I think I might want a counter top panini press.
I swear by mine. Great for making focaccia or French bread toast as well as paninis!
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I think I might want a counter top panini press.
I swear by mine. Great for making focaccia or French bread toast as well as paninis!
Congrats, Daniel and WindSparrow!
Another space quiz:
Mars Myths & Misconceptions: Quiz
I got 10 out of 10. But I wasn't sure about a few of the questions.
I just pointed out to my mother the date of Mother's Day. Which seems a little backwards.
Can someone help me with the stats of this article? It seems as though he's saying that the stats prove that almost half of all rape reports are false accusations, but I admit I am HORRIBLE with statistics. So I can't really figure it out.
Allyson,
this seems to be the relevant paragraph:
Combining this 27% with the initial 212 "disproved" cases, it was determined that approximately 45% of the total rape allegations were false.
and:
In the study of false rape allegations in the midwestern town and state universities, over half of the accusers fabricated the rape to serve as a "cover story" or alibi. This included 56% of the non-student and 53% of the student false accusers.
These are two different studies of rape allegations.
So he's saying that about half/over half of all rapes accusations are false, and these stats bear that out.
Really? Half or more? Or is this sleight of hand?
The common stats according to FBI and everywhere else are between 5-8%
What gives?
So I've been eating bean and cheese tosadas for dinner the past few nights, and they are delicious! But keeping the refried beans in the can in the fridge as I went kind of made me feel like I was eating dog food... Hmm.
Allyson, it looks like they're using several different definitions of "false allegation," and combining the statistics from different studies as if they were all using the same definition. I'm a little too tired to read it closely right now, though.
Taking the first example of a high percentage of "false" accusation. (Kanin, 1994)- well known study. Its "rigorous" methodolgy really meant rape victims were treated as guilty until proven innocent and pressured into retracting. David Lisak. [link]
I was able to look that up quickly because I've encountered the Kanin study before. No time for the others.