Tag religious wackos

News From Home

Like a lot of other mostly-rural states, Maine is crammed to the gills with religious nutjobs. You can’t swing a dead cat without hitting some Jesus freak, even in the bigger towns, like the one where I grew up. I attribute it to a mixture of generational poverty, rural suspicion of education, a higher-than-usual percentage of inbreeding, and too much Allen’s Coffee Brandy. And that doesn’t even include the Catholics!

But I digress. This post at BoingBoing pulls together a bunch of links about a resident of Lewiston named JoAn Karkos, who decided that it was her God-given prerogative to remove a book she didn’t like from the public libraries in both Lewiston and Auburn by checking them out and not returning them. The book — It’s Perfectly Normal: Changing Bodies, Growing Up, Sex, and Sexual Health — offended her Christian sensibilities because it had nekkid pitchers in it and talked about homos. And we all know Jesus HATES the homos.

Last week, she even had to go to court and risk jail time, but at the last minute the Lewiston City Manager stepped in and said that the city would not file the papers necessary to prosecute her for contempt of court.. How’s that for savvy political maneuvering, eh? If Sarah Palin doesn’t work out, maybe McCain can draft him — he certainly has more experience.

That last link has several links to earlier stories about the Cranky Old Lady and the Naughty Book if you’re interested. In the end, she got to keep the books, and the two libraries just bought new copies, so I guess everyone is happy.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Brains The Size Of A Nano-Tube

Science Daily reports that a new survey by a group at University of Wisconsin found that 70% of Americans consider nanotechnology research to be “morally objectionable”.  And it’s not because they’re too stupid to know the difference between nanotech and biotechnology research such as stem-cell work or cloning:

The moral qualms people of faith express about nanotechnology is not a question of ignorance of the technology, says Scheufele, explaining that survey respondents are well-informed about nanotechnology and its potential benefits.

“They still oppose it,” he says. “They are rejecting it based on religious beliefs. The issue isn’t about informing these people. They are informed.”

Time to go smack my head against the wall for a while.

There are valid reasons to have qualms about nanotechnology.  Many safety concerns remain unaddressed, and quite a bit is still not known about how the small scale of the chemical changes being made actually impacts the properties and behaviors of materials (although I did read recently that a new study shows that nanotubes are not toxic to mice).  But being opposed to this sort of research because your giant invisible grandpa wouldn’t like it is just plain stupid.

Our national tradition of anti-intellectualism is starting to get in the way of keeping things running.  Last week in Salon, Laura Miller wrote about Susan Jacoby’s new book “The Age Of American Unreason” and Jacoby’s claim that fundamentalist religion in the United States is directly responsible for what Jacoby calls “junk thought”, epitomized by the “intelligent design” debate.  Erich Vieth, posting at Dangerous Intersection, also writes about Jacoby, pointing out some factoids which should sound familiar to people reading here: 50% of Americans do not believe in evolution, 50% of Americans believe in ghosts, 15% of Americans do not know that the Earth revolves around the sun.

Stupidity and religious faith walk hand in hand.  We’ve got a Presidential candidate who will pray to end the budget deficit, schools that pray for good grades for their kids, people who believe in miracles, and a President who says God tells him to start wars.  I’ve had people ask me why I can’t just “live and let live” with regard to fundamentalists, and all I have to say is that it’s because these people imperil us all with their appalling combination of stupidity and willful ignorance.  I can’t write this sort of stuff off with a blithe “oh, ha ha, silly fundies” anymore because they are contributing directly to the rapid demise of not just social and political institutions but of enlightened civilization itself.  And they don’t care, because, in their world-view, they’re all going to fucking Disneyland when the Apocalypse comes.

You can’t make people who are willfully and deliberately opposed to knowledge and reason turn around and accept those things by sheer force of will.  I’ve mentioned Nietsche’s words before: “Faith means not wanting to know what is true.”  And consequently nothing will stop them, not even acceptance.  Maybe through resistance it might be possible to get the fence-sitters and the “live and let live” types to see the danger these people pose and convince them to take up the cause.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

What’s Your GDI?

 

(via)

If you’ve got a few minutes and a sense of humor, you might want to find out what your God Delusion Index is.  A helpful hint: if you answer "yes" to Question #12, you might want to consider voting for Mike Huckabee if your state wasn’t involved in yesterday’s primaries.  Or seek professional help.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Mr. Pot, Meet Mr. Kettle

In today’s Slate, book critic Mark Oppenheimer has a piece about the relative validity of Scientology. His premise boils down to this:  don’t look too closely at how wacko it is, because you’ll only invite people to look at just how wacko Christianity and Judaism are.  After all, we wouldn’t want anyone to think that religions based on zombie worship, virgins giving birth, flaming bushes, and all those other assorted “miracles” were somehow not quite believable.  Laugh all you want about Xenu, folks, YOUR worship of imaginary omnipotent grandfathers is TOTALLY legit.  Riiiiight….

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Jesus Is Coming, Look Busy!

sacred%20elvis.jpg

Apparently, when Americans are not obsessing about killer tsunamis or terrorist attacks, they’re getting all geared up for the End Times.

A new poll from the Associated Press and AOL indicates that 25% of the American public believe that this is the year Elvis..er, Jesus makes his big comeback.

I wish I could blame this on the poll coming from people who subscribe to AOL, but apparently it was your garden variety telephone poll. The real problem, of course, is that it appears that among the 25% are virtually all the senior members of the Bush Administration (including Chimpy himself) and a fair number of top-ranking officers in the military.

Here’s a question for all you Christians out there: at what point do you people give up and admit that he’s not coming back? It’s starting to look ridiculous. He’s already a thousand years overdue. It’s like the world’s longest production of “Waiting For Godot” ever.

Comments:
I haven’t looked, but I’d be interested in seeing how the second coming has ranked in other years – kind of an apocalypse index. Some people put a lot of time and effort into figuring out when “the end” is coming – which is completely wasted since, if you pay attention to and/or believe such things, “of that day or hour, no one knows, neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father.” (Mark 13:32, as part of a whole discourse on “the end,” to cite only one passage)

So, yeah, look busy. Even if 2007 isn’t “the end” maybe we could make things better in the meantime.
Posted by Tony [URL] on 01/08/07

All you have to do is make a cursory reading of American history to see the ebb and flow of millennialism. There’s usually an uptick in this nonsense once every seventy-five years or so, almost always in direct response to an era of modernism preceding it. Measnwhile, Pat “I didn’t say nuclear” Robertson and his ilk look more and more like the lot of snake-oil salemen they really are. Problem is, lots of people in this country swear by snake oil.
Posted by Brian [URL] on 01/08/07

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

All Original Content Copyright © BrianKaneOnline
All Other Content Copyright © Its Original Authors

Built on Notes Blog Core
Powered by WordPress

Switch to our mobile site