Sails & Sorcery

Kung Fu-ool's Comments

The best place to think out loud! A public forum where your minor errors can be magnified to incredible failures when your readers wildly misinterpret what you write.

My Photo
Name:
Location: Wilmington, Delaware, United States

A friend of mine convinced me to start this blog. Oh what an adventure it's been ever since.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Why athiests are angry, and rightly so.

Why Greta, an atheist, is angry, the abridged version.

Now I don't consider myself an atheist; really what I believe defies simple description. However, I usually find myself siding with atheists in any sort of argument, especially when it comes to the patriotism of an atheist coming into question. I don't expect you all to read Greta's whole spiel, but I'll quote a few of my favorite comments from her:

I'm angry that according to a recent Gallup poll, only 45 percent of Americans would vote for an atheist for President.


I'm angry that atheist soldiers -- in the U.S. armed forces -- have had prayer ceremonies pressured on them and atheist meetings broken up by Christian superior officers, in direct violation of the First Amendment. I'm angry that evangelical Christian groups are being given exclusive access to proselytize on military bases -- again in the U.S. armed forces, again in direct violation of the First Amendment. I'm angry that atheist soldiers who are complaining about this are being harassed and are even getting death threats from Christian soldiers and superior officers -- yet again, in the U.S. armed forces. And I'm angry that Christians still say smug, sanctimonious things like, "there are no atheists in foxholes." You know why you're not seeing atheists in foxholes? Because believers are threatening to shoot them if they come out.


I'm angry that the 41st President of the United States, George Herbert Walker Bush, said of atheists, in my lifetime, "No, I don't know that atheists should be regarded as citizens, nor should they be regarded as patriotic. This is one nation under God." My President. No, I didn't vote for him, but he was still my President, and he still said that my lack of religious belief meant that I shouldn't be regarded as a citizen.


I'm angry that women are having septic abortions -- or are being forced to have unwanted children who they resent and mistreat -- because religious organizations have gotten laws passed making abortion illegal or inaccessible.


I'm especially angry that so many believers treat prayer as a cosmic shopping list when it comes to health and illness. I'm angry that this belief leads to the revolting conclusion that God deliberately makes people sick so they’ll pray to him to get better. And I'm angry that they foist this belief on sick and dying children -- in essence teaching them that, if they don't get better, it's their fault. That they didn't pray hard enough, or they didn't pray right, or God just doesn't love them enough.


I'm angry -- enraged -- at the priests who molest children and tell them it's God's will. I'm enraged at the Catholic Church that consciously, deliberately, repeatedly, for years, acted to protect priests who molested children, and consciously and deliberately acted to keep it a secret, placing the Church's reputation as a higher priority than, for fuck's sake, children not being molested. And I'm enraged that the Church is now trying to argue, in court, that protecting child-molesting priests from prosecution, and shuffling those priests from diocese to diocese so they can molest kids in a whole new community that doesn't yet suspect them, is a Constitutionally protected form of free religious expression.


I get angry when religious believers base their entire philosophy of life on what is, at best, a hunch; when they ignore or reject or rationalize any evidence that contradicts that hunch or calls it into question... and then accuse atheists of being close-minded and ignoring the obvious truth.


I get angry when believers say that they can know the truth -- the greatest truth of all about the nature of the universe, namely the source of all existence -- simply by sitting quietly and listening to their heart... and then accuse atheists of being arrogant. (This isn't just arrogant towards atheists and naturalists, either. It's arrogant towards people of other religions who have sat just as quietly, listened to their hearts with just as much sincerity, and come to completely opposite conclusions about God and the soul and the universe.)


But perhaps most of all, I get angry -- sputteringly, inarticulately, pulse-racingly angry -- when believers chide atheists for being so angry. "Why do you have to be so angry all the time?" "All that anger is so off-putting." "If atheism is so great, then why are so many of you so angry?"


That's really just the tip of the iceberg, but I think it gets the point across. Athiests are angry because there's so much wrong in the world that can be solely blamed on the kind of religious people who frighten me. They're in the majority, and if they had their way, they would have me and all other people who don't agree with their view of the world at best deported, and at worst killed. Science and reason are taking a back seat to religious fanatcism and it seems like there's nothing we can do to change that. That's why athiests are angry, and that's why I'm scared.

I turn again to Bad Religion for the most succinct statement on the world today:

Welcome to the new Dark Ages.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I would like to make a counter-point, Steve.

The world has this overview of "Christians" as those who believe in Christ, and while that may be technically true, a bunch of us regard "Christians" as "Protestants" as we Catholics aren't nearly as psychotic as the other side of "the family."

Show me a group of religious intolerants, and I'll bet you my house they come from one of the Protestant sects. Catholics are not blameless, but I'm absolutely willing to wager my domicile that the crazies everyone makes fun of and rails against are not from our church.

If you read Dan Brown, maybe you'll think of The Catholic Church as this shadowy, uber-right-wing church who has people killed to protect secrets and hoarde all of the gold in the Vatican coffers. Oddly enough, I can live with that.

The complete intolerance of other religions and sexes, though? Not me or any Catholic I know. Sure, the Pope is usually stodgy and unyielding on that subject, but look at the majority of the church. The people who show up on Sunday are the ones I refer to. Then again, I've always had a problem with authority.

So, in conclusion, next time someone derides me for being a "Christian," just remember that I'm on that side of the family that the "upstanding Christians" shun.

All the world hates a Catholic :-)

10:46 AM  

Post a Comment

<< Home