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Archive for August, 2009

Good Cop, Bad Cop: PZ and the Creation Museum

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

“Look! It’s PZ!” Cheers went up and applause ensued. PZ Myers finally arrived at the Creation Museum in northern Kentucky. This was the first time the famous (or infamous) blogger had ever visited the place that defied his field of study, accepting only microevolution, but vehemently denying macroevolution. Like everyone else, I wanted a picture with the atheist icon and somehow managed to get one. The place buzzed with excitement. However, as I looked around I realized that although PZ was important, he wasn’t nearly as important as what he had done. When I pulled into the parking lot for the “museum” what I saw amazed me. Two extremely long lines…of non-believers. There was also a fairly large group of more that had already received their ticket, an “I was there” button, and an Secular Student Alliance (SSA) sticker. And the lines were growing. More and more people with t-shirts stating “Friendly Atheist” or some other distinction of disbelief started to trickle in from the scorching hot parking lot. PZ’s visit brought a congregation of atheists, agnostics, secularists, humanists, and other skeptics from around the country to one spot: a place where theists called their home turf. And for once, we, the skeptical, outnumbered them.

There were well over 200 skeptics, and we caused a back-up at the “museum”. Despite the lines, the crowds, and the outright misleading information, people seemed to be having a good time. We were surrounded by people who were of similar ideas and thoughts on science and religion. Ironically, it was here in a place of religion over science that many of us felt as if we belonged. It is no secret that skeptics are a marked minority, for now. Many student and community groups have trouble breaking 50 members, many of whom are never really active. To be immersed in such a large crowd was a shock. Everywhere I looked, I saw the black and white SSA sticker. We didn’t have to make noise or rattle the cage or cause a stink; our mere presence was enough to get the message across loud and clear.

I would like to state that I’m not knocking the work that many like PZ do. Until skeptics are acknowledged as part of society, attention is necessary, even if it’s bad attention. We can’t let people pretend that we aren’t here. This wasn’t the case August 7th. The need to get attention was no longer needed, which left more room to be respectful and polite. I saw many skeptics quiet their snickers and move aside to let the families on vacation look at the exhibits. I know many would say they shouldn’t have to do that. Those people are right. They don’t. But they did. And although that might have meant they missed the chance to try to convert someone, they did something that is by far more important. The skeptics showed respect to the believers. They proved that we aren’t evil, rude, immoral hooligans; they proved that even when we hold the majority we still respect the minority.

PZ Myers is amazing at what he does. He can bring a small news story to the front of the internet is less than a day. Anything posted to his blog is circulated within minutes. His controversies bring attention to the skeptical movement. He even admits he loves causing so much outrage. There is no question that his tactics are needed at this point in time and, unfortunately, for some time to come.

I find it mildly amusing that the “bad cop” of the movement made so many “good cops” simply by visiting some obscure place in Petersburg, Kentucky. Bad attention is better than no attention, and can obviously have positive effects. Just remember that you also need enough good attention to balance it all out.

Why does Secular Activism matter?

Monday, August 17th, 2009

My personal history with faith is quite different from many of the non-believers I have met. Since this is my first post and I’ve been having trouble coming up with something to write, I’m going to try to draw upon that, to write about why I became involved with secular activism and why i think its important to make the case for a rational world.

When i was fifteen i decided to make a leap of faith and became an orthodox Jew. It was a long journey. 3 years later, I woke up in the summer of 06′ somewhere in the heart of Brooklyn, i had a beard that touched the ground, my tefillin (Jewish phylacteries) next to my bed, and my siddur on the cabinet next to me. I was in a Hasidic Yeshiva waking up at 6:00 am on a Saturday to go downstairs and pray. My parents were deeply distressed that I had ended up here (the rabbis had insisted I separate myself from them, especially my father who is not Jewish), my health (mentally and psychologically) had been damaged by the advice of Rabbis who did not even have a bachelor’s degree (Hasidim are not supposed to go to college). I can’t tell you exactly why i fled that day , all I know is I looked around at all these Yeshiva students sleeping in the bunk beds near me, and forced myself to get on a bus back to Philadelphia and never looked back.

I was a member of the very well known Jewish Hasidic movement, Chabad-Lubavitch. Chabad is not only the second largest group of Hasidim (A populist Jewish religious movement that was born in eastern Europe) it is also an international organization that runs educational institutions, has its own publishing house, and sends out its most charismatic students around the world to proselytize to unobservant Jews. It also has its own political lobbying group, with a decent amount of pull in Washington.

I think Chabad’s existence illustrates the need for secular activism, for a demand that religion and state remain separate, a defense of secular humanism, and a sharp critique of arguments based on any sort of divine mandate.

Chabad gains a massive amounts of its funds via charity from non-orthodox Jews (Mainly Jewish people who identify with the reform movement) who are uneducated about many of the things that Chabad promotes: an uncompromising view of Israel’s right to every piece of the Biblical kingdom; a mystical ideology that draws deeply on racism towards Non-Jews; a deeply misogynistic attitude towards women; and finally although the official organization would never admit it, the majority of them firmly believe that their last Rebbe (Grand Rabbi and Leader) Menachem Mendel Schneerson is the messiah and is coming back to save the Jews and punish the gentiles.

So what we have is a religious movement that gains its wealth primarily from the moderates or even those who are only “culturally Jewish.” The money pours into a whole network of institutions that promote ideals that these very charitable people deeply dislike and don’t know they are supporting, convinced by a massive PR campaign that they are promoting Judaism. This is an organization whose ideology is actively promoting hard-line policies in Israel and values  that are deeply unhealthy and destructive. That’s why there needs to be a Secular, Free-thought movement. To make people realize what a leap of faith really is. We need to go to the moderates and the liberal defenders of faith and make them realize what they are defending. We need to show there is an alternative to taking ethics by divine mandate, to  show religion is not making the world a better place, an demonstrate how people are suffering because they are not making the effort to really look and see what the faithful are saying.  We need to show people what faith really is or someone you love might be tricked into a leap of faith and not have a bus to come back home on.

Confessions of a Punk Teacher

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

 

If I had a soul, this is what it would look like.

If I had a soul, this is what it would look like.

Who is the Punk Teacher?

 

I decided to create the pseudonym “Punk Teacher” first and foremost so that I could write frankly about my new teaching career without risking drama, or worse, my job.

 

I am literally started my teaching career this year, summer 2009. My first experience was doing about a month of student teaching with Latino 5th graders who had failed my state’s standardized test.

 

I am completely thrilled to be a teacher. It is my dream career. Yet there are a lot of problems with the educational system, and I have no intention of turning a blind eye. In fact I think my perspective is uniquely honed in such a way as to cut through bullshit in a refreshing and relevant way.

 

Even in my limited experience I already have much to say and many stories to tell, but I will try to stay focused on introducing my motives and myself.

 

I am a 29 year old Latino male who has lead a sketchy enough life that I feel that “punk” is the best adjective for it. The word “punk” has many connotations which include everything from French situationism to homosexuality in gang culture. But I hope the word invokes some more common imagery. I hope it calls forth images of angst ridden dirty kids with mowhawks, of anarchists and skinheads, full of rage at a society that they are struggling to understand. I hope that it invokes this imagery because this imagery describes my own youth, which still permeates its influence into my adulthood.

 

My own story with education is mostly a failed one.

 

I am the middle son of a college professor.  By the time I was 13 I had enough traumatic childhood experiences which ranged from just growing up in a repressive Latin American dictatorship to being sexually abused. By the 5th grade I had been psychiatrically hospitalized, by the 7th grade I had been placed in a school for troubled kids who’s security was so high that teachers watched the students urinate to prevent the smuggling of drugs and weapons. My classmates were hardcore gangsters.

 

By 9th grade I was going to school drunk or on drugs, by 11th grade I dropped out with a GPA beneath a 2.0.

 

I had but one refuge in life; it was the punk subculture, which I will define as the collective youth cultures, which based themselves in anti-establishment music, clothing, philosophy and lifestyle. My favorite bands growing up were the Dead Kennedy’s, The Misfits, Black Flag, Bauhaus, Skinny Puppy, Last Resort, Brutal Juice,  The Business, Neurosis, and other classics of hardcore, Oi!, industrial, and old school punk.

 

By the time I was 18, I was working professional as a tattoo artist and facing felony charges for organized crime. Though the two are completely unrelated it does give a good impression of what kind of background I have.

 

A few years later I underwent an intense religious conversion to fundamentalist Christianity. This may seem like a strange dichotomy, but if one reads the book Righteous by Lauren Sandler , it is clear that the evangelical religious right has invested a great deal of resources at massive campaigns to co-opt anti-establishment youth cultures and is quite good at it. I never quite fit in well with my fellow fundamentalists due to bad habits like identifying myself as a Christianarchist; I reasoned that the Christ like life should lead one to an anarchist utopianism.  My brothers and sisters in Christ did not agree.

 

Right smack in the middle of my evangelical Christianity I panhandled my way across the United States, and enjoyed a great deal of volunteer work with the Anarchist community of Santa Cruz, California. I will never forget attending a training camp where many of the attendees where veterans of the notorious Seattle WTO Riots, where anarchists basically shut down Seattle, Washington in protest of globalization.

 

At the tail end of my evangelical Christianity my politics took a slightly right wing shift when I became a member of the Progressive Labor Party, a Communist party which counts among its slogans “Don’t Vote, Revolt!”

 

So don’t assume that in my religious days I was somehow wearing my trousers up to my chest with coke bottle glasses sitting around in pews singing 100 year old hymns. Though my education was marginal I was a voracious reader and studied Church history, and varying and competing theologies, including the Liberation theology of Latin America and the Social Gospel espoused by Martin Luther King. I also merged these ideas with a traditional southern Pentecostalism which teaches that God is a very active and evident supernatural entity which manifests miracles on a regular basis. The traditional view of this latter theology is called by its proponents “Charismatic Christianity.”  If it sounds like I was insane and dangerous I will not disagree.

 

But I will say that I believed that poverty was the product of social immorality and I wanted to fight it. I just happened to believe, like all Charismatics, that Jesus was talking to me inside my head and guiding my actions.

 

It was working with a youth ministry at my church where the congregation was mostly white middle class and the youth and children’s ministry was mostly black neighborhood kids that I began to develop my current worldview about education. As I got more and more involved with the kids and got to know their families, situations, and attitudes I realized that what they needed was a way out of a cycle of poverty and that education was a more realistic vehicle for that than prayer. This caused conflicts with my church and me and caused me to leave, never to return to a Charismatic congregation.

 

Shortly after that I started college, realizing that I needed to take my own advice.

 

 

 

College changed everything. Learning became my new addiction. It was hard as hell to get in and the whole process terrified me. I had no idea how I was going to pay for it, but the financial aid turned out to be enough. I made the lowest possible ACT score to be accepted into the University, but I was accepted nonetheless. Within 1 year I had a high GPA, laboratory research experience, and was the member of two prestigious academic organizations including HHMI, which is one of the world’s biggest supporters of biology research.

 

This December I graduated with a bachelor’s degree in neuroscience.

 

What college did for me was powerful. My formal science education along with my own voracious reading habits caused me to abandon my religion. This was not a passive process for me but a deep internal conflict about the ethics of truth, the death blow to my religion was inflicted by Richard Dawkin’s book The God Delusion which caused me to accept either I believed science and evidence were the best and most reliable road to truth or that willful faith was. The two were epistemologically incompatible, and anyone who has a science education and denies this is like an ostrich with its head in the sand.

 

Since I came from a punk-anarchist background it was deeply entrenched in my habits and worldview that when I see such a major problem with the world as the destructive power of religion I had to do something about it. So within a few months I became an active member of the secular and skeptical movements and remain one today. My activities have included podcasting, organizing campus clubs, traveling to conferences and blogs like this one. I don’t feel like I do enough and consider it one of my goals to increase my output; this is a very punk way to deal with a beloved cause.

 

I am now a 5th grade bilingual math and science teacher.  As someone who believes that the most powerful force in democratizing our society is education I believe that I am in the trenches of the culture war.

 

In this blog I hope to communicate effectively what my experiences are as an educator and hopefully to inspire and inform people on how they might act to improve education in this country.

Statistics is Sexy

Monday, August 10th, 2009

That’s the title of the Organizations & Market post referencing this latest New York Times piece. We here in humanities land love to hear that our math can be useful math too. Hot on its heels comes this great crash course in Bayesian reasoning – required reading for every student interested in, well, doing probabilities right.

One of the common refrains in my field is that failures of Bayesian reasoning are behind lots of our errors of reasoning in general – Linda the Feminist Bank Teller and the Asian Disease framing problem immediately come to mind. Consider the first problem:

Linda is 31 years old, single, outspoken, and very bright. She majored in philosophy. As a student, she was deeply concerned with issues of discrimination and social justice, and also participated in anti-nuclear demonstrations.
Which is more probable?

  1. Linda is a bank teller.
  2. Linda is a bank teller and is active in the feminist movement.

And then the second. There will be a short quiz next period.

Terrorism wins badminton

Sunday, August 9th, 2009

The BBC reports:

The England team has withdrawn from the World Badminton Championships in India because of “a specific terrorist threat” made by extremists.

The eight-strong squad pulled out of the tournament, which starts on Monday in Hyderabad, after reports of threats by Muslim extremists Lashkar-e-Taiba.

Lakshar-e-Taiba has shown that, sometimes, terrorism does work.

I cannot fault the English team here for cowardice, and in fact I commend their courage in acknowledging that the safety of their players is more important to them than the interests of whatever groups own and profit from the team. In fact, the failures involved in this event (the failure of Indian society to cultivate and protect a humanist ethos, the failure of the Muslim intelligentsia to combat fundamentalism, the failure of the British and Indian governments to ruthlessly exterminate those who issue such threats, etc.) are too broad to even be meaningful. The real questions here are: what are the short-term effects of L-e-T’s victory in Hyderabad? And what are the long-term effects?

The immediate effects of the withdrawal will probably be, in the long run, small. But in the long run this is another victory for terrorists in their seemingly endless war on modernity. Lashkar-e-Taiba is more of a Kashimiri nationalist organization than a Muslim reactionary militia, and Islam is simply a willing, almost eager puppet-ideology for these people to exploit in their political agenda. The association in the minds of L-e-T is the same tiresome trope that drives nationalist idiocy all over southeast Asia: modernity (read: the “West,” whatever that is) is the enemy. To them, intellectual progress stopped in the mid-7th century when an Arabian bandit cribbed a nationalist ideology of his own from Judaism, Christianity, and local pagan myths. This ideology they will defend to the end.

So, even if the immediate fallout is minimal (I can find no major American news story reporting on this issue), L-e-T is emboldened, and every victory like this is a recruiting slogan. To Indian nationalists and religious fanatics who agree with the objectives of L-e-T (even those who don’t agree with its methods), the urgency in eliminating this group is diminshed because they see it as merely wrong-headed but good-hearted tendency towards the ultimate goal of purging southeast Asia of Western influence and, more potently, of convincing the next generation of fanatics that triumph over modernity is a worthy, attainable goal.

Within Liberty

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Introduction

The great John Milton, referring to American eloquence, said: “Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience, above all liberties.” It seems that within the framework of what constitutes “liberty”, the lighted fire called “free-speech” is the greatest sight. The cracks and fissures in the monument we have to human solidarity – supported by the pillars Rights, Liberty, Freedom, Equality – is made to echo by simply the function of free-speech. In order to fix the problems, we must first identify them; this can only be done by the same tools that made them, that raised such a monument to the heights man has allowed himself. To such heights have we been able to gaze far into the future, deeply into grains of sand, and eloquently into our deepest selves. The problems we find – in the future, the grains and ourselves – are made apparent by the liberty to speak. Silence does not remove problems, it only covers them with a transparent veil. To fill the fissures, to smooth the sutures, we must open our eyes and minds and mouths and be prepared to engage with our own fallibility.

We dislike hearing of our own failings and here-in we must allow some support. None wants to be thought a failure. Yet, there is a vast chasm between missing a step and plummeting to the ground. People often mistake the latter for the former, their emotions matching the overzealous self-harm. Jane has forgotten her child at school, thus she is a failure as a mother. She feels the brunt and punishes herself emotionally even when she picks up her child two hours later. But she is not a failure, she is a fallible human. Yes, she has made a mistake. We do not aid Jane by mocking her, though we silently rebuke her to each other. As Bertrand Russell said, we do not gossip about each other’s virtues. The point remains however that she is not a complete failure, though her emotions are dictating as such.

Many will argue that such strong emotions prevent the recurrence of such a mistake. The punishment is done for the benefit of both Jane and her child. This is certainly true, but the problem remains to what extent do we allow such cross-firing to take in collateral damage. That is, how far do we take such a loathing of failing into the public sphere?

The Loathing of Failing and Berlin’s Concepts of Freedom

Jane is not a failure as human being to forget her child, though her actions are examples of what a terrible mother would do. However, it was not Jane’s intention to forget or leave her child (how does one deliberately forget anyway?). She made a mistake and, as a human being, this will happen. No one, not even Megan Fox, is perfect (though in the looks department, she comes “close”). Thus Jane must forgive herself and continue, trying harder. This is a healthy way to progress and better herself. Mistakes are not wooden-planks to produce our own crucifix, but to take higher steps toward an intended destination. This false-dichotomy plays out when it sets it sights on the freedom of others.

The reason to restrict anything within a society, that is curb liberty, is a form of coercion. This might be under the archway of what Isaiah Berlin calls “negative liberty”. To better understand “negative” notions of freedom (within Berlin’s context, freedom and liberty are interchangeable), we can also focus on its corollary.

Berlin states, in his famous essay Two Concepts of Liberty, that negative freedom is defined by the absence of coercion. As Nigel Warburton has succinctly stated: “Coercion is when other people force you to behave in a particular way, or force you to stop behaving in a particular way. If no one is coercing you then you are free in this negative sense of freedom.” An example might be that no curfew prevents one being on the streets, no police force prevents one from driving down to see friends, and so on. If one was prevented because of a curfew, police presence, threats of violence, then one would not be free (in this negative sense).

Berlin then goes on to define a positive conception of freedom. This is the freedom to do as one wants with one’s life, within that life’s context. As Berlin puts it with his usual beautiful phrasing: ” ‘positive freedom’ – the doctrine of self-adjustment to the unalterable pattern of reality in order to avoid being  destroyed by it.” The big concept is self-realisation and the actions toward exercising control over one’s life – rescinding such rights is absolving one’s positive freedom. The point is to help people realise their best virtues, their greatest strengths, their abilities. An example is someone who is stuck in a relationship with an abusive partner – no one is forcing her to stay in the relationship. The partner has told her to leave and abuses her emotionally and sometimes physically. Though the abusive partner is telling her to leave, she keeps telling herself she “loves” him. Her friends and family know this relationship is bad for her and if she could learn to love and appreciate herself more, she would realise she deserves better. In this context, she is not free – even though no one is stopping her from leaving this terrible relationship.

Thus, positive freedom is freedom to do something, as opposed to negative which is freedom from something.  Positive freedom might be thought of under the domain of “rights”. This means the allowance of slight paternalistic interferences – such that, someone who is wasting their life would be put on a better path. However, if the former part of the previous paragraph is troubling – talk of what’s best for the citizen, making them better people – then one is not in solitary company. Berlin himself maintains a heightened suspicion of positive freedom. Throughout history we have seen governments do the most horrid actions in the name of bettering themselves and their citizens.

So, positive freedom is the way one’s freedom is outlined – as outlined perhaps by declaration of rights and constitutions – and negative freedom is lack of coercion when performing certain actions.

Free speech is the ability to speak or express oneself without fear of being “coerced” into silence or violence. Thus, as the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy also states, freedom of speech is a negative freedom. Curbing it thus rescinds liberty, not so much bending as breaking it.

Removing freedom of speech is done out of this hatred or loathing of failure (and perhaps other reasons, though I won’t be addressing those here, since I am dealing with freedom of speech in a societal framework). People do not want to hear contradictory remarks about their most deeply held beliefs. The important point here is that the very existence of a challenge to conventional views is evidence of liberty and freedom. It was of course the Greeks who started this idea that one should challenge tradition (what the classicist Peter Jones calls “the tradition of challenging tradition”), basing thought and inquiry into and, more importantly, from the human realm, since this is the only realm that has utility. Even if one is completely wrong to speak out against evolution or Darwinism or cosmology, the fact remains that the established view is forced to cement itself within a stronger foundation. This means more of those who accept the established views within a framework – so the majority of scientists and Darwinism, the majority of liberals and freedom – must almost relearn their views, express them eloquently and understand why their views are better than their opponents’. Notice: I did not say their views are “true” or “perfect”. According to Karl Popper, we should work with ideas that are strongest against its counter-theories. We have ideas that withstood the onslaught of prevailing criticisms. Beneath the storm of outrage, these are the ideas that bloom even in the fog of obscurity, the rain of anger and thunder of discontent.

But these ideas only come to fruition with the ability to express them. Hating an opponent’s view, simply because it upsets or hurts one’s feelings, is not reason enough to rescind freedom of speech.

Religions are often the  groups responsible for demanding censorship,  banning and burning. Throughout modern history, it has been the policy of papal instruction to burn books that speak out against god,  to restrict scientific inquiries which upset the geocentric world-view, and the demand from an Iranian leader to kill a man who lives in London for writing a work of fiction. Unfortunately, religions have been granted so much freedom within a liberal and secular framework that it has poisoned the well of freedom for all. The religions have taken hold of the bucket and laugh as we flail for our fingertips to touch the water’s surface. Instead, our wavering reflections on the water mock us and the bucket is punctured by the religions’ thorny retribution. Now, whenever we reach in to drink from freedom, most of it drains out because of the loopholes driven in by the religions.

This is not meant to sound extreme or to highlight that we have lost this battle. It is true that talking of liberty is hardly ever done in the context of praising it – it is usually done to defend it.

So to be able to express views, within the framework of rescinded coercion, is the most important element of any form of liberty. To encroach upon that fundamental framework for the purposes of avoiding hurt feelings is to ignore that one is rendering the framework hollow. The religious tend to forget that freedom of speech to criticise should be met by freedom to criticise back. In most other areas, it seems that many religious people share the fundamental principles of a liberal society. Yet it is no irony that we often hear about protestations (from where, ironically but unsurprisingly, Protestants derive their name), from religious groups, against the most important value within a free society: free-speech.

The Silencing of Mankind – Why Free Speech Matters

Consider any other fundamental right or important element of freedom – such as equality, justice, and avoidance of harm. All these would be close to nothing if freedom of speech was eliminated, undermined or restricted. Indeed, though freedom of speech is fourteen shades of grey, it is grey nonetheless – not black and white. We can only talk about freedom of speech with freedom of speech; we can only highlight restrictions to our rights with free-speech; we can only find power in numbers to eliminate despotism with free speech.  The first mark of a society that is ruled by a totalitarian regime is when there is no freedom of speech (this does not mean that all totalitarian regimes did not allow free-speech, only that it is a clear indication of a violation of an important freedom).

If we arbitrarily demarcate lines based on nothing but the “tyranny” of “majority” opinion, as Mill viewed it, then we have got no closer to doing best for mankind. All we have done is catered to the feelings of one group – even if it is the majority. Even if the whole of mankind believes the earth flat, the planet remains stubbornly spherical. A better writer than myself, John Stuart Mill, put it like this:

If all mankind minus one, were of one opinion, and only one person were of the contrary opinion, mankind would be no more justified in silencing that one person, than he, if he had the power, would be justified in silencing mankind. (”On Liberty”, Chapter II. Of the Liberty of Thought and Discussion, 1869 – Italics mine.)

“Silencing mankind”. The power of Mill’s image is a resounding call to prevent a gag being placed in the mouth of humanity. Mill’s point on the censor himself runs further. The censor must assume infallibility when censoring a work, since he must know beyond all doubt that a work is better off being censored. But this is blatantly incorrect since no one can be absolutely correct in their judgements. The difficulty of course could be shifted to the other extreme: allowing a work to be published which causes harm. The point however that we need to address is that people must be given the choice. When a work is banned, restricted or pulled from distribution, a censor has taken it upon himself to read a work for a whole society. This is paternalism of the worst kind, grinding our emotional maturity into a fine powder of obedience. It seems that on the whole it would be better that a work is presented, even if it does cause harm, as this leads to the overarching growth of maturity in our species. Censoring seems to only allow for juvenile and loud voices to find support for their views: for example, a work is censored, a few “liberals” cry out. No one is hurt. A work is not censored and someone is killed by fanatics who are offended by it. The latter of course we have seen occur to the Japanese translator of The Satanic Verse. Whilst it might appear harsh that we should risk our lives for the sake of some ideal, like freedom, it seems we risk our lives and freedom by not standing up for it. The allowance of religious arrogance threatens every aspect of freedom one can name: personal autonomy, sexuality, friendship, fashion, careers.

Yet some things should be contentious for the liberal agenda, such as racist or misogynist writings. But then, they should be rejected from publication not because it hurts people’s feelings, but because of poor scholarship. I for example would be very interested to read a case, based on reason, evidence and good logic, that states we are better off denigrating women, treating them like cattle, and reducing their minds to dull throbs of rhythmic idiocy. I would like to read this because I know – as far as I know anything – that I never will. The case for the equality of humanity and the emancipation of women is so strong, in terms of a Popperian paradigm, that we can easily backhand arguments against it.

Thus it seems the censor is useless. Who is this person reading works for society? Who is deciding for the average citizen that material is too harsh?

Progress in terms of equality comes about through discussion. Limiting access to the public domain of ideas is to prevent the growth of these ideas toward the betterment of society. Before we can allow the ideas to come to fruition, we must have a foundation open to the light of reason and comprehension. Lucidity, ease of access and an understanding that ideas are fallible and to be contested should be the benchmark for policies that we decide for ourselves. Arbitrarily limiting or restricting certain forms of information assumes, as previously said, infallibility from the censor and as Mill also highlighted, the problem that the restricted document could contain the truth we seek.

The final problem in limiting free speech or censoring a work is the assumption that: only one group is harmed, or, if the whole of society is harmed, that no one benefits. Both are wrong. If, as constantly occurs, Muslims are offended by a work of art or fiction or the way someone scratches their nose, those targets are censored to placate Muslims (similarly when other religious groups cry out that they are offended). Now, that work of art is gone completely and the Muslims are satisfied. But what about the artist, the producer, the audience, and so on, who do appreciate it? Their concerns are swept aside to placate one group because they are religious as opposed to artistic or academic. Religions should not have a moral high ground but should be on the plateau of equality with the rest of us. Then we can speak of judging something; not because the religious groups hanker over us, but because we are all equally horrified at a dog being tortured to death as a work of art, equally dissatisfied with publication of some poor novel. This would mean that religions are taken seriously, not because they are religious people, but because they are people. Mature people, treated as such to show that we want to put them in line with ourselves, as adults dealing with a chaotic world. Not as children who have loud voices and toys of mass destruction they throw out their cot of platitude.

And the second point, that no one benefits is also wrong. By a group censoring or crying for a limit to the free speech in this instance, they prevent themselves from judging it. How many Muslims read The Satantic Verses before deciding Rushdie & Co. should die? How many people bothered to see the cartoons made by Jyllends-Posten before they marched in the streets, demanding death and blood of those who mocked Islam? In these instances, the groups would have benefited by simply engaging with the work. They then have a choice: ignore the silly infidels who just do not understand the power of Allah or retaliate by drawing satirical pictures of the cartoonists, writing a strongly-worded letter (minus death-threats) and so on. There are ways of “retaliating” that do not cross the bounds of discourse to enter the minefield of violence. Muslims reacting in such brash, harmful and violent ways are not making Islam any more a “religion of peace” or their faith any more acceptable by behaving in such stupid, childish ways. If religions want to be taken seriously, they must accept the rules of adult discussion which govern our growth and not the monkey-bars of juvenile delinquency that lets them leap over the lines of conduct we have in place.

This even before equality, justice, and equal suffrage. This before the inducing of minds toward intellectual adventure and fulfilment regardless of race, sex and ethnicity. This all before we decide on how create a path to glory, unifying our shaking hands and raising a platform toward peace. Freedom of speech is itself the decider in what should be free. Not everything should be said or spoken but the decision as to what we shall say, read or publish can only be decided on an open platform, using reason and not emotion as the yardstick. All this can only occur with the freedom to speak, ideas flying across the mental landscape like a flock of migrant birds blackening the ground with their shadows. Freedom starts with the first flap of wings and the dilation of the pupil toward the horizon. Now we can set off and take our wings toward a more peaceful horizon.

The worldview of George Sodini

Friday, August 7th, 2009

The first thing the public wanted to know was: why? Why did 48-year old George Sodini, a gainfully employed middle-aged man with no apparent history of violence, stroll into a gym earlier this week armed to the teeth and shoot thirteen women, killing four of them, before killing himself?

Sodini himself told us, for months or even years leading up to the incident, in an online blog and video diary. His print diary was just as insightful. Yet even with a plethora of detail on their side, the experts quickly whittled away the complexity behind this man to the singular convenient trope of the modern serial killer: George Sodini hated women.

This was the media’s story, and that was all they would say about it. Sodini was a loner, Sodini was frequently rejected by women, Sodini felt hurt by all the women in his life who declined his advances, and so they had to die because of his rejection issues. In the fast-paced world of 24-hour news reporting it was important to reduce the complex psychology of a deranged loner down to an easily-digestable theme, regardless of extemporaneous details like Sodini’s deep religious convictions.

And yet the only play that Sodini’s religious convictions received in the whole discussion following his death was in online secular freethought media. Every mainstream source was so hooked up on the convenient excuse of Sodini’s hatred of women that they never bothered to ask the hard questions about Sodini’s motivations. This is doubly perplexing because Sodini himself was quite clear on this point:

Maybe soon, I will see God and Jesus. At least that is what I was told. Eternal life does NOT depend on works. If it did, we will all be in hell. Christ paid for EVERY sin, so how can I or you be judged BY GOD for a sin when the penalty was ALREADY paid. People judge but that does not matter. I was reading the Bible and The Integrity of God beginning yesterday, because soon I will see them.

But of course, such truths would be confusing to the average consumer of mass media today. It simply does not comport with the current accepted social narrative that ‘religion = morality’ to think that a Christian could be both motivated to violence by religion and also be theologically correct in his understanding of doctrine.

‘Magic Words’ theology

Sodini comes from an Evangelical tradition that explicitly states that morality is irrelevant. Its apologists go out of their way to attack and ridicule those Christians who dare suggest that goodness matters. To the Evangelical, what is important is submission to doctrine, and nothing else. A man who is ’saved’ through the born again experience is in heaven guaranteed, not because they have earned it, but because they have recognized that they can’t earn it. The core principle here comes from Paul: humans are inherently filthy, perverted creatures (Paul’s word is ‘worthless’) who always fall short of God’s moral demands, so why bother trying to be good? We are so evil, in fact, that God himself had to come down from heaven and let himself be murdered on a tree just to give us the chance of some day receiving divine forgiveness.

Equipped with a “get out of hell free” card in the cheap excuse of a ‘born-again’ experience, Sodini felt empowered to do whatever he liked, whenever he liked, because he believed that his actions wouldn’t count in the long run. This ‘magic words’ theology teaches that, once you say the magic words admitting your inherent moral worthlessness and accept the human sacrifice necessitated by our worthlessness, you’re in the clear. Everything else is secondary to God, including your moral choices.

The average American is bombarded with propaganda linking irreligiosity to immorality, social deviance, and crime, so it makes sense that mainstream media wouldn’t burden them with the thought that religion could encourage immorality in this fashion. Yet this is exactly what the Evangelical mindset seeks to do: to cheapen goodness. They do this by equating value on goodness with heresy.

Sodini was indeed correct in his realization that, once he had met the minimum criteria of salvation, he was all set. Any expression of Evangelical born-again doctrine would have to agree with him, and indeed they have been agreeing with him for centuries. In his monstrous rampage Sodini has laid bare the central contradition of the American right: they preach and lecture and moralize endlessly as to how we should and shouldn’t behave, yet they are doctrinally committed to the notion that behavior is irrelevant except where it concerns submission to doctrine.

Not only that, but why has no one in the mainstream media asked if the Evangelical perspective on women poisoned his behavior as well? Theologians call the most popular conservative Christian perspective on gender roles ‘complementarianism.’ It holds that men and women have innate functions, and of course the innate function of women is submission to men. Sodini’s deeply unsatisfying relationships with women must have been truly perplexing to a Christian like him. What else to do with any element that persistently confounds your worldview except eliminate it? And so he did. Again, Christian doctrine gave him all the excuses that he needed, and yet popular media is stuck on square one, content to say that Sodini hated women without saying why his hatred would lead him to violence. For most people, being rejected by women does not lead to murder, but Sodini had religious passion on his side.

This question should have led to a sobering internal discussion among Christians as to how they can reconcile their doctrine with the social narrative that religion makes people better. The Christians should have been forced to review their scriptures and talk to their leaders and explain Sodini’s behavior to their congregations as some kind of error. But they can’t. The belief is too deeply-ingrained in centuries of Protestant dogma and apologetics. And the media prevented even a prelude to conversation by stopping everything at Sodini’s chauvanism.

If the media had the courage, and the public had the honesty, to confront this question, then we would really have something productive to talk about. Does religion cause morality? No, because they say that it shouldn’t. The Evangelical doctrines, plainly visible to the initiated but completely hidden from the public who are meant to believe that religion is about goodness rather than against it, have to be brought to light and seriously discussed. How can you be good without God?, they ask us. It’s very simple. How can you be good with God? According to the Evangelicals, you aren’t supposed to be. Sodini understood this, and it’s high time that the public realized this doctrinal monstrosity for what it is: an excuse to be evil.

Great article on the importance of Net Neutrality

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Rather surprising that such an informative article about the safeguarding of our most basic internet rights is posted on HuffPo.  But Alas, Karr does a superb job of summarizing the key points of net neutrality, which are all embedded within the Internet Freedom Preservation Act of 2009.  The act is a great read for anyone interested in net neutrality.  Check it out:

H.R.3458-7-31-09

Give a Damn plane crash and me being insensitive

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Followers of my regular blog know that I have been a large supporter of the Give A Damn project (see entries here and here).  I would support this project anyway, but I support it more because of my relationship with Rob Lehr, who is part of the core team for the documentary.  Rob and his production company filmed Skepticon I (for cheap, I may add).  Rob is also a member of the Church of the FSM here at MSU, and has led the organization during my absence in the past.

This morning, at about 4 am CST, Rob and Dan were doing a flyover of Nairobi to get footage for the documentary when the plane crashed.  Rob is interviewed in this video.

Now, here’s something interesting.  The Give A Damn documentary promos build up Rob as the atheist who doesn’t give a shit about others.  I know Rob, and while he is often frank and eager to lay responsibility where it should be, he is not apathetic or dispassionate.  All the same, that’s how he has been billed for this project.

However, Rob the uncaring atheist was the passenger that lept out of the plane before it could spiral down (ultimately landing upside down and bursting into flame upon impact before exploding five minutes later).  The gash on Rob’s head would later require six stitches and he also has a fractured leg.  After landing, he went back into the burning plane and pulled out an unconscious Dan, then went back in after the co-pilot.  In the process of unlatching the co-pilot’s seat belt Rob’s arm caught on fire (he has burns up and down his arm from it), yet he still managed to get the co-pilot free.  It was at this point that the locals dragged Rob and the co-pilot to safety.  If the co-pilot lives (he’s currently in critical condition), it may very well be because of Rob’s selfless bravery.  I’m very proud of Rob, and infinitely grateful that one of my closest friends is alright.  I’ve always known that Rob had this type of character.

So for all of you who have ever said that atheists have no impulse to be moral, you can now borrow my crowbar in the interest of dislodging your feet from your mouth – the atheist dragged one of your own from a firey wreckage when god was too busy to do it.

Which brings me to my next point.  Before I get into it, I want all my readers to bear in mind that this event was a tragedy.  I feel for everybody involved, and I had to really mull over whether or not I should say what I’m about to say.  I am not an asshole (in fact, I’m often too caring for my own good – my parents can vouch for this), and believe me when I express that saying what needs to be said even though it may hurt people is not always easy for me.  This scenario is no different.  I realize that some people may brand me as insensitive, and I admit that I can’t blame them.  But if we don’t all learn something from this, then we are not doing anybody a favor.  That being said, here we go…

Dan and Dave are both religious, which is why it was no surprise to see that Dave’s first post on the Give A Damn twitter feed was:

“Thank God for this #miracle of the #Giveadamn #documentary team surviving the #plane #crash.”


I couldn’t believe my eyes.  If it was god that kept Rob and Dan (and possibly the co-pilot) alive, why did he allow the plane to crash in the first place?  Moreover, the pilot of that plane is dead.  Dead. He is survived by a wife and four children.  How could anybody possibly call such a thing a miracle?  This is a travesty, maybe worse.

The truth of the matter is that if god was watching, he left it to the hands of a non-believer to do what he couldn’t (or wouldn’t) do.  The reason Dan is alive and that the co-pilot has as high a chance of survival as he does is because a rather exemplary mortal, not Jesus, was watching over the believers.  All the prayers in the world would not have budged Dan one inch further from that wreckage.  Instead, the man who thinks he only gets one crack at life was self-sacrificing enough to dive back into the blaze and rescue them.  Don’t thank god – thank human goodness.

When travesties of this magnitude can be used as evidence of god’s goodness, one can only wonder what could ever possibly be used to establish his wickedness or apathy (or reasonably, his non-existence).  The real inversion of reality here is that many Christians still consider god more worthy than man, including the best of us like Rob.

I am infinitely grateful that Dan and Rob, both my friends, are going to live.  Dan has a broken collar bone, but he’ll recover.  More Give A Damn twitter feeds beseech me to offer my prayers for them.  I will not pray.  If god exists, he didn’t help them then and I have no reason at all to believe he would help them now.  Instead, I’ll give credit where it’s rightly due and when they return home (Rob lives under two miles from my house), I will fry them up some bacon and buy them a beer, and reassure Rob once more how proud I am to know him.

Atheists and agnostics are the same thing

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

There are a million definitions out there for what the words “atheist” and “agnostic” mean.   Let’s start with what they do not (and cannot) mean.  They do not mean degrees of openness to evidence.  I only say this because I’ve encountered the claim that atheists are closed off to the possibility of god, and agnostics aren’t.  But just like agnostics likely do not believe in the tangible existence of smurfs, if they ever met one they would immediately change their mind, as they should; atheists are the exact same way.  If shown smurfs (or a god), or evidence of them, we will change our minds.

Others say that to be agnostic means to say that we cannot know.  There is much to say about this.  First, and most obviously, why can’t we?  Is it really too early to say that people cannot rise from the dead, and that to accept such a proposition without evidence is indicative of lazy thinking at best (and insanity, at worst)?  I don’t think so.  Even for the ambiguous god of deism, the best I’ve ever heard as a defense for “we cannot know” is that people cannot imagine any other way existence could have happened (forget, for a moment, that god would have had to exist to create all of this).  But that’s not an argument, it’s simply a lack of information (either on their part or on humanity’s part) or a lack of imagination.  You can honestly say that we do not currently know, and that is fine – but you lack the knowledge of the future (amongst other things) to say that we cannot know.  Additionally, to say that we cannot know about god is to treat the idea of knowledge in an absolutist fashion, which I’ll argue in the following section is not the way we utilize that idea.  Anyway, my arguments for how we can know about god’s non-existence with reasonable certainty (which I’ll tackle in the following section) can be found throughout this blog and over at my regular blog.

I’ve heard others say that to be agnostic means to believe there is a god, but to admit that we know none of his properties (although, I’d more associate this with deism).  These people suffer from the same philosophical failings as other believers.

However you view the term agnostic, I will argue that doing so entails misconceptions about the nature of knowledge or a poor analysis of the evidence on hand that, once resolved, will reveal that you are no different from an atheist.

The nature of knowledge.

For even our most certain claims, we must allow for the possibility we are somehow wrong.  Even something as simple as 1=1 might not be true (you may be dreaming this life, and in the real world this is not the case).  So what we do is we attach probabilities to truth claims based on the evidence on hand.  While I’m pretty sure that there are no purple, nine-legged insects with heart shaped candy eyes and a radio dial on their forehead on this planet, we may one day turn over a rock and find a colony of such insects.  While this is highly unlikely, it would be wrong to deny it as a (very distant) possibility, and thus my claim that there are no such insects is not absolutely certain.

While it’s not relevant to the discussion on atheism versus agnosticism, it should be noted that even god would be subject to these constraints.  What if he was wrong about being omniscient?  What if a demon is feeding god his every thought?  Such a demon could even make god feel omniscient and god would never be the wiser.  God would have to allow for this possibility, and so even he cannot have 100% certain knowledge.  The point is that what we’re after is not absolute certainty, we’re after reasonable certainty.  Ideas that are so likely to be true that they are as close as we can get.  Atheists accept this.  We are not saying we are absolutely positive that a god does not exist.  What we are saying is that there is no good reason to believe that there is one and plenty of good reasons to believe there isn’t one.  We say the same thing about unicorns, leprechauns, and purple nine-legged insects.  Agnostics also accept this on propositions that allow for it, which gets me to my next point – often, it is how these things are presented that determine our approach to them.

The nature of propositions.

Another claim I’ve heard of agnostics before is that they say “we cannot know”.  To me, this seems euphemistic for “we cannot falsify”, and they’re right.  However, claiming belief in an unfalsifiable proposition which bears no supporting evidence because nobody has managed the impossible is to fall victim to the trap of a self-fulfilling prophesy.  For instance, if you believe in smurfs with no corroborating evidence because we’ve yet to comb our universe to its very edges (a feat that would be tedious and impossible) to prove there is no centimeter of space-time (how’s that for a conflicting idea?  :P ) where a smurf exists, you will never be able to escape your absurd belief.  Instead, we need to realize that if a proposition of existence, such as that of smurfs, gods, and celestial teapots, has no evidence, then that IS evidence for that object’s non-existence.  Should we ever come across any evidence for these objects, we’ll happily change our minds.

Furthermore, as I said at the end of the previous section, whether we are agnostic (in the sense of saying we can’t disprove a proposition or we can’t know about a proposition) or atheistic (saying that it is so highly improbable as to be considered reasonably certain) about a proposition often has more to do with how those propositions are presented than anything.

Consider two gods, we’ll call them god Pork and god Beans.  They are identical in that they both have power as unlimited as the universe allows and are, in each example, the author of the universe.  Here is the difference.

God Pork uses his limitless power remove all evidence of his existence.  In this case, the absence of any evidence for the existence of Pork IS the evidence of his existence, and every discovery ever made will conform to the idea of this god.  It is impossible to be anything but an “agnostic” about Pork.

But god Beans, he uses his limitless power to provide you with irrefutable proof of his existence.  We lack irrefutable proof of his existence, so it is impossible to be anything except an atheist about Beans.  You cannot be open-minded to the existence of Beans because he is a contradiction of logic.  It would be like saying there is a married bachelor – you cannot have both.

Richard Carrier originated this argument and articulates it better than I ever could.

Recap

So, to you people that call yourselves agnostics, how do you really differ from atheists?

  • Are you open to the idea of a god?  So are we.
  • Are you unsure about the existence of god?  Why?  Are you also unsure about the existence of smurfs?  Of nine-legged purple insects with candy eyes and radio dials?  Why one and not the other?
  • Obviously, we can know some things: how to open a door, that scratching our crotch will not open a door, that the Sun will rise in the East tomorrow, that “National Treasure” is amongst my DVDs (I just looked up at random).  Why can’t we know (by any sane definition of the word) if there is a god, by use of all the available evidence?

This should help to explain why I called agnostics lazy thinkers in a recent post.  I do not mean to imply that they are dumb (I do not even believe that Christians are unviersally dumb), but that agnosticism requires some lazy thinking to maintain.

I will be looking to modify and add to this, so please post objections.

Facebook is the new NWO (not the wrestling alliance)

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Check out this map created by Vincenzo Cosenza.  It shows that Facebook is the most used social networking site in nearly every country in the world, specifically the west.  Even Russia’s top site V Kontakte is basically Facebook.

I think it’s great that social networking isn’t split across many different platforms, even though I’m usually in favour of less centralized control.  Facebook, so long as it continues to provide more privacy features, allows what Piere Levy calls “totalization without control.”  That is, we can communicate with one another through and around any institutions, so long as they allow Facebook.  Now one might counter by saying that having only one major networking site makes it easier for governments to censor them, but I would argue that the easier access by so many others (others without much knowledge of how to use the internet), in so many free countries, outweighs its censorship in few countries, but only if their still remains other more spreadable and tougher to censor forms of social networking, and especially when Facebook can cross-platform with these other forms of social media.

What do you think?