Posted on 07/08/2005 7:34:14 AM PDT by olde north church
In another outing of Libs going to the Free Republic "well of ideas", it appears Leftist WaPo columnist Richard Cohen was influenced by something he read on our humble site.
--snip-- Over the weekend I went to a party, where I was asked who I thought should succeed Sandra Day O'Connor on the Supreme Court. Without hesitation I boldly gave my answer: Judge Judy.
Is it possible he was reading the Rush Thread
http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1434709/posts?page=73#73
on 7/1.
Considering the shortage of new ideas amongst the body politik liberal, I feel quite proud of my effect on an old liberal stooge. They say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. Or is it intellectual plagiarism? The Dems don't have a problem with that. Just ask Biden.
For my next subliminal message to Mr. Cohen:
Shave the beard. Dye the Gray. Lose the glasses.
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/325877p-278366c.html
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/326204p-278680c.html
(Excerpt) Read more at nydailynews.com ...
Laura Ingram has also suggested Judge Judy for the Supreme court.
I doubt that liberals even watch Judge Judy, it is too common for the elite like them.
The sequence should be:
In another outing of Libs going to the Free Republic "well of ideas", it appears Leftist WaPo columnist Richard Cohen was influenced by something he read on our humble site.
-snip--
Over the weekend I went to a party, where I was asked who I thought should succeed Sandra Day O'Connor on the Supreme Court. Without hesitation I boldly gave my answer: Judge Judy.
--
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/325877p-278366c.html
http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1434709/posts?page=73#73
The second link is to a response from Judge Judy in the Daily News.
Laura Ingraham did a bit in which she played Schmuck Chumer -- er, Chuck Schumer -- grilling her in a Senate Judiciary hearing, and sound bites of Sheindlin replying with remarks like, "That's a lot of bull!"
Richard Cohen has been a whining "Progressive" all his live-long life.
To people like little dick cohen, FR might just as well be on the moon. We don't exist in their world so he was sure he could steal an idea and not get caught. He really still hasn't gotten caought because the skunks he writes to won't see this, but nice job anyway.
You could call FreeRepublic and its members a lot of things, but "humble" is surely not one of them. ;~))
I have seen about 10 minutes of Judge Judy about three or four times in my life. Each time, I have been astounded at what a stupid old hag the woman is. It's like she's ripping off the vintage (early 90s) Dr. Laura without understanding that Dr. Laura had known what she was talking about.
I would take no pride in the fact that of the thousands of columnists out there, you and some idiot happened to think of the most famous pop-culture reference to a judge.
"Oh my gawd. I was trying to think of a skank, and I wrote about Paris Hilton. Then a famous columnist was trying to think of a skank, and he thought of Paris Hilton! He mustbe reading my mind!"
i wouldn't say stupid, i would say bigoted, racist, feminist with no common sense, but not necessarily stupid..
after all, you need to pass a certain amount of schooling to become a judge.
Judge Judy shows no signs of having retained any schooling.
I know people around FR (and most anywhere else) pass off the word "stupid" to refer to anyone who disagrees with them. I do not mean it in this sense. I have not seen Judge Judy show any signs of an education or introspection beyond that of a typical 7th-grader in the midst of a temper tantrum.
Judge Judy shows no signs of having retained any schooling.
I know people around FR (and most anywhere else) pass off the word "stupid" to refer to anyone who disagrees with them. I do not mean it in this sense. I have not seen Judge Judy show any signs of an education or introspection beyond that of a typical 7th-grader in the midst of a temper tantrum.
Next time, do both of us favor, keep the proverb in mind: It is better to keep one's mouth shut and be thought a fool, than to open it and remove all doubt.
If you are the best I can do as an opponent, I should hang my head in shame.
The Apollo missions' photographs of Earth as a blue sphere helped win millions of people to the environmentalist view of the planet as a fragile and interdependent whole. The Russian geoscientist Vladimir Vernadsky had coined the word "biosphere" as early as 1926, and the Yale University biologist G. Evelyn Hutchinson had expanded on the theme of Earth as a system maintaining its own equilibrium. But as the German environmental scholar Wolfgang Sachs observed, our imaging systems also helped create a vision of the planet's surface as an object of rationalized control and management--a corporate and unromantic conclusion to humanity's voyages of discovery.
What NASA did to our conception of the planet, Web-based technologies are beginning to do to our understanding of our written thoughts. We look at our ideas with less wonder, and with a greater sense that others have already noted what we're seeing for the first time. The plagiosphere is arising from three movements: Web indexing, text matching, and paraphrase detection.
The first of these movements began with the invention of programs called Web crawlers, or spiders. Since the mid-1990s, they have been perusing the now billions of pages of Web content, indexing every significant word found, and making it possible for Web users to retrieve, free and in fractions of a second, pages with desired words and phrases.
The spiders' reach makes searching more efficient than most of technology's wildest prophets imagined, but it can yield unwanted knowledge. The clever phrase a writer coins usually turns out to have been used for years, worldwide--used in good faith, because until recently the only way to investigate priority was in a few books of quotations. And in our accelerated age, even true uniqueness has been limited to 15 minutes. Bons mots that once could have enjoyed a half-life of a season can decay overnight into cliches.
Still, the major search engines have their limits. Alone, they can check a phrase, perhaps a sentence, but not an extended document. And at least in their free versions, they generally do not produce results from proprietary databases like LexisNexis, Factiva, ProQuest, and other paid-subscription sites, or from free databases that dynamically generate pages only when a user submits a query. They also don't include most documents circulating as electronic manuscripts with no permanent Web address.
Enter text-comparison software. A small handful of entrepreneurs have developed programs that search the open Web and proprietary databases, as well as e-books, for suspicious matches. One of the most popular of these is Turnitin; inspired by journalism scandals such as the New York Times' Jayson Blair case, its creators offer a version aimed at newspaper editors. Teachers can submit student papers electronically for comparison with these databases, including the retained texts of previously submitted papers. Those passages that bear resemblance to each other are noted with color highlighting in a double-pane view.
Two years ago I heard a speech by a New Jersey electronic librarian who had become an antiplagiarism specialist and consultant. He observed that comparison programs were so thorough that they often flagged chance similarities between student papers and other documents. Consider, then, that Turnitin's spiders are adding 40 million pages from the public Web, plus 40,000 student papers, each day. Meanwhile Google plans to scan millions of library books--including many still under copyright--for its Print database. The number of coincidental parallelisms between the various things that people write is bound to rise steadily.
A third technology will add yet more capacity to find similarities in writing. Artificial-intelligence researchers at MIT and other universities are developing techniques for identifying nonverbatim similarity between documents to make possible the detection of nonverbatim plagiarism. While the investigators may have in mind only cases of brazen paraphrase, a program of this kind can multiply the number of parallel passages severalfold.
Some universities are encouraging students to precheck their papers and drafts against the emerging plagiosphere. Perhaps publications will soon routinely screen submissions. The problem here is that while such rigorous and robust policing will no doubt reduce cheating, it may also give writers a sense of futility. The concept of the biosphere exposed our environmental fragility; the emergence of the plagiosphere perhaps represents our textual impasse. Copernicus may have deprived us of our centrality in the cosmos, and Darwin of our uniqueness in the biosphere, but at least they left us the illusion of the originality of our words. Soon that, too, will be gone.
The judge found for the plaintiffs and Harrison was forced to pay back royalties. Mr. Harrison was found not to be guilty of deliberate plagiarism but rather "subliminal influence".
How much do we absorb without conscious knowledge and is triggered and recalled at a later time during active thought processes.
I read that in Technology Review a couple months ago and it seemed relevant.
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/06/issue/megascope.asp
Original thought has many meanings. For the individual, for the community, for history. With the prevalence of the internet, archived media, etc., many people will find their claims to an original idea...are not original in history of thought, although may be been orginal to that thinker.
Calling Richard Cohen a rip-off artist is a compliment. He's much worse than that.
There is another series of Aricles which I will probably post about intellectual property, Digital rights management, and who owns ideas. It is an interesting concept. Some of the points are that one must use existing media and ideas to create the new ideas.
I think Cohen is one of the posters here pushing Gonzales and claiming the Scalia is opposed to overturning Roe.
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