I take by this you mean that I object when people just make stuff up and try to pass it off as true (for any non-vacuous conception of what "true" means)? Yes, absolutely!
(If by this you mean that I don't accept much of Quine's account of the value-laden nature of empirical observations, well, you're totally off target.)
Beyond that, thank you for more amusing, off-base, and content-impoverished bluster! Maybe next time you can work in Kanye West? That would be cool.
(The point of the quotes was to illustrate, in the author's own words, the best example I could find of what I judge to be a problematic pattern of thought that suffuses much of the works. This is how quotes are commonly employed when one doesn't have space to go into exhaustive detail.)
But, more seriously, actually thank you for two more reasonable recommendations. I haven't read the actual debate between Popper and Adorno, just brief summaries, so maybe it's time that I try again to find a translation. I've wanted to anyway. And I'll check out some of the articles on your page, as you indicate.