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Backwards Glances Index 2005 part 5

A word of warning - owing to the Weekly Glance's attempted topicality some of the links below may be even more ephemeral than usual. (Tip - a search for cached versions of missing sites is often productive using either Google or The Internet Archive Way Back Machine.)

 

October 1st 2005  The Gospel According to St Stephen

October 4th 2005  Pious Deceit

October 7th 2005  Good News Bad News

October 9th 2005  That's the Spirit

October 11th 2005  Fundamentalism

October 13th 2005  Unchurched

October 15th 2005  Democratic Denmark

October 19th 2005  Lost In Translation

October 21st 2005  The Popstar and the Parasite

October 30th 2005  Can I Still Hate the Pope?

November 1st 2005  Jesus Comes Out of the Closet

November 8th 2005  Voice of Unreason

November 15th 2005  Santa's World, Not Yours

November 22nd 2005  Bend It

November 25th 2005  Dolphin Pick-me-up?

November 27th 2005  Joy of Invective

November 30th 2005  More OINK

December 7th 2005  White House Christmas

December 14th 2005  War Against Reason

December 18th 2005  Do Unto Others

December 20th 2005  Lying By design

December 22nd  Archaeo-Hype

December 31st 2005  Seasonal Distractions

 

October 1st 2005

The Gospel According to St Stephen - religious fanatic, self-appointed guardian of the British nation's moral health, and world-class bigot Stephen Green of Christian Voice is quoted at length here on the decision to go ahead with a UK tour of Jerry Springer the Opera. "It is clear director Stewart Lee is being driven by some kind of perverse missionary fervour." And Mr Green, presumably, is not? It is clear that Stewart Lee is keen to see his award-winning show put before as wide an audience as possible - surely a natural aspiration for a writer and director? "I wonder if the municipal theatres from Plymouth to Aberdeen share his anti-Christian zeal and are prepared to sacrifice community cohesion for it." There is no evidence of such zeal from Lee - zealotry tends to be the preserve of religionists. Note the guarded threat implicit in the phrase "sacrifice community cohesion". Who will disrupt things - Green and his disciples? Perhaps having threatened a cancer charity they are now keen to move on to bigger things. It is likely the largely secular "community" in the UK doesn't give a toss about his whining. "This production portrays Jesus as a coprophiliac with an infantile complex who admits to being homosexual. Almighty God is put across as an old fool who needs therapy, Mary the mother of Jesus is told she was raped by an angel."

Assuming that Green's description is accurate, so what? The Holy Family are as dysfunctional and confused as the rest of us - but then we were made in God's image. "We shall want to challenge local councillors about their support of such a divisive and anti-Christian production on their doorstep. Councillors will have some explaining to do to their constituents, especially come the May local elections." Green keeps saying "we" and yet we only ever hear from him. He is coy about giving numbers for his followers. Maybe Christian Voice is really just him and a couple of pals who meet up in his garden shed. It is a distinct possibility. "To publicly blaspheme the name of Jesus Christ is to bring shame and judgment on those towns where it happens and on the United Kingdom as a whole." It will bring no shame - see the remark above about not giving a toss. There is a lovely Old Testament ring to the word judgement though, you can almost smell the brimstone. But who will do the judging, Christian Voice, lined up Pop Idol style giving marks for religious correctness? Or will it be the Old Fool Himself? Can we expect plagues delivered by a senile deity? Or will He materialize over Plymouth or Aberdeen and then just float incontinently about, having forgotten what He went there for? "A challenge has been laid down to us to stand up for our Lord all over Great Britain, and I pray we shall be up to it." Laid down to stand up, eh? Oh dear Stephen, you sound much better just parrotting the good book - your own efforts leave a lot to be desired. If anyone doubts this see MediaWatchWatch on his pitiable performance on BBC's Question Time, where to use an old English expression, he was torn up for arsepaper. Readers from the US will be interested (and enraged) by his disgusting press release on the Katrina disaster. The obvious glee with which he views the desperate plight of the people of New Orleans marks him out as a deeply sad and unpleasant individual.

That'll Be the Deya - a couple who claim they had a "miracle" baby through the supernatural intervention of so-called Archbishop Gilbert Deya are going to court in an attempt to win back the child from Social Services. Last year DNA testing showed that "Baby C" was unrelated to either parent and had most likely been smuggled into the country. The woman involved claims that Baby C was the second of three miracle babies born to her after a pregnancy of only 27 days. She says the first of the babies had died and the third is being held by the authorities in Kenya, who are keen for Deya to return to that country to answer charges. Deya is still free in the UK and protesting his innocence - and his ability to work miracles. This report in the Guardian manages to dig up the Right Reverend Dominic Walker, Bishop of Monmouth, described as an "expert on the paranormal" whatever that is supposed to mean, to comment on the case but even he, a staunch believer in the virgin birth of Jesus is not falling for Deya's nonsense. Meanwhile Deya  claims that he is being persecuted. This ridiculous affair has dragged on long enough - Deya should not be persecuted but prosecuted - he should be deported to Kenya where 20 of his miracle babies are still being held by the authorities. Deya says "I thank God I am a free man in England" - let's hope for not much longer. For more on the Deya saga see here. Publications by the great man mentioned on his website include How To Receive Prosperity Miracliously (sic) Annointed (sic) Prayer and Please God Send Me a Spellchecker. (OK, I made up the last one).

Faith's Fatal Forfeit - here is a study to warm the cockles of an old atheist's heart. It is also a chance to bask in the glow of having one's prejudices confirmed. And a time to crow "See, I told you so!" Social scientist Gregory Paul has collated data from various sources and reached the conclusion that "In general, higher rates of belief in and worship of a creator correlate with higher rates of homicide, juvenile and early adult mortality, STD infection rates, teen pregnancy and abortion in the prosperous democracies." In a paper published in the Journal of Religion and Society, Paul finds among other things "There is evidence that within the U.S. strong disparities in religious belief versus acceptance of evolution are correlated with similarly varying rates of societal dysfunction, the strongly theistic, anti-evolution south and mid-west having markedly worse homicide, mortality, STD, youth pregnancy, marital and related problems than the northeast where societal conditions, secularization, and acceptance of evolution approach European norms." For those of us who are sick and tired of religionists claiming morality stems from their belief in a vengeful sky fairy this is welcome news - but it would be idiotically optimistic to think that Paul's paper is likely to be read in those areas of the US singled out in his conclusion, let alone acted upon. It would appear that if you want to live in a societies that "come closest to achieving practical “cultures of life” that feature low rates of lethal crime, juvenile-adult mortality, sex related dysfunction, and even abortion." you want to be resident in "The least theistic secular developing democracies such as Japan, France, and Scandinavia" which "...have been most successful in these regards." Furthermore "The non-religious, pro-evolution democracies contradict the dictum that a society cannot enjoy good conditions unless most citizens ardently believe in a moral creator. The widely held fear that a Godless citizenry must experience societal disaster is therefore refuted." Will this study do anything to quell the strident religiosity that is now so much a part of American politics? Unlikely in a culture where nearly every politician, left or right, from the President downwards, knows that public protestations of faith garner easy votes. Obviously one must be aware that Paul's paper is just one study but it draws its data from a wide variety of sources. Anyone that cares for the future of the societies in which we live should take note of the efforts of various governments, particularly in the US and the UK, to push a religionist agenda and allow unelected faith representatives undue influence upon policy. Join a humanist or atheist society (see the sidebar and here) and make your voice heard - there is a war going on and Gregory Paul has just handed us some very effective ammunition - it would be a shame not to use it..... (For a reaction to the paper from those who were offended by the findings go here and scroll down to the comments - and stop sniggering. These people obviously have enough problems without your mockery. On a related theme see this study of Child Fatalities From Religion-motivated Medical Neglect )

Abstract - from the above-mentioned paper. "Large-scale surveys show dramatic declines in religiosity in favor of secularization in the developed democracies. Popular acceptance of evolutionary science correlates negatively with levels of religiosity, and the United States is the only prosperous nation where the majority absolutely believes in a creator and evolutionary science is unpopular. Abundant data is available on rates of societal dysfunction and health in the first world. Cross-national comparisons of highly differing rates of religiosity and societal conditions form a mass epidemiological experiment that can be used to test whether high rates of belief in and worship of a creator are necessary for high levels of social health. Data correlations show that in almost all regards the highly secular democracies consistently enjoy low rates of societal dysfunction, while pro-religious and anti-evolution America performs poorly." See the full text.


October 4th 2005

Pious Deceit - What is truth? asked Pilate in the New Testament gospel of John. Whatever suits your purpose, would seem to be the answer from Nigel McQuoid, director of schools at the Emmanuel Schools Foundation writing in the Guardian. The Foundation has been accused of teaching creationist and other religious nonsense in classes other than those dedicated to religion or philosophy. McQuoid goes in for some disingenuous pleading on behalf of the  management and staff, saying that they are not "one dimensional creationists". The problem with reading something like this is that in the back of one's mind the thought lurks  that, to a devoted religionist zealous to promote his (they are most frequently men) faith, truth is often the first casualty. This he will justify to himself as being in a good cause - more kids brainwashed by Christianity in this case. If an academy school is run by those with a religious agenda, there is a very real danger that those with strong beliefs will allow their faith to seep into classes and subjects other than religion and philosophy. McQuoid complains that the Emmanuel schools have been made "... the targets of misrepresentation." Here he is definitely allowing his religious fervor to stray from the facts.

Back in July 2004 80 took a look at a "damning document" which revealed that the Emmanuel Schools Foundation was polluting history lessons with  religion and that the schools' ethos was Christian fundamentalist. The document itself, Christianity and the Curriculum, was removed from the Emmanuel web site around that time, but happily a copy can be found here. The reason for its disappearance was given as a site re-design, but the real reason was that it was far too upfront about how utterly warped by a religious standpoint the schools' curriculum is. Do questions such as "In this context, it becomes important to peruse why Hitler paused at the English Channel when an immediate invasion might have lead to a swift victory. Could it be that God was calling a halt to this march of evil?" belong in a history class on World War II? Or how about "Science and geography may speak of the glory and wonder of God's creative activities. History can be seen not as a cycle of meaningless events but as a story in which God speaks and acts." For all the pleading in McQuoid's piece he is just not credible in the light of this curriculum document. This last quote says it all "Christian Truth must play a vital part in all of these matters because left to themselves they will be distorted and drained of meaning. Christianity and Biblical Truth must find a place across the whole Curriculum and not just be confined to the Act of Worship and Religious Education." How does this sit next to McQuoid's claim, "The individual beliefs of our teachers and students may vary, as in any school, between the atheist and the believer, but the commitment to rigorous, critical thinking is prized..." As the great American philosopher Bart Simpson would say, "Yeh, right".

In his complaining about unfair accusations of teaching creationism, McQuoid really lets the cat out of the bag by employing language used by his higher profile rabid creationist brethren from across the Atlantic. This is the tired old ploy of claiming "Darwinism" is a religion and evolutionary scientists are the high priests. Such drivel is a transparent attempt to drag science down to the level of religion, but the two cannot be compared in this way. No religion is backed by the kind of evidence that has been found for evolution by natural selection. If such were the case then blind faith would not be necessary.  By parroting this kind of silliness McQuoid manages to trash what little tatters of credibility he may have had left, and reveals where his sympathies really lie. The fact that he is more than economical with the truth will be, in his view, justified by the souls he may save. Such deceptive behavior is sanctioned by St Paul when he said "Being crafty, I caught you with guile." (2 Cor12:16) and "To the weak became I as weak, that I might gain the weak: I am made all things to all men, that I might by all means save some" (1 Cor 9:22) Such duplicity is a legitimate weapon in the Christian armory, and McQuoid's piece illustrates this very well indeed. The misogynist tentmaker also said "For it is written, I will destroy the  wisdom of the wise, and will bring to nothing the understanding of the prudent." Hardly a good mission statement for those entrusted with children's education and yet Paul is just the type held up as role model by the likes of McQuoid.

A Stone and a Feather - here is an opinion piece from the Guardian by Alex Wright telling us "We need a more nuanced debate about religion, and must stop seeing it in terms of being either a fantasy or a destructive force". The first question that occurs to 80 is why? How will a "nuanced" debate make any difference? 80's dictionary says nuance is a noun that means "A subtle difference in meaning or opinion or attitude". Just how will a subtle difference alter the glaring fact that religion is based on a non-rational view of the world and is, by its very nature, divisive and intolerant? If your religion has the sole revelation of the truth this automatically implies any one espousing a different faith is wrong - not only wrong, but very likely damned to boot. How a bit of nuancing is going to alter this state of affairs is, to 80 at any rate, a complete mystery. Wright does acknowledge the malign effect religion has had throughout human history and puts it very well "It is undeniably the case that religion has often been the harbinger of terrible conflict in human history. It is also incontrovertible that if one person thinks they have access to an exclusive truth it is unlikely that they will give much credence to an opposing truth maintained by others." Sadly he is not content to leave it there but follows this statement with a but - there is always a but. In this instance he points to a few isolated cases where individual religionists have performed noble deeds on behalf of others. This alone isn't enough, so Wright throws in references to some of the obscene acts perpetrated by those regimes he believes to have been atheist - not that he uses the A-word but the implication is clear. What he fails to mention is that the amount of human suffering illustrated by his examples,Treblinka, Gulag Archipelago and the Cambodian killing fields is far outweighed by that visited upon humankind in the name of religion over the last two millennia. (Also to nitpick, a good case can be made that the people behind his first example, the Nazis, were not atheists, but Christians)

Wright then tells us "We need to encourage a more nuanced debate about what constitutes acceptable religiosity in a predominantly post-religious society." Surely in a "predominantly post-religious society" religiosity*, or more accurately, the practice of a religion, should be an entirely private matter and have no role in the public sphere whatsoever. Such a society, if it is an open and free one, should not dictate people's beliefs and certainly should'nt follow the current worrying practice of defining whole groups of people by their supposed religious beliefs. The Blair government has a lamentable habit of doing this, which then allows unrepresentative religious "parliaments" and "councils" to have a privileged input on policy making, particularly with regard to education. Most people in Britain do not define themselves by their religion so why should the government thus categorize them? Wright finishes the piece with a plea that is in fact undermined by his "harbinger of terrible conflict" description in his third paragraph. He asks us, with particular reference to Islam but applicable to other revealed religions, "...to start taking religion much more seriously. And that first means getting real about religion. Not dismissing belief wholesale as a ludicrous fantasy, but seeing it for what it is, and recognising within it a capacity for transformation that may be as much benign as maleficent." In effect Wright is asking us to warp the scales so much in favor of religion that the stone of divisive and destructive faith is balanced by the feather of isolated good deeds by individual religionists. If that is what "nuancing" the debate means then it is a nonsense and 80 will have none of it.

* Religiosity means "Exaggerated or affected piety and religious zeal" which is certainly not the meaning Wright intends here.


October 7th 2005

Good News, Bad News - the media are full of the latest breakthrough in the fight against cancer, in this case cervical cancer. The Guardian tells us "Two major drug companies, Sanofi Pasteur and Merck and Co, which are jointly developing it, claim that the vaccine, called Gardasil, gives women 100% protection against the changes in cells lining the cervix that forewarn of cancer." It reportedly does this by targetting the human papilloma virus (HPV). If accurate, this is wonderful news for women at risk from the disease (and for the shareholders of the companies involved). This is obviously the aforementioned good news, but what could possibly be bad about this? It seems that HPV is spread by sexual intercourse and in order to be effective girls as young as 10 would need to vaccinated. Enter  conservative religionists in the US with their warped view of the world. They see this breakthrough as a threat to young girls' chastity, in that they believe vaccination would actually encourage them to have sex. Bridget Maher of the Family Research Council has said "Abstinence is the best way to prevent HPV. Giving the HPV vaccine to young women could be potentially harmful, because they may see it as a license to engage in premarital sex." This is not backed by any evidence but is based upon Maher and others' unhealthy obsession with what others do with their genitalia. Note that Maher seems to think that the potential harm of premarital sexual intercourse is more of a threat to young women than death from cervical cancer. Consequently these conservative Christians' answer to the lethal danger of this sexually transmitted disease is the teaching of abstinence, the effectiveness of which is much disputed.

So, let's see if we have this straight. Scientific research has come up with a treatment that looks to be, on the evidence so far, 100% effective against a deadly disease that in the UK kills 1300 mothers, sisters, wives, daughters and nieces every year. (In the US the death toll is approximately 3700.) Rather than welcome Gardasil as a reliable way to prevent these deaths, these religionists view it as a threat to girls' chastity and a possible incitement to become "sexually active". These fools are so fixated on the subject of sex and the religious regulation thereof that they cannot think of anything else - even to the point of opposing the use a treatment that could save thousands of lives. Culture of life? Don't make me sick.

The Hanged Banker - here's an item that should have the conspiracy theorists tingling with anticipation. The trial has begun in Rome of 5 people accused of the murder of Roberto Calvi in 1982. Calvi's body was found hanging by the neck under Blackfriars Bridge in London, the pockets of his suit stuffed with rocks and banknotes. Police initially thought it was suicide but later changed their minds, leaving the verdict open. Calvi, dubbed "God's banker" because of his close Vatican links, is thought to have been laundering money for the Mafia through his Banco Ambrosiano, then Italy's largest private bank, before its subsequent collapse and his prosecution. This explanation is far too straightforward for many, and web sites and books have detailed a vast conspiracy behind the murder involving a war between the dark forces of freemasonry and the Roman Catholic church. This rather dramatic-looking site, Freemasonrywatch, is typical of the sort of imaginative web-spinning that has surrounded the story. A rather more sober page from American Atheist tells the story as well, under the heading Through the Looking Glass, Vatican Politics, the Calvi Murder and Beyond.... The writer, Conrad Goeringer, weaves in not only freemasonry and the Vatican but also Mussolini, Juan Peron, the late Argentinian dictator, visions of Mary and Opus Dei. His final paragraph tells us "Calvi’s last days have been investigated, at least as much as they can be. Calvi had been sentenced to jail for the collapse of Ambrosiano, but was free on appeal. He sent his wife to Washington, DC telling her that he and the entire family were in danger. He obtained a false passport and in the company of Flavio Carboni made his way to Trieste, then to what is now Croatia, then Austria, where he called his daughter with instructions to meet him in Zurich. He never arrived. Five days later, Roberto Calvi was hanging from a rope underneath a bridge in London." Whether the murder trial validates any of the myriad connections that have been surmised between church, gangsters and dictators remains to be seen. 80 has tended to the cock-up rather than the conspiracy view of many supposed mysteries. The most likely explanation here is a sordid falling out among crooks which ended, as it often does, in murder. Experience tells 80 this will not satisfy the conspiracy theorists who could never settle for such a prosaic outcome. Expect the stories to continue, but embellished further by claims of a trial that was a smokescreen, generated to conceal those sinister forces which were really responsible.
 

Words of Comfort -  "Religion has actually convinced people that there's an invisible man, living in the sky, who watches everything you do every minute of every day. And the invisible man has a special list of 10 things he does not want you to do. And if you do any of these 10 things, he has a special place full of fire and smoke and burning and torture and anguish where he will send *you* to live and suffer and burn and choke and scream and cry forever and ever 'til the end of time...but he loves you." -- George Carlin

Payback? - as George Bush's choice to fill the Supreme Court seat vacated by Sandra Day O'Connor, Harriet Miers is undergoing intense scrutiny of her opinions and beliefs. One item of great interest is why she was chosen by the President at all. E. J. Dionne Jr., writing in the Washington Post, calls her Bush's Dangerous Choice, and highlights one likely reason. As in the elevation of John Bolton to the UN ambassadorship it looks like another instance of a reward for past services. Bolton, aka Scary Mustache Guy, was instrumental in stopping the Florida recount in 2000, thereby ensuring Bush scraped into the White House. Miers has long been a faithful servant to Bush and rendered one service in particular which may go some way to explaining her appointment. Dionne tells us "At the very moment Bush is battling charges of cronyism, Bush has sought an appointee from about as deep inside his inner circle as he could go. No one will miss the fact that, back in 1998, it was Miers who was responsible for looking into Bush's Vietnam era draft record to prepare for damage control." Cronyism? Maybe - or just prudent action to keep sweet another person who knows where the bodies are buried. The President's comment on his choice was "I picked the best person I could find."
 

"Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from a religious conviction." Blaise Pascal


October 9th 2005

That's the Spirit - here's an interesting review from the New Yorker about an exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum devoted to spirit photography from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Entitled “The Perfect Medium: Photography and the Occult,” and featuring more than a hundred and twenty photos it illustrates what reviewer Vince Aletti calls "...an exercise in blind faith and outrageous fraud." He reasons that the popularity of spirit photos was aided initially by the great loss of life in the American Civil War and the Franco-Prussian War that left many relatives highly receptive to this method of apparent contact with their lost ones. A similar slaughter in the First World War made seances popular with many who were grieving, most notably Arthur Conan Doyle. (Talking of Conan Doyle, the exhibition features one of the Cottingley fairy pictures that so hoodwinked the gullible old chap. For more see James Randi's library page) This sense of bereavement coupled with public ignorance of the relatively new art of photography goes some way to explain why so many were taken in by these images. The enthusiasts who fill websites today with pictures of orbs, rods and other spurious photographic artifacts don't even have that excuse. Their ignorance is deliberate. Back in 2002, 80 looked at an online exhibition of spirit photographs from the American Museum of Photography called Spirit Photography 1868 - 1935, a good few of which feature ectoplasm, which to 80's untutored eye looks like the spirit world's answer to snot.

Charlie and the Nonsense Factory - it is no great surprise that the report commissioned by Charles, Prince of Quacks, on "complementary" therapies is at the center of a row over its credibility. (see Foolish Meddling) Edzard Ernst, professor of complementary medicine at the University of Exeter's Peninsula Medical School made these damning observations "It looked to me as though the conclusions were written before the data were put in. These people admitted they were not experts in healthcare. They didn't understand anything of complementary medicine and, more importantly, they weren't even interested in learning." Ernst has said that he is in favor of using complementary medicine but follows it up with what has always been the showstopper for such treatments - they must be "backed up by good science." In other words they must be shown to be effective by the same standards applied to real, evidence-based medicine. A spokesman for the Prince tried to justify the report's recommendations that alternative/complementary treatments should be made available through the taxpayer-funded National Health Service (NHS) "Past research indicates that as many as 16 million people in the UK have used complementary treatments so there is a clear need for reliable information on this subject." A couple of observations can be made here. As 80 has said before, science is not a popularity contest, no matter how many millions of people think alternatives are a good idea. Also note the reference to "reliable information" - something Ernst claims the report is not.

Ernst is not alone in his concern over the pressure from Charles Windsor for the NHS to use unproven treatments. Dr Richard Horton, the editor of the prestigious medical journal The Lancet, is even more forthright in his condemnation of the report saying "Let's be clear: this report contains dangerous nonsense." Horton voices concern at the "collusion and complacency shown by some doctors, notably Graeme Catto, president of the General Medical Council, who has welcomed the Prince of Wales's report on CAM." Horton cites the recommendation of the report that homeopathy could be used to treat asthma, which kills 1400 people a year in the UK, and says "The idea that homeopathy can replace conventional treatment, as the prince's report suggests, is absolutely wrong. Not one shred of reliable evidence exists to support this incredibly misjudged claim." His final paragraph sums up the worries of those who believe that medical treatments must be shown to work effectively by agreed scientific standards "We are losing our grip on a rational scientific medicine that has brought benefits to millions, and which is now being eroded by the complicity of doctors who should know better and a prince who seems to know nothing at all." The Prince of Quacks has all sorts of opinions he is keen to share, but he should restrict them to organic farming or architecture, to name a couple of his favorite hobbyhorses, and keep his aristocratic nose out of matters where his wilful ignorance and wishful thinking could endanger people's lives.


October 11th 2005

Fundamentalism - "Descent into the new Dark Ages" is the uncompromising title of a special report in the print edition of New Scientist (Vol 188 No 2520) magazine. Among some worrying and indeed frightening articles such as "The End of the Enlightenment" and "Enemy at the Gates", the editors have at least included some light relief. This comes in the form of an essay by Bryan Appleyard called "People in glass houses...." in which he shares with us his ignorance of just what the scientific method entails. This is obvious when, in the second paragraph, he tells us "Science is indeed the faith, system, theory, methodology - choose your own term - that sustains liberal democratic socialism." You cannot "choose your own term", at least not if you wish to be accurate. In addition, science does not sustain just liberal democratic socialism, it sustains the whole roiling, overpopulated planet irrespective of politics. Take away science (as the Bush administration seems bent on) and its medical and technological offspring and you would have a very sorry state of affairs indeed, one that humankind couldn't pray its way out of. Appleyard thinks that science should not be used to refute fundamentalist claims, even if this is possible, for fear of becoming fundamentalist itself. This smells of Gould's non-overlapping magisteria nonsense. Where religion makes claims that are testable by using the scientific method, why should they not be tested?

In order to make his point Appleyard then produces the bogeyman of scientism (in the strong sense) - one can almost hear him say "There are some things man is not meant to know". He seems to think that "God did it" as an explanation that while implausible is "at least complete". Completeness is no good if your argument is hogwash and merely offers, like Intelligent Design, a facile explanation that tells us nothing of how the real, physical world works. His main concern is with scientists/secularists (he seems to think these terms are interchangeable - they are not) who overreach themselves and make the "fatal extrapolation" by claiming that  science works therefore it is potentially "omnicompetent and omniscient". This particular straw man is a figment of Appleyard's imagination - such absurd claims belong to religion, not science. He defines what he calls scientific fundamentalism as the "...belief that the world is accessible to and ultimately controllable by human reason." This he rightly calls a "profoundly unscientific idea. It is neither provable nor refutable. Obviously it is a leap of faith to insist that human reason is capable of fully understanding the world." He seems to overlook that this "profoundly unscientific idea" is of his own making. Science, or more properly the scientific method, makes no claims as to absolute knowledge or even the possibility of achieving that goal. What it can offer are theories that, by making predictions that can be tested, result in ever more accurate approximations of physical reality. It is the religionists that are so arrogant as to proclaim certainty and perfectability. As for the dream of the world being "ultimately controllable" that is politics, not science.

Appleyard, having conjured up the specter of scientism appears to backtrack, saying "Now obviously I know - and I need to make this very clear- that most scientists do not hold this view." It is apparently down to a few bad apples, which he illustrates by Hitler's use of now discredited biological theories of Ernst Haeckel in Mein Kampf (no mention here of Hitler's religion) and the massacres perpetrated by Stalin and Mao. He seems totally unaware of the checks that are inherent in the scientific method - this is why we now know that Haeckel, Lysenko and others were wrong. Look for a similar self-correcting tendency in religion (or politics) and you will be wasting your time. Appleyard's vision of scientific fundamentalism is not reflected in the real world - it is a product of all the tales descended from Shelley's Frankenstein, of those frightened by science "unweaving the rainbow". It is a monster that, paradoxically, comforts those dissatisfied with the material world, those who hunger for something more. This attitude is described in another item that appeared in New Scientist last year in an interview with philosopher Jamie Whyte, when referring to people of "faith". "The weirdest manifestation of this new tendency is when people say: "I'm not a Christian but I believe in something." Then I say: "Of course, I believe in many things, like there is a chair there and a table. What are you talking about?" And they reply: "Well, you know, something more." But what "more"? What they mean is something more than we have any good reason to believe in." People can believe what they like - and many of them do - but when those beliefs have consequences that can be tested in the real, physical world by science they invariably come off the worse for the encounter. This is not scientific fundamentalism it is just science, working as it should.

In Their Own Words - for those of you who want more information than the press reports provide on the Dover School Board Evolution/Intelligent Design court case you can find transcripts of testimony here, courtesy of The American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania. Also read Devolution by H. Allen Orr, writing in The New Yorker, for an excellent summary and dismissal of the nonscience that is Intelligent Design. Orr's final paragraph points up that this is not a case of competition between rival scientific theories - that would be conducted via peer-reviewed papers published in respected journals and backed by evidence. No, the simple fact that the venue is a courtroom emphasizes this is not a scientific dispute at all. "Biologists aren’t alarmed by intelligent design’s arrival in Dover and elsewhere because they have all sworn allegiance to atheistic materialism; they’re alarmed because intelligent design is junk science. Meanwhile, more than eighty per cent of Americans say that God either created human beings in their present form or guided their development. As a succession of intelligent-design proponents appeared before the Kansas State Board of Education earlier this month, it was possible to wonder whether the movement’s scientific coherence was beside the point. Intelligent design has come this far by faith."
 

American Democracy in Trouble - click on over to Common Dreams and read a speech by Al Gore in which he surveys the current state of US politics and the media and concludes "It is no longer possible to ignore the strangeness of our public discourse". Impassioned and erudite, Gore, the best president the US never had, voices his fears for the future of democracy. Far from being a jeremiad this is a clarion call to stop the rot before it is too late.


October 13th 2005

Unchurched - now what the hell does that mean? In the eyes of say, Brig. Gen. Cecil R. Richardson, the US Air Force's deputy chief of chaplains, it seems to mean unaffiliated or not belonging to any religious faith. 80 had not come across the word before but disliked it instantly. Why? Because it implies that those so described are somehow lacking something. This is offensive, not only to those who have a private belief and choose not to flaunt it in public displays, but most particularly those unencumbered by superstition, the god free. Not to believe in a vengeful. capricious sky fairy under whatever name, Yahweh, Allah etc. is not to feel deficient in any area. It is a release and a chance to stand on your own two feet, instead of appealing to holy writ to justify your actions. It is the pleasure of performing a good deed for its own sake, and not because some all-seeing deity is keeping score. It is to delight in the fact that you have been given the priceless opportunity of learning about the amazing Universe in which we find ourselves. It is the knowledge that you are the result of countless generations of ancestors who lived long enough and were healthy enough to breed, making you the product of a long line of winners, stretching back into deep time. You are not "unchurched".

In June of this year the superintendent of the US Air Force Academy acknowledged "..that religious intolerance permeates the military school." There were complaints that evangelicals harassed cadets who did not share their faith, and a top chaplain claimed to have been fired because she "..criticized what she saw as proselytizing at the academy." So, over 4 months later, has the USAF cleaned up its act? Partially, would be the charitable reply. According to the Washington Post, the Air Force, "...facing a lawsuit over alleged proselytizing, has withdrawn a document that permitted chaplains to evangelize military personnel who were not affiliated with any faith..." While never a part of Defense Department policy (it was drawn up by National Conference on Ministry to the Armed Forces (NCMAF), a private association of religious bodies that provide chaplains to the military) the fact that this document was handed out to serving chaplains could easily give that impression. Why should those wishing to serve in their country's armed forces have to endure anyone proselytizing them? Just what part of the job is that? Following a law suit by Michael L. "Mikey" Weinstein, a 1977 Air Force Academy graduate who accuses the Academy's leaders of pressuring cadets to convert to evangelical Christianity, the USAF has now distanced itself from the document.

Among other evidence, Weinstein's suit cited the words of the aforementioned Brig. Gen. Cecil R. Richardson, which appeared in the New York Times, to wit "We will not proselytize, but we reserve the right to evangelize the unchurched." If this zealot is not going to bother anyone else, why pick on the "unchurched" - what if they are "unchurched" because they think religion is a load of hooey? Their opinions are at least as valid as Richardson's. The Air Force now has new guidelines on religious tolerance "...that discourage public prayers on all but rare occasions. They do not ban evangelizing but say chaplains "...must be as sensitive to those who do not welcome offerings of faith as they are generous in sharing their faith with those who do." This may be calling for a finer discrimination than these zealots can manage. It also does not go anywhere near far enough and is only a slight improvement on the previous state of affairs, but some, like Rabbi Arnold Resnicoff, a special adviser to the secretary of the Air Force, think it is wonderful, even though he seems to miss the point entirely. He told the Post that the "..amazing, positive thing that people are missing.." about the new NCMAF code of ethics is that "even the most evangelical chaplains are agreeing not to try to change the religion of a Jew, a Muslim, a Hindu -- anyone who has a religious faith." And what about the god free, "those who do not welcome offerings of faith"? Do these guidelines still allow them to be pestered by evangelists or not? The rights of those who choose not to display their faith overtly, and of those who are free from such irrationality altogether, are still not considered equal to the rights of the superstitious herd.

Us Ordinary Folk - "We are going to die, and that makes us the lucky ones. Most people are never going to die because they are never going to be born. The potential people who could have been here in my place but who will in fact never see the light of day outnumber the sand grains of Arabia. Certainly those unborn ghosts include greater poets than Keats, scientists greater than Newton. We know this because the set of possible people allowed by our DNA so massively exceeds the set of actual people. In the teeth of these stupefying odds it is you and I, in our ordinariness, that are here." Richard Dawkins, Unweaving the Rainbow

Secularist of the Year - Maryam Namazie has deservedly won the National Secular Society's Irwin Prize for Secularist of the Year. See this page from Butterflies and Wheels for details of the award, and Maryam Namazie's acceptance speech. Update - here is a report from the NSS with pictures.

Try This One Out in Yer Faith Schools - a cartoon by Martin Rowson in the Guardian.

Rained Off - God showed his opinion of evangelicals on the opening day of DC Festival, a Christian evangelical gathering in Washington two years in preparation, when he rained on their parade. The lame excuses from the participants are, I suppose, a heartening demonstration of their faith. Evangelical preacher Luis Palau said "I'm not discouraged. I'm perplexed that the Lord would allow this rain to come and despite all our prayers...When we get to heaven . . . we'll find out why this happened." One participant added "Rain is not going to stop God's power."  All things considered, 80 reckons  they have gotten off lightly compared to what He did to New Orleans............. 

Quote - " As for their combined ability to contact the dead, they are about level with Spongebob Squarepants", from Tony Youens' Commentary, in which he reviews those unprincipled individuals who make a somewhat sordid living from appearing on stage and "contacting the dead". He looks at four mediums (media?) and rates them for, as he puts it, sheer entertainment value. See how Derek Acorah, Colin Fry, Tony Stockwell and Simon Peters fare in Youens' hit parade.........


October 15th 2005

Democratic Denmark - multiculturalism is all very well but it should not mean that minorities can dictate what is permissible for the majority. This is especially true with regard to what has sadly become in some people's eyes the sole defining feature of many cultures, religion. One reason this has happened is lazy or convenient labelling, as in UK politicians' frequent reference to the "Muslim community". The citizens of the UK who are Muslim are a diverse bunch and pinning the same label on them all leads to the mistaken perception that self-appointed groups, for example the Muslim Council of Britain, are representative of all co-religionists. Another reason is that fundamentalists have hijacked the language of democracy and disguise their unreasonable demands as "human rights", a concept they singularly fail to apply to members of other faiths or none. This problem is not confined to the UK but affects other countries in Europe, such as Denmark. It is well-known that, in general, followers of Islam do not hold with graphic likenesses of their prophet Mohammed. At various times in the past Christianity has had its own iconoclastic tendencies and there were even protests when Jesus was first depicted in movies, but generally these days the prevalent culture in western democracies allows the depictation of pretty much anyone and everything. If you are an immigrant to one of these countries it is arrogant to think that your religious views on imagery should supersede those obtaining locally. Now a Danish author has started a row by claiming that no one dared illustrate his book on Mohammed. A newspaper, Jyllands-Posten, rose to the challenge and asked cartoonists send in representations of the prophet - 12 did so. 80 has not tracked down the images anywhere, except one, and consequently cannot comment on their artistic merit or style*. The single example on Jyllands-Posten's website shows a bearded, turbaned man clutching a dagger, flanked by two burka-clad women whose eyes alone are visible, unlike the man whose eyes are blanked out. Given that Mohammed triggered a series of wars and conquests in the name of his religion the fact that the cartoon character is armed should not surprise anyone. As for the women, it is well-known that Islam values women less than men and its stricter interpretations insist they wear what are in effect ground-length hats. (*Update - all the cartoons may be seen here)

Aside from such embellishments, it is plain the very fact of the cartoons' existence was enough to rattle the cage of Islamic iconoclasts, in particular one Imam Raed Hlayhel who can't quite get his head around the idea of democracy. Jyllands-Posten quotes him as stating "This type of democracy is worthless for Muslims, Muslims will never accept this kind of humiliation. The article has insulted every Muslim in the world. We demand an apology!" By all means protest Imam if you, and some of your fellow religionists, find the images offensive but do not think in a democracy you can go further than that - and don't claim to speak for all Muslims in the world, unless you have checked with them all. Such hyperbole merely makes you sound silly.  Inflammatory language can only set off the inevitable hotheads - and so it has. The newspaper has received threats and has consequently hired security guards. A youth who phoned in a threat to one of the cartoonists has been arrested. Jyllands-Posten has, quite rightly in 80's view, refused demands for an apology. Flemming Rose, the paper's cultural editor, denied that the purpose of the request for cartoons had been to provoke Muslims but was a "...reaction to the rising number of situations where artists and writers censured themselves out of fear of radical Islamists." 

This worrying development can be seen in the aftermath of the brutal murder of Theo van Gogh, the craven behavior of London's Tate Britain gallery, and is not limited to Islamists - the play Behzti was closed down after riots and threats by Sikhs. The reaction to Jerry Springer the Opera from Christian Voice and others is also part of the same readiness of religionists to be offended by modern culture. If these people live in a democracy that allows them to express their own, often bigoted views, then they must acknowledge the right of others to free expression. In the UK right now the Blair government has taken the side of some religionists in attempting to legislate against the incitement to religious hatred, apparently oblivious to the chilling effect this ill thought-out law will have on public discourse and the arts. Other religious groups and secular organizations such as the National Secular Society recognize this threat to free speech and have publicly protested. The last word belongs to Flemming Rose, "Religious feelings cannot demand special treatment in a secular society. In a democracy one must from time to time accept criticism or becoming a laughingstock".

        

O.I.N.K. - since the above was written 80 has been made aware (thanks, Tony) of this opinion piece by Mark Steyn in the Daily Telegraph, which informs us "Dudley Metropolitan Borough Council (Tory-controlled) has now announced that, following a complaint by a Muslim employee, all work pictures and knick-knacks of novelty pigs and "pig-related items" will be banned. Among the verboten items is one employee's box of tissues, because it features a representation of Winnie the Pooh and Piglet." (Do "pig-related items" include the bacon sandwiches in the staff canteen? How about pigskin gloves?) Steyn quotes Councillor Mahbubur Rahman on the decision, "It is a good thing, it is a tolerance and acceptance of their beliefs and understanding," No, it is not a good thing, Mr Rahman, for at least two reasons. One is that pigs in pictures and stories have always been part of British culture and anyone who chooses to live in the country should accept that. Two, if this absurd ban is allowed to stand what other features of British everyday life will be deemed unacceptable or offensive in the light of someone's religious/superstitious beliefs? To commemorate Dudley Council's craven swinophobia, 80 is instituting an award for the most craven performance by a public body in accommodating offended religionists. In honor of the banned and harmless Piglet the award is to be called the OINK! Recipients are automatically enrolled in the Order of the Imbecilic Nincompoop Kowtowers. Should readers know of any public body, apart from Dudley Council, Tate Britain and Burger King that deserves to join this sad assemblage do let 80 know.


October 19th 2005

Lost In Translation - The Times reports that Cardinal Newman (1801-90) is in the running for a sainthood. Although the book has been open on the old boy since 1958 no reports of any miracles via his intercession had surfaced until recently, when, we are told, a deacon of "the Diocese of Boston in the United States had testified that he had recovered from a spinal disease after praying to Cardinal Newman." The deacon, 60, had earlier undergone an unsuccessful operation, but after prayers to Newman had "fully recovered his health and mobility". By way of explanation for this slow miracle rate, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor, the Archbishop of Westminster, said "...the English are not very good at miracles. It’s not that we are not pious, but the English tend to think of God as a gentleman who should not be bullied." Loosely translated this means "In general the English are not given to religious hysteria which is why the miracle had to be outsourced to the USA". Murphy-O'Connor earned 80's undying contempt some time ago for his concealment of the actions of pedophile priests - see Whited Sepulchre and also here. Talking of pedophilia, here is a remark that illustrates the caring and compassionate side of Roman Catholicism. A spokesman for Archbishop Vincent Nichols of Birmingham, who is also plugging Newman for sainthood, seemed amused that the miracle report came from the Diocese of Boston, a hotbed of priestly sexual abuse. He callously said "Perhaps that is God’s little joke." Nothing like a bit of child abuse and permanently scarred lives to keep the deity amused. These hypocrites are beyond belief.

Unholy Trinity - 80 has long been an enthusiastic recipient of Fraser Cain's Universe Today newsletter which is also syndicated elsewhere on this site. Regular readers cannot have failed to notice 80's frequent references to Tony Youens' skeptical Commentary, his cold reading expertise and his tireless promotion of a rational world view as a founding member of the Association for Skeptical Enquiry (ASKE). A recent happy discovery for 80 was Skepticality  and their fascinating, funny and informative podcasts. A short while back 80 mentioned that Tony was to feature in one of these. Now the The Unholy Trinity of a Skepticality podcast featuring Tony Youens interviewed by Fraser Cain is available online for your delectation - excellent! (80 is also delighted to hear of Derek's progress and wishes him a speedy return to the podwaves) Don't forget permanent links to the above-mentioned sites live in the sidebar of this page.

noitulovE - the makers of that fine, dark brew Guinness (or rather their ad company, Framestore CFC) have excelled themselves with this promotional video. Look for the download link under the center picture. It is about 6MB in size and is in Quicktime, which can be downloaded free here. Enjoy!

Faith Based Marketing - it's hardly the way to build confidence in their market research. Faith Based Marketing (PO Box 1055 Rockwall, TX 75087) were dumb enough to spam  rabid atheist 80 with an invitation (full text here) to register for the 1st Annual Faith Based Marketing Summit to be held on November 4th in Dallas. They offer advice on how smart folks can entice the dollars from the pockets of the faithful. "In recent years, the faith based community has played a major role in the success of numerous films such as The Passion of the Christ and the Left Behind series, and books like The Prayer of Jabez and Rick Warren’s best-seller Purpose-Driven Life. The 1st Annual Faith Based Marketing Summit will explore the role this influential segment of society can play, and help attendees learn what it takes to reach this integral group of consumers." Have they forgotten the words of St Paul? ".. the love of money is the root of all evil..." (1 Timothy 6:10) It certainly looks like it. Can we say hypocrites? Yes, I rather think we can. But wait, maybe we can't, for "A feast is made for laughter, and wine maketh merry: but money answereth all things." (Ecclesiastes 10:19) So much for biblical inerrancy...
(thanks to the Skeptic's Annotated Bible, bless 'em)

Quote - from the excellent Pharyngula blog, in a piece on Charles P Pierce's  Greetings from Idiot America, these words struck a resounding chord with 80. "You would be surprised at how much email is sent to me telling me to stop being so derisive, that harsh language and ridicule turn people off and repel the very ones we're trying to persuade. My reply is like the one above; by refusing to ridicule the ridiculous, by watering down every criticism into a mannered circumlocution, we have created an environment where idiots thrive unchallenged."

Windsor Whines - The Prince of Quacks sounds off again in an article from the Daily Telegraph "The prince moved on to address a group of GPs sympathetic to his holistic view of medicine. He said he did not promote complementary medicines "because of some self-indulgent pet projects, or because of some half-baked obsession with unsubstantiated quackery". He added: "I seem to have attracted a remarkable degree of controversy for something as apparently harmless as advocating a whole-person, holistic approach to health care." He has in fact attracted attention for promoting dangerous nonsense and using his privileged position to try and bypass the standards of evidence required for any real medical treatment. It is typical of Windsor that he has turned valid criticism from the likes of the editor of The Lancet, Dr Richard Horton, and the professor of complementary medicine at the University of Exeter, Edzard Ernst, concerning his irresponsible meddling and the useless, misleading report he commissioned , into yet another whine about how misunderstood he is. He then added that complementary medicine was not about "quackery and witchery, hocus-pocus and snake oil" but about giving patients accurate information and letting them make informed choices. In the real world complementary medicine that is not "quackery and witchery, hocus-pocus and snake oil" is not "complementary" at all, it is just medicine. As for giving patients accurate information this is the very commodity from which his report is free - see Charlie and the Nonsense Factory. While on the subject of quackery and its endorsement by the medically unqualified, click on over to Tony Youens' Commentary for the story of the politician who is convinced on the flimsiest of evidence that homeopathy works. (Nice picture, Tony.) As has been said many times  before, the plural of anecdote is not data...

Pastafarian Proof - as if proof were needed that all the other religions are johnny-come-latelies here is the news that a votive offering to the Flying Spaghetti Monster has been found by archaeologists in China. The find, an upturned bowl of noodles at least 4000 years old, greatly strengthens the case made by devotees of the FSM for equal representation when religion finally takes its rightful place in the science curriculum. It is surely beyond doubt that the noodles "...about 50cm (20in) long and 3mm in diameter, appear similar in style to a traditional variety called La-Mian." are one of the first faltering attempts by early Pastafarians at depicting His Noodly Appendage. Perhaps this momentous discovery will finally convert those close-minded school boards who are resisting the fair and balanced inclusion of the FSM in  science classes.

US Constitution, Article VI - Clause 3: The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the Members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of the several States, shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this Constitution; but no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States.

President Bush - trying to quell a blistering assault from conservatives that has thrown Harriet Miers' nomination for the Supreme Court into doubt, said Wednesday that her religion is a factor in evaluating her. "People ask me why I picked Harriet Miers," Bush said. "They want to know Harriet Miers' background. ... And part of Harriet Miers' life is her religion." San Francisco Chronicle Also see Christopher Hitchens' piece in Slate, Miers and Brimstone, where he says "Let's stop pretending there's no religious test for nominees."


October 21st 2005

The Pop Star and the Parasite - here is the singularly revealing tale of a man who makes a living from the grief of others trying to hitch his rickety little wagon to the altogether more impressive vehicle of someone who actually possesses some talent - and achieving not fame and fortune by the association but richly deserved humiliation. Intrigued? How about if names such as Robert de Niro, Robin Williams and Dustin Hoffman are featured? Click on over to Tony Youens' Commentary for the sordid details and be ready to laugh your socks off.

Unbelievable - 80 nearly missed this report from RTE News earlier this month. A Nigerian man, Osagie Igbinedion, resident in Kilkenny, Eire, performed a home circumcision. The result was that "...29-day-old Collis Osaighe ... died from haemorrhage and shock due to bleeding. He had been circumcised a number of hours previously by Mr Igbinedion." Mr Igbinedion was charged with reckless endangerment and appeared before Waterford Circuit Court court. He was found not guilty by the jury, which had assistance from the bench in reaching its conclusion. So far this seems a terrible tragedy that occurred over an operation that is not medically necessary but if Igbinedion was found not guilty in a properly constituted court then that would appear to be that. It is this paragraph from the RTE report that 80 finds stunning - "In directing the jury, Judge Kevin Haugh said that they could not bring what he called their white western values to bear when they were deciding this case." White western values? What exactly does the judge mean by that? Is it that black Nigerians should not be prosecuted under the laws of the country in which they are resident? Surely the death of a child is of deep concern in any culture, African or Irish? Does it mean that someone's ethnicity allows them to escape a penalty that would be imposed on someone else of a different background? It seems we have here a deeply unpleasant and dangerous mixture of insulting condescension by Judge Haugh, who appears to imply that black, African values regard a child's life as of lesser importance, and ridiculous obeisance to the idea of multiculturalism - an idea that is desperately in need of reassessment. In any country there should be one system of law equally applicable to all residents of that country. Had this been a case of the torture of a supposedly possessed child, similar to cases known in black religious communities in London, would the good judge decide there was no case to answer as we should not apply white western values? In Haugh's case the law is very definitely an ass.

Antipodean Quotes - "To do so would make a mockery of Australian science teaching and throw open the door of science classes to similarly unscientific world views -- be they astrology, spoon-bending, flat-earth cosmology or alien abductions -- and crowd out the teaching of real science." From a letter signed by more than 70,000 scientists and science teachers in Australia opposing the introduction of so-called Intelligent Design into school science lessons, a move apparently favored by federal Education Minister Brendan Nelson. Perhaps this ignoramus should read a quote from Rosemary Sceats on the Victorian Skeptics web site, "No woman who has ever menstruated, had menstrual difficulties e.g. bleeding fibroids or endometriosis, been pregnant, given birth, with or without complications, suffered from repeated thrush and/or cystitis infections, and especially no woman to whom all of the above applies, could find the theory of so-called "intelligent design" anything but absurd. The female plumbing system provides gilt-edged evidence of the complete absence of design, intelligent or otherwise! And as for the male plumbing system, what sort of designer would put a sewer pipe right through the middle of a playground?"

Theodicy Idiocy - If you've not already seen it do take a look at the latest Humanist Network News (there is a permanent link in the sidebar). Always of a high standard, this week it features an extract from The Atheist Manifesto, penned by Sam Harris, author of The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason. Harris looks at the so-called problem of evil - how a loving and omniscient God can permit all the suffering that so obviously exists - and not just from human actions but also the forces of nature, as in Katrina or the recent earthquake in Kashmir. "If God exists, either He can do nothing to stop the most egregious calamities, or He does not care to. God, therefore, is either impotent or evil. Pious readers will now execute the following pirouette: God cannot be judged by merely human standards of morality. But, of course, human standards of morality are precisely what the faithful use to establish God’s goodness in the first place. And any God who could concern himself with something as trivial as gay marriage, or the name by which he is addressed in prayer, is not as inscrutable as all that. If He exists, the God of Abraham is not merely unworthy of the immensity of creation; he is unworthy even of man." Highly recommended - while you are at the HNN site why not sign up for the newsletter? It's free.

Intense Dislike Anyone? - Here is the full text of Rowan Atkinson's speech to the House of Lords opposing the introduction of a bill to outlaw incitement to religious hatred, pointing out the very grave danger it poses for freedom of expression in the UK. He demonstrates that even the name of the measure is absurd, "The starting point for my objections to this Bill is to argue with its supposedly inarguable premise: the ‘ooh Yes Religious Hatred, that sounds like a bad thing, let’s have a law against that’. As hatred is defined as intense dislike, what is wrong with inciting intense dislike of a religion, if the activities or teachings of that religion are so outrageous, irrational or abusive of human rights that they deserve to be intensely disliked?" The government is still bent on pushing this absurd legislation forward, even over the objections of churchmen such as the former Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord Carey. His comments on the Life of Brian, a movie which may well have not been made under the proposed legislation, are revealing and welcome, "I love the film and I think it is good for religion to be knocked, to be criticised, to be challenged because we have done a lot of damage in the past". While he still clings to his illusions, saying "We know religion is a force for good ..." (who are we?) he tempers this with "...but I don't want to control a writer not to criticise me, because I may need that criticism." Surely, one may well think, even such an obdurate bunch as the Reverend Blair and chums will take notice of an opposition that, however briefly, unites religionists and atheists. Don't count on it - Blair's election time drivel that he would listen more in future has so far proved just that, drivel.


October 30th 2005

Can I Still Hate the Pope? - asks Carol Sarler in an opinion piece in The Observer on the proposed incitement to religious hatred legislation and its inherent threat to free speech. She goes on to say "Wholeheartedly, gut-wrenchingly hate him. I hate him for sitting around in his white frock, luxuriating in the infinite wealth of the Vatican while casually denying condoms to the dying of Africa. I hate him for condemning the poorest of women to early death by childbirth. And I pretty much hate, by extension, the Roman Catholics whose devotion permits his tyranny to thrive." 80 finds little to argue with there, or in the rest of the column, save only that 80 does not actually hate Ratzinger or the other targets of Sarler's wrath - but he does deeply despise them. Hatred does not seem to properly convey the utter contempt that such people so richly deserve. I suppose Blair and the other appeasers will come up with a law criminalizing religious despisal next....................
 

It's Miller Time - good news for those who are able to watch BBC 2 on Monday October 31st - the Beeb are showing Jonathan Miller's A Brief History of Disbelief at 7:00 pm. This excellent 3 part series was originally shown on digital channel BBC4 and is now available to a wider viewing public. Program One - "Shadows of Doubt, in which Jonathan Miller visits the absent Twin Towers to consider the religious implications of 9/11 and meets Arthur Miller and the philosopher Colin McGinn. He searches for evidence of the first 'unbelievers' in Ancient Greece and examines some of the modern theories around why people have always tended to believe in mythology and magic." Don't get too excited though, for as welcome as this rerun is, it does not appear to herald a change in BBC policy regarding the ridiculous amount of religious (mainly Christian) programming that is foisted on a largely secular populace.

Most Hokum Live - at last the deceitful drivel that is Living TV's Most Haunted Live is revealed for what it is in the Daily Mirror. To anyone who has followed Tony Youens' Commentary on the subject this comes as no surprise at all, as he exposed this nadir of cheap TV and its star turn, Derek Acorah and his performing tart Sam, some time ago. Still, it is nice when a national newspaper gives the story wider coverage. According to the Mirror the show's "resident parapsychologist Dr Ciaran O'Keeffe has sensationally lifted the lid on the ghosthunting series..." revealing that so-called paranormal events were faked and the "psychic" participants had been previously briefed on the "haunted" premises they visit. O'Keeffe caught Acorah out with a couple of fake deceased characters he invented for the purpose - even their names were derogatory anagrams about Acorah. The great psychic (and Sam the slut, of course) then obligingly contacted these imaginary spirits. As O'Keeffe says "In my professional opinion we're not dealing with a genuine medium. When Derek is possessed he is doing it consciously - all we are seeing is showmanship and dramatics." Acorah, when confronted on the allegations is quoted as saying "Not only do I believe that I am a genuine medium - I live my work 24 hours a day. If I thought that I wasn't a true medium, I wouldn't work as one." Is he just trying to brazen this out or is he really that deluded? Perhaps he can turn this into a business opportunity, unlike his "friendship" with singer Robbie Williams. A psychic who contacts fictional characters could have a whole new glittering career ahead of him. 80 can't wait to hear from the spirits of Fu Manchu, Pollyanna and Gertie the Dinosaur in the new, more honestly titled, Most Haunted Liars.

Telling It Like It Is - "We live in a twisted world, where right is wrong and wrong reigns supreme. It is a chilling fact that most of the world's leaders believe in nonsensical fairytales about the nature of reality. They believe in Gods that do not exist, and religions that could not possibly be true. We are driven to war after war, violence on top of violence to appease madmen who believe in gory mythologies. These men are called Christians, Muslims and Jews." 80, as regular readers know, enjoys the cathartic effect of a good rant. The opening inflammatory quote is from a posting that, at times, makes 80's efforts look more than a little staid. Read If You're a Christian, Muslim or Jew - You are Wrong by Cenk Uygur and see if you too are nodding in agreement. Also scroll down the page to read the more than 300 comments that the piece has attracted. For those who think that Uygur is too strident and will only alienate readers note how many of the comments voice approval of the views expressed (although of course this may only reflect the makeup of the blog's readership). For more on Cenk Uygur see here.


November Ist 2005

Jesus Comes Out of the Closet - never mind the new Narnia movie, The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe, being a Christian allegory here is a real Romanian wardrobe that not only has Jesus depicted (miraculously of course) on the front, but also Saints Peter and Paul. In this latest instance of pareidolia (see The Miracle of St Rorschach) a report in The Register tells us the images are actually formed from book-matched walnut veneer. This is achieved by slicing the wood into very thin sheets and placing these together so that the wood's figuring (often mistakenly called grain) makes a symmetrical pattern, in this case showing, to the eye of faith, "holy" images. In an earlier incarnation 80 worked in the timber trade and can vouch for the striking visual effect attained by book-matching veneers and although he saw dancing ferrets, wine glasses and a very convincing preying mantis, deities or saints were conspicuous by their absence. For more on pareidolia see Rorschach Icons by Joe Nickell, this entry in the Skeptic's Dictionary and also Hokum-Balderdash Assay which features links to many instances of these illusions. Compare this non-supernatural wardrobe to the one pictured in the Register, and check out this example of book-matched walnut veneer.

A Legitimate Use of Violence? - do take a moment to read The only debate on Intelligent Design that is worthy of its subject - it takes a lot to brighten 80's Monday morning and this little number from The Abstract Factory blog did the trick.

Rupert's Resonance - is an interesting item from Scientific American by Michael Shermer, (The Skeptic), on Rupert Sheldrake's nonsensical  morphic resonance (MR) hypothesis . Shermer's capsule description of MR in the opening paragraph gives an idea of what it's all about "Have you ever noticed how much easier it is to do a newspaper crossword puzzle later in the day? Me neither. But according to Rupert Sheldrake, it is because the collective successes of the morning resonate through the cultural morphic field." This field allows in some spooky way for skills to propagate through a population of people or animals even though they are not in physical contact and cannot observe or communicate with each other. Sheldrake, at one time a scientist, has borrowed an old ploy from the world of the paranormal to explain why experiment fails to support MR. It is his contention that "...that skeptics dampen the morphic field, whereas believers enhance it." (Which is of course the same lame excuse why, say Uri Geller, was unable to show off his parlor tricks when in the company of James Randi and Johnny Carson.) This argument, as Shermer notes, actually renders Sheldrake's idea unfalsifiable and therefore makes morphic resonance more hogwash than science. (You can sign up for Shermer's free eSkeptic newsletter here. The latest edition, not yet posted to The Skeptic web site, is a hilarious and enlightening description of a Young Earth Creationist convention from Jason Rosenhouse. For info on YEC see here.)

Bail We Must - Perhaps this short item goes some way towards explaining the popularity of shows like the now exposed Most Haunted Live and dramas based on "true stories" like Medium. It seems that more people in Britain, according to a survey, believe in ghosts than God. Particularly noteworthy is the role of TV and movies in promoting the supernatural, "Just over three quarters, (76%) said that reality (sic) TV shows and films like The Blair Witch Project have helped convince them spooks and ghouls really exist." One wonders if there is a need among a significant part of the population (the sheep) to hold irrational beliefs and the credulity that was formerly applied to religion has merely been transferred to ghosties and ghoulies. If so, those who try and educate the public in the application of critical thinking to matters of blind belief may well be on a hiding to nothing. Those of us who have a naturalistic world view may be in the situation where as fast as we bail the boat still keeps filling with water - but the consequences of not bailing are so horrendous we daren't stop.


November 8th 2005

Voice of Unreason - Pat Robertson is well-known for his outrageous statements, (you can get a bellyful of them here) so it was only a matter of time before this deeply unpleasant person had something to say about the evolution/Intelligent Design case in Dover, Penn. It seems he is less than pleased about the ousting of 8 of the 9 IDiots on the school board which has effectively put a stop to ID in the classroom. He gave this warning "I'd like to say to the good citizens of Dover: If there is a disaster in your area, don't turn to God. You just rejected him from your city." Any conflict between this threat and the idea of a loving and caring God was explained by the great theologian in blunt terms, "God is tolerant and loving, but we can't keep sticking our finger in his eye forever. If they have future problems in Dover, I recommend they call on Charles Darwin. Maybe he can help them." Robertson reveals here exactly what Dover was really about - not teaching alternative theories of evolution (there are none) but forcing religion into the science class. By his crass remarks he has shown how, in a tiny mind such as his, the theory of evolution is perceived as some kind of atheist religion and Darwin is its prophet. He is incapable of understanding anything other than a position based on faith. Logic, rational inquiry and evidence play no part in his myopic vision of the world. While the smarter Intelligent Design proponents have attempted to portray their "theory" as something that belongs in the school curriculum on scientific merit, Robertson confirms that the whole ID thing is merely an inadequate fig leaf for creationism. (also see Rev. Ridiculous doesn't speak well for intelligent design and this piece from Alfred P Doblin, who says "If there is such a thing as intelligent design, Pat Robertson is an example of a model needing a recall.)

On the subject of ID, one wonders why none of the proponents of this nonsense have been nominated for the Templeton Prize (see Of God and Mammon). This is offered by Sir John Templeton who speculates "If even one-tenth of world research were focused on spiritual realities, could benefits be even more vast than the benefits in the latest two centuries from research in food, travel, medicine or electronics, and cosmology?" The answer to this has to be no - so-called spiritual realities have been researched throughout humankind's history with remarkably little benefit whatsoever. In instances where the light of science can be shined upon spiritual realities they have a habit of disappearing in a puff of (holy) smoke. All this aside, by Templeton's own standards Intelligent Design would seem to be just what he is looking for, a melding of science and faith. Perhaps we can expect to see Michael Behe or William Dembski as nominees - but then maybe even the  Templeton judges are not dumb enough to fall for their Argument from Ignorance. Dahlia Lithwick illustrates what a stupid position this is in Mind the Gaps where she applies some good old reductio ad absurdum with inevitable results. Also take a look at Talkdesign.org, "a response to the "Intelligent Design" movement of creationism." Recommended.

Olga Z is Allison Dubois - perhaps one of the scriptwriters of TV show Medium, supposedly based on the exploits of "media whore and self-proclaimed psychic Allison DuBois", has it in for the woman. Read this piece from the Two Percent Company and see how a fake psychic (is there any other kind?) in the show matches Dubois herself with spooky accuracy.

One Step Forward - then two steps back. Imagine if you will an animal that by its speed has become the dominant member of a fiercely competitive pack. What do you think would become of the animal's dominance if instead of leading the pack it developed an irrational desire to gnaw off its own feet, leaving it crippled and unable to compete, eventually to be left behind in the dust. This somewhat crumby metaphor represents the outcome for the US if it turns its back on science, replacing it with theology. The creationist/intelligent design camp want to do exactly this with school biology classes, but it won't stop there as the faith-based thinking embraced by the these clods is an attack on all science and reveals a widespread ignorance of the scientific method. Today came the welcome news that the IDiots on the Pennsylvania local school board in the Dover district were given the push, 8 out of 9 of them being replaced. Bryan Rehm, one of the winning board members said that regardless of the outcome of the ongoing court case ID will not be part of the school science curriculum. But this good news was tempered by the bad news that Kansas seems set to retain its dunce status as the State Board for Education no less, decided by a 6-4 vote to open the science curriculum to ID. Not content with revealing to the world their idiocy in this matter they then went on to redefine the meaning of science itself "so that it is no longer limited to the search for natural explanations of phenomena." In the language of the opening metaphor, the Kansas board have started gnawing.

Stamping Out Offense - it seems that Hindus are the latest religionists to jump on the "we are offended" bandwagon. The Hindu Forum of Britain (who they?) has got its collective knickers in a twist over a Royal Mail Xmas stamp that shows "a Hindu couple worshipping baby Jesus". Hold on, you cry, they may have a point there, but the Royal Mail claims the offending image is taken from a 17th century painting that currently hangs in a Mumbai gallery. If, as it seems, no one has taken exception to it in India itself, home to 98% of the world's Hindus, why should the British Hindus deem it offensive? 80 detects more than a little me-tooism here. We have had violent Sikhs, protesting Christians and any number of swinophobic Muslims so why shouldn't the Hindus have their 15 minutes of fame? Secretary general of the Hindu Forum, Ramesh Kallidai, told the BBC "Even if we accept that an artist in 1620 AD took the artistic license to portray practising Hindus worshipping the baby Christ, we should be asking if this is politically and sensitively correct in the 21st century." So Kallidai thinks that the 21st century should be more repressive of artistic expression than the 17th century? Grow up - it is only a stamp, surely there must be far more important matters with which the Forum can concern itself?


November 15th 2005

Santa's World, Not Yours - the name of this blog and its subtitle should be enough to get your attention - Unscrewing The Inscrutable, "I'm not angry, I just don't agree with you". One article in particular caught 80's eye here, entitled What It Feels Like to be an Atheist. The author, DarkSyde (DS), by using an analogy of belief in Santa Claus to represent religious faith makes some very telling points. These will resonate particularly with those of you living in the US, where rampant religiosity pervades every walk of life, from politicians declaring their faith in order to score votes to pharmacists refusing to supply medication that conflicts with their idea of morality. DarkSyde encapsulates the paranoia engendered when all around you are in thrall to irrational beliefs and, even worse, expect you to comply with their world view even to the point of legislating for compliance. That DS does this with a large dollop of humor is quite an achievement, although the laughter engendered may well end in a shudder when you realize the situation described plots one to one with real life for many thousands of people. If 80 featured an essay of the month this would be it.

Reasons To Be Sceptical - Part 1 in which Tony Youens visits the god of the gaps and finds he isn't there, and introduces an infinitesimally small unit of time, no doubt soon to be adopted by cosmologists, in describing the (god free) beginning of it all "...... from nought point bugger all after the big bang right up until now is the whole thing was an entirely natural process. I mean ‘natural’ as opposed to supernatural." In Part 2 he has some pointed advice for mediums and for those who are convinced against all reason by their "trivial babblings". Tony also includes a link to Bad Psychics, a site 80 has found to be full of interesting things, including interviews with the likes of Derren Brown, Paul Daniels and Richard Wiseman plus a great deal more. If you have been alarmed/disgusted/amused by the rise of cheap psychic "reality" shows such as the execrable Most Haunted Live, then Bad Psychics is definitely the place to go. (Also find out what was said when Tony spoke to The Supernatural World.)

What's In a Name? - in this instance not a great deal, unless you are a biblical literalist or one who follows that bastard child of religion, science and wishful thinking called biblical archaeology. It seems that "Archaeologists digging at the purported biblical home of Goliath have unearthed a shard of pottery bearing an inscription of the Philistine’s name, a find they claimed lends historical credence to the Bible’s tale of David’s battle with the giant." according to MSNBC. The "scientist" in charge of the dig, Dr. Aren Maeir, a professor at Bar-Ilan University is quoted as saying "What this means is that at the time (circa 950 BCE) there were people there named Goliath. It shows us that David and Goliath’s story reflects the cultural reality of the time." Hold on to that first sentence as it is the only thing that Maeir says that makes any sense.

Replying to the assertion that the tale is likely a myth written down hundreds of years after the time it is set Maeir said that finding the scraps lends historical credence to the biblical story. Maeir is obviously of the school where the default position is that bible stories are true and can be confirmed by archaeology. In fact the bible contains two versions of the Goliath story, one where he is killed by David (Samuel 17:49, 50) using either a slingshot or a sword (the bible says both) and another where he is killed by Elhanan the son of Jaareoregim (Samuel 21:19). Helpfully the editors of the King James version of the bible, when confronted by this paradox, changed the text so that Elhanan killed the brother of Goliath - a change unsupported in the original Hebrew text. Forgive 80 for quoting the actual passage but it is up there with some of the best of Monty Python "And there was again a battle in Gob with the Philistines, where Elhanan the son of Jaareoregim, a Bethlehemite, slew the brother of Goliath the Gittite, the staff of whose spear was like a weaver’s beam." So, to recap, what has Maeir discovered? Nothing - beyond the fact that the name Goliath existed in 10th century BCE Philistia. (For more see this interesting page on who really killed Goliath)


November 22nd 2005

Bend It - like Youens! Nails have not been such fun since Passion of the Christ. In A Nail Bending Suggestion from Discovery Channel we look on as Tony Youens uses the awesome power of his mind to bend nails - apparently. What we in fact have here is a fascinating illustration of the power of suggestion and its affect upon our perceptions, organized by Chris French head of the Anomalistic Psychology Research Unit and Tony Youens. Recommended viewing for skeptics and believers alike but you will need broadband. On the same page make sure you check out Richard Wiseman in The Man Behind the Magic, in which he looks ".. at the science of illusion and the secrets that magicians use." (Also see Tony's Commentary on the latest offering from crap psychic Derek Acorah called Ghost Towns. Another offering from scruple-free Living TV)

Benson on Buxton - sometimes someone says something that is so stupid that your blood boils. In this particular instance it is Nicholas Buxton who is talking bollocks, and Ophelia Benson whose blood (quite understandably) boils. Her rebuttal on the Butterflies and Wheels site of Buxton's pathetic and false view of secularism is a joy to read. Buxton, whom the Guardian tells us is "writing a PhD thesis on Buddhist philosophy" is shown to be not only a fool with little grasp of how to present an argument but one who thoroughly deserves the onslaught from Benson. Perhaps he will think twice before trotting out his ill-thought out tosh before the public. Come to that, what was the Guardian thinking of to print it in the first place? Did no one read it before publication? 80 is all for freedom of speech and expression but please, give it at least a semblance of coherence. Happily the paper has managed to redeem itself somewhat with this item featuring Philip Pullman on the Blair government's religious hatred bill, in which he " asks if the law will distinguish between a rational analysis of theology and a call for violence...". Also weighing in on the dangers posed to free speech are Monica Ali, Philip Hensher and Salman Rushdie. Recommended.

Wishful Physics - You can't win, you can't break even and you can't get out of the game - that, sadly, is how the universe seems to operate. In other words not only are you unable to extract from a process more energy than you put in, you cannot even achieve unity. You also cannot isolate any such process from interacting in some way with the rest of the universe. These three (gross) simplifications of the laws of thermodynamics would appear to be complete showstoppers for the free energy crowd. These are the folk, ranging from carnival-type hucksters to qualified scientists, who claim to get more energy out of a system than they put in - what is called achieving an over unity result. Some of these really look like they are onto something but somehow concrete results are never seen, often after years of investment frequently provided by willing, but scientifically ignorant, dupes. The Guardian newspaper recently looked at one of the companies that claims over unity results from harnessing the power of the "hydrino". That this variant of a hydrogen atom, with its electron occupying a closer orbit or shell around the central proton than normal contradicts what is known of quantum physics seems not to bother Blacklight Power (BLP) and its leading light Randell Mills, a "Harvard University medic who also studied electrical engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology".

Long before the Guardian's interest the name of Blacklight Power (formerly HydroCatalysis Power) used to crop up regularly in Bob Park's newsletter, What's New. One mention, from 2000, was over the notoriously lax US patent office's decision to actually withdraw a patent (likely at Park's instigation) issued in February of that year to BLP and to re-examine another on the grounds that the office was "concerned that the BLP technology involves perpetual motion and cold fusion". A later entry, for September 2002, mentions that BLP was suing the Patent Office saying it had changed its mind too late in light of the firm going public "with an estimated $1B stock offering". (Now where else in the world of science is recourse taken through legal acti