Quantcast
Oct 21
Palin, Huckabee use NPR firing for deflection
Sarah Palin and Mike Huckabee rushed to the defense of political commentator Juan Williams on Thursday after he was fired by NPR for comments about Muslims.

Palin and Huckabee — like Williams, paid Fox News contributors — launched into the publicly funded radio network.

"NPR defends 1st Amendment Right, but will fire u if u exercise it," Palin tweeted. "Juan Williams: u got taste of Left's hypocrisy, they screwed up firing you."

Huckabee went further in his criticism, calling on Congress to pull funding from NPR.

“NPR has discredited itself as a forum for free speech and a protection of the First Amendment rights of all and has solidified itself as the purveyor of politically correct pabulum and protector of views that lean left,” Huckabee said.

“It is time for the taxpayers to start making cuts to federal spending, and I encourage the new Congress to start with NPR,” he added.

After complaining of too much political correctness in society, Williams told Fox News' Bill O'Reilly on Monday that he gets "nervous" whenever he sees people in “Muslim garb” boarding a plane. NPR fired Williams Wednesday night.

Williams is declining to comment on the firing. “I better bite my tongue at this point,” he told The Washington Post Thursday morning.


Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1010/43959.html#ixzz131wClRpy

The illusion, of course, that reactionary hate-mongers like Palin want to push, is that NPR gets any significant funding from the federal government. In fact, about 3% or less of NPR's entire budget comes from the federal government. Consider that large corporate broadcasters, like Clear Channel, probably save at least that much in tax breaks and you have to ask yourself: What's Sarah Palin really trying to accomplish here? It's clearly not holding government accountable for anything, as NPR is demonstrably less invloved with government than her own employer News Corp.

As she, and Huckabee say, they're concerned over First Amendment rights. This week Palin-backed tea partier Christine O'Donnell also had a strange opinion about the First Amendment. O'Donnell suggested that since the words 'church, state seperation' themselves aren't written in the document, that this government was not intended to be a secular one. You know, it's amazing. They deride a constitutional scholar like Obama, but at the same time refuse to acknowledge the real context in which this document was composed. The writers, the intent, the history behind amendments are meaningless to people who find it more rewarding to accuse their ideological opponents of betraying it. That's why Palin thinks, seemingly in this instance only, that the First Amendment all of the sudden applies to someone other than citizens in relation to the government. While I have the right to call my governor, senator or president any rude name I can think of without going to jail for it, I don't have the same right to call my employer that same rude name without being dismissed from my job for it. That's how the First Amendment works, it's there to insure that the government doesn't have control over what people say. It's to make sure that the government works for the people, not the other way around. That's also precisely O'Donnell's confusion. Just as the First Amendment explains that it's not the government's job to tell us what words we are not to say, it also tell us that the government is neither there to tell us what to say. Government isn't there to tell us to say our prayers or follow Jesus or keep the sabbath day holy. They shouldn't even be there to tell us to trust in god, but thanks to a 1950's red scare, that exact phrase is printed on all our money.

That's all not even to consider the fact that an employer being allowed to fire an employee for unbecoming behavior, as is deemed by the employer, is already a major conservative talking point. I wonder why the freedom that Palin would support to, say, deny a Muslim woman the right to wear a headscarf at her job in Disney World, doesn't extend to the directors at NPR. Could it be, perhaps, that Disney is totally private company that doesn't ever get any tax breaks or federal subsidies? Whose employment is all contained within the United States? Oh, no? I mean, does Palin count every NPR employee as a public employee? Because that's fucking wrong. It's an independent corporation, not a wing of the FCC.


According to NPR CEO Vivian Schiller:

We are a private 501(c)3. We've had journalists call up and ask what department of the government we report to. That's laughable. Have you listened to our shows? We do apply for competitive grants from the likes of the Ford Foundation and the Knight Foundation. As a result, some money from CPB does come to us when we win grants. Depending on the year, it represents just one to three percent of our total budget.


Here's what's really going on here: It's more than Palin conveniently attacking an easily identifiable conservative target. It's the justification of the hatred and fear of Muslims. What Palin and Huckabee are saying, with the help of their employer News Corp., is that it's a valid position to be afraid of Muslims. Muslims work great as enemies on Fox, and all broadcast news sources. The images of olive-skinned, bearded men in keffiyehs has worked for years, even before 9/11, as a go-to symbol of terrorism. We've even got Fox news 'journalists' declaring all terrorists to be Muslims. At the very least, it takes the heat off of major, multi-national corporations who pollute the water you drink or Christian missionaries who rewrite the history books your children learn from or a tax-dodging, degree-forging, inexpereinced Christian extremist embarrassing what was, until her rise, a growing conservative movement.

But, as long as the right can identify their party with Christianity, and frame any non-Christians as the real problem, they can keep their support steady. And it doesn't matter how much you support Palin or Huckabee or O'Donnell on the issues, if you're being intellectually honest, you've got to admit that, at the end of the day, those people are far more interested in getting votes than they are in sharing religious beliefs. My question to the religious is: How much longer will you put up with being used?
Oct 20
Creationism lives on in US public schools – John Farrell – New Scientist

Thanks to Kim Z for the link

IN DOVER, Pennsylvania, five years ago, a group of parents were nearing the end of an epic legal battle: they were taking their school board to court to stop them teaching "intelligent design" to their children.

The plaintiffs eventually won their case, and on 16 October many of them came together for a private reunion. Yet intelligent design and the creationism for which it is a front are far from dead in the US, and the threat to the teaching of evolution remains.

Cyndi Sneath was one of the Dover plaintiffs who had a school-age son at the time of the trial. She has since become an active member of the American Civil Liberties Union and a member of the Dover Area School Board. "My interest in public education and civil liberties was certainly sparked by the trial," she says. "And that interest permeates our family discussions."

Chemistry teacher Robert Eschbach, who was also a plaintiff, says the trial has made teachers less afraid to step on people's toes when it comes to evolution. It "forced me to be a better educator", he says. "I went back and read more of the history around Darwin and how he came to his conclusions."

None of this means that the Discovery Institute, the Seattle-based think tank that promotes intelligent design, has been idle. The institute helped the conservative Louisiana Family Forum (LFF), headed by Christian minister Gene Mills, to pass a state education act in 2008 that allows local boards to teach intelligent design alongside evolution under the guise of "academic freedom".
... Read more

Oct 19
Re: Atheist Fundamentalism?

Author: SCRulerShinoda
Keywords:
Added: October 19, 2010

Oct 19
“Please bow & empty your head for Reverend Bugger’s invocation.”

Whether at a graduation ceremony or some solemn public gathering it’s not uncommon for a clergyman to be invited to deliver an invocation to launch the event. Although they may exist, I have yet to hear one that is anything more than the shaman calling upon a magical spirit to bless the assembly, and other wise invoke his/its supernatural guidance.

Invocations sometimes precede governmental sessions. While they are suppose to be generic, the occasional fanatical pulpiteer will thrust his preferred deity’s name into the script in violation of the 1st amendment prohibition on the endorsement of a specific religion by the government. The fact that some of the attendees don’t recognize said deity and find it exclusionary, or even offensive, is lost on the Bible thumper. More likely, the sky pilot couldn’t care less if it irks some, perceiving it as his divinely directed duty to shove his god down peoples’ throats welcome or not.

Of course, if the invocation is delivered by a pagan , AKA non-Abrahamic religionist (which happens about as frequently as Halley’s Comet, albeit, it’s far too often if you ask the followers of the predominant faith), and the deity mentioned happens to be one with four arms and an elephant’s trunk, you can be assured the howls of disgust and the cry of “blasphemy!” would be deafening. This is never perceived as hypocrisy by the offended shepherds and sheep of the one “true” faith.

This sectarian tradition isn’t disappearing any time soon in the US. After all, it would be political suicide for a public official to come out against religious invocations. But this doesn’t mean religionists have to own the right to deliver invocations at public events by default. Atheist activists have the opportunity, indeed the duty, to get onboard the invocation train.

What would an atheist’s invocation sound like? How about an appeal to reason; a wish for respect for attendees’ opposing positions; an imploration for community, civility, compromise, goodwill, empathy and logical discourse? All of those things are grounded in realism and foundational to productive discourse. It’s what the thinking in an advanced society do.

A word of advice: unless your invocation precedes an atheist meeting you’ll want to suppress the urge to blurt out - "Thanks for coming. I have no supernatural horse hockey to feed you as though you are a herd of mindless medieval peasants. I have too much respect for your intellect. So, let's get on with reality and the event." After all, you’ll want to be invited back hopefully before Halley ’s Comet’s next appearance.
Oct 19
Bad Arguments For God


For the last few years, I have been relatively active in discussing/debating the existence of a god or gods [myself arguing on the "not existing" side]. By mere virtue of living in the United States, this generally means a focus on the biblical god of Abraham...but I am an equal opportunity disbeliever in any god that interacts with our world...that is to say...a theistic god. My motivation is not to demean any given god-believer, but rather to demean and ridicule bad arguments. If the god-believer can be shown that their argumentative position is unsupportable yet they remain married to that argument, then the god-believer brings that ridicule upon themselves. I strongly believe that there is no such thing as a thought crime and an individual is free to believe what they will...though it does trouble me that children are inculcated with mythology-as-fact before they are able to reason for themselves.

So...In my years of discussing belief, it quickly became apparent that there is a very limited arsenal of arguments for the existence of God. Here I wish to present a list of common arguments for the existence of a theistic god and show how they fail. To my mind, the arguments cited below should simply be taken off the table if the god-believer wishes to have any intellectual credibility.

Over the coming weeks/months/years, I will provide provide a brief dissertation on how each of these arguments fail. Feel free to suggest other arguments if you feel I have missed some important ones. Remember...I am only refuting arguments cited for the existence of a personal, involved, theistic god and, for this exercise, am unconcerned with arguments for the "some higher power" deistic god.

  • 1) The bible is the most popular book in the world
  • 2) Why is there something instead of nothing?
  • 3) Effectiveness of prayer
  • 4) Personal experience
  • 5) My holy book says so
  • 6) The miracles of my deity
  • 7) Prophecies
  • 8) Irreducible complexity
  • 9) The morality of humankind
  • 10) The argument from consequence
  • 11) The uniqueness of Christianity
  • 12) All societal benefits of religion
  • 13) The inerrancy of my holy book


Oct 19
Just Another Brick In The Wall
Oct 18
Morals Without God? – FRANS DE WAAL – The New York Times

Thanks to Skepticato for the link

I was born in Den Bosch, the city after which Hieronymus Bosch named himself. 1 This obviously does not make me an expert on the Dutch painter, but having grown up with his statue on the market square, I have always been fond of his imagery, his symbolism, and how it relates to humanity’s place in the universe. This remains relevant today since Bosch depicts a society under a waning influence of God.

His famous triptych with naked figures frolicking around — “The Garden of Earthly Delights” — seems a tribute to paradisiacal innocence. The tableau is far too happy and relaxed to fit the interpretation of depravity and sin advanced by puritan experts. It represents humanity free from guilt and shame either before the Fall or without any Fall at all. For a primatologist, like myself, the nudity, references to sex and fertility, the plentiful birds and fruits and the moving about in groups are thoroughly familiar and hardly require a religious or moral interpretation. Bosch seems to have depicted humanity in its natural state, while reserving his moralistic outlook for the right-hand panel of the triptych in which he punishes — not the frolickers from the middle panel — but monks, nuns, gluttons, gamblers, warriors, and drunkards.

Five centuries later, we remain embroiled in debates about the role of religion in society. As in Bosch’s days, the central theme is morality. Can we envision a world without God? Would this world be good? Don’t think for one moment that the current battle lines between biology and fundamentalist Christianity turn around evidence. One has to be pretty immune to data to doubt evolution, which is why books and documentaries aimed at convincing the skeptics are a waste of effort. They are helpful for those prepared to listen, but fail to reach their target audience. The debate is less about the truth than about how to handle it. For those who believe that morality comes straight from God the creator, acceptance of evolution would open a moral abyss.
... Read more

Oct 18
Atheism Becoming the New Religion, Evangelicals Warned
Evangelicals heard the call on Monday to be guardians of the truth in the face of widespread indifference to religion and the “denial” of Scripture within parts of the church.
Oct 18
Atheist Agnostic Christian's

Author: cure4atheism

Keywords:

Added: October 17, 2010

Oct 17
Joe Dixon’s Atheist Bible Study #28
I think I kind of f'ed up with the rant about blood but whatever. The God Man is still having Moses make Egypt unlivable. That Lord is totally goofballs.
From: JoeDixon
Views: 44
2 ratings
Time: 08:47 More in Comedy
Oct 17
CRYING Atheists for the win – HAHAH u can't comment

Author: Angelsword135

Keywords:

Added: October 16, 2010

Oct 15
Tales Of Mere Existence: god

(Thanks to Roland for the link)
Oct 15
Stop Living Like a Christian Atheist , Spiritual Living, Christian
Editor's Note: The following is a report on the practical applications of Craig Groeschel's recent book, The Christian Atheist: Believing in God but Living as if He Doesn't Exist, (Zondervan, 2010). Sure, you believe in God. ...
Oct 14
God Hates You, Hate Him Back: Making Sense of The Bible (Revised International Edition) (Paperback) tagged “agnostic” 7 times
God Hates You, Hate Him Back: Making Sense of The Bible (Revised International Edition)
God Hates You, Hate Him Back: Making Sense of The Bible (Revised International Edition) (Paperback)
By CJ Werleman

Buy new: $23.99
Customer Rating: 4.1

Customer tags: bible(16), atheist(12), humor(12), god(8), christianity(8), agnostic(7), funny(6), jesus christ(6), jesus(5), philosophy(2), agnosticism(2), bible commentary
Oct 13
The Thing behind the curtain & It’s self appointed press secretaries

Leave reality behind for a moment and allow yourself a bizarre flight of fantasy.
Imagine that the President of the United States, arguably the most powerful man on the planet, has never been seen. He never ran for office, and was never elected by official ballot. No one has ever personally met him. He never meets with foreign officials. He never speaks publicly. He never appears in person, in pictures, or on TV, the radio, or the internet. He is said to have written, or at least “inspired” a book to be written, that defines his political positions and vision for the nation; albeit, the original text has never been seen only redacted and reshuffled copies of the original manuscript exist.

And instead of having just one press secretary to interpret his book of policies, issue his edicts, explain his positions, and define his objectives he has thousands upon thousands of self appointed spokesmen-spin doctors speaking on his behalf. Many if not most of their interpretations and explanations are in diametric opposition to some of their fellow spokesmen’s understandings and pronouncements. Each of them accuses the other of being false spokesmen, or “not true press secretaries.”

The result would best be described as chaos. It wouldn’t take long for the American public to become disillusioned and completely dismissive of the nation’s leader and his self-appointed quasi-official mouthpieces. Surely calls for impeachment would follow; people would be on the verge of revolution; the heads of the soothsayer spokesmen would roll in the streets. Shouts of “Mr. President show yourself and speak to us directly! Prove you are who your spin doctors say you are, or which one they say you are if you ‘are’ at all! Resolve the confusion and conflicts among your official un-official professors once and for all!” would ring in every city, town, village and hamlet in the nation.

Absurd you say? Who could imagine such a thing, or allow it to happen? How anyone could give that president or his “ministers of spin” any credibility, much less entrust him or them to guide their lives for even a moment much less a four or eight year term is simply implausible.

And yet the vast majority of Americans, and billions of people around the world, not only endure such a construct, they endorse it, embrace it, couldn’t conceive of existence any other way. Not just for four or eight years, but for their entire lives. Just substitute the word “God” for the title “President,” and “Clergy” for his thousands of press secretary minions and what I described in my hypothetical construct becomes as real and as natural as a priest’s erection at a choirboys’ rehearsal.

One would think (if in deed one can think at all) that when your invisible divine being needs an army of contradicting spokesmen spin doctors all of whom claim to be speaking for it, you can pretty much figure the reclusive and inscrutable divine thing they profess to speak for is either senile and confused, mute and in a coma, or non-existent.

But no. Instead the faithful take sides. They form into competing parties that proclaim THEIRS to be the one true “party of god”; THEIR spokesmen best represents THEIR god’s / gods’ wishes. THEY represent the true invisible silent god, the others worship a false invisible silent god and follow the interpretation of false prophet / not a true believer spokesmen.

Sound crazy? It is. It’s the stuff of fantasy stories like Alice in Wonderland, The Wizard of Oz, or Gulliver’s Travels. Stories that if they were real places with real people would be a nightmarish existence where fiction is taken as fact, lies accepted as truth, confusion and contradiction perceived as clarity and cohesion, edicts of genocide and violent punishment perceived as just, good and loving.

If forced to live in such a world I would do what I do now - use every opportunity I had to proclaim: “Pay no attention to the thing behind the curtain, it does not exist; and the one speaking in front of the curtain is full of shit.”
Oct 12
The Ridiculous Myth of the Violent Wild West
...and five more myths of history.

How many murders do you suppose these old western towns saw a year? Let's say the bloodiest, gun-slingingest of the famous cattle towns with the cowboys doing quick-draws at high noon every other day. A hundred? More?

How about five? That was the most murders any old-west town saw in any one year. Ever. Most towns averaged about 1.5 murders a year, and not all of those were shooting. You were way more likely to be murdered in Baltimore in 2008 than you were in Tombstone in 1881, the year of the famous gunfight at the OK Corral (body count: three) and the town's most violent year ever.

Read more: Ridiculous History Myths (You Probably Think Are True)

h/t Check Your Premises


And most ordinary people in the Old West didn't go around with a gun strapped on, either. They just wanted to live in peace and go about their lives. But if criminals tried to come into town to rob the bank or a store, they were ready to grab their guns and fight back. It was actually quite dangerous for the outlaws.


Oct 11
Omnipotent Lite
Oct 11
Darwin Fish
Oct 11
Is the Bible Reliable?
Oct 11
Up all night

« Previous Entries Next Entries »