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Posts Tagged ‘Palin’

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.

Hitchens on Palin

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

Following in the footsteps of Jeffrey Sachs and Sam Harris, Hitchens throws in his tucents with this article attacking Palin’s religious bent and anti-science outlook.

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).

Sachs Echoes Harris on Threat of Anti-Intellectualism

Friday, September 26th, 2008

Jeffrey Sachs seems to be echoing the words of Sam Harris in his most recent opinion article.

While many factors contributed to America’s destabilising actions, a powerful one is anti-intellectualism, exemplified recently by Republican vice-presidential nominee, Sarah Palin’s surging popularity.

Earlier this week, Harris wrote an article bashing America’s desire for anti-intellectualism.  Sachs has jumped on the bandwagon of defending intellectualism and elitism in politics by taking a Saganistic approach to the issue by showing how in an age of Science, anti-intellectualism and disdain for Science are the last things we should be preaching.

The problem is an aggressive fundamentalism that denies modern science, and an aggressive anti-intellectualism that views experts and scientists as the enemy. It is those views that could end up getting us all killed… The challenges faced by a major power like the US require rigorous analysis of information according to the best scientific principles.

This is a great article by Sachs, and coming from probably the word’s leading Economist, his words should resonate outside of the science-minded community.

As for what I think, I’ve also noticed that it’s the parochial, the religious trump card, the in-group behaviour that ties itself to an anti-intellectual nationalism that is stunting the growth of the global community.  If only people could get over themselves, over their Gods, over their tradition, over their dogma, over their disdain of modern science, and over their disdain for intelligence, then we could mature as a civilization and realize that in this day and age we need to rely on eachother to survive.

…Apparently I can take a Saganistic approach as well.

Pentacostal leader gets in on the cartoon-hating business

Sunday, September 21st, 2008

Apparently unsatisfied with his denomination’s current cache of craziness capital, CEO of the Assemblies of God George O. Wood (and yes, his title really is CEO) has fiercely criticized a Washington Times cartoon that makes light of Sarah Palin’s history of glossolalic indulgence. The Assemblies of God is a conservative Pentacostal denomination whose core doctrines include the belief that God’s greatest gift to you is proven by incomprehensible stammering, or as some like to mispronounce it, “speaking in tongues.”

The cartoon, which is only legitimately available to Washington Post subscribers, depicts Republican vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin babbling nonsense into a cell phone with John McCain declaring that he has no idea what it means but that it gives him a “direct line to the Almighty!,” with the second panel showing a confused God on a cell phone telling an angel that he can’t understand the “dam’ right wing politician” on the other end.

I have categorized this article as a feature and not as news because there is no way for me to objectively report someone being so basely silly as George O. Wood is right now. The cartoon’s subject is obviously the play-acted piety of the religious right and has nothing to do with the practicing of speaking in tongues; the cartoon merely depicts glossolalia, and the fact that Wood has inferred slander from a frank depiction of his own beliefs says a lot about what he must think of the practice of speaking in tongues. It is a Charistmatic assertion that glossolalia (”the gift of tongues,” in certain circles) is a direct line with God, and it is a Charistmatic recognition that nobody really knows what any specific instance of glossolalia means qua language.

Are we seeing shades of the Jyllands-Posten Mohammed cartoons episode? I don’t think so. I doubt anyone is going to get too upset over the Christian Post’s harshest critique of the cartoon (”the cartoonist portrayed God as cranky, befuddled, a user of profanity and not omniscient”), or Wood’s whiney theological guess that since God “is multi-lingual, [Woods is] sure He doesn’t have problems understanding any prayers.” The cartoonist, Pat Oliphant, is still alive as far as I know. Pentacostalists might believe that God routinely demonstrates his existence not to cure disease or alleviate suffering, but to rile up excited, agitated crowds of pre-committed believers in moments of furious ecstasy, but I doubt that even they are any danger to the cartoonist.

So what is the danger? The danger is that the Washington Post, fearing for its advertising dollars, will kill the cartoon and take the cartoonist off their rolls. The danger is appeasement. The danger is treating any ridiculous religious superstition as if it were off-limits to even being mentioned, much less criticized, as if we’re supposed to act like the profound national interest in protecting the rights of inane babble trumps the freedom of speech or the principle of free inquiry.

Why Sarah Palin Should Scare You…

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

I watched Sarah Palin’s speech during the Republican National Convention, and I have to disagree with most of the punditry that it was some sort of stroke of brilliance. Ms. Palin’s speech during the RNC was filled with lies about her record, lacked any specificity, demeaned community organizers, and used her ‘experience’ as a PTA member and mayor of a small hamlet as some sort of force multiplier that magically made her more experienced than Barack Obama or even Joe Biden.

But more importantly for the readers of this site she (perhaps wisely) did not discuss her religious views. In short, Sarah Palin is a closet Christian extremist. In a previous article, Roy mentioned that Palin believed in teaching creationism in the classroom. With China generating 300,000 engineering degrees a year – 240,000 more than the United States and roughly a 25% high rate per capita – we seriously risk endangering our position as the technology capital of the world especially if we are mired in such distractions.

She does not believe in abortion rights even in case of rape, incest, or the health of the mother, despite this position only supported by 18% of the population. Even among those who consider themselves ‘pro-life’, she is in the minority, as most believe that some sort of exception must be made.

Palin also has very little knowledge or opinions on foreign affairs and even less (if any) experience. But what she does believe in should scare you; I will let this video speak for itself.

This, combined with McCain indicating that he would pursue a hyperaggressive, confrontational foreign policy along with the possibility that neoconservative “Democrat” Joe Lieberman may fly up to Alaska to ‘tutor’ Palin on such matters is truly terrifying. In short, I cannot trust either McCain or Palin with the world’s most powerful conventional military and its second largest nuclear arsenal.

But behind every far-right fundamentalist is a far-right fundamentalist church. Meet the Wasilla Bible Church.

From it’s gay-to-straight conversion camps to its pastor invoking the typical “America is a sinful nation, Doomsday be upon you!” screed, it certainly does not look encouraging to secularists or even the majority of Christians.

Some may be wondering why I won’t bring up Barack Obama’s former pastor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright to be ‘fair’. This is because Rev. Wright’s political views are just that – political; although I don’t agree with much (if anything) that he said, after hearing his sermons it is clear that Rev. Wright justifies his views from his personal experiences and political leanings and NOT the Bible; it is very conceivable that if Rev. Wright were an atheist, Buddhist, or any other religion, he would still hold the same political views.

What would a 21st century democratic theocracy look like?

Friday, September 5th, 2008

Last month, I wrote about how tired I was that so much of this year’s election coverage has been about which of our two leading American presidential candidates loves Jesus more. This remains the case-I still don’t care whether Barack Obama’s old reverend subscribes to liberation theology or not, I still don’t care whose version of Christianity John McCain claims to believe, and I really, genuinely, honest-to-whoever do not care whether or not Joe Biden is a practicing Catholic. In fact, the thing that I love most about Joe Biden is that he is actually about policy and not oblique piety; his is a refreshing turn from political rhetoric that has large devolved into a contest of conservative Christian buzzwords (”values voter” and “culture of life” are my favorites) and infantile political gimmicks designed with the religious in mind.

That being said, what does interest and concern me is the fact that just about everybody else in the country does seem to care about this stuff.

It is simply an unavoidable truth of our political circumstances (and a rather unpleasant truth at that for secular voters) that strong religious beliefs form the perspective through which a great many Americans view their prospective leaders. The normative American cultural assumption is that the Bible is the obvious foundational source of goodness (note its most popular colloquial appellation: “the Good Book”), and so candidates’ political stances are vetted as much by their congruence with Biblical values as they are with their actually being a good or a bad idea. In fact, on this pattern of “reasoning,” several very bad policies have persevered exclusively by their religious appeal, such as the so-called “Mexico City policy” and abstinence-only sex “education.

And yet these policies persist, despite the fact that both examples above appear so brutally stupid that one most wonder whether they were designed with failure as an objective. This leads one to wonder: what is it about our political discourse that permits stupidity to be tolerable, even virtuous, to many American voters? Why is it that three candidates for helmsman of the world’s most powerful battleship-of-state would be permitted to publicly admit to being evolution deniers and not simply laughed out of our discourse?

I think that the answer to this question is what may sound like a contradiction: that the United States can be said to be in the softcore stages of a democratic theocracy. By this term I do not just mean any theocracy that permits voting (since even Iran allows its citizens to choose a President, though the Supreme Leader is appointed), but rather, a democratic theocracy would be any state where certain religious values are so endemic in a society’s values and customs that little to no legal framework whatsoever is even necessary. To be more specific, I think that a modern democratic theocracy has three relevant, salient features:

  • A de facto state religion is already in place, so no overt de jure state religion is necessary. One of the principles of a true democratic theocracy is that there need not be any legal strictures requiring high officials to be of a particular religious persuasion, as is the case in totalitarian states like Iran and Vatican City, because the voting popular electorate does all of the enforcing on its own. It would be wildly paranoiac of me to say that this is exactly the case in the United States in every instance, but even the most optimistic observer must concede that this is the case in many instances. The religious demographics of the United States Congress, for example, help to draw this picture: somewhere from 12-16% of Americans call themselves “not affiliated” with any religion, but only about 2% of Congresspeople decline to declare a religious affiliation (even atheist Peter Stark calls himself a Unitarian). The Presidential demographics are even more appalling; only one non-Protestant Christian has ever been elected President, both of the current likely candidates are fighting furiously for the votes of the devout, and who among us would doubt that both candidacies could be imperiled by even a very minor slight of religion-based public policy? Why does Obama feel the need to quote the Bible when advocating the elimination of poverty, which any half-witted humanist knows is a good idea without particularly caring whether or not the Bible approves?
  • “Religious police” are not necessary because the religious body politic is fiercely self-policing. Again, nobody in the United States is going around killing their neighbors for picking up sticks on Sabbath, but we do have our own, peculiarly American ways of enforcing extremist religious values. Public criticism of any religion’s favorite metaphysics is obviously strictly off-limits for elected officials (even if such metaphysics are absolutely, demonstrably loony- note that the few politicians who do oppose teaching creationism in schools often do so on grounds of “keeping religion out of the classroom” rather than the factually appropriate “creationism is unscientific gobbledygook”), but this rule is more appropriately applied on the social level. People with sexual inclinations towards the same gender are essentially terrified into hiding the truth about themselves because they have good reason to fear such things as expulsion from their families, the obliteration of their good standing in certain communities, lifelong subjection to vitriol and venom from near and afar by the religious, and of course alienation from many religious communities. Where does this peculiar hatred of the homosexual come from? What logical reasons would we have for hating the gay, the secular, and the science teacher if not for our fellow citizens who place metaphysics above reason?
  • A nation’s values, especially the value of its electorate, are inextricably congruent with explicitly religious values. Focus on the Family, the Christian Coalition, the ACLJ, the aggregate of American bishoprics, and their counterparts across the spectrum of American Christianity do such a fine job of telling voters how to vote, who to vote for, and why the Bible says you should vote this way for this person, that official regulations forbidding formal religious tests for high office are useless. Creationist think tanks like the Discovery Institute, Answers in Genesis, and Creation Science Evangelism are so good at deceiving the public into thinking that there is some kind of “controversy” about evolution within the scientific community that the United States (one of the most savagely anti-evolution nations in the world) can maintain a majority popular stance in favor of young-earth Creationism despite having public schools that are required to teach the exact opposite. This is particularly effective where lax homeschooling standards permit parents to feed whatever garbage pseudoscience they desire to their children because there is often little to no real accountability for students who never learn how to think differently from their parents. Also unlike nearly every other wealthy liberal democracy in the world, the United States is afflicted with a massively revisionist historical complex wherein the Puritans, a cult of totalitarians who left Europe only because they weren’t permitted to brutally oppress their children in the manner they desired, can be portrayed as devout victims of injustice who went on to found an (explicitly Christian) nation with the help of a loving creator-god named Jesus. No other national history so ruthlessly corrupts reality as to build what could only be called an official founding-mythology plagiarized unabashedly from another theocracy’s playbook.

I do not for a moment believe that the United States is at risk of becoming the next Iran. I do not entertain even an inkling that formal oppression of the non-Christian is around the corner (which is to say that I am nowhere near as paranoid as many of the religious are!) and I have never, ever feared that my open secularism would ever threaten my personal well-being. What I do fear, however, is that the socially normative Christian sense of entitlement is growing- we have always seen it in our politics, and far more scarily, in our military. Our government, at least by the letter, is formally intolerant of theocracy, but our society seems to thirst for it. The majority opinion wants God and his Creation Week taught in our schools, the majority opinion wants God on our money and on the lips of our children and politicians day and night, the majority thinks that I will be on fire forever after I die.

If I could ever be accused of paranoia, it would be for the opinion that society appears to me to be becoming more tolerant of hatred, prejudice, and bigotry than the ongoing liberalization of formal government policy in respect to religion would suggest. With the economy turning sour and the evangelicals letting their old frustrations about government fester at the prospect of a Democrat sweep this fall, I can only wonder what the next step in our social development will be. Will we finally permit our values to be congruent with the values of our secular republic’s government? Or will the religious majority let its anger and its devotion mix and grow until things become even worse for those whom it is already bad? Do we really want to let the best-armed members of our population (our military) be the most uniformly convinced that Jesus is the only one to build either a life or a state? I do not.

I worry about my country. Even as you and I get to watch the meteoric rise of a unified, highly-motivated secular movement in the United States, we also get to watch its backlash use our success as rallying cry. Perhaps I worry needlessly, but I wouldn’t be slinging words like “theocracy” and “religious police” around if I didn’t think that we were in a real danger of having to fear some of our religious neighbors far more than we will ever have to fear our religious leaders.

What’s good about Sarah Palin?

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

Editor’s Note: A shorter version of this post would just say “Nothing.”

So there’s been a lot of flack to Republican running-mate Sarah Palin since John McCain announced her this past week. But can she really be that bad? I bet I can think of some good reasons for Sarah Palin to be on the ballot with McCain.

  1. She’s a woman, and this means that women can be politicians too.
  2. She’s from Alaska, that’s pretty cool.
  3. She reminds us that the Republicans are still hypocritically behind anti-abortion legislation, and anti-contraception.
  4. She makes Joe Biden look a lot more intelligent (not that he didn’t before, but this helps).
  5. She gives the atheist blogs something to talk about for weeks.
  6. She reminds the American public that if they don’t vote for Obama it’s going to be four more years closer to an all out Christian theocracy.
  7. If McCain dies during his presidency (he is old), she’ll be president and that just has to bring Armageddon that much closer, and come on, who here doesn’t want to see the Armageddon?
  8. Also, if she became president than Kim Cambell (only female prime minister of Canada) will look better by comparison.
  9. She’ll keep global warming on track, so Canada will get nice and temperate.
  10. Finally, a McCain-Palin candidate is ripe for comedic value (old man with a younger woman touring across the US).

(Note: I hope the satire is taken in this post, and if you’re offended, too freaking bad.)