^^^group sideindividual group
12/23/2008 3:15:48 PM
12/23/2008 3:23:50 PM
^ wow, did you go to HS in North Carolina?I can't imagine a place like that...
12/23/2008 3:24:54 PM
Yes, I have lived in NC my entire life. I went to public high school.
12/23/2008 3:28:33 PM
GOP you can always find a small sect where a minority group is the norm no matter how trivial they are. however in America as a whole Willy Nilly and agnostics are as a whole belittled by society. I am impressed that there is an Atheist out there who can say that if a god were to come up to and smack them in the face they still wouldn't believe that said god exists.
12/23/2008 4:01:43 PM
12/23/2008 4:12:28 PM
I also have faith that this won't happen but I can't state that it is impossible so where does that put me?
12/23/2008 4:17:43 PM
^ I wouldn't call that faith, that's reasonable conjecture.
12/23/2008 4:22:02 PM
You know, reading through this, it's amazing how much of the thread revolves around atheists complaining that people are dismissive of them. It's gone from, "We are horribly oppressed!" to "Nobody pays us any mind." I know which one I'd rather be.Also, their almost physical reaction to people saying the word "God" is pretty impressive. I wonder, if a President were to mention Santa Clause, whether they'd take that as an official endorsement by the government of Santa's existence?
12/23/2008 5:57:04 PM
snore
12/23/2008 11:19:48 PM
12/24/2008 12:37:46 AM
12/24/2008 12:45:29 AM
I wasn't trying to shitcan your argument. I was just making a side comment on something that I see screwed up a lot.
12/24/2008 12:54:11 AM
Fair enough. Although I assure you that Raptor Jesus and Allah-saurus are different entirely.
12/24/2008 1:05:11 AM
12/24/2008 1:19:17 AM
^ Yeah, because it's only atheists that are pushing for the complete separation of church and state. As long as one particular religion's sacred text is displayed in any courtroom, there is not separation of church and state. Until the word "god" is removed from all of our money, there is not separation of church and state. Until public schools prohibit the teaching of creationism in science class, and the practice of school-provided "prayer time" (or even worse, actual school-directed prayer,) there is not separation of church and state.I don't understand how so many of you oppose changing these things without any legitimate defense for the fact that they are all blatantly unconstitutional.
12/24/2008 8:44:49 AM
12/24/2008 9:51:09 AM
12/24/2008 10:15:34 AM
Are atheists the most "discriminated against" in terms of getting a job interview or people avoiding us as we walk down the street? Of course not. But depending how broadly you define discrimination, a case can be made that we're on par with other traditionally "oppressed" groups. I've read that atheists are the least trusted group in America. While women and ethnic groups are making social advances, while homosexuality is becoming more acceptable, while America's majority has a generally neutral sentiment towards most beliefs and physical conditions, atheists are often met with disbelief that they don't believe in "SOMETHING" and some people make wild assumptions that we must be evil because of it. I'd say the unbalanced sex ratio is a form of discrimination too, considering most atheists are men and women want partners of the same religion.
12/24/2008 10:51:36 AM
12/24/2008 11:01:57 AM
So we neglect to teach evolution (which is the most factually supported theory) in favor of what??? Intelligent design? All science is a construct of the devil to mislead people?
12/24/2008 11:16:54 AM
^I think he meant teaching it as a fact, as opposed to a scientific theory. He said, "I'm sure you have absolutely no problem whatsoever teaching that evolution is a fact." to express his prejudiced generalization that atheists don't accept evolution as a scientific theory and push the idea of it being 100% fact.[Edited on December 24, 2008 at 11:25 AM. Reason : ]
12/24/2008 11:25:24 AM
I know I was hoping he would come back with that response. I guess we shouldn't teach about gravity as if it is a fact either. Both are theories which one is more often treated as fact??
12/24/2008 11:28:34 AM
I think gravity is pretty rightfully regarded more as settled fact than evolution.[Edited on December 24, 2008 at 11:35 AM. Reason : and yes, the fucking theory of gravity argument isn't news around here]
12/24/2008 11:34:32 AM
Isn't gravity a law, and not a theory?
12/24/2008 11:34:47 AM
^^ Actually as a theory evolution is very sound. It has not been discredited despite MANY frantic attempts. ^The only reason gravity is ever described as a law is because when it was described it really has no more basis for being a law than evolution. In fact it is part of Newtonian mechanics which has been shown to not be completely accurate.Btw I know it isn't news but that dumbass was just asking to step in it.[Edited on December 24, 2008 at 11:41 AM. Reason : asdfdf]
12/24/2008 11:40:19 AM
...like running in the Special Olympics...
12/24/2008 11:41:40 AM
^^ I meant that the theory of gravity, while not provable, is more demonstrable than the likewise non-provable theory of evolution. That I'm much more willing to accept that we have gravity figured out to a greater degree isn't to the discredit of evolution so much as it is to the credit of gravity....and if I'm not mistaken, gravity is explained by both Newtonian physics and relativity. I don't know about quantum theory and all that shit. Also, as far as I can think of, there is nothing about Newtonian mechanics that is inaccurate so much as Newtonian mechanics is incomplete in terms of explaining everything.[Edited on December 24, 2008 at 12:54 PM. Reason : but yes, I stand by my statement that, of the two theories, I place more faith in gravity.]
12/24/2008 12:53:22 PM
^ Evolution is observable in a petri dish.Quantum explains gravity by positing the existence of a "graviton" which hasn't yet been detected, iirc.
12/24/2008 1:08:00 PM
^^ I would be hesitant to frame things that way.There's some pretty amazing work going on now in statistical genomics that's shed a lot of light on evolution in new theories, and corroborating evidence. The main thing that makes evolution so hard to grasp is the time scales it takes things to happen. Really anything that takes longer than 1 human lifespan is difficult for people to really visualize. With gravity though, you see tons of examples of it everyday. But the theory of evolution, and the approximate time scales are very much confirmed; it's the origin of life, and the details that scientist are working on now. We know definitively that genomes have changed over a very long time, between/from different species. What's unclear is what types of events cause what types of changes.and we've been learning tons of new stuff about gravity on a regular basis though.It's "figured out" so far as you don't have to worry about you plane crashing because of a glitch in gravity, but let's say we wanted to send a probe to the next nearest star, our knowledge of gravity isn't complete enough yet to reliably do that. Specifically, Voyager 2 (or was it Voyager 1?) just recently crossed over the termination shock boundary of our solar system, and that threw a lot of curveballs to the astrophysics guys about how the universe actually works.
12/24/2008 1:40:19 PM
12/24/2008 2:18:04 PM
^ But most people have a problem with people who say that they won't vote for someone because of his race. In my opinion most of these people wouldn't have a problem with the same people saying they won't vote for someone because they are an atheist. This was partially demonstrated in the Dole campaign. There was no attempt for anyone to say so what if Hagan is an atheist the only thing they tried to do was deny it. It would be equivalent to Mccain accusing Obama of being black and Obama saying no because I have a white grandfather.Like I said before I may have overstated in my OP but Atheists are certainly extremely disrespected.
12/24/2008 5:54:37 PM
12/24/2008 7:37:27 PM
everyone of aaronburro's posts I've seen look the same______________________________________________randomuser: Argues their point of viewaaronburro:
12/24/2008 8:17:27 PM
12/25/2008 12:01:12 AM
12/25/2008 1:13:42 AM
"I've officially been chopped N skrewed"/
12/25/2008 2:41:54 AM
12/25/2008 3:26:57 AM
12/25/2008 3:41:32 AM
12/25/2008 11:27:11 AM
from ^'s link:
12/25/2008 1:20:00 PM
The bible belt has done wonderful things for this country. I would love to see this poll done in different states throughout the US.
12/25/2008 2:09:30 PM
^^I'm surprised that you're surprised.
12/25/2008 2:26:05 PM
not surprised at alljust didn't think the #'s would be that high
12/25/2008 2:49:18 PM
12/25/2008 4:10:17 PM
The poll results really surprise me, to be honest. I would have expected Muslims to win the "wouldn't vote for" list handily. Reading the about.com article, though, something else occurred to me, which is that atheists don't fit in with many other "oppressed" groups because they are distinguished by a certain ideology (as opposed to skin color or gender, which is determined purely by genetics; also, arguably, sexual orientation).They didn't ask what percentage of people would refuse to vote for a candidate who was Communist, for example. And at the end of the day, how much difference is there? Good old fashioned Communism is inherently atheistic. They're both conclusions arrived at through the logic (flawed or not) of the people who choose them. And as this thread demonstrates, atheism has an active political component that's taken just about as seriously as the American Communist Party.The simple fact is that you have an ideology, a voluntarily chosen belief that is different from most Americans. Are ANP candidates oppressed because nobody wants to vote for them? No. They're just the minority. It's bad when people don't vote for you because you look different from them; it's bad when people don't vote for you because you have a vagina; it's democracy when people don't vote for you because they don't agree with you.Of course, people from varying religious sects don't agree with each other, either, but most Protestants could elect a Catholic and most Christians wouldn't mind voting for a Jew. Of course, the theist population has a very important common denominator that atheists lack, something that ties them together and gives them fundamentally the same outlook.
12/25/2008 4:24:41 PM
12/25/2008 8:50:43 PM
12/25/2008 9:30:22 PM
12/25/2008 9:35:16 PM
12/26/2008 12:01:16 AM