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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Why We Fight

I have noticed quite a few messages in the comments to my posts lately. Some people seem to think the billboards such as "You Know It's A MYTH" or "You Know They're All SCAMS" are dickish and are making atheists look bad. Some even scowled at me for calling people delusional for believing that God created people in their present form less than 10,000 years ago. Why? Because it's disrespectful. In my humble opinion though, respect should never be automatic. Respect is to be earned, and when people believe something beyond all rational and logical meaning in the face of contradicting evidence, it IS a delusion, and it deserves NO respect. It's the God damn definition of delusion.

Why do we fight? Why do we to tell people they are myths and scams and put it up on billboards? It's because we live in a society where religious beliefs are so heavily respected that they aren't questioned, and they are often pushed into our laws and our lives without consequences.

Why so many anti-Christian messages? Am I just butthurt against Christianity instead of religion in general? The reason for this is because in our society, Christianity rules supreme, and is often not held to the same standards as any other religion. It is favored in so many cases where, if replaced by a different religious act, would be heavily attacked. A recent example of this would be Tim Tebow. In University he would wear references to bible verses on his face...

Once he graduated, the NCAA ended up banning eye-billboards.

Now, Tebow is a professional football player for the Denver Broncos. But since the NFL already bans eye-black messages, he has to figure out a different way to send his Christian bat-signal… and it looks like he found it!


Is he breaking the rules? Looks like it:
… NFL and NCAA rules forbid players from marking their uniforms…

The rule covers the helmet, jersey, pants, shoes, tape, wristbands, and headbands. No writing on any part of the body. Before each game uniform reps — former NFL players — prowl the sidelines looking for violators. When the teams go back into the locker room before the game starts, they are given a list of players who are in violation of the rule.
If they come out for the kickoff without removing the writing, they will be fined. According to Johnny Rembert, the uniform rep in Jacksonville and a 10-year NFL veteran, fines start at $5,000.
As far as I can tell, Tebow has been issued no fine. However, Kenny Britt of the Tennessee Titans was fined $5,000 because the towel attached to his uniform said “#10 VY” — a tribute to Vince Young. Britt accepted the fine and removed the towel for the second half of the game. Why is the NFL letting Tebow’s violation slide? How much do you want to bet if someone had "There is no God" written on their wrist, they'd be hit with that fine the moment someone spotted it on their HDTV. This is what we so often see in our little world. Christianity is accepted where everything else is strictly forbidden.

What else? Is that all I have? Some NFL guy writing on his wrist? That's a pretty weak argument, maybe people just didn't notice it or just didn't care because it's such a little thing it's not worth fighting over. Well I was reading the Chicago Tribune and I saw this letter-to-the-editor from Ed Leighton:

Eighteen months after graduating from a public high school, I had a chance encounter with Mr. Clark, my old guidance counselor. In what might have been a fishing expedition, he asked me who my most influential teacher was.
“Mr. Eitmueller,” I replied.
He then asked if it had anything to do with Christianity. It did.
I was a teenager in the ’70s and had succumbed to many of its temptations. As a student of Mr. Eitmueller, he was well-aware of the resulting changes in me, and it seems, of my potential. When he told me I’d be receiving a failing grade in his class, I asked if there was anything that could be done (you know, to fix that).
There was. If I agreed to read the Gospel of John that summer, he would agree to elevate my failing grade to passing.
Certain I had just made a great deal, I walked away quite pleased with myself.
As agreed, he passed me.
As agreed, I read the Gospel of John. By summer’s end, I accepted Jesus Christ as my savior.
Just imagine if Eitmueller had suggested reading any book about atheism…

Better yet, imagine a public school teacher telling a child who failed the class that he would change the grade to passing, but only if the student read the Koran.

There would have been an uproar then. The teacher would have been severely reprimanded if not suspended or fired. There would be an uproar now. Every Christian Right group would rightfully be after that teacher. Every administrator at that school would be inundated with emails calling for their heads.

But because it’s a story about Christianity, it gets a complete pass. Everything’s ok. The teacher is a role model. The letter makes it into the Sunday edition of the Tribune.

Anyone want to make a bet that the Illinois Family Institute has nothing to say about this story? How about any Religious Right group? Any church? Of course not. They want more exchanges like this to happen.

Christians also fight the hardest to get their beliefs into schools and laws. They come up with a pseudoscience and even though it's denied by the entire scientific community, they demand it gets equal treatment and be taught alongside evolution in schools. Don't believe me? Oklahoma State Senator Josh Brecheen wants to introduce a bill next year that will hamper the teaching of evolution:
Senator Brecheen says children should be given all the facts when it comes to evolution.


The senator says he supports having creationism — the belief that God created the world without evolution — taught in public schools.

“You either remove both or you put both in,” he said.
In an op-ed he wrote last week, Brecheen called evolution, “a religion,” and says there are serious flaws in the theory that students ought to know.
“The main fallacy with Darwinian theory,” he argued, “is the sudden appearance at about 540 million years [ago] of fossil records. It’s like a guy standing at the chalkboard and saying okay here’s an atom [and then writing] question mark, question mark, human — here we are. But its fact, and there’s zero evidence to back it up.”
 What he's talking about is  the Cambrian Explosion, which has already been explained before...

Even the major universities have come out against this idiocy:
Oklahoma’s major universities including OU and OSU all agree that evolution is the best science and that alternatives such as creationism should not be taught in public schools.
This is what Brecheen wrote in an op-ed last week:
One of the bills I will file this year may be dismissed as inferior by “intellectuals” so I wanted to devote particular time in discussing it’s merits… I’m talking about the religion of evolution. Yes, it is a religion. The religion of evolution requires as much faith as the belief in a loving God,
As PZ Meyers wrote in an op-ed about this, "It's not a promising beginning when you're discussing a scientific topic and immediately dismiss intellectuals." If you would like to see all the fallacies in this man's statement about teaching Creationism in school, check out PZ Meyers' article, where he breaks it all down.

The faculty of Southeastern Oklahoma State University are covering their eyes in shame right now, since apparently this creationist-cliche-spewing plagiarist and professional imbecile managed to successfully graduate from their institution.

I would like if we could all just get along, if we could just do what's right for humanity instead of what's right for furthering our ideology. I ask that secularism be promoted so that nobody's ideology is favored. If we could do that, there would be no reason for billboards telling everyone that the nativity is a myth. People could believe what they want and keep it to themselves and live however they want. But when those illogical beliefs start to hurt our society, or individuals, then it's time to take off the kid gloves and get serious. Religious ideology should be treated the same as any other harmful ideology, such as homeopathy. Get serious and stop pandering to ignorant people. This is why we have to remind people that we live in reality, not a fairytale. This is why we fight.

26 comments:

  1. Very well voiced. Darwin knew best, the delusional will die out. With time. We need a good fucking war for that though. Err. Scratch that last part.

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  2. And this is exactly why we fight. well written

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  3. I wish there was a way for me to be able to favorite this post!

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  4. wish there were no stupid people in the world.. they're the reason for all the conflicts!

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  5. another great post. and agreed with tomi991

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  6. Can he shave in god we trust in his head like the NY Knicks used to do? Problem solved.

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  7. Luckily religion doesn't mean much in my society...

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  8. I adopt a 'live and let live' policy with respect granted to everybody unless (mostly until) they prove otherwise. If someone wants to be religious, then go crazy. But as soon as they start forcing it on others is when I get riled up. It's probably quite naive of me to expect those types to respect my wishes because I'm respecting thiers, but as a wise man once said, "if you push me don't think that I won't shove."
    Evolution should be taught in schools not because it's the 'athiest agenda' or whatever bull Fox News is spreading, but because it's what we have the best evidence for. If we had evidence that god magiced humanity out of nothing, then we'd teach that. But we don't, so we should teach what we do.

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  9. Yeah, I would like it if people could just get along too. Unfortunately Man is just that, Man! and if there's is one thing Men have continually proven. Its that he can always find a way to Hurt and create pain.

    In response to your comment Coop, thanks for the idea. I will do a post on soundproofing a room. I did it last year

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  10. i agree that respect should not be automatic. i got my dad Richard Dawkin's book "The God Delusion" for Christmas, and my Grandma got pissed off because I was apparently disrespecting the moral values she had tried to instill in our family. turned out to be quite the event..

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  11. Good post. To be honest, I don't a monkey's what the untermenschen do to their prole sports. I do get ticked off when they get in the way of science. (That includes Al Gore's pseudo-scientific religion.)

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  12. i was one of the nay-sayers in the comments... you make a lot of good points man, but you're fighting one hell of an up-hill battle... it's fucked how the teacher can just manipulate a kid into reading the bible...

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  13. Holy crap, I sure didn't know there was a rule forbiding people to mark their uniform! I mean, I know it can be some kind of advertising but whatever!

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  14. You are free to choose anything you want or need, there is no such thing as a supreme religion

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  15. actually teach both and let the students decide for themselves what would they believe in more.

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  16. Meh. This is just picking at straws. We have religious zealots, with Christian militias in charge of nuclear disarmament where I live. Him and his militia "protest" and verbal\physically attack anybody that isn't part of HIS perfect Christian ideals. He has been quoted as saying crazy shit like "God needs OUR protection". Did I mention that he works with NUKES? Yeah, writing bible passages on your wristbands doesn't really bother me.

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  17. I don't understand how Kenny Britt of the Tennessee Titans was fined if he was just making a tribute... In soccer is something it's usually done and no one has ever been fined

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  18. @invagrantly why teach both? They aren't equal. No respected scientific institute agrees that creationism is a proper science or that it's anywhere near equal to evolution. Science isn't about belief, it's about facts. Creationism isn't about facts, it's a religious belief. If you want to learn about religious beliefs, you can take a course about religions. It does not belong in the science class though.

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  19. Great Post. Well said. I must say, that I could care less what others choose to believe though. As long as you don't force it upon me or my fam, we are good. I believe there is something out there, what it is, I don't really know, but it's not the bible god and whatnot. So, very well put.

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  20. If the rules state no writing on the body where does that leave all the tattoos players have these days that are visible? Could they start fining them for those too?

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  21. Great post! These subliminal messages have to go. The field is not a place to express these types of messages. And... umm... why does this thing keep pinging atheists.org while logged into your page?!

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