OK, it seems Chavez's government was not the source. My bad for not checking sources.
Usually when a person apologizes for an error, as you are doing regarding not checking sources, I feel it's appropriate to accept the apology and move on. In this case, though, I think more needs to be said.
"OK, it seems Chavez's government was not the source."
No. It isn't that it "
seems" the Chavez government was not the source you cited in your post. It's that the Chavez government was
not the source you cited.
Here is the post in question:
You cited 3 sources: oglobo, reason, and deadlinelive. None of these is Hugo Chavez, or the Venezuelan government, nor do these appear to me primary news sources.
I'm not familiar with oglobo, but reason and deadlinelive are opinion sites. The item at reason is an opinion piece by libertarian philosopher Ronald Bailey. The item at deadline live is an opinion piece by talk radio host Jack Blood. What people like these do is take things they have heard or read and spin out thoughts based on these things. Interesting as their thoughts may be, what skeptics need is the primary information on which these thoughts were based. If Bailey, or Blood, opine about something they believe Chavez said, then what we need to see before giving weight to their opinions is the statement by Chavez which they are opining about.
Yes, it was an error for you not to check out what the people you cited were claiming before passing it on -- an error for which you have already apologized, so no more needs to be said on that.
But it was also an error for you to claim in your post that Chavez was saying these things, when you had not read anything from Chavez on this matter and were not actually quoting from Chavez. This is a separate error, it is a serious error, and it is an extremely prevalent error in this section of the forum.
I think it is worth pointing this type of error out and criticizing it when we see it occurring, in hopes that people may become more aware of how often this is happening, may become more aware that this is a problem, and may make more of an effort to refrain from doing this. I don't mean to single you out, since you are by no means the only person in this thread or on this forum committing this error. But I felt it was worth pointing out in relation to you, since immediately after acknowledging and apologizing for the one error (not checking your sources to see if their claims were accurate) you proceed to again commit the other error (taking the words of one person as if they were the words of someone else):
Now, it may seem like a diversion maneuver, but when people do not consider completely weird a statement like that coming from a certain individual, I think its a symptom of the certain individual's behavior...
Who is the "certain individual" who has made weird statements? Well, in this thread we have a number of candidates:
Headscratcher4 linked to and made statements based on a piece written by Jack Bailey (a libertarian pundit), in which Bailey alleged that Chavez had said something. Therefore we are in a position to analyze, make judgments about, and react to hs4's or Jack Bailey's statements.
You, citing reason.com and 2 other sites, posted a statement alleging that Chavez had something. Therefore we are in a position to analyze, make judgments about, and react to your, oglobo's, Jack Bailey's, or Jack Blood's statements.
Travis, citing no source, posted a statement that Chavez had said something. Therefore we are in a position to analyze, make judgments about, and react to Travis's statements.
I, citing no source, posted a statement that Christopher Hitchens had said something. Therefore we are in a position to analyze, make judgments about, and react to my statement.
None of us actually provided the text of any statements by Chavez (or Hitchens). Therefore a skeptic reading this thread would not be able to come to any conclusions about Chavez (or Hitchens) based simply on what has been posted in this thread
and should not be doing so.
Your post about something being "a symptom of the certain individual's behavior" is hard for me to follow. But it sounds as if you are saying that, because Chavez has been characterized as making weird statements in the past, when people heard it being said that Chavez had talked about an earthquake weapon they were right to assume the story was genuine and that anyone who questioned the claim was an irrational Chavez supporter.
If that is what you meant, then you have it exactly backward. It is not people who refuse to pass judgment on Chavez (or Christopher Hitchens, or Rush Limbaugh, or Barack Obama, or George W. Bush) for things they are alleged to have said, until their actual statements are brought forward and examined. It is people who mistake the words of libertarian writer Ronald Bailey or radio talk show host Jack Blood for the words of Hugo Chavez who are displaying symptoms of non-skeptical behavior.