For a guy who is supposed to be infallible it sure is easy to catch him in a contradiction.
Ever since I was a kid, I felt that, if there really was a God, he was a pretty insecure dude to need us all praising him all the time. I mean, really? Your penis is that small, God? ;)
And don’t use that stupid “He works in mysterious ways” crap. The Earth is acting pretty screwy, and kinda always has. Earthquakes, famines, floods, disease, etc, seems like a pretty nonsensical way to run an existence. It almost looks like it’s an accident that we even survived this long… if I didn’t know better…. OH WAIT, I DO. Yes, life is an accident–an amazing accident and that’s why we should cherish it.
“Ballpoint Adventures” takes on the idea of God, once again in this strip (and the several that followed it back in 2006), hope, if you’re a person of faith, that you can handle it!
I know people mean well when they say one person or another, who has passed away, has gone to heaven. However, it seems a little silly to attribute a heaven to cats (or any animals) given that, according to the Bible, getting into heaven for humans requires one to accept Jesus, etc.
Back on the 17th I found the above-capped op-ed at NYTimes.com (original here: www.nytimes.com/2012/02/18/opinion/blow-santorum-exalts-i… ). The piece talks about Santorum’s "increasingly unhinged" public comments. This is an understatement to a guy like me. I feel like my right to free thought hinges on my respect for the right of others to free thought. In other words, if I start saying things like "you’re belief in a god is ridiculous" I open myself up to people saying things to me like "your lack of belief in a god is ridiculous." So, I try to hold my tongue.
Of course, religious folks fall just short of telling me my lack of faith is ridiculous, as it is, and based on the way Santorum talks, it seems like a lot of folks with similar beliefs would like to shape government based on these beliefs. (And they worry about Islam?) Here’s a cutting from the above op-ed:
Also last week, he suggested that liberals and the president were leading religious people into oppression and even beheadings. I kid you not. Santorum said: “They are taking faith and crushing it. Why? When you marginalize faith in America, when you remove the pillar of God-given rights, then what’s left is the French Revolution. What’s left is a government that gives you rights. What’s left are no unalienable rights. What’s left is a government that will tell you who you are, what you’ll do and when you’ll do it. What’s left in France became the guillotine.”
Then, just today I saw Santorum quoted as saying (source: www.cbsnews.com/8301-505267_162-57385629/romney-santorum-… ): "To say that people of faith have no role in the public square? You bet that makes you throw up."
Santorum was bagging on a speech JFK used to explain that he wasn’t going to force his religious views on America. Instead of, as another CBSNews.com article points out (source: www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57385430-503544/santorum-… ):
Santorum said Kennedy "was trying to tell people of faith that you will do what the government says, we are going to impose our values on you."
So, Santorum says JFK and the USG shouldn’t force their religious views on We The People. Fine, but how can he turn around and wear his religion on his sleeve, thus suggesting he’ll impose his religous values on us?
Of COURSE people of faith have should have a role in the public square, but their faith itself? Yeah, bad idea. We need facts to take center stage, not belief in a magical being protecting us from pollution, rising sea levels and a dramatically changing climate (not to mention AIDS, cancer and terrorist bombings). And that’s what scares me. Maybe it’s just the media making America seem more prone to Believery than we really are, but it really seems like we’ve become the subject of an episode of "The Twilight Zone" where people trust a malfunctioning computer in a cave instead of trusting facts and common sense to protect themselves from danger and stagnation. Only, in this case, the computer is Christianity.
That’s the real danger of believing in God and trusting men in robes (or white collars) to provide all of your guidelines for living your life–you forget to think for yourself. Regardless of whether there is or isn’t a God, we all know humans get things wrong all the time. So how can you blindly assume that your pastor or priest, rabbi or imam, hasn’t misunderstood the will of the being that created the entire freakin’ universe?
Let’s be honest–the universe is a vast and amazing place. The idea that any human can even come close to understanding what God wants indicates an amazing amount of ego and hubris. In the end, you really MUST make your own judgment and NOT trust only religion and religious people, because what if they’re wrong? Either way, you’ll have only yourself to blame for your decision, so why not take responsibility for yourself?
GODzilla. What a great name for a fictional character.
-FA
SIGH.
WHY would the Japanese be angry at a fictional character? In other news: the correct pronunciation of the giant monster’s name is “go-ji-ra”. So, “God” has nothing to do with it.
Posted this to my main blog by accident:
Recently wrenthekwack on Tumblr posted the below graphic:
The caption he added to it was “Because how would a plane fly without oil? :)”
Very cute. :) Of course, without oil we wouldn’t have most of our world without oil, including planes and skyscrapers to fly them into (or the computers to create and view this graphic).
Obviously, this is a very complex issue and the doctoring seen above was done on a graphic that originally suggested religion was the key to 911. But which is it? Oil or religion that, if removed, would scatter the terrorism equation into the wind?
Well, FriendlyAtheist, one of my favorite atheists on Tumblr, took great issue with the idea that it was oil and not religion. In short, he made some wild stabs at wrenthekwack graphic, 1) sarcastically suggesting that perhaps the hijackers were yelling “Oil Akbar” instead of “Allah Akbar,” 2) that somehow the graphic puts forward the idea that the USG was behind 911 (like I said, wild stabs), 3) the weirdest statement of all:
Last option would be to say that somehow the need for oil by the US made it worthy of attacking by these “atheistic” terrorists (since religion has nothing to do with it per the cartoon). Sure, whatever. Like the US is the only country that uses middle east oil.
Crossing religion out of that graphic doesn’t mean religion has nothing to do with 911. So, that’s a very odd, extreme assumption to make. And then the claim about the US not being the only consumer of Middle East oil?? As if America wasn’t the big kid on the block?? Who else would terrorists go after? Seriously, FA, I’m thinking you banged this reply out in 30 seconds rather than thinking it through. Seems like such behavior is going around.
FA also added that it’s not about the money, either. He quotes a study that says “The evidence we have assembled and reviewed suggests there is little direct connection between poverty, education and participation in terrorism.”
The suggestion of poverty being a part of it reminded me of something, so I left a waaaay too long comment on his post suggesting that, in fact, it is not about money per se, but is also not really about religion. Here’s the comment I left:
Have you seen Thomas PM Barnett’s seminar “The Pentagon’s New Map”? (It’s on Google Video here: video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4689061169761152025 ) I HIGHLY recommend you watch it. In it he says a LOT about how the world functions, but he puts forward the idea that the world can be divided into two sections. One section is the core and the other is the gap. The core is what we’d recognize as the “rich” section—the First World. The gap is largely the Third World. The gap is also where most of the terrorism in the world comes from. However, Barnett suggests that it’s not money that is the determining factor here, but connectivity. As in, communications. I distill this down to a simple concept: if you have a voice, you’re less likely to turn to terror. If you’re being ignored, you need to do something to get people to pay attention to you. Timothy McVeigh said as much before he was executed. Violence, he felt, was the only language the USG would respond to.
Now, most of US foreign policy tends to be determined by oil. Our involvement in the Middle East is largely about oil. So, in a sense, oil *is* a reason extremists in the Middle East are so pissed at us. If we would only find a way to replace the oil we buy in the Middle East with something we could make here in the West, we’d remove US troops from oil-rich countries (aka Muslim countries) as well as one of their main excuses. See, that’s what religion is—an excuse. A tool. ObL didn’t give a shit about Allah or 72 virgins. He was so rich while he was alive, he could have had 72 virgins any time he wanted. No, this was about power and influence. Sure, “Allah” might have been the excuse the actual hijackers had, but the guys who put the hijackers up to it are only interested power and influence. If religion didn’t exist, they’d use some other lie to convince those poor idiots to do what they did.
I’m all for atheism and spreading the idea that truth and proof are what should determine our actions and not some fictional god, but the reality is that religion is just a tool—an excuse—to do horrible things. It is not the true corruption that greed and power are. Religion is the lubricant.
Sorry for such a long comment…
I’m truly happy to see all of the new voices speaking up and against the louder voice of religion. However, there’s been a lot of stupid-thinking on the part of my fellow atheists. They think contradicting Believers is enough to “win.” What good is it to make an argument against religion if it is faulty? Remove religion from the planet and all of the religion-based strife goes away? I don’t think so. It won’t be religion-based anymore, but there will be other strife in its place. We humans loooove conflict. We’ll use nationality, race, sexual preference, gender, hair color, TV shows-preference, or some other bullshit excuse to divide ourselves up.
I’m against religion in its most common form, but to say it’s the sole thing that motivates terrorists is to adopt a rather shallow view. If terrorists didn’t feel under attack, if they felt as though their way of life wasn’t being threatened they wouldn’t need to look for an excuse to “kill infidels.”
Religion is an excuse for everything. Like I said, religion is the lubricant. But fear and hate work, too.
Ballpoint Adventures for January 10, 2006: Why just pray to God?
This is the first of a huge line of Ballpoints about God. Hope you’re not easily offended! :)