Intolerable Political Pandering

Posted By Stefan Monsaureus

Writing at Salon, Joe Conason discusses the religious intolerance so sadly displayed in recent remarks by leading Republican presidential contenders Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee. In the process of pandering to the right wing they imagine to be in control of the Republican party, these two have few qualms in asserting the superiority of faith over reason, and seem to hold the separation of religion and government only in as high a regard as is necessary to protect their own questionable religious beliefs.

But Conason notes that in waving the flag of Christianity, both candidates invite rejoinder on that same subject.

If Romney is going to attack humanists and secularists as “wrong,” then let him explain why they were so far ahead of his church on the greatest moral issues of the past half-century.

As for Huckabee, let him answer a few pertinent questions about his faith, too. Does he actually believe in creationist dogma that insists the planet is less than 10,000 years old, and that humans once walked with dinosaurs? How would that loony idea influence his science policies as president? Is he a believer in “end times” eschatology, which holds that American foreign policy should be shaped by the coming Armageddon in the Middle East?

Finally, Conason makes the oft-overlooked point that although atheists may vociferously and passionately defend their worldview, they have historically shown more tolerance for religion than the other way around.

Phonies like Huckabee and Romney complain constantly about the supposed religious intolerance of secular liberals. But the truth is that liberals — including agnostics and atheists — have long been far more tolerant of religious believers in office than the other way around. They helped elect a Southern Baptist named Jimmy Carter to the presidency in 1976, and today they support a Mormon named Harry Reid who is the Senate majority leader — which makes him the highest-ranking Mormon officeholder in American history. Nobody in the Democratic Party has displayed the slightest prejudice about Reid’s religion.

In fact, where poll after poll shows that a significant proportion (a majority in some cases) of Americans would refuse to vote for an atheist for any public office solely on the basis of their nonbelief, one would be hard-pressed to find an analogous position among freethinkers. But, then, there have never been enough admittedly atheist candidates to make such a position tenable.

Some day. In the meantime, I will address the issue of tolerance further in an upcoming post.

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7 December 2007

Peace on Earth and Good Will Toward Men

Posted By Stefan Monsaureus

Tis the season, both political and religious. And it seems to be bringing out a nasty streak of intolerance in the name of religious tolerance. So, apologies for this disjointed compendium, but I need to clear a backlog of disturbing bookmarks. Some of this ground has been well trodden by others, but it’s worth an aggregated view just for the benefit of facilitating pattern recognition.

On 27 November 2007, presidential wannabe Mitt Romney, quoted in the Christian Science Monitor, confessed his embrace of religious quotas and his apparent bigotry.

He answered, “…based on the numbers of American Muslims [as a percentage] in our population, I cannot see that a cabinet position would be justified. But of course, I would imagine that Muslims could serve at lower levels of my administration.”

Somebody, please, send the good Governor a copy of the 2001 American Religious Identification Survey or the recent Barna survey that indicates 7% of Americans are atheist, agnostic or without faith. But, before we lay claim to a cabinet position, we should heed Mr. Romney’s remarks today, while seeking to allay concerns that his Mormonism could be somehow at odds with right-wing fundamental protestantism. As reported on the Washington Post web site:

Romney praised the practices of many faiths and underscored repeatedly the religious heritage that was at the heart of the Founding Father’s vision of the new country. He called for public acknowledgment of the Creator on currency, in the pledge and said nativity scenes and menorahs should be welcome in the public square… I will take care to separate the affairs of government from any religion, but I will not separate us from ‘the God who gave us liberty.’”

Oh. So, he favors freedom of religion. Pick an ideology. Any Judeo-Christian ideology.

Of course, the world is now well-familiar (and suitably disgusted) with the story (e.g. here and here) of Gillian Gibbons, the British school teacher working in Sudan who faced prison, fines, and 40 lashes for blasphemously permitting her seven-year-old pupils to name a teddy bear “Muhammad.” Following her conviction, Ms. Gibbons was pardoned by the Sudanese president. Such leniency could not be tolerated by some citizens in Sudan.

The teacher, Gillian Gibbons, was sentenced to 15 days in jail last week for insulting Islam and was to be released next Monday. Under Sudanese law, Ms. Gibbons could have received 40 lashes and been jailed for six months. On Friday, hundreds of Sudanese in Khartoum, the capital, protested what they considered a lenient punishment and called for her to be put to death.

On 29 November 2007, the Austin American Statesman reported that Chris Comer, the Texas Education Agency’s director of science curriculum for more than nine years, tendered her resignation under pressure after being accursed of creating bias against the teaching of intelligent design.

Comer was put on 30 days paid administrative leave shortly after she forwarded an e-mail in late October announcing a presentation being given by Barbara Forrest, author of “Inside Creationism’s Trojan Horse,” a book that says creationist politics are behind the movement to get intelligent design theory taught in public schools. Forrest was also a key witness in the Kitzmiller v. Dover case concerning the introduction of intelligent design in a Pennsylvania school district. Comer sent the e-mail to several individuals and a few online communities, saying, “FYI.”

As noted at Panda’s Thumb:

Apparently, not being a team player in the The Republican War on Science is a firing offense at the TEA. Why forwarding an announcement concerning a talk whose topic is highly relevant to the conduct of science education by an internationally recognized speaker should cause TEA administrators a problem escapes me. One is forced to wonder whether Ms. Comer would be looking for a new job if instead she were forwarding emails announcing talks by DI fellows about “intelligent design” creationism.

This issue is also well-treated at Pharyngula and The Austringer. Details on the story may be found at the web site for Texas Citizens for Science.

On 30 November 2007, The Independent reports that the Turkish publisher of Richard Dawkins’ The God Delusion may be subject to imprisonment on the basis of increasingly frequent application of laws restricting freedom of expression.

Erol Karaaslan, the founder of the small publishing house Kuzey Publications, could face between six months and a year in jail for “inciting hatred and enmity” if Istanbul prosecutors decide to press charges over the book, which has sold 6000 copies in Turkey since it was published this summer.

See additional stories here and here.

On 3 December 2007 the Guardian reported on continued protests against humanist author and activist Taslima Nasrin, who announced several days ago her intent to remove supposedly offending passages from her autobiography.

But the offer to remove the paragraphs from new printings of the bestseller was not enough for Syed Ahmed Bukhari, the chief cleric of New Delhi’s Jama Masjid mosque, who suggested earlier today that Indian Muslims should “not tolerate the infamous authoress Taslima Nasrin on the Indian soil” unless she offered a written apology for what he called her “anti-Islamic publications”.

“The apology must bear her assurance that in future she will desist from repeating such venomous writing that may have any inkling of blasphemy,” he said in a statement.

“India is a democratic nation and the constitution here neither does permit any citizen nor allow any foreign national to be irreverent to the tenets of any religion,” the cleric continued.

On 4 December 2007, The Rational Response Squad reported on the encyclical letter Spe Salvi promulgated by the Vatican on 30 November 2007, noting that the Pope has chosen to villify atheists by attributing to them some of the great moral lapses of the recent past.

The attempt to correlate atheism with violence, hatred, and genocide is the faithful fall-back argument for theists looking for a scapegoat. As in many other situations, their best defense for their beliefs and the resulting atrocities throughout history is something like, “Atheists did it, too! Just look at Hitler, Stalin, and Pol Pot. You’re just like us!” Well, I beg to differ. Those three well-worn examples did not commit those crimes because of their lack of god-belief. That is where the fundamental difference lies.

The encyclical letter Spe Salvi itself, while not as inflammatory in its rhetoric as the above implies, says:

Since there is no God to create justice, it seems man himself is now called to establish justice. If in the face of this world’s suffering, protest against God is understandable, the claim that humanity can and must do what no God actually does or is able to do is both presumptuous and intrinsically false. It is no accident that this idea has led to the greatest forms of cruelty and violations of justice; rather, it is grounded in the intrinsic falsity of the claim. A world which has to create its own justice is a world without hope.

Of course, reasonable people might disagree. Those who rely on reason over faith certainly will.

On 4 December 2007, A Thinking Man pointed out the cries of blasphemy regarding a Red Bull commercial that aired in Italy (see also the New Humanist Blog).

Father Marco Damanti, from Sicily, wrote to the makers of the caffeinated energy drink denouncing their commercial as “a blasphemous act” and said yesterday he had received a prompt reply promising to remove it from Italian television. The advert depicted four wise men, instead of three, visiting Mary and the Baby Jesus in Bethlehem. The fourth wise man bore a can of the soft drink.

Even those challenged at recognizing patterns can glimpse this growing and paradoxical trend in which free speech is squelched in the name of religious sensitivity and tolerance, while overt discrimination against and rampant disrespect of atheists continues unabated.

Situation normal.

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6 December 2007

A Constant Problem for Physicists

Posted By Stefan Monsaureus

A New York Times op-ed by physicist and communicator of things scientific Paul Davies proclaims the faith of the scientist.

All science proceeds on the assumption that nature is ordered in a rational and intelligible way. You couldn’t be a scientist if you thought the universe was a meaningless jumble of odds and ends haphazardly juxtaposed. When physicists probe to a deeper level of subatomic structure, or astronomers extend the reach of their instruments, they expect to encounter additional elegant mathematical order. And so far this faith has been justified.

This will surely be spun as heresy in the scientific, rationalist, and nontheist blogosphere, with ample finger-wagging at the absurdity of arguing that each hypothesis amounts to an exercise in faith. But, there is a constant problem in physics that lends comfort to those clinging to a deistic view of the universe.

Over the years I have often asked my physicist colleagues why the laws of physics are what they are. The answers vary from “that’s not a scientific question” to “nobody knows.” The favorite reply is, “There is no reason they are what they are — they just are.” The idea that the laws exist reasonlessly is deeply anti-rational.

If there is any faith among scientists, though, it is perhaps that continued investigation and exploration will yield answers to these mysteries, and a rational explanation for the existence of these seemingly arbitrary (albeit anthropically “fine-tuned”) properties of our universe.

In other words, the laws should have an explanation from within the universe and not involve appealing to an external agency. The specifics of that explanation are a matter for future research. But until science comes up with a testable theory of the laws of the universe, its claim to be free of faith is manifestly bogus.

Alas, Timaeus’ demiurge may be relegated to the purgatory into which all gods of the gaps are ultimately banished by science. But such discourses on the quintessentials of metaphysics abet a deistic understanding of the universe. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.

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24 November 2007

Accumulated Wisdom 2007.11.22

Posted By Stefan Monsaureus

According to the Associated Press, the “little people” may be in line for more equitable treatment.

The Colorado Supreme Court cleared the way Tuesday for an anti-abortion group to collect signatures for a ballot measure that would define a fertilized egg as a person… If approved by voters, the measure would give fertilized eggs the state constitutional protections of inalienable rights, justice and due process.

Clearly, such a measure, if passed, would be the end of legal abortion. And it would wreak havoc on the next census.

The Wall Street Journal reports on Dr. Arthur Matas, a transplant surgeon actively promoting a change in U.S. policy that would permit the sale of kidneys.

“There’s one clear argument for sales,” Dr. Matas told a gathering of surgeons earlier this year. The practice, currently illegal in the U.S., “would increase the supply of kidneys, save lives and improve the quality of life for those with end-stage renal disease.”

With thousands of patients on the kidney transplant waiting list dying each year, and a significant public health burden associated maintaining patients with kidney failure, the merits of this proposal are coming into clearer view. Others point to the fact that current donors are given inadequate (i.e. zero) compensation for the loss of a kidney and the discomfort of a surgical procedure, with the only consideration being that warm fuzzy feeling one gets from altruistic deeds. It is not, however, without controversy, centered primarily on the possibility that those of lower economic status could be exploited. At least the issue is being discussed (e.g. here or here). Links to some additional information may be found at here, here, or here.

The Center for American Progress has launched a multi-year media campaign.

The first part of the campaign involves a pilot experiment to begin defining progressivism in the public’s mind through a series of distinct advertisements that explain the progressive movement’s core values and policy ideas, its historical accomplishments, and its philosophical differences with conservatives.

The first of these videos can be viewed here (Quicktime movie).  This is progress, but it would be nice to see a similar effort to recapture the dreaded “L” word, which has become a term of opprobrium when passed over the forked-tongue of the neo-radical right wing.

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22 November 2007

This is Your War, On Drugs

Posted By Stefan Monsaureus

A New York Times editorial recalls one of America’s other perpetual wars – the so-called War on Drugs – and applauds tentative steps by the USA to collaborate with Mexican officials to stop the flow of illegal drugs.

If Washington is serious about stopping the northward flow of cocaine, heroin and other drugs, it must begin an aggressive campaign to stop the southward flow of money and high-powered weapons that finance and arm the cartels. And there must be a far more serious effort to curb Americans’ use of illicit drugs.

The last point is perhaps the most salient. Just as military intervention in Iraq is unlikely to break the growing tide of anti-American public sentiment in the Middle East, military interdiction efforts are not going to solve what is, at best, a public health problem, and at worst an artificial problem fueled by political expediency.

Let’s draw another parallel: our failure to curb our thirst for petroleum-based energy has not only made the quest for oil a driving national security interest, it has put untold billions of dollars (now euros) into the hands of despotic leaders and Islamist states.  As noted in the Times editorial, America’s demand for illegal drug imports similarly funds cartels with enormous power.

According to the National Drug Intelligence Center, between $8 billion and $23 billion in proceeds from the drug trade flowed illegally across the border into Mexico in 2005. The cartels have used that enormous financial clout to corrupt Mexican law enforcement on an unparalleled scale. The traffickers’ firepower — likened to what American soldiers face in Afghanistan and Iraq — also eclipses the puny arsenal of Mexico’s police forces. Mexican officials estimate that 90 percent of the guns they confiscate are smuggled in from the United States.

When politicians can have a serious national dialog about our efforts to eradicate drug abuse, without fear of appearing soft on crime, we may one day see the development of a rational drug policy. When politicians can have a serious national dialog on our efforts to curb Islamic radicalism without seeming soft on national defense, we may one days see a rational foreign policy.

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19 November 2007

Questioning Theocracy

Posted By Stefan Monsaureus

In Saturday’s Secular Sermon at Daily Kos, tbrucegodfrey discusses the sad, persistent attempts of some religious conservatives to impose biblical values on American governance and jurisprudence, noting (among other things) the the difficulties in applying “traditional” religious values as law when there are numerous competing religious traditions and no small amount of inconsistency within and between them.

Ultimately, the question of whether, and if so which, religious traditions govern our society’s public morals, i.e. laws, remains to be seen. To claim stupidly, however, that America needs to “return to the Bible” is asinine; not only does the Constitution bar Congress from establishing a religion and guarantee freedom from Congressional interference in the free exercise of religion, it bars all religious tests for federal office.

And, of course, there is the huge issue of whether whatever moral code one might glean from an ancient text written when heliocentricity was an unknown concept, slavery was an accepted practice and the subjugation of women was routine could possibly be applicable to contemporary society. But the point of this sermonette seems to be that candidates should be called to account for pandering to those who would impose theocracy on America.

What does this have to do with Democrats winning elections? I think that we should start asking theocratic Republicans – meaning those who take public support from theocratic organizers – which Bible passages should become statutes. I think we should ask their opinions of Biblical stoning, whether adultering men should be stoned as well as women, whether the government should be in the business of promoting Christianity or whether that is a church’s day job.

Such questions do not seem out of bounds, especially in cases where a stance is based on a selective reading of the Bible. It would be wise, though, to avoid over-generalization; the goal is to drive a wedge between religious fundamentalists and religious moderates, not between all religious adherents and atheists. Not all Christians are biblical literalists lacking the sophistication to appreciate allegory and metaphor.

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17 November 2007

Carnival of the Godless #79

Posted By Stefan Monsaureus

Carnival of the Godless #79 is now online at Aardvarchaeology. This “bi-weekly collection of good blogging from a perspective unclouded by notions of friendly guys in the sky who provide pie when you die” contains links to a number of worthwhile posts of interest to the nontheists among us.

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12 November 2007

Status Symbols

Posted By Stefan Monsaureus

The Atheist Alliance International has posted a new web site called Atheist Symbol. The purpose of this site is to promote yet another symbol for the freethought community.

This symbol is not the symbol of AAI or of any of its member organizations. It is meant to be a generic symbol of freethought for the world. The symbol shows how atheists fit into our world and are an integral part of it. The “A” is capitalized because we are important. It is attached to the circle (a globe) in the same way we are attached to our world.

This newest entry into the growing collection of freethought icons comes in a variety of colors and styles. It joins the recently released “Scarlet Letter A,” which is part of Richard Dawkins’ Out Campaign,

the symbol of yesterday’s upstart incarnation of freethought known as “The Brights Movement

and, of course, that venerable standard from American Atheists:

And the point of these symbols declaring one’s lack of belief in some theistic construct? Building a sense of community and shared purpose, I suppose. But, the use of these symbols suffers the same weakness as self-identification as an atheist; it is at best an uninformative statement of the negative, imparting nothing of one’s values or beliefs. Why the compulsion to proclaim this lack of belief?

A preferable approach might be a symbol of rationality, reason or skepticism. Or something whimsical, like the interrobang (a hybrid of a question mark and an exclamation point).

For those atheists of a progressive bent, the symbol of humanism seems a worthwhile alternative.

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3 November 2007

Stained Glass Ceilings

Posted By Stefan Monsaureus

The Crypt, a blog at politico.com, reported on comments made by Senator John Kerry at a recent Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life event. In “The Stained Glass Ceiling for Atheists,” the one-time presidential candidate is quoted as saying that atheists have little chance of becoming president.

“The vast majority of Americans say they believe in God,” Kerry said, responding to a question about the likelihood of an atheist or agnostic winning the presidency. “The vast majority of America, at some time, goes to church, and I think it matters to people. When you are choosing the president of the United States, people vote on the things that matter to them. So I think it is probably unlikely that you are going to find somebody who stands up and says, ‘Well, I don’t believe in anything,’ and you’ll get a whole bunch people who get excited about voting for that person,” Kerry said. “It’s just a fact.”

Let’s look past the ignorance betrayed by characterizing atheists as not believing in anything, as if our worldview was entirely vacuous; it’s a statement he should be called on but, quite frankly, Kerry wears the cloak of irrelevance so well that it seems almost pointless to bother. But the fact that he goes on to express regret for not talking about his faith more during the campaign – as if that was the cause for his defeat – is stunning in light of the increased attention that atheism has recently received. Many freethinkers (myself included) thought that if nothing else, the increased visibility of the “New Atheist” crowd would sensitize politicians to the existence of this substantial population (one that exceeds that of many religious denominations).

Either Kerry is oblivious to the existence of this sizeable secular minority, or views it as unworthy of consideration. In either case, it is obvious that overt criticism of Abrahamic religious faiths may garner attention, but is insufficient for forging political clout. Different strategies are needed to build awareness for (and assert!) the political power of atheists and agnostics.

The 2004 presidential candidate again expressed regret for not talking about his faith more publicly during the campaign, and allowing Republicans to paint a caricature of him.

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1 November 2007

Progressive Taxes

Posted By Stefan Monsaureus

An essential feature of good citizenship is paying one’s fair share toward the maintenance of the common good. Determining what constitutes a “fair share,” though, has been a point of contention throughout history. Superimposed on questions of individual responsibility are issues of allocating economic resources between the public and private sector.

A recent New York Times editorial titled “A Dearth of Taxes” noted that the United States has apportioned comparatively fewer resources to the public sector, collecting just over 28% of gross domestic product as taxes.

That rate was one of the lowest among wealthy countries — about five percentage points of G.D.P. lower than Canada’s, and more than eight points lower than New Zealand’s. And Danes, Germans and Slovaks paid more in taxes, as a share of their economies.

This would be good news if it could plausibly be attributed to our increased productivity, favorable trade balances, or a burgeoning budget surplus. But, alas, Bush’s war in Iraq continues to strain our budget. Despite the president’s lower tax mantra, somebody will have to pay the piper, and it looks increasingly like it will be the poor and middle class.

Robert Reich, writing on the logic of taxing the rich, notes that the wealthiest of our society have reaped the rewards of recent changes in the U.S. tax policy, and should be called upon to pay their fair share.

Taxing the super-rich is not about class envy, as conservatives charge. It’s about the nation having enough money to pay for national defense and homeland security, good schools and a crumbling infrastructure, the upcoming costs of boomers’ Social Security (the current surplus has masked the true extent of the current budget deficit, but it won’t for much longer), and, hopefully, affordable national health insurance. Not to mention the trillion dollars or so it will take to fix the Alternative Minimum Tax, which is now starting to hit the middle class.

He continued this line of thought in a subsequent post on fair tax burden, relying on a notion of “equal sacrifice” to rationalize a proportionately higher tax burden on the wealthy (that is, a progressive tax structure):

Equal sacrifice means that in paying taxes, people ought to feel about the same degree of pain – regardless of whether they’re wealthy or poor. This means that someone earning $2 million a year ought to pay a larger portion of her income in taxes than someone earning $20,000 a year.

Asking the rich to share the suffering of the poor seems a bit ludicrous and, despite Reich’s intentions, smacks of class envy. More importantly, it is a bad way to frame this issue. Characterizing taxes as a “sacrifice” almost compels a utilitarian approach to minimizing suffering through continued tax “reform.” In fact, the rewards of our society fall disproportionately on the rich. It might be said, then, that rather than equalizing sacrifice, the goal is to achieve parity in our return on investment. That is, taxes represent investments in infrastructure, a high quality work force, and a strong defense; the returns on those investments will be shared by all, but obviously be of greater value to those with the largest capital investment in our economy.

Not to mention the elimination of an immense bureaucracy in the Internal Revenue Service, a vast reduction in money wasted on tax accountants and lawyers, less reliance on “voluntary” payment of taxes, a reduced level of Congressional manipulation of spending and investment, and a shift of the basis for business decisions from tax consequences to true economic benefits. And, of course, the virtue of providing disincentives for over-consumption and incentives for savings and capital formation. Rather than expound on the virtues of such a fair tax plan, readers are referred to groups like Americans for Fair Taxation.

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30 October 2007
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