Time For An Atheist Uprising

Italian nun shot dead by Somali gunmen By MOHAMED SHEIKH NOR, Associated Press Writer

MOGADISHU, Somalia — Two gunmen killed an Italian nun and her bodyguard at a hospital Sunday, and a security official for an Islamic militia controlling the capital speculated the attack was linked to worldwide Muslim anger over a speech by Pope Benedict XVI.

The nun, whose identify was not released, was shot in the back four times at the entrance to the Austrian-run S.O.S. Hospital in northern Mogadishu, said Dr. Mohamed Yusuf, a physician at the facility, which serves mothers and children.

The rage among Muslims is becoming a mass-madness and public health crisis. How can human beings be so monstrous to each other and claim piety at the same time? Religion is no longer the opiate of the people — it’s the crystal meth of the people.

Sadly, whatever the cure may be, it isn’t the War Without End. Armageddonists aren’t going to lead us to peace. mjh

Evangelicals promote school ‘exit strategy’

Rutland Herald: Rutland Vermont News & Information By DAVID CRARY The Associated Press

“The infusion of an atheistic, amoral, evolutionary, socialistic, one-world, anti-American system of education in our public schools has indeed become such that if it had been done by an enemy, it would be considered an act of war,” [D. James Kennedy, pastor of 10,000-member Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. and host of a nationally broadcast religious program] said in a recent commentary. …

Yet even … [R. Albert Mohler Jr., president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, who last year said the denomination needed an “exit strategy” from public schools] says there will be a cost to America if the call is widely heeded.

“One of the great missions of the public schools was to bring together children of divergent backgrounds — I benefited from that,” he said. “There is a loss in this.”
– – –

Capitol Hill Blue: Abandoning our public schools is not the answer By JOHN M. CRISP

The great failure of public education is that our society has been unwilling to provide the same access to quality education at all schools that we provide at our best schools. Therefore, our schools appear to stumble from crisis to crisis amid periodic calls for their replacement with voucher programs and more homeschooling.

Abandonment rather than improvement of our public schools would be an unfortunate choice. I’m attracted to the ideas of the late Neil Postman, who argues in his book “The End of Education” that to the extent that our nation enjoys a common shared culture, that culture has been developed and is passed on from generation to generation at least partly by means of the shared knowledge and ideas that we acquire during our common experience in the public schools.

In other words, because our public schools are a place where we develop a set of common stories, myths and experiences — George Washington crossing the Delaware, Betsy Ross sewing the first flag, even the fear of being sent to the principal — they encourage a sense of a shared heritage that helps pull our country together.

Homeschooling and vouchers for private schools … tend to pull us apart. All in all, our public-school system has served us well; it would be better to repair its faults than to abandon it.

What would Jesus drive?

Som evangelicals, environmentalists unite by Jeff Bayard

Many evangelicals have dismissed environmentalists as liberals unconcerned about the economic impact of their policies to fight global warming. Long-standing distrust between the two camps over issues such as abortion and same-sex marriage has discouraged evangelicals from joining liberals on the environment.

But shared concerns over global warming and protecting the Earth are bringing together the two groups in ways that could make the Republican Party more eco-friendly and lead some evangelicals to vote Democratic. …

[E]vangelicals will not call themselves environmentalists.

“They are going to call themselves pro-life,” he said. “But pro-life means life in the Arctic, the life of the atmosphere, the life of all the people under the influence of climate change.” …

Much of the old guard remains unmoved.

The Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant denomination in the country, adopted a resolution in June denouncing environmental activism and warning that it was “threatening to become a wedge issue to divide the evangelical community.”

Focus on the Family leader James Dobson admonished evangelicals to remain focused on stopping abortion and gay marriage.

The Interfaith Stewardship Alliance, which includes Christian leaders with close ties to the Bush administration, argues that if humans are responsible for global warming, the costs of preventing it outweigh the harm it causes, said spokesman Calvin Beisner.
– – –

A Greener US One Year After Katrina: “What Would Jesus Drive?” – International – SPIEGEL ONLINE – News By Markus Becker

Hurricane Katrina, which destroyed New Orleans and killed hundreds of people, has made US citizens far more aware of the environment. Green has become fashionable even among conservative politicians and the religious right.

Four words illustrate where debate about climate change is headed in the United States: “What would Jesus drive?”

They are part of a campaign devised by the Evangelical Environmental Network which describes itself as an environmental group of biblically orthodox Christians. Their aim is to find “new ways to love your neighbor as we strive together to reduce fuel consumption and pollution from the cars, trucks, and SUVs we drive.”

That may sound cute but the US government should be paying close attention to campaigns such as this. The sudden eco-awareness of the religious right, which culminated in a demand for stricter environmental laws in February, is just one of many indications of a growing environmental awareness in the United States. …

The US oil industry still occasionally runs disinformation campaigns such as “Carbon Dioxide – – they call it pollution, we call it life” by the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a free trade lobby group.
– – –

Right cross by Cate Terwilliger

[I]n this election season, Christians who have claimed Calvary as right-wing real estate face an increasingly powerful opponent that originates outside any “gay agenda” to destroy the traditional nuclear family and with it — in the view of Focus on the Family founder James Dobson — Western civilization.

This “enemy” comes from within. It’s another Christian army, one whose vision of Jesus Christ and biblical truth could scarcely be more different than that of the religious right. …

Bush and his ilk, [Pastor Robin] Meyers told the peace rally, are “make-believe Christians.”

“I have watched as the faith I love has been taken over by fundamentalists who claim to speak for Jesus, but whose actions are anything but Christian,” he said. “I’m a great believer in moral values, but we need to have a discussion in this country about what constitutes a moral value. …

“I’m tired of people thinking that, because I’m a Christian, I must be a supporter of President Bush, or that because I favor civil rights and gay rights, I must not be a person of faith.” …

A group of Democratic leaders, including Tennessee Sen. Roy Herron, just this week tried to make a connection by launching FaithfulDemocrats.com. The mission of the “online Christian community” is to help readers “put their faith to work for the common good, holding our nation and the Democratic Party to their highest ideals.”

Then there’s the recently formed Network of Spiritual Progressives, whose statement of purpose challenges “the misuse of religion, God and spirit by the religious right.” A committed faith, the group says, should manifest itself not in moral rigidity, but in activism aimed at bringing about peace and social justice, alleviating poverty and protecting the environment. …

“The religious right has always been moralistic,” White says. “Usually, they’ve focused on genital sins, but there have been times when other issues dominated — like alcohol, Sunday store closings, divorce. …

“But people on the religious right like to shop in Wal-Mart on Sunday, and they like their beer when they watch football, and they get divorced at higher rates than atheists do. So you can’t condemn that; it won’t sell.

“You can sell something that people are not. You can say, “The problem is outside; it’s other than me.’ Terrorists, communists, homosexuals, liberals — whatever it may be. But it’s someone who’s not me.” …

Some liberal Christians interpret the current rift among believers as the result of radically different responses to the anxieties of modern life.

“The religious right responds to modernity as a threat, and the best response is to look back to a time that seemed to be, at least in collective memory, idyllic and safe,” Broadbent says.
– – –

Global warming film unites preachers and politics By Carey Gillam, Reuters

Evangelical Christian leaders have embraced the cause and are now helping spur momentum before both midterm elections in November and the 2008 presidential election.

“In the past, white evangelicals have been largely Republican and the environment has traditionally been a Democratic issue … so there are political implications in terms of alliances,” said Joel Hunter, who serves on the National Association of Evangelicals board and as senior pastor of the 12,000-member Northland Church in Longwood, Florida.

“But there is no doubt about the mandate of scripture here. We need to do what we can to care for the Earth,” Hunter said by telephone. “We want to lead people into the arena where it will have an affect on how they vote.” …

[A]ccording to a July survey by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, more than 70 percent of people of faith polled believed global warming was occurring.

But the movement to turn that devotion into a political power base on global warming is only now getting under way. Advocates said they intended to put pressure on both Republicans and Democrats to be more active in seeking to reduce global warming.

A national rollout of “The Great Warming” at U.S. cinemas starts in October. The plan also calls for more than 500 sermons on global warming and lists of questions for church members to ask political candidates. …

“I am what you call a green Republican … and there are a number of us out there,” said Troy Helming, founder of the Kansas-based Krystal Planet alternative energy company, which also backs the film. “It is unfortunate that the party … has kind of lost its way in terms of environmental issues.”

mjh’s blog — scripture-based justification for anti-environmentalism

Publish or Perish

I am technically halfway through the book. Never mind that I may be 2/3rds of the way through the content that I can see writing. This past quarter I wrote more words in less time, producing longer and, I hope, more useful chapters, even splitting a couple of those chapters into new ones. I may have hit my stride this past week.

Certainly, this deadline was very different. I seemed to be done a day early. I took part of Friday afternoon off — the very day of my deadline. But then I got the latest version of Vista — Release Candidate 1. I had to check the chapters I was preparing to turn in with the latest version to make sure nothing significant had change (a few screenshots needed updating). So, I ended up beating the old deadline by just an hour or so, but it was still a better experience.

The hallucinations have been interesting. Mostly little movements out of the corner of my eyes; occasionally, odd sounds from behind me; rarely the two together. Of course, the cockroach on my coffee filters and the spider hanging from the kitchen light were real — I think. At least, Merri saw the spider, too.

I can’t seem to focus my eyes the first time I look at my screen each morning (any of my 3 screens). My hips hurt terribly only one day this week, but I can produce an interesting popping sound from both shoulders just by shrugging. After hours typing on the laptop, my old desktop keyboard feels weird and hard to navigate.

I can’t precisely sum up the time spent on the book. I’m at work on in before 9am most days and stop close to 9pm, but I’m not engaged in the project all 12 hours. On the other hand, I’m thinking about it 23 hours a day. I’m trying hard not to talk about it all the time, but other subjects come slowly to mind. But then, I’m not actually talking to anyone but Merri, who is my first and best editor, toiling through my first drafts.

I bought a new 500GB hard drive during my break on Friday — and thought back to my first hard drive, a used 200MB drive that cost $600 ($3 per MB vs 50 cents per GB). I have 6 or 7 versions of Vista installed at this point. And, I’m deeper in the hole, though the hardware purchases are half of what I’ve lost by turning down classes. So far, one of my colleagues has made more money on the book than I have by teaching the classes I can’t. (But that’s really just whining — I’ll come out way ahead next year.)

Just a little work today, then volleyball and the Simpson’s season premiere. Then, back to work tomorrow morning (it’s getting harder to get up at 6:20am — it’s dark!). See you next week. mjh

Remembrance of Things Lost

At one time, I thought that every year 9-11 should be commemorated by grounding all air traffic. Those days after 9-11-01 were made even more surreal by the absolute quiet. (Why do we put up with so much noise everyday?)

My feelings have changed since then. I would still support a freeze on air travel for the tenth anniversary, but in between now and then, I think we need to move on — and most of us are. 9-11 was a monstrous act by a tiny handful of sick madmen who represent a tiny tribe of medievalists. We have let that tiny band of fanatics change every day since 9-11. Worse, we’ve increased their numbers a thousandfold through our actions since that day. We’ve spent a trillion dollars in 5 years to wage war on a few thousand loonies with donkey carts and box cutters. Oh, sure, they also have video cameras and websites. Behind it they have an idea, however mad, and you can’t kill an idea, though an idea can kill you.

Here at home, you’re more likely to be physically attacked for appeasement (hey, you, where’s your flag lapel pin?! Communist! Feminazi! Islamo-fascist!) than to be arrested by the piety police. We’re coerced to face Washington, not Mecca, 5 times a day in obeisance. We never speak of the irony of our band of religious fanatics dragging us into war with their band of religious fanatics. (God Bless America!) At least our fanatics haven’t beheaded anybody yet (just killed a few doctors, homosexuals and foreigners). We do have the higher ground morally.

Although we did the right thing in Afghanistan 5 years ago, we’re now loosing ground there. The Soviets took a decade to give up fighting the rebels we armed. The Taliban is still alive and kicking, shooting us with our own guns (perhaps we should fund the war through taxes on gun manufacturers). The official Afghan government is looking into restoring a morality police.

As for bin Laden, a few years ago Duhbya said he never thinks about bin Laden (only Hussein). That is until 2 months before an election, when he mentioned bin Laden 17 times in one speech. The War on Terror, the War Without End, is all that matters and justifies that terrible war of choice in Iraq, where we deposed an enemy of bin Laden’s and Iran’s. All part of the birthing of democracy or the End of Days. Those democracies seem likely to elect ayatollahs and willingly adopt sharia even as we elect our own conservatives.

Had enough? Are we going to continue to give power to the incompetent, corrupt and fearful? The same people who promise trillions of dollars and a shredded Constitution will destroy the enemy in another generation or so? mjh

mjh’s blog — ‘I have no idea, and I really don’t care.’

Promise: In 2001, Bush trumpeted that finding Osama bin Laden was his administration’s “number one priority. We will not rest until we’ve found him.”

How Bush backed it up: In 2002, when asked about the whereabouts of Osama, he replied, “I don’t know where he is. I have no idea, and I really don’t care. It’s not that important.”

mjh’s blog — Third Debate Comments
SCHIEFFER: Mr. President?

BUSH: Gosh, I just don’t think I ever said I’m not worried about Osama bin Laden. It’s kind of one of those exaggerations.

The Pre-action to ABC’s 9-11 Movie

I think members of the Clinton administration made a mistake in attacking the ABC movie on 9-11 before it has been shown. It is understandable to react with outrage to lies and slander. However, one looks foolish and censorious doing so before the lies have come out into full public view. It sounds weak to say “I’ve heard this is claimed…” Let the claims come out, let ABC stand behind those words, then pummel them with the truth.

Lost in the furor is the bigger question: why and how is ABC presenting this movie without commercials? Who is paying for this — the RNC? Did Fox buy ABC and not mention it in a newscast? How is it that a good buddy of Ayatollah Limbaugh wrote the script? I’m not saying that people with strong views can’t express them through bad TV. However, we all know what Republicans would have done with an ABC movie written by Michael Moore. Democrats need to stop following the Republican playbook. Act differently from the Republicans — the country needs some sanity. mjh

Hell’s Angel: Ayatollah Limbaugh

I watched Lush Limbaugh on CBS News the other night in a segment called freeSpeech (notice the nerd influence). Limbaugh calmly yet forcefully insisted that to disagree with the entire package of The Endless War on Terror is to be unAmerican and unpatriotic. That’s right — if you have questions or doubts or oppose anything our clearly adled leaders insist on, you are unAmerican.

Frankly, I can think of nothing more unAmerican than stiffling dissent and demanding fealty to the government.

It was some days later that these word from American Pie (the song, not the movie) percolated up to consciousness.

And as I watched you on the stage
my hands were clenched in fists of rage
no angel born in Hell
could break that Satan’s spell

That people hang on Limbaugh’s every word and worship him is all the proof one needs there is no god and public education is a failure. mjh

mjh’s blog Search Results for ayatollah