http://southtownstar.suntimes.com/7638940-452/kadner-state-cuts-off-food-to-crestwood-pantry-over-prayers.html
The State of Illinois insisted on compliance with the Constitution and they didn't back down. Good for them! If this religious organization wants to continue forcing hungry people to be subjected to prayer in exchange for food distribution that's their right, but the government doesn't have to pay for it.
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Christianity and Gullibility Go Together
Michele Bachmann's attack on the HPV vaccine was probably politically motivated but there's an outside chance she may really mean what she says. After all, she married an idiot who believes homosexuality is a mental illness that can be 'cured.'
OTOH she may be stupid like a fox. The Tea Partiers would have been satisfied with a libertarian attack on Perry's order to have all 12-year-old girls vaccinated against the cancer-causing virus, but Bachmann's rhetoric in an interview after the debate took things to a whole 'nother level of dishonesty:
Sounds a lot like rape doesn't it? She makes it sound like the vaccine is intra-vaginal and breaks the hymen. It's government rape of virgin girls!!!!!!
What a dishonest whore, and I have not seen any outcry about this. As a woman I'm offended that she feels that the STD nature of the virus has given her the right to couch her statements in these terms. Does she think that all the little boys and girls who got the measles vaccine were also violated in "the most deepest personal part" of a child? The injections are given to the same part of the body.
There's lots of attention to a claim that the HPV vaccine caused mental retardation... a claim made by a stranger and never backed up. Her claim has about as much merit as any other anecdotal claim, and any parent who makes a post hoc claim should be presumed to be in error until proved otherwise. This is the same post hoc error made when parents linked vaccination to autism diagnosis. Besides the original "study" being discredited, autism diagnosis can be made earlier than the scheduled vaccination that had been blamed. So I guess now we blame other conditions on it.
I can see why a parent might opt out from a vaccine that's a private health risk rather than a public risk. And of course all parents believe their children will be virgins until marriage. (Those are the kids most likely to get pregnant at 15 of course)
The pundits are attacking her insane claim that mental retardation could result rather than her sly sexualization of a sound preventative health measure. She probably has her feet up on a coffee table somewhere, and she's laughing her ass off because she knows that the response of smart people who paid attention is completely irrelevant. Her target audience is too stupid to know whether she's being attacked fairly or unfairly. They live a life of willing gullibility when it comes to claims without evidence and an instinctive mistrust of smart people. Her audience isn't watching pundit shows, except maybe Bill O'Reilly. No, they'll be tuned in to NASCAR news or perhaps they'll check in on "Teen Mom" to see if anyone they know is on it.
OTOH she may be stupid like a fox. The Tea Partiers would have been satisfied with a libertarian attack on Perry's order to have all 12-year-old girls vaccinated against the cancer-causing virus, but Bachmann's rhetoric in an interview after the debate took things to a whole 'nother level of dishonesty:
Yes, of course it violates liberty, when you have innocent little 12-year-old girls that are being forced to have a government injection into their body. This is a liberty interest that violates the most deepest personal part of a little child. And it violates the parental rights, because what we understand is, again, this was an executive order that mandated that every little 12-year- old girl had to have this vaccination. And then you'd have to opt out.
...The problem is, again, a little girl doesn't get a do over. Once they have that vaccination in their body, once it causes its damage, that little girl doesn't have a chance to go back. So you can't just say you're sorry.
Sounds a lot like rape doesn't it? She makes it sound like the vaccine is intra-vaginal and breaks the hymen. It's government rape of virgin girls!!!!!!
What a dishonest whore, and I have not seen any outcry about this. As a woman I'm offended that she feels that the STD nature of the virus has given her the right to couch her statements in these terms. Does she think that all the little boys and girls who got the measles vaccine were also violated in "the most deepest personal part" of a child? The injections are given to the same part of the body.
There's lots of attention to a claim that the HPV vaccine caused mental retardation... a claim made by a stranger and never backed up. Her claim has about as much merit as any other anecdotal claim, and any parent who makes a post hoc claim should be presumed to be in error until proved otherwise. This is the same post hoc error made when parents linked vaccination to autism diagnosis. Besides the original "study" being discredited, autism diagnosis can be made earlier than the scheduled vaccination that had been blamed. So I guess now we blame other conditions on it.
I can see why a parent might opt out from a vaccine that's a private health risk rather than a public risk. And of course all parents believe their children will be virgins until marriage. (Those are the kids most likely to get pregnant at 15 of course)
The pundits are attacking her insane claim that mental retardation could result rather than her sly sexualization of a sound preventative health measure. She probably has her feet up on a coffee table somewhere, and she's laughing her ass off because she knows that the response of smart people who paid attention is completely irrelevant. Her target audience is too stupid to know whether she's being attacked fairly or unfairly. They live a life of willing gullibility when it comes to claims without evidence and an instinctive mistrust of smart people. Her audience isn't watching pundit shows, except maybe Bill O'Reilly. No, they'll be tuned in to NASCAR news or perhaps they'll check in on "Teen Mom" to see if anyone they know is on it.
Labels:
anti-vaxxers,
bachmann,
hpv,
hpv vaccine,
stupid Christians,
stupid women
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Teh 9/11 Stoopid
Another stupid Facebook post:
If they trust God, why send military overseas? Shouldn't God just smite all the enemy with pestilence and locusts and earthquakes and hurricanes and uhhhhh high unemployment rates.... uhhhh nevermind
At least they didn't insist on friends doing a c&p of this drivel, but I just wanted to!
So ... ahem ... In the past ten years, we have experienced murder, mayhem, droughts, earthquakes, hurricanes, and a few terroristic attacks by Muslims. And a few by Christians. And a few that we still haven't figured out the motives for.
And yet we still waste our lives on Facebook and Blogger and youtube as if we're not all individually living under the Sword of Damocles.
Which is nice, because we're not. We have always had a precarious existence. There have always been plots against "good guys" by "bad guys." The story of human history is filled with this kind of stuff, and coincidentally, so is the Bible, which is 100% human.
We don't live our lives looking over our shoulders because you just can't live that way. That's why we sometimes get caught with our pants down, as we did on 9/11 and at Pearl Harbor and as I did a couple of months ago when a deer ran in front of my car. Paranoia is not healthy. We have an innate sense of not worrying about events with low odds other than taking ordinary precautions. I wear a seat belt despite a 20+ year driving history without an accident. It wasn't paranoid to wear the seat belt, and then when I hit that deer... well I didn't actually need the seat belt because the deer got the worst of it, but I'm glad things could have been worse but not worser.
If we were tasty little rodents surrounded by owls and felines and all manner of predator, we would be justified being on edge all the time. Likewise, if we were less fertile and less plentiful.
The world has too many people and we're getting in each other's way and on each other's nerves. 99% of us could be wiped out and the species would probably continue with the genetic material of that 1% left, assuming they could find each other. "God" wiped out humanity before. Why pray to him now, when we've gone forth and multiplied a little too much?
Instead of praying, we should take reasonable precautions and watch out for ourselves and others. We should think a little more about how others are feeling and thinking. We should be aware of how many ways we're vulnerable without being ridiculous about it. We should be humble about our shortcomings and the ways we affect other people without being doormats.
This article is both chilling and thought-provoking: http://www.science20.com/alpha_meme/science_next_911-82474
The author makes the point that what made the 9/11 terrorists so dangerous was their arrogance, a "sin" that isn't unique to Muslims. Chirstian terrorists are just as arrogant and just as dangerous, and they may be lurking around the corner or brewing some overblown resentment against people they consider the "enemy."
I was as disturbed as anyone on 9/11, perhaps more because of having lived in both New York and DC. But what disturbed me more was the arrogance of the Christians around me who seemed so sure that God was on our side, and that all muslims were evil. I was in Texas at the time, but it's not a Texas thang to be a black-or-white thinker. The effect of 9/11 on the psyche really disturbed me, and the reminders of the event kind of make me sick to my stomach. I feel for the people who were there and who were hurt directly, but the people who went a little nuts around the country kind of scare me.
As 9/11 approaches....I would like to share this prayer
Now I lay me down to sleep...one less terrorist this world does keep...with all my heart I give my thanks...to those in uniform regardless of ranks...you serve our country and serve it well...with humble hearts your stories tell...so as I rest my weary eyes...while freedom rings our flag still flies...you give your all, do what you must...with God we live and God we trust....Amen!
If they trust God, why send military overseas? Shouldn't God just smite all the enemy with pestilence and locusts and earthquakes and hurricanes and uhhhhh high unemployment rates.... uhhhh nevermind
At least they didn't insist on friends doing a c&p of this drivel, but I just wanted to!
So ... ahem ... In the past ten years, we have experienced murder, mayhem, droughts, earthquakes, hurricanes, and a few terroristic attacks by Muslims. And a few by Christians. And a few that we still haven't figured out the motives for.
And yet we still waste our lives on Facebook and Blogger and youtube as if we're not all individually living under the Sword of Damocles.
Which is nice, because we're not. We have always had a precarious existence. There have always been plots against "good guys" by "bad guys." The story of human history is filled with this kind of stuff, and coincidentally, so is the Bible, which is 100% human.
We don't live our lives looking over our shoulders because you just can't live that way. That's why we sometimes get caught with our pants down, as we did on 9/11 and at Pearl Harbor and as I did a couple of months ago when a deer ran in front of my car. Paranoia is not healthy. We have an innate sense of not worrying about events with low odds other than taking ordinary precautions. I wear a seat belt despite a 20+ year driving history without an accident. It wasn't paranoid to wear the seat belt, and then when I hit that deer... well I didn't actually need the seat belt because the deer got the worst of it, but I'm glad things could have been worse but not worser.
If we were tasty little rodents surrounded by owls and felines and all manner of predator, we would be justified being on edge all the time. Likewise, if we were less fertile and less plentiful.
The world has too many people and we're getting in each other's way and on each other's nerves. 99% of us could be wiped out and the species would probably continue with the genetic material of that 1% left, assuming they could find each other. "God" wiped out humanity before. Why pray to him now, when we've gone forth and multiplied a little too much?
Instead of praying, we should take reasonable precautions and watch out for ourselves and others. We should think a little more about how others are feeling and thinking. We should be aware of how many ways we're vulnerable without being ridiculous about it. We should be humble about our shortcomings and the ways we affect other people without being doormats.
This article is both chilling and thought-provoking: http://www.science20.com/alpha_meme/science_next_911-82474
The author makes the point that what made the 9/11 terrorists so dangerous was their arrogance, a "sin" that isn't unique to Muslims. Chirstian terrorists are just as arrogant and just as dangerous, and they may be lurking around the corner or brewing some overblown resentment against people they consider the "enemy."
I was as disturbed as anyone on 9/11, perhaps more because of having lived in both New York and DC. But what disturbed me more was the arrogance of the Christians around me who seemed so sure that God was on our side, and that all muslims were evil. I was in Texas at the time, but it's not a Texas thang to be a black-or-white thinker. The effect of 9/11 on the psyche really disturbed me, and the reminders of the event kind of make me sick to my stomach. I feel for the people who were there and who were hurt directly, but the people who went a little nuts around the country kind of scare me.
Friday, September 9, 2011
Speciation
Thanks to NWA's ignorant post, I felt compelled to find something that NWA could understand regarding speciation. I think this excellent video should do the trick:
For a fuller discussion of macro-evolution, Talk Origins has a series on predictions based on evolutionary theory and the results that confirm the theory.
Note: A theory is not the same as "hypothesis," which is a preliminary guess. A "theory" in science is a concept that explains observed phenomena, and which can be further tested with more observations. So far, observations by trained biologists have confirmed and refined the theory of evolution in many ways. Observations by Christian pseudo-scientists have been debunked by responsible actual scientists. Note: these scientists are not "Darwinists." They are scientists - they trust the scientific method to add to human understanding, and do not revere Darwin at all except in the same way they revere any scientist who has proposed a new theory that has stood the test of time. They are not "Darwinists" any more than they are "Newtonists" or "Einstinists."
For a fuller discussion of macro-evolution, Talk Origins has a series on predictions based on evolutionary theory and the results that confirm the theory.
Note: A theory is not the same as "hypothesis," which is a preliminary guess. A "theory" in science is a concept that explains observed phenomena, and which can be further tested with more observations. So far, observations by trained biologists have confirmed and refined the theory of evolution in many ways. Observations by Christian pseudo-scientists have been debunked by responsible actual scientists. Note: these scientists are not "Darwinists." They are scientists - they trust the scientific method to add to human understanding, and do not revere Darwin at all except in the same way they revere any scientist who has proposed a new theory that has stood the test of time. They are not "Darwinists" any more than they are "Newtonists" or "Einstinists."
Tuesday, September 6, 2011
Examples of Evolution
Of course the only reason I would post this on a blog about atheism is that some Christians cling to the idea that Christianity (or more accurately, Judaism) explains scientific "mysteries." These "mysteries" were only mysterious to the bronze age mythology writers, not to modern scientists, but science is hard to read and fairy tales are easy to read. That's the real reason they cling to their mythology: it's easier to imagine a sky fairy with a magic wand whipping up the universe, planets, and all the species of earth than it is to take the time to learn a little about what people have been deducing from evidence for a few hundred years.
Some of this might be a bit hard to read, but persevere. It's easier in the end than trying to rationalize that science proves "intelligent design" or throwing out rationality altogether. After all, if you disagree with evolution through natural selection you have to throw out modern antibiotics and vaccines, and then you die. We might miss you, though we won't miss your stupidity.
Some of this might be a bit hard to read, but persevere. It's easier in the end than trying to rationalize that science proves "intelligent design" or throwing out rationality altogether. After all, if you disagree with evolution through natural selection you have to throw out modern antibiotics and vaccines, and then you die. We might miss you, though we won't miss your stupidity.
DNA proof of why there are still monkeys! |
The Whale evolved from land-dwelling mammals, and there are "transitional" fossils to prove it.
The eye evolved through natural selection. It is not irreducibly complex or magical. (There's a video at that site so even the stupidest Christians can understand it)
Humans evolved from other bipedal species, which in turn evolved from other primates. DNA evidence confirms this. Yes, it does! (This last one's harder to read but it's the source of the cool chart to the right)
If you really want to "teach (yourself) the controversy," check out the responses to creationist claims at Talkorigins.org. My favorite stupid argument is the "argument from incredulity." It's the argument that because you can't (or won't) believe something is true therefore it's not true. Hey, I'd like to believe that I'm the Princess of the Universe and that I can smite anyone who zips into the parking place I have my eye on. But I don't believe that because I'm not psychotic. The same argument is put forward by UFOlogists and other believers of utter nonsense. It's as sophisticated as putting your fingers in your ears and singing "la la la la I can't hear you!"
Friday, September 2, 2011
Lewis Black on Creationism
From The Daily Show. He dishes the dish on Ken Ham and Kent Hovind. If you can stomach clips of these two ignorant chimps this segment is priceless:
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