Archive for August 2009

I’m not sure quite what to make of this story in the Dallas Morning News about a Collin County camp for children of atheists, agnostics, and “free thinkers”:

In many ways, the one-day event looked more like science camp than a gathering of children who had grown up without a god.

The campers, ages 5 to 15, played with llamas and kangaroos, examined fossils and staged their own UFO sightings.

Their counselors refrained from bringing up religion directly, though they encouraged the kids to embrace scientific skepticism.

Many of the parents had more modest goals, hoping their children would have some fun – and maybe make a few friends from among North Texas’ small but growing community of nonbelievers.

I don’t know what’s more tragic, that a camp like this exists or the part about the “growing community of nonbelievers”.

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Recently, Christian writer Jason Boyett posted an interview on his blog with an atheist writer who goes by the pseudonym Dromedary Hump. (Part 1 of the interview here, and Part 2 here.)

As I was reading through the interview, a couple of things stuck out at me. See if you notice them in this excerpt (Boyett’s question in bold):

I guess the direction I was headed with that question regarded what I see as a potential critique of your business model: that you are making an easy buck by taking advantage of someone’s fears. Yes, this is definitely the life insurance approach, offering peace of mind in hopes that you won’t ever have to execute the agreement. However, the death rate for humans is 100 percent. You calculate the potential for the rapture occurring at a 00.0000001 percent chance. From your perspective, isn’t this sort of like (to pick an off-the-wall, non-religious example) asking an insane person to pay you $110 so you’ll protect him from the flying purple cheese monster? He gets peace of mind because he truly believes the cheese monster exists and is after him, but of course you know otherwise. You just get money for nothing. In my opinion, that conflicts with the Rule of Reciprocity. Your thoughts?

Jason, good challenge. First, I didn’t invent the rapture. It was implied by scripture and then reworked by 19th century Christians. One has the option of accepting those stories in the Book of Daniel and Revelation, and subsequent embellished interpretations of them, as either real things that are bound to happen or the ravings of lunatic cultists. I opt for the latter.

If you are equating believers in the rapture to “insane people” then yes… I would be taking advantage of the mentally incompetent, it would be wrong. But I don’t think you want to make that statement.

[Note from Jason: Well, no, I certainly didn't want to imply that rapture-believers are insane. Just trying to come up with a metaphor unconnected to religion. I'll admit the flying purple cheese monster comparison is a bad one. Anyway...]

Thus your example of the insane person buying protection from a purple monster is not a good one. I view believers of the rapture pretty much like any believers who take things on faith. They aren’t insane; they are usually capable of running their lives, making decisions on their own, dealing with daily trials and tribulations, making judgments, etc. I treat them as adults capable of making their own determinations in life. To that extent I am treating those people exactly how I would like to be treated. That I believe they have been mislead, are naïve about what scripture is and why it was written… that they are pawns of a mind virus that has pervaded men’s minds for thousands of years is 100% true.

But I will not afford them “victim status.” They have choices. They made them. I am servicing their need, a need that has been artificially created by nonsensical ancient writings, that has been fostered by the church for 1700 years. The genesis of any “scam” one may perceive of my service isn’t with my service. It’s with the scam of religious teachings. Religion itself makes my “scam” (if one wishes to define it as such) pale in comparison.

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I finally figured it out! The Fort Worth Star-Telegram’s Bud Kennedy looks like the “Dramatic Prairie Dog”:

The cover of the September issue of Texas Monthly proclaims of Texas Tech coach Mike Leach: “This crazy pirate may be the best college football coach in the country.” They got the “crazy” part right, but I definitely wouldn’t say he’s the best coach in the country.

Granted, he’s very good at what he does, and he deserves a certain amount of recognition for that. If nothing else, his ability to recruit virtually unknown players and turn them into one of the most dominant passing offenses in the nation is worthy of admiration.

But NCAA records are one thing; results are quite another. At some point, those billions of passing yards have to translate to meaningful wins, and that’s where Leach has so far come up short. Sure, they beat Texas last year in what was arguably one of the biggest games in the country, but at the end of the season, all they had to show for it was a shared Big 12 South title and a loss to Ole Miss in the Cotton Bowl. In fact, in the nine seasons Leach has coached at Tech, they’ve never outright won the Big 12 South division or played in a BCS bowl game.

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I haven’t exactly hidden my feelings for Senator and gubernatorial candidate Kay Bailey Hutchison. I don’t really have anything against her, but I’m not a big fan either. Still, you’d expect that someone whose political experience dates back to 1972 and whose campaign includes Karl Rove and Karen Hughes would be a very strong challenger to incumbent to Rick Perry. So far, though, that hasn’t been the case, and the Internet hasn’t made it any easier.

The first mistake Hutchison (or “Kay” as her campaign prefers to call her) made was not being decisive about running. Four years ago, there were rumors she was considering a run for governor but backed off when it was obvious she couldn’t beat Perry. This time around, she finally pulled the trigger, but not very convincingly. In mid-July she announced that she would be announcing her candidacy at a later time. Combined with her fence-sitting about if or when she will be retiring from the Senate, this non-announcement created the impression that she wasn’t really committed to the task. And in the political world, that’s like blood in the water; sooner or later, the sharks are bound to appear.

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