folklore creature than to have a small band of coyotes with a dermatological disease.</itunes:summary>
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                    <item>
                <title>Nov 3,  2007 at 02:11 PM : Good post, Cory....</title>
                <description>Good post, Cory. Sadly, though I believe you are wasting your breath (writing?). There are none who are as blind as those who refuse to see. Or have I said that before? So I repeat myself.
&amp;nbsp;</description>
                <link>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/Crobar/5574/#c_22734</link>
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                <itunes:summary>Good post, Cory. Sadly, though I believe you are wasting your breath (writing?). There are none who are as blind as those who refuse to see. Or have I said that before? So I repeat myself.
&amp;nbsp;</itunes:summary>     
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