Farewell, Hitch
December 16, 2011 1 Comment
The world is now less articulate.

Contents include: atheism, skepticism, humanism, science, religion, and politics. Best served ironic.
December 16, 2011 1 Comment
The world is now less articulate.

February 7, 2011 2 Comments
Canadian televangelist Charles McVety, who recently had his show canceled for making some disgusting remarks about gays, claimed that his “freedom of speech was under attack.”
And he’s absolutely right.
The Canadian Broadcast Standards Council said in December that McVety violated national broadcasting codes. That’s probably true. But perhaps the Council should rethink their standards.
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in section 2 states (emphasis added):
Everyone has the following fundamental freedoms:
(a) freedom of conscience and religion;
(b) freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression, including freedom of the press and other media of communication;
(c) freedom of peaceful assembly; and
(d) freedom of association.
The Council took issue with McVety’s characterization of gay pride parades as “sex parades.” He also referred to gay events as, “malevolent, insidious and conspiratorial.”
He is , of course, an ignorant ass, but this is another example of freedom of speech being dangerously limited in Canada. This is the same kind of thinking that results in journalists being prosecuted for “offending” religious people. (Of course, the FCC in the U.S. has it’s own problems, but that’s a topic for another day.)
McVety has also claimed that he was not allowed to refer to a debate opponent as an “atheist” (not sure I believe him about that).
I don’t think it can be put any better than it was by Christopher Hitchens speaking in Canada on freedom of expression:
April 9, 2010 2 Comments
Though religious and atheist violence has been around for centuries, recent studies show that militantism among atheists and the faithful is on the rise.
One needs to look no further than the headlines in any daily newspaper to find evidence of this unfortunate trend.
Last year we saw Hindu “morality police” beat young women in India for drinking alcohol.
In that very same year, militant atheist Richard Dawkins wrote a book about evolution.
In the near-decade that has passed since the Muslim terrorists flew jetliners into the World Trade towers and the pentagon, intelligence agencies have uncovered numerous Al-Qaeda plots to bomb buildings and planes in many different countries.
But they aren’t the only ones plotting.
It has been reported that dozens, if not tens, of militant atheists were found to have sinister plans to write books. Books that express opinions different than those held by most people.
In recent weeks the FBI has executed a series of raids on a Christian militia that plotted to murder police officers and set off a bomb at a funeral. And of course the Lord’s Resistance Army continues to reek havoc across Africa.
This outrageous behavior could be seen mirrored in Christopher Hitchens, perhaps the most militant of all atheists, as he called for the capture and prosecution of high-ranking catholics who aided in the cover-up of child rapes.
But perhaps the most heinous crimes of these zealots has been the incitement of others to commit violence. Like the Muslim group that offered a $100,000 reward for killing a Swedish cartoonist ($50,000 bonus for slaughtering him like a lamb).
Militant atheists have also used this tactic of incitement recently. Two of the so-called “Four-Horsemen” were seen doing just that—both during moderated debates with theists.
Daniel Dennett was reported to have stroked his manly white beard while simultaneously grumbling as an opponent began speaking of free-will.
And in perhaps the most blatant act of militantism, sources reported to have seen Sam Harris, in response to Pascal’s wager, raise a single eyebrow.
July 15, 2009 Leave a comment
So, fellow atheist blogger, Drazzel, got me thinking once again about something that baffles me over and over and over. In his post, he relates a story about a friend who called him a “fundamental atheist.” Drazzel rightfully had difficulty even comprehending what that could possibly mean.
Do not mistake passion, which can change its mind, for fundamentalism, which never will. Passion for passion, an evangelical Christian and I may be evenly matched. But we are not equally fundamentalist. The true scientist, however passionately he may “believe”, in evolution for example, knows exactly what would change his mind: evidence! The fundamentalist knows that nothing will.
Our principles are not a faith. We do not rely solely upon science and reason, because these are necessary rather than sufficient factors, but we distrust anything that contradicts science or outrages reason. We may differ on many things, but what we respect is free inquiry, openmindedness, and the pursuit of ideas for their own sake. We do not hold our convictions dogmatically: the disagreement between Professor Stephen Jay Gould and Professor Richard Dawkins, concerning “punctuated evolution” and the unfilled gaps in post-Darwinian theory, is quite wide as well as quite deep, but we shall resolve it by evidence and reasoning and not by mutual excommunication.