Great piece on Slate regarding the Book Burning and the ground zero Mosquehttp://www.slate.com/id/2266535/
9/8/2010 1:10:17 PM
Except you are responsible for Christian extremists just as Muslims are responsible for Muslim extremists. If you each would stop perpetuating the destructive idea that belief without evidence is virtuous then we wouldn't have Christian nor Muslim extremists.And yes, Grumpy, there would still be extremists of some kind. And some humans would still kill other humans over something. And we still would all have differences to squabble over.
9/8/2010 1:29:23 PM
You're right - my personal acknowledgement of the existence of metaphysical phenomena perpetuates Christian extremism. I also believe in spanking children. Thus, I have perpetuated genocide.My bad
9/8/2010 2:03:17 PM
You forget, without religions the world would be a magical*, happy place where we used the power of reason to create a utopia.*-Magic is bullshit
9/8/2010 2:09:18 PM
LOL, I pre-responded to Grumpy's bulllshit and it still wasn't enough. Never have I suggested that the world would be perfect without religion. Only better.
9/8/2010 2:46:55 PM
9/8/2010 3:20:18 PM
Are you trolling me? Evidence must stand up to scrutiny. This type of "evidence" is not evidence. This is not even a matter of semantics. Their "evidence" is wrong in addition to not even being evidence.
9/8/2010 3:34:49 PM
9/8/2010 4:12:06 PM
It is not a leap of faith to submit that the excise of a bad thing would make the world a better place.It's called deductive reasoning. [Edited on September 8, 2010 at 4:52 PM. Reason : .]
9/8/2010 4:26:11 PM
If you acknowledge that religion was not divinely bestowed upon humanity by some god, then you must acknowledge that what we consider to be religions formed naturally from a secular/areligious world. Similarly, if all governments were formed naturally by groups of people, then if you consider things on that large scale, we're living in the natural result of an anarchist society just as we're living in the natural result of a completely non-religious society. Even if all modern religions were suddenly dismissed by everyone, what's stopping new ones from just forming on their own? If we began in a godless world that led to to the one we're living in now, what's to say that somehow hitting the spiritual reset button would make it stay that way?It's also worth mentioning that people can show the same degree of fanaticism and irrationality (believing in things without proof/despite contrary evidence is hardly exclusive to religion) in their patriotism or political ideology (or a handful of other things). For some people, they're effectively just religions without the god figure (or with a non-divine god figure, a la Ayn Rand, Obama, or other famous people surrounded by that whole cult of personality). It's important how you're defining religion, because otherwise you're just vaguely talking about all sorts of other group-thought organizations/structures and ideologies.As I've said before, I think that the whole notion of devoting oneself to some vague in-group and assigning others into broad out-groups is the closest thing we have to a "root of all evil" concept, but group-thought is a component of human nature. It's pretty much hard-wired into our brains, and however much some thoughtful people manage to resist it, it'll always exist in society without some sort of sci-fi style brain altering (and that sort of thing would be a complete violation of human rights). You can't force people to become rational individuals... some of them likely aren't even intellectually capable of it. Also, group association does have the genuinely positive purpose (one that is largely obsolete in first-world nations) of helping others survive/taking care of others, despite all the problems the mentality brings....And that's not even saying anything about the stuff McDanger mentioned: That you have no idea how people would behave without religion (they certainly wouldn't all become rational and thoughtful) and the fact that your statements don't acknowledge the charity work done by many non-extreme religious groups (as well as the whole stupid-people-using-it-as-a-moral-crutch thing that could kinda be helpful to society).
9/8/2010 9:38:28 PM
9/8/2010 11:54:37 PM
what happens to those in the bible who worship "false" gods?
9/9/2010 12:17:27 AM
Something similar. What's your point?
9/9/2010 8:56:35 AM
9/9/2010 9:13:22 AM
But doesn't a good society require a devotion to something a bit more than just truth? I mean, as Darwin himself revealed, the truth about life can be pretty cut-throat. For better or worse, religion offers a set of principles, a system of ethics. As far as I know, atheism offer no such thing. Secularism I suppose offers a system of ethics, but a rather limited one.I agree that a society built on ancient myths is almost certain to have its moral shortcomings. But I also think its incumbent upon atheists and secularists to do the tough intellectual work and come up with a viable substitute before they go tearing down centuries of moral foundations.[Edited on September 9, 2010 at 9:55 AM. Reason : ]
9/9/2010 9:53:45 AM
A devotion to society itself seems more morally sound to devotion to anything else.
9/9/2010 10:22:06 AM
I think that's a good starting point, but the Golden Rule can only get you so far; it doesn't really answer the more complex moral questions. "Treat others as you would have them treat you" only works to the extent that we all wanted to be treated the same.To be sure, I agree with you more than I disagree with you. I just notice a tendency among my fellow atheists and secularists to be a bit flippant when it comes to questions of moral foundations. [Edited on September 9, 2010 at 10:31 AM. Reason : ]
9/9/2010 10:29:15 AM
And that seems like a extremely solid foundation for ethical devotion. All people should be treated equally and with equal respect. There are basic fundamental human rights which all people have and should not be impinged by any other person. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights seems like a much better moral foundation than the Bible or Koran.The bottom line (and I'm speaking not necessarily directly to you, but to anyone who wonders how we can have morality without religion) is that it is better to derive morality from truth about how we affect one another than ancient texts that have no factual basis. [Edited on September 9, 2010 at 10:42 AM. Reason : .]
9/9/2010 10:33:13 AM
Imam fears moving NYC mosque could inflame tension(AP) β 20 hours ago
9/9/2010 8:02:14 PM
^ wow, you grossly mischaracterized his statements (or is that what you actually think it says?).You could work for Fox News.[Edited on September 9, 2010 at 8:05 PM. Reason : ]
9/9/2010 8:05:19 PM
^ Actually, I did nothing of the sort. I quoted the imam accurately--and the headline and this quotation are AP's doing:
9/9/2010 8:08:15 PM
^ you did actually, itβs your M.O. in fact.
9/9/2010 8:10:36 PM
^ Posting it doesn't make it so. How did I mischaracterize the imam's statements, "grossly" or otherwise?[Edited on September 9, 2010 at 8:17 PM. Reason : Go back to reading Media Matters' talking points. ]
9/9/2010 8:16:50 PM
why is it that conservatives have such limited capacity for abstract thought?only the most concrete thinker could even begin to equate Burning Korans with building a Mosque.since you seem to have such difficulty, hooksaw, let me explain to you the basics. here's they way NORMAL people understand these issues hooksaw.Yes, Pastor Chucklefuck has the right to burn as many Korans as he likes.No, he should not do so, because it is unethical and he should have the common sense to understand how it is outrageous and insulting to desecrate a holy book that is revered by that culture to be physically sacred. No, he should not do so, becasue the end result will be to stir up a bunch of poorly-educated religious nutjobs. Yes, he's also a poorly educated religious nutjob.No, it should not be our country's goal to sink to the Lowest Common Denominator.Yes, Imam Whats-his-nuts has the right to build a mosque on private property.Yes, he should be concerned to build where it would be most welcome/effectiveNo, he should not have to fear an outrage for using an old Burlington Coat Factory building which has nothing to do with the World Trade Center site.No, flag-waving Jesus-loving Americans should have nothing to fear from nor be outraged by a cultural/recreation/religious center being built in an old Burlington Coat Factory building that has nothing to do with the World Trade Center site.Yes, our Constitution protects rights for everyone.No, you dont get to pick and choose based on who agrees with youNo, Freedom of Speech does not include the right to engage in hate speech or incite violenceNo, building a mosque (with goal of increasing understanding and tolerance within a local population) does not equate to maliciously burning Korans (with goal of instigating and alienating an entire global population)
9/10/2010 3:50:56 PM
How is burning a Quran unethical?
9/10/2010 4:07:36 PM
9/10/2010 4:18:51 PM
9/10/2010 4:29:15 PM
It's a tough sell to me to call causing non-lasting psychological insult as unethical. Wouldn't quite call it inflicting suffering.Note the non-lasting. It's definitely possibly to inflict psychological suffering but it ought to take more than an insult.
9/10/2010 4:32:02 PM
9/10/2010 5:11:53 PM
Clearly unethical.
9/10/2010 6:25:10 PM
9/10/2010 9:45:26 PM
9/10/2010 10:36:58 PM
9/10/2010 11:30:11 PM
Fox asked today if it was wise to build a mosque there. Here is the President's response:
9/11/2010 3:30:59 AM
He has also provided an answer to the longstanding question: Justice, or just us?
9/11/2010 3:36:50 AM
You can also notice the subtle differences between the news agencies. The Fox News guy asks if its wise to build a Mosque at ground zero, but CNN labels the question on screen as about the Islamic Center.
9/11/2010 5:02:36 AM
I don't understand why people are coming down on me for defining suffering as something greater than personal insult. And McDanger and your claims that I am an amoral prick are totally unfounded. See every thread that I bring up the advantages of secular morality, humanity's innate capacity for altruism, etc. In fact, in this very thread I'm the only one who is seeking to define what constitutes an unethical interaction between two people. And yes, I do get offended when people proselytize false things at me, and I understand that believers will get offended by me telling them their beliefs are false. Neither interaction is unethical and if anything the believer in question's offense doesn't mean as much to me as the 3rd party observers who may be sitting on the fence and convinced that false belief is wrong.But that's fine, anecdotes about atheists and attacks on my character seem like a much stronger argument anyway.
9/11/2010 8:49:39 AM
Islamic Center Developer Evicted from SoHo Office Sep 15, 2010
9/16/2010 7:17:46 AM
30 compaints in 14 years? My girlfriend alone can top that in one year, while living in a pristine apartment-building.I'm sure the national smear effort against Rauf will dig up worse things yet.
9/16/2010 9:18:24 AM
^ So, the Democratic state senator and mayor of Union City, New Jersey, and the all-Democrat board of commissioners are involved in a "smear effort"? Furthermore, I doubt that a "pristine" apartment has serious complaints such as "mold inside apartments, garbage issues, bedbugs, foul odors, dirty hallways and the lack of utilities/heat."[Edited on September 16, 2010 at 10:41 AM. Reason : Context matters.]
9/16/2010 10:40:29 AM
Well, hell. We've had water stains on the ceiling, termites, dead animals in the central air, gas-leaks and appliance-to-wall connections. We've had to call the city once to get them to fix something. Problems get fixed. Anyone sittin' in our place is feeling safe and clean and all "this is a satisfactory domicile that any American would be happy with".Honestly, I wouldn't be surprised if the company was being less than kind to tenants, but that story just rings of "make a mountain out of a mole-hill".
9/16/2010 11:32:35 AM
This entire story is about making a mountain out of a mole hill. A mountain big enough to hide the overt racism.
9/16/2010 11:38:50 AM
^^ Okay, so why are those Democrats allowing it then? ^ Anything to toss out yet another despicable "RACISM!!1" charge, right? [Edited on September 16, 2010 at 12:53 PM. Reason : And I think you got your libelous comments confused. You meant "bigot," right?]
9/16/2010 12:52:45 PM
Uh, because they're not in a position to pass judgement on the lawsuit?
9/16/2010 12:57:49 PM
^ Well, which is it? You posted that the suit against Rauf was part of a "smear effort," didn't you?
9/16/2010 1:00:39 PM
Why can't it be both?
9/16/2010 1:16:31 PM
^ That's absurd.Oh, look--the developers of the mosque near Ground Zero have now changed the wording on their Web site and the site itself (this was how it read as of late August 2010):
9/16/2010 6:24:16 PM
http://www.911hardhatpledge.com/
9/20/2010 10:19:10 AM
"Andy and a growing number of American's agree..."
9/20/2010 10:23:11 AM
^^What a crock of shit.
9/20/2010 11:03:00 AM