I’ve got nothing.
About · Referring queries · Random article · Random doc · Recent comments (XML) · Contact · XML/Atom
1,081 articles · 1,304 document pages
We highly recommend The Rejection of Pascal’s Wager: A Skeptic’s Guide to the Bible and the Historical Jesus. It is an incisive display of unpretentious, serious scholarship and it is the only word needed on the debate.
Anyone can double click to edit the block below. Its content is not necessarily from Sedition·com or reviewed or approved by us. Your chalkboard entry will stay there until someone else does the same or the server cache is reset or expires in a week. Rules: XHTML strict, no styles, no scripts, no <pre/>, no attributes except href for links, 750-ish characters, and, as usual, threats and abuse won’t be tolerated unless they’re very, very funny.
Why would you want to do this? You can put an ad and link for your site there. You can put a “Sedition·sucks” there. It’s above the fold on the top page and it’s all yours until the next visitor comes along.
Why would we want to do this? 1) Free speech is fun. 2) Cross-pollination is fun. 3) A Web 2.0 résumé point is nice when poking the job market with a sharp stick.
» This week in the news #52: the horror
» “Extra line breaks in this message were removed.”
» For whatever reason –or– Don’t count your blessings before they hatch
» Avatar
» Untitled
» Microsoft launches Windows 7
» Black presidents in popular fiction
» Allow me to be the first of what I daresay will be legion by close of blogness tomorrow
» This is all absurd. Obama is president of the United States of America. There’s a big difference.
» Questions from the QueryLog: catalyst model open text file
» Questions from the QueryLog: access catalyst config from a model
» Keywords: form bind change onchange ie problem ie6 ie7 jquery
» Wrap-up: 10 Catalyst models in 10 days
» Catalyst Model #10: Fixing your legacy code by not fixing it
» Catalyst Model #9: TheSchwartz
» Catalyst Model #8: Titles in real typefaces on demand with Imager
» Catalyst Model #7: Page view counter/tracker
Celia» hello...i dont believe music makes you gay. if you are a good …
Ashley» But she looks like Rena Owens.
Montag» sure cg animation is getting better, but it isn't that good. a…
chris holmes» abser-naffing-lutely amazing. have sent to all my autopsycho pa…
Vagrant» He's got Bush's spiteful little smirk too. Early institutional…
We use carbon neutral web hosting to serve pages and our software, images, and auxiliary content are developed using 100% wind power; no, seriously.

Two Men were traveling in company through a forest, when, all at once, a huge Bear crashed out of the brush near them.
One of the Men, thinking of his own safety, climbed a tree.
The other, unable to fight the savage beast alone, threw himself on the ground and lay still, as if he were dead. He had heard that a Bear will not touch a dead body.
It must have been true, for the Bear snuffed at the Man’s head awhile, and then, seeming to be satisfied that he was dead, walked away.
The Man in the tree climbed down.
“It looked just as if that Bear whispered in your ear,” he said. “What did he tell you?”
“He said,” answered the other, “that it was not at all wise to keep company with a fellow who would desert his friend in a moment of danger.”
