Showing posts with label Christians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christians. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Bill Maher is wrong about Muslims

For the record, Bill Maher is wrong. And he probably knows it. He's right that all religions are irrational and most of their sacred texts espouse violence and outdated morality.

Where he's wrong is the liberal response. The liberal response to radical Muslims should be the same as what it has been to radical Christians from the days of the Ku Klux Klan onward: condemn the criminals, not the religion. 

Because religion is like human nature. We can ascribe everything bad we do to "human nature." But then there are all the good things we do, like love and charity, that are also human nature. It's the same with religion: the Inquisition and the Sistine Chapel coexisting.

Maher knows that the United States is not really going to single out Muslims for discriminatory treatment, second-class citizenship or the like. That's not who we are. But he wants media attention and maybe enough liberals to say, "Yeah, maybe you're right, maybe these guys are nothing like us."  False enemies like this are like jackalopes inserted to mock the American pageant. 

Remember: 12 million Muslims live in America. Twelve million! 

The "liberal" Maher is wrong that Muslims are not like us just like conservatives are wrong that blacks or Hispanics are not like us. Who is "us" anyway? Guys that look like Bill Maher? Or maybe Mike Huckabee? People that think like Ted Cruz? Or Bernie Sanders?  


By Travis Gettys
January 9, 2014 | Raw Story 

Friday, January 9, 2015

A recent history of terrorist killers...

A conservative equivalent of what Bill Maher decries among Muslims is when right-wing Christians blow up abortion clinics, shoot abortion doctors, or law enforcement officers. 

The attackers against Charlie Hebdo killed 12 people, including a Muslim policeman. 

How many Americans remember the Atlanta Centennial Park anti-government bomber Eric Rudolph who in 1996 killed two people and wounded 112 others? Or Wade Michael Page's murder of six Sikhs in Wisconsin in 2012? Or Jim David Adkisson who killed two and wounded seven others in 2008? Or the guy who flew a plane into the IRS in 2010 and killed himself and one other? Or the Army of God that murdered two people? Or Anders Breivik, who killed 77 people, mostly children, in Norway with an anti-Muslim motivation? And do I really need to mention Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols, who murdered 168 Americans and injured over 600 others? 

I'm not recounting recent U.S. history to excuse inexcusable crimes somewhere overseas; I'm just reminding you that crazy people do crazy things, and often for reasons that "upstanding" people would generally sympathize with.

So the response is not to demonize all Arabs or Muslims, or all conservative Christians for that matter, but rather to demonize the alleged murderers, their ideology, and anybody who likewise espouses terror and/or violence against innocents as a means to a political end.



By Travis Gettys
January 9, 2015 | Raw Story

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Theologians: U.S. campaign finance system is unjust

[HT: NPR]  Just in case any of my Judeo-Christian conservative friends actually care what their Judeo-Christian theologians think...

... They agree that America's pay-to-play political system with unlimited political contributions is unjust. Here's the report's conclusion [emphasis mine]:

How can religious teachings help us shape a more just role for money in the American political system? What kind of theological principles should be applied to the problem? The ten theologians introduced in this volume offer many compelling candidates: Heed the voice of the poorest Americans. Develop a theology of corporations. Remember that justice requires a multiplicity of voices and fair economic outcomes – not just fair procedures

With $6 billion running through our election cycles and many more dollars spent on lobbying, it is time for people of faith and moral commitment to get more involved in reforming the role of money in American politics. We are called to apply the teachings and wisdom of our religious traditions. We are called to raise our voices and offer constructive action for a more just political system.

I've said it before: if we could fix campaign finance, most of America's intractable political problems would take care of themselves, because the majority usually knows what's best -- the One Percent just doesn't let them get their way most times.


June 2014
Auburn Theological Seminary

Monday, August 12, 2013

Christian-themed [insert product here]

I wonder what God considers an acceptable markup for Christian-inspired products?

Anyway, I must share this quote of ex-model Kylie Bisutti from another interview about her new Christian sportswear label:


According to Bisutti, the line is the first of its kind. “There are actually a few other Christian clothing companies out there, but they namely focus on T-shirts and hats,” she said. “This is really the first one that has jeans, and blazers, and handbags. It’s the first one to cover everything.” She’s most excited about the brand’s range of skinny jeans. “It was really important for me to include them, since it’s such a staple for everyone right now in their clothes,” she said of the style. “Even guys are wearing those now, and so we have skinny jeans for guys as well.”


It's the first one to cover everything, you see?  Because God wants your entire wardrobe, especially your skinny jeans, to honor Him.

Seriously though, this is at once so wrong and so American: to peddle schlock in God's name and then pat oneself on the back for being such a holy roller. No other nation of Christians has the nerve to attempt this.  


Kylie Bisutti: God's earthly vessel. Can I get an 'amen!'

Former Victoria’s Secret Model Dishes on Christian-Themed Clothing Line
By Stephanie Nolasco
August 8, 2013 | Fox News Magazine

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Catholic historian: Early Christians never persecuted

Here's another sacred myth busted:

In the 300 years between the death of Jesus and the conversion of the Emperor Constantine, there were maybe 10 or 12 scattered years during which Christians were singled out for supression by Rome’s imperial authorities, and even then the enforcement of such initiatives was haphazard — lackadaisical in many regions, although harsh in others.

... "And then you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." (John 8:32).


By Laura Miller
February 24, 2013 | Salon

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Sandy sent by God to elect Obama?



If I were the type of guy to attend a church with a Jumbotron and a mall in it, I might believe that Hurricane Sandy had been sent by God to remind us what a real President looks like, and believes in: we're all in this together, and we help each other.

We must not even consider privatizing/disbanding FEMA and other parts of the government that keep our fellow Americans alive.


By Paul Krugman
November 4, 2012 | New York Times

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Mourdock, rape and the Book of Job

Before I tell you why, let me quote two whole paragraphs from a rape apologist's apologist's blog post:

Bigger picture now: The essence of religious monotheism is that everything comes from one God, which naturally leaves humans befuddled when “Bad things happen to good people.” The faithful nevertheless persevere in their faith, believing that God is unknowable to human minds. This is the essence, for example, of the Book of Job, which I felt compelled to reread this afternoon. (It is a deeply disturbing story precisely because it raises these fundamental issues about the nature of God, good and evil, etc.) Suffice it to say the last place to delve into these matters is a U.S. Senate debate two weeks before the election.

No one has to believe this. Many people don’t. That is why it is better left out of political campaigns. (Repeat: [Richard] Mourdock will and should pay a price for this.) But Mourdock does believe this. No one who knows him or has interviewed him doubts that he’s a sincerely religious person. He was not expressing a lack of sympathy with rape victims (hence the term “horrible situation”).

And here is what Mourdock said in his own defense, clarifying his initial statement:
“God creates life, and that was my point. God does not want rape, and by no means was I suggesting that He does. Rape is a horrible thing, and for anyone to twist my words otherwise is absurd and sick.”
But actually I don't want to talk about rape.  I want to talk about religion.

For me, what Indiana Republican Richard Mourdock said is important not because it reveals his true beliefs about rape or abortion -- why we continue to be "shocked" or "outraged" when knuckle-dragging fundamentalist Republicans admit to believing what we already know they believe is beyond me -- but because Mourdock's moment of honesty reveals the absurdity of believing that God decides what happens in our lives, and then praising God for pulling our puppet strings.

Mourdock should be getting dinged for saying something really philosophically stupid and self-serving, which was that: God doesn't intend for rape to happen, but if a rape does happen and it results in pregnancy, God does intend that to happen, and for the rape victim to carry that rapist's fetus to term.  Because life is precious, or something.

Let me make that real simple.  Rape = not God's fault.  Innocent life = God's plan.  See how God wiggled out of that one?  Pretty slick, huh?  

Moreover, people like Mourdock are the first to go Tebowing the instant anything good happens in their lives.  But when something bad happens?  It's because somebody sinned against God. Or, as Jennifer Rubin says above about evil, God's mind is "unknowable." That's just another double standard, I'm sorry. That's not even an attempt at theodicy, it's just an intellectual shrug of the shoulders.  We are letting God off way too easy here.  If God made us in His image then certainly He didn't intend for us to be so dumb.

Ms. Rubin also mentions the Book of Job in defending Mourdock, and, well, God. That's a funny choice. That's the one where Satan makes a bet with God that he can make holy Job curse God's name if Satan makes Job suffer enough.  God takes Satan's bet and gives him permission to put Job and his family through the wringer.  

Now, if you are a fundamentalist who believes that the Bible is God's word, then there is nothing "unknowable" about God's intentions in the story of Job.  It's written quite clearly and simply.  God made a wager with the devil and let one of his most devout children be tortured and played with to prove a point.  Job's friends, meanwhile, come to the very modern-Evangelical conclusion that Job must have sinned terribly against God to have earned so many creative torments, one after another.  That was just salt in Job's God-inflicted wounds.  Then toward the end of Job, God's voice rings out from the heavens and says Job isn't a sinner.  And God defends himself by telling Job and his accusers how hard His job is, and how men really aren't qualified to question His decisions.  Get over it, in other words.  

The dramatic irony in all of it is that only the reader knows about God's bet with Satan.  Job remains clueless to the end that he was celestially punked.

Overall, Job is a great story.  It's one you'll want to tell your kids before bed, again and again, so the next time they say, "Why should I?" you can answer, "Because you're too stupid to understand why, so just do what I say."  Which is pretty much what religious conservatives believe parents should tell their children, and what they think CEOs and Republican Presidents should tell us adults.  

This is all a long way for me to say: the next time somebody says, "It was God's will," or "Thank God for your blessings," or "The Lord works in mysterious ways," you'll know that person is either dumb or full of shit. 

UPDATE: The Eds. at conservative National Review thought Mourdock's absolute pro-life stance needed their special defense.  But for the record, I'm not arguing the pro-life question in my post; I'm arguing about what is really God's fault, and how do believers explain evil in the world, like rape.  Or how something "good" (an innocent baby) could come from something bad (rape), and at what point in that chain of events is God involved or not involved.  Mourdock was just my launchpad into that discussion, which I find much more interesting and fundamental.

If you believe that great good can come from evil, then you are less likely to want government to help the poor and suffering among us, because, hey, it's all part of God's plan for them... or for their kids, or somebody three generations down the line.  Their suffering makes no sense and seems pointless to us, but it does make sense to Him, and that's all that matters.  --> That kind of attitude is a logical extension of what Mourdock, et al believe about God and evil.   

And that's why they must be exposed and opposed. Because their backwards thank/blame-God-for-everything attitude harms all of us.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Fundamentalists the same everywhere?

You know, if you replace the words "God" and "Jesus Christ" in these people's quotes with "Allah" then they sound just like the Muslim Brotherhood.  Just for fun, I've taken some quotes from this story to show you what I mean:

One indignant worshiper raised his voice, and demanded to know: “Am I trying to start a revolution?  The answer is ‘yes’,” he continued. “I’m not trying to get our guns to march on Washington, but we need to do two things: Get on our knees … and spread the Koran to our fellow men.”


Others responded with: “If we don’t do something now ... We need to get over our fear”, as well as a warning that “America is gonna have Allah coming after her”.


In a chaotic group discussion, I was repeatedly bombarded with a chorus of: “The only answer is Allah."

Brother Jerry said the value of the dollar was affecting his retirement savings, before reaffirming, “We’re fundamental Muslims, and Allah is in control of the economy."

Kevin, a telecom installer, then explained, “When we push Allah aside, he curses the economy. The whole world is suffering because we’ve been disobedient to Allah.”

“When we all get right with Allah, then the economy is gonna be fixed, the country is gonna be fixed, and the world is gonna be fixed.”

"I’m going to vote for Mitt Romney," Kevin said. "But the answer is not Democrat or Republican - it’s Allah.”



Gee, I guess Bible-thumping American fundamentalists aren't that different than religious fundamentalists anywhere else.

P.S. -- But seriously though, the answer really is Allah.


By Ben Piven
October 10, 2012 | Al Jazeera

Sunday, October 14, 2012

'08 vs. '12: 'The 'Most Important Election Of All Time'


Andrew SullivanBill Maher and others have mentioned this dug-up letter from the anti-gay Christian group Focus on the Family in 2008 that gave 34 dire predictions if Obama got elected.

Exactly none of them has come true.  BUT if we re-elect Obama, surely all of them will.

Seriously though, don't these people feel at all ridiculous playing Chicken Little, over and over again?


By Libby Anne
October 1, 2012 | Patheos

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Another nail in the GOP's coffin

The GOP is already in trouble, demographically.  They already lost blacks and women, and they're losing Hispanics; meanwhile, the GOP is "not generating enough angry white guys to stay in business for the long term."  And now there's this:

The [Pew] study, titled "Nones" on the Rise, indicates that 1 in 5 Americans now identifies as "religiously unaffiliated," a group that includes those who say they have no particular religion, as well as atheists and agnostics.

Perhaps more instructive is a close look at the age breakdown: If you're under 30, there's a 1-in-3 chance that religion plays little or no role in your life, according to the survey.

"This finding and the growth of this group has very real political consequences and political implications," says Greg Smith, a senior researcher at the Pew Research Center's Forum on Religion & Public Life and a co-author of the study.  "It's heavily Democratic," he says.

Why are so many under 30s turning away from religion?  I side with this explanation:

"There is considerable evidence suggesting that the 'nones' have actually been caused by politics," says Campbell, co-author of American Grace: How Religion Divides and Unites Us. "Many people have pulled away from the religious label due to the mingling of religion and conservative politics."

Conservatives, by making their religion political (or actually subordinating their religion to their politics, I would say), have turned off a whole generation of people from religion (and politics, too).  This all started in the U.S. in the 80s, so it's no surprise that kids born then and grew up in this evil mix of religion and politics can't stand it as young adults.




By Scott Neuman
October 9, 2012 | NPR

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

For conservatives, charity's all about THEM

Rush Limbaugh's latest monologue on government assistance vs. charity is quite telling on his part.  Unintentionally so.

See, he sets up government assistance and charity in opposition to one another. That's not necessarily so, it's not a zero-sum game, but let's go with his conceit. So, which one is better?

I've settled this before.  First, look at U.S. poverty statistics pre- and post-LBJ's War on Poverty.  Presumably, America has been just as Christian and charitable all along, so the only independent variable here is government spending, which made all the difference.  Second, there is scant data on how effective charity is.  (I'm not talking about overhead rates; I mean, how well do they achieve their stated mission.)  Most charities don't seek to measure their effectiveness, and most contributors don't demand it in the first place.  So next time somebody tells you charity is more effective than government assistance, ask him to prove it.  He probably can't.  Or if he can, only anecdotally*.  Third, and perhaps most important, both charitable giving and poverty are pro-cyclical.  So as people's incomes go down in tough economic times, so does charitable giving.  As a result, charity is at its weakest when it's needed most.  Whereas government can borrow all it wants at low interest rates even during downturns -- especially during downturns, in America's case.  (Never mind, for now, the downsides to over-borrowing.)

Beyond the pre-eminent effectiveness of government aid, what's so telling about Rush and conservative's view of charity is their focus on the giver.  See, with government assistance there is no "should I/should I not donate" moment of moral decision-making for the giver.  The decision on the amount, the form, and the recipient, is decided by our elected officials. According to conservatives, government assistance "deprives" givers of the good feeling they get from giving.  And it "deprives" them of the moral opportunity to be good Christians and decide personally whom to give their money to.  You see, it's all about making them feel good and getting them into heaven, not helping the needy.  

That shouldn't surprise anybody, since their rock-bottom belief is that our world is evil and sinful; it is a "vale of soul-making" constructed as an elaborate test to separate the Saved from the Damned, like God's version of Survivor.  Therefore, by design we are not entitled to enjoy our time on Earth, they firmly believe.  Indeed we should expect pain and privation, perhaps even welcome the chance to endure it.  And if we are well off, well... according to Evangelicals at least, that's a sign of God's blessing for a righteous life.  Thus it is doubly sinful of government to "punish" the righteous with higher taxes as it "takes away" their chance to be charitable.  Rush dog whistles at this all the time.


I know too many Christian conservatives to say, as some liberals do, that this is all about their greed. For the super-rich One Percent, it certainly is about greed.  But for the GOP base it is not so simple.  Nay, there is a distinctly Evangelical Christian underpinning to all this.  (Rush acknowledged the rift among Christians by calling out the Catholic Church's consistent and principled stand for government aid to the needy.)  Nevertheless, it's all about their feelings and their salvation, not the needy.

(*The question of results/performance is all about them, too, in a way.  Monitoring and evaluation of results demands precious resources that many small charities don't possess. A possible way to overcome this is to have many small charities working very locally, where the results are "evident" to givers.  "Seeing is believing" for most conservatives who distrust statistics, especially government stats.  They may also want that good feeling of seeing the people they benefited.  But to have only micro-scale charity would not only be inefficient and duplicative, but also dangerously inadequate and unequal, because it would concentrate charitable giving around wealthy people, creating vicious cycles of local poverty and virtuous cycles of local well-being, both isolated from each other.)

It really does come down to whether or not you believe we're all in this together. Conservatives don't.  

If you do, then the question is not so much the how (the process of giving assistance), but the result (improved well-being for the needy).  To put it in ethical terms, liberal-progressives believe that one's personal moral satisfaction should not come from being a superior charitable giver (in relative or absolute terms, no matter); one's satisfaction should come from knowing that he contributes to a fair and just society that guarantees the basic needs and dignity of those who can't take care of themselves, for whatever reason.  Liberals don't want to live in God's obstacle course for human gerbils; liberals want to live in a normal, civilized country where everybody is better off.  It is well within our power to make that happen, therefore it is our moral obligation.  

If you're morally serious about that aim, then you have to look at statistics, you have to put pre-conceived notions aside, and make evidence-based decisions.  And government assistance, as mentioned above, has proven in every developed country to be the best way to achieve that aim.


September 11, 2012 | The Rush Limbaugh Show

Friday, August 31, 2012

Paul Ryan is not a Catholic and he said so

Remember when the Right said that Obama had to repudiate Jeremiah Wright if he wanted to be President?  Remember how they doubt Obama's confessed Christianity, even to this day?

Why then is Paul Ryan, a self-proclaimed Catholic whose own parish priest has come out against him, and who is opposed by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, getting a free pass by the media on his love for the atheistic philosopher of self-interest, Ayn Rand?  Imagine if the Mormon Church came out and said that Mitt Romney did not represent their beliefs!

Here's what Ryan said about his hero Rand in a 2005 interview:

The reason I got involved in public service, by and large, if I had to credit one thinker, one person, it would be Ayn Rand.... I grew up reading Ayn Rand and it taught me quite a bit about who I am and what my value systems are, and what my beliefs are.  It's inspired me so much that it's required reading in my office for all my interns.

Note that he didn't mention the Bible, Jesus, Catholic catechism, or anything religious at all.  Ryan said his value system was formed by a dead atheist who hated religion more than Karl Marx.  

Now that Ryan is a VP nominee he's trying to back-track, saying he rejects Rand's philosophy; he just likes her economic ideas.  But not so fast.  Rand's economic ideas are based entirely on a morality of strict self-interest that is in direct conflict with Catholic-Christian teaching.

So, I'm going on the record to say I don't believe Paul Ryan is a Catholic or a Christian.  Nowadays we don't have to take a politician's word for it -- the Right taught us that with Obama.  So I don't buy Paul's recent coming to Jesus.  He was a grown man and an elected Congressman with a wife and children when he said that in 2005, and it's not like he's changed since then.  He's simply telling us now what he thinks we want to hear.  Remind you of anybody?


August 29, 2012 | The Colbert Report

Monday, August 13, 2012

'Neither Christian nor right'

Dr. Giles Fraser, a priest at St. Mary's Newington and former canon chancellor of St. Paul's Cathedral in London, shows succinctly how terribly afflicted by cognitive dissonance are America's so-called Christian conservative politicians:

[Paul] Ryan has now predictably backtracked [on his love of Ayn Rand]. "I reject her philosophy. It's an atheist philosophy. If somebody is going to try to paste a person's view on epistemology to me, then give me Thomas Aquinas." By the way, this is the same Thomas Aquinas who insisted that, "Man should not consider his material possession his own, but as common to all, so as to share them without hesitation when others are in need," thus espousing the very collectivism that Rand so loathed.

Concludes Giles:

The trouble is that Christianity in the US has become so widely hijacked by the right that not enough people will actually notice.  As the Ryan case aptly demonstrates, the Christian right is neither: that is, Christian nor right.

Bravo, padre!


Mitt Romney's running mate may be Catholic but his admiration for an author hostile to Jesus's teachings risks losing him votes
By Giles Fraser
August 13, 2012 | Guardian

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

School choice 'shell game' -- FOR SHAME!

So this is what school choice means?  Subsidizing kids who already attend private schools, or attracting star athletes?  What a farce.  

This is a silly Plan B after many states' voters have rejected publicly-funded private school vouchers.  These "scholarships" aren't publicly funded, proponents point out; they are a complicated tax-deduction scheme for corporations and tax-credit scheme for families, and a way for corporations to buy influence by helping politicians dole out favors by deciding which students get them.

A report by the Southern Education Foundation on Georgia's version of this "shell game" found that "from 2007, the year before the program was enacted, through 2009, private school enrollment increased by only one-third of one percent in the metropolitan counties that included most of the private schools in the scholarship program."

Here's how the scam works in Georgia:  

After Georgia's scholarship program was adopted, parents of children in private schools began flooding public school offices to officially 'enroll' their children.  Their plan was to fill out the paperwork even though they had no intention of ever sending their children to public schools.  According to the way the law was interpreted, the enrollments would make them eligible for scholarships.

Worst of all, it's Christian schools that are taking advantage of these new state laws: cynically "giving" while fully expecting to "receive" in return.  Not very Christian!


By Stephanie Saul
May 21, 2012 | New York Times

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Poll: 1 in 6 voters admits they're morons

Hats off to the Public Religion Research Institute for taking this poll.  It's not every day that idiots willingly identify themselves as such.  Now we know that at least 17 percent of U.S. voters are morons, politically.  

The stupidest demographic of all?  White evangelical Protestants: 24 percent think Obama's a Muslim.


By Lauren Markoe
May 10, 2012 | Religion News Service

Friday, July 22, 2011

Texas shows why Big Guvmint is needed

It must be hard being a thoughtful Texan. Sure, you get to be proud of its bigness, its cowboy lore, its football prowess, Tex-Mex, Austin's music scene, but beyond that?.... And then everyday in the news those few thoughtful Texans see yet another story about the Christian Taliban trying to turn their state into Jesus Land.

Besides all that, this story just underscores the inanity of elected boards of education. Why do we elect people from one party or another to make education policy for our kids? What's liberal or conservative about the 3 Rs? It's the politicization of children's learning. It's madness.

So here we see yet another unapologetically stupid Maud Flanders/Michelle Bachmann-type in Texas lamenting to the media that there are only "six true conservative Christians on the board." (And alas no true blondes.)

But why should one's religion matter? Well, now that she went and mentioned it like it did, it does matter: nobody's religion should play any part in deciding education policy, so she just disqualified herself! Unfortunately, most Texans don't see it that way; they think one qualifies oneself for public office by juggling Bibles while speaking in tongues at a gun show.

Texas and the rest of America's states need a big dose of Big Government in education, just like our competitors prescribe to their people. Washington, DC should shove a standard national education policy down their unwilling throats.

I'm sorry for putting it that way, but shoving ignorance down unwilling people's throats is exactly what these parochial bumpkins want to do. They are silly and should be replaced with disinterested career bureaucrats in Washington.


By Jim Vertuno
July 20, 2011 | Huffington Post