Monday, 11 February 2008

Arch-nutjob replies (Not to me personally)

Yes, the stupid crazy fool who we all love to mock, Dr Williams, has replied to everyone who pointed out that what he said last week was a load of shit.

Let's see what he said.
Well he starts off with the usual, "I didn't really say it like that.", "Taken out of context.", etc. He also apologised and admitted it may have been his fault in being unclear.
Taking responsibility for being misunderstood is probably a compromise position. As if he carried on denying any fault people would get annoyed at him, yet if he admitted he was wrong then he would be admitting he said something stupid. So this way he can sneakily pretend he has apologised without actually apologising for what actually caused offence.

Moving on:
"I believe quite strongly that it is not inappropriate for a pastor of the Church of England to address issues about the perceived concerns of other religious communities, and to try and bring them into better public focus."
True in a free society anyone can address anything, what people were saying was not, "Don't comment on that!", but "That is a really really REALLY REALLY stupid comment." Most then went on to explain why it is such a stupid comment. So to claim that people aren't letting you address issues is bullshit. Just as you have the right to make a monumentally stupid comment, we all have the right to tell you are stupid.

OK, there isn't much more that I know of of the speech except:
The relationship between law and religion was a subject on which "Christians and people of other faiths ought to be doing some reflecting together", he added.

Apparently us immoral bastards, who need evidence before we believe in things, are not allowed to to comment on the relationship between laws (That affect us too) and religion. Maybe it is because we may make things fair for everyone, ruining their special status under the law?

In conclusion his reply was slightly more well though out but still extremely stupid, which makes me wonder about these kind of comments:
"We have probably one of the greatest and the brightest Archbishops of Canterbury we have had for many a long day. He is undoubtedly one of the finest minds of this nation. "

Finest minds? I have seen finer minds, behind the till at McDonalds, yes he has a lot of theology qualifications. This doesn't make you clever, with theology the whole idea is not to give a good argument but to
  • Give a good excuse they you have no argument.
    OR
  • To think of an idea you want to be true, then think of a eloquent way to pretend a contradictory book agrees.
    OR
  • To disguise your lack of argument using very complex language, so people just assume you know what you are talking about.
In general NOT an academic subject. Just an exercise in linguistic gymnastics.

In lighter news Gordon Brown has said he believes religious law should be subservient to UK law.
Which is in principle the same as my position, "I don't give one hoot of a flying fuck what you want to call a religious law, as long as it isn't an official law and doesn't break the actual law."

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Thursday, 7 February 2008

Arch-nutjob being nutty again.

The Archbishop of Canterbury (Dr Rowan Williams) has said the government should let Muslims have the choice of using Sharia law instead of British law for some issues.

Let's hope not the right to kill apostates and adulterers.
Dr Rowan Williams said the UK had to "face up to the fact" some citizens do not relate to the British legal system.
Well that doesn't give them the right to have their own legal system, if you choose to move to a new country
with a completely different legal system, then you should be prepared to abide by it, if you want to live by a legal system like you had before, then stay where you are or move somewhere with a similar legal system.

I am not against immigration, but I am against giving immigrants different rights to everyone else, whether that is more rights or less rights. Democracy is built on equality, for this reasons no one should be exempt from the law.

Unfortunately Dr Williams, with his stupid views, has a position in our Government, let's hope we vote him out next election. Oh wait, he never was elected they just gave him a position in government just because he is a ranking member of a group of people who believe an invisible sky daddy is supreme dictator of the world.

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Tuesday, 5 February 2008

My opinion on moderate Christianity

I have to say it is one of the hardest things to have a fixed opinion on, as moderate Christianity is so vapid and wishy washy it is hard to pick anything out to form an opinion on without it disappearing as soon as you start to question it.

But then recently one of my friends suggested I read a little book of his, which I am currently halfway through, and I think I have finally managed to form an opinion on moderate Christianity.

The book is called “Bacon sandwiches and Salvation” (I plan to review it fully when I finish) and is written by Adrian Plass, it claims to be and A-Z of Christian life. It is written in a style like a dictionary, taking a word or phrase then giving a short explanation for each. The book starts off funny but with about 6 puns and anagrams per page the humour quickly subsides (and turns into irritation) and I actually started to get a feel for the message in the book.

One of the main messages that stuck out like as sore thumb was, the message favoured by fundamentalist evangelicals, the message that if you don't die “with Jesus” you will be eternally tormented. But I found it more sickening from this source, as normally the fundamentalists are deadly serious when talking of this disgusting subject, they are trying to help you (in some sick perverted way), where as this Adrian bloke actually thought the subject, that 2/3 of the world will be eternally tormented when they die, was something of a light idea to joke about. Now I was hopeful that he didn't actually believe it but he does clarify himself:

Hell: (1) place of eternal unhappiness for those who have decided to refuse God's invitation to come home to him (2) a concept that has been denied or significantly diluted by many modern teachers and theologians. But before getting too excited by cheery optimistic views, it might be well to check with God that he actually goes along with them. The Creator of the universe can be very slow and (let's be brutally honest) a little dense when it comes to staying au fait with new exciting theological advances. (See also Good News)

I have many problems with part 1, especially the fact that I “have decided to refused God's invitation”, sorry but I don't thing this God guy exists,
if I did then I would be in the position to refuse to go to the home of a genocidal maniac. As it stands though, I no more refused God's invitation than I refused the genies invitation to turn me into a prince (for those of you who are unsure I never met a genie!).

And the second part, well that is just disgusting, using light hearted language to explain that anyone who says I wont be eternally tormented is just wrong. Thanks Adrian, at least I am glad the subject of us non-believers in Hell is amusing to someone.

Now of course none of this talk of damnation scares me, it is like threatening to behead me with an invisible sword, it just isn't scary. The reason it bothers me so much, is the fact that this whole religion, is based on a central theme of, “We Christians are super, as long as we are fairly nice and apologise for our mistakes we will be eternally rewarded. Everyone else is going to be eternally tortured because they aren't one of us.” A theme which runs through the New testament and is normally visible somewhere even with the moderates. And this is taught to children before they are old enough to see it is just a disgusting tactic to keep people in line by fear, and soon enough we have a new generation of indoctrinated people to carry on the sick cult.

Now I should probably stop here and address the anyone saying “I am a Christian, I don't believe in any of that.”
There are many people who claim to be Christian, but when you question them they really are far from it.
Ask them directly on just about any story of the bible, and eventually they will conceded it isn't true, even while holding onto their core belief.
But it gets to a point where either they do actually believe that Jesus died for them, or they don't.
If they do then they have to explain why he was dying for them, if it wasn't so save them from the “lake of fire” mentioned in the same book that tells of this sacrifice.
If you can find me anyone with that answer I will add them to my list of Christians with out a sick cult-ish belief, which is currently zero.
The other option is no they don't really think Jesus died for them, but they like some of the things Jesus supposedly said, and they have some kind of feeling that there is more than just the material world. As far as I can see these people aren't Christians, they are 'spiritual' people who, while I still think are completely wrong, their beliefs are much less perverse.
Now of course, who am I to say these people are or aren't Christians? I am no one of course, but it seems to me to use a rather extreme analogy that these “Christians” are like people who are claiming to be Nazis because they think blonds are hotter than brunettes, they almost agree with one little bit while rejecting all the other completely vile bits. I do apologise again for the extreme analogy, I just couldn't think of a better one.

So in conclusion my opinions of moderate Christianity is that it is just as sick and twisted as the fundamental version, while trying to focus on making cakes and growing pretty flowers, instead of thinking about the implications of believing that 2/3 of the world are doomed wile they can carry on baking and gardening in eternal bliss. And none of them think that this God guy is a colossal DICK for damning most of the people in history to eternal torment for such a petty thing as not believing in one specific message from a bronze age book that got most things completely wrong.

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Tuesday, 15 January 2008

A stupid agnostic.

Now I don't really have much against agnostics, they normally seem to be wishy-washy people who for some reason can't decide if there is a dictator-wizard in the sky. Of course a rather strange position, but a far less bizarre one than the theists, who actively think there IS a dictator-wizard in the sky.

But I have found a very special agnostic, one who seems to know about as much about science as your average creationist. The author of AgnosticWeb.com.
In the beginning, we are told, was the Big Bang.
Correction: Scientific evidence shows the universe started in "The Big Bang", whether that was the beginning we still do not know. Also you have the problem of defining beginning as time started with the big bang. The main thing I object to is the "we are told" as the author is attempting to make it sound as though it is taken on faith not evidence.
After aeons, everything calmed down, cooled down, settled down, until conditions were just right for life.
The universe was just right for life? No. Part of one planet, orbiting one of the hundred billion suns in our galaxy, which is just one out of billions of galaxies, had the correct conditions for life (I should point out it is only correct for a certain type of life, as there may be other types of life we don't know about).
When you explain it properly it sounds far less of a coincidence, as it is far less than on billionth of a percent of the universe that was "just right for life".
Next, various inanimate globules of matter suddenly became animate and, at the same time, managed to reproduce themselves. They were very simple and very primitive, you understand, so you needn’t think too hard about them. A flash of lightning, perhaps, and the little bits of what’s-it came alive and straight away knew how to produce new generations of living what’s-its.
Now he if just getting stupider, I know many creationists who would love to be able to be this stupid, but just can't quite manage it.
Abiogenesis, the study of the formation of life, is actually a very interesting field of science, and is not a place where people make assumptions about spontaneous generation of "what’s-its". We know from experimentation that if you simulate the early atmosphere, with the correct gasses, water vapour and lightning, this produces amino acids (amino acids being the building blocks of life). Now to get evolution started we need self replicating entities, and there are many hypotheses for how this happened. To characterise abiogenesis as "globules of matter suddenly became animate" is just bollocks.
These simple, primitive life forms, which were totally unconscious and mindless, managed (over aeons) to combine themselves into new forms, and out of the blue developed sensitivity to light (= sight), sound, touch, smell, taste, organs that enabled them to eat, drink, move, and even reproduce in new ways. “Out of the blue” because these things had never existed before. The very concepts were totally new. Pick up a pebble, and ask yourself how you would make it see. Where would you, conscious though you are, even begin the process? And “out of the blue” also because if they hadn’t worked straight away, even in their most primitive form, they wouldn’t have survived. What is the use of something that doesn’t work? Imagine a primitive, blind eye reproducing itself and trying to perfect itself over thousands of years until at last the umpteenth generation of this particular creature is able to cry out (in its own language, which is another of the amazing inventions of the unconscious, mindless ones): “I CAN SEE!”
This nutjob didn't even do the slightest bit of research for this article, the evolution of the eye is actually rather easy to explain. Anyone who doesn't believe me please read Climbing Mount Improbable of if you cant be bothered then at least read the wikipedia article on the evolution of the eye. I would go into it my self but I am actually rather poor at explaining science when I am not in the mood, and also it would make this post way too long.
Also, no it wouldn't have to come "out of the blue". If no other organism has any form of sight, then any organism with just the ability to sense the presence/absence of light gains an advantage over others, remember these organisms had to survive in the conditions of those days, not the conditions now. Sight built up slowly from: being able to detect light; to beg able to detect which direction the light is coming from; to forming fuzzy images, to forming clearer and clearer images. Not: nothing...nothing...nothing...nothing... FULL SIGHT!
Similar arguments can be made for the other senses.
Or imagine a rudimentary penis hanging around for aeons, unable to perform, and of course waiting for a suitable, self-made vagina to insert itself into.
I would love to be able to mind read just so I could see what goes on on inside this morons head. Does he really believe that scientists think that first the penis formed and then by a stroke of luck a vagina formed aeons later. Evolution happens as very small changes, and it is not hard to think of a path from "fish sex" (female lays eggs on the sea floor, male sprays his semen all over them) to "mammal sex" (I hope most of my readers know how this works) where each step is tiny and is beneficial to both the male and female.

This is only the first paragraph of the stupid article and my brain has almost melted from the stupidity. So I send out a message to any sensible agnostics out there to tell the author of AgnosticWeb.com that he should modify his arguments for agnosticism, as not to tar all the agnostics with the brush of mental retardation.

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Saturday, 12 January 2008

Mesage to all faith schools:

FUCK OFF!

OK, now I have got that out of the way I should probably clarify my position in politer language. I would have started in a nicer way, but this is just one of those issues that is ridiculous.

I would like to divide up my complains about faith schools into four categories:
  1. Why should we (the British public) have to contribute to schools that would discriminate against some of us.
  2. Why should we have to pay for indoctrination.
  3. Why is our government supporting a system that breeds "In group vs. Out group" thinking.
  4. Why is it illegal to have a secular school?


Why should we (the British public) have to contribute to schools that would discriminate against some of us.

In this country faith schools are publicly funded, which means that everyone, whether of the faith or not is contributing to them equally. But these schools are allowed to discriminate against people of other faiths, by not allowing them entrance to the school (often unless they are baptised in the particular faith), or even one they are accepted they can still be denied the free school bus pass by the council (another example at the same school!).

Now you may think why the hell would anyone of a different faith (or no faith at all) want their child to be sent to a faith school? The answer for people of no faith is because it is not possible to have a secular school in England (see part 4), and almost a third of all schools are faith schools. The answer for people of different faiths is either because the other school has a better rating in the league tables, or because there is no school of their faith near by.

The better ratings a school has, the more popular it is, leading to a harsher entry program, which often leads to people of other faiths being excluded from the better schools. As almost one third of all schools are faith schools* in some areas this can lead to all children whose parents have no faith (or the wrong faith) will end up excluded from the best schools.

Now this is a ridiculous situation for any civilised country to be in. Everyone should be eligible for entry to every publicly funded school. And entry should be decided on academic merit, geographical location (It is wrong to force a child into a 2 hour trip to school when there is a school 5 minutes down the road), etc.

Of course the system isn't as bad as it sounds, in most areas the schools are not over subscribed, and Church of England schools will let children of non C of E parents in. Still of course you are more likely to get in if you are C of E, and they support the right of other schools to not let you in. Not to mention that you will have to pray to their god and go to their church as though you were part of the C of E.

(* 6,850 out of 21,000 British schools are technically faith schools, but by law in all state schools pupils must take part in a daily act of worship)

Why should we have to pay for indoctrination.

Religious schools teach that their religion is true, and often even teach you ideas such as "if you don't believe in God you will burn in hell". I can show you no statistics backing these points up, as I don't have access to any, and I severely doubt anyone has even collected data on what percentage of schools teach about hell and other horrific bible stories (such as Sodom and Gomorrah). I can tell you this however, that my school did, and so did the schools of many other people I know.
Also I know a few people from Catholic schools who were all taught that contraception, premarital sex, and masturbation are all sinful and dangerous!

Why is our government supporting a system that breeds "In group vs. Out group" thinking.

Many people support faith schools as "Multiculturalism" which I have to say is nothing but utter bollocks.
Multiculturalism is surely, many cultures getting on, and combing to from a society of diverse ideas. Which is the diametric opposite of what faith schools are creating, faith schools divide us up into small groups of people with the same cultures, stopping children of different cultures mixing and indirectly (possibly directly in some cases) teaching that they are a separate group from the others.

An extreme example of the problem of faith schools is Northern Ireland, a place where from a young age everyone was separated by their faiths because the faiths were fighting. Everyone then grew up without properly interacting with the people of the other group, making it easier for extremists to convince them to fight the other group.

Why is it illegal to have a secular school?

Now here is the most ridiculous idea of the lot. It is legally impossible to have a school that favours no religion. I am not talking of an atheist school that teaches their is no God and only accepts people with atheist parents, that is just a stupid as a faith school. I am talking about a school that devoted equal time to teaching about every religion, or lack their of, a school which does not force anyone to pray (or force them to not pray), a school that doesn't take religion into consideration when someone wants to join.

Dr Paul Kelley tried to create such a school but failed. Why did he fail you may ask? As this is obviously a school that would be fair to everyone.
One senior figure at the then Department for Education and Skills, told Kelley that bishops in the House of Lords and ministers would block the plans.
Those fucking nutjobs again? Those self-righteous bastards refuse to let anyone live their lives without the Christian sky daddy.

Not only this, schools who don't force pupils into daily acts of worship loose marks in Ofstead inspections, meaning they go down in the National league tables.



In conclusion our education system is shit, and I haven't even got on to the syllabus (which is also shite).

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Friday, 4 January 2008

Christian Leadership Univeristy

A.K.A Nutjob diploma mill

I love it when I find crazy Christian websites. This one offers you a "Doctorate of Theology Degree". Which you of course have to pay for (approximately $4,000 which is about £2,027).

But it is good enough to tell to 10 reasons not do their stupid course, now most of the reason are strange:
  • I do not believe that Jesus Christ is the only way to heaven, and I cannot tolerate those who hold this intolerant belief.
  • I believe true education needs to be boring, meaningless, and have no relevance to my life.
  • I believe that speaking in tongues is of the devil.
But I have a feeling this is all fluff to disguise the main reason not to go to their "university":
  • I feel that my discipleship experience with Jesus must be accredited by the U.S. Department of Education if it is to have any value.
I love how they phase that sentence, it makes it appear that you are being up your self if you actually want your Doctorate to be officially accredited, instead of just certificate saying that some website classes you as one. Without it being accredited your title doesn't change to Dr.

Well they are accredited by the "Worldwide Accreditation Commission of Christian Educational Institutions"(WWAC) and "Apostolic Council for Educational Accountability" (ACEA).
But the WWAC and ACEA are both non-recognised accreditation agencies, so they may as well not be accredited


But then the do have 'good' reasons to encourage you to join them.
ou can hear God's voice every day of your life. You can be sure it's really Him. You can carry on an extended two-way conversation with Jesus Christ on a daily basis, and it's easier than you ever imagined.
Yes the teach you to actually hear an invisible wizard who doesn't exist talking to you. Now to me this seems to be:

(Who needs photoshop when you can get GIMP for free)

Another reason to join this crazy place is

The fast track to your degree

You are much closer to your Doctorate of Theology Degree than you realize. Bring in up to 50% of your degree through the combination of transcripts from other colleges and a Life Experience Portfolio. Put your past studies and experiences to good use and earn your Distance Learning Doctorate of Theology Degree faster than you ever thought possible!

Now I understand that experience or other college courses may help, but 50% of your Doctorate for them is a bit insane, no wonder they aren't accredited!

But worst of all, one of the things you have to complete for this doctorate, is on-line quizzes about he bible, each of which you have to get 70% on.
Worst of all? (I hear you say) That doesn't sound bad!
It is bad because they are multiple choice, with unlimited time, and most of the questions are very easy to google (I achieved 90% in little over 5 mins, on a part of the bible I mostly haven't read.). You can also do these quizzes if you are not a student (This is how I did one), there is only one quiz for each block, and it tells you the correct answers at the end. So you could do the quiz without submitting your "university" information, then get the answers and use them when you do the quiz for real. (Now the site doesn't look clever enough to check your IP for this behaviour, but even if it was, you could got to an internet cafe for the first go, and write the answers down.)

To conclude, this is a funny place, until you realise that these cranks may have ripped hundreds (there are hundreds of testimonies, though they could be made up) of people off, and become rich.

Wankers

(Well probably not that would be 'sinning')

{On second thoughts, probably, as I am sure ripping gullible people off is also probably a sin, and they do that}

[Actually on third thoughts it probably isn't a 'sin' to rip gullible people off, seeing as that is the basis of most religions.]

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Monday, 24 December 2007

Barry Morgan puts the Mor in Moron

I recently wrote a post about how stupid the Archbishop of Canterbury was, but I should have waited a few days, because the slightly less senior Archbishop of Wales is much more openly a retarded nutjob.
The Archbishop of Wales, Dr Barry Morgan, has described a rise in "fundamentalism" as one of the great problems facing the world.
A very true statement here, just look at the facts.
  • Fundamentalist Islam attempting to blow the world up to rid it, free speech (especially in cartoons) and of inappropriately named teddies.
  • Fundamentalist Christianity bombing abortion clinics and trying to teach religion in science classes.
  • Or perhaps most comically,
  • Fundamentalist Hindus stopping the development of canals because the land bridge was built by a army of sacred monkeys.

But let's look at what
Dr Barry Morgan (Another doctorate in the non-subject of theology) was most worried about.
He focused on what he described as "atheistic fundamentalism".

Holy shit! Now I have never heard that one before, (well except that that exact phrase returns about 10,700 websites on google and "atheist fundamentalism" returned 38,500 websites, sarcasm rules again) the clever doctor must have thought it up all by himself.
Before we go into what these fundamentalists (I suppose Dr Nutjob would probably put me into this category) have done to destroy society. Lets just look at his terminology.

Noun

fundamentalism

  1. (religion) The tendency to reduce a religion to its most fundamental tenets, based on strict interpretation of core texts.
  2. (finance) The belief that fundamental financial quantities are the best predictor of the price of an instrument.
  3. The beliefs held by those in this movement.
  4. Strict adherence to any set of basic ideas or principles.
So Atheism being just the lack of a belief in god, nothing more nothing less.
1. has to be obvious bollocks because we have no sacred texts
2.
Is about finance so is irrelevant
3. Atheism isn't a movement, we hold no beliefs in the supernatural that is all that links us.
4. Atheism itself has no ideas or principles, except that lack of existence of the supernatural, all other ideas and principles an atheist has are their own.

So the term
"atheistic fundamentalism" makes no sense in any context of the word fundamentalism. Thank you Dr Morgan for making your stupidity so upfront it was easy to expose.

Well, even though his terminology is stupid, what truth is there in his argument that
"atheistic fundamentalism" IS one of the greatest problems in the world.
He said it led to situations such as councils calling Christmas "Winterval", schools refusing to put on nativity plays and crosses removed from chapels.

OH NO! They called Christmas Winterval? Forget, war, terrorism and openly lying to children someone renamed a Christian festival.
First of all how is this a great problem? I know Winterval is a stupid name, I call it Christmas
, most atheists call it Christmas, including famous Atheists like Richard Dawkins. The people who are changing the names of religious festivals are nor the irreligious, we don't care, it is being renamed as to not offend people of other religions in a case of political correctness gone mad.

Second, this is pretty bloody hypocritical of the Chirstians to complain when people rename their festivals, seeing as their festivals are just renamed pagan festivals, with a couple of new ideas thrown on top. What does mistletoe and holly have to do with Jesus' birth? Pagans used it as decorations celebrating fertility, the white berries of mistletoe represented semen and the red berries of holly represent menstruation fluid. The bunnies and eggs at Easter also represent fertility, bunnies represent "going at it like bunnies" and eggs, well that is obvious. Also the Christians even failed to rename Easter when they hijacked it, it was originally a festival celebrating the Pagan Goddess Easter.
Now Winterval is a stupid name, and Merry Christmas is in my opinion much nicer sounding than Happy Holidays, but Chrsitans are in no position to complain about people changing their festivals.

Right back to what
"atheistic fundamentalism" has done to the world.
He said it advocated that religion in general and Christianity in particular have no substance, and that some view the faith as "superstitious nonsense".
OK, this
one is defiantly aimed at people like me, again I must point out:
  • WAR
  • TERRORISM
  • MURDER
  • CHILD RAPE (You reading this Pope Beny 16? Child rape is bad!)
  • ALL OTHER RAPE
  • ASSAULT
  • BANNING CONTRACEPTION IN AIDs RIDDEN COUNTRIES
  • ETC
I wonder what kind of world Dr Morgan lives in, where someone calling faith nonsense is on par with the above things.

Now onto my defence. If Dr Morgan, or anyone else, can give me a good reason why Christianity is any less stupid than believing that a pack of Gnomes are running around in my computer to make it work, then maybe I will stop thinking it is so stupid. Normally the only arguments that are given are:
  • Arguments from personal experience - Normally dubious ones with other explanations much more likely than an invisible man controlling the universe.
  • Argument from personal incredulity - "I can't imagine how this would happen without a higher power," which is a backwards explanation as it is postulating something more complicated than the original problem.
  • Argumentum ad populum - Basically, "Many people believe it, therefore it must have some merit." This is a logical fallacy, if the argument had merit then you would be able to explain it with appealing the large numbers of suporters.
  • And other equally useless arguments.
So in conclusion Dr Morgan, if you want me to not call your faith nonsense, you will have to show me that it isn't nonsense. Not that it is true, just that it is more likely to be true than anything I could just make up.

What other terrible destruction has "atheistic fundamentalism" caused?
As well as leading to Christmas being called "Winterval," the archbishop said "virulent, almost irrational" attacks on Christianity led to hospitals removing all Christian symbols from their chapels, and schools refusing to allow children to send Christmas cards with a Christian message.
Well I don't agree with the, removing of religious symbols or stopping children sending religious cards. (I don't want to sound repetitive but, war? famine? HIV?) He has offered no evidence that it was atheists at all. It sounds like another instance of political correctness gone mad.

Any more?
He also said it led to things like "airlines refusing staff the freedom to wear a cross round their necks" - a reference to the row in which British Airways (BA) suspended an employee who insisted on wearing a cross necklace.
Can you believe it, because of us atheists, religious people have to follow the dress code of the job that they applied for. The problem wasn't the cross, but the fact that the dress code didn't allow any necklaces. If you MUST wear a miniature Roman execution device around your neck, then don't apply for jobs that don't let you wear things around your neck. Problem solved.
Dr Morgan said: "All of this is what I would call the new "fundamentalism" of our age. It allows no room for disagreement, for doubt, for debate, for discussion.
Fundamentalism? No, we have been through this.
Atheists shut down debate and discussion? It is Christians, not all Christians but many, who say that they are 100% sure, that doubt is bad (parable of doubting Thomas), that what ever way the evidence turns they will still believe. Where as most atheists say "show me evidence", so on the contrary, it is the religious who allow no room for debate.

Then we have some pointless waffle about how lovely the story in Luke's Gospel is, irrelevant and questionable. Then he says:
"God is not exclusive, he is on the side of the whole of humanity with all its variety."
I guess he never read the old testament where God was happy to kill anyone for the crime of not being an Israelite, the Racist.

I will leave it there, and conclude that the Arch-nutjob of Wales doesn't even understand the concept of global problems.
The Anglican church is meant to be a calm reformed church, without crazy nutjobs, yet the the Archbishop of Wales and the Bishop of Carlisle are trying very hard to put an end to that.
Or maybe it is hard to have an organisation that worships an invisible man creating the universe without harbouring nutjobs?
But I think this makes it very obvious that Anglican Bishops don't deserve a privileged place in the House of Lords any more than drunk homeless men with a dogs and a harmonicas.

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Thursday, 20 December 2007

Less evil, just as stupid.

Has anyone even heard of Dr Rowan Williams? He is the current Archbishop of Canterbury, Head of the Anglican church. As far as I can see he is less evil than the pope, but just as stupid. In this respect both he and Joe Ratzinger, accuratly depict their churches.

First of all he has a doctorate, who am I, just an undergraduate, to call him stupid?

Well I am doing a real world subject (Physics) which relies on your ability to understand the world around you. He has a doctorate in a subject where you start with an ungrounded assumption (God exists) then use fuzzy language to "show" whatever you originally wanted to show. Which isn't a way of finding out about the world, but more a way of pretending to be sophisticated when claiming what ever the hell you want to.

Anyway we decide if someone is stupid not by their qualifications, but by what they have to say, so here I plan to show what Dr Rowan says is really stupid, then from that conclude that HE is stupid.

So here we go.

First of all, recently Dr Williams said a few things on the Jesus story.
He said most of the story we are taught as children is a myth, and how did he decide which bits are really true and which bits aren't?

The archbishop said his approach was to stick strictly to what the Bible says.
Now normally the correct thing to do at this point would be to show how many things the bible got utterly wrong, therefore showing you cant trust is to tell you what is and isn't accurate. But in this case we don't need to, for he isn't a biblical literalist, I will put a supporting quote later. This puts him in a rather stupid position, he could have claimed the Bible to be infallible and then decided what is correct based on what is inside, or he could have said the Bible is not meant to be taken at face value and then looked for other evidence when deciding what is true and what isn't.

But apparently if you have a doctorate in theology you can claim the bible is a source of all knowledge, except for the bits we know are wrong. With no other book would people accept thing inside as true, with no supporting evidence, when so much of the book had been shown to be incorrect. It is insanely stupid.

OK my promised quote of Dr Williams denouncing biblical literalism, in this case creationism:
"I think creationism is, in a sense, a kind of category mistake, as if the Bible were a theory like other theories ... so if creationism is presented as a stark alternative theory alongside other theories, I think there's - there's just been a jar of categories, it's not what it's about."
I promise you I did not purposefully pick an example of him being extra waffly, he just talks like this. It is a common trick in theology to say as many words as you can without ever actually saying anything of substance. (A really master of this is Alistair McGrath who can give an hour long talk without actually saying anything at all.) The benefit of such a way of talking is you can say very, silly things, or very obvious thing, but make them sound intellectual. So lets dissect this quote and see what he is actually saying.

Removing the fluff, and the speaking error,
"I think creationism is, in a sense, a kind of category mistake, as if the Bible were a theory like other theories ... so if creationism is presented as a stark alternative theory alongside other theories, I think there's - there's just been a jar of categories, it's not what it's about."
We get,
I think creationism is a category mistake, as if the Bible were a theory like other theories ... so if creationism is presented as an alternative theory alongside other theories, I think there's just been a jar of categories, it's not what it's about.
Taking the bit in green, he is saying the creationism is mistaken to think the bible is a theory like other theories. Which could be expressed as "The bible is not a theory like other theories."
So we now have:
The bible is not a theory like other theories, so if creationism is presented as an alternative theory alongside other theories, I think there's just been a jar of categories, it's not what it's about.
Next we have to deal with the fuzzy language like "jar of categories". Taking the whole green bit I think he is implying that: if we present creationism as an alternative to science then we are dividing them into separate categories, and we shouldn't. Or more simply that "We shouldn't make people decide between science and creation."
So we can condense the waffle down again to give us:
The bible is not a theory like other theories, we shouldn't make people decide between science and creation.
Now when you look at it the first part is rather useless, so we can discard that. And for clarity, (a theologians worst nightmare) it is normally best to use positive language when explain things.
So I think (though you can never be too sure), what Dr Williams really said was.
People can believe both evolution and creation.
Well, now we can see what he is saying we can look at if it is true. Which as far as I can see it is and it isn't. I kno this is unclear, but unlike a theologian I will try to clarify my opinion.
While it is possible to believe both if you are happy with believing two contradictory things at the same time, as many religious people are. Or if you only accept part of each of them.
But if you are going to fully accept the science, then creation goes out the window, because evolutionary theory explains everything from the start of life. So if you wanted to add creation to the science you would have to have a God who made the first replicating "thing", then got bored and left. But this is just putting God in the gaps of science, which in the past has shown to fail because as scientific knowledge grows, God shrinks. Also it is not like we have no idea how life started, there are many hypotheses and many supporting experiments, look it up, the field of science which studies life's origins is called abiogenesis.

Anyway I was getting off topic, the point is that Dr Williams dresses up simple statements with so much fluff it is hard to show he is incorrect because you don't really know what he said.

Ok. What other stupid things has this man
said?

I will just do one more and I will do a quick one, for as you saw above it takes a long time to dismantle theological babble.

According to a The Sydney Morning Herald:

He went on to say that while he believed in it himself, new Christians need not leap over the "hurdle" of belief in the virgin birth before they could join the church.

He said the virgin birth was "part of what I have inherited".

I thought this was worth quoting because it shows how thinking is not an important part of becoming a doctor of theology, or head of a church. While I can see his point in the first bit, to believe in the fundamentals of a religion you need not believe all of it, and personally I think the virgin birth is far less ridiculous than some of the other things that you do have to believe to be a Christian, but who is asking me. The important part is the second bit, his reasons for believing.

How can you inherit a belief? The only way I can think of is by being told it when you are young enough to believe anything, and never fully questioning why you believe it. Now this is a pretty poor reason for anyone to believe anything, but much worse for someone with so many qualifications in the field of religion. For someone of his "status" to not even question the things he was taught as a child doesn't say much for his field of study, surely if theology was an intellectual pursuit it would encourage thinking and discussion on all these points.
That someone can have have been a lecturer on a subject and still have not questioned what he was told about it as a child has to discredit theology as a proper degree, can you imagine an authority in any other subject claiming the reason why they support a certain aspect of it is because there family always believed it?

In conclusion, Dr Rowan Williams is just another religious nutjob, who doesn't deserve the title Dr as his subject, theology, doesn't deserve a place in any university (or even deserve a place in any colleges, schools or nurseries for that matter).

**CORRECTION: He is the is the senior bishop and principal leader of the Church of England, but not actual Head of the Anglican church, that is the British monarch. - Thank you Alex.

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Wednesday, 19 December 2007

That scary evil dude (The pope)

The Pope.
Should we listen to what he has to say, or dismiss him as a crazy man who is out of touch with reality and
the modern world?
I mean he did wear this hat...



















not to be festive, but because he thought it was a nice hat.
In my opinion when you start wearing red hats with white fir in the winter, and don't even think it may be mistaken as a Santa hat, you have started to loose touch with the world.

Moving on what does the Darth Sidious look alike have to say on important issues? This is more important than making Ad Hominem attacks on the poor guy, but I may slip in a few more because it is so easy when he looks like this...

So lets look at what he has to say about real world issues (please remember people listen to what he has to say).

Using condoms to prevent HIV:
"The traditional teaching of the church has proven to be the only failsafe way to prevent the spread of HIV/Aids."
The Pope warned that contraception was one of a host of trends contributing to a "breakdown in sexual morality", and church teachings should not be ignored.
Great, so based on his interpretation of a bronze age book that doesn't even mention contraceptives, as they hadn't been invented, he is willing to advise millions of people not to use condoms, even though it would save their lives. This is what is known as genocidal stupidity.

What else has the evil pope said/done?

On a minor note he believe that Harry Potter books are evil. (I will agree that 6 and 7 were pretty crap, but I don't know about evil!)
"It is good that you, esteemed and dear Mrs. Kuby, enlighten the people about Harry Potter, because there are subtle seductions, that act unconsciously, deeply distorting Christianity in the soul, before it can properly grow"
And people believe this nutjob is infallible?

Next, a big one.

Crimen Sollicitationis was enforced for 20 years by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger before he became the Pope.

It instructs bishops on how to deal with allegations of child abuse against priests and has been seen by few outsiders.

Critics say the document has been used to evade prosecution for sex crimes.

Crimen Sollicitationis, was a confidential document which tells church officials to move priests, who are suspected of crimes such as child abuse, to a new area so they wont be caught and shame the church. It also goes into details on how to silence the accusers. Don't take my word for it, read it, I have linked to it above.
Not only this but Vatican City hides convicted priests and fights the
extradition orders of countries where they are wanted.

In my opinion, anyone who can enforce a document that helps child abusers avoid the law, is a sick twisted individual. This man is someone who is happy to let children be sexually abused as long as no one finds out.
You can watch the panorama documentary on the subject on google video.

Now it is possible to go on all day about the things the Nazi Pope has done/said, so I will stop after just one more.

His recent papal encyclical not only attacks atheism with too many logical fallacies for anyone to consider. (His argument basically consists of: Communists were atheists, communists killed many people, therefore atheism is to blame for many deaths. Which is as logically sound as: McDonalds is a business, McDonalds have made many people fat, therefore business itself is to blame for the obesity.)
What I was more annoyed about was what he said on the subject of technology.
In the second encyclical of his papacy, Benedict urges Christians to put their hope for the future in God and not in technology, wealth or political ideologies which can often be deluding.Post Options
Now, quickly skipping over the old claims of money being evil and politics being corrupt, which I can't be bothered with. What the hell does "His Holiness" have against technology? There was a time when we valued God over technology, it is known as the Dark Ages! A time where everything was pretty fucked up from every ones point of view.
Oh except that the Pope had just as much power, if not more, than most of the world leaders. Hmm I wonder why he wants the world to return to the Dark Ages?

In conclusion the Pope is a selfish man who cares more about the power of his church than of the suffering of abused children, people suffering from AIDs and the benefits of modern technology. What a great man to be leader of 1billion Catholics, and no wonder they have to claim he is infallible, otherwise no one would ever listen to a crazy word he said.

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Monday, 17 December 2007

Creationist nutjobs invade the UK

(Apologies for the strong language.)

Right, we all know there are many retarded (or willfully ignorant) English people who still don't accept science, but normally these nutjobs have the courtesy to SHUT THE FUCK UP! But now they want to build a Christian theme park. Now this doesn't sound too bad, I mean the religious already have schools and churches to indoctrinate their children into their beliefs, so why not let the children have fun while they loose their grip on reality? Why? Because they are not only teaching them that:
  • An invisible man in the sky runs the universe.
  • He will decide if you will be tortured forever, based wholly on what you believe.
  • That belief without evidence is better than REALITY!
  • That by saying a prayer over bread and wine you can REALLY turn it into flesh and blood that, looks, tastes, smells and has the exact chemical make up of the original bread and wine.
  • That your brain doesn't really control your thoughts and memories, that is just an illusion, it is actually your immaterial soul. And the fact that drugs, hits to the head, Alzheimer's, and other things that affect you brain CHANGE these functions, is merely a "disconnection" between you and your soul? WTF?
  • That a bronze age book is the source of morality, as long as you ignore the immoral bits!
  • That is is a nice thing to decorate your houses with miniature roman execution devices.
  • That someone else can, two thousand years ago, be a scapegoat for all your "sins" along as you apologise.
  • ETC
Along with all this SHIT they...
will champion the book of Genesis and make a multi-media case that God created the world in seven days.
Seven days? Now before someone, somewhere, even thinks about possibly saying: "We can represent the days as periods of time, because of the original Hebrew meaning of the word day." Lets do what we always get told to do. Read it in context.
So lets look at a KJV:
And God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And the evening and the morning were the first day.
Now what time period has both morning and night? You got it, a 24 hour day.

So back on topic, these nutjobs want to claim the earth was created in: 168 hours, but he rested for the last 24, so really the world was created in 144 hours.
STUPIDITY ALERT!!!
Now this isn't the time for me to go into the REASONS why this is stupid, though it should be blatantly obvious to anyone with more than 4 brain cells, I will try to go into this in more detail on the main site, when I finally get round to moving it onto serif. (Which I started yesterday.)

So the main point is there may be a theme park in England, promoting NOT-THINKING, and SCIENTIFIC IGNORANCE. This is so backwards it is unbelievable.

Now who is funding this £3.5 million venture of stupidity? We don't know, but people think it may be Sir Peter Vardy. The man who owns religious school, that TEACH CREATIONISM, but the government is fine with it because they got a good ofsted report. (Surly all that means is that someone should investigate ofsted for incompetence.)

So now all that there is to do congratulate Wigan Council for refusing permission for them to build it there, and to let our concerns be known to any other council that considers it!

</rant>

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