First of all , I want to say Happy New Year and hope that 2012 is a good one for each and every one of you. Thank you for coming here to read and for providing continued support and insightful comments which contribute to our debates and discussions.
Another year is over, and a new one begins, and it is yet another election year with the Religious Wrong Right pushing even harder than ever to get control of the reins of White House.
Simon Brown from American Atheist writes:
From the halls of Congress, where the U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly urged public schools to post “In God We Trust” displays in classrooms, to the Values Voter Summit in Washington, D.C., that was attended by 3,000 fundamentalist Christian activists, the Religious Right’s influence loomed large.
Since 2012 is an election year, we expect the Religious Right to use this growing influence to wage an all-out war to shape the U.S. government into a body that will do its bidding.
Here are 10 of the biggest challenges, issues and concerns that Americans United is expecting to confront in the coming twelve months
Improper Involvement of Religion in the 2012 Elections
Religion has infiltrated the run-up to the 2012 elections on an unprecedented level. Virtually all of the Republican presidential candidates have spent considerable time courting votes from the Religious Right. Nearly all of the major contenders spoke at the Values Voter Summit, and most of those candidates also appeared at a forum in November focusing on “questions of the soul” that was held at a fundamentalist church in Iowa.
The Religious Right is also making a serious push to pick the Republican candidate for president. The Alliance Defense Fund held its annual “Pulpit Freedom Sunday” in October, an event designed to encourage churches to engage in illegal campaign intervention. Last year’s version featured a record number of participants, and activists assume that even more will join in fray in 2012. The Religious Right is also planning to hold voter turnout drives and distribute “voter guides” that pretend to be unbiased but are not.
Religious Right strategists dream of forging fundamentalist and evangelical churches into a disciplined voting bloc to effectively dominate the democratic process.
Sadly, the presidential campaign has already included expressions of religious bigotry. Influential Dallas pastor Robert Jeffress said in October that former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who is Mormon, is a member of a cult and cited his affiliation as a reason not to support his candidacy.
Critics have also questioned President Barack Obama’s status as a Christian, charging falsely that he is a Muslim or at best an opponent of the Christian faith.
Article VI of the U.S. Constitution forbids religious tests for public office, and church-state separationists regard attacks such as these as a violation of the spirit of that provision.
School Voucher Onslaught in the States and Congress
The Associated Press reported that 30 states explored voucher subsidies for religious and other private schools in 2011, and that number is expected to grow this year. These efforts have been driven by wealthy right-wing organizations, such as the Alliance for School Choice, which advocates for vouchers nationwide and is run by right-wing activist Betsy DeVos. Her organization and its allies provide vast resources and public relations expertise to push for school vouchers in many states.
DeVos has lots of help from the Religious Right and the Roman Catholic hierarchy because parochial schools and fundamentalist academies would be the primary beneficiary of “school choice” programs.
There is an especially sneaky attempt at voucher legislation underway in Florida, where a ballot initiative set to be considered in 2012 would allow the state to give taxpayer money to religious organizations.
Rabbi Merrill Shapiro, president of the Americans United Board of Trustees, is a plaintiff in a case filed by AU and its allies to get the initiative off the ballot. He and others involved in the litigation say the proposed constitutional amendment misleads voters about its true effects.
Voucher bills may come up on the federal level as well. House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) railroaded a voucher program for the District of Columbia through Congress in March, so it’s clear Americans United will have to carefully monitor federal legislation as well in 2012.
The Catholic Bishops’ Crusade for ‘Religious Liberty’
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has launched a formidable new lobbying unit known as the Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty. The committee claims to be defending religious liberty, but critics say it actually seeks to preserve taxpayer funding for church-affiliated agencies while maintaining overly broad exemptions from various laws.
A representative of this committee testified in October before the House Judiciary Committee Subcommittee on the Constitution regarding the issue of religious liberty in America and made the case that Catholic-run organizations should be exempt from providing birth control or recognizing same-sex marriages but should still receive government contracts and funds. Republicans on the committee seemed willing to consider this position, but Democrats were very resistant to offering such broad religious exemptions and government money.
The Pew Research Center found that Catholic lobbying organizations are the most powerful among Washington religious lobbies as they comprise 19 percent of all faith lobbying. As a result, the Ad Hoc Committee will certainly be one to watch in 2012.
Improper Religious Proselytizing in Public Schools
Some elements of the Religious Right hate the public school system because it doesn’t allow them to indoctrinate students with their version of Christianity. As a result, they look to add prayer or other religious activities to the school schedule whenever they can.
In Missouri, for example, voters will face a religion amendment on the 2012 ballot that, if passed, would open the door for religious activities on any and all public property, including schools. The proposal is so open-ended that school children might have the right to refuse to do homework on religious grounds.
In Florida, a bill is advancing through the state legislature that would let local school boards allow students to offer prayers at school events. Originally the measure stated that the prayers must be non-sectarian but that language was removed. The legislation has been offered several times before and could pass, although AU’s Florida chapters, the ACLU and the Anti-Defamation League all oppose the measure.
Moreover, the Religious Right is always trying to stack public school curriculum and textbooks with religious material and going on creationism crusades, which observers expect will continue in 2012.
‘Faith-Based’ Funding and Hiring Bias
Despite pleas from Americans United and allies, President Obama has yet to act on his campaign promise to make major civil rights and civil liberties improvements to the Bush “faith-based” initiative. Speaking in Zanesville, Ohio, in 2008, he said, “If you get a federal grant, you can’t use that grant money to proselytize to the people you help and you can’t discriminate against them – or against the people you hire – on the basis of their religion.”
Americans United has written to Obama asking him to keep his promise, but he has yet to do so. This issue is likely to remain an ongoing concern in 2012.
Related faith-based funding controversies are also likely. For example, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) is considering a new rule allowing the use of taxpayer funds for the construction and repair of religious buildings overseas.
AU has submitted comments to USAID urging the agency to withdraw the proposed rule.
Government Promotion of Religious Symbols
In an election year, politicians often look for easy ways to show their religiosity and that has already begun at both the state and federal levels.
The U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a resolution in November that reaffirmed “In God We Trust” as the official motto of the United States and encouraged its display in public schools and other public buildings. The action came even though, as Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) pointed out, no one had suggested that this is not the motto of the United States.
That same month, Rep. Bill Johnson (R-Ohio), introduced a bill that would order the Secretary of the Interior to add a Franklin Delano Roosevelt prayer to the World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C. Roosevelt offered that prayer on D-Day as the United States began the military operation that liberated Europe.
Another religious display issue has arisen in Montana, where a large statue of Jesus erected by the Knights of Columbus sits on national forest land. The U.S. Forest Service had planned to remove the statue, but is facing resistance not only from the Knights but also from U.S. Rep. Denny Rehberg (R-Mont.), who wants to save it.
In Georgia, the state legislature will consider a bill that would require all vehicle license plates to be emblazoned with “In God We Trust” unless drivers pay extra to cover up the message.
As election season heats up this year, it is likely these types of efforts will only increase.
Attacks on Religious Minorities
The Religious Right says frequently that America is a Christian nation (despite ample evidence to the contrary), so anyone who doesn’t share that movement’s belief in its special brand of Christianity is often marginalized.
The best example of attempts by the Religious Right to marginalize minorities is anti-sharia legislation. In 2010, Oklahoma passed the so-called “Save Our State Amendment,” which bars enforcement of Islamic law. It received 70 percent of the vote.
Church-state experts note that the U.S. Constitution already bars government support for religion in most cases, so such legislation is unnecessary.
The law has been challenged in court on the grounds that it singles out Muslims for discrimination. Americans United filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case in May, and it is now before the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
While Oklahoma has taken one of the rashest stances in discriminating against Muslims, it is clear that many other elements of the Religious Right would like to see similar laws enforced nationwide and could make a push for that in 2012.
The Marriage War
The Religious Right, along with the Catholic hierarchy and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormons), are out to fashion state marriage policy so it reflects their doctrinal teachings. They are firmly committed to the idea that marriage is between one man and one woman only, and they are fighting in the courts, in the statehouses and in Congress to make sure the law continues to define marriage according to their theology.
The highest profile case is the challenge to California’s 2008 ban on same-sex marriage that is working its way through the federal court system. More than 40 states have already banned same-sex marriage, but the outcome of this case could set a precedent for reversing that trend. The Supreme Court may take up the issue in 2012.
There is also a referendum in the works in North Carolina that could be on the ballot in May and would, if passed, put a ban on gay marriage into the state constitution.
A referendum banning same-sex marriage is also on the November ballot in Minnesota.
‘Personhood’ Amendments Here, There and Everywhere
Multiple states have faced attacks from groups seeking to pass “personhood” amendments, and that trend looks to continue in 2012.
The latest state to consider one of these amendments is Mississippi, which voted it down in November. Had the measure passed, it would have declared fertilized eggs to be people, made abortion illegal in virtually all instances, including cases of rape and incest, and it would have banned some forms of birth control. So broad was the language of the amendment that women who miscarried could have been subjected to criminal investigations.
Keith Mason, co-founder of Personhood USA, which is a sponsor of these amendments, has said that his organization may attempt another shot at a Mississippi ballot initiative and that his organization is pushing for “personhood” amendments on the 2012 ballots in Ohio, Florida, Montana, Oregon, California and Nevada.
Religiously Based Censorship
The Religious Right is always on the lookout for books, movies, artwork and other aspects of culture to ban based on their religious convictions.
In late 2010, Speaker John Boehner and his allies called for the removal of an exhibit in the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery after they learned that it contains a short video of a crucifix with ants crawling on it, as well as works of art with sexual themes. The museum bent to Boehner’s pressure and removed the video.
In Missouri last summer, a school district banned Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-Five and Sarah Oeckler’s Twenty Boy Summer because a local professor complained that the books advocate principles that are contrary to the Bible.
These are only a few of the issues we are expected to go up against in the coming year. We can expect to see many similar efforts by the Religious Right in an attempt to get their way and more claims are made that a candidate’s god chose him or her to lead our nation.
AU Executive Director Barry W. Lynn said, “This could be a uniquely challenging year for Americans United, with political candidates claiming God’s endorsement and lawmakers poised to vote on all manner of unconstitutional affronts to the First Amendment.”
This election year, we must remain as vigilant more than ever and not take anything for granted.

One of the few I don’t have a problem with is the prayer by FDR. Mind you, I AM an atheist, but I have an uncle I never met during the D-Day invasion. Since it is a historic moment in time, and involves my family (hell it involves me being alive), I really don’t have a problem with it at all. Not only did my uncle die in that invasion, I had a great uncle who was a “guest” of the Germans (POW that is) for more than a year, and my dad also got sent to Germany to fight.
This is one of those things that I see as a moment in time: a deed and a set of circumstances that go beyond the regular rules… such as the fact that my grandmother’s birthday was on December 7th… Pearl Harbor day for those of you who don’t know.
The words were spoken and accepted by many brave soldiers and their families. To try to excise them from the public record or pretend there is a reason they should never be uttered/written/inscribed is to do a grave disservice to everyone involved.
Mind you, I just sat througha funeral service this weekend for my mother, one that involved a silly denial of everything science had found for a “Faith” based belief in creationism and a fairy god-fucker. All I can say is that any so called being who did, or allowed, the last two years of shit my mother went through is a creature i would willing place my pistol to said head, pull the trigger, cut off its balls (or remove its ovaries) and stuff them in its mouth after which I would willingly piss on it, pour on some gasoline, and strike a match… then really go crazy.
Digital Atheist, I am sorry to hear about the loss of your mother. We recently had to sit through the funeral of a friend who died in her sleep at the age of 56 and she was expecting to soon be a grandmother for the first time. She was a very sweet person, always helpful and to hear others say what she went through was “god’s will” just maddens me that they cannot see that any god that “wills” the terrible demise of his own creations is a sadistic monster.
Funny you should mention WWII and Germany. All your religious fanatics will say Hitler was an atheist, but nothing could be further from the truth. Hitler was very religious and thought he was ordained to be the worlds leader of a superior race. After the attempt on his life failed he thought that god had stepped in and saved him. The original Nazi Party was similar to our rightwing fanatics with their hate and separation. They considered themselves superior to all others, Christians feel the same today and choose specific groups to hate like the Nazi’s did.
Also, it seems the more these religious folks have infested our political system the more are rights are removed, the Patroic Act and the new law allowing the president to detain indefinitely anyone he see fit should be a concern. Can you imagine what a guy like Perry could do with such laws. Just like the Nazi’s imprisoned any and all progressive voices, a religious fanatic as president could do the same and we’d see universities closed down and professors imprisoned. Theocracies are repressive dictatorships that only benefit those at the top, and this is what the religious leaders of the right want, to destroy our democracy. Look at how repressive the middle east has been with their theocracies.
The Christians are just as bad and repressive, as in the old days they wish all to work for little or no wages and give most all else to their church…they already have us working at low wages, have taken our homes and forced many to beg for food. Yep, keep on voting for the Religious right and you’ll be tortured for questioning their abuse of power next.
Stardust…they use “god’s will” to explain away anything they cannot logically explain about their belief…it is a cop-out.
A tornado hits a neighborhood and some guy will be standing infront of his slightly damaged home while all his neighbors homes are trashed and he’ll say…”god stepped in and saved our home”. Well what about your neighbors?? Did god dislike them? Why them and not you? What mr god fearing idiot needs to do is understand the dynamics of a tornado, they bounce around and don’t think or plan where they will touchdown…but that takes science and logic, something he certainly cannot understand.
Wow, Digital Atheist…thanks for sharing all that.
Words certainly fail, RE any thoughts and/or condolences.
Thanks, also, to Stardust & Mark.
Of course, thanks to Stardust for alerting all of us with all that…depressing (?)…info.
I’m also dealing with some medical shtick…my life-sharing partner [we've been together for ca. 37 years!] has been undergoing Chemo therapy for Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma for several months. No fun, indeed! She’s doing quite well…so far. THANKS, of course, TO SCIENCE!!!
[AND, in our case...Medicare/Medicaid!!! Yeah...VOTE DEMOCRATIC in 2012 ???]
Oh…and what!…Call me “Nurse Chuckie”?
Anyway…
It’s really, IMO, good to see some back-and-forth activity again, here on AO.
There used to be a lot more of that when we were “GifS”, especially when Sean (RIP) was around.
Not just for one particular Post; but consistently…”across the board”.
No offence intended; but when Ray does a Post, a whole bunch of his fans come by with some well deserved adulation towards him…but that’s IT! When it comes to a lot of other Posted items…like KA’s, etc…there’s not much “comment action”. (Even KA doesn’t seem to join in for much.)
That was never the case back when Sean ruled the roost. Come to think of it, most, if not all, of the “Old Timers” hardly…if ever…come around anymore.
I guess the question might be: Is this Site gradually dying?
OK…sorry [NOT!] for…erm…”complaining”.
As to this Post, in particular; there’s so much weird-ass & important “stuff” (CRAP?) goin’ on with the all the 2012 “projections”, that it behooves all of us, I think, to, perhaps, rev-up(?) our communications here…and, for that matter, wherever else our personal atheist opinions MIGHT have some positive effect. If, of course, ANY effect is actually possible…yada-zama.
As has been expressed, recently, elsewhere here on AO. (by me, for one?) we atheists have, at present, no Political Party, or general organization to appeal to; at least one that pays any effective attention to what we, in particular, perceive as the REAL dangers of what I’ll call the New Nazism (or Neo-Fascism?)…OR, in reality…just plain:
“Christian Fascism”. IOW…it’s here, folks…right NOW…WAY beyond the “Gates”!
Remember the old quote attributed to Sinclair Lewis (and/or Huey P Long)?
“When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross.”
[There's an ongoing controversy about that supposed quote, BTW!]
Whether it actually was something Sinclair Lewis OR Huey P Long said…it’s STILL, me thinks, a “spot-on”, and very ACCURATE quote for these times.
Y’all probably remember the somewhat popular Palin photo version…?
Here, perhaps, is a more appropriate visual version for 2012 (minus the quote):
http://mattstone.blogs.com/photos/christian_art_political/view-of-an-elephant-wearing-an-american-flag-carrying-a-cross.jpg
Hi Chuck, I don’t think the site is dying. Stats for hits are still up there, but yes…comments are down from what they used to be except when Ray posts. Maybe our old readers liked the pointless banter with god believers who would troll here and all the “asshat awards” and “lion feed”, etc. We have moved away from that and lost many old readers who enjoyed mocking and tearing into Xians who would tell us ” Jesus loves you, God is good, you are going to burn in hell.” It got very tiring addressing these people over and over in non-productive debate with their lack of reasoning and lack of critical thinking skills and exhibiting their willful ignorance.
I would like to be able to do more posts than I have …life has been difficult for me the past couple of years and I am very grateful to KA, Ray and Jimmer for their insightful posts and everyone’s contributions in the comment threads. I hope that we can be more active in getting more discussion going and will allow believers to join in comments if they do not break the comment policy. (They still come by to tell us we are terrible people, going to burn in hell and all those other lovely things Christmas dream of for us, but we simply delete them now and refuse to give them any fuel to feed their persecution complexes.)
If anyone has a guest post or ideas to improve the site, please send us an email.
Also, happy to report we are listed in the sidebar of Austin Cline’s atheist website at About.com
http://atheism.about.com/b/
Actually, Star, I wasn’t thinking at all of the totally BS “believer” (god-botherer?) aspect; I was happy when the decision was made to pretty much keep them out of the comment queue. Arguing with fundies is an exercise in pure masochism, of which I’ve had WAY too much already in my 72 years,
I’d just been noticing the gradual drop off of actual atheist participation over the past year or so, and my comment was more about being encouraged by the very recent comments from Sue Blue, Digital Atheist, Mark, etc. I’m aware, somewhat, of your fairly recent change in your personal & working situation, partly because of your facebook shtick.
I still can’t get “turned on” very much at all by facebook; and forget twitter, which I really consider a total waste of time! Lots of mostly pointless blathering; with frequent and terrible abuse of the English language.
BTW, I do occasionally comment on Austin’s Site; which is another great old atheist “watering hole”.
Anyway…’nough said…for now?
Hi everyone. Happy holidays & all that humbug. I had a pretty wild weekend drinking, & so didn’t feel up to the ‘sunday sermon’ this time out.
New job, new digs, loads more stress. But good-bye, 2011, I sure ain’t sorry to see it gone. Bad year for me.
Digital atheist, my deepest condolences on your loss.
Star, thanks for doing the NY post – & thanks also to my venerable colleagues, Jimmer & Ray, for their hard work & contributions over the last year.
Thanks also to ChuckA for his loyalty & somewhat hilarious (albeit a little skewed) commentary.
P.S I do keep something of an eye on the place, ChuckA: although life has been exhausting lately, Once I settle, I’ll probably comment more, but no promises.
Maybe if we can get up some more regular posts, we will get more traffic. I will try to find news bits and such. ChuckA and others, if you send me some tips, I will seriously consider posting them. Thanks!
@KA…RE the very end of your comment…
Yeah, a wise policy…IOW…don’t make ANY (especially serious?) promises…?
[Like any friggin' New Year's Resolutions?]
Which reminds me of a tune I played quite a bit (the trombone part), whilst in a Show Lounge group, back in 1969 to ’71.
If you’ll pardon some New Year’s linking, here’s the original recording of that Hal Dave/Burt Bacharach tune; performed (of course!) by Dionne Warwick:
@everyone
Thanks for the condolences. It has been a very strange week for us all. It has been hard to cry or anything, because i sat here every day for the last couple years watching my mother slowly day one breath at a time. And where were those Christian friends of hers, the oh so relgious right believing people of this community? I can tell you: not here visiting her or helping or anything. There were a few who kept in touch from time to time, but for the most part, yeah, they would put her on the prayer list but that was it.
It is a far cry from the days when I was young and and no one in the family would have had to bother cooking for most of the first week. At least then the caring and comfort was palpable. Hell, the preacher we had then would have been one of the best advertisements for Christianity they could have hoped for. He never wanted any more money then what it tooked for him and his family to live on and save a a little.
He loved working on radios and was happy to fix them for the elderly in the community very seldom charging much more than the cost of parts, if even then. He always kept a spare car that he loaned out to people who had car troubles. He spent a good part of every day going to hospitals and nursing homes to visit, and not just people from his congregation, but anyone he happened to meet.
As regards discussions, he was always willing to talk to people with opinions different than his, and would tell people if he had changed his stances, or discuss both sides of the question if he thought an important point has been brought up by the other person; and his advice to everyone about the bible? Read, study, and decide for yourself what it means. Now he would be run out of the church by a mob bearing pitchforks and torches.
And all things being equal, I honestly believe he would have been the same man whether he had been Buddhist, Muslim, Hindu, ???, or an atheist. It was his personality, but he had all the good traits of Christ going on that people want you to know about. I don’t think he held much truck with the darker stuff some of them want to pretend doesn’t exist or isn’t part and parcel of christ-followin.
I’m not a long time atheist, I would be a liar to say I was. It only happened in the last few years watching my mother slide away, although I’ve always trusted science over the bible when it comes to the physical world. There are places within in an hour’s drive from where I live where you can go and sit in nature and know that this world is far older than 6000 years old. The mountains here have been worn down, and no not by some big flood. Rain, wind, sun…
Anyway I hope you are all having a happy New Year. Despite the loss, I can say that for the most part I am. Sometimes grief CAN be overridden by the knowledge that the person missing from your life is no longer suffering.
The main problem I see with the United States Constitution is that it does not spell out any punishment for violations. I realize that’s not the purpose of a constitution but it leaves people free to violate the Establishment Clause and claim it’s okay based on some obscure interpretation while avoiding any repercussions should they be called on it.
Hi Guys, I have been visiting your site for a couple of years now and would be absolutely gutted to see it disappear.
The reason I have not commented before is that I am in New Zealand and also only have access through work so I keep my “visits” limited.
Basically this site is a breath of fresh air in what seems to be an increasingly insane ( R-right ) America, so it is essential that you keep your voices being heard.
We have very little religious interference with government here but there are a couple of organisations (cults), based mostly on the televangelist system who are trying to squeeze their way into power along the same lines as yours with wealthy “bishops and pastors” extolling thier “flock” to tithe as much as possible, even to the point of admitting on tv that they are a “church” that believes in giving. Unfortunately the uneducated, poor or just plain desperate that constitute their “flock” all seem to be sucked in. Not since the the catholics were selling passes to heaven has it been so expensive to book a place for your soul.
Fortunately we have a fairly independent media here who keep an eye on said fanatics and also an inherent distrust of those who know what is best for you (beware the person who persecutes you for your own good for they do it with god’s blessing and therefore no pity)
I’m writing this during my holidays during which I’m reading Richard Dawkins, The Greatest Show on Earth, something that should be compulsory reading in every high school everywhere! and I’m wondering if anyone else agrees with me that if evolution is true (and it is!!) then are we witnessing the last desperate acts of a species (the fundie) before natural selection eventually takes care of the problem? If so, I believe that like a dog stuck in a corner they will get a lot more aggresive before the world is rid of them. Expect a lot more nutbags going on shooting sprees egged on by their preists to do “god’s” work).
Stand fast people, it’s going to get worse in America before it gets better, but it will get better, just look at what is happening in the middle east, revolution without religion. Technology, inclusiveness and education will all contribute to a better world, remember it wasn’t long ago that we would all be locked up for expressing anti religiod views.
You all do fantastic work bringing religious absurdity and intolerance into the light (sorry) and I hope to be reading your posts for a long time yet.
@Jimbo
I actually had the same thought just a few days ago visting my mother’s grave site. The more science shows that the bible and other religious works are not truthful, the more it seems the people who believe in them are trying to shout above or block the truth. I honestly do believe that sooner or later we will see a very large proportion of the world give up on the idea of gods. Truthfully, at times, I believe that there are far doubters and disbelievers out there than the ones who already speak out. It is hard to not share in the fantasy and to admit it. I know, I’ve only told a very few people I know because I can’t deal with hurt and betrayal I know they would feel. I know I’m not totally honest with myself but at the same time, I never like to cause anyone any distress.
Again, I do think you are on the right track with your thoughts and have shared them myself.
Thanks Captain Al, Jimbo, and Digital Atheist for spending the time commenting…
& Happy New Year to Everbody!
OK…some more video linking…
Check out this, IMHO, really excellent, and especially 2012 relevant, Sean Faircloth talk…
[From the YouTube page info]:
“Uploaded by richarddawkinsdotnet on Dec 27, 2011
Christopher Hitchens said there was one goal he most wanted to achieve. The Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason & Science US offers “Six Way to Reframe Secular Issues and Strategy” and, in this presentation, connects the Vision for a Secular America to serving the goal Christopher Hitchens articulated.
Sean Faircloth is the author of the book “Attack of the Theocrats, How the Religious Right Harms Us All and What We Can Do About It.” Faircloth serves as Director of Strategy & Policy for the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason & Science US.”:
Happy new year everyone. I’ve been away for a few days and only able to use the library computer. Over the holidays the libraries were closed due to budget considerations. I think we can expect more of that if the so called conservatives get elected. They already have theirs and fuck the rest of us.
Good comments all around. I will be posting soon again and am freeing my time to be online more often. My own laptop is being repaired. “(It’ll be ready tomorrow I promise.)” Well that was last week. Ah no big deal.
I just stopped by to say hi and. Also We do try to keep it rolling here. KA, Stardust, Ray, and our guest poster ChuckA. I think that sometimes we just get burnt out and maybe feel that we are covering ground peviously covered. Ah well here’s to a great 2012 and I really hope that people start examining all the bullshit in their lives that is just like the lie of 2012 mayan armegeddon or whatever that bullshit is about. Cheers
I heard a good one. Regarding new years resolutions. “In one year and out the next”.
Yeah jimmer54, Cheers!
Anyway, I dunno…Just because…it’s a rather cold Wednesday…
in January?
From the very last (Great) album…”Brazilian Romance” (1987)…by my favorite all-time great Jazz female vocalist:
Sarah Vaughan (March 27, 1924 – April 3, 1990)…
[A somewhat appropriate title?]
“Nothing Will Be As It Was”:
[BTW...the alto saxophone solo is by Ernie Watts. And, of course,
I suggest checking out some of the other great tunes from the album, on YouTube. Like "So Many Stars", f'rnstance.]
Another (“completely different”?) suggestion:
Check out Michael Shermer’s rather interesting (1/5/12) Huffingtonpost [in the new Science section] article RE socalled “Expert Predictions”:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-shermer/wrong-again-why-experts-p_b_1181657.html?view=print&comm_ref=false
Thanks for that Chuck.