http://youtube.com/watch?v=w4fQA9mt-MgThis isn't a news article, rather a small "powerpoint" slide show put together by some random person on the internets.I offer it only because after viewing it I felt it was a decent production and that I agreed with a lot of it. Please pay particular attention to the references to the founding of the country and also please post any evidence contradicting the propositions made in this video ESPECIALLY regarding the founding of this country.
3/10/2007 1:47:21 AM
That was lame.I hate religion as much as the next guy, but atheists are FAR from being persecuted. Usually, the non-religious side wins out on the legal stage, because of separation of church and state guidelines.
3/10/2007 1:53:58 AM
as an agnostic, i find it hard to care what the atheists are doing.but maybe I'll try ... tomorrow.[Edited on March 10, 2007 at 2:42 AM. Reason : ]
3/10/2007 2:41:30 AM
3/10/2007 7:45:14 AM
well, as something of an atheist myself, I'll tell you flat out why. Because I don't want there to be religion anywhere at all. Ever again. I won't force people to stop believing, and I don't want laws against it, and I want people to be able to make their own decisions - but I'll do what I can to make them understand that their beliefs are incorrect and, in many cases, harmful.
3/10/2007 9:02:49 AM
least trusted minority. that really amazes me and pisses me off
3/10/2007 10:35:04 AM
^^ so you're an evangelical atheist...That makes you just as bad as an evangelical christian.
3/10/2007 10:47:36 AM
Here is the discussion panel following up on the video I already posted.Its basically 3 people who agree atheists are bad, but only 2 of them think they need to “shut up” whereas the third guy thinks they should be extended the freedom of speech b/c this country lets other stupid people say stupid things too.Interestingly though one of the women thinks based off of a different source than Paula is using, that there are a whole lot more atheists in this country.
3/10/2007 10:49:04 AM
3/10/2007 10:53:42 AM
^ yeah, he/she believes in annoying the shit out of everyone around them.
3/10/2007 10:57:52 AM
I was debating over whether to post this blob of text, but kdawgs post pushed me in that direction.
3/10/2007 11:01:49 AM
Philosophical and logical reasonsMany atheists will point out that in philosophy and science, the default position on any matter is a lack of belief. If reliable evidence or sound arguments are not presented in support of a belief, then the "burden of proof" remains upon believers, not nonbelievers, to justify their view.[102][103] Consequently, many atheists assert that they are not theists simply because they remain unconvinced by theistic arguments and evidence. As such, many atheists have argued against the most famous proposed proofs of God's existence, including the ontological, cosmological, and teleological arguments.[104]Other atheists base their position on a more active logical analysis, and subsequent rejection, of theistic claims. The arguments against the existence of God aim at showing that the traditional Judeo-Christian conception of God either is inherently meaningless, is internally inconsistent, or contradicts known scientific or historical facts, and that therefore a god thus described does not exist.The most common of these arguments is the problem of evil, which Christian apologist William Lane Craig has called "atheism's killer argument."[105] The argument is that the presence of evil in the world disproves the existence of any god that is simultaneously benevolent and omnipotent, because any benevolent god would want to eliminate evil, and any omnipotent god would be able to do so. Theists commonly respond by invoking free will to justify evil (cf. argument from free will), but this leaves unresolved the related argument from nonbelief, also known as the argument from divine hiddenness, which states that if an omnipotent God existed and wanted to be believed in by all, it would prove its existence to all because it would invariably be able to do so. Since there are unbelievers, either there is no omnipotent God or God does not want to be believed in.Another such argument is theological noncognitivism, which holds that religious language, and specifically words like God, is not cognitively meaningful. This argument was popular in the early 20th century among logical positivists such as Rudolph Carnap and A.J. Ayer, who held that talk of deities is literally nonsense.[106] Such arguments have since fallen into disfavor among philosophers, but continue to see use among ignostics, who view the question of whether deities exist as meaningless or unanswerable, and apatheists, who view it as entirely irrelevant. Similarly, the transcendental argument for the non-existence of God (TANG), a reversal of the more well-known theistic argument, argues that logic, science, and morality can only be justified by appealing to a non-theistic worldview.Personal, social, and ethical reasonsSome atheists have found social, psychological, practical, and other personal reasons for their disbelief. Some believe that it is more conducive to living well, or that it is more ethical and has more utility than theism. Such atheists may hold that searching for explanations in natural science is more beneficial than seeking to explain phenomena supernaturally. Some atheists also assert that atheism allows—or perhaps even requires—people to take personal responsibility for their actions. In contrast, they feel that many religions blame bad deeds on extrinsic factors and require threats of punishment and promises of reward to keep a person morally and socially acceptable.Some atheists dislike the restrictions religious codes of conduct place on their personal freedoms. From their point of view, such morality is subjective and arbitrary. Some atheists even argue that theism can promote immorality. Much violence—e.g., warfare, executions, murders, and terrorism—has been brought about, condoned, or justified by religious beliefs and practices.In areas dominated by certain Christian denominations, many atheists find it difficult to accept that faith could be more important than good works: While a murderer can go to heaven simply by accepting Jesus in some Christian sects, a farmer in a remote Asian countryside will go to hell for not hearing the "good news". Furthermore, some find Hell to be the epitome of cruel and unusual punishment, making it impossible that a good God would permit such a place's existence.Just as some people of faith come to their faith based upon perceived spiritual or religious experiences, some atheists base their view on an absence of such an experience (or on explaining such experiences through natural causes). Although they may not foreclose the possibility of a supernatural world, unless they believe through experience that such a world exists, they generally refuse to accept a metaphysical belief system based upon faith.Some atheists argue that religion's emphasis on "faith" can undermine the desire to continually seek new knowledge and explanations.[107] For example, if it is accepted that God created life, then there is no need to research how life arose. Stephen Hawking noted in his book "A Brief History of Time" that the Pope urged him and other scientists not to delve into the origin of the universe because that area belonged to God.Additionally, some atheists grow up in environments where atheism is relatively common, just as people who grow up in a predominantly Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, or Christian cultures tend to adopt the prevalent religion there. However, because of the relative uncommonness of atheism, a majority of atheists were not brought up in atheist households or communities.Osiris-DionysusThe term Osiris-Dionysus is used by some historians of religion to refer to a group of deities worshipped around the Mediterranean in the centuries prior to the birth of Jesus. It has been argued that these deities were closely related and shared many characteristics, most notably being male, partly-human, born of virgins, life-death-rebirth deities and other similar characteristics.-wiki
3/10/2007 11:02:25 AM
Bad video. 80% of it is whining about the small stuff. When we atheists are asked why we care about religion, we need to respond with the fundamentals of how it affects our life. That we are widely considered to be depraved. That laws and common morality are based in fantasy. That billions of people are teaching, living, and enforcing terrible lies that have real effects on our lives.
3/10/2007 11:15:21 AM
agreed. hell im agnostic and im wary to tell people just cuz they directly associate that with atheism. more hastle than its worth.
3/10/2007 11:48:55 AM
^speaking of associationhttp://ncst.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2204609276
3/10/2007 12:14:38 PM
Actually, I missed one point in my little statement up there. I also don't get into my lack of religion or the religion of others until they bring it up first - so I'm not evangelical, I just don't keep my mouth shut once someone's brought their faith up to me.And yeah I was somewhat of a christian - like 6 or 7 years ago. I know exactly what I believe, although I'd say that I live by more of a set of ideas and facts than beliefs - my beliefs have just changed and evolved over time, which I think everyone's beliefs should do. In fact, one of the things I dislike so much about religion is how much every religion forces itself to never change. I think kdawg's inability to understand that my beliefs could change and his portrayal of that change as my "Not knowing what I believe" is proof of that problem. My beliefs changed from my freshman year in college to almost 4 years after I graduated, and that's not understandable?Change always happens anyway, but it usually is forced or happens far too slowly. People allow their beliefs to stagnate and don't update them with the reality of what humanity has learned since those beliefs first came into being.It was ok, for instance, to think the earth was 6,000 years old, until we proved that wasn't true. Still believing it is pointless, because it's been unequivocally disproven. I believed in christianity until it became obvious to me that those beliefs, or at least the supernatural portions, were completely impossible and without any historical merit. I had been taught as though all of these things were true, not that they were beliefs, and that's the case with most religions. You're taught from the time you can understand, at least if you're a Chrisitan, that there's a man in the sky watching you, that he came to earth in human form, that he raised the dead and healed the sick and was born of a virgin and died and rose again... but you're not told that there's a chance these things are incorrect.Then, as I moved away from them, I began to realize that not only were they untrue, but continuing to believe in them and other such supernatural mythologies was harmful to human development and caused wars and social tension. It just doesn't make a bit of sense to me.[Edited on March 10, 2007 at 1:36 PM. Reason : .]
3/10/2007 1:22:48 PM
3/10/2007 3:30:33 PM
i hope you're joking
3/10/2007 4:32:19 PM
yeeeeeeahfreedom of religion is not the freedom to lead a class in public school in prayer. But don't get me wrong.I hate both atheists and Christians (of the severity seen in the videos above). Religion is heritage. The sooner that atheists can recognize that there is cultural value to religion and the sooner the Christians can acknowledge that religion isn't a guide for life the better.And don't give me that Christian shit that religion is a guide for life, the bible says crap about sacrificing your first born and shit. You only say Christianity gives you your guiding points for life when it fits your convenience. One way or the other, clear, rational thought must be used to ascribe to certain parts of the bible. THAT IS NOT FAITH. Faith kills people.And anyone who calls themself an atheist is an asshole. That's why they're "persecuted." Honestly, this isn't about who you are, this is something you decided, to publicly proclaim that you think other people are wrong in their beliefs. And on top of that, religion has a big part in history and the building of society as we know it, get over it. Anyone with decency who is going down that track calls themselves agonistic (simply recognizing themself as the lazy fuck they are) or finds something else to do with their time that's more productive than this anti-belief system.[Edited on March 10, 2007 at 5:25 PM. Reason : ]
3/10/2007 5:23:58 PM
nazism had a big part in building what germany is today. that doesn't mean that tradition is a GOOD thing. and no, I'm not comparing christianity to nazism, but the logic is the same. just because something helped your society be what it is today (and would you really argue that today's society is GOOD?) doesn't make it good in its own right.society may or may not have come into being without religion - I'd say society is more about grouping together as humans to feel more together, and that's human nature. it's about more easy access to food, other people, and sex. also, since when is something you decided not part of who you are? not only that, but how did I DECIDE to not believe in god? I didn't DECIDE not to believe in god, I just don't. Your arguments are silly.and I agree with you about the label "atheist," that's why I call myself "somewhat of an atheist" or "sort of an atheist," etc. Atheists say they KNOW there's no god, just as theists say they know there IS a god. I don't KNOW there's not a god, I just don't think there is. I'm not exactly an agnostic either, however, because agnostics believe that god can neither be disproven or proven. God can very easily be proven, though not as easily disproven, but either way, I'm neither atheist nor agnostic.[Edited on March 10, 2007 at 6:33 PM. Reason : ,]
3/10/2007 6:32:14 PM
^^Wow, that's stupid. I should recognize the cultural value of religion? Culture has no value to me. Falsehoods don't get more important over time.
3/10/2007 6:53:28 PM
3/10/2007 8:09:37 PM
3/10/2007 8:20:44 PM
3/10/2007 8:36:44 PM
3/10/2007 8:38:35 PM
That's great, only problem is that you don't rule the world.
3/10/2007 8:51:56 PM
3/10/2007 10:36:58 PM
3/10/2007 11:10:08 PM
he's not being very nice to any group. atheists are a bunch of assholes who choose to go against the grain and tell everyone how stupid they are. christians were brainwashed as children and cant choose for themselves.[Edited on March 10, 2007 at 11:15 PM. Reason : the agnostics who say they are lazy are the ones that dont understand what it is]
3/10/2007 11:15:13 PM
thanks.and yes my agnostic friends do fit in that category.I can see where you're coming from. When confronted with disbelief in the Christian God, certainly there is the agnostic route, atheist route, boldface lying, and possibly some others. I only consider the lying option to be 100% apathetic.
3/10/2007 11:24:48 PM
The Agnostic's "Creed"
3/11/2007 2:43:53 AM
While nobody can prove that God exists (short of God making an appearance), nobody can prove that God doesn't exist either. So why argue about it? Especially when we will all find out the answer in due time anyway.
3/11/2007 4:15:41 PM
3/11/2007 8:40:00 PM
3/11/2007 11:17:11 PM
I think mrfrog makes some great points here.
3/11/2007 11:32:34 PM
Okay, I get a warm and fuzzy feeling on the inside when I think about a number of things, and I'm gona try to ask for more detail on yours.I think I get the feeling you're talking about there when I read Stephen Hawking or Popular Science, you know, just the creativity of our minds applied to the edge of the known.But when I think of a "warm fuzzy" argument for atheism, I'm thinking more of a "coming out of the closet" feeling. Like, if you spend your ENTIRE time at church just thinking to yourself "this is complete crap, I want to leave now," then it's more of a self-empowerment thing to be able to say "I don't believe in this." Which kind of stems from the faith thing. Faith is something you look inside yourself for, maybe it's there and maybe it's not. If you find that it's not then sure, you could be much happier pursuing alternative creeds.--My question: How is your "deep thinking" exclusive to being non-theist? I've heard strong Christians who've studied physics discuss how the knowledge they gain reinforces their faith instead of wearing it away.And then is that thinking really connected to your separation from Christianity (just guessing)? I'm typically of the opinion that science has gotten as far it can in disproving Christianity. We can find alternate dimensions or the unified field theory and it wouldn't require a repositioning of the church, while at the same time many churches NEED to be repositioned on issues that science has ruled over for hundreds of years (note: evolution).I see these as sort of petty fights that won't change anything now that we've gotten this far. Is the science over religion thing I talked about here why you 'quit' or was your motivation elsewhere?
3/12/2007 12:09:08 AM
No, I used to get warm fuzzies when I was younger and believed in god, and when I stopped believing in him, I got the same (actually sometimes better, though that could just be because of the time that's passed) feeling from the things I described earlier."I'm thinking more of a "coming out of the closet" feeling." absolutely not, in my case. But that's partially because I didn't screw around in church once I stopped believing.
3/12/2007 12:20:51 AM
3/12/2007 12:21:26 AM
you know, another important point is that the only difference between my beliefs and those of a christian is a matter of scale. allow me to explain:unless you believe that the bible is the infallible, correct, and perfect word of god in every instance and to the full degree, you are picking and choosing what you do and do not want to believe. correct? if you say you are sure the bible is infallible, this means that you believe slavery is necessary, women should be stoned for adultery, shellfish is as evil as homosexuality, the earth is flat and covered by a firmament, etc. Most people would say some of these things, though which of these differs based on the person, are metaphor or simply incorrect. Well, I believe in some of the bible. I believe some of the facts are historical - wars, etc - because we have physical evidence of those events. I just choose not to believe that that jesus rose from the grave, or that the entire earth was flooded, or that a man was born of a virgin, or that the earth was created in 7 days, or that man was made of the earth and eve of his rib... or man and woman made separately, depending on which CHAPTER of genesis you read. or that god exists.
3/12/2007 12:33:38 AM
I'll admit that I don't get what atheists actually think.Personally, i expand the idea of god to any super-universal intelligence that can be represented by a single or multiple beings that may or may not even be aware of our existence. To say that nothing like that exists for certain doesn't seem right to me, it even seems illogical. To say that something like that may exist, but it has no bearing on me (what I view as agnosticism) seems to be the most logical position.
3/12/2007 12:43:51 AM
3/12/2007 3:56:53 PM
I believe that no one know what happens to them after they die or if there is a "higher power (which I guess is more agnostic than atheist). However, I consider myself to be atheist. The reason why, using an odd example.....Right now I am in my house. I can not see my backyard. If someone were to come in right now and ask me if I believe that a giant giraffe is in my backyard I would say no. Of course its possible there is one. However, I have no reason to believe there is, no facts, no history etc. to back that up. I don't say to that person well I don't believe or disbelieve that there is a giraffe in my backyard.The term that is used to describe my belief I think is a "weak-atheist". I think most atheists are like this and not like the ones that try to disprove the existence of god constantly, but I could be wrong about that.
3/13/2007 11:55:24 AM
So, in philosophical terms, you're a weak atheist (with a lack of belief in any gods) rather than a strong atheist (who claims to know there is no god). The majority of atheists I've met are weak atheists. The only reason I've really encountered the term strong atheist is that agnostics (who also often meet the qualification for being a weak atheist) want to differentiate themselves from the term atheist.
3/13/2007 1:33:17 PM
3/13/2007 9:49:34 PM
3/13/2007 10:51:26 PM
Honestly, if someone told me there was a giraffe in my back yard I'd go out there and look half believing it, because isn't not every day that someone just comes up to you and says "dude! there's a giraffe in your back yard"
3/13/2007 11:17:49 PM
3/13/2007 11:37:28 PM
If it's a backyard that you can never look into, then there could be goddam dragons back there.I mean, do we even know that backyard exists, much less that there's something in there?
3/14/2007 1:25:40 AM
3/14/2007 1:36:21 AM
3/14/2007 1:40:52 AM