19 July 2012

Petition the White House: Pressure Indonesia to free Aan!

I recently posted about the infuriating case of Alexander Aan, an Indonesian atheist who was thrown in prison and slapped with a $10,000 fine for blasphemous postings on Facebook.  He's also received numerous death threats, and some fundamentalist Muslims are calling for him to be executed.

Now there's a petition out on the White House's We the People service to pressure Obama to take a stand and call out Indonesia on this injustice.  If it gets 25,000 signatures, it will end up on his desk in the Oval Office.  It's currently at about 3100, so there's a long way to go.  Go. Sign. It.

In my opinion, any person who values freedom of expression, be they atheist or not, should be signing this.

As I said in my post on Skeptic Freethought about this issue: If you are an atheist and have ever expressed your views online, you would be a criminal in Indonesia.  Atheism should not be a crime anywhere.

I don't always agree with JT Eberhard, but...

... he occasionally says something that absolutely knocks it out of the park:


“The good news is that this life you lucked into is your own, and the only rewards or punishments, the only real heaven and the only true hell, are the results of your own actions between now and when you die. You have an opportunity to live in a way so that when your time is up you will have discovered heaven long before you found death.”


Drawing by Jen McCreight

If that isn't a positive message that atheists can rally around, I don't know what is.

18 July 2012

The different flavors of atheism, revisited

(Cross-posted to Skeptic Freethought)

Despite what The Oatmeal may think, this isn't every atheist's idea of a good time.


For better or for worse, some people like to categorize. I can be one of those people at times.


PZ Myers recently posted a list of taxa that he believes describe different personalities within the atheist movement; I did something similar on my blog last fall, though with a slightly different focus. PZ focused on patterns of thought, while I looked at patterns of behavior (I also marked each of mine with a card suit for symbolism). Here’s an executive summary of both of our lists:


PZ’s Taxa:


  • Scientific Atheist: Knows that there is no god due to total lack of empirical evidence for one. Sometimes a little too arrogant.
  • Philosophical Atheist: Doesn't believe in god because believing in one requires making unfounded assumptions. Sometimes overly long-winded.
  • Political Atheist: Motivated to fight the political and legal battles to make the world a better place for atheists. Sometimes makes compromises that other atheists don’t like.
  • Humanist: Altruistic do-gooder who wants to help people in the name of godlessness. Sometimes “pragmatically fickle” and may join up with liberal churches instead of expressly atheist organizations.



My Taxa:


  • Agitating Anti-theist (spade): Sees religion as an enemy to be vanquished, and fights its advances tooth and claw.
  • Incredulous Inquirer (club): Skeptical toward religion, but wants to discuss rather than fight.
  • Mainstream Materialist (diamond): Doesn't believe in god, stops worrying, and enjoys life.
  • Diplomatic Disbeliever (heart): Strives to form friendly alliances with open-minded religious people.



Many people who read either or both of these posts may find themselves identifying with more than one category. They’re archetypes, and very few people strictly belong to any one of them. Each one of us has a different story behind how we realized we were atheists, how we came to join up with other atheists in this ever-evolving movement, and where we’d like to see the movement go.


And yet I unfortunately continually see bickering among these different “kinds” of atheists, the most vitriolic of which occurs on the internet. Atheists call one another “bullies” and “accommodationists” and accuse one another of dogmatism and “Tinkerbellism” over different approaches toward the movement. We see nasty exchanges of ad-hominems and passive-aggressive head shaking on Twitter because one party is either too critical or not critical enough of religion for the other party’s tastes.


Don’t get me wrong; I think that atheists who speak out in the name of atheism should be willing to defend why they say, and if an atheist says or does something reprehensible then others can and should call him or her out on it. But let’s try to keep it civil.


A diversity of perspectives and approaches toward living without religion is, in my opinion, healthy for the movement. We need people who uncompromisingly fight for the truth, we need people who make nice with theists, and we need average citizens who aren’t full-time activists to show the general public that we do walk among them. This movement isn’t one-size-fits-all.

12 July 2012

Idiots vandalize church with "athiest" graffiti

I don't often use foul language on this blog, but: you fucking dumbasses.

Nice "use" of unnecessary "quotes" there.
Apparently someone thought it was a good idea to tag a church with spraypainted messages promoting atheism.  Well, except that these brilliant vandals couldn't even spell "atheism" right.

Creative spelling, eh?

At this point, no one knows whether the people who did this were really atheists or just anti-authority trolls looking to have some fun at someone else's expense.

Yeah, that'll convince 'em.

I really hope that whoever did this didn't honestly think they were helping the atheist movement at all.

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Creative Commons License