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Archive for the ‘Media’ Category

Go England: Atheist Advertisement on Buses!

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

0F16E795-BB3C-4356-B8D4-968B9B34972E.html

That thar is a link, you should click on it.

Toodles.

Where is the case for optimism?

Monday, December 29th, 2008

*sigh*…the year in review.

Presto! Your belief is…

Friday, December 19th, 2008

There are many, many people out there who are just plain confused about religion. Personally, I know a lot of people (and I’m sure you’ll realize that you do, too) who have an idea of where they stand on individual issues (like reincarnation or satan or karma) but are intimidated when it comes to the big picture because they do not know what to call themselves. 

I think there is a bizarre parallel between religions and music genres. Let me explain. There are quite a lot of people (you may be one of them) who enjoy music but aren’t passionate about it and have no extreme preference in what they listen to. One of these people would probably claim they listen to everything, even though it’s not like they sincerely enjoy every piece of music that goes through their ears. There are similar types of people when it comes to religion. The equivalent would be those who may know vaguely what they think but consider many matters unimportant, and then give themselves a  label like agnostic (or not at all) and then attatch, “but I respect all beliefs”. But can they honestly say that they respect all beliefs? If they thought about it, probably not. On the extreme end there are also music fanatics who will just be plain OCD about their music generes. Have you ever been listening to a friend’s song on their iPod, and you ask what it is, and they’ll reply, “oh, that’s post-industrial tranceacid rapcore,” or, “that would be popharmonics jazz fusion.” Unfortunately, I think the same thing is happening to religion, and so many labels are popping up these days that I can understand how it would be hard to distinguish them without some good research. Lately I’ve heard people describe themselves as “christian wicca”, “naturalized deist”, and “environment-oriented theist” (I think they might have been trying to say pantheist) among some others. 

All of this is to prove a point about people these days. An overwhelming amount of them just lose track of what they think. This is often either because they just don’t know what to call themselves, or because they get confused by the myriad of (now becoming) interchangable beliefs that eventually become meaningless if they’re mixed up too much. 

To a point, I have a solution for these people.

 

The Belief-O-Matic.

 

I’m actually not kidding about this. It’s an astonishingly accurate quiz made up of about 20 really precise questions. I really think that many people are intimidated by, or just don’t feel like doing, the research it takes to be knowledgable about their faith. I think that this simple online quiz is surprisingly effective and non-hoaxy, as opposed to basically every other “what are you” quiz on the internet these days. 

Even if you are quite clear on what you are, you should go on over to beliefnet and take a look, because you’re probably skeptical (and I know you want to). The quiz takes about 5-10 minutes and is so right it will surprise you.

 

Cheers

Conservation-ing

Monday, December 1st, 2008

A while back, we featured Dr. Terese Hart – environmentalist – on the site. She was in the States at the time on a break from her work in the Congo. Ever since, she and her husband Dr. John Hart are back at their work on the new TL2 project.

Terese Hart maintains a blog www.bonoboincongo.com where she posts updates of their project and other interesting happenings (and there are many!). A lot has happened since she went back, and though there is no way I can surmise it here, I have put up some of what I think are the most striking pictures from the past 2-3 weeks. If you enjoy conservation, jungle life, or even simply adventure, check out her blog for sure. And if nothing else, please have a look at the last picture here.

Travelling through Congo

Traveling through the jungles is done mostly on motorbikes along known trails (of which there are no guarantees). But sometimes you have to get creative.

Bush meat in Congo

Bust meat hunting is a hot button issue. While the village locals do not do this in epidemics, the demand for bush meat from bigger cities is causing a major problem.

Improvised Weapon

Improvised weapons such as this are now widespread, and allow people to carelessly overhunt.

Locals

Some police officers who were questioning the team (who were later arrested and released) being given a tour of a Dell laptop, GPS and other such devices.

Kids learning math

The village ‘nurse’ giving kids a quick lesson in math.

Forest Elephant

A forest elephant – a target for poachers – in a dreamy scene

Ivory Sale in Namibia

CITES is holding the massively controversial one-off ivory stock pile sale these few months. Here is a picture from the sale in Namibia (Oct 2008)

Taking a bribe

Perhaps the most striking of all these images – an ANR agent taking a bribe of in the form of a Duiker

(ANR = Alliance pour une nouvelle République. Apparently a force equivalent to the FBI in the US)

Steven Baldwin Gets Punk’d By Two Local Radio Hosts

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

It amazes me too, but there actually is a right-wing Christian Baldwin brother (given that the family is known for its liberal values, who would’ve thunk it?). His name is Steven Baldwin, of Biodome and The Usual Suspects fame, and he claims that he ‘found God’ and became a batshit crazy fundamentalist who believes that Howard Dean is a puppet of the Anti-Christ and has insisted that he would leave the country if Obama were elected.

To appeal to young people who are increasingly falling away from hardcore religion, Stephen has created the “Livin’ It” Skate “Ministry” to tie something cool in with something… not so much. Not surprisingly, he’s also a complete idiot, which makes me wonder if his character in Biodome wasn’t just an act. To promote “Livin’ It”, two irreverent local radio hosts who most surely are going to hell decided to provide the Ministry with a theme song -

[youtube]fxoVYFOfM2g[/youtube]

fyi, the person who posted this video is Dr. Tae Kim of Northwestern University, who apparently is also really good at skateboarding. Where were physics professors like that in my school?

Beautiful

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

People come before Ideas.  Share this with everyone.

Two Ways of Looking at the World

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

One in search of answers through eyes of wonder, joy, and fulfillment:

One in search of answers through eyes of fear, conspiracy, and negativity:

The Old Africa is a Country Mistake…by an “Almost” Vice President

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

Watch this video.  Just watch it.  Kindgartners think Africa is a country.  Now that Palin has lost maybe she’ll return to the sandbox, build some sand castles, play some kickball, and drink some kool-aid.

Oh how so very true

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Candles, Chock Full of Engineering

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

Candles appear to be simple objects. They’re just a wick wrapped in wax, right? They are that and much more. Which contains more energy, a molecule of candle wax or a molecule of TNT? The following video answers that question and more…

This video is one from a series called The Periodic Table of Videos by the University of Nottingham. Candles are impressive.

“Who wrote your questions?”

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

Wow, watch this video of Joe Biden being asked the most ill-concieved questions I have ever seen.

This is a great example of how journalism should not be conducted – biased, leading questions loaded with buzzwords.  Not only that, but the buzzwords are the bias that lend itself to the leading of the questions.  Kudos to Biden for handling the situation well.

Secular convocation vs fundie radio

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

So I’ve been having a media circus in Edmonton here over trying to change one line from the convocation charge. The best so far was the radio interview I agreed to without looking into (I still would have done it had I known).

The station is AM 930 The Light. On their website is featured ads for Focus on the Family and Christ Centred Professionals Club (among others). This showed me that it would be a very en”light”ening interview.

I recorded the stream and posted it on my blog. Check it out there and see how far into the call ins you can get (hint: they advertise Expelled several times).

UAAA keeps fighting for secular convocation

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

My group made the front of the city section of the local paper today, in our crusade for a secular convocation.

It’s been a busy few months, but we’ve finally ascertained meetings with the right levels of administration and could potentially see this resolved by the end of November (university administrations move pretty slowly).

Here’s an exerpt (the full story will be taken down in 30 days, after which you can find it on my blog):

A student group at the University of Alberta is fighting to make the school’s convocation ceremony a God-free event.

Specifically, the U of A Atheists and Agnostics society objects to one line in the service, when the chancellor charges graduates to use their degrees for “the glory of God and the honour of your country.”

The group is petitioning the university to either remove the line or change the wording to respect their “God-optional” views.

The god-optional refers to the last story the Edmonton Journal ran on my group.

So four cryptozoologists walk into an art museum…

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

What follows is an excerpt from a partial transcript of an event that occurred at Bates College’s Olin Art Museum. The event was a panel discussion with four cryptozoologists, which accompanied “an exhibition inspired by the arts of taxidermy,” containing art and sculptures depicting a variety of cryptozoological forteana. The exhibit ran from May 29th to June 27th, 2007. This transcript was prepared by a Bates College professor whose name has been omitted for privacy. It features Bigfoot researcher Tim Cassidy, sea serpent enthusiast J.P. O’Neill, artist Jeffrey Vallance, and cryptozoological heavyweight Loren Coleman.

The highlight of the symposium for many people occurred at the end of a panel discussion involving Loren Coleman, Tim Cassidy (a Bigfoot researcher), J.P. O’Neill (author of The Great New England Sea Serpent), and Jeffrey Vallance (an artist interested in the paranormal). Nato Thompson, curator of Mass MoCA, speaking from the audience, said he assumed that there must be some creatures the panelists believed in and some they didn’t. He proposed to read a list of creatures of various kinds and asked the panelists to raise their hand if they believed in their existence. This challenge evoked considerable amusement and laughter from both the panelists and the audience. Loren Coleman said he would play along with this “game,” but pointed out that he did not uses the word “believe” in this context; he preferred to say that he accepted or denied the evidence for the existence of these beings.

“Sea monsters,” Thompson began. All four panelists raised their hands, as they did when Thompson called out “Sasquatch” and “Yeti.” Only one panelist raised his hand for “vampires” and “aliens.”

“Hobbits.” All four panelists raised their hand again, but Coleman hesitated, saying “It depends on which kind.”

“Fairies.” Three panelists raised their hands including Coleman.

“Angels.” Two hands went up including Coleman’s. “I’m open-minded,” he said.

Thompson continued: “Hydra,” “ghosts,” “Medusa.” When he finished, Coleman took over. “Unicorns.” Two hands went up. “Mermaids.” Three hands. Then with much laughter and applause, the session came to a close.

This was the crucial point in the symposium, the moment when the cryptozoologists had been challenged to make a public and unambiguous commitment about their position on the existence of these creatures. (Vallance, the artist, had said earlier that it didn’t matter to him whether they existed or not.) The humor that accompanied this very serious “game” can be understood, I think, as an effort to diffuse the tension and embarrassment the panelists may have felt at being asked to take a position that would marginalize them in the eyes of some unsympathetic members of the audience. Loren Coleman’s responses- raising his hand half way and then lowering it, raising it tentatively and then qualifying his position, raising it and then indicating he was just joking – had the effect of blurring the very boundary between science and pseudoscience, reality and the imagination, that Nato Thompson’s question had challenged him to draw.

Tauriq on eSkeptic

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

I’m pleased to say our very own writer, Tauriq, is the featured writer of this week’s eSkeptic from the Skeptics Society. Tauriq wrote a review of Michio Kaku’s book Physics of the Impossible: A Scientific Exploration of the World of Phasers, Force Fields, Teleportation and Time Travel. (Allen Lane/Penguin, 2008, ISBN 9780715999921).

Like all of Tauriq’s writing, the review is informative and most importantly, it makes we want to read Kaku’s book.

If you aren’t subscribed to eSkeptic yet, do so here. I highly recommend it. It is a great dose of skepticism, science, and rationality in your inbox, weekly.

Christian sex secrets revealed

Saturday, October 11th, 2008

Sometimes you can’t make this stuff up:

Just A Taste Of What You’ll Discover…

How to banish premature ejaculation.

How to eliminate “quick” erections.

How to become a multi-orgasmic male.

Discover why God hates “sexless marriages.”

E.L.I.T.E.S. Move to Canada!

Friday, October 10th, 2008

I’m sure this video is exactly what so many of you think.  I’ll personally stand at the border, in a Mountie costume, and give you a basket of  maple syrup, social healthcare, beaver meat, and aborted fetuses.

This is Why Jesus is Not a Friend of Mine

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

This video is from a real ska band called Sonseed.

I tried to find lyrics of this song online, but I couldn’t find any. However, courtesy of me, I transcribed the lyrics of song! (Further proof that I have no life.)

Jesus is My Friend by Sonseed

Jesus is a friend of mine
Jesus is my friend
Jesus is a friend of mine
I have a friend in Jesus

Jesus is a friend of mine
Jesus is my friend
Jesus is a friend of mine

He taught me how to live my life as it should be
He taught me how to turn my cheek when people laugh at me
I’ve had friends before and I can tell you that
He’s one who will never leave you flat!

Chorus

He taught me how to pray and how to save my soul
He taught me how to praise my god and still play rock and roll
The music may sound different but the message is the same
It’s just an instrumental praise his name

Chorus

Jesus is a friend of mine
Jesus is a friend of mine

Once I tried to run, I tried to run and hide
But Jesus came and found me and he touched me down inside
He is like a mountie, he always gets his man
And he’ll zap you any way he can. Zap!

Chorus

He loves me when I’m right, He loves me when I’m wrong
He loves me when I waste my time by writing silly songs
He loves me when I’m quiet and I have nothing to say
He’ll love me when I’m perfect if I ever get that way

Jesus is a friend of mine
Jesus is my friend
Jesus is a friend of mine
I have a friend in Jesus

Jesus is a friend of mine
Jesus is my friend
Jesus is a friend of mine
I have a friend in Jesus

Jesus is a friend of mine
J-J-J-Jesus
Jesus is a friend of mine

That was frightening, but I did enjoy this part of the song:

But Jesus came and found me and he touched me down inside
He is like a mountie, he always gets his man
And he’ll zap you any way he can

Next Time a Creationist Asks for Transitional Fossils…

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

…you go ahead and whip out this link:

http://www.transitional-fossil.com/

It is pathetic how many creationists are out there. It is even more saddening that they don’t even know what evolution is! Not one creationist I’ve ever spoken to has ever ever ever defined evolution correctly. They are arguing against a straw man. But the worst of it all is that they do not even listen when they’re told that they don’t know what evolution is. They never bat an eyelash. They just move on as intellectual zombies, slaves to their religious beliefs that don’t let them see reality.

So, I have a suggestion. If you ever encounter a creationist, don’t debate about evolution. It is a pointless exercise when the creationist does not even know what evolution is. Instead, it would be more useful to either leave the guy alone or try to educate this person about what creationism really is. Only do the second option if you yourself are well informed about what evolution is.

On a side note, I doubt that link will change any creationist’s mind.

Anyway, let’s still give three cheers for the Tiktaalik.

Will Smith Doesn’t Believe in Math

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

“2+2= Whatever I want it to.”  No Will, it doesn’t.  This isn’t the world of The Secret.  Just because you’ve achieved great success through personal willpower doesn’t mean that everyone can.  Some advice, don’t travel to Darfur and tell the locals that they can achieve what they want if they just put their mind to it, especially considering that with your unheralded ability to achieve even the loftiest of goals you don’t cure aids, or even cancer.  No Will, you focus all of this power into killing aliens, pissing off your uncle, fighting the undead, pursuing happiness, and saving earth.

Pat Condell on Sharia Law in Britain

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

The video that was originally in this post was taken down by Youtube.  This video is a commentary on what happened.

Below is a repost of the original video on someone elses Youtube account:

Religion in political cartoons

Sunday, September 28th, 2008

I have to appreciate Christianity Today’s post on religion in political cartoons. Here’s a sample (click through for a few more).

The Three Demon Diet

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Everyone in Honduras is raving about the new three demon diet.  Just call your local priest or witchdoctor and he’ll come rid you of demon fat.  Screw Tago. Screw Freddy! You’re fat, get rid of them.  They are not your friends, they are demon fat summoned to Earth to make you obese and shaky…and insane.

So call 1-800-threedemon and a priest or witchdoctor can treat your insanity with…more insanity! Yayyy!

…I would drool at the chance to meet the news reporter who interviewed the demons by placing the microphone in front of the woman’s stomach, even though she was clearly the one speaking the demon voice.

Video: CFI Skeptics Trounce 9/11 Truthers on Ontario’s “The Agenda”

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

As a prelude to a scheduled debate put on by CFI Ontario, two CFI-sponsored skeptics and two well-known 9/11 “truthers” (people who reject the accepted account of the attacks of 9/11/01) met live on an Ontario TV program called “The Agenda.” CFI skeptics John Ray and Jefferson Flanders faced off with conspiracy theorists Michael Keefer and Graeme MacQueen, while host Steve Paiken peppered both sides with questions.

Throughout the interview, the 9/11 truthers performed the common Guish Gallop-style maneuver where as soon as one argument is shot down, they move on to another seamlessly (notice, for example, what happens when the truthers are pressed to back their claim about the fact that there is no security camera footage of the hijackers available from the Boston airport). The skeptics remained calm and controlled, and clearly came out as the more sensible side in this televised debate, which you can watch for yourself here.

The following evening, the same skeptics and truthers met for a moderated debate. Video footage of that debate is forthcoming.

Center for Inquiry Promo Video

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

I am proud to present to you CFI’s most recent promo video. The official site for the video contains more info.

[youtube]_o2_U0ggvb8&fmt=18[/youtube]

I quoth the CFI site hosting the video:

The methods and values of scientific thinking have expanded our knowledge about life and our place in the universe. This modern knowledge—based on experience and evidence—has brought enormous benefit to humanity, yet many people still choose to rely on ancient texts and beliefs to guide their lives and their nations.

The Center for Inquiry exists to change this situation. We are here to promote the scientific outlook, to expand the methods and values of science into all areas of human endeavor.

We invite you to learn more about the ways we are using education, outreach, and activism to advance reason and human values around the world. Then, if these values are as important to you as they are to us, we ask you to join CFI.

Let your voice be heard. With your help, we can ensure that our time—your time—will be a time of science and reason.

Some of the brightest lights or our day are in this video. It contains Steven Pinker, Daniel Dennett, Susan Jacoby, Ann Druyan, Laurence M. Krauss, Damon Linker, E.O. Wilson, Jennifer Michael Hecht, Richard Dawkins, and Paul Kurtz.

The video is fantastic and for very good reason. Lauren Becker, a field organizer for CFI, along with Rich Blundell, president of Omniscopic and CFI supporter, produced the video, and I, yours truly, created all the graphics used in the video.

However, there are some observations I would like to make about the video. Again, it is awesome, but that is mainly due to the fact that I greatly respect and admire the work of everyone featured in the film. I am not entirely sure what the target audience for that video is, but I think in future promotional videos, younger student leaders need to be featured so that the video will appeal to a younger generation. I guess this has been a long-standing problem with CFI and the skeptical/secularist movement in general. There needs to be a greater showing of the many young people who are part of the movement. Plus, I have no idea how appealing this video will be to people who are not already familiar with CFI’s mission.

Nevertheless, I love this video. Lauren and Rich did a fantastic job and I am proud of them and CFI.

On a side note, if you noticed that Dawkins’ head was too close when he was shown for the second time in the video, don’t fret. Due to the contraints in time that was the best shot available.

Edger Exclusive Photoshop: The Mona-Dawkins

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

Fundamentalist Theatre 3000 BC: Bibleman – A Fight For Faith

Friday, September 12th, 2008

Today I will review Bibleman – A Fight for Faith so you won’t have to lose your brain cells. You can view the whole thing HERE.


Yes that’s right… discontented with the lack of overt religious themes in mainstream superheroes such as Superman or Spiderman, CBN has created a series called “Bibleman”. Part Jedi Knight (who, judging from the choreography hasn’t even mastered the simple Shii-Cho form) and part former security guard turned holy avenger, Bibleman battles stereotypical one-sided supervillains, some of whom have been effeminized to imply that they are homosexuals.

In the beginning, Bibleman’s sidekick Cypher (the African-American in the picture) fights off thieves who intend to steal bibles from a Christian bookstore and burn them… for no particular reason whatsoever except maybe that they hate religion or something.

We soon find out that the real enemy is someone named ‘The Wacky Protester’ (the ridiculous-looking thing at the left of the poster), who has a machine that generates a portal to a virtual world where “there is no God”. The Protester essentially wants to lure little kids into his ‘funbox’ (nothing wrong there…) and convert them into atheists, as if there isn’t any indoctrination coming from anyone in the religious community and just being an atheist were some sort of horrible atrocity. It is at this point where the film makes a pathetic attempt at pop culture, when the talking computer that is the Wacky Protester’s partner in crime compares his virtual world machine to “The Matrix”.

Two kids are quickly abducted from a Christian summer camp, lured inside the machine, and converted into atheists by the virtual world’s subpar 3D graphics and random buzzing CGI bees… somehow. But unfortunately for the Protestor, Biblegirl – despite being a creationist and biblical literalist – is able to spout out a bunch of Treknobabble in Bibleman’s pseudoscience lab to determine what was happening to those two kids who became atheists.

Bibleman and Cypher then engage in a battle royale with the Wacky Protestor – if you consider a crappy musical number and lightsaber choreography more pathetic than any Star Wars fanfilms that I’ve seen a ‘battle royale’ – to save the souls of those two children. Of course, God always wins in the end, so despite the Protestor and his swarm of CGI bees’ best efforts, Bibleman prevails and those two kids can continue to be good fundamentalists who will grow up voting Republican because of ‘family values’ issues.

It’s ironic that Bibleman – A Fight for Faith implies that atheists are out to indoctrinate young people into not believing in Christianity when the film itself is doing the exact same thing towards atheism – essentially indoctrinating kids, who form and hold opinions much more easily than adults, that atheists are all elitist college nerds who should be feared. But I would argue that this film also teaches kids a far more dangerous lesson – that people different from your conservative Christian self are somehow ‘out to get you’; replace ‘atheist’ with any other religion or ethnic group and this film would be just as reprehensible. On the other hand, the effort (or lack thereof) that CBN put into special effects made the film more hilarious and bearable than otherwise intended.

Overall, for promoting negative stereotypes about atheists and to aim it towards the most susceptible audience possible, Bibleman – A Fight for Faith gets 4.5 out of 5 popped collars.

Exclusive Edger Photoshop: General Obama

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

Obama = General Adama

McCain = Colonel Tigh

Palin = President Roslin

Who’s Biden?

ID’s REAL Equal Weight

Friday, September 5th, 2008

Via Steve Greenberg

Your Four Horsepeople

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

After the anticipated internet popularity of the Lori Lipman Brown segment on the Colbert Report, Comedy Central Insider has posted the Colbert Report’s 8 Best Atheist Moments.

It’s surprising that only 2 of the 4 horsemen of Atheism have appeared on the Colbert Report, but I rather like the Atheist guests in these videos.  From what I’ve experienced in this movement and from where I think it’s headed, Brown, Dawkins, Harris, and Hirsi Ali are rather good spokespeople for the cause.

Suppose we needed four representatives for Atheism.  Who would your four horsepeople be?

Finally, the Video: Secular Coalition for America’s Lori Lippman Brown on the Colbert Report

Monday, September 1st, 2008

On Friday, August 29 Lori Lippman Brown, head of the Secular Coalition for America, was featured on the Colbert Report’s Better Know a Lobby segment. Initially, the taping was supposed to show on Thursday, August 28, but was postponed till the next day.

Enjoy!

The Course of Reason- Episode 2

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

The Center for Inquiry has just released their second episode of the new student freethought oriented The Course of Reason podcast.

On the Center for Inquiry’s The Course of Reason podcast Justin Trottier, Tyler Handley, and Debbie Goddard discuss campus-related news and events in the world of freethought activism, engage in educational segments, conduct interviews and panels with freethought leaders from around the world, and provide student leaders with information and resources for successfully organizing, participating in, and running a campus freethought group.

Join the podcast’s Facebook fan page

“Prosperity gospel” preacher-”IRS investigation of my church is ‘politically motivated’”

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

Yesterday, a Minnesota “prosperity gospel” preacher, whose theology is based upon the un-Biblical precept that God wants his followers to be economically successful, stated that an intensive IRS probe of his church’s income and expenses is “politically motivated.”

Reverend Mac Hammond told the Christian Post that “enemies of the gospel” are behind the inquiry. Though Hammond could not be reached by email by this author for comment, he appears to maintain that the IRS probe into his church’s income is based on purely material or political gain rather than on an authentic, principled desire to enforce IRS tax regulations that are suspicious of any religious entity’s gaining for itself a particularly strong annual income from donations and investments.

This IRS probe comes in the wake of (Republican) Senator Chuck Grassley’s battle to ensure that six profitable megachurches adhere to IRS regulations of non-profit, non-political entities amassing great wealth adhere IRS religious-based tax exemptions.

Reverend Hammond did not provide any details about whose political ends are being served, or what possibly political gain other than principled enforcement efforts of existing regulations are provided by the investigation of successful American megachurches for their lavish economic gains.

Megachurches, which comprise a relatively small (but growing) percentage of mostly Protestant congregations, typically draw thousands of worshipers from across their host states to single, highly profitable locations, often providing strong economic gains for popular pastors. Among Senator Grassley’s targets is the infamous megachurch reverend Creflo Dollar, whose personal benefits for presiding over a large (apparently unaffiliated Protestant) congregation include at least two private Rolls-Royce automobile for Dollar’s personal use as well as numerous other kickbacks.

The principle of separation of church and state, which dates back to the time of Jefferson, requires that local and federal government officials be wary of any religious organization that unnecessarily abuses its tax-exempt status for the purpose of personal gain by clergymen. No fault has yet been found in the enforcement of such regulations other than personal offense by the wealthy religious pulpit-men who have profited the most from exploitation of IRS tax exemption.

Ultimate Christian Wrestling

Friday, August 29th, 2008

This was just too hilarious to pass up. First there was Bibleman, the fundamentalist Christian superhero. Now meet Ultimate Christian Wrestling, the fundamentalist Christian wrestling federation.

Seriously though – I may not be any connoisseur of wrestling, but these people are pretty good; they even have the chairs-and-ladders-being-used-as-weapons thing down:

Now all we need is a fake plot with a powerful and amoral wrestling industry mogul to turn this into a man-drama.

UPDATE: Secularism on the Colbert Report on Friday

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

This just in:

Lori Lipman Brown, the Secular Coalition for America’s director and lobbyist in Washington D.C., will be featured on The Colbert Report segment “Better Know a Lobby” most likely today, Thursday, August 28 on Friday, August 29.

From the Secular Coalition for America’s site:

Secular Coalition for America director Lori Lipman Brown is being featured on The Colbert Report’s “Better Know A Lobby.” The two-hour taped interview with Stephen Colbert in his New York City studio will be condensed to a six-minute, or less, segment. We hope the final product will be humorous and possibly even informative. The Comedy Central show, which airs at 11:30pm (10:30 central time), is expected to be broadcast on Thursday (8/28).

Too bad it will be only 6 minutes long. However, this looks like it will be good exposure. Tune in and watch!

Your Intelligence is Nothing but a Fart of God

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Edger, for those of you who don’t know, is also just a fart of God.

The Skeptologists!

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

My friend, Brian Dunning (from the excellent Skeptoid podcast), is in the process of creating a new TV show called The Skeptologists. They’ve just finished the pilot episode. Hopefully it gets picked up and we get more of this awesomeness!

From the Skeptologists site:

We’re not willing to just accept stories of the paranormal or supernatural. We want proof. Each week, we’ll take on a handful of wild claims — from the Bermuda Triangle to Bigfoot sightings to haunted houses — and apply accepted scientific practices and experiments to see if these ideas really hold up. Whether in the field or in the lab, we’ll literally put these subjects to the test in the hopes that one day we may find something that can’t be explained. Each episode will investigate one or more popular paranormal, supernatural, or other type of phenomena, in favor of evidence-based science.

The cast includes:

They have a one minute sneak peak trailer out on Youtube. Here it is:

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You can HELP the Skeptologist by sending an e-mail of support to skeptologists@newrule.com. Write-in in support of this show idea and let them know why you would watch a show about critical thinking, science and skepticism. The e-mails will be collected and used to help with the show getting picked up. (They won’t use your e-mail for anything other than this purpose by the way.)

Let’s hope we see this on the air soon!

Bikini atheist catfight

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

Do you find traditional is there a God debates a bit dull and stuffy?

Beyond Reasonable Doubt’s author Geoff Henley might agree, and is using the following add to promote his book:

The Ten Commandments v. the United States: Roy Moore on trial

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Judge Roy Moore, the Alabama court judge who built his credentials among the religious by defying court orders to take down a wooden idol of the Ten Commandments in his courtroom, is at it again. Since he can no longer adjudicate from the chair (he was removed from his post by an Alabama judicial ethics panel), he now tries to make law from the far safer, far more lucrative bench of a conservative religious legal foundation called the Foundation for Moral Law. He recently sent some ripples through the religious media when his foundation filed a friend-of-the-court brief in a lawsuit against the state of Texas for their restrictions on “moments of silence” in public schools. The brief itself is little more than an ambling manifesto against the separation of church and state, reading much more like an old man sitting on his porch shaking his fist at passing children than as a polished, professional legal brief.

But, it seems that Mr. Moore did not simply fade away after the Ten Commandments circus as I thought he would, and indeed he has cast himself as a long-term, in-it-to-win antagonist of everyone who wants to keep the church out of the government. As it appears that we will have Roy Moore to contend with for some time, I think that we have to start asking certain questions.

Moore’s claim to fame among the theocratic is his belief that the Ten Commandments are in some way the “foundation” of American law. During the media hubbub about whether Moore had violated this or that part of Alabama state law or the Constitution itself, nobody ever stopped to ask what I think is the most important question of the day: was he right? Are the Ten Commandments responsible for our most cherished judicial principles? It may surprise you when I say that no, no they are not.

First of all, Moore himself does not appear to be very familiar with his own Bible. If he were, he would have known that the rules we today call “The Ten Commandments” were never once explicitly described as being written on stone (his wooden reproduction of the Commandments clearly shows the Commandments written on stone tablets) in the fanciful Exodus myth of the Pentateuch. There were ten rules that were written on stone tablets given to Moses, but this was the so-called “Ritual Decalogue,” which gives such unmemorable legal advice as “do not boil a baby goat in its mother’s milk” and “sacrifice firstborn male animals to Yahweh.” The image we have of Charlton Heston descending from on high with the Law of Moses written in stone hoisted over either burly shoulder is nothing more than a crude cultural parody of what the Bible itself actually says, but I think we can move on from Moore’s Biblical illiteracy since it is not at all the worst of his slanders against American law.

But even if Moore were not completely ignorant of the superstitions he claims to champion, he would still be wrong on the notion that the Ten Commandments in some way form the foundation of American law. One of the most important principles of the Constitution of the United States is this: it can be amended. When we mutually agreed that slavery, contrary to Biblical injunction, was wrong, we added the 13th Amendment with the consent of the people. When there was an apparently irreparable hole in the way that states conducted civil rights law, we added the 14th Amendment, again with the consent of the governed. That is the Constitution’s great strength: we do not deify the Founding Fathers to the point where we conceive of their word as final, exhaustive, and infallible. Instead, we have room to hammer out new laws to fit new situations that could not have been foreseen even by geniuses like Madison, Jefferson, and Franklin.

What parallel to this is there in the Ten Commandments? What room for amendment is there in the Word of God? None whatsoever. This problem is in fact even more profound for Moore because he is not Jewish, in which case his discourse would be constrained only by the Hebrew Testament, he is a Christian. This means that he is also bound by Jesus’s supposed proclamation that in principle not so much as a fraction of a letter of the Law of Moses can be expiated by any means. There is not even an exception made for God himself to change the Ten Commandments.

And what of the Laws themselves? Not one of them is reflected, either verbatim or even in principle, anywhere in the Constitution, some of them are obvious and are reflected in numerous other primitive codes of law, and some of them are directly antithetical to the promises given in the Constitution. The first five Commandments (I use the Jewish parsing of the Laws here) are a hat trick of unAmerican judicial failure:

1. I (Yahweh) am the Lord your God.
2. You will have no other Gods before me, nor will you make any false idols.
3. You will not misuse the name of God.

These rules are all obviously antithetical to the Establishment Clause, which was specifically set up to prevent the government from making proclamations like this. Any law that ever existed proclaiming that Yahweh is the only God, or that non-Judeo-Christian Gods are forbidden, or that saying “God dammit, I can’t believe Roy Moore actually thinks that he has a substantial legal case” is an offense against the law has been eliminated, and any future laws will not outlive the blink of an eye in any reputable American court.

4. Remember the Sabbath and keep it holy.

This one firstly would require the government to figure out when the Sabbath is (the Jews say it’s Friday, most Christians say Sunday, most Mormons and some off-the-mainstream say it’s Saturday, and I’ve heard of at least one church that says Wednesday), and then the court would have to tell us all that we can’t work on that day. The Bible says that the punishment for breaking the Sabbath is murder by your fellow citizens, with no exception made for doctors, soldiers, or children. So not only would this require American courts to legislate on religious calendars, it would also shut down our economy one day out of the week and fill death row with anyone who dares to deliver the Sunday Times. Is Roy Moore prepared to defend this as a bedrock principle of American law?

5. Honor your father and mother.

Not bad advice, but then, the Confucians made a religion out of ancestor-worship and they didn’t seem to need the Ten Commandments to do it, so in what way could we plausibly argue that without the Hebrew Testament, nobody would ever honor their parents? And, of course, no exception is made for abusive, murderous parents, just another reason if Moses were an intelligent dictatorship (or, at least, a conduit for a far greater dictatorship), he would have left a little wiggle room. There is none.

6. You will not kill.
7. You will not commit adultery.
8. You will not steal.
9. You will not perjure your neighbor.

The idea that the sixth commandment actually says “you will not murder” is simply untrue; the Hebrew language at the time lacked any word distinguishing killing other people from murdering other people (the distinction is rather sophisticated when you think about it). In all probability, the original commandments probably were just a single word with a negative prefix, reading like “no-kill” and “no-steal” to honest translators. The commandment against killing is paradoxically sandwiched between stories of Israelites ankle-deep in the blood of some foreign tribe, but less us pretend for the moment that the Bible were at all consistent. Roy Moore is now in the position of abolishing the death penalty, firearm possession, and the military. If he is against stealing in principle, then it is unconscionable that the US government would seize the assets of terrorists and drug warlords for use repairing the damage they’ve done. Clever hair-splitting occasionally renders “do not lie” as the flaccid and obvious “do not perjure” (which is completely unfaithful to the original Hebrew), so Moore must then be against lying in principle (or else he is a bad Christian and/or illiterate). As such, remember that when the Nazi stormtroopers come poking around for Anne Frank, Roy Moore wants you to tell them everything you know about where she’s hiding.

And if Roy Moore really needs God to tell him not to cheat on his wife, then he’s in even worse shape that I postulate.

10. You will not covet your neighbor’s house, goods, possessions, slaves, beasts of burden, or wife.

Every faithful translation loops the “wife” in with all the other material possessions (you will also notice that there is no commandment not to covet your neighbor’s husband). So, first of all Roy Moore must think that it is a foundational truth of American law that women are property (if he does not, he is either a bad Christian or a liar), and not only that, but that capitalism is inherently evil. For indeed how could our economic system survive if advertisers couldn’t play off your jealousy of the handsome man with the lavish vacation home, or the chic and sexy young woman with earrings more expensive than your car, or any of the irksome jealousies that drive you out of your home to buy this or that or the other in the name of looking like you’ve succeeded over others?

Roy Moore is obviously wrong about the Ten Commandments, and if he believes what he says about them then he is an anti-American, anti-freedom ruthlessly theocratic nut who would rid us of our military, our economy, and our rights. If he does not believe it, or if he is so Biblically illiterate (or just plain old regular-illiterate) as to not understand what he believes, then he is not qualified to tell us free-worshiping, freethinking American citizens how to regulate the government that serves us. Moore’s government starts with a bully in the sky, our government starts with the mutual consent of the governed. The problem we face is that everybody has the insight to question the Constitutionality of Moore’s attempts to use his taxpayer-funded court to attribute our success as a nation to the ancient legal code of an extinct bronze age totalitarian theocracy, but nobody has the spine to ask if Roy Moore was even right.

And now that it has been asked, the answer is clear: Roy Moore is wrong on the law, wrong on the Bible, wrong on history, and wrong for America.

Oh! Richard Gere…Poo on Him

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

Hand to god, I swear, this hymn will convert you to Christianity. You have been warned.

This video is from Songs of Praise, a BBC religious TV show in the UK. Every week they visit a different town or village then they showcase a few hymns from the main local church. I’m not sure what town or episode this video is from…but it doesn’t matter really.

Enjoy! (Actually…you probably can’t; the music really is sub-par.)

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