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Ireland Criminalizes Blasphemy

An anonymous reader writes "Another European country clamps down on free speech. From the article: 'It does seem bizarre that, in 2009, a modern European nation would seek to shield religious belief from criticism — yet that is what is happening in Ireland right now. In repealing the 1961 Defamation Act, the Irish government sought to expunge the worst excesses of Ireland's draconian laws restricting free speech, but in the process it has ended up making offending religious belief a criminal offence. Aside from a 25,000 fine (reduced from the 100,000 originally sought by the government), the new Defamation Act gives the authorities the power to stage raids on publishers: the courts may now issue a warrant authorising the police to enter, using "reasonable force," premises where they have grounds for believing there are copies of "blasphemous statements."'"

1,376 comments

  1. It's so very odd..... by allaunjsilverfox2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's like watching V for Vendetta in real life. 0.o

    --
    Restore the madness of youth's lechery
    1. Re:It's so very odd..... by Adolf+Hitroll · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Fuck God!
      (and Allah, Yahve...)

      --
      Smile, don't click...
    2. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 4, Funny

      Fuck God!

      ...and receive a divine orgasm. Amen.

    3. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In the US, people often wonder why the ACLU gets its panties in a knot over seemingly trivial government involvement in religious matters. This kind of shit is why.

      If you give the Bible-thumping idiots an inch, they will take the field.

    4. Re:It's so very odd..... by somersault · · Score: 2, Funny

      More like Father Ted. You know that Ireland isn't part of the UK, right?

      --
      which is totally what she said
    5. Re:It's so very odd..... by allaunjsilverfox2 · · Score: 1

      Yes, I do understand basic geography. But the concept behind V was overarching political power using media, religion and fear. Something that seems to be sweeping normally sane nations.

      --
      Restore the madness of youth's lechery
    6. Re:It's so very odd..... by cyphercell · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yep, beginning to feel a little embarrassed by my agnosticism. Best just to hide my true feelings and side with reason.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    7. Re:It's so very odd..... by Darkness404 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You place the blame at religious people, but on the other side, things like "hate speech" still follows this absurdity of lack of freedom of speech yet there is (comparatively) less uproar about it. We need freedom of speech for absolutely -everything- one thing banned from freedom of speech is one thing too many.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    8. Re:It's so very odd..... by Duradin · · Score: 1

      Hmm, let's see, major motion picture that has elements relevant to the topic or tv show that's only on the bbc, which one do I use to make an analogy...

      You knew enough about V for Vendetta to know it was set in the UK. A good chunk of ./ probably has never seen or heard of Father Ted.

    9. Re:It's so very odd..... by somersault · · Score: 1

      I just get frustrated that people mention V for Vendetta every time a story remotely involving the UK comes along. People could at least provide a bit of variety by mentioning 1984 every now and then if they're always going to compare real life to over the top fiction.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    10. Re:It's so very odd..... by maxume · · Score: 1

      How very droll.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    11. Re:It's so very odd..... by ionix5891 · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's like watching V for Vendetta in real life. 0.o

      it gets worse

      http://www.independent.ie/national-news/all-email-text-and-phone-records-to-be-kept-for-2-years-1820026.html

      The records of every email, text and phone call will soon be kept to facilitate criminal investigations.

      New laws will be published today obliging internet service providers to store data of email and website activity for a year.

      All phone and text traffic from everyone in the country will also be stored for a two-year period.

      The GardaÃ, the army and the Revenue Commissioners can access the information as part of investigations into serious crime.

      Justice Minister Dermot Ahern says it will be well monitored.

      âoeItâ(TM)s very important that the police are able to insist that the data be retained by the Internet companies so that they can prove cases against these people who peddle child porn,â Mr Ahern told RTE radio today as he published the Communications (Retention of Data) Bill.

      The Bill implements an EU directive which brings Ireland into line with other EU member states.

    12. Re:It's so very odd..... by MarkvW · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Reading your post, I can only assume that you must be very young.

      Free speech for absolutely everything would mean free speech for planning and advocating genocide and murder.
      Free speech for absolutely everything means free speech for fraud and deception.
      Free speech for absolutely everything means "fighting words" that provoke another to attack.

      I'm glad that I live in a country that carefully regulates certain forms of speech.

    13. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If it helps, don't think of agnosticism as a middle ground between the states we call "religion" and "atheism." Think of it as a middle ground between the processes of "reasoning" and "faith." As you go through the business of living, you have to stand on one side of the line or the other.

      It's simply not meaningful to hide behind "agnosticism" as a position. It doesn't make you sound diplomatic, it only makes you sound cowardly and irresolute. As an example, are you agnostic about Zeus, too? No? You're pretty sure that the possibility of Zeus's existence shouldn't inform your decisions and actions in everyday life? Then you must feel the same way about whatever God(s) the religious people are trying to sell you at the moment.

      All it takes for thumpers to get away with this crap is for good "agnostics" to do nothing. It's not useful to natter endlessly about the difference between gnostic and agnostic atheism. The debate is between plain old theism and plain old atheism. And it isn't being held in Internet forums, at lexicographers' conventions, or in comparative religion studies. It's being held in the legislatures, in the voting booths, and in our kids' science classes.

      Seriously. It's time to pick a side and stand up for it.

    14. Re:It's so very odd..... by Fallen+Seraph · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ummm, in the US, hate speech IS protected speech. The only time it loses this status is when it is used to directly incite violence, such as getting people to riot, hurt others, etc. That's why the KKK, the New Black Panthers, the Westboro Baptist Church, and other pieces of shit organizations continue to operate legally within the US. I may not agree with them, and hell, I may even think that some of them seriously deserve several hours of pain and suffering, but I will fight to the death to defend their right to free speech.

    15. Re:It's so very odd..... by jbacon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You'd have a point, except for the fact that said over the top fiction is becoming more real every day.

    16. Re:It's so very odd..... by Darkness404 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Free speech for absolutely everything would mean free speech for planning and advocating genocide and murder.

      Theres nothing wrong with that though. Now, if you actually -do- any of those things, yes it is wrong. But talking about it? No one gets hurt so therefore it should not be prohibited.

      Free speech for absolutely everything means free speech for fraud and deception.

      No, fraud can still be regulated. You are free to claim anything, but you must back them up. Contracts similarly should be free for anything, but you must not lie in them.

      Free speech for absolutely everything means "fighting words" that provoke another to attack.

      You attacked, you are the one to blame. I see nothing wrong with not regulating it. Words to not have the power to kill or otherwise (really) hurt someone. Therfore they should be unregulated unless dealing with a contract or an offer to trade.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    17. Re:It's so very odd..... by Me!+Me!+42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps cyphercell prefers to stand apart from proscriptive, "I know best," dualistic, do-gooders, such as certain believers and atheists? You knowâ"people like you.

      --
      -- My apologies if the above facts contain any opinions, or vice versa! --
    18. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or maybe it wasn't because it takes place in the UK, but THAT IT INVOLVES CENSORSHIP AND FEAR? You idiot.

    19. Re:It's so very odd..... by wurp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm agnostic, and I *am* picking a side and standing up for it.

      'Agnostic' doesn't mean "I don't know whether to believe in the Christian god" (as your comment re: Zeus appears to imply). Agnosticism can mean either "I don't know whether there's a god or not" or "I believe it's unknowable whether there's a god or not".

      A god could take many, many forms. I believe there's strong evidence against a god who created humanity in its image and for the purpose of exalting it.

      Not having heard any reasonable theory of the origin of the stuff in the universe, the space-time in which it sits, and the physical laws governing that stuff, I don't know where it comes from. I find it equally hard to believe that some entity outside of the bounds of physical laws created it or that it has no origin. (Giving a physical explanation of its origin just begs the question of the origin of the physics of the explanation).

      I don't think you know either. So I call on you, stop pretending you're omniscient: admit you're not atheist, but rather agnostic.

    20. Re:It's so very odd..... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You place the blame at religious people, but on the other side, things like "hate speech" still follows this absurdity of lack of freedom of speech yet there is (comparatively) less uproar about it.

      There is a lot less uproar about hate speech laws than there is about censorship laws because hate speech laws are a much broader and more loosely defined category. For example, most laws that fall within that category provide harsher penalties for people convicted of conspiring to commit other violent crimes against a group they speaking out against. Some hate speech laws provide harsher penalties for people issuing threats and directly advocating/ordering violence against particular groups. They are the same tradeoff of rights we've always used when limiting free speech, that is free speech is limited when it infringes upon other people's individual rights, like the right to live.

      Mind you, not all hate speech laws fit into the above category. Some of them to simply try to censor negative speech about groups, regardless of whether o not that speech directly infringes upon the rights of others. Many people do speak out about these and there have been several ACLU cases where the ACLU has fought hard against those hate speech laws.

      We need freedom of speech for absolutely -everything- one thing banned from freedom of speech is one thing too many.

      This is a sophomoric view. Free speech always has been limited when it comes into conflict with other rights. You don;t have the right to yell "fire" in a crowded theater because your free speech does not trump everyone else's safety. Your free speech is not protected if your speech is telling your underling to go shoot the shopkeeper who wouldn't pay up. Your free speech does not trump another person's right to not be threatened or even give you the right to slander or libel or falsely advertise or commit fraud.

    21. Re:It's so very odd..... by somersault · · Score: 1

      Hmm, let's see, major motion picture that has elements relevant to the topic or tv show that's only on the bbc, which one do I use to make an analogy...

      I dunno - if you're boring and don't care how inappropriate your references are, I suppose you'd go with the slightly disappointing major motion picture. If you like to throw a curveball every now and then to keep things interesting, you could mention Father Ted. This change to the law could be used to great comedic effect.

      In repealing the 1961 Defamation Act, the Irish government sought to expunge the worst excesses of Ireland's draconian laws restricting free speech, but in the process it has ended up making offending religious belief a criminal offence.

      If anything it sounds like the Irish Government are trying to pull their nation further away from a V for Vendetta like situation. But in the process they have made one element of the law more restrictive (and they will no doubt sort it out shortly). This bungle is the sort of oddity that people will look back on and laugh - and should be laughing at already, rather than bemoaning how draconian it all is.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    22. Re:It's so very odd..... by CastrTroy · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I think agnosticism is the only real answer. Pretending that you have any proof one way or the other, or that you truly believe one side or the other, is just ignoring the other side. There's a whole bunch of science that points to the conclusion that everything happens because of science. But there is also no direct proof that there is no god. There is only proof that god didn't do X. Whereas X is create the universe in 7 days, or flood the earth to get rid of the bad humans. There is no scientific proof that there is no god. Perhaps our current scientific methods are just unable to perceive god, just as they at one time were unable to to detect particles smaller than atoms. If you watch Religulous, you should walk out with a message, not that people who believe in god are crazy, but that people who think they know the answer one way or the other are just kidding themselves.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    23. Re:It's so very odd..... by TrebleJunkie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Leonard Peikoff had it right on Agnostics:

      "The agnostic miscalculates. He thinks he is avoiding any position that will antagonize anybody. In fact, he is taking a position which is much more irrational than that of a man who takes a definite but mistaken stand on a given issue, because the agnostic treats arbitrary claims as meriting cognitive consideration and epistemological respect. He treats the arbitrary as on a par with the rational and evidentially supported. So he is the ultimate epistemological egalitarian: he equates the groundless and the proved. As such, he is an epistemological destroyer. The agnostic thinks that he is not taking any stand at all and therefore that he is safe, secure, invulnerable to attack. The fact is that his view is one of the falsest--and most cowardly--stands there can be."

      --

      Ed R.Zahurak

      You know, oblivion keeps looking better every day.

    24. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      "When god cums, everything goes!"

    25. Re:It's so very odd..... by Hawthorne01 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, I am a "Bible-thumping idiot". And this sort of thing scares me to no end. My family background is Scots-Irish, so that means we got kicked out of two perfectly good countries (including, ironically, Ireland) because our particular brand of "Bible-thumping" wasn't compatible with what others believed in. I don't want transubstantiation or premillennialism inscribed into the Constitution, I just want a country with laws that treats my beliefs with respect and dignity and not have to worry about people who label would me as a "Bible-Thumping idiot" attempting to take that right away from me.

      --
      "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."
    26. Re:It's so very odd..... by somersault · · Score: 1

      Good job on comprehending the summary there. The people who see "fear" here (rather than simply having a giggle) are the true idiots.

      Ireland are trying to make their laws less restrictive of free speech, but it has had an unintended side effect, and therefore they will probably sort that matter out too soon enough. Sensationalist morons like yourself should stay on YouTube.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    27. Re:It's so very odd..... by gnick · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Agnosticism can mean either "I don't know whether there's a god or not" or "I believe it's unknowable whether there's a god or not".

      I guess you're right, but not knowing whether or not there's a god doesn't necessarily make you agnostic. Nobody knows whether there is a god. Or many. Personally, I'm an atheist and am perfectly willing to admit that I don't know whether or not there's a god. I believe that there are no gods because I see no evidence of them and I see no useful reason to assume that there are any. It does no benefit to me, others, or my understanding of the universe to believe that they're there, so I assume that they're not. I don't understand some people's reasoning for doing otherwise, but am willing to accept that they do without judging or assuming that I'm somehow mentally superior because I reached a different conclusion.

      That got longer than I'd intended, I'm just saying - Not knowing whether or not there are gods lurking about doesn't necessarily imply that you have to declare yourself "agnostic".

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    28. Re:It's so very odd..... by carterhawk001 · · Score: 1

      I'm agnostic about Zeus. You got proof Zeus does not or never did exist? Maybe the judeochristian god was Zeus. Didn't consider that one, did ya? From wordnet: a person who claims that they cannot have true knowledge about the existence of God (but does not deny that God might exist). That says it all about my position, and given the state of our sciences I dare you to prove the absolute non-existance of God.

    29. Re:It's so very odd..... by avandesande · · Score: 1

      You are confusing a 'sentient being' with a particular god.

      Big difference

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    30. Re:It's so very odd..... by jipn4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Free speech for absolutely everything would mean free speech for planning and advocating genocide and murder.
      Free speech for absolutely everything means free speech for fraud and deception.

      Indeed it does. And that's the legal situation in the US. It only becomes illegal once it rises to the level of a conspiracy.

      I'm glad that I live in a country that carefully regulates certain forms of speech.

      I'm glad I don't. And chances are your country has been continuously democratic nowhere near as long as the US.

    31. Re:It's so very odd..... by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      Hey, the left have their idiocies. If you disagree with things like homosexuality saying such can get you in a pinch in places like Great Britain. Go a step further, say something not very PC in America and you can lose your job, career, and be blackballed for life. Free speech must be free for those we disagree with or it's not really free for any of us.

    32. Re:It's so very odd..... by sdpuppy · · Score: 1
      To incite violence and when committing violence.

      It is one thing to punch someone in the nose and call him "idiot" ("assault")

      and another to punch him in the nose and say something about his ethnicity or origin ("hate crime")

    33. Re:It's so very odd..... by Old97 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Atheism requires at least as much faith as a belief in God. There is evidence of creation all around us and there is much evidence that can be plausibly linked to an intelligent creator. To ignore all that and say God does not exist is an act of faith. Your post reveals that you have a lot in common with the worst of the fundamentalists with your intolerance, bigotry and absolute certainty.

      Most agnostics I know actually believe that it is likely that God or the Creator exists. What they are not sure of is the nature of God and God's relationship (if any) with Man. Is God good, bad, or indifferent? That seems like a reasonable position to me. It's not arrogant or intolerant either.

      --
      Very often, people confuse simple with simplistic. The nuance is lost on most. - Clement Mok
    34. Re:It's so very odd..... by Kokuyo · · Score: 1

      I would agree with you but for the last statement.

      Do you mean to say you think it would be right for a bunch of cool kids to harass and belittle certain students on a daily basis and be protected under free speech? Would it be alright for them to make up suggestions of a defamatory nature about said student under your kind of free speech?

      So if you think it's the kid's responsibility to not protect himself from psychological harm by physical force... then, pray tell, how is the kid supposed to protect himself against these odds? Answer me that and I'll concede the point.

    35. Re:It's so very odd..... by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What a bunch of pompous whooey! (FYI, a strong agnostic position antagonizes just about everybody on the thiest and athiest side).
      .
      Agnosticism is a stand against arrogance and self-delusion and for rationality. Not only do we not know, but the question is simply not answerable in any rational way.
      .
      If you assume omniscient, omnipotent superbeings, all bets are off. They/It can make us believe anything. You can't know that any of your beliefs are certain and/or yours.
      .
      If there are no omniscient, omnipotent superbeings, you can't absolutely prove the negative, you can only accumulate increasing amounts of evidence.
      .
      I'm aware of non-rational experiences of "the divine" and how powerful they are (had some myself, actually), but the interpretation of being enlightened/born-again/etc. is all done though the mind. If it can be induced by chemicals or a powerful magnetic field pointed at the right spot on the skull, I'd have to question it's association with omniscient superbeings.

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    36. Re:It's so very odd..... by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      I agree, but I think a lot of "agnostics" could be defined as atheists who are confused about the meaning of the words atheist and agnostic. Looking up the main dictionaries isn't much help since the meanings are equally confused there. If you take the definitions to mean the following (from Oxford dictionary. Webster's are completely different):

      atheism:
        - noun the belief that God does not exist.

      agnosticism:
        - noun the belief that nothing can be known concerning the existence of God.

      then I think fewer people will define themselves as agnostics. But from my experience the most common understanding of those words is that an atheist is someone who "knows for sure" that there is no god, and an agnostic is someone who is not so sure, and in that case majority of us non-believers would call ourselves agnostics.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    37. Re:It's so very odd..... by somersault · · Score: 1

      Hmm fair enough, the article is slashdotted but I found another, and it seems they have passed this law on purpose, so I was wrong to assume based on the wording of the summary.

      [the old law required] that blasphemy be a criminal offence. However, no one ever bothered to formulate what the exact offence might be, and we muddled on for quite a long time without anyone worrying about this (perhaps, as a friend pointed out to me, because all blasphemous material was grabbed by the all-powerful censors long before it could ever get to court). In 1999, there was an attempt to prosecute a newspaper for a cartoon mocking the church, but the judge in that case noted that he could not prosecute, because there was no definition of what legally constituted blasphemy. Well now there is. And it concerns itself with what might or might not cause "outrage among a substantial number of the adherents of [a] religion" (note, not just Christianity, as was the case with English blasphemy law: this is, at least, equal opportunities idiocy).

      Still, I don't think people are going to stand for this law, and I still believe that it will be sorted out soon enough. Sounds like they are having another meeting in October in which they can sort the situation.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    38. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should you pick a side if you have no evidence either way and really don't think it matters?

    39. Re:It's so very odd..... by tmosley · · Score: 5, Funny

      I like my gods like I like my governments, non-sentient and bloodthirsty, with lots of terror driven followers.

      That's why I vote a straight Cthulhu ticket. That means voting for either Republicans or Democrats. After all, why pick the lesser of two evils?

    40. Re:It's so very odd..... by Kokuyo · · Score: 1

      I completely agree. My country lacks that insight, I'm afraid.

      On the other hand, while I am against the death penalty, I sometimes ask myself whether it wouldn't be a good idea anyway to just get rid of that kind of people once they do become violent.

      I don't much care if someone thinks I'm scum because of my skin colour, my belief system or whatever. Just as long as they accept that I have the same right to live in peace as they have they can think I'm raping and eating children as a hobby for all I care.

      The question, in my opinion, is thus: Can these people be educated once they have proven to be able and willing to inflict harm upon others?

    41. Re:It's so very odd..... by aamcf · · Score: 1

      FWIW, I'm in Ireland and the UK right now.

    42. Re:It's so very odd..... by sponglish · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Before Newton, if you wondered why the planets didn't crash into the sun, you have to say "I don't know." After Newton, you'd say "gravity." That period of time between question and answer is not a free-zone for introducing supernatural beings simply because we haven't figured out all the answers yet. In a million years, assuming science has failed to find the answers to the ultimate questions (Where did we come from? Why are we here? Where are we going?) it may be time to think seriously about a Creator as the last option, but let's give it some time first.

      --
      "I improvise. It's my greatest talent. I prefer situations to plans..." --Wintermute, William Gibson's "Neuromancer"
    43. Re:It's so very odd..... by PieSquared · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Honestly, the proper answer is that "atheism" doesn't mean "absolute certainty that god doesn't exist" as many religious people would have you believe.

      Personally, I think "I don't have any particular reason to believe that the universe requires a divine creator" plus "I don't see any actual evidence that a divine creator exists" is enough to qualify as atheism. I held the view that I was agnostic for a few months, and my actual views didn't change between then and when I started describing myself as an atheist. Since then I've become more certain, of course, as it became easier to look at the evidence provided by "new atheists" once I lumped myself into the "atheist" category. Almost any "atheist" would admit there's a *chance* that there's a creator deity, but they don't believe in one given no evidence that one *actually* exists.

      --
      Does a line appended to your comment give your post meaning in and of itself, or only in relation to those without?
    44. Re:It's so very odd..... by Michael+O-P · · Score: 1

      There are two kinds of people: those who think there are two kinds of people, and those who don't.

      --
      I'm Peggy.
    45. Re:It's so very odd..... by s0l1dsnak3123 · · Score: 1

      so true. Welcome to the real world as Orwell imagined it :|

    46. Re:It's so very odd..... by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      Most agnostics I know actually believe that it is likely that God or the Creator exists. What they are not sure of is the nature of God and God's relationship (if any) with Man. Is God good, bad, or indifferent?

      They are not agnostics though, they are religious.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    47. Re:It's so very odd..... by vmbsd · · Score: 1

      Exactly! The existence of God can neither be proved nor disproved. Anyone that claims otherwise.. better have some proof!

    48. Re:It's so very odd..... by Darkness404 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Do you mean to say you think it would be right for a bunch of cool kids to harass and belittle certain students on a daily basis and be protected under free speech? Would it be alright for them to make up suggestions of a defamatory nature about said student under your kind of free speech?

      It depends. On school grounds the school can effectively set its own rules regarding that because they are in the school. Very similar to how if I show up to Taco Bell and keep complaining that I can't get a Big Mac and their tacos are made with ground up worms, they could tell me to leave.

      If it was outside of school, there are plenty of ways to "block" people online and off. If they keep calling, you could file for harassment because your phone is being blocked whenever they call and thats not a free speech issue, its the fact that you are (or at least should) be able to use your phone how you want to.

      So if you think it's the kid's responsibility to not protect himself from psychological harm by physical force... then, pray tell, how is the kid supposed to protect himself against these odds? Answer me that and I'll concede the point.

      Again, most of these things take place at schools, and schools can basically regulate how they wish to conduct business inside school property.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    49. Re:It's so very odd..... by 10Ghz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So, do you think it's a good thing to "regulate" discussions about various subjects, including genocide and such? Why? Who is being harmed if some people have a discussion about how to carry out a genocide? People ARE harmed if those people start going around killing others, but merely discussing something should NOT be illegal.

      Hell, I have had some discussion with my friends that are about subject-matters that are illegal. Like, "how would you murder someone?". Discussing something like that should NOT be illegal, since no-one is harmed by such discussions. And no, just because we had such a discussion does not mean that we are about to kill someone.

      So you are glad to live in a country that tramples on free speech. Well, good luck with that. I on he other hand would much rather live in a country where speech is actually free. Words or thoughts do not harm anyone.

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    50. Re:It's so very odd..... by Kjella · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Bill implements an EU directive which brings Ireland into line with other EU member states.

      Meh, I recognize the bill. They're implementing it to the maximum extent possible, the minimum is six months which promises well for most of the other optional stuff. Many european countries are struggling with getting this bill through the national legal process.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    51. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said. I am a declared agnostic myself also. Currently there is no way to prove/disprove the existence of a given deity or deities. I do not discount the possibility that a given deity or deities could exist.

      However, the buck stops there and I do not let the possibility that they may exist have any conscious influence in my life.

    52. Re:It's so very odd..... by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      If you RTFA, you would discover that there does not appear to be any constituency in Ireland that particularly supports this law and that it is introduced because there is a clause in Ireland's Constitution requiring there to be laws against blasphemy. The Irish government doesn't want to go to the expense of running a referendum to amend the constitution to remove this clause (although they are quite willing to run a second referendum to try and get the Irish voters to support a stronger EU, since they voted it down the last time).

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    53. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      An atheist does not believe that god exists true
      An atheist believes that god does not exist false

      Thinking that a totally unsubstantiated claim is totally unbelievable does not require any faith. In fact, even religious people disbelieve all other religions. An atheist disbelieves all religions. It's not equivalent in any way to the religious position, and thinking otherwise is simply denoting naivete.

      Atheists do not believe. Stop saying otherwise, please!!!

    54. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Are you indecisive about ghosts, werewolves, vampires, witches, mole people, Santa Claus and Elvis Presley too? Sorry dude, some things are just so ridiculous that they don't even merit consideration for being real. "God" is one of those things.

    55. Re:It's so very odd..... by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      No, fraud can still be regulated. You are free to claim anything, but you must back them up. Contracts similarly should be free for anything, but you must not lie in them.

      A perhaps clearer way of looking at fraud is this: All contracts depend on "meeting of the minds", the understanding and agreement of both parties regarding the terms of the contract. If one party deliberately lies to the other in order to get their agreement then there can be no "meeting of the minds," ergo the contract was never valid in the first place. There is no "regulation" of fraud involved.

      False claims outside the domain of contracts are simply speech, and not a matter for the legal system. It is up to the listeners to demand evidence to back up questionable claims.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    56. Re:It's so very odd..... by bertramwooster · · Score: 1

      I think there is much confusion about the term agnostic. Since one cannot disprove the non-existence of any god, agnosticism is the most logical stance one can take. However, the fact that one is agnostic should mean that one is equally agnostic about Zeus, the christian or any other mainstream god, and (not to ignore the pastafarians) the FSM as there is little evidence to support any of them. I am, strictly speaking, agnostic, but for practical purposes, I'm an atheist.

    57. Re:It's so very odd..... by Dare+nMc · · Score: 1

      >Free speech for absolutely everything means "fighting words" that provoke another to attack.
      You attacked, you are the one to blame.

      So does that go one farther. IE I hire a defense company to train my dog to attack when I yell "kill." Officer pulls me over with the dog in the back of my truck. I yell kill out the window and the officer get taken out. Who is at fault? does my dog simply get put down for being aggressive, and I am free to train a new one? Is the training company negligent because they didn't train the dog to recognize authority, or because they set the trap? Or is the officer at fault for getting close without taking proper care?

    58. Re:It's so very odd..... by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Leonard Peikoff erred when he wrote

      He treats the arbitrary as on a par with the rational and evidentially supported.

      Because there is no evidence that actually disproves the existence of God. Neither is there proof God exists.
      In the absence of certain knowledge, leaving the question "does God exist?" unanswered is actually the most rational position. Insisting on a yes or no is for small minds who cannot live with uncertainty ;-)

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    59. Re:It's so very odd..... by Kenshin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Theres nothing wrong with that though. Now, if you actually -do- any of those things, yes it is wrong. But talking about it? No one gets hurt so therefore it should not be prohibited.

      AFAIK, in most places plotting murder or uttering death threats is a criminal offense.

      Words to not have the power to kill or otherwise (really) hurt someone.

      Absolute bullshit. There's a very old expression: The pen is mightier than the sword.

      Most wars/revolutions/coups/whatever are started by talkers, people who never even step into battle.

      All those idiots who strap on suicide belts are convinced to do it by someone very good with words.

      Charles Manson didn't actually kill anyone, but he convinced his followers into slaughter.

      --

      Does it make you happy you're so strange?

    60. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just because you declare yourself something does not make it so. In order to be in the athiest grouping you must believe at 98% that there is no god. To be any less sure puts you into the classification of agnostic. Its just a big old holding ground where people who are from 50% sure there isnt a god up to 98%. Thats a very large range and does includes people that are only 50% sure there is a god. Basically titles are bad. Very few are aware that darwin came up with a classification grid for it and of those who know about it only some follow it. Being agnostic just means you do not have enough facts on either side to properly conclude. Or like my father you just dont care.. life goes on either way

    61. Re:It's so very odd..... by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      'Agnostic' doesn't mean "I don't know whether to believe in the Christian god" (as your comment re: Zeus appears to imply). Agnosticism can mean either "I don't know whether there's a god or not" or "I believe it's unknowable whether there's a god or not".

      That's great, except that neither of those sentences answers the question "Do you believe in god". As such, you're NOT picking a side - you're just giving an answer to a question we didn't ask.

    62. Re:It's so very odd..... by BitZtream · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      In Ireland, the ACLU could go fuck itself.

      You go with what the majority wants, wether you in your US mentality think its right or not.

      Considering the ratio of strongly religious people to non-religious in Ireland, this law is not shocking in the least.

      I really don't see what your problem is, other than you are probably one of those jackasses that screams about being open minded and freedom of speech, yet you are unable to to accept that not everyone feels the way you do.

      So basically, the people in Ireland feel differently than you, and because they don't agree with you, you think of them as bible thumping idiots. How ironic is it that you call them names for doing the exactly the same thing you do, but on the other side of the fence.

      Stop being such a self absorbed twit and realize you're point of view isn't the only one that exists.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    63. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      My side is to maintain the separation of church and state, regardless of which "side" you want to stand on.

      I don't think agnosticism is "cowardly" or "irresolute" at all, and I resent the statement that it is. It strikes me as a far more scientific and reasoned stance than atheism, as a matter of fact. We can't DISPROVE the existence of a god or gods outside our realm of current knowledge (or measurement, for that matter), therefore saying it doesn't exist is as stupid as saying it does.

      Now the God of the Bible, or the Allah of the Qu'ran? Those two are pretty much bullshit strictly because the moment you statistically test for the "power of prayer" or any number of other places it's claimed they put their meddlesome fingers in the real world, you find it just doesn't happen. I disprove what I can about religion, but as for claims of beings outside the realm of our understanding or measurement? I can't honestly rule them out, and claiming that I can is dishonest to myself AND those around me.

      Calling agnostics "cowardly" because they insist on more proof before making a decision one way or the other is like accusing scientists of being "cowardly" because they insist on gathering evidence and results before deciding if a hypothesis is true or false. I agree with you that something has to be done about religious extremism before it takes everything over, but your opinion that those who sit logically in the middle can't fight for their right to sit in the middle without choosing a side is a False dilemma at best. At worst, it makes you just as bad as the religious fundies you're lashing out at.

      Can that bullshit. I may feel like I sit in the middle on the matter of the supernatural, but I sure as hell sit on the extreme side of demanding my personal freedoms to believe as much. At gunpoint, if necessary. "Pick a side and stand up for it", my ass. You've clearly missed the real issue if attacking agnostics is your way of solving it.

      Who the fuck modded your bullshit insightful?

    64. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      The point is that atheism is as much an act of faith as any theism.
      Agnosticism is refusing that act of faith.

      In that sense it is closer to pure rationalism than atheism.

      I've always had trouble with zealots of any camp. I actually put a distance from a friend who was a bit too committed to convert me to atheism, using the exact "Zeus" argument described above.

    65. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Im agnostic because I believe being so sure of anything that is so far behind one's self without any proof for or against is unreasonable. But that doesn't mean I want modern governments and academic institutions to be ruled by these religious fanatics, they need to be secular institutions. The debate isn't about plain old theism and plain old atheism, the debate is over whether or not these institutions should be secular. Someone who believes or does not believe in a god make no difference in this matter.

    66. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      I don't get it. There is no way to prove that god exists. Only lunatics think otherwise.
      That said, either you *believe* in god or you *don't*. If you don't believe in god then you are atheist. If you do believe in god then you are religious. There is no middle ground. Saying "we cannot prove etc etc"... is just stating the obvious. The question is:

      Given that god is undefinable and unknowable, and that its existence cannot be proven, do you believe in it?

    67. Re:It's so very odd..... by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      I disagree.

      I identify as agnostic for two reasons.

      1) a cowardly fear of getting grouped with the vocal asshole atheist zealots (they really annoy me, as who cares if someone else has a faith that guides their life in a reasonable way?)

      2) I don't see any reason that a Deist interpretation of God is in anyway offensive to my view of the universe. As it is unprovable either way, I find myself unable to take a strong stance on either side of the existence of a creator that put all of our laws of physics and all of the energy/matter into place.

      I don't feel that I am straddling the line between faith and reason, simply that I do not want to form an opinion that is untestable, and does not have an effect either way.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    68. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      Great troll :)

    69. Re:It's so very odd..... by Cyner · · Score: 1

      Planning genocide, well that's a touchy area. You are right that nobody is getting hurt... yet.

      Lying is a form of speach. You want both Free Speach and to regulate Lying; you contradict yourself.

      If you have to qualify what your saying with "really" you either don't mean it, or you realize there's something inherently wrong with what you're saying.

      --
      FreeBSD.org - The power to serve
    70. Re:It's so very odd..... by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      I think you are confused as to what atheism means. Atheism does NOT require any proof. Please read that again: Atheism does NOT require any proof. I, as an atheist, do not believe that a god (as in any supernatural being) exists in the same way as you do NOT believe that there is a silver tea pot in the orbit around Jupiter, even though you have no proof of it either. If we required a positive proof in order to disbelieve some proposition, we would be forced to believe any crazy idea that anybody came up with since it is impossible to prove the negative. Pink unicorns on Venus? Prove they don't exist! Flying Spaghetti Monster? Prove he doesn't exist! etc etc. That's what atheism means: the lack of belief in a certain proposition (that god exists), not an absolute certainty (which is impossible, but then that applies to pink unicorns as well) that that proposition is false.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    71. Re:It's so very odd..... by FourthAge · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Leonard Peikoff is retarded. He misrepresents agnosticism in two important ways.

      Error number 1. Both theism and atheism are faith based positions. There is no proof of the non-existence of God, ergo anyone who claims "There is no God" has made a leap of faith. You may argue that the non-existence of God is more likely than his existence, but that's not good enough.

      Error number 2. Agnosticism is a recognition that both atheism and theism require faith. It is not chosen for diplomatic reasons, it is chosen because it is the only position that does not require faith. I don't know, for 100% certain, that God does not exist. Hence, I am agnostic. Leonard Retard doesn't have 100% proof either, but he has faith, faith that he knows enough about the world to know, for sure, that God does/does not exist.

      Incidentally, it must be said the behaviour of religious people does not tell us anything about God. God might exist, but have nothing to do with any religion. You cannot use flaws in Islam or Christianity or Scientology to disprove God. Equally, the behaviour of those religious people is NOT a reason to be an atheist.

      --
      The tao of democracy: the government you can vote for is not the real government.
    72. Re:It's so very odd..... by macbeth66 · · Score: 1

      What an idiot. Peikoff obviously does not know the first thing about agnosticism. And I hate it when people quote some jack ass expert on a subject, who merely states an opinion without any supporting facts. Quoting people like this gives them unwarranted credibility.

      You can be an agnostic and be very spiritual. One is knowledge, the other is faith.

      Incredible crap out there.

    73. Re:It's so very odd..... by Old97 · · Score: 1

      Most agnostics I know actually believe that it is likely that God or the Creator exists. What they are not sure of is the nature of God and God's relationship (if any) with Man. Is God good, bad, or indifferent? They are not agnostics though, they are religious.

      If they were religious they would be certain that God exists. What makes them agnostic is the word "likely". Big difference.

      --
      Very often, people confuse simple with simplistic. The nuance is lost on most. - Clement Mok
    74. Re:It's so very odd..... by frosty_tsm · · Score: 1

      As an example, are you agnostic about Zeus, too?

      That word does not mean what you think it means. Hint: it's not that specific.

    75. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry dude, some things are just so ridiculous that they don't even merit consideration for being real. Relativity is one of those things.

      (Modified for fun and profits...)

      Well, then i seriously hope you're not leading or aspiring to lead a scientific career.

    76. Re:It's so very odd..... by HappySmileMan · · Score: 2, Informative

      My family background is Scots-Irish, so that means we got kicked out of two perfectly good countries (including, ironically, Ireland) because our particular brand of "Bible-thumping" wasn't compatible with what others believed in.

      Actually Ireland was part of Great Britain until 1922, so really it was British law kicking them out of both countries, when they left one they shouldn't have gone to somewhere else in Great Britain for that reason.
      The Irish weren't immune to this nor were they the ones carrying it out, in fact there were many priests imprisoned or executed for teaching catholicism (and the Irish language).

    77. Re:It's so very odd..... by MrMista_B · · Score: 1

      Atheism has as much to do with faith as not collecting stamps has to do with stamp-collecting.

    78. Re:It's so very odd..... by egomaniac · · Score: 1

      I'm curious. If we were discussing the existence of, say... leprechauns, would you be saying "Exactly! The existence of leprechauns can neither be proved nor disproved. Anyone that claims otherwise.. better have some proof!" Or <insert fictional entity here>? Do we have to have proof of them not existing too?

      I take issue with the "you can't prove he's not real!" argument. I agree, I can't prove that God doesn't exist. I also can't prove that leprechauns aren't real, or that Santa Claus wasn't really bringing me presents when I was little. Hell, I can't even prove that there aren't dinosaurs living in the middle of some unexplored jungle somewhere. But "you can't prove otherwise!" doesn't mean that the idea actually merits consideration.

      The correct -- and only sensible -- stance is to assume that such fantastic claims as God or leprechauns or Santa Claus are false. That doesn't mean you can't change your mind. Obviously if somebody in Ireland catches one of the little buggers, I'm perfectly prepared to adjust my default "leprechauns don't exist" stance. Likewise if there's a booming voice from the heavens telling us to start behaving or we'll go to hell, I'm willing to revisit the "God doesn't exist" theory. But in the complete absence of any evidence, claiming God exists is NO DIFFERENT than claiming any other fictional character exists. You don't give Harry Potter the benefit of the doubt and assume he might actually be real; you don't believe that dragons might once have really roamed the English countryside despite a lack of evidence. So why does God -- a fictional character far more unlikely than all of the rest put together -- merit such special consideration? Why is he the one character that you have to give the benefit of the doubt to?

      --
      ZFS: because love is never having to say fsck
    79. Re:It's so very odd..... by Snaller · · Score: 1

      Now explain what it means with your own words.
      Right. Didn't think you could.

      He's just another fool who doesn't under stand what agnostic means.

      (I'm neither)

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    80. Re:It's so very odd..... by Cornelius+the+Great · · Score: 1

      There's no cowardice in agnosticism. I don't really need to be certain of god's existence in one way or another to live my life. Nor should my goals be to protect my like-minded brethren. Live and let live- those who violate this tenet should be shown the door- atheists included. If someone wants to pass out bibles at a public school, or to start off a city hall meeting with a prayer, that's okay with me. You know why? I don't have a stick up my ass about God, Allah, Jesus, Jehovah, Buddah, Vishnu, or any other deity... none of them offend me. And as long as I'm free to practice my life without being required to go through the motions of worship, I don't require my neighbors to keep practice their religion in private.

      You're wrong about the need to take a stand. Just like I don't have to choose between voting for either major political party in America. I can simply opt out. It's not only my choice, it's my right. It's not that I won't take a stand or can't make up my mind- it's just that I really don't care. Believe in god? Don't care! Don't believe in god? Great, but don't care either!

      I suspect this relatively new evangelical movement in the US is only a direct counterbalance to zealous atheism. If one goes away, so will the other. So don't expect me to join your petty tug-o-war. It's pointless, and needlessly divisive.

      --
      Sigs are for losers
    81. Re:It's so very odd..... by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      You are confusing belief with certainty. Let me fix your sentence for you: If they were religious they would have faith that God exists. Neither of them are certain, one of them have faith, the other doesn't.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    82. Re:It's so very odd..... by greenbird · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I just want a country with laws that treats my beliefs with respect and dignity and not have to worry about people who label would me as a "Bible-Thumping idiot" attempting to take that right away from me.

      I want a country that doesn't treat your beliefs in any way, period, much less with respect and dignity. What makes you think your beliefs deserve respect and dignity? You think all religions should be treated with respect and dignity? Does that includes ones that advocate killing others that don't believe? Religious belief should be irrelevant with regards to the law not treated in some special manner.

      --
      Who is John Galt?
    83. Re:It's so very odd..... by FromellaSlob · · Score: 1

      the agnostic treats arbitrary claims as meriting cognitive consideration and epistemological respect. He treats the arbitrary as on a par with the rational and evidentially supported.

      Bullshit. Being Agnostic does not mean you treat all ideas as worthy of equal consideration. I'm agnostic, but readily acknowledge that every religion I have ever been exposed to is utter nonsense.

      The difference between an Agnostic and an Atheist is that the Agnostic remains open to new ideas, whilst the Atheist treats the absence of evidence to support the existence of any sort of God / supernatural power as proof of the opposite. The problem is, lack of proof does not equate to proof of absence. I'll readily concede that there is plenty enough evidence to discredit the fairy-tales told by the major religions, but beyond that you're into the unknown.

    84. Re:It's so very odd..... by Medgur · · Score: 1

      Atheism is an act of faith as well. There's simply no way to test the veracity of the continuance of consciousness after death or the existence of meaning in the development of our universe. Or the lack thereof. There very well could be that my qualia is an expression of a force that I cannot test for. But it's totally inconsequential and meaningless to consider that without a meaningful way to observe its existence. But saying there -isn't- is kind of like kind of like the 18th century belief that atoms were indivisible.

    85. Re:It's so very odd..... by Maddog+Batty · · Score: 1

      There is no way to prove that god exists.

      There is also no way to prove that god doesn't exist.

      Most people believe the above two statements.

      If you believe that god exists then you are religious (despite the fact that it can't be proved)

      If you believe that god doesn't exist then you are an atheist (despite the fact that it can't be proved)

      If you are not sure whether or not god exists (because it can't be proved either way) then you are an agnostic.

      Most people actually agree that they are agnostic when they actually think about it.

      I count myself as an agnostic who thinks it is very unlikely that god exists. Close to being an atheist sure, but there is still the possibility that there is a greater being out there. A very small possibility in my view but I can't discount it. That makes me an agnostic.

      --
      wot no sig
    86. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerryLove · · Score: 1, Informative

      The terms confused me for a long time, but the dictionaries are pretty consistent.

      An Agnostic doesn't believe in God.
      An Atheist believes in a lack of a God.

      This puts the Atheist in the same boat as the theist: with a belief that lacks any evidence.

      But most people who say they are Atheist are actually Agnostic and are just not using the standard English definitions.

    87. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerkBoB · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't think you know either. So I call on you, stop pretending you're omniscient: admit you're not atheist, but rather agnostic.

      Strictly speaking, I think you will be hard-pressed to find very many so-called atheists who truly believe (i.e. have faith) that there is no God (in the judeo-christian sense or otherwise) or gods. Throwing this out as an argument against calling oneself Atheist is an exercise in pedantry.

      I am an Atheist. Do I pretend to have iron-clad proof of the non-existence of God or gods? No. I do live my life as though it is true, however. Practically speaking, it might as well be true. It does not trouble me to assume that there is no God any more than it does to assume that there is no invisible pink unicorn standing behind me, judging my soul as I type this. It is illogical to assume otherwise! Once one opens the door to the possibility of one supernatural being, the only logical progression is that ALL beliefs based on the supernatural must potentially be true. And that's an express train to crazytown.

      I used to share your discomfort with the concept of atheism vs. agnosticism... As I grew older, though, I began to see that agnosticism was a much less useful state of being. If one is truly agnostic, then one ought to feel compelled to give equal weight to all systems of knowing. I believe that accepting a personal state of functional atheism requires more up-front intellectual honesty, but in the long run produces much less cognitive dissonance.

      WTF is up with the commenting system lately? All my paragraphs are smushed together, even though each is correctly bracketed within <p>tags</p>...

      --
      A host is a host from coast to coast...
      Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
    88. Re:It's so very odd..... by pjabardo · · Score: 1

      There is no proof that relativity or quantum mechanics is correct but most evidence suggests that they are correct. I wouldn't consider arrogant anyone who believes that relativity and quantum mechanics explain most phenomena in the universe.

      Of course lack of evidence is not the same as evidence of lack but if a thorough search was done, lack of evidence certainly strongly suggests evindence of lack.

      Agnosticism puts religion (or at least an abstract form of it) in the same level as science and that is a very foolish thing since religion asserts a truth and science is one method that can be used to arrive at the truth with a conserable degree of confidence.

      On the other hand saying that the question is not answerable in any rational way simply shows that *you* (or me or anyone that I know of) can not do it. In the future, who knows. Proving negatives is not impossible, it is simply much more difficult.

    89. Re:It's so very odd..... by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A belief in god does not make you "religious". Religion is the only thing that makes you religious.

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    90. Re:It's so very odd..... by gentlemen_loser · · Score: 1

      Its called "growing up". I was that kid in elementary school and junior high. By high school, you learn how stuff works and have ways of dealing with it. Regardless of that, schools have rules about harassing other students. Enforce those and stop trying to change a country's fundamental laws by invoking the "think of the children" clause.

      Frankly, I am grateful to have had those experiences. Those same assholes from the playground exist in the workforce, bars, movie theaters, and just about anywhere you could go. Now I know how to recognize and deal with them.

    91. Re:It's so very odd..... by Nursie · · Score: 1

      "I don't think you know either. So I call on you, stop pretending you're omniscient: admit you're not atheist, but rather agnostic."

      The two are in no way incompatible.

      I don't have evidence, therefore I am agnostic.
      As a result I don't have belief in a deity and I don't follow a religion, I am atheist.

      So I call on you, stop pretending you occupy some hallowed, reasonable middle ground that nobody else occupies: admit you ARE an atheist.

    92. Re:It's so very odd..... by Kokuyo · · Score: 1

      And we all know teachers are at least as scared of bullies as nerds are. Heck, most of them are nerds themselves.

      So schools seldom protect the underdogs. What now?

      See, on principle, you're absolutely right. Problem is, it just doesn't quite work like that in real life.

      And in an ideal world, we wouldn't even be forced to have this discussion, eh?

    93. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I defy you to demonstrate the validity of reason without using reason.
      Accepting reason requires accepting it as trivially true, as a tautology; faith in a higher being can similarly be accepted.

      The agnostic realizes that what's "proved" isn't necessarily proved at all, and formally accepts that.

    94. Re:It's so very odd..... by QuoteMstr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Both I and Richard Dawkins would describe ourselves as "tooth fairy agnostics" -- as in, the evidence for God is so conspicuously absent and evidence against such a being is so strong that God's existence is as likely as the tooth fairy. Therefore, it's not worthwhile considering the possibility of the almighty in our daily actions. The distinction between "God doesn't exist" and "God is so unlikely to exist that the possibility isn't worth considering" is academic and pointless, and fighting about it ignores our common cause against the involvement of magical thinking in public life.

    95. Re:It's so very odd..... by scotl89 · · Score: 1

      Agnosticism *is* the reasoned position, in that it grows out of the acceptance that, no matter how overwhelming the evidence, there is no such thing as "proven" and "unproven." No one "disproved" the Earth's position in the center of the solar system; instead, someone showed very strong negative evidence against it, as well as positive evidence in support of another theory. The agnostic, the reasoned human being, must accept the possibility, no matter how minute, that the Earth does in fact lie at the center of the solar system. The agnostic could hold a reasoned position such as "given the data, the chances of the Earth being at the center of the solar system are incredibly slim, and in fact it appears that the sun occupies that position." To speak of a theory's accuracy in dichotomous terms, and to then pick a side, is to reject entirely a possibility that has not been shown to be incorrect, just unlikely. The idea of a creative god might seem like a long shot, and no positive evidence exists to argue for it, but one cannot entirely discount it. One can only speak of its unlikelihood; that is, one can only be an agnostic.

    96. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerryLove · · Score: 1

      We need the freedom to hold and advocate any opinion or position.

      But then, that's what I mean when I say "free speech"

      There are some thinking that means you can should "fire" in a crowded theater. That would only be appropriate if it was your opinion that there was one. Otherwise you are committing fraud (lying to effect): more an "action" than a "speech", even if it is spoken.

    97. Re:It's so very odd..... by corbettw · · Score: 1

      Theres nothing wrong with that though. Now, if you actually -do- any of those things, yes it is wrong. But talking about it? No one gets hurt so therefore it should not be prohibited.

      Although if you do go through with it, there should be additional penalties for taking the time to plan it out with others. Conspiracy and all that.

      Contracts similarly should be free for anything

      Anything legal, that is. We can't let the courts be used to enforce illegal behavior, that would be schizophrenic to say the least.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    98. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm, how about those of us who aren't agnostic OR atheist?

      Some of us just don't give a shit about religion, period.

    99. Re:It's so very odd..... by Awful+Truth · · Score: 1

      This is a sad feature of modern atheism; they tend to view the debate as a contest one side or the other will win. In that regard, they resemble no group so much as the evangelicals they love to mock. Face it, atheists, atheism is a religion, with crap for holidays. How else can one be so certain about the fundamental nature of the universe. Let's remember that humanity has only had agriculture for 10,000 or so years, written language for 5,000, and a real acceptance of scientific method for 200 or so years. We're supposed to know for sure whether or not there's a god/gods?

    100. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      'Agnostic' doesn't mean "I don't know whether to believe in the Christian god" (as your comment re: Zeus appears to imply). Agnosticism can mean either "I don't know whether there's a god or not" or "I believe it's unknowable whether there's a god or not".

      Either way, guess what: nobody cares. Your distinction has zero practical relevance.

      Not having heard any reasonable theory of the origin of the stuff in the universe, the space-time in which it sits, and the physical laws governing that stuff, I don't know where it comes from. I find it equally hard to believe that some entity outside of the bounds of physical laws created it or that it has no origin.

      I find it equally hard to believe you've actually looked for such a theory. Call it experience, call it a hunch.

    101. Re:It's so very odd..... by anagama · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't know what you mean by "no evidence either way". I think the many thousands of years that have passed without actual miracles (I don't equate the improbable with the miraculous) indicates something. Plus, there are thousands of years to demonstrate that hard labor, research, trial and error, or other human efforts are capable of producing some pretty amazing feats -- pyramids to particle accelerators.

      At this point in time, it is completely reasonable to expect the religious people to demonstrate at least some proof that their god can do cool shit, and I don't mean some half-assed convoluted interpretation of natural processes or something like that. I mean something like water to wine in a controlled environment -- something that would win the James Randi prize. Raise the dead. Lift a mountain.

      What I do see is that humans using their brains have done amazing stuff. Humans' gods however, never do squat, and while I realize proving a negative isn't possible, at some point you don't expect it can be proven. I'm not holding my breath to get a visit from Santa, and I'm not holding my breath any gods will ever do anything. I feel confident neither exist because of the complete lack of their influence on the world (I don't count the effects put in motion by people, which are mostly bad anyway). Obviously, if confronted with actual evidence to the contrary, I'd change my mind in a heartbeat.

      What is silly though, is discounting the towering evidence against the existence of gods so that somehow, the evidence that they do exist is considered equally weighty. To put this in a car analogy, religionists are like a car manufacturer who claims their car is the fastest in the world, except that every expert who has test driven the car hasn't been able to get it to go faster than a Geo Metro in any kind of driving conditions no matter how skillfully it is driven. Most people are going to think the car manufacturer's claims are bunk at that point. With religion though, we get excuses. Maybe in a particular set of circumstances with the right number of believers exerting psychic powers on the car, it would be fast. Nobody is going to buy that as valid tech spec. They do with religion though. It's crazy.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    102. Re:It's so very odd..... by Jumperalex · · Score: 2, Informative

      Its funny this is coming up now as I was recently thiking along these lines recently.

      I am PHILOSOPHICALLY agnostic because I do believe that it is unknowable / there is little chance we will ever prove one way or the other. In fact I feel that it is just as arrogant to say there IS NO god as it is to say there IS a god.

      I am IN PRACTICE an Athiest because I choose to blieve there is/are no supreme being(s). I also believe that even if there is some form of a creator, diety, etc that I have no need to worship them and that they have no concern with how I actually live my day to day life. It is almost the Stargate maxim that any "higher being" / creator is simply one that is more evolved and not neccesarily worthy of worship.

      A person could just as easily reason like an agnostic but choose to believe that there is in fact some diety out there. I don't see any inherent hypocricy in that situation.

      --
      If you can't be good, be good at it!
    103. Re:It's so very odd..... by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      You go with what the majority wants, whether you in your US mentality think its right or not.

      In civilized countries (for once a very appropriate term) majority doesn't get to tyrannize the minority. That's what having rule of law is all about.

      Stop being such a self absorbed twit and realize you're point of view isn't the only one that exists.

      Says a self absorbed twit who supports the law which puts people in jail for expressing their point of view.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    104. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerryLove · · Score: 1

      I think that we can remove the "trumped by other rights" quandary by revising our definition of "speech".

      If speech is the right to hold and promote an idea or belief, and I think that's what we are all wanting to protect, then clearly shouting "fire" wouldn't pass muster as protected. It would protect "fraud is good" (an idea) while allowing the prohibition of fraud (an action).

    105. Re:It's so very odd..... by Me!+Me!+42 · · Score: 1

      Treating your beliefs with dignity and respect would be too much. What makes your beliefs so precious?
      Perhaps you beliefs include child molestation or racism? Perhaps you are a moron or crazy?
      How about we just treat you with a measure of respect and dignity but completely and totally ignore your beliefs. You keep them out of our faces and we'll leave you alone so long as you don't hurt anyone.
      That should be good enough for everyone -- even "Bible thumping idiots."

      --
      -- My apologies if the above facts contain any opinions, or vice versa! --
    106. Re:It's so very odd..... by Nursie · · Score: 1

      "The difference between an Agnostic and an Atheist is that the Agnostic remains open to new ideas"

      Way to talk yourself up there agnostic guy! Atheists are all closed minded bigots! Unlike us agnostics!

      You're an atheist. You don't have any religion, you don't actually believe in god, you just don't rule one out. Welcom,e to the club, you're an atheist, now lose the conceited attitude.

    107. Re:It's so very odd..... by ahankinson · · Score: 1

      As many others have pointed out, you cannot absolutely prove that God does not exist, therefore you need to make a 'reasonable assumption' about the nature of the universe in order to arrive at atheism. That 'reasonable assumption' for atheists is also called 'faith' for theists. Taking an absolute stand on theism OR atheism requires that you take as much evidence as there is into account, and then assume the rest.

    108. Re:It's so very odd..... by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 1

      From your post, I'd guess that you might describe yourself as "deist", if you were familiar with the term. It is distinct from "theist", and somewhat overlaps "atheist", in that it is a rejection of all of the theisms. In fact, deism is condemned as vehemently as atheism by the major theist doctrines. However, it is a definite intellectual position, unlike the confused non-stance of the agnostic. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deist

      --
      Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    109. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't get frustrated, look on the bright side. England prevails.

    110. Re:It's so very odd..... by Nursie · · Score: 1

      How much does whatever you're smoking cost by the gram?

      I'd kill (ok, not really) to live in a place where mystical, irrational thinking didn't affect my life.

    111. Re:It's so very odd..... by ChadM · · Score: 1

      I totally disagree with the parent. Theism/Atheism is having faith in the existence OR non-existence of a god (not necessarily a Christian god). Agnosticism is the lack of faith either way, which sounds quite reasonable to me as nobody has actually provided proof one way or the other, at least as far as I'm concerned. Why is it so difficult for some people to admit they they do NOT have the answer to a long standing question?

      Also, it's a shame about Ireland. I may have to rethink ever visiting.

    112. Re:It's so very odd..... by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Both theism and atheism are faith based positions.

      Atheism is a faith based position as much as not collecting stamps is a hobby. Simply not believing in a god doesn't require faith. It is just refusing to believe in something for which there is no evidence.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    113. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're against libel laws?

    114. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      Peikoff obviously does not know the first thing about agnosticism.

      groan

    115. Re:It's so very odd..... by Brain-Fu · · Score: 1

      I don't get it. It is actually quite simple, and it is not a matter of taking a middle ground.

      The key point you seem to be missing is this: "failing to believe" something is not the same thing as "postulating its falseness."

      1) An agnostic does not state that God exists.
      2) An agnostic also does not state that God does not exist.
      Therefore: An agnostic does not "believe" either position.

      The reason for this disbelief is so simple that it is sometimes hard to understand: there is no evidence either way. Neither position can be demonstrated by rational means, and therefore neither position will be held.

      That is all there is to it. There is no need to add more to it with arbitrary rules like "you can't not believe in the non-existence of God if you already don't believe in the existence of God."

      It is also true that many agnostics behave as atheists. They would justify this on the principle of Ockham's razor. Since God's existence cannot be verified or falsified by rational means, then the agnostic will not assume God's existence, as that would be a needless multiplication of entities. The agnostic also does not dis-assume God's existence, however. The agnostic simply doesn't consider God to be a relevant input into any of his decisions (whether he exists or not).

      So this is the simplest of all positions to take. It involves no commitment to an unsupportable stance, and it adds no complexity to any important decisions.

      It is only when you try to present the rejection of both statements as mutually-exclusive (which they are not) that you introduce needless complexity, and confuse yourself.

    116. Re:It's so very odd..... by FromellaSlob · · Score: 1

      You don't have any religion, you don't actually believe in god, you just don't rule one out.

      Yep, and that bit I highlighted in bold is what makes me an agnostic rather than an Atheist. If that's your position too, then so are you, whatever you call yourself.

    117. Re:It's so very odd..... by Me!+Me!+42 · · Score: 1

      There are two kinds of people: those who think there are two kinds of people, and those who don't.

      I totally agree with your observation, but not with either of those two people!

      --
      -- My apologies if the above facts contain any opinions, or vice versa! --
    118. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerkBoB · · Score: 1

      Atheism has as much to do with faith as not collecting stamps has to do with stamp-collecting.

      Wow, man... That is .sig-quality. I won't steal it, but I will remember it. Thanks! :)

      --
      A host is a host from coast to coast...
      Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
    119. Re:It's so very odd..... by mea37 · · Score: 1

      Actually, the picture of an agnostic as an atheist who "just isn't so sure" is merely a charicature used by atheists to slander the agnostic position, as has been repeatedly demonstrated in this thread.

    120. Re:It's so very odd..... by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      You're an atheist. You don't have any religion, you don't actually believe in god, you just don't rule one out.

      An atheist is someone who does not believe in the possibility of a god. Not someone who does not have a religion. By not ruling out the possibility of a god, the person is not an atheist.

    121. Re:It's so very odd..... by Lurker2288 · · Score: 1

      You don't have a problem with Bibles in public school or prayer in town hall because we live in a country where we are for the most part protected from the worst excesses of religious belief intertwined with governmental authority. You don't need to look too far to see what can happen when such protections don't exist: contemporary examples can be found in any country where theocratic law justifies honor killing, or where homosexuality is outlawed as evil. Or think back to the times of the Inquisition, or various state-sponsored religious massacres.

      This is why some of us 'have a bug up our asses' about religion in government. Why should the superstitions of ANY group be allowed as justification to take away or constrain the rights of others?

    122. Re:It's so very odd..... by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      And we all know teachers are at least as scared of bullies as nerds are. Heck, most of them are nerds themselves.

      Depends on the age though. I saw much, much more bulling in elementary and middle school than ever in high school. I wouldn't think that a teacher would have much of a problem dealing with a 9 year old. For older grade levels, I didn't see that there was that much of bullying going on, at least during school.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    123. Re:It's so very odd..... by AsmordeanX · · Score: 1

      Kudos to the mod that labeled this "Funny".

    124. Re:It's so very odd..... by The_Duck271 · · Score: 1

      In a world with no evidence for divine beings, taking a position that considers the presence and absence of divine beings equally likely is "[treating] the arbitrary as on a par with the rational." In a world without evidence for monsters under your bed, the rational position is to believe that no such monsters exist. It is not rational to be "agnostic" about monsters under your bed, even though no amount of evidence will conclusive disprove their existence.

    125. Re:It's so very odd..... by dyingtolive · · Score: 1

      You guys are reminding me of the South Park episode where people of the future are having the holy war over what atheists should call themselves. Does it matter what you call yourself or what -ism your particular belief set falls into?

      --
      Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
    126. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK. Then show me evidence. To make it short, show me only the *best* evidence for an intelligent creator.

      So far, I have seen none. But with really good, indisputable evidence, I might be convinced...

    127. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All I said was "that piece of halibut was good enough for Jahobah"

    128. Re:It's so very odd..... by lenester · · Score: 3, Informative

      "I believe it's unknowable whether there's a god or not"

      This is the proper definition, as put forth by...

      The one thing in which most of these good people were agreed was the one thing in which I differed from them. They were quite sure they had attained a certain "gnosis" — had, more or less successfully, solved the problem of existence; while I was quite sure I had not, and had a pretty strong conviction that the problem was insoluble.

      - Thomas Huxley. Y'know, the guy who invented the fucking word. ;)

    129. Re:It's so very odd..... by thebheffect · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what you don't get. I believe there *may* be a 'god'. I also believe there *may not* be a 'god'. Sometimes the answer, "I don't know", is the most rational. Until I see proof that god exists/doesn't exist, I will remain rational, and say "I don't know". If that takes forever, so be it.

      Who knows, maybe Jesus descends from Heaven on a walkway of light, or the skies rip apart and show us Marduk battling Tiamat. Lacking the ability to define or know god *now* doesn't prove we will always lack that ability. Maybe we will find out when you die. Maybe we won't. I don't know.

    130. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it equally hard to believe you're not a sanctimonious dick. Call it experience, call it a hunch.

    131. Re:It's so very odd..... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      So why does God -- a fictional character far more unlikely than all of the rest put together -- merit such special consideration?

      A numerous, vociferous, and occasionally ferocious fan club?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    132. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      Whatever. I'm not the one who's writing laws telling you what you can and cannot say.

    133. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      So in other words, we are all blissfully unaware of whether or not our universe has a rootkit.

    134. Re:It's so very odd..... by FromellaSlob · · Score: 1

      It is not required for you to give a shit. You either believe there is a God, believe there is no God, or don't know. Therefore you are either a believer, an atheist or an agnostic.

    135. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For many atheists, it's because they have had very negative experiences with religion (or more specifically religious followers) and feel that religion must be combated and that there can be no middle ground. In a small way, they have become like what they despise.

    136. Re:It's so very odd..... by Yogiz · · Score: 1

      You don't need proof to believe and that's what atheism is. Believing that god does not exist. Agnosticism has become a tainted term. A lot of people seem to understand that it is something standing half way in between believing in god and atheism. Like there's a fifty-fifty chance of god existing. Most people who consider themselves agnostics that I know are more like 99.9998% atheists and 0.0002% theists. Since too many people don't seem to understand the difference, perhaps it's just easier to round a bit and consider yourself an atheist.

      Yeah, there's a possibility that god exists. It's about as probable as the existence of an orange green-spotted 225kg platypus who floats somewhere between Mars and Jupiter and eats small black holes for breakfast but that doesn't mean it doesn't exist. Not too damn likely however.

    137. Re:It's so very odd..... by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There is only proof that god didn't do X.

      Allow me to point out that the list of "things that don't require a god to explain" has been growing monotonically since we've been keeping records. The total has never gone down - nothing has ever moved from the "explained without gods" to the "explained with gods" column.

      (Oh, and something else to consider.)

      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    138. Re:It's so very odd..... by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      Given that god is undefinable and unknowable, and that its existence cannot be proven, do you believe in it?

      I do not believe that humans have the ability to make that call.

    139. Re:It's so very odd..... by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

      [In a world without evidence for monsters under your bed, the rational position is to believe that no such monsters exist.]

      Well, *there's* your problem right there!

      In a turkey's world without evidence for personal decapitation on Thanksgiving, the rational position is to believe that personal decapitation on Thanksgiving never happens.

      Black swan events do happen. Monsters like politicians, lawyers, et. al. have been known to hide under beds. Unless you look, you don't know, and you never know about next time with certainty.

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    140. Re:It's so very odd..... by GreatBunzinni · · Score: 1

      Nothing happens because of science. Science is nothing more than a systematic method of finding out why stuff happens and how they happen. Knowing exactly why something works does not in any way put in question the existence and influence of a superior being.

      Also, do not confuse religion with the existence of a superior being. More precisely, do not confuse the lack of religion with the lack of belief that there is no superior being. Organized religion is nothing more than a form of social organization that managed to get people to associate themselves with it and managed to gain enough power and influence to force their associates to follow orders and rules dictated by the organization's upper structures. That means that not following a religion does not in any way put in question the existence of a superior being. It only jeopardizes the ability of those social structures to have power over people and have influence over society.

      So please don't confuse things. Believing in science doesn't mean you don't believe in a superior being and believing in a superior being doesn't mean you should disdain science. The only effect that the scientific method may have on religion is when someone proves without a doubt that some crap that some illuminated guy from an organized religion has been shoveling onto their followers is bulk. And that isn't a problem related to scientific method nor the existence of a superior being. The problem is that clueless people have been trying to use the existence of a superior being to contrived lies made up by them to be able to control the population.

      --
      Slashdot, fix your code or at least hire someone who is competent at it to do it for you.
    141. Re:It's so very odd..... by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm a militant agnostic: I don't know, and you don't know either!

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    142. Re:It's so very odd..... by Snaller · · Score: 1

      "Ummm, in the US, hate speech IS protected speech."

      Of course - they don't want you to destroy evidence!

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    143. Re:It's so very odd..... by x_IamSpartacus_x · · Score: 1

      Can you seriously not understand the differences in the responses

      Atheist: No
      Theist: Yes
      Agnostic: I cannot know

      To get mad the agnostic for not answering "yes" or "no" is just as stupid at getting mad at the guy who doesn't respond with a simple "yes" or "no" to the question: "Have you stopped beating your wife?"

    144. Re:It's so very odd..... by gnick · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This puts the Atheist in the same boat as the theist: with a belief that lacks any evidence.

      You're right, but I see the situation a little differently:

      Pretend you're sitting in a room with a small box. A friend walks in and asks, "So, is there a basilisk in that box?"

      An atheist says, "I believe that there is no basilisk in that box. If there was, he probably would have made some kind of noise or tried to get out. But the box has been completely silent the whole time I've been sitting here. Come to think of it, I've never seen a basilisk. Based on the fact that I have no evidence that gives me any reason to assume there's a basilisk in there, I believe that there is not one. A few people have remarked that some never-before-seen critter may be in there, but I don't think they based that on anything observable and a lot of them acted kind of nuts. So, even though I may be wrong, I believe that there is no basilisk."

      An agnostic says, "I'm afraid that I haven't opened the box and don't have a key. There's no way for me to know whether there's a basilisk inside it or not. Since I can't say for certain what, if anything, is in the box I can't commit as the the potential of it containing a basilisk. Somebody did speculate that there may be a basilisk in there. Somebody else said there may be a griffin. Somebody else said that there may be a cat, a vial of poison, an unstable element, and a Geiger counter. But, since the box is locked, silent, and hasn't budged since it was first found, your guess is as good as mine."

      Just an off-the-cuff analogy to try to get across my thought train. Feel free to offer a better one.

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    145. Re:It's so very odd..... by krondell · · Score: 1

      Gnick, I don't think you and the GP are that far apart in your thinking. I think most rational, scientifically minded people will agree that the idea of bearded, robed, man-like god sitting on cloud with a sheppard's staff watching us is silly. I suspect that there are no gods. I find it highly unlikely that there is a god or gods. But I still don't know. To me agostism implies openness mindness in admitted ignorance, whereas strict atheism requires an unfounded sureness or confidence similar to strong faith in a deity.

    146. Re:It's so very odd..... by Me!+Me!+42 · · Score: 1

      And why was my first post lost and my second one delayed 15 minutes?

      --
      -- My apologies if the above facts contain any opinions, or vice versa! --
    147. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the religious fanatic says, "Somebody thousands of years ago said that there were magical tablets in there with instructions for us. Looking inside would be showing a lack of faith and would break the rules. We typically jail or stone the people who look inside and try to tell us it's empty."

    148. Re:It's so very odd..... by lenkyl · · Score: 1

      how about apatheism? i don't care if there's a god or not since i won't find out for sure till i die there's no point in even worrying about which one of the hundreds of religions if any is correct. perhaps there are more side to this than you realize or are willing to admit.

    149. Re:It's so very odd..... by retchdog · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Bullshit. The Oxford English Dictionary (which is the last word in these matters) gives "atheist" as: 1. One who denies or disbelieves the existence of a God; 2. One who practically denies the existence of a God by disregard of moral obligation to Him...

      (added emphasis mine)

      That is, although I acknowledge the lack of evidence, I am nonetheless an atheist because I live my life as though there is no god.

      What you call "atheism", is somewhat more accurately described as "antitheism". Further, most of those who call themselves "agnostic" today are actually atheists. I would go further and say that most nominally-religious people are actually agnostic; you don't need to scratch very deep to find their doubts...

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    150. Re:It's so very odd..... by jnaujok · · Score: 1, Troll

      Except, if you RTFA, you'd find out that the Conservative parties are the ones who voted against the law, while the liberal, tree-huggers (Green Party) are the ones who voted for it.

      Of course, that was after they defined Blasphemy as not having "artistic, social, or Academic Merit."

      So, now they can actually claim that anything that goes against the "scientific consensus" view is Blasphemy and fine you E25,000. Takes care of that whole "global warming isn't happening" debate.

      In the meantime, putting crucifixes in bottles of urine or dumping elephant dung on the Virgin Mary are both obviously steeped in artistic merit, so that's fine.

      All Ireland has done is swap one set of religious zealots for a different set.

      --
      Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
    151. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      leonard seems like a dickhead to me. agnosticism is strictly the belief that the knowledge of whether there exists a god or gods is unattainable. this guy talks big about shit he doesn't understand. bravo.

    152. Re:It's so very odd..... by Creepy · · Score: 1

      Having lived in the University of Minnesota Duluth tunnel system for two years (before transferring) where there is no need to go outside, ever, I can assure you that mole people do in fact exist. As for the rest of those, they're a bunch of hooey.

    153. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I just don't care if there's a god.

      I'm pretty sure that makes me atheistic, not agnostic. Also possibly blasphemous, so maybe I shouldn't visit Ireland any time soon.

    154. Re:It's so very odd..... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      The main problem with this analogy is that it's dealing with something that is observable and understandable by humans: a box. This is something that you can, even if you can't open it, still gather evidence from, by shaking it, weighing it, listening for noise or motion inside, smelling for the scent of a dead basilisk (whatever a basilisk is), etc.

      When dealing with the question of a god, we're talking about something that's really not observable and understandable by humans, by definition. We don't even know for sure if there's an afterlife, if there are other "planes of existence", if it's possible to be a "ascended being" (from Stargate) or an energy being, if ghosts are real, etc. We only know for sure our own living corporeal existence, and compare everything to that. So the idea that we can observe or test for the existence of a god seems rather ridiculous to me. The only "evidence" we have is really just anecdotal evidence from various people, living and dead, with really nothing to determine if what they saw or experienced was real or hallucination or outright lies, just like our "evidence" of UFOs. It's not rational to draw any conclusions from that.

    155. Re:It's so very odd..... by fluppy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This puts the Atheist in the same boat as the theist: with a belief that lacks any evidence.

      ahem.
      a- = without
      theism = belief in a deity
      atheism = without belief in a deity

      Agnosticism and atheism aren't mutually exclusive. You can be an agnostic atheist (i.e. you don't believe in any god and you claim there is no way to know this for fact) or you can be a gnostic atheist (i.e. you don't believe any god and you claim to know this as fact). Most atheists are agnostic atheists.

    156. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Look. Nothing can be proven with 100% certainty. Socrates discussed that 2000 years ago, and got over it =)
      Going down that route shows a lack of good arguments on your side. There is no proof that Santa Claus does not exist -- does this make him believable? Clearly not. Is that question even worth the attention? Nope.

      As I was saying in another post: Atheists DO NOT believe in god. This does not require faith.

      You incorrectly stated that "If you believe that god doesn't exist then you are an atheist". This is a straw man. I don't believe -- I never "started" believing. I had no reason to. I don't have a "faith" in the non-existence of god, exaclty in the same way that I don't have a "faith" in the non-existence of the great glaglaglagla of bbbbbdddz.

      Agnostics that make points like yours are just nitty-picking on really feeble arguments. After all, knowing anything requires accepting a risk of being wrong. That said, calling one thing that has 99.9999999999999% probability of being false, "false" is perfectly normal and rational. Calling it "unknown" is ridiculous.

    157. Re:It's so very odd..... by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Yep, and that bit I highlighted in bold is what makes me an agnostic rather than an Atheist

      It makes you both. They are not the incompatible positions that you claim they are.

      You have no knowledge - you are a-gnostic.
      So therefore you have no actual belief - you are a-theist.

      Do you honestly think all the millions of people across the world that describe themselves as atheist have decided that even if there was evidence of a deity found they wouldn't believe it? That they've decided that they *know* and have confirmation that there is no god? That it's not the simple lack of any evidence that allows them to discard the myriad of religions and their fantastic claims?

      You're further up your own superior butthole than I thought.

    158. Re:It's so very odd..... by sorak · · Score: 1

      Agnosticism is a stand against arrogance and self-delusion and for rationality. Not only do we not know, but the question is simply not answerable in any rational way.

      But we do answer the question in how we live our lives. We can choose whether to work on Saturdays or Sundays, and whether to follow dietary guidelines, or to perform sacrificial offerings to the Roman Gods (and to the god of the old Testament, just in case they were only until they stopped making animal sacrifices).

      So is it rational to be agnostic in regards to unicorns, fairies, Roman mythology, or the existence of Santa Clause? You can avoid ever making an incorrect assertion, if you answer every question by saying "I don't know", but is it really "rational" to apply this level of ambiguity to every aspect of your life?

      If you assume omniscient, omnipotent superbeings, all bets are off. They/It can make us believe anything. You can't know that any of your beliefs are certain and/or yours.

      This is known as universal skepticism. How do we know that we aren't living in the Matrix? how do we know that food won't kill us, but poison will? In the face of uncertainty, do we forget everything we ever knew and give up on any possibility of ever learning or knowing anything, or do we take a chance on being wrong, and try to learn from our experiences?

      If there are no omniscient, omnipotent superbeings, you can't absolutely prove the negative, you can only accumulate increasing amounts of evidence.

      And this is exactly why atheists often argue that the burden of proof must lie on the person making a claim, as there is an unlimited number of possible claims, and no possible way to disprove those that are not self-contradictory.
      .
      A Pompous Atheist

    159. Re:It's so very odd..... by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Most religious people in my area (NE united states) subscribe to the separate spheres interpretation of science and theology. It works a lot like double-think. They pray using the theological side, get their values using the saner part of theology, and then accept science as functioning.

      Where a religious book or edict conflicts with obvious science (old earth, evolution) God simply works in mysterious ways, and the books can be loosely interpreted as a metaphor for how he did such.

      When an edict such as no birth control that flies in the face of common sense is said, it is simply wrong.

      Perhaps this is unique to my area though.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    160. Re:It's so very odd..... by Ekdar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      One of my favorite philosophy professors once mentioned something like this: I propose that there are invisible dogs everywhere around us all the time. As we move around, the dogs move out of our way. The dogs are silent and possess numerous other qualities that prevent us from ever detecting them.

      Now I may ask someone, "do you believe that these invisible dogs exist?"

      If someone were to respond "no" would you conclude that this person holds a belief that lacks any evidence? Would you insist that they, instead, "withhold judgement" with regard to the invisible dog issue? There is a potential entire realm of "there exists an undetectable entity E" claims that could be made, invisible dogs and supernatural creatures being examples.

      But do we really lack evidence that these entities do not exist? Isn't lacking evidence that something exists evidence in itself that the thing doesn't exist? Maybe not empirical evidence, but that's another question.

      Alternatively, perhaps in the invisible dog case the conclusion will be that it is not possible for there to be any evidence demonstrating either existence or lack of existence. It's still not completely clear to me that the rational course of action in that case is to "suspend judgement" rather than choosing to believe in the non-existence.

    161. Re:It's so very odd..... by DrLang21 · · Score: 1

      From Merrian-Webster
      Faith: 2,b (1): firm belief in something for which there is no proof (2): complete trust

      You might not like the idea of thinking of "faith" outside of the belief in magic, but the standard recognized English definition is what it is. Arguing about the difference in saying that you don't believe in the existence of God and saying that you believe in the non-existence of God is just sophistry. Face it, faith in many things is an important aspect of everyone's lives every day. Thinking of it in such narrow terms so that you can use it as an attack point just makes you an ass.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    162. Re:It's so very odd..... by Nursie · · Score: 1

      "An atheist is someone who does not believe in the possibility of a god. Not someone who does not have a religion. By not ruling out the possibility of a god, the person is not an atheist."

      That's your definition, not anyone else's. Not any atheist I've ever met, not any atheist I've ever heard described. Short answer -

      FAIL.

      A-theist - without theism. Without religion or faith, usually because they are also a-gnostic, that is to say that they have been shown absolutely no supporting evidence for any of it.

    163. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From a strict definitional position, this is agnostic. However, I find it easier to say that is the atheist position (or 99% atheist if you like).

      Basically, for me, atheism is I'm confident that the gods as described by any religion currently around today do not exist, without saying they definitely do not (asymptotically approaching zero chance, basically) while accepting there is the barest possibility that there *could* be *something* that remains unobserved that is in some manner responsible for some initial conditions that eventually resulting in the formation of our universe. There is zero supporting evidence for it and I don't think it is the case, but I can't say definitively that it didn't happen.

      In short, I agree.

    164. Re:It's so very odd..... by Nursie · · Score: 1

      I don't know about unique to your area but one of the things you forget is religious prejudice. Even in relatively enlightened countries and areas you find a lot of people who use their religion as an excuse to be prejudiced, largely against homosexuals

    165. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given that you cannot know, do you believe?

    166. Re:It's so very odd..... by dword · · Score: 1

      Complete freedom of speech = chaos
      Everyone will say what they want, how squeaky they want, how loud they want, everyone will listen to whatever they want at what volume they want. We'd go deaf! Seriously, I know enough people who would suffocate the world with their "free speech" and who should be put in a sanitarium!

    167. Re:It's so very odd..... by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      That's bullshit. There is NO evidence for God. That alone is evidence for atheism. Anything else is simply a denial of facts and evidence available and therefore irrational, same as creationism.

    168. Re:It's so very odd..... by flitty · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a python sketch.
      (many years in the future)
      Police: GET up against the wall!
      Man: Please, don't shoot me!
      Police: What do you believe in!
      Man: I don't know!
      Police: Well, ok then, you're free to go. Good day now.
      Man: Really?
      Police: Ah, yes, we're the agnostic police. Move along please, we could or could not have all day to sit here and chat.

      --
      Whether or not there is some sort of god, I'm not supposed to say/god is a word and the argument ends there-Smog
    169. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Agnosticism is a stand against arrogance and self-delusion and for rationality."

      I'm not so sure about the arrogance part

    170. Re:It's so very odd..... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I often refer to myself as an agnostic of a sort or at least as holding more agnostic views on religious subjects. As such, I found some o your comments way off base.

      If it helps, don't think of agnosticism as a middle ground between the states we call "religion" and "atheism." Think of it as a middle ground between the processes of "reasoning" and "faith." As you go through the business of living, you have to stand on one side of the line or the other.

      I disagree with this. Everyone uses reason to solve some problems and takes a lot of facts based upon having faith in the research done by others. Like most other things, there are shades of grey and people who refuse to see that are just another stripe of extremist.

      It's simply not meaningful to hide behind "agnosticism" as a position. It doesn't make you sound diplomatic, it only makes you sound cowardly and irresolute.

      It's not meaningful to have a position that isn't persuasive to others. I didn't realize the purpose of life philosophies of this sort was to shape other people's perceptions of me.

      As an example, are you agnostic about Zeus, too? No?

      Don't you think it is more than a little presumptuous to answer a question you pose for others? I feel about Zeus just as I do about Allah and Yahweh. I don't know or care to argue the existence of any particular deity. Obviously they exist as ideas and as objects of faith and worship for individuals. To what degree that makes them "real" and how objective that is can be debated, but to little effect. Faith and the results of faith is a very subjective thing.

      You're pretty sure that the possibility of Zeus's existence shouldn't inform your decisions and actions in everyday life?

      But religious systems tend to provide more than assertions about what does and does not exist. The existence of Jesus is debatable, but whether or not he existed has less impact on informing the average christian's life than the content of the teachings attributed to him. Does Jesus's existence or lack thereof influence whether his moral (not moral not ethical) teachings about treating one's neighbors with kindness?

      All it takes for thumpers to get away with this crap is for good "agnostics" to do nothing.

      Your paraphrasology fails on several points. Just because a person is an agnostic does not mean their actions are any better or worse than your own or even that there exists a subjective moral framework into which that could be judged. If an agnostic teaches their children that there may or may not be a god, but that there are certain accepted moral principals provided by different religions and educates them on how those principals influence society have they done a better or worse job than a parent who teaches their children that there absolutely is no god?

      Seriously. It's time to pick a side and stand up for it.

      So they're with you or they're against you? You make is sound as though agnostics don't vote or participate in life at all, as if their lack of judgement on religious matters makes them immobile when it comes to any debate about religion. I reject any such assertion. A person can be an agnostic and vote against teaching religion in the classroom. For that matter a person can be a devout believer in some religion and still vote against teaching religion in the classroom. Your adversarial attitude and derogatory nicknames aren't helping anything. All they do is artificially polarize people on an issue and make people angry and defensive so it is harder for people to cooperate and work together to solve real problems.

    171. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      Uhm, so many people believe, so clearly humans have the ability of making that call.

      If you meant "rationally" then you are simply paraphrasing what I said and not give an answer. But the fact is, either you have faith or not. Either god makes a difference in your life or it does not. You can still say "I do not believe but I am not sure"... you can also say "I do believe but I am not sure" -- but it's still a yes/no question.

    172. Re:It's so very odd..... by lgw · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Weak agnosticism" is the uncertainty whether a god exists,
      "Strong agnosticism" is the believe that the existance of a god is unprovable either way.
      "Weak atheism" is the belief that a particular god (whose identity is generally clear from context) does not exist.
      "Strong atheism" is the belief that no god exists, period.

      Strong agnosticism is a logically defensible position: there may exist a god who created a universe with thr property that it is impossible to prove (or disprove) that god's existance. This claim can only be disproven by establishing the existance of a different sort of god. Very few people hold this belief.

      Strong vs weak atheism often devolves into an argument about whether beings of power that our ancesters would describe as divine are "really gods". Weak atheism is a statistically defensible position: put 100 men in a room, each with mutually incompatible descriptions of God. Point to one and say "he's wrong". Your odds are pretty good.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    173. Re:It's so very odd..... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      This is a sophomoric view. Free speech always has been limited when it comes into conflict with other rights. You don;t have the right to yell "fire" in a crowded theater because your free speech does not trump everyone else's safety. Your free speech is not protected if your speech is telling your underling to go shoot the shopkeeper who wouldn't pay up. Your free speech does not trump another person's right to not be threatened or even give you the right to slander or libel or falsely advertise or commit fraud.

      Wrong.

      You have the right to free speech in all of these cases. However, you are responsible for the effects of your speech in all of them. You can yell "fire" all you want, but because this compromises safety, it will land you in jail. It's not about the speech itself, it's the effect. If you yell "fire" in your own home (that you live in alone), there's no consequences to that. Anything that limited free speech would do so regardless of who heard or where it happened.

      Ordering your underling to shoot a shopkeeper: again, you're responsible for the outcome, which is the dead shopkeeper. Slander/libel: you're responsible for the negative effects, assuming your statements were false.

      This is why "hate speech" should not be illegal. While you could make a weak argument that it encourages people to commit crimes against minorities or whoever, that same argument could apply to all kinds of things, like telling your friend how much you hate Best Buy or Microsoft, and then he either stops buying from them, or goes nuts and shoots people at those businesses. Saying negative things about certain groups of people is quite different from directly ordering someone to commit a crime, and the courts have agreed with that view in the past. If some racist person commits a crime against a minority, there's already laws against that: laws against assault, murder, etc. It really doesn't matter what the criminal's motivation was, the end effect is the same, and the punishment should be the same. Remember the Draconian code, "an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth". While it sounds harsh, the idea was that the punishment should fit the crime, and not be either too lenient, nor too excessive, and that it should be the same for everyone, i.e. a murderer gets executed, whether he's a poor person or a VIP. There's nothing in there saying "an eye for an eye, but two eyes if the victim is of a protected group of people", but that's exactly what "hate speech" laws are about.

    174. Re:It's so very odd..... by DrLang21 · · Score: 1

      What ever happen to trying to understand the root meaning of a word through it's origins? Agnostic has the root Latin word "gnostic" which generally means 'to have knowledge'. So "agnostic" simply means 'to be without knowledge'. This means that agnosticism and atheism are mutually exclusive. It is possible to be both or either. To say that you are agnostic simply is to admit that you have no idea about the nature of God. It is possible to be an agnostic atheist, which is to say that you do not believe in the existence of God, but you also do not believe that we know for certain.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    175. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      Yep you are right.

    176. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Reading this really hurts my heart. I love my Lord and Savior. I am not going to beat you over the head with the bible. I prefer to live as an example to others around me. I have hated God at times in my life, but He has never let me down. I have personnally had Him work in my life to save me from myself. Some would ask why am I so special. Well I ask you instead why are you so ordinary. There is no more reason than because I allow God to love me and be a part of my life. If there is one single thing that I have learned on my journey through life, that is, God will allow us to do as we wish even to our own demise. I have witnessed this with much sadness many times. I know a great many people think that God is this great jeanie of the lamp, they bend a knee to pray, and poof! Here's your prize. To those I say get a life, get a clue, and get in touch with God. To the rest of the world who choose to hate over to love. I challege you to love instead, unless you are a coward and prefer the easier way. How much harder is it to love that realative that takes from you, rather than kicking their but like they deserve. I challenge you do to this, if you dare, and you never know you might find God waiting for you with a smile.

      Peace always ~ T

    177. Re:It's so very odd..... by shiftless · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      If there's one thing that irritates me more than religious zealots, it's dictionary zealots who presume to tell ME what I am or am not. I say I'm an atheist. I don't know for a fact if there is a god or not, but my guess is NO. "Oh, you're not really an atheist then, you're actually an agnostic." No, I'm atheist, and that's that. Now mind your own fucking business. Can I make it any clearer?

    178. Re:It's so very odd..... by Nursie · · Score: 1

      "Taking an absolute stand on theism OR atheism requires that you take as much evidence as there is into account, and then assume the rest."

      Which is why you get 5 buck if you spot an someone taking an absolute stand on atheism and not saying they are simply a functional agnostic atheist because there is no evidence is available.

      I saw one of those once, they came across as utterly crazy.

      Agnosticism and atheism are not incompatible, and you're probably both if you're either (though agnostic theists do exist, they're weird).

    179. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      That doesn't work: s/God/Santa/

      1) An agnostic does not state that Santa exists.
      2) An agnostic also does not state that Santa does not exist.
      Therefore: An agnostic does not "believe" either position.

      Remark: we all know that Santa doesn't exist, even if it cannot be disproven. (sorry if it's a spoiler!)

    180. Re:It's so very odd..... by EsbenMoseHansen · · Score: 1

      Perhaps cyphercell prefers to stand apart from proscriptive, "I know best," dualistic, do-gooders, such as certain believers and atheists? You knowâ"people like you.

      Dualism.. now there is a word that needs an antonym. Materialistic is the best I can do. Though, given the number of meanings of dualism that Wikipedia lists, perhaps it would be better to use another word.

      --
      Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.
    181. Re:It's so very odd..... by jockeys · · Score: 1

      As an example, are you agnostic about Zeus, too? No? You're pretty sure that the possibility of Zeus's existence shouldn't inform your decisions and actions in everyday life?

      I sacrifice a bull to Zeus every month, you insensitive clod!

      --

      In Soviet Russia jokes are formulaic and decidedly non-humorous.
    182. Re:It's so very odd..... by lgw · · Score: 1

      The reason planets don't crash into the sun (and electrons don't crash into protons in hydrogen atoms) is "angular momentum". "Gravity" tends to things crashing into each other.

      The period of uncertainty (or at least incorrect or oversimplified belief) doesn't seem to have an expiraton date.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    183. Re:It's so very odd..... by EsbenMoseHansen · · Score: 1

      You might realize that that argument becomes rather silly if you substitute "god" with "invisible pink unicorn" or similar.

      (I seem to have to hasten to add these days: Note that agnosticism as it was originally defined does not include or preclude atheism: indeed, most atheists are agnostics.)

      --
      Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.
    184. Re:It's so very odd..... by Elshar · · Score: 1

      I guess you didn't really get the SchrÃdinger's cat reference. the GP post was more of an illustration of the attitudes of two differing viewpoints on an unknowable.

    185. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very good sir. More tea, sir?

    186. Re:It's so very odd..... by shiftless · · Score: 4, Insightful

      EXACTLY. I get tired of hearing these idiots proclaim that I'm "really an agnostic" and that being an atheist is exactly like being a theist. No it isn't. Atheists aren't the ones making extraordinary claims here, theists are. There is nothing irrational about finding the whole God thing absurd, especially since there isn't a shred of scientific evidence in support of any supernatural deity. I admit that there could in fact be a supernatural being that we are not aware of or able to perceive, but that doesn't make me an agnostic. I'm an atheist, and there is nothing wrong or stupid about that viewpoint.

    187. Re:It's so very odd..... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I think that we can remove the "trumped by other rights" quandary by revising our definition of "speech".

      I disagree, but I'm willing to hear your arguments.

      If speech is the right to hold and promote an idea or belief, and I think that's what we are all wanting to protect, then clearly shouting "fire" wouldn't pass muster as protected.

      So what if my idea that I want to promote and protect is that all black people should be killed and that the people in my organization should go out and kill them right now? Currently my free speech is limited. If I tell my followers to go out and kill black people, I go to jail for conspiracy to commit murder. This is because my free speech rights don't trump other's right to live. If, however, I don't actually incite others to direct violence and just say I think black people are evil and inferior and should be put killed (without telling people to actually do it) my free speech rights are protected. In some countries they place this line a little further in either direction.

      This is also in keeping with the way out legal system deals with rights in general. Freedom of religion, for example, protects my right to perform crazy sex rituals and smear myself with chicken blood. It does not protect my right to steal a chicken from someone else or rape or perform human sacrifice because that is where my religious freedom starts conflict with other people's rights. Even if my religion requires me to sacrifice people, that freedom is limited.

      All freedoms are limited when they come in conflict with other people's freedom. The main purpose of laws in our country is supposed to be resolving those conflicts of freedom. In theory, the government is not even supposed to be getting involved (sans a few particulars spelled out) unless there is a conflict of rights.

    188. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      I totally agree with you... but faith is NOT rational. Faith is believing IN SPITE OF rationality. I do not have a Faith, therefore I am an atheist. Also, do you really think that an agnostic thinks that the answer is 50/50? I guess that is not true for the vast majority of people.

      The truth is that nobody knows whether god exists. That said, the atheists think it's hogwash.

      "Who knows, maybe the Law of Conservation of Mass Energy will be disproven in the future. In the meanwhile let's give the perpetual motion lunatics the benefit of doubt..."

    189. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...(whatever a basilisk is)...

      Mythologocal serpentine creature. I believe that the earliest known reference in literature was Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.

    190. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Likewise if there's a booming voice from the heavens telling us to start behaving or we'll go to hell, I'm willing to revisit the "God doesn't exist" theory.

      So all it takes for you to throw away reason is a bit of magic*? To me that's no different to a caveman observing lightning and drawing conclusions from it. No offense.

      Of course your current stance is the only correct one any enlightened human could possibly take.

      I think this whole separation of agnosticism vs. atheism is bullshit. Being an atheist doesn't require faith. It only requires acknowledgement of the scientific method. Saying God doesn't exist is not faith, it's just putting into words the unlikeliness when observing all facts. Agnostics consider the existance of any God an option despite all evidence, which is as unreasonable as being a theist.

      If I say "tomorrow, gravity could reverse and massive objects start to repel instead of attracting each other, I just don't know. Therefore I'm inconclusive about the behaviour of gravity." Does that make me agnostic to gravity's behaviour over time or does that make me an indecisive coward? Should I start to change my life around the possibility that gravity tomorrow is reversed? No.

      Being agnostic and taking no stance is just giving theists' fantasies merit and considering them a possibility instead of denying them as the bullshit they are. Agnostics are pseudo-scientific cavemen with doubt about their own life.

      *Remember: any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

    191. Re:It's so very odd..... by Creepy · · Score: 1

      In English, if you're talking about the monotheistic God you need to capitalize the G, as it is either a name like Bob or Edna or a formal title like the President of the United States (vs, say, the president of Enron). Lowercase g is used for polytheistic beliefs - Zeus is a god, Jupiter is a god. Now if God had a proper name like Balthazar Copernicus Socrates the Third, we may be able to use god, depending on context (say, BCS the Third is the only god vs God is BCS the Third).

      Personally, I believe if there is a God, it is not manifest the way most religions believe - existence is God or the universe itself is God. I also believe that such a God would not want or need to be worshiped (why would it need to?). I therefore also don't believe I am a true Atheist or Agnostic though I'd probably lean toward Agnostic.

    192. Re:It's so very odd..... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Informative

      Your free speech is not protected if your speech is telling your underling to go shoot the shopkeeper who wouldn't pay up. Your free speech does not trump another person's right to not be threatened or even give you the right to slander or libel or falsely advertise or commit fraud.

      Wrong. You have the right to free speech in all of these cases. However, you are responsible for the effects of your speech in all of them. You can yell "fire" all you want, but because this compromises safety, it will land you in jail.

      When you go to jail for doing something, that something is not something you have the legal right to do. By your argument you have the right to murder, but are responsible for the consequences and will go to jail for murdering irresponsibly. I'm not even going to bother reading the rest of your ill thought out ideas.

    193. Re:It's so very odd..... by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think agnosticism is the only real answer.

      Atheism is a spectrum not a single point, and I think the only real answer is "soft" atheism. Do you believe that there is a china teapot in orbit around Alpha Centauri? This is the same question as "do you believe that version X or religion Y's God is real"? I can't rule it out absolutely without being as crazy as the religious people, but based on everything we know about the universe, human nature, and the historical evolution of religion Y, we can rule it as being lunacy to believe such nonsensical things. Are you "agnostic" about celestial teapots or would you consider such beliefs ridiculous?

    194. Re:It's so very odd..... by jmpeax · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The point is that atheism is as much an act of faith as any theism.

      No it isn't. Atheism is the default position. It is, simply, a case of not endorsing or subscribing to purported religious facts for which there is no evidence. Faith has nothing to do with it. Your logic doesn't make sense.

      Countries are making the kind of legislation this article talks about and you don't think some rational zealotry is in order?

      Seriously, people like you need to pick a side. Religion has damaged society for too long. We're so close to killing it and the last thing we need is morons like you who, through cowardice or indecision or existential angst, end up validating those insane enough to actually believe the shit they're told by their religions. People make the mistake of thinking that this is harmless philosophical debate. It isn't. Religion in all its forms is holding humanity back.

      Don't you see how your friend was being rational, and was probably shocked by your inability to follow his very simple logic that, applied in any other context, you would have agreed to be sound?

      I'll put it another way, care of Doug Stanhope: being an intelligent, rational. educated person, but having never come into contact with any religion, would you afford any weight to <insert religious text here>, let alone wholeheartedly believe in it, despite evidence to the contrary? Can you see what I'm saying?

      Incidentally, the Zeus argument is exactly the same thing. Someone has told you something for which you are required to categorise as fact or fiction. You suggest it absurd to think that Zeus would be real (presumably because an all-powerful being seems absurd to you), but you don't find the story of a Christian god (for whom there is no evidence and serious credibility issues surrounding the text that describes it) ridiculous.

      You know the only difference? When your teachers/parents/priest taught you about the latter, they drilled it into you that it was true, and they did so from such an early age that it has created enough doubt to cause you this brain attack in adulthood. Either that or you're scared of dying/being alone, yada yada. Grow up. The world needs you to stick up for what's right, not what makes you feel warm at night at the expense of others.

    195. Re:It's so very odd..... by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      The interesting point of your analogy, to me, is that the atheist never actually opens the box.

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    196. Re:It's so very odd..... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Fuck God!

      ...and receive a divine orgasm. Amen.

      Hail Eris, indeed.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    197. Re:It's so very odd..... by mordenkhai · · Score: 1

      I am confident that Elvis did exist..... I mean I have all of his religious plates and his oral bible records. You can't fool me Prince of Lies!

    198. Re:It's so very odd..... by devnulljapan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The point is that atheism is as much an act of faith as any theism.

      Right...in exactly the same way as not playing tennis is a sport. Atheism is a lack of faith, not an act of faith. There is no evidence for gods or faeries or santa claus; are you agnostic about faeries? If not why not? Why so sure? How about santa? How about gods? Why claim agnosticism in the face of gods but not Russell's teapot? It's an absurd cowardly accommodationist position.

    199. Re:It's so very odd..... by wasabii · · Score: 2, Informative

      This is silly. An atheist is somebody who does not believe in God. Period. Atheist. Not a theist. Theist with an a in front of it. It's not that hard. Is there a God? A) Yes. B) I don't know. C) No. A) is a theist. B) and C) are both not theists, therefor, atheists. Agnostic is a seperate and overlaying word. No knowledge. Most people without knowledge answer B). That makes them an atheist and agnostic, at the same time.

    200. Re:It's so very odd..... by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      Uhm, so many people believe, so clearly humans have the ability of making that call.

      So many people believed the earth was flat, we learn and evolve.

      I do not think we have the ability to understand how to make that call (at least for now).

      The universe is an amazing place filled with many things I can not even begin to understand. I am, however, willing to learn.

    201. Re:It's so very odd..... by wasabii · · Score: 1

      Wrong. Atheist. a-theist. Negating theist. Anybody who is not a theist is an atheist. Answering "I don't know" to "is there a god?" makes you an atheist.

    202. Re:It's so very odd..... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      As an example, are you agnostic about Zeus, too?

      No, I'm sure Zuess existed, and was an extaordinary man, the one who first picked up a burning stick in a lightning storm and threw it at his enemy.

      Was it Heinlein who said "any sufficiently advanced technology will appear as magic"?

      I think all the old Pagan gods were probably real, live human being. And they were all nerds.

      As to the creator of the universe, wow, that must have taken some really, really HARD math! Unless, of course, this is all just a computer simulation.

    203. Re:It's so very odd..... by pnotequalsnp · · Score: 1, Insightful

      To paraphrase Dawkins: "agnosticism is flawed because it assumes that the probability that God exists is equal to the probability that God does not exist". I think you would rather say that right now you cannot rule out the existence or the non-existence of "God" (provably soon). But to say that they are equally likely (probability) is incredibly naive, since you presumably have to tell me which God you are talking about, which history has shown to be ever-changing (Zeus, Thor, etc.). Therefore you are neither atheist nor agnostic.

    204. Re:It's so very odd..... by somersault · · Score: 1

      Technically that's "Northern Ireland" rather than Ireland though, most norn Irish people I know seem to like to make the distinction..

      --
      which is totally what she said
    205. Re:It's so very odd..... by jmpeax · · Score: 1

      there is also no direct proof that there is no god

      There are invisible pink unicorns everywhere. You can't see them and they avoid touching people by shifting between spatial dimensions. But they are there, and there is no scientific evidence to prove otherwise. You consider believing me?

      Trying to prove a negative is an exercise in futility. Using the mere fact that a theory is proposed as an excuse to suggest that its probability is anything but miniscule (on the same level as any similar theory like the pink unicorns) is illogical and will lead to a life of religious fear and existential confusion. Avoid!

    206. Re:It's so very odd..... by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, but support of gay marriage is quite high, and people identifying as religious is very high. I think the overlap is not as extreme as one would think.

      Most gay fear I see is men afraid they may catch the gay. Somehow an unwanted advance from a guy is bad for them, but when they hassle the uninterested straight ladies it is A-OK. Probably because we (men) are all actually assholes.

      I think most people can rationalize any prejudice they have without the help of religion, but maybe I am wrong.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    207. Re:It's so very odd..... by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      Websters defines athiest at "one who believes that there is no deity" and religious as "relating to or manifesting faithful devotion to an acknowledged ultimate reality or deity."

      Simply, Athiests can be religious, in that they are manifesting faithful devotion to their ultimate reality in which there is no deity.

      Just for fun, Websters defines theism as "belief in the existence of a god or gods" there is no mention of "religion or faith".

    208. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck God!

      Who?

    209. Re:It's so very odd..... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Nobody knows whether there is a god

      I do. But if He doesn't want you to fnd him, you won't.

    210. Re:It's so very odd..... by spire3661 · · Score: 1

      "I do have a test today, that wasn't &%#$%$#@. It's on European Socialism. I mean, really, what's the point? I'm not European. I don't plan on being European. So, who gives a crap if they're Socialists? They could be fascist, anarchists, ..." "... It's not that I condone fascism. Or any -ism for that matter. -Isms, in my opinion are not good. A person should not believe in an -ism, he should believe in himself.. " - Ferris Bueller

      --
      Good-bye
    211. Re:It's so very odd..... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      If you would have read the article, you would have discovered that it happened not because of the politicians involvement with religion but because of a constitutional clause in the Irish constitution that makes it so.

      The ACLU is not operating on anything like this.

    212. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're agnostic not atheist. Very few people who call themselves atheist are actually atheist. The problem with true atheism is that it's as extreme as religion itself (only on the other side). Atheism says there is no god(s), period. Even though we can't possibly know that. That's as bad as saying there is a god, period.

    213. Re:It's so very odd..... by Bootsy+Collins · · Score: 1

      If you believe that god doesn't exist then you are an atheist (despite the fact that it can't be proved)

      You can say this as many times as you like; but that simply is not the definition of the term.

    214. Re:It's so very odd..... by spire3661 · · Score: 1

      Ever hear the pen is mightier then the sword? Words are ideas, which can grow into action, it can be, and often is, a very direct relationship

      --
      Good-bye
    215. Re:It's so very odd..... by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      Wrong. Atheist. a-theist. Negating theist. Anybody who is not a theist is an atheist. Answering "I don't know" to "is there a god?" makes you an atheist.

      No, it makes you someone who doesn't know the answer. I never denied or embraced one or the other, and I don't have to.

      Is there a dollar bill sitting on my desk right now? You can take a leap of faith and answer yes, or no, or you can answer, 'I don't know as I lack the ability to know'. By not answering, you have not answered yes or no.

    216. Re:It's so very odd..... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      The Oxford English Dictionary (which is the last word in these matters)

      Not really. English dictionaries only track usage - they can't be authoritative because there's no central authority. English is defined as what most of its speakers say it is.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    217. Re:It's so very odd..... by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      We're on slashdot, here's a programming example:

      The bit field is true, the bit field is false or the bit field is undefined. Undefined is not true or false.

    218. Re:It's so very odd..... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      What would you call those (like me) that don't believe god exists because we don't have any evidence of it? Yes, I know we don't have evidence god doesn't exist either, but for practical reasons lack of evidence for is evidence against.

    219. Re:It's so very odd..... by WiiVault · · Score: 1

      You seem to view this much the way the news people do. There are two sides to every issue and they must always draw from both sides, no matter how much rational evidence there is to ignore one side. Sure there is a chance of "God" but many a rational person will conclude that the likelihood of it seems quite low. There are not always two equal sides to every point, quit pretending there are.

    220. Re:It's so very odd..... by GospelHead821 · · Score: 1

      To me, this sounds like an aesthetic argument. You look at this list and say, "All of these things are absurd. Believing in them without tangible evidence is foolish." I look at the list and say, "Except for God, these things are absurd. Belief in any of these things, except for God, without tangible evidence is foolish."

      You may declare that the lack of evidence for God's existence makes him absurd, but then you would be begging the question. I do not find the proposition of God's existence to be absurd and, therefore, I think that he does merit consideration for being real, despite the lack of hard evidence.

      I choose to acknowledge Christian scriptures as acceptable soft evidence. Like any testimonial, acceptance of the evidence must be based on the perceived reliability of the account and the trustworthiness of the person delivering the testimonial. Again, it would be begging the question to claim that the authors of the scriptures are unreliable because they have written such obvious absurdities as the scriptures. I choose, as a matter of faith (and I recognize the core of irrational behaviour in doing so), to recognize scriptures as reliable and trustworthy.

      --
      Virtue finds and chooses the mean.
      Aristotle, Ethica Nichomachea
    221. Re:It's so very odd..... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Actually, no. Atheism is faith in that the unknown is not true. This is completely different from the known like playing tennis as a sport as in you have no proof or testable evidence to the truth or not of a God.

      In fact, the same mechanism for believe in a god is present in the rejection of the belief. This is evident because you made a conscious decision about it.

    222. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pfft... Sounds like you both are Agnostic Atheists.

    223. Re:It's so very odd..... by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      Athiests believe in themselves and others enough to disbelieve an existence in God.

    224. Re:It's so very odd..... by isomeme · · Score: 1

      I find it useful to think in terms of two axes, atheism-theism and agnosticism-gnosticism.

      The theism axis addresses the question of whether god (however defined) exists, as if that question were answerable as a matter of objective fact.

      The gnosticism axis addresses the question of whether it is possible for a human being to *know* definitively that god either does or does not exist.

      So, for example, Richard Dawkins is a gnostic atheist, while C. S. Lewis was an agnostic theist.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a skull.
    225. Re:It's so very odd..... by nog_lorp · · Score: 1

      Good analogy, but that seems to be based on a quite a parody of an agnostic person.

      When it comes down to it, your interpretation of atheist is closer to mine of agnostic. It comes down to just quibbling over words.

      Let's all just agree that organized religion sucks and live happily ever after!

    226. Re:It's so very odd..... by Fallen+Seraph · · Score: 1

      Evidence of what? Hating someone else, and being a bigot is not illegal. And how exactly does making hate speech illegal "destroy evidence"? Your comment makes no sense whatsoever...

    227. Re:It's so very odd..... by Yoozer · · Score: 1

      The point is that atheism is as much an act of faith as any theism.

      No, and the reason is simple: it wasn't the atheists that started saying that there is no god; it was the theists saying that there was one.

    228. Re:It's so very odd..... by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      --Theres nothing wrong with that though. Now, if you actually -do- any of those things, yes it is wrong. But talking about it? No one gets hurt so therefore it should not be prohibited.--

      There are limits to this like yelling "FIRE" when their ain't one. Where the line should be drawn I don't know, but I know it shouldn't be because you criticize; we'll not just religion but the Catholic Church in general. I hope the rest of the EU does not end up the same way.

    229. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Who modded this insightful? This wouldn't be misplaced in a KKK meeting...

      What makes you think your beliefs deserve respect and dignity?

      Because my beliefs define who I am and how I interact with the world, and as such are a fundamental part of my "right to exert my personality", which is protected by the Geneva convention of Human Rights.

      You think all religions should be treated with respect and dignity?

      That's an implied non-sequitur: religion != belief. Belief is a personal experience no matter how you twist it. Religion on the other hand is a social endeavour like any organization, and should be treated as any not-for-profit organization. Last I checked, NFP's were actually treated with respect and dignity as well.

      Does that includes ones that advocate killing others that don't believe?

      Yes, until a simple nutjob actually goes from advocation to action. Then, the entire organization should be declared illegal.

      Religious belief should be irrelevant with regards to the law not treated in some special manner.

      Sounds to me like you think everyone's beliefs are inferior to your own. How else can you justify trampling over everyone with a statement like yours above?

      Beliefs should be irrelevant to the law unless they are used as motive. Organizations should be answerable to the law anyway. You really need to get off your high horse and start treating people with respect: if you alienate your audience with the first thing you say, no one will ever admit to agreeing with you.

    230. Re:It's so very odd..... by Faylone · · Score: 1

      No, gravity is why they WOULD crash into the sun if they weren't moving so fast that they maintained an orbit.

    231. Re:It's so very odd..... by plague3106 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Chemical breakdowns in your brain due to lack of oxygen do not make a god.

    232. Re:It's so very odd..... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Because there is no evidence that actually disproves the existence of God. Neither is there proof God exists.
      In the absence of certain knowledge, leaving the question "does God exist?" unanswered is actually the most rational position. Insisting on a yes or no is for small minds who cannot live with uncertainty ;-)

      You can't give a definite "yes" or "no" - and any rational person would agree with that, including all atheists that I know; but you can certainly derive probabilities from your observations. And, for practical purposes, if, according to observations, that there is no god(s) with 99.999% likelihood, you might just as well say that there are none.

      In the end, what matters isn't what you say, but how you act. As a self-declared agnostic, whenever you consider the consequences of your actions, do you account for the possibility of some god (not necessarily Christian) judging your actions against his divine set of moral laws? If you do not, then for all practical purposes you are an atheist.

    233. Re:It's so very odd..... by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      Using your own definition of these words makes the discussion much more difficult than it needs to be. Please use the meaning of these words as defined by a dictionary such as Oxford:

      http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/agnostic?view=uk

      http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/atheism?view=uk

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    234. Re:It's so very odd..... by WindowPane · · Score: 1

      Q: What's white and gooey and falls from the sky?

      A: The coming of the lord.

      --
      No Brains, No Headaches
    235. Re:It's so very odd..... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Free speech for absolutely everything would mean free speech for planning and advocating genocide and murder.

      IMO, planning genocide and murder SHOULD be legal, up to the point where you actually carry it out. Thinking or even saying "that son of a bitch deserves to die" should NOT be a crime. Actually putting a bullet in the son of a bitch's head should be the crime, not its preparation.

      Free speech for absolutely everything means free speech for fraud and deception.

      The crime isn't (or shouldn't be) the words that perpetrate the fraud, it is and should be the actual theift by deception. If deception is illegal, then Penn and Teller belong in jail, and your parents should be jailed for telling not teling you that Santa is actually your dad, and you should go to jail for telling Aunt Gussy "why, you look nice today" when in fact she's an ugly old hag.

      Free speech for absolutely everything means "fighting words" that provoke another to attack.

      If my words provoke you to fight, that's your failing, not mine, Regardless of ANYTHING I say, if you attack me, you deserve to go to jail for assault. Nobody but you made you swing your fist.

    236. Re:It's so very odd..... by davester666 · · Score: 1

      But I'm not swearing, I'm calling out to my friend, Jesus.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    237. Re:It's so very odd..... by n00bonator · · Score: 1

      42

    238. Re:It's so very odd..... by dyingtolive · · Score: 1

      I quote John Lennon, "I don't believe in Beatles, I just believe in me." Good point there. After all, he was the walrus. I could be the walrus. I'd still have to bum rides off people.

      --
      Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
    239. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Words to not have the power to kill or otherwise (really) hurt someone.

      Ni!

    240. Re:It's so very odd..... by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      now if God had a proper name like Balthazar Copernicus Socrates the Third

      The Jewish/Christian/Muslim God does have a proper name: Yahweh.

    241. Re:It's so very odd..... by thebheffect · · Score: 1

      You do not have faith in God, that is what makes you an atheist. But you have faith in that very belief, that there is no God.

      I have no faith in either answer.

    242. Re:It's so very odd..... by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      you can't absolutely prove the negative

      Can you explain what you mean by this? It seems like an absurd statement to me. There is no "special" sort of logical proposition known as "the negative" as far as I know.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    243. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why claim agnosticism in the face of gods but not Russell's teapot?

      Because arguments about Russell's teapot don't generally consume much time. I am agnostic specifically because I see no benefit in wasting time arguing about if there is a God.

      I know that it is impossible (or perhaps extremely unlikely) for me to prove or disprove the existence of God. My time is better spent on just about anything else.

      For me, and many of my agnostic friends, it is entirely a matter of time efficiency. I may personally think theists are misguided and often simple minded about their beliefs and convictions, but I see no point in arguing with them about it.

    244. Re:It's so very odd..... by Stuart+Gibson · · Score: 1

      That seems like you are implying that atheism and theism are both irrational viewpoints. I assume you don't believe in the tooth fairy, but are you really saying you don't believe in a lack of the tooth fairy? Are you only agnostic about the tooth fairy or are you an atheist with regard to the tooth fairy.

      There are an infinite number of things to not believe in, but saying that not believing all these possibilities is the same as believing in them seems rather ludicrous.

      See also: Burden of Proof.

      --
      It's all fun and games until a 200' robot dinosaur shows up and trashes Neo-Tokyo... Again
    245. Re:It's so very odd..... by holmstar · · Score: 1

      Go a step further, say something not very PC in America and you can lose your job, career, and be blackballed for life. Free speech must be free for those we disagree with or it's not really free for any of us.

      You are being hypocritical. While anyone has a right to say what they like, you cannot force anyone else to listen to you... IE they can choose not to associate with you if they disagree with what you say.

    246. Re:It's so very odd..... by sherriw · · Score: 1

      Wish I still had mod points. Well said. That's my view exactly.

    247. Re:It's so very odd..... by Xaositecte · · Score: 1

      Will this ever go away?

      You tell me there's a magic man in the sky that created everything, and I don't believe you. That's not the same thing as saying, "I believe there's no god."

    248. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you use the definition that the universe is everything, then there is nothing left to create it. It has no cause beyond itself.

    249. Re:It's so very odd..... by marnues · · Score: 1

      Undefinable and unkownable? Sounds like your god doesn't exist by definition.

    250. Re:It's so very odd..... by Tanktalus · · Score: 1

      The right answer to "have you stopped beating your wife yet?" is not "yes" or "no". The right answer is to answer a question unasked.

    251. Re:It's so very odd..... by Noren · · Score: 1

      Using your dictionary of choice, Webster's includes in its definition of Atheism both
      2a: a disbelief in the existence of deity and
      2b: the doctrine that there is no deity

      Many athiests use the 2a definition and are not religious.

    252. Re:It's so very odd..... by marnues · · Score: 1

      Faith itself is neither rational nor irrational. You seem to get what irrational faith is. However, you can have rational faith. I have a rational faith that gravity will continue to exist given the 25 years that I have been experiencing it in the same way. There is a mountain of grey area in-between this faith and the total irrational faith in something like pink unicorns.

    253. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one writing those scriptures had any evidence of god either.

      So why should you believe them?

      The bit that gets me is that I really like the new testament, and agree with just about everything jesus said. It just seems as though you could do it all without the god bit, and it would still work.

      My understanding of the bible is 'Hey, if you do all this stuff that initially seems really dumb, like unconditional love and not caring if you have any money, then you actually have a happy and fulfilling life!'

      And that is a very hard thing for anyone to believe, but I don't need a promise of heaven or a threat of hell to do it, as I think the rewards for following it come in this life.

    254. Re:It's so very odd..... by Noren · · Score: 1

      atheism - noun
      2. disbelief in the existence of a supreme being or beings. - Random House Dictionary

      Trying to claim an entire group of people believe something that most of them don't in order to use it as an attack point just makes you an ass.

    255. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As I grew older, though, I began to see that agnosticism was a much less useful state of being. If one is truly agnostic, then one ought to feel compelled to give equal weight to all systems of knowing.

      I am agnostic because I prefer to give no weight to any system. There might be a God, multiple Gods, or no Gods at all. I don't know, and I don't care to waste my time debating it. Agnosticism can be as simple as that.

    256. Re:It's so very odd..... by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      You can't give a definite "yes" or "no" - and any rational person would agree with that, including all atheists that I know; but you can certainly derive probabilities from your observations. And, for practical purposes, if, according to observations, that there is no god(s) with 99.999% likelihood, you might just as well say that there are none.

      That approach may work for those religions who claim divine intervention in human affairs, maybe even with specific dates and places. In those cases, it may even be possible to disprove the miracles they believe in.

      But one can always claim that God is a very hands-off being who once set the universe in motion and is content to watch how life develops, without day-to-day interference in people's life (compare deism, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deism ).
      Try disproving that, and you will find that such a belief offers very few points to attack it ;-)

      For the record, I grew up in a religion of the former type, but eventually dumped it because their theories were too absurd. But that does not mean I consider all forms of religion refuted.

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    257. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not true, it's not even false. The fact that it isn't true doesn't mean I have faith. The fact that it's not false doesn't mean I have any doubts.

    258. Re:It's so very odd..... by wall0159 · · Score: 1

      "The reason for this disbelief is so simple that it is sometimes hard to understand: there is no evidence either way."

      I think at this point, we reach an argument over semantics.

      My view is that I disbelieve in God (I consider that disbelieving in the existence of a thing is equivalent to believing in the non-existence of that thing) because there is no evidence. For the same reason, I also disbelieve in Allah, Thor, Yahweh, Amun-Re, etc.. Having said that, I don't have proof of their non-existence, and so must concede that I could be wrong.
      I call this position atheism, perhaps you would call it agnosticism...

    259. Re:It's so very odd..... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      There is more evidence that the scientific method works, and that I am sane and capable of applying science, logic, and reason, than that a deity exists.

      And "disbelieve an existence in God" is still cutting it pretty close -- we simply withhold belief until there is evidence.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    260. Re:It's so very odd..... by aamcf · · Score: 1

      "Ireland" is the island. The Republic of Ireland is the country in the south. Northern Ireland is the bit in the north. I've lived in East Belfast all my life, except when I was a student, and I don't know anyone who would say that Northern Ireland isn't in Ireland. If I was writing professionally and this came up I'd use the terms "Republic of Ireland" and "United Kingdom" to describe the two countries in the British Isles. The only time I'd use "Ireland" is when I mean the island. "Ireland" as short for "Republic of Ireland" is confusing (and arguably offensive in some cases).

    261. Re:It's so very odd..... by Creepy · · Score: 1

      Some people believe the Loch Ness monster and Bigfoot exist even without any real evidence, and yes, that seems silly (for a religious analogy), but how about life on other planets? We don't have any proof of it, but since we don't really understand our universe we can't entirely discount it.

      In HP Lovecraft's "From Beyond" the scientists didn't believe in monsters until they saw them, but to see them they needed special equipment. Is it therefore not rational that monsters may be under the bed because we don't understand enough about the universe to see them? How about dimensions past space-time (which would be alternate timelines) - we can't perceive them, don't know for sure that they're there, but are they a possibility? Some believe yes, some believe no - you need to take that on faith.

    262. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Atheism to most people implies that you believe there is no god. I consider myself agnostic simply because I don't believe in any one religion but I believe there is probably some higher power out there. There are a lot of people that totally reject the idea of any kind of god or guiding force in the universe which seems to fit the definition of atheism better. It is more useful to have multiple categories to define people than to lump them all together into either Atheist or Religious.

    263. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hmmmm, I think I'd say "momentum" is why planets don't crash into the sun.

    264. Re:It's so very odd..... by Corbets · · Score: 1

      If atheism is the default position, why are there so many people who believe in some sort of supreme being? I'd be quite willing to wager that over history, more people have believed in divinity than have not.

      Despite being an agnostic with atheist leanings (as described earlier in this thread), I suspect that theism is the default position, with atheism being a recent aberration.

      Oh, and your arguments on this sort of topic will be taken better if you leave the emotional content such as "grow up" out; we expect dogmatic and provocative crap from the theists, and look to the atheists for cool reason. ;)

    265. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a "Bible-thumping idiot", I feel quite scared by this law. If you RTFA, you'll see that this move was opposed by the Catholic church and the Conservative party in Ireland. I don't know a lot about non-American politics, but it sounds to me as though the Ireland "religious right" is against this.

      What scares me about this is that I don't see anything in the article defining blasphemy. Is this limited to blasphemy against Catholicism? Would blaspheming Scientology fall under this law? Would saying that the 9/11 attacks were wrong be blaspheming against extremist Islamic groups? In a free society, I don't think anyone wants to be hampered in religious discussion, Bible-thumping idiots least of all. I'd much rather see healthy discussion and dialog on religious issues be promoted.

    266. Re:It's so very odd..... by FiloEleven · · Score: 1

      That doesn't make sense. You won't be around in a million years and neither will I, and it's a bit pompous of you to declare that billions of people should discard a line of thinking because you deem it a last resort.

      There is also an implicit assumption that Science is the One True Faith and holds final authority (at least for those million years). You may consider it as such, most here do, but not everybody does. You're welcome to believe that religious faith is ridiculous, but you should also recognize that it is held above Science by some and equal to it by others. In the end it's all a matter of preference.

    267. Re:It's so very odd..... by mea37 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "No it isn't. Atheism is the default position"

      The default position is "I don't know". You change from that position when either (1) you have evidence (and if you have any on this matter I'd very much like to hear it), or (2) you are convinced as a matter of faith.

      In all areas of science, the default position is "I don't know". Scientists do not default to saying "there is no way to make fusion reactors work" simply because they haven't found one. We do not default to "there is no unification of the natural forces", or "P != NP", or any other negative hypothesis where evidence is lacking. We call them "open problems".

      When mankind does try to default to a negative proposition, he often comes off looking a bit silly. ("There is no way for a heavier-than-air machine to fly.")

      The only reason atheists claim "no is the default" on the issue of a God is that they personally find "Yes" distasteful. It's a matter of faith. (Or, more cynically, rhetoric. I suppose I shouldn't assume candor.)

      "Countries are making the kind of legislation this article talks about and you don't think some rational zealotry is in order?"

      Too bad not everyone agrees with you about what position is "rational". Fundamentalists tend to think their religion is the only rational view, whether their religion is atheistic or not.

      Zealotry in favor of atheism is no better a government policy than zealotry in favor of Christianity.

      "Seriously, people like you need to pick a side."

      No, people like you need to stop pushing false dichotamies and pretending that we're all out here to "take sides."

      "Religion has damaged society for too long. We're so close to killing it "

      LOL. Might want to fact-check that one, chief.

      "through cowardice or indecision or existential angst"

      As soon as you start asserting your opponents' motives, you might as well forget about reaching useful conclusions.

      "would you afford any weight to <insert religious text here>,"

      Acceptance or rejection of religious texts is irrelevant to the discussion. Every religious text is rejected by some theistic religion, so clearly it is not merely the domain of atheists to reject religious texts. It is in fact quite possible to reject every religious text and still be agnostic. Your failure to recognize this possibility stems only from your "us-or-them" mentallity - which by the way is the very mentality that does most of the harm you ascribe to religion.

    268. Re:It's so very odd..... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      I don't have a stick up my ass about God, Allah, Jesus, Jehovah, Buddah, Vishnu, or any other deity... none of them offend me. And as long as I'm free to practice my life without being required to go through the motions of worship, I don't require my neighbors to keep practice their religion in private.

      It is worth taking a stand, because that right is under attack -- subtly, here, in "faith-based" programs taking your tax dollars and putting them towards the worship of somebody's invisible friend -- and overtly, in this actual censorship in Ireland, and in the push for "intelligent design" in schools.

      For that matter, there's already the issue of "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance. This was added in the 1930's or so. I was Jewish when I was in grade school, but I'd certainly feel very uncomfortable today if I was asked to make that pledge -- I really see no reason it needs to be there.

      If you really want to "live and let live", even if you were a theist, you should see the point, here. Private schools can pledge whatever they want, but public schools should not require this daily worship of a deity.

      I suspect this relatively new evangelical movement in the US is only a direct counterbalance to zealous atheism. If one goes away, so will the other.

      Unlikely. You don't need atheists for some Muslims to hate Christians, and vice versa. Atheism wasn't needed for the Crusades, or for the Inquisition. And as many theists repeatedly prove, even if they need an atheist, they don't need a real one -- a strawman atheist works well enough.

      In fact, here's something to think about: Atheists are the least trusted minority in America. That's right, people think less of us than they do of homosexuals -- not that there's anything wrong with homosexuals, but it's worth thinking about. And, whatever you believe, does that seem right?

      So don't expect me to join your petty tug-o-war. It's pointless, and needlessly divisive.

      Doesn't have to be. There's no particular reason atheists can't work with the saner theists. Not all Christians want the Ten Commandments on public property -- and note, "public" as in "government-owned", I don't really care what you put on your lawn.

      And by the way, what you've described isn't agnosticism, it's atheism. Unless you actually believe in a particular religion, you're an atheist, even if you're "not sure". Being "agnostic" would mean that you don't believe that anything can ever be known about the existence of a god -- but you could be an agnostic theist, or an agnostic atheist.

      The "atheist" label is usually misrepresented as being a belief that there are no gods -- that would be antitheism, not atheism.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    269. Re:It's so very odd..... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      But one can always claim that God is a very hands-off being who once set the universe in motion and is content to watch how life develops, without day-to-day interference in people's life (compare deism, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deism [wikipedia.org] ).
      Try disproving that, and you will find that such a belief offers very few points to attack it ;-)

      There's no point in disproving it - a belief in passive, non-intervening God is, for all practical purposes, the same as atheism, because such a belief does not affect your decisions in any way (if God is passive, then he won't encourage you or punish you for right/wrong moral choices).

    270. Re:It's so very odd..... by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

      Perhaps I am an ass, though I'm not sure why you felt it necessary to bring it up. I'm also not sure where you see an attack in my previous post. Perhaps we're a little sensitive on the issue? Not having a factual basis for a belief, and having the belief come under fire might cause that reaction. But I'm just guessing.

      The difference is subtle, but in this case, it's important to the discussion. I don't 'believe' that there is no god. It isn't some affirmative position. It isn't a 'trust' that there isn't a god. It's simply the lack of an affirmative belief in a god.

      The point matters because the theists assert that atheism as some other belief, which is held as firmly as theirs is. It isn't, at least for me. I'd give up my position in a second if confronted with any evidence to the contrary, a statement which cannot be credibly made by any Christian. I don't trust that there is no god, I just don't accept gods, unicorns, or the Easter Bunny into my world view in the absence of evidence that would make such a belief rational.

      That believers cannot understand this argument convinces me all the more that the capacity for religion is some madness that human beings seem congenitally susceptible to. No-one finds it challenging to not believe in the Easter Bunny, or Zeus. But dare to assert that Jesus or Mohammed were just men, and look out...

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    271. Re:It's so very odd..... by locofungus · · Score: 1

      The problem with your definition of agnosticism is that 100% of people, with no margin of error at all[1], are 100% agnostic.

      There are a countable number of things we can believe in.

      There are an uncountably infinite number of things we have "faith" do not exist. In fact, there are an uncountably infinite number of invisible pink leprechauns of various heights that do not exist. And that's just one particular shade of pink of a leprechaun with a particularly friendly grin.

      My definition of "does not exist" is that it has no measurable influence on the universe that I inhabit. God(s) do not exist. The invisible pink leprechaun that is three nanometres tall doesn't exist either. Apart from anything else, how can it be pink if it's invisible and how can something that is only three nanometres in size have a colour anyway? I am an atheist because I am a skeptic (although global warming deniers who are amongst the least skeptical people on the planet have rather hijacked that term).

      Tim.

      [1] I'm sure someone is going to now point out some brain damaged individual who believes absolutely everything.

      --
      God said, "div D = rho, div B = 0, curl E = -@B/@t, curl H = J + @D/@t," and there was light.
    272. Re:It's so very odd..... by FiloEleven · · Score: 1

      Someone else wrote above that believing in God does not make you religious. Religion makes you religious; believing in God makes you a theist. You don't have to be Christian or Muslim or Jewish to believe in God, and the God in which you believe does not have to share all of the attributes of those religions' versions of God.

    273. Re:It's so very odd..... by yoshi_mon · · Score: 1

      "...and your Santa Clause eligible..."

      Pure win.

      --

      Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
    274. Re:It's so very odd..... by Jamu · · Score: 1

      By that definition, everyone's an atheist.

      --
      Who ordered that?
    275. Re:It's so very odd..... by yoshi_mon · · Score: 1

      It, to the best of my understanding, breaks down like this:

      Is there a god(s)?

      Yes: Theist
      I don't know: Agnostic
      No, but I can't say for sure: 'Weak' Atheist
      No, and there could never be such a thing: 'Strong' Atheist

      --

      Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
    276. Re:It's so very odd..... by jadrian · · Score: 1

      Soft evidence? Of what? That maybe some guy named Jesus actually existed? That this guy had some powers and was able to perform miracles? That he actually resurrected? That God exists and he was his son?

      I find it very soft, really really soft, evidence for the first. And that's it! I wonder if you'd take evidence this soft to believe that some guy living nowadays is also the son of God. Seriously, would you?

    277. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um...not quite. I you kill someone and they happen to be homosexual then you will be charged with a hate crime. Nobody has to incite anything. You might think differently but that is the underlying elephant of that law. Your first point is correct as long as it remains in "speech" form.

    278. Re:It's so very odd..... by saforrest · · Score: 1

      For that matter, there's already the issue of "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance. This was added in the 1930's or so. I was Jewish when I was in grade school, but I'd certainly feel very uncomfortable today if I was asked to make that pledge -- I really see no reason it needs to be there.

      It was added in 1954 at the behest of the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Knights of Columbus so that you Americans could distinguish yourselves from the fearful godless Communists on the other side of the Iron Curtain.

    279. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Equating the concept of Santa Claus to the concept of a God is not a valid argument. It is both a Red Herring and a Straw Man. The argument is about the existence of God, not the existence of [insert random anything else here].

      Following your reasoning, replace 'Santa Claus' with 'Extraterrestrials'... and your argument falls apart.

      There is no proof that Extraterrestrials do not exist -- does this make them believable? Clearly not.

      Yet almost everyone on Slashdot would agree that Extraterrestrials in some form *probably* exist. You chose Santa Claus because it fit your desire to bias your argument with the fact that most people do not believe Santa Claus exists.

      I am an agnostic atheist, so you don't need to convince me. But your reasoning is clearly flawed.

    280. Re:It's so very odd..... by GospelHead821 · · Score: 1

      Abraham, Moses, and Job were supposed to have spoken with God. The prophets heard his voice. Jesus performed miracles and claimed to be one with the Father. Although the chroniclers of the scriptures were not necessarily present for these events, they were much closer, historically, to the action than we are.

      As for the "purpose" of the Bible, if you begin with the assumption that God does not exist and that it is a manual for right living, then I agree with you. The introduction of God into the mix doesn't really add anything.

      I do not, however, believe that the Bible is just a manual for right living. For lack of a better analogy, I believe that it is a letter from God to humanity, telling us that he is there and waiting for us to choose to seek him out. Right living is a proper response to communion with God (but by no means is communion with God a necessary condition of right living.) It is not the ultimate purpose of the scriptures, though.

      --
      Virtue finds and chooses the mean.
      Aristotle, Ethica Nichomachea
    281. Re:It's so very odd..... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

      Free speech for absolutely everything would mean free speech for planning and advocating genocide and murder.

      That’s no big deal, unless, of course, you actually do the genocide and/or murder.

      Free speech for absolutely everything means free speech for fraud and deception.

      That’s no big deal, unless, of course, you actually do the fraud and deception.

      Free speech for absolutely everything means "fighting words" that provoke another to attack.

      That’s no big deal, and if the other one attacks you, you have the legitimate defence right to counter the attack. Oughta teach the asshole that words are only words.

    282. Re:It's so very odd..... by schon · · Score: 1

      Free speech for absolutely everything would mean free speech for planning and advocating genocide and murder.

      Theres nothing wrong with that though. Now, if you actually -do- any of those things, yes it is wrong.

      And what about if you talk about it and someone else does it? Do you get a free pass because you can say "hey, I didn't do anything, I helped plan it, but I wasn't there when it happened, so I'm clear"?

    283. Re:It's so very odd..... by FiloEleven · · Score: 1

      At this point in time, it is completely reasonable to expect the religious people to demonstrate at least some proof that their god can do cool shit, and I don't mean some half-assed convoluted interpretation of natural processes or something like that. I mean something like water to wine in a controlled environment -- something that would win the James Randi prize. Raise the dead. Lift a mountain.

      That's not how God works. God's MO is to reach into people's heads and tweak some synapses, turning unbelievers into believers. You should be careful about asking for proof, because you could be next. You could be street preaching within the week, my friend, and you would rant and rave against the skeptics who would disregard you as fully as you disregarded those who came before you in God's name.

      ;)

    284. Re:It's so very odd..... by DMUTPeregrine · · Score: 1

      (Giving a physical explanation of its origin just begs the question of the origin of the physics of the explanation).

      Giving a divine explanation of its origin has the exact same problem: Where did that god come from? Anything a god can have done the laws of physics can have done, so there's no reason to believe in a god.

      --
      Not a sentence!
    285. Re:It's so very odd..... by saforrest · · Score: 1

      There is evidence of creation all around us and there is much evidence that can be plausibly linked to an intelligent creator.

      I know of no evidence, none at all, that has ever been presented which has been clearly and objectively demonstrated to be evidence of an intelligent creator. If you believe there is, almost certainly you do not understand what you have seen or you have been misled, or both.

      I say "almost certainly" because I recognize the unlikely possibility that you have information which most people who have examined this question do not. In the off chance you do, may I ask for examples of your "evidence of creation"?

    286. Re:It's so very odd..... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

      Do you mean to say you think it would be right for a bunch of cool kids to harass and belittle certain students on a daily basis and be protected under free speech?

      Yes indeed. This is a great way to tech kids about bullshit being bullshit.

      Would it be alright for them to make up suggestions of a defamatory nature about said student under your kind of free speech?

      Well, if you can prove defamation, you have defamation.

      So if you think it's the kid's responsibility to not protect himself from psychological harm by physical force...

      No, by words back, or simply by ignoring the words.

      then, pray tell, how is the kid supposed to protect himself against these odds? Answer me that and I'll concede the point.

      The kid simply has to ignore it.

      When I was a kid, I went to a private school where the teachers would have the whole class laugh at you whenever you screwed-up. Since I screwed-up a lot, I had the whole class laughing at me pretty much all the time. So I had two choices, either stop screwing up, or not giving a shit whenever the whole class laughed at me.

      I took the easy way out: not giving a shit about the rest of the class.

    287. Re:It's so very odd..... by aaandre · · Score: 1

      Think of it as a middle ground between the processes of "reasoning" and "faith."

      And keep in mind that "faith" is something people are indoctrinated, brainwashed into as infants, using rewards, punishment, lies and often cruelty.

      "God is in the sky, watching you."
      "Where, mommy?"
      "You can not see it."
      "How do I know it's there."
      "Because I say so."
      "Do you see it?"
      "No, but I know it's there."
      "How do you know?"
      "My mom told me."

      If you are a Christian, ask yourself, what would you believe in if you were born in a small village in Afghanistan? India? China? Japan?

      Interesting, isn't it?

    288. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he equates the groundless and the proved

      He got that wrong.

    289. Re:It's so very odd..... by jipn4 · · Score: 1

      The US doesn't have hate speech laws, so the ACLU can't fight against them. Hate speech is constitutionally protected, like most speech.

      There is a lot less uproar about hate speech laws

      Yeah, probably because the US doesn't have hate speech laws.

      This is a sophomoric view. Free speech always has been limited when it comes into conflict with other rights.

      That is almost not a consideration in the US.

      You don;t have the right to yell "fire" in a crowded theater because your free speech does not trump everyone else's safety.

      In order to be prohibited, it has to be false and extremely and imminently dangerous.

    290. Re:It's so very odd..... by immcintosh · · Score: 1

      You have clearly not fully considered what you are saying, so I will enlighten you. Agnosticism is a position. In short, it is the position that there simply isn't enough available information to make a decision. It is, if I may be so bold, the only rational position on the matter. The agnostic position is (or at least should be when fully considered), "I have examined the evidence for both sides and find both sides lacking."

      Or are you claiming to have definitive evidence one way or another? No? Well, there's an old saying to which you should take heed: "Whereof one does not know, thereof one should not speak." I hate to break it to you, but before you go around calling people cowards, you'd really be best served knowing what the hell you're talking about.

      In picking a side and standing with it just for the sake of doing so, all you're serving is the worst kind of ignorance; I sure hope nobody follows your advice.

    291. Re:It's so very odd..... by skuzzlebutt · · Score: 1

      I assume this was intended as a troll; your post is, however, the exact and perfect response to this situation. Cheers.

      --
      My debut novel AMITY now available: http://jeremydbrooks.c
    292. Re:It's so very odd..... by raju1kabir · · Score: 1

      There is no way to prove that god exists.
      There is also no way to prove that god doesn't exist.
      Most people believe the above two statements.

      Then most people are logic-impaired.

      It's true that there's no way to prove god doesn't exist.

      However, it is possible to prove that it does exist (if in fact it does). All it has to do is show up and be counted.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    293. Re:It's so very odd..... by religious+freak · · Score: 1

      We're so close to killing it

      Um, why would you say that? Irrespective of your view on the matter, I believe the topic TFS is pretty clear evidence that religion is not going anywhere...

      Additionally, I always find it quite interesting when folks get worked up to the point that they actually believe religion is holding humanity back. I am of the opposite opinion. Religion is holding society up. Personal theological beliefs have nothing to do with this conclusion. Do you, as a presumably well educated, relatively financially secure person actually believe that certain elements in the "lower classes" wouldn't slice your throat if they weren't afraid of God? How about those that would steal or break your shit?

      In my estimation, religion was created 1) because it is an innate component of human existence and 2) To keep society functioning (and in certain instances to create or resurrect a society).

      You know how stupid, weak minded and contemptible you believe those religious fanatics are? Well, just imagine if the doctrine they followed didn't restrict them from killing you. THAT is the world without religion.

      Just my humble two cents...

      --
      If you can read this... 01110101 01110010 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100111 01100101 01100101 01101011
    294. Re:It's so very odd..... by sponglish · · Score: 1

      No, you're being pompous by asserting the ultimate questions in life have to be answered on a timescale that includes you and me. Stop thinking of yourself as the center of the universe and realize that the human race has only been seriously attempting to understand the world around us for a millennia or two. That's nowhere near enough time to say "we don't know all the answers, so it must have been god." I can't help what superstitions billions of people believe in, if they weren't susceptible to such, there'd be no Lotto.

      --
      "I improvise. It's my greatest talent. I prefer situations to plans..." --Wintermute, William Gibson's "Neuromancer"
    295. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the US, people often wonder why the ACLU gets its panties in a knot over seemingly trivial government involvement in religious matters. This kind of shit is why.

      If you give the Bible-thumping idiots an inch, they will take the field.

      The original article has most of its facts wrong. The Government was reducing the impact of the legislation as the existing fine was 100K. It was changing the legislation in a manner that did not require a constitutional referendum, as the constitution (1932) still refers to blasphemy as a criminal offence. Admitedly, its a poor solution to what was a non existing problem...but thats governments for you....

      We don't thump bibles in ireland anymore...we take 'em outside and kick seven types of sh&*te out of em.

    296. Re:It's so very odd..... by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      I disagree, I think athiests are religious in that they've defined a set belief system, or in this case, a very set non-belief system.

    297. Re:It's so very odd..... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      You can't even prove "God didn't do X". Even if the X in question is something that conforms perfectly to well-established natural laws, God could still have had a hand in it.

      Example: I'm shooting a basketball from three point range. It goes in. The video shows a standard parabolic arc, no surprises. But I'm claiming that an invisible hawk swooped down, grabbed the ball, and put it in the basket. The parabolic arc is just the path the hawk took.

      Proof? I suck at basketball, and I would never have made that shot unassisted.

      Just goes to show the difficulty of proving a negative.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    298. Re:It's so very odd..... by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      The right answer to "have you stopped beating your wife yet?" is not "yes" or "no". The right answer is to answer a question unasked.

      What a horrid analogy.

      The phrase "Have you stopped beating your wife yet?" implies that you have been beating your wife in the past. In order to answer it accurately, you need to address the underlying assumption.

      The phrase "Do you believe in (a) god(s)?" implies nothing, therefore it can be answered directly. You may have to determine which god(s) the questioner is referring to, but otherwise it's just a yes or no answer.

      You're comparing apples and hand-grenades.

    299. Re:It's so very odd..... by bky1701 · · Score: 1

      Does anyone here - anyone - actually understand that you start with "false" and work up? You cannot go around defining things as unknown because there is a miniscule percentage of a possibility it is true. Doing so means you cannot be sure of anything! Will the sun rise tomorrow? It has every other time in history, but you know, there is a CHANCE it will not.

      Lack of proof for IS proof against. In the absence of any proof ether way, the rational assumption is the assertion is false. Something doesn't get to be "maybe" or "probably true" until there is extraordinary evidence for it. As I said in another post, god requires more evidence than any other theory in the history of man-kind to be even a "maybe". How much of that exists?

      Agnostics - from my personal experience - are OFTEN those with religious up-bringings who cannot stop believing in god completely. So do yourself a favor - abandon your past teachings on the subject, read a lot on the scientific method, and then go evaluate the claims of religions again, and the idea of god itself. If you're not an atheist then, I don't know what to say.

    300. Re:It's so very odd..... by MadUndergrad · · Score: 1

      If obesity is not the pinnacle of human health, the way humans function best, why are there so many fat people? Several billion fatties can't be wrong, can they?

      Religion has been an unfortunately tenacious set of memes throughout human history. That doesn't make it the default position.

    301. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you don't know for sure I'm not hiding a teapot up my asshole. A magic, invisible teapot that knows all the thoughts of everyone, the past and the future, and can do anything it wants. My magic teapot also created the universe.

      Admit that you don't KNOW I don't have that magic teapot up my ass. You are an asshole-teapot agnostic, not an asshole-teapot atheist!

    302. Re:It's so very odd..... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Correct - and it's still true that these definitions are not a "middle ground" between theism and atheism. You can be an agnostic and atheist - you can even be an agnostic theist.

      But unfortunately many people do not understand the definitions you give, and I think that's what the OP was getting at: the people who admit they don't believe in God, but claim that they aren't atheists, instead claiming that they exist in some middle limbo ground, neither believing nor not believing, somehow existing between theism and atheism. Perhaps it's because of the stigma to do with the label "atheism", but I feel that the more people who distance themselves from atheism (despite not believing in god), the easy it is to stigmatise atheism. Worse are those who add to the criticism themselves, claiming absurdities such as "atheism is just as bad as theism", and thinking that they occupy some magical superior high horse between the two.

      You never get this sort of thing with anything else, such as ghosts, UFOs or unicorns. People say they believe or they don't - none of this cowardly "Well I don't believe in fairies ... but I don't disbelieve, therefore I'm still better than both those who believe, and those who don't believe in fairies!"

    303. Re:It's so very odd..... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Claiming God is unknowable certainly sounds an "act of faith" to me, far more so than those who simply reject belief in God.

      I actually put a distance from a friend who was a bit too committed to convert me to atheism

      Question: Do you believe in God, yes or no?

      If no, I'm not sure why he was trying to convert you. If yes, stop hiding that you're a theist.

    304. Re:It's so very odd..... by zarzu · · Score: 1

      we actually know nothing at all other than that we somehow exist (we don't know if the existance is corporeal), descartes' demon sends greetings. nothing you see has to be true, when you talk to someone, there is no way of knowing that you are actually talking to the person you think you're talking to. still no one goes around and says that he doesn't believe in anything there is because there is no way of actually telling it is true. agnostics should go and check out what an agnostic atheist is and i am sure most of them would see that they aren't really agnostic. if you're agnostic you can't not believe in god, you have to stand absolutely neutral. there are lots of people here posting about them being agnostic but feeling that there is no god. that doesn't work, either you withhold judgment and call yourself an agnostic or you have to pick a side.

    305. Re:It's so very odd..... by zarzu · · Score: 1

      there is no point, opening it would not tell you whether there was a basilisk in it when you were initially asking the question.

    306. Re:It's so very odd..... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      The US doesn't have hate speech laws, so the ACLU can't fight against them. Hate speech is constitutionally protected, like most speech.

      Actually, ll but 5 US states have implemented laws that an be considered "hate speech" laws according to the common understanding of the term. (AR, GA, IN, SC, WY)

      You seem to be under the mistaken impression that free speech is an unlimited right. That's not so. Just because free speech is a guaranteed right, does not mean that instances where speech conflicts with other protected rights it trumps them. We also have the basic human right to live and speech which is likely to cause the death of others can qualify in that regard. Just as free speech doesn't protect a person who orders another murdered, even though all they did was speak.

      This is a sophomoric view. Free speech always has been limited when it comes into conflict with other rights.

      That is almost not a consideration in the US.

      It is very much a consideration. The "yelling fire in a theater" example originated in the US in 1919 in a Supreme court case. The courts have been ruling what constitutes legitimate restrictions on speech in light of the rights of others for a long time.

      In order to be prohibited, it has to be false and extremely and imminently dangerous.

      Here's an experiment for you. Tonight at 3 A.M. I dare you to go to a nice suburban neighborhood and scream as loud as possible "Barack Obama is black!" over and over again. It's a true statement and not imminently dangerous. We'll see how long it is before you find yourself face to face with the cops. Public nuisance and disturbing the peace laws restrict free speech for the simple convenience and comfort of the public. There are many more examples, but hopefully that one is good enough to falsify your theory.

    307. Re:It's so very odd..... by sponglish · · Score: 1

      IANA physicist, but as I understand it, an object in motion moves in a straight line unless acted on by an outside force. Gravity bends the path of the planets into orbits, otherwise they'd just wander off or crash into the sun.

      --
      "I improvise. It's my greatest talent. I prefer situations to plans..." --Wintermute, William Gibson's "Neuromancer"
    308. Re:It's so very odd..... by ssintercept · · Score: 1

      in the US you have a buttload of rights. however, the one right you don't have is not to be offended. someone who reacts with violence to someone else's words has bigger problems. for instance, anger control, self esteem issues, etc...

      this bunch of "cool kids" are obviously not too cool if they are harassing another. that has nothing to do with free speech.

      WWJD?
      why turn the other cheek.

      --
      "You can kill the revolutionary, but you can't kill the revolution."-- Fred Hampton
    309. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both I and Richard Dawkins would describe ourselves as "tooth fairy agnostics" -- as in, the evidence for God is so conspicuously absent and evidence against such a being is so strong that God's existence is as likely as the tooth fairy. Therefore, it's not worthwhile considering the possibility of the almighty in our daily actions. The distinction between "God doesn't exist" and "God is so unlikely to exist that the possibility isn't worth considering" is academic and pointless, and fighting about it ignores our common cause against the involvement of magical thinking in public life.

      I agree that it is not worth considering. However, I don't think this part is true:

      evidence against such a being is so strong

      Please enlighten us. What evidence do you have that there is no god?

    310. Re:It's so very odd..... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      The terms confused me for a long time, but the dictionaries are pretty consistent.

      Perhaps you are confused, because you obviously haven't looked at them.

      Many dictionaries support a range of definitions for atheism, not just those who believe God doesn't exist, but also those who reject belief, disbelieve, with some going so far as to cover anyone lacking belief. There are at least three definitions of "atheism":

      * Lack of belief (also called implicit)
      * Rejection of belief (also called explicit weak)
      * Belief in non-existence (also called explicit strong).

      http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/40634/atheism - "The varieties of atheism are numerous, but all atheists reject such a set of beliefs."

      http://www.answers.com/atheism gives "Disbelief in or denial", and lists that separate to "The doctrine that there is no God or gods"; Philosophy Dictionary says "Either the lack of belief that there exists a god, or the belief that there exists none".

      And I don't know of any dictionary that supports your definition of agnosticism. Agnosticism means that you either don't know if God exists, or you claim God's existence is unknowable. See http://www.answers.com/agnosticism : "The belief that there can be no proof either that God exists or that God does not exist." Even if we did only accept the "strong" definition of atheism, it is still completely incorrect to misuse "agnostic" to mean a lack of belief. Instead, we'd just end up with no word for people who didn't believe in God - hardly a useful situation.

      Also see http://atheism.about.com/od/aboutagnosticism/a/atheism.htm .

      But most people who say they are Atheist are actually Agnostic and are just not using the standard English definitions.

      They're not using the definitions that you made up, you mean. In reality, most people who claim they are agnostic are actually atheists, as shown by my dictionary refererences.

      But who cares - the point is that they don't believe in God, that's more important than quibbling over definitions. It astonishes me how eager agnostics (at least, I bet you are?) are to criticise people who identify as atheists, and either claim they are using the wrong word, or absurdly claim that they are "in the same boat as the theist". On the contrary, it is agnostics who believe something without evidence (i.e., the claim that God cannot be proven nor disproven).

    311. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerryLove · · Score: 1

      You'd be an agnostic. You don't believe in a magic man in the sky (or any other god(s)).

    312. Re:It's so very odd..... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      No, he's an atheist, as supported by dictionaries, and used by a large number of atheists. He might be an agnostic too, but that's beside the point.

      The problem with true atheism

      Is true atheism different to other kinds of atheism? What about a true scotsman?

      is that it's as extreme as religion itself

      *snort* Yes, wake me up when laws are passed "because there is no God", when people are criminalised for insulting atheism, and when atheists fly planes into buildings in the name of their so-called faith.

      Atheism says there is no god(s), period.

      No it doesn't, period. But even for those who do believe that - yes, there's a period there. That's as far as any claim that a strong atheist makes will go. Contrast with religion, where there is no "period". If only religion was simply "There's a god", and not the vast amounts of other superstition that gets tacked onto that. If only religion was simply a single philosophical position, rather than the endless system of beliefs that it actually is.

    313. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what is stupid is that you assholes are starting to shove it into everyone's faces. It's as obnoxious as the overly religious people.

      Religion isn't the problem, it's over zealous people. And they don't need religion to overreact to everything.

    314. Re:It's so very odd..... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Honest questions - please make a conscious decision about these:

      * Do you believe in God?

      * Do you believe in magic pixies?

      I'd like to see whether you accept or reject belief, so I can then criticise you no matter which response you give.

    315. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean Koran-thumping idiots, right? That's all this has to do with. God, or may I say, Allah forbid someone says something about those peace-loving Islamics. You, your people and your government are scared shitless. Pathetic.

    316. Re:It's so very odd..... by tsotha · · Score: 1

      This is no longer true in any realistic sense. Groups like the KKK have to be ridiculously careful about what they say, which is why they pretty much just put on their costumes and march down the street. Virtually anything you say be construed as harassment or a threat if viewed in the right light, and prosecutors can famously indict a ham sandwich. There's not a huge difference between paying a fine for saying something and paying a huge legal bill for saying something. So what if you win - you'll still be broke.

    317. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerryLove · · Score: 1

      It's interesting that you mention burden of proof.

      Burden of proof discusses how to establish something that might be true is, in actuality, true. You seem to be clashing this with a negative belief

      For me to actively believe there is a lack of something: I would need (preferably) a proof that it was impossible, or minimally a knowledge of where the positive assertion came from.

      In the case of specific claims regarding the tooth fairy: I have specific knowledge of what does happen.

      I don't believe it's proper English to be theistic, agnostic or atheist "towards" something; but ignoring the semantics of your question: I actively disbelieve in the tooth fairy as commonly presented; because that definition makes claims which can be disproven.

      How about you? Are you a positive believer that there is definitely nowhere in the universe a flying animal that would, if given the opportunity, steal children's teeth? (not a whole tooth-fairy, but that subset of traits). In the trillions of planets over billions of years you are certain that nothing like that has ever evolved?

      There's certainly no evidence that one has. Are you an atheist or an agnostic?

    318. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      see, now from what ive read, people are treating agnosticism as a type of BELIEF.
      its not.
      theism and atheism are types of BELIEF.
      gnosticism and agnosticism refer to KNOWLEDGE.

      a typical Atheist is an AGNOSTIC ATHEIST: you cant prove god doesnt exist, there is no evidence. therefore there is no god.

      a typical theist is an AGNOSTIC THEIST: science cannot explain everything, you cant give me all the answers. therefore there must be a god.

      a Zealous theist is a GNOSTIC THEIST: i hold the bible, who's teachings are irrefutable evidence, which PROVES god exists. you cannot doubt these teaching, therefore god exists.

      so in laymens terms, pretty much everyone here is AGNOSTIC. just AGNOSTIC ATHEISTS, they dont believe in god[s] because nothing can prove them to be true. there is no evidence/knowledge to show they exist, so therefore they dont.

    319. Re:It's so very odd..... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Funny, I'm an atheist for pretty much the same reasons. The question of how much importance one places on it is independent of the definitions of atheism and agnosticism (if you want to emphasise the view that the question of God is meaningless, you may be interested in Ignosticism).

      (Okay, I enjoy arguing with theists ... but then you seem to enjoy arguing in this thread.)

    320. Re:It's so very odd..... by Moryath · · Score: 1

      If "god" really did design humanity, he was drunk when he did it.

      I mean really. What sort of omniscient being would deliberately design us to have the windpipe crossing the foodpipe, thus ensuring that millions would manage to choke to death?

      What sort of omniscient being would attach reproductive organs to areas normally used for waste elimination?

      What sort of omniscient being would design a brain that is so vulnerable to the slightest shock, and then put it in such an unprotected place? The sensory organs could much more easily have been put on the same pedestal (neck) while the brain was tucked safely down in the chest. Given that the eyes he/she/it designed don't work much faster than 30-40 fps tops in gathering information, the increased "lag" for a slightly longer optical cord (which would protected just fine with less brainstem to use up space in the spinal column) is minimal.

      In short: if "god" really did design human anatomy, he was either drunk, or he's an asshole who deliberately designed something very defective.

    321. Re:It's so very odd..... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Well if you think there's evidence, fair enough - but note that many theists say how they believe in God despite them acknowledging no evidence, and say that faith alone is acceptable. They also claim that not believing is no more rational than believing.

      I choose, as a matter of faith (and I recognize the core of irrational behaviour in doing so), to recognize scriptures as reliable and trustworthy.

      Wait - what does that mean? Surely you claimed you believe because of what you see is evidence? If you choose to claim the evidence is reliable, in order to support something you want to believe out of faith, how is that different to those who just believe through faith? And you were criticising him for begging the question?

    322. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerryLove · · Score: 1

      So what if my idea that I want to promote and protect is that all black people should be killed and that the people in my organization should go out and kill them right now? Currently my free speech is limited. If I tell my followers to go out and kill black people, I go to jail for conspiracy to commit murder. This is because my free speech rights don't trump other's right to live.

      You moved from promoting to inciting: from words which share ideas to instigating actions. It's very much like the actions which incite a panic of "fire" or a belief that your ponzi scheme isn't one. It's no longer "speech".

      Beyond that I generally agree, though again think that a reframing makes the idea easier to bright-line test: that doing something to someone isn't a freedom, that having something done would be.

      It means your "right to kill who you want" isn't trumped by someone else's right to not be killed, but rather that you never had the right to kill someone in the first place (your rights don't include the circumstances of others)

    323. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. You articulated that brilliantly. Kudos.

    324. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerryLove · · Score: 1

      Can I make it any clearer?

      You really can't be clear at all. You've declared that you will use words essentially at random and what you mean has no real relationship to what the English definitions are.

      How could I possibly be expected to understand you?

    325. Re:It's so very odd..... by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      OK, thinking on this, I guess religious is the wrong word. It is pretty close though.

    326. Re:It's so very odd..... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Except atheists have no trouble with what to call themselves - we call ourselves atheists. It's everyone else who seems to think it makes sense to quibble over what atheists should call ourselves, claiming that we're not really atheists, or making straw man arguments about what they think atheists believe.

    327. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerryLove · · Score: 2

      I've usually heard it with dragons.

      I wonder if you are making a distinction between "suspending judgment", "not believing", and "disbelieving".

      If my friend, prone to lying, tells me he won the lottery I don't believe him. I'm also not certain he's wrong.

      If my neighbor I know nothing about tells me the same thing: I "suspend judgment" and neither believe nor fail to believe (I'm simply unsure)

    328. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerryLove · · Score: 1

      You appear to by lying.

      http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/atheism?view=uk

      "the belief that God does not exist."

    329. Re:It's so very odd..... by Xaositecte · · Score: 1

      Stop that.

      Now.

      The tendency of people who don't believe in magic men in the sky to insist on an exact word to label their own specific beliefs is silly. It's semantic nonsense that makes people argue about what words are used in lieu of arguing about whatever the hell they're actually arguing about. Call yourself an Atheist as a broad term, and if people want to know about the precious little snowflake you call your individual beliefs, have a conversation about it.

      Seriously, get thirty atheists in a room and ask them what the word "Atheist" means, you'll get thirty-five different answers! One of them will probably be written down, tied to a brick, and thrown through the window!

    330. Re:It's so very odd..... by jjd1_dement · · Score: 1

      The world needs you to stick up for what's right, not what makes you feel warm at night at the expense of others.

      That's an interesting statement, and it points out a troubling problem with agnosticism/atheism. Without a God, what is "right"? How did you decide? You argue for a notion of what is "right" or "true", but without any universal basis to claim such. This makes statements like this meaningless. Why should I care what you think? Obviously religious folks disagree with you. Those in Ireland apparently feel threatened by your claims, so how do you tell them you are "right" and they are "wrong" and have any objective basis to underpin your argument? In the absence of God, you are simply elevating yourself to the position of God in allowing yourself to set objective truth.

      Nietzsche saw this problem. People like to stop with the first 3 words of his most famous quote. They should really read to the end:

      God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him. How shall we comfort ourselves, the murderers of all murderers? What was holiest and mightiest of all that the world has yet owned has bled to death under our knives: who will wipe this blood off us? What water is there for us to clean ourselves? What festivals of atonement, what sacred games shall we have to invent? Is not the greatness of this deed too great for us? Must we ourselves not become gods simply to appear worthy of it?

      Hitler was essentially carrying out Nietzsche's argument to it's natural conclusion. He decided he could choose what was right and chose to murder millions of Jews. How would you argue against him, and what makes you "right"?

      If you are going to hold to a universe with no God and cry out for the rest of humanity to join you - you need to consider what to do next. What will be the basis for laws and justice. Who gets to decide?

    331. Re:It's so very odd..... by anagama · · Score: 1

      I've had some 'spiritual' experiences before so hopefully, I'll be able to avoid becoming a street corner preacher. I chalk those experiences up to the brain being super cool, but I can see how they can be very convincing. My most memorable was related to sleep deprivation, heat, and overwork. I fire a type of wood fired kiln that requires five or six days of constant stoking (armload of wood every 7-10 minutes at the peak temperature, which lasts three days round the clock). In my first firing, I didn't have enough help, so I got way to little sleep, plus I was physically exhausted from alternately sweating from exposure to the 2400F interior when stoking, freezing due the winter temperatures (the kiln is roofed but not enclosed), chopping wood, and running around doing this or that.

      At dawn on the last day of firing, I heard singing through the fog gathering over the fields around the kiln. It was unearthly beautiful, like angels. I strained hard to hear the words, but couldn't make them out. Seriously, I was awestruck with sound and I felt compelled to leave the kiln, find the source, and just listen to it in its full glory. I had no choice in the matter, it was literally like a Siren song to me. I can't emphasize enough that the sound was beautiful beyond anything I've ever heard in my life, before or since.

      As I was leaving the kiln pit, I walked by a propane campstove. There was a teapot on the burner and the water was making that sound it makes just before it starts to boil -- when the bubbles are small and just beginning to form, a sort of muffled tinging sound. At that instant, I realized I was not hearing singing -- I was hearing the tea kettle (I was so tired I had already forgotten that I'd set it on the burner). If I had been slightly more tired, I might not have figured it out and could easily have believed that I was visited by angels or muses or elves or whatever. How my brain turned that tea kettle noise into ethereal music, I don't know, but that convinced me of how powerful the brain is in its ability misperceive.

      I still treasure those moments hearing the angels singing, because it was absolutely beautiful. I just accept the fact that it wasn't actually angels at all but rather something quite mundane. This knowledge doesn't make it any less wonderful or moving. I just don't interpret it as spiritual, it was an auditory hallucination. The cool part is, I could do this whenever I want -- I just have to get really tired and do hard physical labor. There must be an easier way ....

      Anyway, sorry for the serious answer to your lighthearted reply. ;-)

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    332. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerryLove · · Score: 1

      The problem is that you are not using the words as I, or the dictionary, or the entomology dictates.

      The agnostic and atheist (to what extent these words can be applied to other beliefs) would both fail to believe there was a Basilisk in the box.

      I don't believe that there are purple 8-legged creatures living on a planet orbiting Beetleguise. If someone told me there were, I would accuse him of making it up and be willing to bet significant money the other way.

      I have not removed the possibility: for that would require me to have contrary knowledge. I don't.

    333. Re:It's so very odd..... by TheLostSamurai · · Score: 1

      As I was saying in another post: Atheists DO NOT believe in god. This does not require faith.

      Keep in mid that Atheism can mean two different things which are actually quite different. From Wikipedia:
      Atheism can be either the rejection of theism, or the position that deities do not exist.

      There is a big difference between non belief and active disbelief. The latter position that deities do not exist does require faith, it requires faith that you as an individual are correct and in fact have the answer to an unknowable question. This type of atheist pisses me off because they are no better than the theists that they loathe. They are overrun with arrogance and pride.

      I don't believe in god but I also know that I am at least partially or maybe completely wrong because like I said, it is unknowable. I also have no problem with people that believe in god, I just can't tolerate anyone that is so sure that their answer is the only true answer.

      Most theists and atheists alike would jump to calling me an agnostic simply because they have a need to fit me into a neat little category. However, even though I don't believe in god while also not ruling out the possibility of a god, I am not agnostic because I do take a stand and have a position on the issue which is very simple:
      Everyone is wrong!

      --
      I am Jack's complete lack of surprise.
    334. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought secular humanism was about embracing humanity, and trying to make bridges instead of burning them. Instead you sound like one of those "idiot bible-thumpers", except your weapon of choice is a hard back Dawkins book.

      Bush tried that whole "you're either with us, or against us" bit, and he's a complete dick. You sound just like him.

    335. Re:It's so very odd..... by daveime · · Score: 1

      In fact I feel that it is just as arrogant to say there IS NO god as it is to say there IS a god.

      This is the bit I don't understand ... why is it "arrogant" to apply common sense to a situation ?

      If you ask me "do I believe in little pink fairies at the bottom of the garden", I can simply answer "no", on the basis of not one scrap of physical evidence seen in the last 2000 years. That's not arrogance, it's just an application of drawing a conclusion from observational evidence (or lack of observational evidence in this case).

      But when you substitute "little pink fairies" with "deity-of-your-choice", all of a sudden I am being arrogant in applying the exact same method to my reasoning ? What would YOUR reaction be to people who really believe, with all their hearts, (and solely on the basis of "faith") in little pink fairies ?

      You'd call them [expletive] nutters, and rightly so !

    336. Re:It's so very odd..... by cc_pirate · · Score: 1

      I prefer to quote Samuel L. Jackson.

      "The absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence."

      That said, I am probably an agnostic atheist. :)

      --

      "There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur

    337. Re:It's so very odd..... by hey! · · Score: 1

      Well, yes.

      You see, I can punch you in the nose and yell "All you idiots should go back to where you came from!" because everybody assumes I'm not talking about *them*. If I punch you in the face and yell "All you [fill in the ethnicity] go back where you came from!" [fill in the ethnicity] people *know* I'm trying to make them leave town.

      "Hate crimes" is about the stupidest name ever dreamed up for a crime. Lots and lots of crimes involve hate, but are not hate crimes. Likewise, it is possible for a "hate crime" to involve very little hate at all, possibly even *none*.

      A hate crime is a crime aimed, not at individuals, but at the community. They are designed to make it impossible for people to live together, to force *your* opinion of who should live where on other people when it's none of your damn business.

      I am mystified that conservatives find it so hard to understand that "hate crime" is orthogonal to the physical act being done. They understand how this works perfectly in the case of "treason". It's not the effect on people physically connected to the treasonous act that makes treason so bad. It's the effect on the country as a whole. Hate crimes work exactly the same way.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    338. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point is that atheism is as much an act of faith as any theism.

      No it isn't. Atheism is the default position. It is, simply, a case of not endorsing or subscribing to purported religious facts for which there is no evidence. Faith has nothing to do with it. Your logic doesn't make sense.

      Countries are making the kind of legislation this article talks about and you don't think some rational zealotry is in order?

      Seriously, people like you need to pick a side. Religion has damaged society for too long. We're so close to killing it and the last thing we need is morons like you who, through cowardice or indecision or existential angst, end up validating those insane enough to actually believe the shit they're told by their religions. People make the mistake of thinking that this is harmless philosophical debate. It isn't. Religion in all its forms is holding humanity back.

      Don't you see how your friend was being rational, and was probably shocked by your inability to follow his very simple logic that, applied in any other context, you would have agreed to be sound?

      I'll put it another way, care of Doug Stanhope: being an intelligent, rational. educated person, but having never come into contact with any religion, would you afford any weight to <insert religious text here>, let alone wholeheartedly believe in it, despite evidence to the contrary? Can you see what I'm saying?

      Incidentally, the Zeus argument is exactly the same thing. Someone has told you something for which you are required to categorise as fact or fiction. You suggest it absurd to think that Zeus would be real (presumably because an all-powerful being seems absurd to you), but you don't find the story of a Christian god (for whom there is no evidence and serious credibility issues surrounding the text that describes it) ridiculous.

      You know the only difference? When your teachers/parents/priest taught you about the latter, they drilled it into you that it was true, and they did so from such an early age that it has created enough doubt to cause you this brain attack in adulthood. Either that or you're scared of dying/being alone, yada yada. Grow up. The world needs you to stick up for what's right, not what makes you feel warm at night at the expense of others.

      You're a fucking idiot. Religion is not this world's problem, it's idiots. And you can't cure stupid. You're a shining example of it. People will do stupid things and hate each other even if you don't have religion.

      And I'm not making an account just to reply to a dumbass like you.

    339. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerryLove · · Score: 1

      http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/atheism?view=uk
      the belief that God does not exist. :

      http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/atheism
      1. the doctrine or belief that there is no God.
      2. disbelief in the existence of a supreme being or beings.

      http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/atheism
      2 a: a disbelief in the existence of deity b: the doctrine that there is no deity

      And since you asked the personal question: I self-identified as atheist for decades until I had this debate and lost, discovering that atheism required a belief that an unevidenced god was also impossible.

      I don't believe there is a god. I believe there is no evidence for one, and the flying-spaghetti monster is just as likely as there to be any god at all. I will be shocked if one exists.

      But I can't prove a negative, and I would be believing without evidence (appealing to ignorance) to Believe there wasn't one rather than simply not believe there was.

    340. Re:It's so very odd..... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      So what if my idea that I want to promote and protect is that all black people should be killed and that the people in my organization should go out and kill them right now...

      You moved from promoting to inciting: from words which share ideas to instigating actions.

      Actually no, I was careful to do no such thing. The idea that I would want people to go and kill other people is not the same as telling them to do it.

      It's no longer "speech".

      Your distinction seems entirely arbitrary. Telling people to go vote for a particular candidate is inciting them to action and is some of the most protected free speech. The speech I described specifically did not ask or tell people to take an action, but left that to be inferred by the listener. But even if it did, it is still speech.

      Maybe what we're seeing here is a semantic issue. You say speech that incites violence isn't speech and thus is not affected by your proposed absolute freedom of speech. Is yelling loudly at night and keeping your neighbors awake not speech either? Is lying about a product for sale not speech? Is lying about a political candidate the night before an election not speech?

      Beyond that I generally agree, though again think that a reframing makes the idea easier to bright-line test:

      I think I muddies the waters more than anything.

      It means your "right to kill who you want" isn't trumped by someone else's right to not be killed, but rather that you never had the right to kill someone in the first place (your rights don't include the circumstances of others)

      Actually in the US in most places you do have the right to kill others in particular circumstances, such as when someone invades your home or is in the process of committing a felony. More importantly the US recognizes freedom of action as the default state with laws needed to restrict action and resolve when people's actions conflict with one another. By default you can swing an axe wildly in the air. That right ends when it endangers the life of another or otherwise conflicts with the rights of another where the law has ruled such rights override yours.

    341. Re:It's so very odd..... by TheLostSamurai · · Score: 1

      Given that god is undefinable and unknowable, and that its existence cannot be proven...

      Sorry to reply to 2 of your posts but to help you understand that not every non-believer is an atheist, see Ignosticism which describes my position to some extent.

      --
      I am Jack's complete lack of surprise.
    342. Re:It's so very odd..... by daveime · · Score: 1

      God will allow us to do as we wish even to our own demise

      And that doesn't worry you at all ? That the loving, caring shepherd who watches over all his flock ONLY watches, but never intervenes ?

      Seems like a kind of uncaring God to me ?

    343. Re:It's so very odd..... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Actually, I don't believe in either, but I believe in the possibility of either but have nothing to convince me of their existence.

      go ahead and criticize me no matter which response I give. Be careful because I don't think I answered that in the way you wanted me to. When you don't believe in a god and exclude their possibility, you are practicing faith in the same mechanical way as a believer is sure that Jesus is his lord and savior. Not being convinced in something is agnostic, not being convinced and attempting to claim it's false is an act of faith when no proof or testable evidence for your position exists.

    344. Re:It's so very odd..... by Ren.Tamek · · Score: 1

      Oh my god, would you take one step back and look at your own post? You're committing the exact same logical fallacies as the religious people on the so called 'other side.' Your 'logical zealotry' is as illogical as their religious zealotry!

      The Bible is just a book. The Koran is just a book. The Torah is just a book. These books contain nothing except words. What magical properties do you, a so called atheist, believe these words can hold? You think they're turning passive men to violence? The open minded to bigotry? Think again. If all religion were to be marginalised to the point of irrelevance, people would go out and make up a new reason to hate and kill each other. We fucking call it politics today, who knows what we'll be killing you over tomorrow?

      --
      "If you want a vision of the future, Winston, imagine a boot stamping on a human face forever." - George Orwell, 1984
    345. Re:It's so very odd..... by Lunzo · · Score: 1

      Great post. Pity no one will see it because its from an AC. I wish I hadn't used all my mod points yesterday.

    346. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>There is a lot less uproar about hate speech laws than there is about censorship laws because hate speech laws are a much broader and more loosely defined category.

      And that's so much better. I know I want my free-speech limiting laws to be "broader and more loosely defined".

      And it looks like Obama is going to expand the hate speech laws as well.

    347. Re:It's so very odd..... by Tanktalus · · Score: 1

      "Do you believe in (a) god(s)?" implies that you have formed a basis for a belief one way or the other. For some, the only way to answer it accurately is to address the underlying assumption. The fact that you don't see that implication shows only that you've formed a basis for belief, rather than maintain a scientific level of scepticism toward belief.

      I'm not agnostic. But that doesn't mean that I won't defend their rationalisation as valid. Because it is (as much as any other belief that has not been proven beyond a doubt to the rest of the world). It's entirely consistent, unpresumptuous, and tolerant. I do find it interesting, in a sociological way, that most of those that attack agnosticism as a valid point of view are generally the atheists, as if even leaving the question of the supernatural open is an attack on their very being. Of the theists that would be most prone to attacking agnostics, the undereducated are also the most likely to be confused by them, so, though I do see the odd theist who is willing to go toe-to-toe with an agnostic, I just don't have as much experience witnessing it as I do with atheists. The way atheists go after agnostics remind me of the way Mormons go after Catholics: as a way to convert, not tolerate.

    348. Re:It's so very odd..... by FiloEleven · · Score: 1

      Stop thinking of yourself as the center of the universe

      But I am the center of my universe, just as you are the center of yours. When I die, barring an afterlife, my universe ceases to exist. You bet your ass I'm going to try to figure out the meaning of it all, and I'm not satisfied with "you can't do this yet." In the end I may not be able to do it, but it is my right to try.

      and realize that the human race has only been seriously attempting to understand the world around us for a millennia or two.

      Only if you limit "serious attempts to understand the world around us" to "stuff we learn through application of something approaching the scientific method." Plato and Aristotle were trying to understand the world in which they lived. The Gilgamesh epic, dating back to one of the earliest known civilizations, does the same. I think Jesus got closer than most people ever do, though I won't speak as to his followers. You may consider philosophy and literature and, yes, religion to be worthless when it comes to the ultimate questions, but that's an awfully lonely position to take.

      None of this is intended to diminish the fruits of scientific labor, which are many and varied, or its continued practice. But I am inclined to believe that science is and shall remain incapable of answering at least one ("why are we here?") or two ("where did we come from?") of the big questions in a satisfactory manner. Did it make a fundamental difference in how you acted when you found out that your body is composed of cells, or that your brain functions through electrochemical waves? The latter was a big step in the scientific understanding of "why are we here," dealing directly with consciousness, yet it is powerless to explain the experience of "I am."

      Here's a delightful little quote from the Wikipedia article on the P = NP problem:

      In a 2002 poll of 100 researchers, 61 believed the answer [to Is P equal to NP?] is no, 9 believed the answer is yes, 22 were unsure, and 8 believed the question may be independent of the currently accepted axioms, and so impossible to prove or disprove.

      Would you be similarly adamant that all the folks outside of the "no" camp halt their lines of thought for a million years?

    349. Re:It's so very odd..... by sexybomber · · Score: 1

      Pretend you're sitting in a room with a small box. A friend walks in and asks, "So, is there a basilisk in that box?"

      Unless it's a baby basilisk or the box is a Box of Holding, I'm guessing not. Good analogy otherwise, though.

    350. Re:It's so very odd..... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>There's no point in disproving it - a belief in passive, non-intervening God is, for all practical purposes, the same as atheism, because such a belief does not affect your decisions in any way (if God is passive, then he won't encourage you or punish you for right/wrong moral choices).

      Not exactly. He might toss you in hell after you die. He might just not like interfering in this world.

    351. Re:It's so very odd..... by Lunzo · · Score: 1

      What a shame that the GP is +5 and you're only +1. If the mods were more rational the situation would be reversed (or both posts at +5).

    352. Re:It's so very odd..... by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      Holding humanity back seems like a great idea to me. This constant progress idea is making many people's lives suck if they can't keep up. I'm not at all convinced that progress is making lives more fulfilling.
      And I like ot think that I'm an atheist and a geek.

      --
      Nullius in verba
    353. Re:It's so very odd..... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Lack of proof for IS proof against. In the absence of any proof ether way, the rational assumption is the assertion is false. Something doesn't get to be "maybe" or "probably true" until there is extraordinary evidence for it. As I said in another post, god requires more evidence than any other theory in the history of man-kind to be even a "maybe". How much of that exists?

      I'd say that, all things considered, the evidence favors God rather than the reverse.

      I think atheism => non-existence of various things, our self-ness, the universe, and ethics. Since all three exist, the balance of evidence is against atheism.

    354. Re:It's so very odd..... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      >> You might not like the idea of thinking of "faith" outside of the belief in magic, but the standard recognized English definition is what it is. Arguing about the difference in saying that you don't believe in the existence of God and saying that you believe in the non-existence of God is just sophistry.

      No, it's a very important distinction. The former is a much weaker claim than the latter, because the former requires no active belief.

      Say I asked you, "Do you believe a woman named Mary Gillespe lives at 524 Circle Creek, New York City?" You would probably say no, because you don't know anything about whether the woman exists or not.

      But if I asked you, "Do you believe there is no woman named Mary Gillespe living at 524 Circle Creek, New York City?" you would also have to answer 'no', again because you have no relevant information. In order to answer yes -- even though the questions are superficially opposite, you would have to take some positive action.

      Now, I believe there is no such woman living at that address, because the name and the address are entirely made up. But there's a probably 1/5000000 chance that I inadvertently gave a correct name/address combination. So I would be a strong (though not dogmatic) agillespean, whereas you would be an agnostic towards gillespeanism.

      >> Face it, faith in many things is an important aspect of everyone's lives every day. Thinking of it in such narrow terms so that you can use it as an attack point just makes you an ass.

      I don't see why that would be the case.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    355. Re:It's so very odd..... by gnick · · Score: 1

      Depends on the basilisk. The old-school ones were basically the size of roosters with snake tails. Killing one involved tossing a weasel into their hole in the ground. But, the myths vary pretty widely.

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    356. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...most people who say they are Atheist are actually Agnostic and are just not using the standard English definitions.

      Is it really a standard if nobody uses it?

    357. Re:It's so very odd..... by HolyCrapSCOsux · · Score: 1

      There are certainly no invisible dogs. The invisible talking llamas have told me so. To believe in invisible dogs is an obscenity! You must have a diseased mind and therefore, must be eradicated before your false testimony can corrupt the minds of proper llama fearing children!

      --
      0xB315AA8D852DCD3F3DCA578FD2E0BF88
    358. Re:It's so very odd..... by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      What are you going to do when a magic pixie knocks on your door?

      I'd like to see you prove to me that it can't happen.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    359. Re:It's so very odd..... by bky1701 · · Score: 1

      The universe is subject to the same rules you would apply to god. God cannot logically exist unless it violates the rules applied to the universe. The usual claim is that the universe could not always have existed, but god could have. This is nonsense; inconsistent, irrational, and could support many ideas other than a god.

      Ethics exist for a simple reason: beings that harm each other stand less a chance of survival than those that work together and help each other, which boils down to evolution. God is in no way, shape, or form, an explanation for ethics, since according to the bible we all have free will to do good or bad. If god created us to have ethics, yet gave us free will to decide to do good or evil, god went and created a sort of logical paradox that may explain things like the platypus...

      Self-ness? I don't know what you mean there, so I'll ignore that one. It doesn't matter, since even one solid and indisputable fact supporting god would not be the extraordinary evidence needed for such a claim, and I am sure it's anything but indisputable.

      Before attempting to forge evidence for your preconceived notions, you should at least make sure they haven't already been used and debunked millions of times in the past. There are many things in hard sciences that could SUGGEST a god, but as an atheist, I always keep hearing this same BS. You're not convincing anyone.

      (No, I won't tell you about the things that may suggest a god. See it as a reason to go and understand science with a clear mind.)

    360. Re:It's so very odd..... by dominious · · Score: 1

      I don't understand some people's reasoning for doing otherwise

      When you die, or when you loose someone beloved, it's just easier to believe in God rather to say "you are dead, game over". In fact, your brain cannot accept that by default, for some reason... It just feels your heart and you don't die sad. Some people just don't understand this until the time comes.

    361. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      And maybe you should reexamine what you perceive as the two sides. As one of the few I suppose you would call a "thumper" (niggers, fags, muties anyone?), I vehemently *OPPOSE* any such legislation as this. Maybe its against the law to blaspheme my religion today, but maybe tomorrow my religion *IS* the blasphemy. That slippery slope will become vertical.

    362. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "There is nothing irrational about finding the whole God thing absurd, especially since there isn't a shred of scientific evidence in support of any supernatural deity"

      Pascal makes a convincing argument to the contrary.

    363. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      I believe that there are no gods because I see no evidence of them and I see no useful reason to assume that there are any.

      FAITH 3: something that is believed especially with strong conviction

      So apparently faith is not the anti-reasoning. Or else, you wish your foot was made of chocolate.

    364. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      Problem with that is that all those things allegedly in the box, you know what they look like, etc. Even if there is a God that you cannot prove exists because you have no physical evidence of his existence, by same definition, if you did have proof you may not even know what it was. If someone told you there was hydrogen in the box, or some other random gas that you can't see, what would your answer be then? Probably the better analogy.

    365. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in crazytown you insensitive clod!

    366. Re:It's so very odd..... by registrar · · Score: 1

      The only time it loses this status is when it is used to directly incite violence, such as getting people to riot, hurt others, etc. .... but I will fight to the death to defend their right to free speech.

      You inciting violence there?

    367. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1
      Wait. What? You just made a circle.

      There is nothing irrational about finding the whole God thing absurd, especially since there isn't a shred of scientific evidence in support of any supernatural deity.

      I admit that there could in fact be a supernatural being that we are not aware of or able to perceive

      So you admit to being irrational then?

    368. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just to say thanks for the reply.

      i've always had trouble with a lot of the old testament, as the way people lived and thought is so alien to me as it's a very different culture from a very different time. I wonder sometimes what exactly 'speaking to god' meant to people then, and if we are misinterpreting it nowadays.

      Anyway I think we are perhaps both approaching the same thing from different directions, so I will leave it there. :)

    369. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      ahem.
      Child = fun being that we all enjoy, cute, cuddly
      Pornography = fun thing that some enjoy, adjective, adjective...
      Child Pornography = ???

    370. Re:It's so very odd..... by Whomp-Ass · · Score: 1

      Just before you descended into pompous arrogance, you hit the nail on the head.

      With the exception of a small percentage of quadrapaligics everyone has the 'right' to kill just about anyone else; the effective denial of that capability amounts to something on the order of a prison state, without contact with others...

      The fundamental tenet of Law is: While you are perfectly 'free' to do whatever the hell you want, there exist rules about certain things and actions, as well as consequences for breaking those rules. The severity of the consequences is supposed to be merited upon the severity of the offense, however, it is not predicated upon the notion that the law should be telling you what is the absolute action and reaction towards every possibility.

      It is you, the ill-thinking, short-sighted, poorly informed, morally compromised, self-proclaimed-know-it-all, and your ilk who shaft those of us who give a hoot about freedom and what was given up for it. Since you've obviously thought all the way through about what type of tight-fettered control would be required to keep anyone from killing anyone else, perhaps you would be so kind as to share your notion of how a Nerfed prison society would last very long...or would it be 'if we just had more control'...

    371. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are talking agnostic not atheist. No being true or false is the act of not knowing or caring to know. Asserting one over the other when no testable or empirical evidence exists is faith.

    372. Re:It's so very odd..... by E++99 · · Score: 1

      Atheists aren't the ones making extraordinary claims here, theists are. There is nothing irrational about finding the whole God thing absurd, especially since there isn't a shred of scientific evidence in support of any supernatural deity.

      "Extraordinary" is in the eyes of the beholder. In my view (and that of Pythagoras, Plato, Newton, and other bright fellows) your failure to find evidence of God is both extraordinary and irrational, the existence of God being necessitated by the application of the laws of logic. You are by all means welcome to your belief, though!

    373. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      Do you believe that darkness exists? Can darkness be seen? Measured? Etc? Darkness is more or less the absence of light. Time and time again peeps say "RELIGIONZ HAVE NO PLACE IN SCIENCE" but then try to use scientific reasoning to disprove religion. You can't have your cake and eat it too. Kind of a double edged sword really.

    374. Re:It's so very odd..... by drDugan · · Score: 1

      bzzzt. no.

      theism vs. atheism are a different axis to gnosticism vs agnosticism

      theism is belief that there is a God.
      vs.
      atheism is belief that there is not a God.

      gnosticism comes from 'gnostic', an old series of beliefs primarily notable by the belief (a prerequisite for theists) that humans can now if God exists - gnostic systems predate most of the world's modern religions.
      vs.
      agnosticism is a belief that humans can not know for sure if God exists.

      The two concepts are close, but different. It is not a matter of percents or certainty.

    375. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, what's someone who thinks people do not have the ability to comprehend if there is a god or not.

    376. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      My god, someone mod parent up (I promise the pun isn't intended)

    377. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anarchduke · · Score: 1

      umm, okay. So, If I were to prove the existence of any of these things, would that prove the existence of God to you?

      Elvis Presley did exist.

      Witches exist.

      Santa Claus existed.


      So, as you say, God must exist. I for one do believe in the existence of a deity. The difference between theists and athests is a simple one.

      A theist looks around the world and sees evidence that a creator had a hand in shaping what is, and an atheist looks that the same world and does not see that evidence. I could point to any number of things which I believe indicates divine influence.

      DNA seems to me to be a prime example. It is such an incredibly beautiful and complex object that I believe it does show that more than random chance influenced its development.

      --
      who prays for Satan? Who in 18 centuries has had the humanity to pray for the 1 sinner that needed it most? ~Mark Twain
    378. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What makes you think your beliefs deserve respect and dignity? You think all religions should be treated with respect and dignity?

      People should be treated with respect and dignity, regardless of their beliefs. People often have a difficult time distinguishing the belief from the believer, so if you disagree with another's beliefs, it helps if you do so in a respectful and dignified manner.

    379. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      HAHAHA oh, the irony. Most atheists believe stuff has been around for how many millions/billions of years? Whats another million I guess.

    380. Re:It's so very odd..... by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      *blinks* Actually, using solely reasoning one must be agnostic. You cannot reconcile actively believing in the non-existence of a creator entity with the idea of reason.

    381. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      Actually, Coward, I *do* to some extent believe in ghost, vampires, witches, etc.

      I mean I realize, to some extent, you were just flinging shit all over the wall hoping some of it would stick, but you can't say you don't believe in witches...

    382. Re:It's so very odd..... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      With the exception of a small percentage of quadrapaligics everyone has the 'right' to kill just about anyone else;

      You're confusing "right" with "capability". Quadriplegics have just as many rights as anyone else, just lesser capability in one way.

      The fundamental tenet of Law is: While you are perfectly 'free' to do whatever the hell you want, there exist rules about certain things and actions, as well as consequences for breaking those rules.

      True enough, as written, but what you are missing is what we were talking about. That is when those rules are allowed to restrict your actions and present consequences. For example, why is it unconstitutional and a violation of basic human rights to create a law that makes practicing Taoism illegal? The answer is, laws are primarily supposed to be for the purpose of determining what happens when the rights of two individuals conflict. In a free society, laws don't restrict your actions if those actions don't interfere with the rights of others.

      It is you, the ill-thinking, short-sighted, poorly informed, morally compromised, self-proclaimed-know-it-all, and your ilk who shaft those of us who give a hoot about freedom and what was given up for it.

      You seem to have missed the point we were discussing entirely, that being what rights people have and when laws can restrict those rights. If you truly care about freedom should understand more about when laws are restrictions of individual liberty and when they are compromises between the liberties of different people.

      Since you've obviously thought all the way through about what type of tight-fettered control would be required to keep anyone from killing anyone else, perhaps you would be so kind as to share your notion of how a Nerfed prison society would last very long...or would it be 'if we just had more control'...

      Okay you seem to have gone off the deep end here. Perhaps you just read my last reply and missed all the context in which we were speaking? The previous poster was claiming that just because a law makes an action illegal, that doesn't mean the law is restricting freedom; i.e. just because a law punishes you after you criticize religion, doesn't mean that law restricts free speech. You seem to have interpreted my reply to him somewhat insanely. What in my post gave you the idea I'm in favor of more restrictions?

    383. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or perhaps tao tse ch'ing thumping? the article doesn't refer to blasphemy against christian or catholic religion, but religion in general. while i am a christian, i find this law offensive.

    384. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      Belief does not need proof. I believe I will wake up in the morning...I could just as easily die in my sleep. I believe I will make it to work in the morning. I could just as easily be hit by a car. I believe there is a God, and one could argue I could just as easily be wrong. None of that is relevant. Belief isn't based on proof, its based on faith. Faith and Proof, for most intents and purposes, are mutually exclusive by definition.

    385. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      I'm beginning to wonder if I'm not actually an aathieist. No, I didn't misspell that. I do not believe in the lack of belief in a certain proposition. Prove me wrong. But I don't think you can, which I think would make you an aaathiest.

    386. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      The really funny thing is, we really can't say that we *know* ANYTHING about the universe. For thousands of years, things that we *know* have been proven false, some of them only to be reversed again. "KNOW", as in an immutable fact, is a funny idea.

    387. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hate to break it to you, but they make...one extraordinary claim.

      From nothing--something.

      You're both as bad in my opinion...I'm pretty happy with "I don't know"

    388. Re:It's so very odd..... by E++99 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sorry, that's not how etymology works.

      It's not a-(the-ism) -- lacking the doctrine of God.
      It's (a-the)-ism -- the doctrine of no God.

      Just like it's not a-(gnostic-ism) -- lacking the doctrine of knowledge.
      It's (a-gnostic)-ism -- the doctrine of no knowledge.

      Just like it's not a-(narch-ism) -- lacking the doctrine of a ruler.
      It's (a-narch)-ism -- the doctrine of no ruler.

      Just like it's not a-(cosm-ism) -- lacking a doctrine of the universe.
      It's (a-cosm)-ism -- the doctrine of no universe.

      Just like it's not anthropo-(morph-ism) -- the human doctrine of form.
      It's (anthropo-morph)-ism -- the doctrine of human form.

    389. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      Better to be damn wrong than admit you don't know, huh?

    390. Re:It's so very odd..... by E++99 · · Score: 1

      Ummm, in the US, hate speech IS protected speech.

      Unless you're in a school or university or workplace.

    391. Re:It's so very odd..... by fbjon · · Score: 1

      It's still not completely clear to me that the rational course of action in that case is to "suspend judgement" rather than choosing to believe in the non-existence.

      The cases are not the same in practice, since the dogs do not offer eternal salvation or somesuch, nor do they provide one with a sense of "greater good". Therefore, there's no incentive in believing in the dogs. Looking at the issues themselves it seems clear to me that believing in nonexistence is the rational course of action. But as a practical matter for us human brains, it might be beneficial to suspend judgement instead.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    392. Re:It's so very odd..... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      There is a lot less uproar about hate speech laws than there is about censorship laws because hate speech laws are a much broader and more loosely defined category.

      And that's so much better. I know I want my free-speech limiting laws to be "broader and more loosely defined".

      The category is broader, and encompasses a wider range of different laws. Each individual law is not necessarily broader. An analogy would be there are fewer complaints about gun laws than the death penalty, because gun laws encompass a much wider range of disparate laws than the death penalty does.

      And it looks like Obama is going to expand the hate speech laws as well.

      First, the president doesn't pass laws, he just signs them or vetoes them. Congress writes the laws. Did no one pay attention in civics class? If you're worried about what laws are likely to be written pay attention to the composition of congress. Second, since hate speech laws is such a broad term, that doesn't tell us a whole lot. There are some very reasonable and useful laws that are lumped into the category of "hate speech laws" while there are equally a lot that are absurd violations of human rights. It's like the people complaining that Obama is going to pass gun laws. Well, he declined to veto one so far and signed it, making it easier to carry concealed weapons in national parks. I'm less than outraged.

    393. Re:It's so very odd..... by FiloEleven · · Score: 1

      Don't apologize, it was a wonderful anecdote!

      How my brain turned that tea kettle noise into ethereal music, I don't know, but that convinced me of how powerful the brain is in its ability misperceive.

      Was your brain really misperceiving, or was it simply that your extreme physical state managed to somehow suppress your mind's recognition of the "kettle-about-to-boil" pattern, allowing you to hear it, as they say, again for the very first time? Perhaps the glorious music you heard is what a newborn hears...

      The cool part is, I could do this whenever I want -- I just have to get really tired and do hard physical labor. There must be an easier way ....

      There is. It's called psychedelic drugs =P

      I don't think you need to qualify the word "spiritual" with quotes, either, unless you're worried about persecution. The way you speak of it, its wonder and ability to move you, it was a significant affirmation that the reality we live in can be tremendously uplifting. When I think of spirituality, my mental image is something like "the magnificent behind the mundane." And there's reslly no other word (in English, anyway) to denote that sort of experience, even if you believe it's nothing more than abnormal brain weather.

      I take a different view, but it's nowhere near a settled matter within my own mind. I tend to believe in a God of some sort, though my God's qualities differ from the classic Judeo-Christian portrayal--they have to when you remove heaven and hell from the equation as I have. I was raised Christian, so that obviously biases me toward a theistic mindset. I think that my belief in spirituality (of the mind-over-matter miraculous healing type) comes more from reading countless anecdotes (I know, I know) describing such occurrences. I haven't gotten the time, money, or motivation yet to seek them out, but I'm certain I will. That will be what settles the matter for me: if I encounter nothing but the flock of frauds we so often hear about, I'll probably take a different path. I have higher hopes than that, though.

    394. Re:It's so very odd..... by E++99 · · Score: 1

      Atheism is the default position. It is, simply, a case of not endorsing or subscribing to purported religious facts for which there is no evidence. Faith has nothing to do with it.

      Agnosticism is the default position. People who have a strong distaste for religion call themselves "atheists" rather than "agnostics" to indicate their opposition to it. However, they cannot defend the premise of the actual definition of atheism, which is a position of faith. So they therefore try to redefine the term to essentially turn it to mean agnosticism. It is not the behavior of a serious mind.

    395. Re:It's so very odd..... by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Lack of proof for IS proof against. In the absence of any proof ether way, the rational assumption is the assertion is false. Something doesn't get to be "maybe" or "probably true" until there is extraordinary evidence for it.

      As a matter of principle I'd say that the onus is on somebody making an assertion to defend their assertion. However, this does not in itself convey rationality or non-rationality to an assertion.

      For example, if lack of proof for IS proof against, let me make the assertion that there is no god. I have no proof in favor of this assertion. Therefore, it must be untrue, and there is a god.

      This kind of thing doesn't get you anywhere. Look, the whole matter is just silly - you can't prove that the chair you're sitting on exists, so how do you think you're going to prove that God does or doesn't exist using logical argument?

    396. Re:It's so very odd..... by Thangodin · · Score: 1

      First point: The default logical position for any proposition is to assume it false until some evidence is given. This is a principle that we employ hundreds, and perhaps thousands of times each day. For example, it is not impossible that a king cobra has crept under your bed while you slept, but if you take this possibility seriously, you will not put your foot down on the floor to get up. Serious consideration of all unlikely possibilities will leave you paralysed, and in all likelihood, clinically insane. Why, then, do we discard this principle in one single case--the existence of God? Second: Certain cognitive heuristics, though common, have extraordinarily bad histories of reliability. Of all of these, our tendency to see conscious intentionality at work where there is none, particularly in areas where we have no explanation, has the worst record. We are hard wired towards paranoia, because a false positive in this regard was far less dangerous for our ancestors than a false negative. This error is at work in belief in conspiracy theories (the Illuminati did it), psychic phenomena (the spirits did it), all kinds of false pattern recognitions (the pattern was put there intentionally by something) and even in our reactions to bad weather (our resentment towards the weather as if it meant to spoil our picnic.) And yet, what do we fill in the gap in our understanding in cosmology with? An intentional being. Now, how reliable a guess do you really think this is? Third: As Richard Dawkins has pointed out, we have evolved to understand the world we live in, the middle world, not that of the very big or very small. We have no talent for cosmology. And again, what we encounter in the common understanding of cosmology are principles suited to the middle world; most commonly, the expectation of intentionality. Again, how likely is this to be accurate? Fourth: While there may be no direct evidence of God, one would expect that a universe created or informed by a divine presence would differ in some particulars from a universe not created or informed by that presence. The problem of evil raises its head, but even more so, the problem of sterility--why is the universe not teeming with life? I can imagine a universe which consists entirely of verdant pockets of life, much of it intelligent, all of it eventually accessible by normal bodily locomotion, in which all transactions between living organisms are positive sum. Thus, the lion does not eat you, but something that you provide (a nectar sack, perhaps), in return for which it provides some other service. No nature red in tooth and claw, no war, no violence. Our universe does not conform to the expectations one would have of a universe created or informed by what we conceive as God. The objection offered to this is that perhaps God had to do it this way. But if God is constrained, what created the constraints? One of the conclusions of theology is that God is not only omniscient, omni benevolent, and omnipotent, but perfectly free. Because if God is not perfectly free, something else limits God, and that something else is actually God. Fifth: As our conceptions of God continue to race ahead of disconfirming evidence, why do we continue to use the word God? The God of Karen Armstrong, Terry Eagleton, or Teilhard de Chardin has nothing in common with Jehovah, yet we use the same word for all. The statement: "There is some X which exists, where X can mean anything, and exists does not necessarily have its common meaning, and this X we call God" is true because it is trivial. It carries no information because its terms have no fixed meaning. Contemporary theology has argued itself into a void. Finally: The belief in God is motivated by Einstein's parsimonious question: Is the universe friendly? But perhaps the question is not whether the universe is friendly to us, but whether we are friendly to it. Consider what happens when you fall in love: the person you love becomes radiant, extraordinary, imbued with benevolent wonder, and you are endlessly fascinated by them. You

    397. Re:It's so very odd..... by E++99 · · Score: 1

      Once one opens the door to the possibility of one supernatural being, the only logical progression is that ALL beliefs based on the supernatural must potentially be true. And that's an express train to crazytown.

      First of all, by definition, there can be one Divine. That can be called God or El or Theos or Logos or Alla or Tao or anything else. These are not "multiple supernatural beings", they are multiple attempts to describe a common concept. Mythological gods, Osiris or Jupiter or Zeus or Brahman is a different concept, where complex interactions are explained through anthropomorphic metaphor. (Brahman can actually fit into either category depending on how it's being used.) The progression into the state of mind that can regard all beliefs as potentially true is not the express train to crazytown, but the express train to reason. Of all the beliefs concerning the supernatural that I've studied, the only one I am unable to find a basis of truth in is atheism.

    398. Re:It's so very odd..... by Old97 · · Score: 1

      You by your existence are evidence. The earth is evidence. The laws of physics and what we continue to learn about them are evidence. We exist now and at another time we did not. We were created. The question is how. Science continues to bring us closer to an understanding that the enormous complexity of all that we know or postulate exist can be explained by a relatively simple set of things and relationships. That is not scientific proof by any means but it is evidence. We know from our experience that creating complex and powerful things from a few simple things requires considerable intelligence on our part. So, it is plausible that the creator is intelligent beyond our comprehension. Again, it is not proof. It is evidence open to your interpretation. To say that it is more reasonable to deny the existence of an intelligent creator than it is to believe there is one is silly. Neither can be proven. One provides some sort of explanation and the other just avoids the question.

      --
      Very often, people confuse simple with simplistic. The nuance is lost on most. - Clement Mok
    399. Re:It's so very odd..... by Thangodin · · Score: 1

      Okay, that came out garbled--picked the wrong formatting option...

      First point: The default logical position for any proposition is to assume it false until some evidence is given. This is a principle that we employ hundreds, and perhaps thousands of times each day. For example, it is not impossible that a king cobra has crept under your bed while you slept, but if you take this possibility seriously, you will not put your foot down on the floor to get up. Serious consideration of all unlikely possibilities will leave you paralysed, and in all likelihood, clinically insane. Why, then, do we discard this principle in one single case--the existence of God?

      Second: Certain cognitive heuristics, though common, have extraordinarily bad histories of reliability. Of all of these, our tendency to see conscious intentionality at work where there is none, particularly in areas where we have no explanation, has the worst record. We are hard wired towards paranoia, because a false positive in this regard was far less dangerous for our ancestors than a false negative. This error is at work in belief in conspiracy theories (the Illuminati did it), psychic phenomena (the spirits did it), all kinds of false pattern recognitions (the pattern was put there intentionally by something) and even in our reactions to bad weather (our resentment towards the weather as if it meant to spoil our picnic.) And yet, what do we fill in the gap in our understanding in cosmology with? An intentional being. Now, how reliable a guess do you really think this is?

      Third: As Richard Dawkins has pointed out, we have evolved to understand the world we live in, the middle world, not that of the very big or very small. We have no talent for cosmology. And again, what we encounter in the common understanding of cosmology are principles suited to the middle world; most commonly, the expectation of intentionality. Again, how likely is this to be accurate?

      Fourth: While there may be no direct evidence of God, one would expect that a universe created or informed by a divine presence would differ in some particulars from a universe not created or informed by that presence. The problem of evil raises its head, but even more so, the problem of sterility--why is the universe not teeming with life? I can imagine a universe which consists entirely of verdant pockets of life, much of it intelligent, all of it eventually accessible by normal bodily locomotion, in which all transactions between living organisms are positive sum. Thus, the lion does not eat you, but something that you provide (a nectar sack, perhaps), in return for which it provides some other service. No nature red in tooth and claw, no war, no violence. Our universe does not conform to the expectations one would have of a universe created or informed by what we conceive as God.

      The objection offered to this is that perhaps God had to do it this way. But if God is constrained, what created the constraints? One of the conclusions of theology is that God is not only omniscient, omni benevolent, and omnipotent, but perfectly free. Because if God is not perfectly free, something else limits God, and that something else is actually God.

      Fifth: As our conceptions of God continue to race ahead of disconfirming evidence, why do we continue to use the word God? The God of Karen Armstrong, Terry Eagleton, or Teilhard de Chardin has nothing in common with Jehovah, yet we use the same word for all. The statement: "There is some X which exists, where X can mean anything, and exists does not necessarily have its common meaning, and this X we call God" is true because it is trivial. It carries no information because its terms have no fixed meaning. Contemporary theology has argued itself into a void.

      Finally: The belief in God is motivated by Einstein's parsimonious question: Is the universe friendly? But perhaps the question is not whether the universe is friendly to us, but whether we are friendly to it. Consider what happens when you fall in love: the person you love be

    400. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'Agnostic' doesn't mean "I don't know whether to believe in the Christian god" (as your comment re: Zeus appears to imply). Agnosticism can mean either "I don't know whether there's a god or not" or "I believe it's unknowable whether there's a god or not".

      That's fine when you're talking to other non-believers, who likely understand what you mean and why you won't say that you're a full atheist. But 99% of Christians interpret 'agnostic' to mean exactly "I don't know whether to believe in the Christian god", or worse, "There's a 50/50 chance that the Christian god exists like the Bible claims." They take it as an acceptance that they might be right, with a decent probability, which you certainly don't believe.

      If you're talking to these people, it's misleading to claim agnosticism; you're almost 100% sure that what they believe (and what they are asking whether you believe) is wrong, and unless you're willing to come straight out and explain exactly that, you're pretty much lying to them them by using the term.

    401. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anarchduke · · Score: 1

      BABEL FISH : The Babel fish is small, yellow and leech-like, and probably the oddest thing in the Universe. It feeds on brainwave energy recieved not from its own carrier but from those around it, It absorbs all unconscious mental frequencies from this brainwave energy to nourish itself with. the practical upshot of this is that if you stick a Babel fish in your ear you can instantly understand anything said to you in any language. Now it is such a bizarrely improbable coincidence that anhthing so mind-bogglingly useful could have evolved purely by chance that some thinkers have chosen to see as a final and clinching proof of the non-existence of God. The argument goes like this : "I refuse to prove that I exist", says God, "for proof denies faith, and without faith I am nothing." "But", says Man, "the Babel fish is a dead giveaway isn't it? it could not have evolved by chance. it proves you exist, and so therefore, by your own arguments, you don't. QED." "Oh dear", says God, "I hadn't thought of that," and promptly vanishes in a puff of logic. "Oh that was easy" says Man, and for an encore goes on to prove that black is white and gets himself killed on the next zebra crossing. Meanwhile, the poor Babel fish, by effectively removing all barriers to communication between different races and cultures, has caused more and bloodier wars than anything else in the history of creation.

      --
      who prays for Satan? Who in 18 centuries has had the humanity to pray for the 1 sinner that needed it most? ~Mark Twain
    402. Re:It's so very odd..... by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 1

      Very true. Every person, religious or not, feels that certain things are untrue. Most Christians, Jews, and Muslims would agree that Ganesh is a fable. "Elephant-headed god, indeed!" they'd say. Then you tell them that you don't believe in their god, and they think you're a bigot. I don't just "not believe", I actively disbelieve. There's a huge difference there, and many people need to be less mealy-mouthed and own up to their active disbelief and its difference from passive nonbelief. To not believe is to not put faith in an assertion. To disbelieve is to think the assertion is very likely to be incorrect. A "not proven" verdict is different from "not guilty".

    403. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anarchduke · · Score: 1

      Well, I am forty years old, and I say, one thing banned from freedom of speech is one thing too many.
      My mother died at 82 years of age, and she maintained the same principle, that censorship in any form is wrong.

      How fucking old are you, douchebag, that makes you think you have the right to say what should and should not be censored.

      Free speech means that you can advocate genocide or murder. Censoring political speech means that only the approved message gets heard.
      Free speech mean you can make fraudulent claims. Limiting free speech means acres of red tape before anyone can make an innovative product offering.
      Free speech means fighting words that can provoke an attack. Common fucking sense says don't call people names when they are carrying a pipe wrench.

      Oh by the way, if you want to come to Texas and fight me because I called you a douchebag, you are welcome to.

      Douchebag.

      --
      who prays for Satan? Who in 18 centuries has had the humanity to pray for the 1 sinner that needed it most? ~Mark Twain
    404. Re:It's so very odd..... by ralphbecket · · Score: 1

      I used to call myself an agnostic until I realised it's not a very useful term. I'm agnostic about gods in the same sense I'm agnostic about invisible, undectectable dogs: the lack of evidence or reason for either means it makes sense to *assume* they simply don't exist, rather than act on the basis that they *might* exist.

      For my money, an atheist is someone who says, "On the basis of the available evidence, it makes sense to assume there is no god (or undetectable dogs)." I think you'd be hard pushed to find an atheist who would not change their mind should the Almighty decide to manifest Himself in their living room offering proof of His credentials.

    405. Re:It's so very odd..... by masterzora · · Score: 1

      I guess you're right, but not knowing whether or not there's a god doesn't necessarily make you agnostic.

      Actually, it does. That's the very definition of weak agnosticism. To say that you're not is just kidding yourself and everybody else. The problem is that almost everyone who doesn't declare themselves agnostic are kidding themselves. Hell, even the diehards who insist that they aboslutely know there are no gods or the ones who insist that they absolutely know there are gods are kidding themselves, too, but in a different manner.

      Now, strong agnosticism is something to which you can actually subscribe/not subscribe. It's a shame the general public doesn't seem to know this definition, though, and instead assume agnosticism := weak agnosticism.

      --
      Remember, open source is free as in speech, not free as in bear.
    406. Re:It's so very odd..... by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      No, that's absolutely not the case.

      It must be demonstrated in court that you chose your victim specifically because you believed they belonged to a specific group in order for it to be a hate crime.

      If you kill someone who happens to be of a particular group, but you killed them for reasons not having to do with that, it's homicide.
      If you kill someone who you believe to be of a particular group - even if they are not, in fact, of that group - and there is evidence to support this motive, and that evidence is sufficient to remove reasonable doubt, then yes, it's a hate crime.

      You might be surprised to know that a black lesbian muslim woman could kill a white straight christian male and it can be a hate crime if she did so specifically because of his race/sexual orientation/religion/sex.

      I will, however, admit, that it is much more likely that a murder of a minority by a person of the majority (in whatever particular aspect - race, religion, orientation) will be looked at as a possible hate crime than the reverse. However, that's largely on the basis of history - the vast majority of hate crimes have been perpetrated by the majority on the minority, so it makes sense in the same way that if a married person is murdered, the spouse is the first person investigated.

      Personally, I view hate crimes as, essentially, terrorist acts - the perpetrators are attempting to frighten an entire class of people/send a message. I think we have laws on the books about terrorist acts, and definitely think we should use those rather than make entirely new laws to handle such things, but if we aren't willing to call a domestic terrorist what they are, then I think I am OK with other laws that help to eliminate crimes based on that kind of absurd thinking.
       

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
    407. Re:It's so very odd..... by masterzora · · Score: 1

      Actually, that's just strong agnosticism. Admittedly, I wish that were the only definition of agnosticism, but the "I don't know if there is a god or not" is weak agnosticism. Given this, I think the problem isn't too many declaring themselves agnostic but, in fact, quite the opposite. Anyone who asserts they do know for a fact is kidding themselves.

      Of course, if people did realize this, weak agnosticism would become a vacuous truth and we would just be left with strong agnosticism as a meaningful declaration. Given that, I would have to agree with you.

      --
      Remember, open source is free as in speech, not free as in bear.
    408. Re:It's so very odd..... by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      "Do you believe in (a) god(s)?" implies that you have formed a basis for a belief one way or the other.

      Wrong. There is no "one way or the other", the question only asks for a single answer. I'm not asking "Do you believe that god exists, or do you believe that he doesn't exist". You're creating an alternative where none was implied. Being an atheist doesn't mean that you believe no gods exist - it just means that you haven't seen enough evidence to convince you that they DO exist. If you are asked "Do you believe in god?" and your answer is anything other than "yes" then you are an atheist.

    409. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As I grew older, though, I began to see that agnosticism was a much less useful state of being. If one is truly agnostic, then one ought to feel compelled to give equal weight to all systems of knowing.

      I am agnostic because I prefer to give no weight to any system. There might be a God, multiple Gods, or no Gods at all. I don't know, and I don't care to waste my time debating it. Agnosticism can be as simple as that.

      I know, I'm responding to an AC, so I probably won't get a response - but how does such a world view inform your decisions? Do you ACT as if there could be multiple gods, such as the ones that have been described by the major religions of the world? Do you make your decisions on day-to-day living as if they exist? Do you worry that somewhere there could be a god or gods that are outraged by your decisions, and will torment you eternally for your actions (maybe because you fail to deny the existence of other gods?) I've decided not to worry about such things, myself, and provisionally disbelieve in the whole lot, so I call myself an atheist. If you act as if it's more likely that there aren't any, then aren't you functioning like an atheist? I am pretty sure that most atheists would change their minds if a deity (provable) popped over for tea, and I'm fairly confident that a majority of them would agree that it would be difficult (ok, impossible) to categorically deny all possibility of an undetectable deity that has no influence over the universe - but what are we talking about then? It's a pointless philosophical discussion with no real impact on anything.Atheism is not so much a "system" as a description of how you act - you don't beg any super-human being(s) for support, supplicate yourself before an altar, fear retribution from an unseen force, or justify your actions as being commanded or suggested from some infallible supreme authority. You act with full responsibility to yourself and your community.

    410. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because there is no evidence that actually disproves the existence of God. Neither is there proof God exists.

      The last couples hundred years since "reliable" factual event recording taken place, there is absolutely no evident for God existent but a lot of evidences for his none existent through scientific discovery. It is a matter of how much evidence it takes to convince a person. By your standard, every marriage couple have a 50% possibility that their significant other is secretly fucking another person (you can't disprove that either aight).

      In the absence of certain knowledge, leaving the question "does God exist?" unanswered is actually the most rational position. Insisting on a yes or no is for small minds who cannot live with uncertainty ;-)

      At some point a person has to make the jump to either side. You can wait till the last moment, maybe when humanity can create artificial life or god appearance, to agree but why wait? Absolute conviction is not required to take side and an intelligent person should always reconsider in face of new evidence proving otherwise. So far, reality has a bias for god non-existent.

    411. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      There is no proof that Extraterrestrials do not exist -- does this make them believable? Clearly not

      If by this you mean UFOs, then they are not believeable. If by this you mean life outside of our planet, then there is no definite proof but good hints (like the fact that we are alive)... ;-)

    412. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      Fantastic, then I am ignostic too! Thanks for the nice article.

      For clarity of speech I call myself atheist...

      Regarding that:
      - Although it's totally true that god is meaningless etc... I think that people have a generic "god idea" related to their religion. In that context I am atheist. I don't believe in the old dude with the beard.
      - A meaningless, non falsifiable concept can simply be defined to be false, until properly defined (see Russell, for example). In this context I could call myself atheist too.

    413. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      Uhm, that is called an assumption based on evidence, but if you want to call it faith... ;-)

    414. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      I did not say that people made that call and were right... Just that they made the call.

    415. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      Well that's the definition of the Catholic church...

      God - "the inexpressible, the incomprehensible, the invisible, the ungraspable"

      http://www.vatican.va/archive/catechism/p1s1c1.htm#IV

    416. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The progression into the state of mind that can regard all beliefs as potentially true is not the express train to crazytown, but the express train to reason. Of all the beliefs concerning the supernatural that I've studied, the only one I am unable to find a basis of truth in is atheism.

      You can find a basis of truth in the "state of mind that can regard all beliefs as potentially true," despite the fact that those beliefs are often contradictory, but you are "unable to find a basis of truth..." in the position that the mythological entities posited by these unnecessary contradictory belief systems do not, in fact, exist? You, sir, just may be the conductor of the express train to crazytown. Try to imagine what would happen if we regarded all the possible explanations for the movement of electrons in a conductor as potentially true - we wouldn't be debating this on the Internet, since there'd be no Internet. No thanks, I don't want to buy a ticket, I'll get off the train here.

    417. Re:It's so very odd..... by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      I agree with the overall point of your argument - there's no evidence *for* god, so it's probably reasonable to not believe or to be dubious - but I think you're not really being fair to the other side.

      For example, "Basilisk" *could* mean a mythical creature that can turn flesh to stone with a look - which certainly sounds absurd. Or, it could mean "a really scary freakin' lizard that triggers instincts in people who see it and they stand completely frozen out of fear," which sounds unlikely, but not impossible (as someone who has literally peed her pants when she woke up with a VERY FREAKING LARGE iguana sitting on her chest, I can attest that it's DAMN sure not impossible!) Similarly, "God" can mean "the omnipotent/omniscient god of modern judeo/christian belief who is immune to logic and paradox" (which sounds completely ridiculous to me, and essentially pointless) or it could mean "A being that is MUCH more powerful than we are, but who still operates by rules that can be understood within a logical framework." Having read the old testament, I always felt like Yahweh was subject to quite a few limits and flaws - sure, he could create a universe, but once he created it, it behaved in ways he wasn't able to control, like an experiment - so, god *could* simply be a being or beings far in advance of us. (I don't think such beings created the universe or mankind, but I absolutely think that it may be possible for mankind or our descendants to one day create other life forms or, possibly, "universes" [whether simulations or through black holes or whatever])

      And the "box" in this case isn't nearly as well understood and observed as you say in your post. We're still not even sure about fundamental forces at work in our universe, don't know for sure what our universe even is, mostly. We aren't sure what the greater framework our universe exists within (if there is one). Let's at least come up with a demonstrated working grand unified theory first before we even try to suggest that we're sure what size and shape the "box" is, and we can't say that we've observed it closely; our observations of the universe to date would be roughly equivalent to saying that we had explored the entire Earth because we'd one time walked about half a mile over to a tree-stump and stood on top of it and looked around for a couple of minutes.

      Like I said, I agree with the overall point, but the analogy is a bit too simple, and implies that we have more understanding of things than we actually do. I absolutely don't think we need to manufacture a supreme (or even just superior) being (or any other complicating factor for which we have no evidence), and I absolutely wouldn't include "god" on a list of the usual suspects for interesting phenomena, but I also can't say that we're exactly fully informed yet of just what the heck is actually going on around us.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
    418. Re:It's so very odd..... by bky1701 · · Score: 1

      "For example, if lack of proof for IS proof against, let me make the assertion that there is no god. I have no proof in favor of this assertion. Therefore, it must be untrue, and there is a god."

      You cannot prove a negative. EVERYTHING exists if you do not assume assertions of a positive nature are false. That include unicorns, martians, Vishnu, honest politicians, and every other idea contradictory to reason ever asserted as true. Thus, there is a great difference between "x exists" and "x does not exist", because if there was not, you'd be opening the floodgates of anything even remotely possible.

      "This kind of thing doesn't get you anywhere. Look, the whole matter is just silly - you can't prove that the chair you're sitting on exists, so how do you think you're going to prove that God does or doesn't exist using logical argument?"

      I can prove it exists in relation to other objects, which is all that can be proved of anything. God is an assertion of fact in relation to other objects (ie, he created the universe). Thus, I can can say god exists or not in relation to those objects. If you remove any frame of reference at all, you end up with a funny sort of reverse nihilism where nothing, including you, exists.

      If the spoon is a lie, you must acquit.

    419. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Leonard Peikoff erred when he wrote

      He treats the arbitrary as on a par with the rational and evidentially supported.

      Because there is no evidence that actually disproves the existence of God. Neither is there proof God exists.
      In the absence of certain knowledge, leaving the question "does God exist?" unanswered is actually the most rational position. Insisting on a yes or no is for small minds who cannot live with uncertainty ;-)

      Amazing that you think this is even a question of theology, religion, or thought/perception systems. This is a question of the role of government in the minds of the governed. Great that we can debate the relative truth or rationality of this or that position on the matter, but is there really any debate as to whether any government should have ANY role in defining the rules of that debate. Much less the power to CRIMINALIZE any position in it?

    420. Re:It's so very odd..... by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what your point is then.

      This is about beliefs, I don't believe that people can truly understand the concept of a god. Just because someone else says 'well, I do believe' or 'well, I don't belive' does not change my belief.

    421. Re:It's so very odd..... by Fallen+Seraph · · Score: 1

      Since when does speech involve killing people? :P We're talking about SPEECH, as in, saying whatever you want no matter how bigoted or ignorant it is. Killing someone is an entirely different scenario my friend.

    422. Re:It's so very odd..... by selven · · Score: 1

      My favorite analogy is that atheism being a religion is like turning the TV off being a channel.

    423. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My friend... your anti-religious zealotry is really quiet astounding. Despite your cynical views, religion, whether or not you actually believe in god, adds a layer of self moderation and sanity to an otherwise indulgent and foolish species. I hope that you experience the world you desire firsthand, some of us might laugh as you desperately try to rationalize your way around the inherent amorality of human nature. The world you are building is cold, calculating, chaotic, and unnatural. I pray that you fail.

    424. Re:It's so very odd..... by The_Quinn · · Score: 1

      don't think of agnosticism as a middle ground between the states we call "religion" and "atheism." Think of it as a middle ground between the processes of "reasoning" and "faith."

      There is a difference between "rationally questioning your beliefs" and agnosticism. Agnosticism says: "After careful thought and consideration, I've decided that I can't decide." It is really a dedication to "fence-sitting".

      There's nothing wrong with saying: "I am an atheist, but I have some unresolved questions", or "I am religious, but I'm exploring what it means to be rational", but to say "I'm Agnostic" means: "I refuse to take sides."

      Just my opinion...

    425. Re:It's so very odd..... by the_womble · · Score: 2, Informative

      That is what is good about the US constitution,

      In Europe, it is increasingly becoming accepted that people have a right not to be offended. In addition it is thought that religious belief is a matter of belonging to a community rather than an acceptance of certain facts, so it become a type ethnicity - and ceases to be a matter of debate.

      It is already very widespread - British broadcasters cannot offend any religion - so Christians cannot say (on air) that they think Satanism is bad.

      Now most people who are actually religious, would rather religion is a matter of debate - we want people to accept a belief, rather than belong to a club, and (in general at least) you cannot really believe without questioning and thinking, which open debate helps

      The people who want this law are like a so-called Muslim I once met who said he would kill Salman Rushidie given a chance, but who said he never prayed (prayer is a serious obligation in Islam). He did not really believe there was a God (or he did not care), he was only upset that because he perceived his tribe as being insulted - a bit like an American getting upset about their flag being burned.

      This is also, of a piece with attitudes in countries that penalise people who choose a different religion from their parents - Malaysia and some Indian states have moved in that direction recently, for example, and there are lobby groups in Sri Lanka for anti-conversion laws. If it a matter of belonging, someone who opts out is a traitor.

      Incidentally, I am a British-Sri Lankan Christian (officially a Catholic, although I believe that denominations do not matter), I was agnostic for many years, and my wife is an Anglican who used to be a Buddhist. I am also obviously a member of an ethnic minority in both countries.

      My children will be taught about Christianity, but they will also be taught that it is dishonest to believe anything other than what your reasoning and experience lead you to. I am also opposed to laws that restrict racist speech (except when it is a direct incitement to violence).

    426. Re:It's so very odd..... by The_Quinn · · Score: 1

      stop pretending you're omniscient: admit you're not atheist, but rather agnostic.

      You don't have to be omnisicient, you just need to draw a conclusion based on all the available evidence. That's what it means to "know" something - it means that: based on all the evidence you have, and your ability to put it together logically, you've come to some conclusion. The sum of all those conclusions is what you know.

      Someday, you might get new evidence that you have to incorporate with your existing evidence, which might change your conclusions. This does not mean that you originally made an error - it just means that knowledge is contextual. In the context of your original information, you put it together logically to make conclusions, and later you incorporate new knowledge to make new conclusions - which build on the previous.

      Just because you can't know everything, for all time, doesn't mean you are helpless and incapable of knowing nothing.

    427. Re:It's so very odd..... by lgw · · Score: 1

      Orbits happen because gravity and angular momentum (that part of momentum that's sideways to the direction of gravity) can so easily balance. That only works in 3 diminsions BTW - make of that coincidence what you want.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    428. Re:It's so very odd..... by The_Quinn · · Score: 1

      Nobody knows whether there is a god.

      I know there is no god, for a couple reasons:

      1. Knowledge is simply the sum of conclusions you've reached by putting together all the evidence logically. Knowledge is contextual - so you can add to it later if you obtain new evidence. "Knowing something" doesn't mean that you can't eventually obtain new information that changes what you know.

      2. God is not a valid, definable concept. Is it a life-form? Is it alive? Dead? Does it have gender? Does it have composition? Where is it? How does it work? You are not supposed to be able to know - because knowing implies reason, which is antithetical to the entire mystical metaphysical basis for god to begin with.

    429. Re:It's so very odd..... by The_Quinn · · Score: 1

      Atheism is faith in that the unknown is not true.

      Definition: Faith is the belief in something without reason, or in spite of reason.

      Ergo, if you use your faculty of reason to become an atheist, it is not an act of faith.

    430. Re:It's so very odd..... by lazy_nihilist · · Score: 1

      And the logical conclusion for a rational atheist would be Nihilism.

    431. Re:It's so very odd..... by SanguineV · · Score: 1

      In all areas of science, the default position is "I don't know". Scientists do not default to saying "there is no way to make fusion reactors work" simply because they haven't found one. We do not default to "there is no unification of the natural forces", or "P != NP", or any other negative hypothesis where evidence is lacking. We call them "open problems".

      When mankind does try to default to a negative proposition, he often comes off looking a bit silly. ("There is no way for a heavier-than-air machine to fly.")

      The only reason atheists claim "no is the default" on the issue of a God is that they personally find "Yes" distasteful. It's a matter of faith. (Or, more cynically, rhetoric. I suppose I shouldn't assume candor.)

      You are confusing things when you try to claim the same behaviour for "all areas of science". The key areas I would like to highlight (but not the only ones) are: phenomenon and hypothesis.

      You are right that people look silly when they claim phenomenon cannot happen (e.g. Poisson's spot, spooky action at a distance, heavier-than-air flight). However these are all phenomenon, a scientist should default to "I don't know if it can happen", although it is fair to be skeptical.

      By contrast when it comes to hypothesis then the default is to assume the hypothesis is wrong and find a way to prove as much. (Usually phrased as if it was right how would I disprove it.) If we assumed every hypothesis was correct until proved wrong we would have many conflicting views of how things worked and no way to choose between them. (This is where the falsifiability of a hypothesis is so important to science.)

      To return to religion, the phenomenon of a particular god (or gods) is often unknowable due to their definition. However, the religion or hypothesis around them should be treated with (I would say extreme) skepticism. It so happens that many a hypothesis is falsifiable.

      Back to atheism, the difference tends to come down to (as nicely mentioned above) agnostic versus gnostic atheism. The former being scientific in spirit, while the latter is a matter of faith. Note that this is a general approach, gnostic tools are not required to show contradiction in many religions.

      As for the aside on the damage religion does to society, I think you (in general, not parent) need to distinguish between religion and organised religion. The former is a personal position that is usually a matter of philosophy with limited impact on society. The latter is a major problem that needs to be addressed.

    432. Re:It's so very odd..... by LuNa7ic · · Score: 1

      Uh, no. You've got it back to front. The nature of most religions requires belief before death. If you don't believe by the time you die, you fail, either missing out on a heavenly reward or suffering a hellish punishment. On the other hand atheism inherently states that it doesn't matter anyway whether you believe or not, you cease to exist upon death. By this logic, religion should be investigated first. Just saying...

      --
      *runs*
    433. Re:It's so very odd..... by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Seriously. It's time to pick a side and stand up for it.

      That is the wrong aproach as well.

      Rather people need to look at the facts.

      Simply picking a side and standing up for it doesn't help as it requires a measure of faith and to define faith, trust in something that has not been proven. You cant place faith in facts, a fact must be able to be proven and proven reliably. facts must be inherently distrusted, thoroughly analysed and questioned regularly. Faith by design requires it to be given without such testing, even in the light of contradictory evidence faith does not allow for points of view to be changed.

      The problem is that many people don't like questioning what they believe to be true or simply cant be bothered so they accept whatever they are told.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    434. Re:It's so very odd..... by Fallen+Seraph · · Score: 1

      He did not really believe there was a God (or he did not care), he was only upset that because he perceived his tribe as being insulted - a bit like an American getting upset about their flag being burned.

      Funny you should mention that, as flag burning is also constitutionally protected as free speech, because it's considered "freedom of expression." Granted there are a bunch of Senators who want to outlaw it, they've failed several times though, so it doesn't look like that'll happen, thankfully :)

    435. Re:It's so very odd..... by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      I was thinking more along the lines of "you can open it, but if it's in there you die."

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    436. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      /*The point is that atheism is as much an act of faith as any theism.

      No it isn't. Atheism is the default position. It is, simply, a case of not endorsing or subscribing to purported religious facts for which there is no evidence. Faith has nothing to do with it. Your logic doesn't make sense.*/

      Well actually not , most atheist would agree that as much as there is no evidence for God , there is also no evidence against God.

      Therefore you will have to believe that there is no God due to lack of evidence proving that there is no God.

      atheist == believer

    437. Re:It's so very odd..... by Whomp-Ass · · Score: 1

      No, I confuse nothing.

      The quadrapaligic has no more right to kick you than my infant daughter: The point, in point of illustration, was that they can-not; I will assume you have the use of your arms, which gives you the right to punch. Your right to punch ends at my nose, not before...Capability is right and if you think otherwise, we'll go back to the prison you've dreamt up for all of us...

      Again, you miss the point.

      Laws are not restrictions. Laws are the 'here-ye, here-ye, we don't want this' of society. There is nothing in them at all that says "YOU MAY NOT DO SO" only "IF YOU DO X, THEN Y WILL HAPPEN". (X -> Y where X is in the domain of 'bad' things and Y in the domain of 'Law')

      I will re-iterate. I will do so explicitly.

      You have not the slightest clue what freedom is, or means. You seem to think that, somehow, safety is a given, and that resources are aplenty. You seem to think that because the word 'free' is in freedom, that it is cheap (this makes me hate you).

      You are a silly boy who has not spent much time here; you must needs think more.

      THINK. FOR FUCKS SAKE...THINK...

      The route your train of thought takes us lets us off at the station where you are nothing more than property of the state and your thoughts are monitored with the same degree of analysis that Fermat's final proof was given.

      I did not miss the point. You simply haven't been in a battlefield. You are too young too and too stupid and too comfortable for your own good.

      I can only imagine what you think the natural condition of mankind is...I know for a fact that you are unable to understand why the absurdly lethal, mimetically programmed, omnivorous, social predator species you share a common bond with, keeps you around though. ...you're the asshole that would have otherwise, and is useful for in the future, being eaten by other (cousin) stupendous death machines...

    438. Re:It's so very odd..... by Whomp-Ass · · Score: 1

      Your posting history brands you as an idiot, or a shill.

      Seriously...Fuck-the-fuck-right-on-out-of-here.

      Oh, and, Nixon is dead and I pissed on him (Well, since you're stupid, I'll extrapolate: I pissed on his grave, and inside-it, him), my piquant little-douche-hat.

    439. Re:It's so very odd..... by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1
      Hmm, so you postulate a cause for 'self-ness', the 'universe', and 'ethics', namely God, and then say that because these three exist, God must exist. This is called begging the question. You even do something logically worse than this: you state that someone who does not belief in your favourite cause, must therefore not believe in the existence of your three consequences, under which the existence of the universe itself!

      So, your argument boils down to: if you are an atheist you do not believe in the existence of the universe. Why? Because God made the universe, that's why!

    440. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can your religion of science explain why protons, neutrons, and electrons form together to make atoms? Because of the forces? because opposite charges, attract? Why do they do that? What causes them to do that? Some force? What causes this force? You want me at accept it because they just do? Or should I just rely on your faith in science that it's that happens that way just because scientists (science's holy men) say so?

    441. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That argument only works for a purely abstract god, something akin to the deistic god that can fit almost any definition.

      The problem is that religious people not only insist on the existence of their god, but also claim to know something about the nature of their god, which is what I believe the "arbitrary" in the quote refers to.

      In the absence of evidence, the reasonable position is to say "for now we'll work on the assumption it doesn't exist until evidence on its existence and nature comes up".

    442. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (I don't equate the improbable with the miraculous)

      Nothing is impossible. Things are only highly improbable.

      A miracle is both the improbable happening, and the improbable happening at the most opportune time.

      For example, the story of Moses. Science has stated that the water turning to blood was a natural growth of fungus and that the drying of the red sea was simple weather patterns. The miracle wasn't that it happened. The miracle was that it happened then.

      Disclaimer, I don't believe every word of the bible, that's just an example.

    443. Re:It's so very odd..... by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 1

      Screw you. The world isn't only black and white. You're going to tell me that gray doesn't exist?

      Zealous atheists are just as logically flawed as zealous zombie worshippers. You can't prove there isn't a God, any more than you can prove it exists.

      Yes, stupidity needs to be confronted and beaten with railroad spike hammers to a pulp. (Scratch that, after seeing "Passion of the Christ", it would probably just give them an orgasm.) But agnostics don't have to take your "side" or any side. Maybe something needs to be done, it just doesn't need tools like you proselytizing thoughtful people away.

      --
      There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
    444. Re:It's so very odd..... by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      Your illustrations are excellent, but their ties to definitions of atheist and agnostic a little fragile. Many people of your first point of view would call themselves agnostic and consider atheist to mean a third point of view you haven't listed which says "There is no basilisk" without the qualifiers of 'I may be wrong' or 'I believe'. There are plenty of atheists of this type. If you describe yourself as atheist, you may be considered such, whereas if you describe yourself as agnostic, you may be your second type, but you may also be the first type. It's a bit of a sliding scale, really.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    445. Re:It's so very odd..... by dogganos · · Score: 1

      Ha! Uncertainty my ass! Which morons gave this crap '5 Insightful' ??????

      Mr. Lonewolf, I bet you don't feel uncertain at all about the existence or not of hundreds of invisible dogs flying over you while you are sleeping. Because if you feel uncertain about them, then you need to see a doctor...

      HE who claims existence of something bears the burden of proving it. (And NO, 'who made all this?' is NOT an argument nor a proof...)

    446. Re:It's so very odd..... by raju1kabir · · Score: 1

      You have to admit his take on it has a certain je ne sais quoi.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    447. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not an an anonymous coward - My name is John Talbot, I just can't be bothered to sign up - but to think that God exists because his existence cannot be disproved is exactly on par with a belief in leprechauns, and I'm not sure even ireland would seek to criminalise anyone who said that they don't exist.

    448. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 2, Informative

      If atheism is the default position, why are there so many people who believe in some sort of supreme being?

      The current thinking is that it's an artifact of our evolutionary wiring as participants in a tribal or pack-oriented society. We seek out and follow our Gods for the same reason that wolves follow their alpha leaders.

      Functional MRI studies have reinforced this notion by suggesting that there's a physical locus for what the Christians call agape. So much for "free will," huh?

    449. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      You know how stupid, weak minded and contemptible you believe those religious fanatics are? Well, just imagine if the doctrine they followed didn't restrict them from killing you. THAT is the world without religion.

      Wow, y our attitude is like something out of an Alan Moore dystopia.

      Your dog's an atheist. How can you trust him not to eat your family alive the minute your back is turned? Gee, there must be some other basis for morality besides the wrath of an invisible sky daddy. Could it be... socialization?

    450. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you are going to hold to a universe with no God and cry out for the rest of humanity to join you - you need to consider what to do next. What will be the basis for laws and justice. Who gets to decide?

      Ask your dog. He's an atheist, yet he doesn't try to gobble your family up when you leave for work in the morning. Are we humans not capable of such restraint?

    451. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      What are you going to do when a magic pixie knocks on your door? I'd like to see you prove to me that it can't happen.

      Well, that sounds like a perfectly good basis for morality to me. </rolleyes>

    452. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      People will do stupid things and hate each other even if you don't have religion.

      But at least they'll have to answer for it.

      Religion is nothing but a get-out-of-jail-free card, and it's time we took it out of the deck.

    453. Re:It's so very odd..... by zsau · · Score: 1

      Atheists ask questions like "are you agnostic in the little green faries and Santa Claus too?" only because they fail to understand what they're criticising.

      Firstly, some people are agnostic about the existence of even their own body. I don't fall into this category, but I think it's the logical consequence of "strong agnosticism". Of course, just because you don't know if you have a left foot (or even if "left" is a valid property) doesn't mean you aren't allowed to act as if you have a left foot.

      As a logical consequence of that last sentence, I'm allowed to act as if faries don't exist, even though I'm agnostic about them. Indeed, I act as if things I know exist, don't, every single day. You do too. Maybe you have a health condition you refuse to admit, or you can tell your marriage is breaking down and you don't address it.

      From another angle, there is a massive difference between God and Santa Claus, which means I can apply a low probability to Santa Claus's existence, but can't make any statement about God's. Santa Claus is meant to exist in our universe, and he's meant to do particular things e.g. fly around at night carried by reindeer pulling a sleigh giving presents to children who've been good and coal to children who've been bad, and in exchange you give him cookies and milk if your parents are American fundamentalists who've never read their bible, or cake and brandy otherwise. Yet, mum and dad always gave me presents labelled "from Santa Claus", and I never got a lump of coal no matter how bad I'd been, and mum ate the cake and drank the brandy. So it seems like probably Santa Claus doesn't exist, but maybe I just don't understand what Santa Claus is meant to be.

      God, on the other hand, is not a part of the universe (as described). Logic and maths (human constructions and not things that fundamentally exist in the same way that the Earth does, regardless of us) are not necessarily meaningful outside of the universe. How can I make any conclusions, using the systems I have, about things that don't follow the rules I know? It is an abuse of logic to say "if I rule out the existence of Santa Claus based on an absence of evidence and evidence of absence, then I should logically rule out the existence of God based on those same criteria". Five minutes ago, you might have almost died a horribly bloody death, and by a miracle, you were saved: and any evidence that that horrible bloody death was about to happen could have been stricken from existence.

      (I don't claim that it's not possible to know that God exists; I claim that I don't know how to. It may be possible, other people might know that God exists, and one day, I might to. However, I do think it's impossible to know that God doesn't exist; to know anything about God's existence would take a miracle, and if you can work miracles, you must be God (or using powers he's granted).)

      BTW: Zeus and Thor are more like Santa Claus than the Judæo-Christian God, so I assess them in the same way

      --
      Look out!
    454. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      But what is stupid is that you assholes are starting to shove it into everyone's faces

      Gee. Why do you suppose that might be happening?

    455. Re:It's so very odd..... by qc_dk · · Score: 1

      Do not mock the most holy glaglaglagla of bbbbbdddz, the god of small annoyances, or next time you open a can of tomatoes the lid will flick juice on your freshly laundered shirt.

    456. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      You know what else Newton and Pythagoras believed?

      I'm guessing you don't, or you wouldn't have made such an absurd appeal to authority.

    457. Re:It's so very odd..... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      The thing is, the Taigs are trying to restrict everybody's freedom. Animists through to Zoroastrians.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    458. Re:It's so very odd..... by cluke · · Score: 1

      I guess we decide by consensus, as a society. Or perhaps it is innate? As Christopher Hitchen's says, were the Jews murdering and coveting with abandon for hundreds of years before the tablets came down from the mountain? Of course not. Therefore this morality must have a basis in something else.

      Also, if the only thing keeping the religious good is the fear of punishment or reward, then surely they are not inherently good at all - the athiest who does good works must truly be a saint, however!

    459. Re:It's so very odd..... by qc_dk · · Score: 1

      I am going to disagree with you on this one. There is a very important difference between a china teapot around Alpha Centauri and the existence of a god. One of those claims are falsifiable and therefore in my book credible whereas the other is nonsense, a derelict of our language that allows construction of meaningless statements.

              We can agree on what constitutes an earthenware vessel designed for the brewing of tea, what Alpha Centauri(AC) is and what orbiting means. So we can devise a test whereby we could answer the question. It might be incredibly difficult and expensive to go to AC to search for the teapot, but it is possible. Until we can do the test we can estimate the likelihood. We have no evidence of human implements being much further away than the outer reaches of this solar system, and the likelihood of the existence of the tea plant on another planet is also incredibly small. So the logical position is to say there is no such thing pending further investigation/data.

              Gods, however, are designed such as to be impossible to prove/disprove. If there cannot exist a test, they can have no influence and therefore do not exist. If we did not have this definition then everything could exist and "exist" would have no meaning. If one unfalsifiable thing is true then we must believe in all unfalsifiable things. This leads to absolute chaos all positions are true. God says "Thou shalt not kill", chtulhu says "Thou must kill" the easter bunny says "Thou must shag". Which is correct? There is no way of distinguishing. Religion purports to be the creator of morality but in reality it is the destroyer. Ethics and morals can only come from reason. They cannot be handpicked from a set of equally valid ambiguous and contradictory prescripts.

              Belief in a deity is irrational and illogical. Religion is a breach of the social contract, it tries to install a higher authority than the sovereign. As such is has no place in a modern society.

    460. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you believe that Elvis Presley is alive? Perhaps kicking it with space aliens who have travelled thousands of light years to cut up some cows and stick a probe up some redneck's ass. Which tabloids do you read? Because I think even they have given up on this one.

      You also believe that magic is real and that witches and wizards exist? BTW, wicca != witch. A witch is a sorcerer or magic user, not some nutjob dancing around in the moonlight pretending to cast spells.

      You believe a fat man in a red suit rides around in a flying sleigh, pulled by flying reindeer, climbs down chimneys and leaves presents for people? BTW, Saint Nick != Santa Claus. Even in the mythology they were two seperate people.

      DNA is something that evolved over billions of years. It's not like knocking over a couple cans of paint and accidently creating the Mona Lisa. If you understood anything about abiogenesis and evolution, you would know that the chances of our DNA forming in the manner that it has was inevitable, not rare or random by any means.

      You have also completely missed the point. This wasn't about what people believe in, it was about people not being able to form a belief in the first place.

    461. Re:It's so very odd..... by cluke · · Score: 1

      These books contain nothing except words. What magical properties do you, a so called atheist, believe these words can hold? You think they're turning passive men to violence? The open minded to bigotry

      Well... yes!

      If all religion were to be marginalised to the point of irrelevance, people would go out and make up a new reason to hate and kill each other.

      No doubt. Does that not mean we shouldn't get rid of at least one of the causes? Then we can work get to work on the others, one by one.

    462. Re:It's so very odd..... by jmpeax · · Score: 1
      Nice sound bites, but you ignore reality and conveniently ignore what atheism is. You ignore probability. You ignore everything that doesn't fit within your apologist viewpoint.

      The fact is that there is no way to rationally believe in a Christian god any more than there is to believe in Zeus. Sure, there's a miniscule probability that Christianity is correct in its teachings, but this probability is comparable to the probability of, for example, Zeus existing and Greek mythology being correct. To that extent, atheists are saying "I don't know". That's why the difference between atheism and agnosticism is fallacious. Agnostics are merely affording extra weight to a purported fact for which there is no evidence for an irrational reason.

      people like you need to stop pushing false dichotamies and pretending that we're all out here to "take sides."

      False dichotamies? Try Israel and Palestine. Or the Irish Republicans and the Unionists. You're right - we're not all out to take sides, but we need to be, because until enough people abandon religion, civilisation will remain shackled by conflict and segregation.

      It is in fact quite possible to reject every religious text and still be agnostic.

      That's because agnosticism, as I have already said, is a faux concept and merely a degree of theism.

      Zealotry in favor of atheism is no better a government policy than zealotry in favor of Christianity.

      OK, I'm going to define my terms very clearly so that you understand. Atheism is just the word used to describe a rational approach to religion. A rational approach to religion is the same as a rational approach to anything else. Information is weighed according to evidence and a conclusion is reached. That is all atheism means. In fact, I think it's pretty absurd there's a word for it, because as I said, for rational beings it's the default position! Can an atheist tell you that he is 100% certain that x deity does not exist? No. What he can tell you is that according to the evidence available, it is highly unlikely that they exist.

      So, should governments approach matters in a zealously rational way? Yes, of course they should.

    463. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      Serious consideration of all unlikely possibilities will leave you paralysed, and in all likelihood, clinically insane. Why, then, do we discard this principle in one single case--the existence of God?

      Nicely put, shame it came too late in the thread for anyone else to read!

    464. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      Please enlighten us. What evidence do you have that there is no god?

      The minimum description length principle. As long as no questions exist that are best answered by "God did it," then the only reasonable assumption is that there is no God doing anything.

    465. Re:It's so very odd..... by jmpeax · · Score: 1

      Oh man, come on. The number of intelligent people who come out with this shit.

      Please read this post and understand what I'm saying!

    466. Re:It's so very odd..... by cluke · · Score: 1

      There are many degress of belief.
      One, maybe yours - though you are a little coy about exactly what you believe God to be so it is hard to tell - is some sort of belief in the numinous. Something must be out there, outside the universe - who knows what? Let's call it God! This is what passes for sophisticated belief as it attempts to "un-ask" the question "What is God?"

      Another is the more common belief of an interventionist being that one can pray to, and who watches you in the bathroom to make sure you aren't jerkin' off in there. Or looks at your thoughts to make sure you aren't fancying same-gender partners.

      One of these beliefs is harmless, the other toxic. And of course there are many shades of grey in between. I suspect most people don't really know what they belive in.

    467. Re:It's so very odd..... by jmpeax · · Score: 1

      Haha I love it. GP saddens me.

    468. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      You can't choose your skin color.
      All current evidence suggests that you can't choose your sexual orientation.
      You can't choose or decline to choose a physical or psychiatric disability such as muteness.
      You can, however, choose to believe absurd propositions, or to disbelieve in them. If your God did nothing else for you, at least He gave you the power of reason.

      I vehemently *OPPOSE* any such legislation as this.

      Please vote accordingly; that's all I ask.

    469. Re:It's so very odd..... by jmpeax · · Score: 1

      I'd be quite willing to wager that over history, more people have believed in divinity than have not.

      Religion is a part of culture. It survives because generation after generation pass it along. Just like language.

      I see what you mean about it being "default" in the sense that people tend to be drawn to religion. But I would suggest that this is because we tend to fall back onto our imaginations when our reason fails to provide an answer. We are, by nature, rational beings.

      Oh, and your arguments on this sort of topic will be taken better if you leave the emotional content such as "grow up" out

      I'll make a deal with you: when people stop suffering at the hands of religion, I'll stop getting emotional about it.

      I have to take issue with your definitions of atheism/agnosticism. See this post.

    470. Re:It's so very odd..... by mcvos · · Score: 1

      I'm agnostic, and I *am* picking a side and standing up for it.

      'Agnostic' doesn't mean "I don't know whether to believe in the Christian god" (as your comment re: Zeus appears to imply). Agnosticism can mean either "I don't know whether there's a god or not" or "I believe it's unknowable whether there's a god or not".

      Exactly. In the GP's words, I'd say agnosticism is firmly on the side of reason, whereas atheism and religion are on the side of faith.

      They're not really opposites, though. It's perfectly possible to be a reasonable (agnoastic) atheist or a reasonable (agnostic) christian. I consider myself agnostic christan, for example. I firmly believe it's unknowable whether there's a god or not, yet at the same time I firmly believe that there is a god (and a very specific one at that), fully aware that this belief is not based on any reliable, objective evidence. That's what makes it belief, after all.

      What really annoys me is theists and atheists who pretend they know everything and claim their position is fully supported by evidence when it's not. It's usually much easier to talk to agnostics (including agnostic atheists and theists) than fundamentalist atheists or theists. (Although I know one guy who I consider a fundamentalist agnostic. He's a really odd case, denying it's possible to be christian and agnostic at the same time, and worships Kant like he's the messiah, despite the fact that Kant himself was an agnostic christian.)

    471. Re:It's so very odd..... by mcvos · · Score: 1

      There is nothing irrational about finding the whole God thing absurd,

      It is, however, an opinion, rather than scientific fact. It's important to learn to distinguish between the two.

    472. Re:It's so very odd..... by Acaeris · · Score: 1

      To be more accurate about the 'Fire' myth. You can yell fire in a crowded theatre and only if the crowd panics and someone is injured/killed will you be held accountable for anything. If everyone leaves safely and no one gets hurt, the worst that can happen is you get banned from the theatre (it's private property after all)

    473. Re:It's so very odd..... by mcvos · · Score: 1

      Agnosticism and atheism aren't mutually exclusive. You can be an agnostic atheist (i.e. you don't believe in any god and you claim there is no way to know this for fact) or you can be a gnostic atheist (i.e. you don't believe any god and you claim to know this as fact). Most atheists are agnostic atheists.

      In the same way, agnosticism and theism aren't mutually exclusive. Agnostics aren't in opposition with atheists or theists, they're in opposition with gnostics, be they theist or atheist.

    474. Re:It's so very odd..... by t_ban · · Score: 1

      Seriously. It's time to pick a side and stand up for it.

      No reason why one should have to.

      Science has never been about the existence (or the lack thereof) of god. Science concerns itself with understanding the observed phenomena of the universe, and says nothing about the primary cause, if any, behind all phenomena. There is no way to scientifically prove or disprove god. Our current knowledge of the universe is incomplete, and perhaps inaccurate in many ways. We are simply not in a position to be 'resolute' about such questions, at least not yet.

      Being 'irresolute' when discussing ultimate causes, therefore, seems to me not cowardly at all, but logically the most acceptable position at present. Staunch theism and staunch atheism are both extreme positions, and neither can be scientifically defended.

      Atheism is fashionable in certain circles, slashdot not the least among them. But if you disregard public opinion and apply cold logic, you'll see that an atheist is just as pig-headed and stubborn as a creationist.

      --
      First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win. -Gandhi
    475. Re:It's so very odd..... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Hmm, so you postulate a cause for 'self-ness', the 'universe', and 'ethics', namely God, and then say that because these three exist, God must exist. This is called begging the question. You even do something logically worse than this: you state that someone who does not belief in your favourite cause, must therefore not believe in the existence of your three consequences, under which the existence of the universe itself!

      So, your argument boils down to: if you are an atheist you do not believe in the existence of the universe. Why? Because God made the universe, that's why!/i.

      To the contrary, if you start with the question, "Why is there anything at all?" the rest are logical conclusions. Logically, atheism implies nothingness.

      It is atheists that assume a priori that they know that God doesn't exist - which is called assuming your conclusion.

    476. Re:It's so very odd..... by mcvos · · Score: 1

      Strong agnosticism is a logically defensible position: there may exist a god who created a universe with thr property that it is impossible to prove (or disprove) that god's existance. This claim can only be disproven by establishing the existance of a different sort of god. Very few people hold this belief.

      Are you sure that very few people hold this belief? It sounds like a very sensible one, and it is what a very influential agnostic, Immanuel Kant, believed. I believe the very same thing, and it wouldn't surprise me at all if a lot of the intelligent, well-educated christians I know would subscribe to the same belief.

    477. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      Mock? I used the proper "great" ablative!

    478. Re:It's so very odd..... by Some+Bitch · · Score: 1

      If it helps, don't think of agnosticism as a middle ground between the states we call "religion" and "atheism." Think of it as a middle ground between the processes of "reasoning" and "faith."

      You forgot the majority of people who are agnostic, those who don't think of it as a middle ground at all. You're on one side with the theists in actually caring one way or the other, we're on the other in the "Don't give a shit" camp wishing both you and them would just shut up.

    479. Re:It's so very odd..... by mcvos · · Score: 1

      Is there a God?

      A) Yes.
      B) I don't know.
      C) No.

      A) is a theist. B) and C) are both not theists, therefor, atheists.

      What if I answer: I don't know, but I think there is? There's plenty of room for a significant difference between B and C.

    480. Re:It's so very odd..... by mcvos · · Score: 1

      Sorry dude, some things are just so ridiculous

      This is an opinion. Don't confuse it with objective fact.

    481. Re:It's so very odd..... by t_ban · · Score: 1

      Countries are making the kind of legislation this article talks about and you don't think some rational zealotry is in order?

      Do not confound philosophical faith and organised religion. An idiotic act like that described in TFA involves the latter, and also political motives.
      The former, whether mistaken or not, is a contemplative category, and has no power either to help or harm society.
      And zealotry in any form is bad, because it destroys the ability to think and act rationally.

      --
      First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win. -Gandhi
    482. Re:It's so very odd..... by mcvos · · Score: 1

      He treats the arbitrary as on a par with the rational and evidentially supported. So he is the ultimate epistemological egalitarian: he equates the groundless and the proved. As such, he is an epistemological destroyer.

      I've never heard of Leonard Peikoff, but he's clearly an idiot. Agnostics are the only ones who distinguish between the groundless and the proved. The only ones who consider what's evidentially supported and what isn't.

    483. Re:It's so very odd..... by mcvos · · Score: 1

      (FYI, a strong agnostic position antagonizes just about everybody on the thiest and athiest side).

      Not at all. It antagonises everybody on the gnostic (people who pretend they know it all) side. There are plenty of agnostic theists and atheists, who believe something despite admitting it's unknowable.

      In fact, I think any good christian should be humble enough to admit the limitations of his own knowledge and be at least slightly agnostic. (I know I am.)

    484. Re:It's so very odd..... by init100 · · Score: 1

      If atheism is the default position, why are there so many people who believe in some sort of supreme being?

      Because they are indoctrinated at an early age, and thus are infected with the psychological disease of religion at an age when they are the most vulnerable to it. Very young children are wired to accept what adults tell them as the truth. Being infected by religion at this early age makes it a chronic disease in most cases, with no effective cure available.

    485. Re:It's so very odd..... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      The universe is subject to the same rules you would apply to god. God cannot logically exist unless it violates the rules applied to the universe. The usual claim is that the universe could not always have existed, but god could have. This is nonsense; inconsistent, irrational, and could support many ideas other than a god.

      This is a common, but bad, argument. Indeed, there are other possibilities. (I also note that atheists nearly always refuse to speculate, since their ideas usually sound even stupider than a deistic creation.) But between a universe autocreating itself ex nihilo, and a universe created by something else, I think the latter option is by far the more likely, and matches our scientific understanding more than ex nihilo autocreation.

      Ethics exist for a simple reason: beings that harm each other stand less a chance of survival

      Sure. But you can use evolutionary arguments to prove nearly any thesis statement in sociology, so it's relatively meaningless and unscientific. (Evolutionary psychology is not the same as evolution, and is the place where softcore scientists gravitate to in order to be able to write papers without needing any proof whatsoever.) You see, if we were all ruthless oppresors of each other, you could craft an evolutionary theory for that. If we were all hippie communists, you could create a theory for that. It's not science.

      But I'm not talking about that. I'm talking about (almost) all people acting as if there was an absolute moral code, even if they don't profess to believe in one. Emotivism is the logical consequence of atheism, with moral relativism being the consequent of that. But moral relativism is logically impossible. Therefore atheism has serious issues, unless it accepts some form of absolute moralism. (Kant is often proposed as a solution to this problem, but even Kant said that if God didn't exist, they'd need to invent him in order for his moral system to work.)

      Self-ness? I don't know what you mean there, so I'll ignore that one. It doesn't matter, since even one solid and indisputable fact supporting god would not be the extraordinary evidence needed for such a claim, and I am sure it's anything but indisputable.

      It's pretty indisputable that I exist. If you exist, then it should be pretty indisputable to you. This alone causes problems, because you didn't exist before you were born, but now you're a thinking, conscious entity. Therefore there's been a transition from nothingness to existence. And, probably, when you die, you'll transition back to nothingness. This is indisputable evidence that nothingness can transition to self-ness, and so when an atheist claims that when you die, that's it, the evidence is actually against him, since it has already happened to you. The evidence unquestionably supports either the notion of Buddhistic reincarnation or Christian resurrection of the "soul" over atheistic nihilism.

      You're not convincing anyone.

      Atheists have already decided they know how the world is, and so will not listen to any argument otherwise. It's not rational, nor scientific, so please don't pretend that it is. You sound like one of those fundamentalist Christians who are terrified of rational debate.

    486. Re:It's so very odd..... by t_ban · · Score: 1

      I used to share your discomfort with the concept of atheism vs. agnosticism... As I grew older, though, I began to see that agnosticism was a much less useful state of being. If one is truly agnostic, then one ought to feel compelled to give equal weight to all systems of knowing. I believe that accepting a personal state of functional atheism requires more up-front intellectual honesty, but in the long run produces much less cognitive dissonance.

      But then your position is not rational, but merely convenient.
      I can agree with atheism-for-convenience or atheism-for-all-practical-social-purposes, but most people who ridicule faith claim rational bases for their position, when in fact they have none.

      --
      First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win. -Gandhi
    487. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's be fair - you're only slightly less atheistic than Dawkins

      You, after all, assume the monotheist a priori.

    488. Re:It's so very odd..... by Lord.Gade · · Score: 1

      I don't understand some people's reasoning for doing otherwise, but am willing to accept that they do without judging or assuming that I'm somehow mentally superior because I reached a different conclusion.

      And that is exactly the "problem". YOU dont understand why THEY behave the way they do, but you are willing to accept it.

      THEY dont understand why YOU behave the way you do, but they are making it a criminial action.

      As frightning as this is, the big picture is fucking scary.

    489. Re:It's so very odd..... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      well for the record, as a comic book fan, that was mutie, as in derogatory term for a mutant. I was just reading one the other day where a black guy asked kitty prdie "Are you one of them muties?" To which she replied "I don't know, are you a nigger?" Classic. Thus the reference.

      In any aspect, are you suggesting it's not ok to belittle someone for their skin color or sexual orientation, but it is ok to belittle them based on their belief structure? I mean, I know its ok as far as free speech goes, but as far as promoting a good logical discussion...o wait, nm, forgot where I was.

    490. Re:It's so very odd..... by Phoghat · · Score: 1

      goddamn, they can't do that.

      --
      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
    491. Re:It's so very odd..... by Phoghat · · Score: 1

      One can be an "agnostic" yet fight for free speech. I feel that no person has the right to dictate to me my beliefs. That goes for right wing religious nut jobs as well as those who consider themselves atheists. There must be a middle ground.

      --
      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
    492. Re:It's so very odd..... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Let's be fair - you're only slightly less atheistic than Dawkins

      That's... what?

    493. Re:It's so very odd..... by Phoghat · · Score: 1
      ""I believe it's unknowable whether there's a god or not."

      This is the same path I follow. As far as I'm concerned, the idea of god can be anything from the traditional christian meme (admittedly unlikely) to some uber-intelligent being from the n*th dimension.(also unlikely)

      Personally I lean more towards Buddhism, the only religion that really doesn't have a god.

      --
      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
    494. Re:It's so very odd..... by t_ban · · Score: 1

      There is no proof that Santa Claus does not exist -- does this make him believable? Clearly not. Is that question even worth the attention? Nope.

      This is a popular argument with atheists. Sometimes they will use golden reindeer, pixies, little green men or invisible dogs instead of Santa Claus. But I think this analogy is flawed.

      When using such examples, they are referring to (existent or non-existent) objects, often associated with childish beliefs, in our immediate and familiar surroundings. Since most of us have grown out of such beliefs, this atheist rhetoric works by evoking a sense of shame in agnostics, by implying that their position is as childish as being agnostic about the existence of little green men.

      But being agnostic about Santa and being agnostic about god are two very different things. We have grown up to know that it was our parents, not Santa, who left the presents in the stockings. Thus the necessity of Santa in the chlldish belief system was replaced by a more complete knowledge of how society works. But we have no such intimate knowledge about the fundamentals of the universe. It is possible that our current state of knowledge is analogous to that of the child who believes in Santa, but just because Santa didn't put the presents there does not mean we shall never wake up into a greater understanding of the universe where there is really is a cosmic #insert favourite name for a cosmic Santa who put the universe there#.

      Further, Santa or pixies or flying deer aren't useful for any theory

      --
      First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win. -Gandhi
    495. Re:It's so very odd..... by anothy · · Score: 1
      most of your post is... well, not very good. but you hit on one point that results in people talking past each other quite a bit:

      Atheism is the default position.

      the problem here is that "atheism", as the word is used in english today, has two meanings.
      first, there is classical atheism, sometimes called "soft" atheism. this is the older meaning, but is also the less common one when the word is used today. this meaning signifies the lack of belief, and is, as you say, the "default" position in some useful sense. it doesn't really make a claim, in the logical sense; it basically says "i'm unconvinced".
      but the second definition, sometimes called "hard" atheism, is the assertion "there is no god". this is how the word is much more commonly used, both among self-professed "atheists" (intentionally lumping the two groups together) and, significantly here, among people of faith.

      this is made worse by the co-opting of "agnostic". hard atheists - those that want to use "atheist" to mean "there is no god" - have pushed soft/classical atheists into the agnostic category, which is unfortunate both for the classical atheists and for the agnostics. the correct definition of agnostic (one who doesn't believe we can know about god) isn't even incompatible with a belief one way or the other. one can perfectly well be a theistic or atheistic (of either type) agnostic (although presumably not an evangelical).

      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
    496. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      well for the record, as a comic book fan, that was mutie, as in derogatory term for a mutant. I was just reading one the other day where a black guy asked kitty prdie "Are you one of them muties?" To which she replied "I don't know, are you a nigger?" Classic. Thus the reference.

      Ah, OK, gotcha. :) Same idea, then.

      In any aspect, are you suggesting it's not ok to belittle someone for their skin color or sexual orientation, but it is ok to belittle them based on their belief structure?

      Yep.

    497. Re:It's so very odd..... by anothy · · Score: 1

      you are correct that the default position is "i don't know", but that's exactly the classical definition of atheism. it's not "one who believes there is no god", but "one who does not have a belief in god". the difference is substantial. the more common usage today is much newer, and largely the result of propaganda and politicization of the discussion (by both sides).

      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
    498. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      You are totally off track. I use Santa because I feel exactly the same way with God -- a childish, superstitious belief.

    499. Re:It's so very odd..... by anothy · · Score: 1
      so much wrong here. you clearly don't understand the different types of atheism, the logical requirements for different sorts of claims, or what agnosticism is. you're a wonderful example of why zealotry on behalf of any position gets to the same end. just one point that's worth calling out in particular:

      ...until enough people abandon religion, civilisation will remain shackled by conflict and segregation.

      this is just plain stupid and ignorant, much more so than can be excused for someone who claims to have any sort of rational view on the topic. religion is a convenient tool for those interested in conflict and segregation (and a host of other ills), but out species is quite adept at doling them out with or without them. ample evidence can be found in the fields of anthropology (millennia of conflict and slavery in pre-religious humans), ancient history (religiously fueled wars were very much the exception in ancient europe and west asia), and modern history ("strong" atheist societies killed more people in the 20th century than theistic ones), just to pick a few examples. it's human nature that's the problem.

      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
    500. Re:It's so very odd..... by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1
      Congratulations, you successfully dodged the point. And you clearly didn't follow the link.

      Before the 1700's, if someone had asked, "What's lightning?", what would have been the proper answer? Was it reasonable to say that God (or Thor, or the Thunderbirds, or Zeus, or Seth, or what have you) caused lightning? No, the proper response was, "I dunno, yet. Maybe somebody will figure it out someday."

      A couple of quotes, just for fun:

      • "To the rational mind, nothing is inexplicable; only unexplained." - The Doctor
      • "To surrender to ignorance and call it God has always been premature, and it remains premature today." -Isaac Asimov
      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    501. Re:It's so very odd..... by anothy · · Score: 1

      you should be annoyed by that. note, however, that it often comes from self-professed atheists. after a few centuries of abusing the terms, people in all camps screw up the difference between "no belief" and "belief in no".

      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
    502. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know the only difference? When your teachers/parents/priest taught you about the latter, they drilled it into you that it was true, and they did so from such an early age that it has created enough doubt to cause you this brain attack in adulthood. Either that or you're scared of dying/being alone, yada yada. Grow up. The world needs you to stick up for what's right, not what makes you feel warm at night at the expense of others.

      Hello, I'm his lawyer. That was a very good offense, sir. Very good indeed... but even though you may have won the battle, you will still lose the war. Let me begin by saying....... this..is..Chewbacca..

    503. Re:It's so very odd..... by anothy · · Score: 1

      except for the ones that do.

      what you're describing is "soft", "weak", or "classical" atheism. it's the more useful and logically coherent version of the term. it is also, unfortunately, the less commonly used meaning, including (in my experience, conversationally and in literature) by self-professed atheists. i'm not sure whether you're making the true/false distinction because you're unaware of the more common meaning or intentionally trying to reshape the language (perhaps admirable; i used to try that, but came to accept it as a lost cause), but regardless, it isn't categorically true.

      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
    504. Re:It's so very odd..... by anothy · · Score: 1

      well put, but a refinement: the two columns should be "explained without gods" and "not explained without gods". nothing ever leaves your "explained with gods" column.

      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
    505. Re:It's so very odd..... by Phoghat · · Score: 1

      Atheism

      Agnosticism,

      Theism

      OK, here it is, read 'em and weap. Pick one.

      --
      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
    506. Re:It's so very odd..... by JerkBoB · · Score: 1

      But then your position is not rational, but merely convenient.

      So, are you saying that my lack of belief in leprechauns or brownies or unicorns is not rational, but merely convenient?

      I am an Atheist. A- (without) theism (belief in the divine). I don't believe in the Divine. Do I pretend to have proof of the non-existence of God? No, I do not. I don't need it, any more than I need to prove that any number of mythological creatures do not exist.

      It's really quite simple. I simply do not believe in that which can not conceivably ever be observed empirically. Making up supernatural explanations for that which we have not yet come to understand through science is convenient, and lazy.

      --
      A host is a host from coast to coast...
      Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
    507. Re:It's so very odd..... by V+for+Vendetta · · Score: 1

      This puts the Atheist in the same boat as the theist: with a belief that lacks any evidence.

      I've heard that reasoning quite a lot. But I can't figure out why in the world this very case should be excempt from the scientific rule: If you claim there is something, you provide verifiable proof for it. In that sense, atheism is the "natural state of mind" (=don't believe in something there's not the slightest evidence for).

      You "believe" I owe you money? I'm "atheistic" to your belief until you have proof for that. Or should I be the one who needs to disprove your claim (=prove my "atheism")?

      I do not belief in the superiority of the white race. Do I need to prove that?

      I as an atheist have nothing to prove. Those who claim there's some kind of higher being have the burden of proof.

    508. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe in God, but that doesn't mean I believe in the dogma spouted by various religions. Has religion damaged society, or have religious leaders and the people who follow them without thinking damaged society? You can just as easily say government has damaged society. Government, for the most part, seems to consist of leaders who want power, and people who follow them without thinking. Does that mean we should do away with government? Yes, No, and I Don't Know are all valid answers to any question.

    509. Re:It's so very odd..... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You are confusing reason with facts or empirical evidence. A person with faith very much reasons and reconciles their faith just as an atheist does. There is no constructional difference between the process or mechanics of the process. If you didn't know and didn't care, it would be a different story and no faith would exist. However, considering that neither theist or atheist beliefs are rooted in provable or testable evidence, then asserting either over the other becomes an act of faith.

    510. Re:It's so very odd..... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Actually, I don't believe in either

      Aha, you have faith - the same mechanism for believe in pixies!

      When you don't believe in a god and exclude their possibility

      Well this is the point - few atheists go so far as to "exclude their possibility". Even for those who are strong atheists, they would still admit they'd change their mind if confronted with the evidence. So your point is a straw man, and no better than me jumping to conclusions about you "excluding the possibility of pixies".

      Not being convinced in something is agnostic

      No, that definition is not supported by any dictionary I am aware of. Agnosticism means a belief that God's existence is unknownable. You can be agnostic and atheist, btw.

    511. Re:It's so very odd..... by Alistar · · Score: 1

      You are putting your current mindset into the period in which you are talking. This is incorrect.

      Before the 1700s if you asked somebody what's lightning, I am very certain the "proper" answer would have been God did it, not "I don't know". Heck there are people today where even though you can use science to explain lightning and thunder, they will still say, "God did it".

      I met a Christian Engineer (some sort baptist I think) and she believed that Rainbows were simply the will of g(G)od and had nothing to do with the refraction of light on moisture in the atmosphere, and she was a bloody Environmental Engineer. Even after roughly explaining the concept, it was still a matter of "Ok, but God still causes it to happen".

    512. Re:It's so very odd..... by samriel · · Score: 1

      If you give the Bible-thumping idiots an inch, they will take the field.

      Where do you find that this only applies to Christians? While I hate the prospect of censoring ANY speech, at least it seems they're being inclusive of the 'other viewpoints'.

    513. Re:It's so very odd..... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      discovering that atheism required a belief that an unevidenced god was also impossible

      What? That isn't backed up by any of the references you quote, which all support two definitions of atheism.

    514. Re:It's so very odd..... by He+who+knows · · Score: 1

      The debate is between plain old theism and plain old atheism. And it isn't being held in Internet forums

      Then stop posting here if you don't want a debate.

    515. Re:It's so very odd..... by mea37 · · Score: 1

      Those who label themselves "atheist" attack as irrational anyone who allows for belief in a god. Those who hold the view you're claiming have lost control of the label "atheist", if indeed you ever had it.

      Read over this thread, and it is very clearly a debate between those who Believe there is no god (calling themselves atheist), and those who believe we do not and cannot know (calling themselves agnostic). Worries about how those labels might have been applied in a different discussion at a different time are moot.

    516. Re:It's so very odd..... by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      I have never ever met an atheist that stated that they didn't believe in god as an act of faith. I am not sure what atheists you have met, but this sounds more like a theist's crap straw man rendition of an atheist than the real life people i know.

    517. Re:It's so very odd..... by mea37 · · Score: 1

      I would assert that "a phenomenon can (or cannot, or will or will not) happen" is, in fact, a hypothesis. "A heavier-than-air machine flying" is a phenomenon; "it is possible for a heavier-than-air machine to fly" is a hypothesis (albeit an ill-defined one for lack of detail, but I think we can both fill in the blanks), and my example above points out what happens when this hypothesis is assumed false.

      In any case, hypothesis are not "assumed false", they are tested. Testing is what we do becasue we don't assume. If we can't test a hypothesis (there is no current test of the string theory hypothesis regarding the nature of spacetime), we make no assumption and leave it as an unknown.

      You claim a need to assume false because of the chaos that would ensue if we assumed true - which fails to address the agnostic position of not assuming anything.

    518. Re:It's so very odd..... by mea37 · · Score: 1

      If you admit that it's a matter of probability, then you admit that you don't know. So atheism is a matter of faith.

      You might want to look up what "atheism" means, by the way, because your definition of it is even more incorrect than your attempt to apply 'probability' to the question. But from there, it's up to you whether you do your own research, as I'm done debating someone who can't express an allegedly-rational viewpoint in rational terms.

    519. Re:It's so very odd..... by Peter+Mork · · Score: 1

      Based on the provided definitions, it's reasonable to claim to be an agnostic atheist. I believe that nothing can be known concerning the existence of any god; I also believe that no god exists. These are not mutually exclusive. The former is (IMHO) primarily a rational/logical assertion; the latter is a statement of faith/belief.

    520. Re:It's so very odd..... by sponglish · · Score: 1

      You bet your ass I'm going to try to figure out the meaning of it all, and I'm not satisfied with "you can't do this yet." In the end I may not be able to do it, but it is my right to try.

      By all means, try. You might be the first person ever to prove that a deity exists. Odds are seriously stacked against you, but maybe your god will finally decided enough is enough and say a big hello to the world.

      Only if you limit "serious attempts to understand the world around us" to "stuff we learn through application of something approaching the scientific method."

      Yes.

      None of this is intended to diminish the fruits of scientific labor, which are many and varied, or its continued practice. But I am inclined to believe that science is and shall remain incapable of answering at least one ("why are we here?") or two ("where did we come from?") of the big questions in a satisfactory manner. Did it make a fundamental difference in how you acted when you found out that your body is composed of cells, or that your brain functions through electrochemical waves? The latter was a big step in the scientific understanding of "why are we here," dealing directly with consciousness, yet it is powerless to explain the experience of "I am."

      You keep mentioning our ignorance of the answers to the ultimate questions. We still have a million years to find the answers before accepting that everything is here thanks to an absentee landlord/superbeing. For all we know, life and consciousness may be aspects of normal matter, extending into a fourth dimension, or the "soul" may become part of a cloud of dark energy after death. Who knows? But I think we will eventually figure it out.

      --
      "I improvise. It's my greatest talent. I prefer situations to plans..." --Wintermute, William Gibson's "Neuromancer"
    521. Re:It's so very odd..... by The+Iso · · Score: 1

      Space-time is a property of matter and energy, not a pre-existing void in which it appeared.

      --
      "You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows." - Bob Dylan
    522. Re:It's so very odd..... by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      You cannot prove a negative. EVERYTHING exists if you do not assume assertions of a positive nature are false. That include unicorns, martians, Vishnu, honest politicians, and every other idea contradictory to reason ever asserted as true. Thus, there is a great difference between "x exists" and "x does not exist", because if there was not, you'd be opening the floodgates of anything even remotely possible.

      Agreed. However, that still doesn't mean that you've effectively shown that none of those things exist. Just because the limitations of logic are inconvenient doesn't mean that they don't exist.

      Look, if you want to believe that there are no gods, or unicorns, or whatever, by all means feel free to do so. However, don't pretend that your choice to do so somehow places you in the lofty elites of those who are "purely rational." You see no evidence and conclude A, and somebody else sees no evidence and concludes B. Neither conclusion follows from the evidence, and while you can feel free to hate the B crowd to me it seems like a waste of energy...

    523. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am mystified that conservatives find it so hard to understand that "hate crime" is orthogonal to the physical act being done. They understand how this works perfectly in the case of "treason". It's not the effect on people physically connected to the treasonous act that makes treason so bad. It's the effect on the country as a whole. Hate crimes work exactly the same way.

      Then be informed. Treason is defined in the U.S. Constitution. Article III, Section 3. "Hate crimes" are an invention that seeks to apply very subjective and generally ambiguous "viewpoints" to more definable criminal acts that can in effect "amplify" the severity of those acts, and therefore the punishment for them. There is NO basis in the Constitution for such extensions to real criminal law. Not that that matters much anymore...

      The fact that an assailant yells a racial slur while hitting you, versus 'gimme your wallet!' doesn't change the actual physical or monetary harm done to you. The fact that a rapist yells something culturally insensitive or misogynistic while raping someone doesn't change the real harm done. But the 'hate crime' extensions allow judges and juries to express their offense and outrage... how dare you say such a thing! How dare you think such a thing! How dare you be unapologetic!

      That doesn't matter. You assaulted, you robbed you raped. Why doesn't matter in the punishment phase. You committed a crime, you are punished for it (especially the last; death penalty hell yeah). Perhaps in repeat offense situations some aspect of that might be taken into account in sentencing, but not as part of up front charges.

      Hate crimes laws are simply an extension of the 'right not to be offended' stuff previous posters mentioned. Any additional 'harm' is simply umbrage. Its up to you if you let words or thoughts some damn lowlife criminal spouted off offend you or not.

    524. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A god could take many, many forms. I believe there's strong evidence against a god who created humanity in its image and for the purpose of exalting it.

      Then how do you explain boobs?

    525. Re:It's so very odd..... by AncientPC · · Score: 1

      I'm an agnostic.

      My response would be the same as an atheist's up to a point. Even though I can deduce there probably not being a basilisk in the box, that does not imply that basilisks do not exist or perhaps fit a different description then what we imagine.

      I reject pretty all religions' image of God, but that's not to say he/she/it may or may not exist in some form or another.

    526. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's funny, if no one tried to brain wash me in the first place I would have never known what this god thing is...

      So if god is real, I hope he sends jesus back so I can kill his ass this time! I'm guna go Manson style on him. Don't be worried its to save you from your sins... LMAO!

      I had this great conversation with this bush the other day, man it was smart and stuff... BTW those frogs taste funny don't lick them.

    527. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a bunch of pompous whooey!.

      Thats the same thing that could be said about your comment gestalt_n_pepper

    528. Re:It's so very odd..... by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1

      Before the 1700s if you asked somebody what's lightning, I am very certain the "proper" answer would have been God did it, not "I don't know".

      A different way to evade the point. You're using "proper" in the sense of "socially acceptable", instead of "correct".

      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    529. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I shift my self-categorization based upon who I'm talking to. If I'm near someone religious I'm not interested in antagonizing, I self-define as an agnostic or an apatheist. If I'm dispersing door-to-door proselytizers, I'll come on as a hard-as-nails, wannabe-Nietzsche atheist (or, in one case, as a committed Catholic). If I'm having a discussion with someone thoughtful, religious or otherwise, I start with theological noncognitivism to preface the discussion with the absurdity of most "God" definitions, proceed to lay down some agnostic complaints, and usually finish with a few lines on pragmatism and parsimony that in the end, seating me solidly in the atheist camp. I find it particularly important to point out at every stage how morality can be justified wholly temporally -- I'm unlikely to go on a murderous rampage or defraud people, despite not expecting to have to atone for sins after death.

      Yes, I'm agnostic. And, I'm atheist. I'm even a bit anti-theist, though not so much as, say, Richard Dawkins. I believe that I am a Pastafarian, a Last Thursdayist, and an advocate of both Russell's teapot and the Invisible Pink Unicorn too, but that's because I don't believe that these groups necessitate belief in the supernatural, and because each of these strawman entities critique different aspects of religious adherence. In discourse, one's framing of self is relevant. It's relatively useless to frame oneself as a broad fifth-amendment advocate at an environmental summit -- with a couple conceivable exceptions, it's not germane to the discussion.

      If you want to know what someone really thinks, you've got to interview them. That's true of religious folks too, by the way. Many worthy people are religious, and it works for them. Some good, productive people dig self-actualization/affirmation/meditation methods, too, and damned if I'm going to criticize something that lets them get out of bed energized and lets them improve this culture of ours -- so long as they keep it off my lawn, so to speak, and don't offer it as a justification for bad decision-making.

    530. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Robert Krulwich recently interviewed Richard Dawkins on Radio Lab, and I thought he had a good response to that question:

      Krulwich: 'I think human beings, most human beings, have some deep impulse to explain their being here. To wonder about the origins of here, and the destiny of them and here. And that question -- the meaning of it all -- is not a silly question.'

      Dawkins: 'No, that's not a silly question, and it has a perfectly good answer, which is not an answer to be couched in the language of purpose. It's an answer to be couched in the language of scientific causation. What brought us all to be here, what is the explanation for our existence... that has a perfectly good scientific answer.

      'You go back in evolutionary time, to the origin of life, and you go back before the origin of life to the origin of the world, to the origin of the solar system, to the origin of the universe... and that becomes deeply mysterious, needless to say. It's not a question I could even begin to answer, and I don't think that at the present stage physics can either. But to the extent that there is going to be an answer, it's going to come from science.

      'That is a deeply satisfying kind of answer to the question, "why we are here?" We already have, in principle, the answer to that question -- and it is NOT an answer of the form, "we are here in order to achieve some purpose." It's an answer of the form, "we are here because something happened, which led to something else that happened, which led to something else that happened."

      Krulwich: 'Let me ask you the harder question: is this hard looking, and this telling your six-year-old, "this leads to this leads to this", this kind of reductionist way of thinking about everything -- does that seem to you to be less than joyously imaginative?'

      Dawkins: 'No, and I... no. I think that's kind of super-romantic. To actually understand that flowers are devices -- beautiful devices, elegant devices -- which are shaped precisely to attract insects and hummingbirds and bats to take pollen from one to another... that is such a mind-blowing thought, compared to the tame, washed out view that flowers are just nice things to have around.'

    531. Re:It's so very odd..... by macbeth66 · · Score: 1

      yeah, it certainly does smell.

    532. Re:It's so very odd..... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      To be more accurate about the 'Fire' myth. You can yell fire in a crowded theatre and only if the crowd panics and someone is injured/killed will you be held accountable for anything. If everyone leaves safely and no one gets hurt, the worst that can happen is you get banned from the theatre (it's private property after all)

      That's not true in the general or specific cases. You can absolutely be charged for yelling "fire" even if no one is injured. Disturbing the peace or public nuisance charges apply. Further you're liable for civil penalties to reimburse the theater for tickets they have to refund as a result of your actions.

      In the general case you don't have to prove harm results from slander or libel, just that such action was the intention.

    533. Re:It's so very odd..... by justwill · · Score: 1

      Total BS. I'm an agnostic. I have not yet experienced anything or seen any compelling evidence which leads me to conclude that a god does, in fact, exist.

      However, 'no proof' does not equal 'proof of nothing'. I maintain that there may well be things operating in the universe beyond my current ability to understand. Should I--by means not yet revealed to me--come to understand some of these things, my position may change one way or the other.

      For me, agnosticism is about following the evidence, about applying rational thought process, about discarding that which is without merit and considering that which has merit. It is absolutely not considering "arbitrary claims as meriting cognitive consideration and epistemological respect".

      Leonard Peikoff apparently had it exactly wrong on agnostics.

    534. Re:It's so very odd..... by wingwing · · Score: 0

      But when you open the box, there's a stuffed toy basilisk in it :)

      Richard Dawkins gives some interesting analogies. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YxwBtfkv9ns

      He describes a religiosity scale of 1-7. 1 meaning I know there is a god and 7 meaning I know there is no god
      Everything else is some type of "agnostic". He describes himself as a 6, a "defacto atheist" but still "agnostic".

    535. Re:It's so very odd..... by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      "There is no evidence for gods or faeries or santa claus"

      WTF?? Are you daft? . . . If there was no faeries then who replaced my tooth with a quarter when I was a kid? If there was no Santa Claus then whose lap did I sit on and how did all those presents get under the tree, AND WHAT BASTARD ATE THE MILK AND COOKIES I LEFT OUT THAT NIGHT??!!

      No evidence indeed! Wake up and smell the coffee man! Faeries and Santa exist or someone pulled off the biggest scam in the world when I was a kid!

    536. Re:It's so very odd..... by jipn4 · · Score: 1

      That's not so. Just because free speech is a guaranteed right, does not mean that instances where speech conflicts with other protected rights it trumps them.

      I don't know what that means. What I do know is that, in the US, free speech has few limitations.

      It is very much a consideration. The "yelling fire in a theater" example originated in the US in 1919 in a Supreme court case.

      That is one of the few exceptions.

      Public nuisance and disturbing the peace laws restrict free speech for the simple convenience and comfort of the public.

      That is not a free speech restriction, since it is based on manner of speech, not content.

      There are many more examples, but hopefully that one is good enough to falsify your theory.

      It's not my theory, it's the law of the land.

    537. Re:It's so very odd..... by shiftless · · Score: 1

      There is no such thing as a "scientific fact." There are only hypotheses, theories and laws, all of which only apply to observable phenomenon. Science doesn't know everything, but it is the only way we CAN know anything. My opinion may just be an "opinion", but it carries a lot more weight than theists' fantastic God claims, since there isn't a shred of scientific evidence in supports the existence of a supernatural being. Some people choose to believe in God anyway, and that's fine--but don't confuse their dogmatic faith with my use of sense and reasoning. Atheism != theism.

    538. Re:It's so very odd..... by religious+freak · · Score: 1
      My dog is well fed and cared for - that allows socialization which leads to peace. You ever visited or lived in a bad part of town? I can tell you folks there are not well cared for.

      Your dog's an atheist

      For the record, he's not. I am God to my dog, as you are God to yours.

      --
      If you can read this... 01110101 01110010 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100111 01100101 01100101 01101011
    539. Re:It's so very odd..... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Aha, you have faith - the same mechanism for believe in pixies!

      Only if you are a moron and don't pay attention to the rest of the statement. The mechanism is not in not believing, but in stating one over the other without any empirical or testable proof. I do not believe is not the same as there is no god or pixies. If you would have kept the comment in context, you would see that I didn't preclude the possibilities of a god or pixies, that I'm just not convinced they are here. That is agnostic and no atheist or apixies and doesn't involve faith at all- it involves not being convinced one way or the opposite. If I was to say either doesn't exist, then I would be reaching with faith because there is no evidence of that. There is only the lack of evidence showing they do and as we know, the lack of something does not prove something.

      Well this is the point - few atheists go so far as to "exclude their possibility". Even for those who are strong atheists, they would still admit they'd change their mind if confronted with the evidence. So your point is a straw man, and no better than me jumping to conclusions about you "excluding the possibility of pixies".

      Actually, all atheist do go so far as to exclude the possibility. Otherwise they would be agnostic which can easily be defined as in not knowing the existence or nonexistence of either. If they are jumping under a label in order to get in on a fad, then that is on them, not the definitions.

      And no, it is not a strawman, it is the difference between two defined terms. You seem to be insisting that an apple should be called an orange just because you have done it in the past or know someone who has. That doesn't make it so, it makes incorrect label or name use. And yes, it is better then you jumping to conclusions over the possibility of pixies because I clearly stated that I wasn't denying their possibility where you ignored the statement and asserted I was. Also you will note that the conversation is about proper labeling because of the differences in terminology that is derived from actions or positions taken. Your jumping to conclusions was nothing more then being an ass in order to perpetuate an incorrect point.

      No, that definition is not supported by any dictionary I am aware of.

      Then you should get out more. It's within the first paragraph at wikipedia, In the context and spirit of the definition from Merriam Webster, and in philosophy circles.

      Agnosticism means a belief that God's existence is unknownable. You can be agnostic and atheist, btw.

      Actually, the term goes past a god or gods existences and refers to the ultimate knowledge in any particular subject. It is often used in terms of gods and is so in this conversation. And no, you can't be agnostic and atheist because the act of atheist is a known assertion(there is no god). It removes the unknowable portion of agnostic. How can you hold a position of not knowing something while asserting to know that same something doesn't exist or is untrue? Go ahead, work that out as a logic problem, -2+2=0, you have nothing, it doesn't work. Atheist assert they know, you can't hold a belief of not knowing while asserting you know. It just doesn't work. I'm sorry I shattered your world view and you might not fit into the popular groups anymore but that's just the logic working, not me. If you don't know there is a god well enough to believe in him, but leave the possibility open, you are agnostic. If you deny the existence of a god, you are atheist and making a definite assertion.

    540. Re:It's so very odd..... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I don't know what that means. What I do know is that, in the US, free speech has few limitations.

      That's true, but it does have limitations and those limitations happen when free speech rights conflict with other individual rights.

      Public nuisance and disturbing the peace laws restrict free speech for the simple convenience and comfort of the public.

      That is not a free speech restriction, since it is based on manner of speech, not content.

      I fail to see why that matters. It's still restricting your ability to speak freely even though it is not false or imminently dangerous. Sure you can whisper the same thing, but then people can't hear you and being able to be heard has long been legally recognized as a vital component for free speech in the US.

      It's not my theory, it's the law of the land.

      Except it isn't the law of the land since I presented you with an example of a law that limits speech and which does not meet your criteria.

    541. Re:It's so very odd..... by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Dualism.. now there is a word that needs an antonym.

      Monism?

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    542. Re:It's so very odd..... by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      I admit that there could in fact be a supernatural being that we are not aware of or able to perceive

      Since we cannot perceive that supernatural being, it must be in a superposition of the existence and nonexistence states. Therefore it neither does nor doesn't exist. Provided supernatural beings follow the laws of quantum mechanics, of course.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    543. Re:It's so very odd..... by ormondotvos · · Score: 1

      Free speech is vastly overrated. Consider social stability. How far are you willing to allow the clever to demagogue the unskilled public? Are only children to be protected against emotional parasites? How about a serious discussion instead of parroted civil rights fake truisms. I speak as a member and former Board member of a very large ACLU chapter. Watch your ideology. It can bite back.

    544. Re:It's so very odd..... by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Ok, so start the filesharing religion where one of the central beliefs is that god wants people to share, and saying anything against it is blasphemy. And then sue the music and film industry associations of the world. :-)

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    545. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was not able to stand more than the first 5 minutes from this film.

    546. Re:It's so very odd..... by ShadowBot · · Score: 1

      Saying "I have no reason to believe there are pink fairies at the bottom of the garden" and saying "I am absolutely sure there are no pink fairies at the bottom of the garden" are two totally different things.

      if you add the axiom that these fairies are invisble and try to avoid being noticed. Then Yes! it becomes arrogant to insist that they do not exist.

      The GP is actually the most reasoned take on the issue I have yet heard.

      The truth is that many scientific theories require similar levels of faith. (multiple universe theory, string theory, even some interpretations of Einstien's theory of relativity) They are supported by mathematical formulations that cannot be proved or disproved in reality in much the same way the proofs of a higher being are supported by philosophical formulations.
      The existence of a mathematical formula is meaningless unless all the variables in it can be matched to existing and measurable physical phenomena.
      Yet no one goes around writing books saying I believe string theory is rubbish.

      Consider these scenarios
      1. The world is actually the Matrix. The architect decides that only humans who belive in him will get downloaded into a cyber brain and live forever upon expiration of thier body. Does this not make him a defacto God.

      2 Dr Manhattan (from watchmen) goes to another galaxy. Seeds it with life, watches over it as it grows, guides it towards sentience and gives the sentient beings a list of rules they should live by and steps back to see which of them sincerely obeys or disobeys (not out of fear). The ones that he deems worthy, at the moment of death are transfigured and given similar powers to him (a substitute body is of course provided for burial to prevent questions). doesn't this make him to all intents and purposes God.

      3. The Ori/ The ancients (from stargate) are Gods in everything but name (despite the writers desperately trying to claim otherwise). In fact they are very similar to the greek/norse pantheons. Whether or not they ask for worship does not detract from the title.

      I could think up more examples but I'm sure you see my point.

      You cannot prove any of the above scenarios aren't currently the case. The only thing you can do (which is what stargate does) is to say becuase you know the origin of a God then that reduces from his/her/it's divinity.
      But in the old Pantheons it was quite possible for a mortal to be elevated to Godhood.

      As a scientist one of the most valuable pieces of information you can have is knowing what you don't know.

      --
      Quantum Physics a.k.a. sub-molecular statistics
    547. Re:It's so very odd..... by E++99 · · Score: 1

      I know a lot about what Newton and Pythagoras believed. My statement wasn't even about belief. It was about the application of logic by people, including myself, who are or were well-qualified to do so.

    548. Re:It's so very odd..... by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      The second sentence is very much self-explanatory, unless you're a total theist with no beliefs involving only one/a particular subset of divinities to exist, which would be pretty rare outside of a subset of pagans and hindus, but still, you're likely only a step below the hardcore atheists - you do, after all, likely disbelieve everyone else's gods... and there might have been a slight mix up as to the person it was aimed at, you messed up the italics tag, idk. The oppositions raised by the epicurians to the notion of a perfect divinity, imo, stand.

    549. Re:It's so very odd..... by jjd1_dement · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's not really a fair analogy to invoke animals in my opinion. For one, they don't have the capability to destroy with small likelihood of consequence as we do (my dog isn't quite yet trained with firearms). Second, I don't think my dog can rationalize lying, stealing, killing, etc like humans can. Third - there certainly are animals that will kill with disregard for your family (a bear for instance).

      That said, however, you've now invoked a simple trust in human nature to keep chaos from erupting as everyone decides to be their own God and do what makes them "happiest". Take away religion and I'm not sure that balance is going to work out for you. The 20th century was the bloodiest on record - and most of this was at the hands of atheist leaders (Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, etc). I'm not so worried that everyday people would just start killing each other, but I am worried about powerful world leaders that can justify genocide and ethnic cleansing simply because they only have to answer to themselves and those that are on the right side of the killing equation. There really is no argument against a Hitler in an atheist worldview other than "sucks that he didn't choose to be a restrained person of his own good nature".

      You may not agree with religion, but I think you vastly underestimate the violence and destruction that will come of a society that completely eradicates a notion of religious morality. It's proven quite dangerous time and time again when those who lead us find themselves unaccountable to God. You are hoping that they all decide to act like tame dogs; I'm worried they will be wild bears.

    550. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These ain't bible-thumpers: mi familia is Catholic, and they, along with my Catholic friends, like to stress how they, unlike other Christians, don't read the Bible: the Roman Catholic Church isn't coy about this, that they teach dogma and ritual, and the precepts of their magisterium, not so much engaging in "bible-thumping"; I was once shocked, in fact, when a Catholic saw me reading a Bible, and when they had asked me if I was a Christian and I asked "what do you mean", their response was "as opposed to Catholic": in further interaction with Catholics over the years now, this has held true; the only time one even sees Catholic teachers reading or citing Scripture is to defend Catholic dogma and positioning themselves, but never once have I ever seen this done according to consistent hermeneutical handling which sought to teach, rather than conveniently abuse, the text: hermeneutic is the skill of reading a text for its inherent meaning, the discipline studied and utilized by biblical theologians with Scripture, and by lawyers to seek ways around and to twist that meaning: as well as apologists attempting to make face for something not substantiated by a source of authority they claim.

      This is a convenient time for Ireland to do this also, since Europe has made similar declarations about the right of religion not to be defended (at the demand of Muslims), a dangerous an lunatic move since it is individuals, not abstract non-entities, that rights pertain to. Even being Roman Catholic, though, I think I'll call my Irish family and ask their opinion on this: they'll probably think this is absurd and dangerous: they have some pretty good heads on their shoulders, and I wonder if the people realize how liberal (in reference to the conception of Catholicism often held) Irish "Catholics" can be these days.

    551. Re:It's so very odd..... by hey! · · Score: 1

      You still miss the point.

      The "hate" component is not directed at the victim of the assault. It has nothing to do with offending anyone, and everything to do with threatening them.

      Sidling up to somebody and saying "We know where you live," does not offend that person and it IS a crime under the correct circumstances.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    552. Re:It's so very odd..... by sexybomber · · Score: 1

      No kidding! I guess I need to brush up on my knowledge of vile and deadly beasts.

    553. Re:It's so very odd..... by E++99 · · Score: 1

      I'm aware of non-rational experiences of "the divine" and how powerful they are (had some myself, actually)

      I wasn't aware that experiences could be classified as rational or non-rational. What distinguishes a rational experience from a non-rational one?

      the interpretation of being enlightened/born-again/etc. is all done though the mind.

      As opposed to arithmetic or anti-religious diatribes, which are done through the... liver?

      If it can be induced by chemicals or a powerful magnetic field pointed at the right spot on the skull, I'd have to question it's association with omniscient superbeings.

      Sure, brain manipulation changes your mental state. I don't think anyone has ever become born again because of chemical or magnetic induction though. The idea that states of mind that are conducive to religious experience can be brought on through natural means, including drugs or fasting, is not evidence that the religious experience is somehow not real. That is a prejudice of having a mindset formed by a Christian society which dissociates drugs from religion. Historically, many, if not most, religions have done the opposite.

    554. Re:It's so very odd..... by jmpeax · · Score: 1

      Try reading my post properly, then reply to it.

    555. Re:It's so very odd..... by jmpeax · · Score: 1
      You know what, your ignorance got to me so much I had to reply to you properly. It's a quicky, though. David Hume on rationalism:

      All rational statements that assert a factual claim about the universe that begin "I believe that ...." are simply shorthand for, "Based on my knowledge, understanding, and interpretation of the prevailing evidence, I tentatively believe that...." For instance, when one says, "I believe that Lee Harvey Oswald shot John F. Kennedy," one is not asserting an absolute truth but a tentative belief based on interpretation of the assembled evidence. Even though one may set an alarm clock prior to the following day, believing that waking up will be possible, that belief is tentative, tempered by a small but finite degree of doubt (the earth might be destroyed, or one might die before the alarm goes off).

      If you can't now see how probability and rationalism play a part in this debate, then I'm afraid you are a lost cause. Either that or you're religious, in which case I don't want to receive any more posts from you.

    556. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think its all bollocks, no law can really change anything so why don't you all grow a back bone and stop getting your panties in a twist you big girl

    557. Re:It's so very odd..... by jmpeax · · Score: 1
      From Wikipedia (you don't like my source, feel free to find one of your own - maybe then you can respond to my arguments rather than making me do the work):

      Atheism tends towards skepticism regarding supernatural claims, citing a lack of empirical evidence.

      Remember how I said this in the post you replied to saying I didn't know what atheism was?

      But you know what, I'm going to simplify things because I've realised this word "atheism" is just a way for people like you to contort things to fit your bullshit. So I am no longer calling myself an atheist. This is my stance: I think that the devotion to people or lifestyles, imaginary or otherwise, based on the belief in wholly unproven facts (that have a very tiny probability of truth on the same order of the probability of, for example, Greek mythology being truth), is irrational. I have provided examples of how this is irrational. I don't care if the object of the devotion is a god, a heaven, the E-meter, a pink unicorn or candy trees on the Moon. It is irrational if it is based on a lack of empirical evidence or if there is evidence to the contrary, just like it would be irrational for you to send me a wire transfer of your entire savings account based on an assertion that I would double your money and send it back. You don't know me and you have no evidence to suggest I could (or would) honour my word. Despite the fact that there is a small possibility that I might do as I say, you would be acting irrationally.

      the logical requirements for different sorts of claims

      Why don't you tell me, what the "logical requirements" for Christianity's many, many disputed claims are? This is what David Hume has to say:

      All rational statements that assert a factual claim about the universe that begin "I believe that ...." are simply shorthand for, "Based on my knowledge, understanding, and interpretation of the prevailing evidence, I tentatively believe that...." For instance, when one says, "I believe that Lee Harvey Oswald shot John F. Kennedy," one is not asserting an absolute truth but a tentative belief based on interpretation of the assembled evidence. Even though one may set an alarm clock prior to the following day, believing that waking up will be possible, that belief is tentative, tempered by a small but finite degree of doubt (the earth might be destroyed, or one might die before the alarm goes off).

      If you cannot understand what I am saying and see how it is rational after reading this, then I really don't know what else I can say to you. You and this other guy talk as if I'm talking crazy. This is, by its definition, a rational way to view the world. I can't express any more clearly, I'm sorry. And I mean that genuinely. If you don't see what I am saying then I really wish I could help, not to make you agree with me, but just to give you the option to. But this is as explicit as my explanation can get.

      the fields of anthropology

      Do you not realise how religion has been consistently used to control the masses in almost every civilised nation on the planet? I would tell you to read a history book if it wasn't so incredibly patronising. Incidentally, your allusion to Stalin is intellectually dishonest - his atrocities were by no means connected to his rejection of religion, they were attributable to the fact that he was fucking bat shit insane.

      I think your ideas about human nature are interesting, but I strongly disagree with them. Human nature is malleable. Someone who grows up, for example, not questioning authority or engaging in rational thought because such things have been discouraged in order for them to be successfully religiously indoctrinated will have a very different nature to someone brought up by parents who have encouraged them to keep their minds open, critical and rational. It is on this fundamental level that I think the danger l

    558. Re:It's so very odd..... by BobGod8 · · Score: 1

      gnostic = imperfect/evil god
      gnostic atheist => belief in the lack of an evil god

      Just saying.

    559. Re:It's so very odd..... by s0l1dsnak3123 · · Score: 1

      You, my friend, are a genious. As my best friend L. Ron Hubbard once said: "You don't get rich writing science fiction. If you want to get rich, you start a religion."

    560. Re:It's so very odd..... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Only if you are a moron and don't pay attention to the rest of the statement.

      Yes, my point exactly. I'm not the one who holds that point of view, you are; I'm merely replacing "God" with "pixies".

      Then you should get out more. It's within the first paragraph at wikipedia

      It states: Agnosticism (Greek: - a-, without + gnsis, knowledge; after Gnosticism) is the philosophical view that the truth value of certain claims particularly metaphysical claims regarding theology, afterlife or the existence of deities, spiritual beings, or even ultimate reality is unknown or, depending on the form of agnosticism, inherently impossible to prove or disprove and hence unknowable. [1] It is not a religious declaration in itself and the terms are not mutually exclusive.

      How do you get from that, to: "Not being convinced in something"?

      And since you refer to Wikipedia, check out atheism: Atheism can be either the rejection of theism,[1] or the position that deities do not exist.[2] In the broadest sense, it is the absence of belief in the existence of deities.

      Case closed. In my earlier comment I give further sources for a range of definitions.

      If someone tells you they're an atheist, it's not very clever to make assumptions about what they believe by ignoring sourced definitions, or redefine the terms just so you can make up a straw man. And what's more, when they clarify their stance, shouldn't you accept that? I'm telling you now: I don't believe in God.

      Actually, the term goes past a god or gods existences and refers to the ultimate knowledge in any particular subject. It is often used in terms of gods and is so in this conversation. And no, you can't be agnostic and atheist because the act of atheist is a known assertion(there is no god). It removes the unknowable portion of agnostic.

      Already proven you wrong, but just OOI, in your personal set of definitions: since I don't believe in God, but I also don't claim his existence or not is unknowable, what category do I fall into?

      Atheist assert they know, you can't hold a belief of not knowing while asserting you know. It just doesn't work. I'm sorry I shattered your world view and you might not fit into the popular groups anymore but that's just the logic working, not me.

      No, I don't. Have fun with your straw man.

      Honestly, I have no idea why so-called agnostics seem to spend so much time attacking people who don't believe in God, just because they use a different term to them - even when numerous dictionaries and other sources back up their usage.

    561. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it helps, don't think of agnosticism as a middle ground between the states we call "religion" and "atheism." Think of it as a middle ground between the processes of "reasoning" and "faith."

      My understanding of agnosticism is quite different. It is not a middle ground at all, it is in fact more logical than atheism, a claim I will attempt to prove shortly.

      It's simply not meaningful to hide behind "agnosticism" as a position. It doesn't make you sound diplomatic, it only makes you sound cowardly and irresolute. As an example, are you agnostic about Zeus, too?"

      Refuse to claim to understand if Zeus exists/existed? Yes, that's what agnosticism is all about. There is no proof that Zeus did/does exist, but absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. That is a logical fallacy called argument from ignorance. From the agnostic point of view making a claim either way is ill advised. What definitive evidence do you have that he did NOT exist?

      There are compelling arguments for the non-existence of god/gods/kami et al. To me it takes a measure of faith to believe in oneself so much as to claim to KNOW the answer, be it affirmative or negative. THAT is what agnosticism is all about.

      You call it cowardly and irresolute, I call it practical humility. Look up 'Black Swan' and then tell me what is more logical.

    562. Re:It's so very odd..... by E++99 · · Score: 1

      I think you perhaps don't understand the concept of God. It is not "a guy who can do cool shit". It is the immutable and infinite source of all existence. What makes you think that God should be doing miracles? Obviously, if you were from any background other than a Judeo-Christian one, the thought wouldn't even occur to you. Either the miracles recorded in the Jewish and Christian scriptures actually happened, or else there's no reason to expect miracles from God in the first place. The reality is that apart from the continual influence of God, the universe would cease to exist, yet to you the fact that it exists, yet without things that look strange enough for you to call them "miracles" means that God doesn't exist? How is that reason? God should do weird things so that you don't have to use your own mind to figure out that he exists? I don't think so. Most people don't need what you call "miracles" to figure out that God exists. Meanwhile it sounds like any competent magician could start a cult and you would join it.

    563. Re:It's so very odd..... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      The second sentence is very much self-explanatory, unless you're a total theist with no beliefs involving only one/a particular subset of divinities to exist, which would be pretty rare outside of a subset of pagans and hindus, but still, you're likely only a step below the hardcore atheists

      Ah, that old adage.

      No, there's actually quite a substantial difference between choosing to believe in something, and adopting the code of ethics derived thereof, and choosing to believe in nothing. A person who chooses to eat chicken at dinner is more closely related to the person who chooses the beef, rather than the person who decides he's not going to eat at all.

    564. Re:It's so very odd..... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Yes, my point exactly. I'm not the one who holds that point of view, you are; I'm merely replacing "God" with "pixies".

      I think you don't know what the point of view is. Now listen one more time, agnostic, I don't believe but am not ruling it out, atheist, There is no god (pixies for you) because of whatever reason. Do you see the damn difference? One is a definitive statement that suggest knowing the other is an non-definitive statement concerning what is unknown. The two do not intermingle.

      It states: Agnosticism (Greek: - a-, without + gnsis, knowledge; after Gnosticism) is the philosophical view that the truth value of certain claims particularly metaphysical claims regarding theology, afterlife or the existence of deities, spiritual beings, or even ultimate reality is unknown or, depending on the form of agnosticism, inherently impossible to prove or disprove and hence unknowable. [1] It is not a religious declaration in itself and the terms are not mutually exclusive.

      How do you get from that, to: "Not being convinced in something"?

      Fuck man, are you that stupid? If I convince you, then the unknown is no longer unknown. If you are not convinced in the presence or absence of a god or body of knowledge, then the definition fits.

      And since you refer to Wikipedia, check out atheism: Atheism can be either the rejection of theism,[1] or the position that deities do not exist.[2] In the broadest sense, it is the absence of belief in the existence of deities.

      And both of those statements are definitive which is impossible if you are unsure or hold a belief that it is unknown or inherently impossible to prove or disprove. Read the damn words that you posted yourself.

      And you sources, when they don't contradict themselves, side with me and not you. Answer this, it's a logic question that I asked of you in my last post but you conveniently ignore, how can not knowing be reconciled with a definite statement of the existence or non-existent of a being? As I pointed out before, they can't and you have yet to show how unknown can mean known.

      If someone tells you they're an atheist, it's not very clever to make assumptions about what they believe by ignoring sourced definitions, or redefine the terms just so you can make up a straw man. And what's more, when they clarify their stance, shouldn't you accept that? I'm telling you now: I don't believe in God.

      Unless they are a moron who doesn't know what atheist is and things agnostic means atheist or don't understand the difference between knowing and not knowing, then my assumptions will always be correct. I'm sorry that you are so hurt about not being in the club with the popular kids, but truth is, you never should have in the first place.

      No, I don't. Have fun with your straw man.

      You should probably look that up too. I don't think it means what you want it to mean. BTW, it is not a universal "I don't agree" clause.

      Honestly, I have no idea why so-called agnostics seem to spend so much time attacking people who don't believe in God, just because they use a different term to them - even when numerous dictionaries and other sources back up their usage.

      Why? Because communicate is a process designed to convey complete thoughts and if you can't label yourself correctly, then don't get pissy about being accused of something that goes with the label. Tell me again, how does no knowing translate into a knowing there is no something? Tell me, how does that logic work? Not believing in god is not atheist, believing there is no god is. They are two entirely different concepts and don't intertwine.

    565. Re:It's so very odd..... by soren202 · · Score: 1

      Hitler

      /argument.

      As a side note, I'm amazed that you haven't realized the flimsiness of this argument. Not only does a lack of direction after we discount god not really mean that he does exist, but there's a lot of philosophy directed toward how we should live and interact with others, with ideas ranging from "live to optimize the pleasure you experience" to "try to do what brings the most happiness to others" (hedonism and utilitarianism respectively).

    566. Re:It's so very odd..... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      It's not really a fair analogy to invoke animals in my opinion. For one, they don't have the capability to destroy with small likelihood of consequence as we do (my dog isn't quite yet trained with firearms). Second, I don't think my dog can rationalize lying, stealing, killing, etc like humans can. Third - there certainly are animals that will kill with disregard for your family (a bear for instance).

      And you've missed the point nicely. The point was that socialization is an adequate basis for what we call "morality," and arguably the only legitimate one. We evolved to cooperate with each other in small groups or tribes, just like other primates do, and that means we had to evolve the means to pass judgment on individual actions that are detrimental to the tribe's. If you'd spent any time around higher primates, this would be obvious to you.

      Bears aren't social animals to begin with. Unlike dogs, bear societies didn't evolve alongside those of humans. If we started now, agreeing to let bygones be bygones, bears and humans could probably trust each other in another 100,000 years.

      Finally, guns don't change fundamental social dynamics, and in any event, religion has proven singularly useless at regulating peoples' misbehavior with them. In countries all over the world, rates of violent crime are more or less directly proportional to religiosity. You're safer in countries like Sweden where only about 25% of the population will tell you they believe in a God, than you are in a country like the US where only about 10% of the population will tell you they don't.

      Take away religion and I'm not sure that balance is going to work out for you. The 20th century was the bloodiest on record - and most of this was at the hands of atheist leaders (Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, etc). I'm not so worried that everyday people would just start killing each other, but I am worried about powerful world leaders that can justify genocide and ethnic cleansing simply because they only have to answer to themselves and those that are on the right side of the killing equation. There really is no argument against a Hitler in an atheist worldview other than "sucks that he didn't choose to be a restrained person of his own good nature".

      Sigh, not this crap again. First off, Hitler and Stalin also drank milk as children. Maybe we should look into milk-drinking with the same critical eye you apply toward atheism.

      Second, Hitler was a freaking Catholic. He wouldn't have been able to come to power and build the Third Reich without the active and well-appreciated cooperation of the Church. There's no shortage of photos of Hitler glad-handing priests and Popes galore. Every Wehrmacht soldier's belt buckle said "Gott mit Uns" (God is with us).

      Third, Hitler was also a raving nutcase, and it's not really meaningful to cite religious beliefs in examining his motivation, one way or the other.

      Fourth, Communist personality cults such as Stalin's are not the least bit atheistic in nature. These dictators are just another class of exploiters, like priests and politicians, who understand how to use peoples' inborn tendency to follow strong, sure leaders without question. (Which in turn is just another facet of socialization at work.) Stalin was a seminary student, as a matter of fact, until he ran across Lenin's writings and realized they represented a more direct path to power.

      Basically, a Communist dictator is a godhead figure, through and through. Same mental exploit, different script. They see traditional religions as competition, obstacles to their own adoration, and attack them as violently as they do any other bourgeois institution. Sometimes they displace the peoples' Gods in a literal sense. North Korea comes to mind, where the dictator and his ancestors are divine personages. You won't find many atheists in North Korea, unless they're hung from trees on the road to town.

      It's proven quite dangerous time and time again when tho

    567. Re:It's so very odd..... by mcvos · · Score: 1

      Claiming your opinion carries more weight than someone else's is also an opinion, and a rather arrogant one, I might add.

      It is true that there's no objective, repeatable scientific evidence of the existence of God, but keep in mind that science restricts itself to examining the laws of this universe, and phenomena that are subject to those laws. Any being that created this universe and its laws is obviously not subject to it, and therefore falls outside the realm of science anyway.

    568. Re:It's so very odd..... by saforrest · · Score: 1

      One provides some sort of explanation and the other just avoids the question.

      I agree with this, but not in the way you meant.

      Look, I by my existence am not evidence, or at least if I am, you're going to have to tell me why. You suggest that I-as-evidence can be interpreted either way, in which case I deny that it is evidence.

      Look, if we were at a crime scene, we could have a strong definition of evidence: (1) something that establishes guilt or innocence, or a weak one (2) anything relevant to the crime scene. The only kind of evidence I'm interested in is (1). If you allow (2) then the entire universe and all existence is evidence, which makes it utterly useless and wholly uninteresting in answering the question at hand.

      Complex organization does not imply conscious creation. If you want, I suppose, you could see life itself as a very, very slow-acting "creator" on a colossal time scale, but any speculation what the consciousness of life "wants" and what its motives are is, well, excessively speculative. And it is not this kind of "creation" which is normally meant in these discussions.

      Arguments for creation based on "irreducible complexity" or the like are all ultimately misunderstandings, deliberate or otherwise, of Darwinian adaptation and the laws of thermodynamics.

      I deny the existence of an intelligent creator because I have no reason to believe one exists, just as I deny the existence of an invisible pink unicorn within the rings of Saturn. I cannot prove or disprove either claim, but I see no reason to engage in a rhetorical dance about a proposed hypothetical for which no conclusive evidence exists.

      The primary argument against an intelligent creator is that, so far, it has been shown to be an extra hypothesis which is wholly unnecessary for understanding the material universe. In science we do not add extra hypotheses without good reason.

    569. Re:It's so very odd..... by jipn4 · · Score: 1

      That's true, but it does have limitations and those limitations happen when free speech rights conflict with other individual rights.

      No, that's just not how it works. US law protects your property from theft, but it doesn't protect you from speech, no matter how much you may feel your rights were infringed. You can claim defamation in civil court, although truth is always a defense, and lack of evident falsehood is usually a defense.

      I fail to see why that matters. It's still restricting your ability to speak freely even though it is not false or imminently dangerous.

      Well, it matters because that's a legally important distinction on what constitutes restrictions on free speech and what doesn't.

      Except it isn't the law of the land since I presented you with an example of a law that limits speech and which does not meet your criteria.

      You can take that up with the supreme court justices who wrote those words; they don't see a conflict between those words and your example.

    570. Re:It's so very odd..... by infernari · · Score: 1

      Both theism and atheism are faith based positions.

      Atheism is a faith based position as much as not collecting stamps is a hobby. Simply not believing in a god doesn't require faith. It is just refusing to believe in something for which there is no evidence.

      Not true. In order to disbelieve something, you have to believe in the premise that it does not exist. You have no undenyable proof that a thing does not exist, therefore you are believing it does not exist. You may have good evidence which suggests that a thing does not exist, which means that it may be a reasonable leap of faith to believe it does not exist, but it still involves a conviction without proof. Without absolute proof of a negative, the best you can have is a logical assumption, not a logical certainty, and an assumption still takes faith. It's not illogical to say "There's no reason to beleive in god." It is illogical to say "There is no god". The first is true. The second is speculation. Probably good speculation, and I'm not discounting its possibility, but it is true that there is not concrete evidence to support the existance of god, while it is not true that there is concrete evidence to support the non-existance of god. Only probable evidence that supports the non-existance of god.

    571. Re:It's so very odd..... by anothy · · Score: 1

      except that's not true. this discussion has lots of people who hold the classical atheist position. the main reason i brought up the issue explicitly is because people were talking past each other, not realizing they were using different definitions.

      also, try not to make so many bad assumptions. i'm no flavor of atheist.

      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
    572. Re:It's so very odd..... by anothy · · Score: 1

      that's mainly because "act of faith" is pretty loaded. the distinction between the two types of atheists are those that disbelieve claims of god vs. those that believe claims of no god. better than half the self-described atheists in this discussion thread have been of the "there is no god" variety.

      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
    573. Re:It's so very odd..... by anothy · · Score: 1

      i'm not pretending to not understand. i understand your claims perfectly well. you're just way, way off base. enough so that i'm not really interested in getting into a debate with you, because it's clear you're not interested in logic or reason, but instead have an agenda that must be served. so, instead, this is to correct a few glaringly obvious things for other readers. then i'm done.

      you still don't show any understanding of the hard/soft or strong/weak distinctions in types of atheism. both tend to use the term "atheism" unadorned, but have very different logical requirements.
      the statement "i do not believe in god" is, on its face, logically weak (an unfortunate term, but there it is): it makes no real claims, and is neutral as to the actual reality. this is what classical atheists believe. it is essentially the same as saying "i'm unconvinced".
      the statement "there is no god" is logically strong: it makes a definitive claim as to the condition of reality. as such, it has the same requirements on evidence as the statement "there is a god (or gods)". this is the more common usage among modern self-professed "atheists". the logical requirements are not diminished based on the fact that you're asserting a negative.

      asserting that the tyranny of atheist rulers is because of an underlying insanity but that the tyranny of theist rulers is because of theism is absurdly intellectually dishonest. why do you get to pick and choose?
      even if you were to make that assertion and try to back it up, the disproportionate representation of psychopaths at the head of atheist regimes would leave open a rather interesting question of why that happens. that is, what is it about religion that serves as a check, albeit an imperfect one, on such craziness? that's not the best place to take your argument.

      David Hume is absolutely correct, but that passage is totally irrelevant. that is, it applies exactly as well to strong atheist claims as it does to theist claims. you seem to want it to say something it doesn't.

      i have no interest in defending the claims of any particular branch of Christianity. you seem, there, to be laboring under the mistaken belief that i give those claims some sort of "free pass" as far as logical constraints go. that's the main reason i'm no sort of proselytizer. turnabout is fair play, i guess, but in doing so you're totally punting on your logical responsibility. and it's a poor punt, given that at no point have i framed things in a "Christianity (of any derivation) vs. atheism" argument.
      that cemented, for me, your position as the sort of anit-church zealot your "argument" about the role of religion on human nature has made you out to be. there's no point in arguing or debating with zealots of any stripe. for other readers: when presented with "you don't understand A", asserting "yeah, well you haven't proven B" is not a coherent defense. especially when nobody's made any claims about B.

      you lump in "belief in the absence of evidence" with "belief in the face of contrary evidence". this, logically speaking, is an error. your apparent, persistent inability to understand this is likely related (in which direction i do not know) to your inability to differentiate between the claims of two different types of atheists.

      and no, i will not do your work for you.

      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
    574. Re:It's so very odd..... by smithmc · · Score: 1

      Agnosticism can mean either "I don't know whether there's a god or not" or "I believe it's unknowable whether there's a god or not".

      I guess you're right, but not knowing whether or not there's a god doesn't necessarily make you agnostic. Nobody knows whether there is a god. Or many. Personally, I'm an atheist and am perfectly willing to admit that I don't know whether or not there's a god. I believe that there are no gods because I see no evidence of them and I see no useful reason to assume that there are any. It does no benefit to me, others, or my understanding of the universe to believe that they're there, so I assume that they're not.

      Why isn't it sufficient to simply assume the nonexistence of gods, in the absence of evidence? Why do you feel the need to cross that line into belief? In doing so, you are committing the same error as the god-fearing folks.

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    575. Re:It's so very odd..... by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

      I think we're getting into how many angels can dance on the head of a pin.

      I don't base my thinking on some 'belief' that there is no god. I base my thinking on a set of precepts which does not include a belief in a god. I waste no time investing in some thought process which wastes energy on trying to prove any absence of a god, any more than I worry about proving the absence of an Easter Bunny. Why worry about proving the absence of something, when you simply don't have any evidence that you need to believe in it's presence? It's like needing to prove the absence of a new type of force in the universe. Absent evidence that you need to explain an objects movement by something in addition to electromagnetic and gravitational forces, why would you invest energy in trying to prove there are no additional forces. You don't have to 'believe' that only electromagnetic forces and gravitional forces exist, you simply use just those in your calculations of motion.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    576. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In a million years, assuming science has failed to find the answers to the ultimate questions (Where did we come from? Why are we here? Where are we going?) it may be time to think seriously about a Creator as the last option, but let's give it some time first.

      That's because science never tried to answer to those questions. Science made (and makes, or is supposed to make) rigorous assumptions based on logic and experiments, that's all it does, nothing more, nothing less.

      Maybe philosophy tries to answer such questions to some extent, but not entirely.

    577. Re:It's so very odd..... by Keynan · · Score: 1

      Not a terribly unreasonable stance. However, do you believe that the questions
      "Does Santa, The Easter Bunny, The tea pot on the other side of the sun, The invisible unicorn, The flying spagetti monster, Fairies, etc exist?"

      should all be left open? I think no; most reasonable people can agree that these like God do not exist. An absence of evidence is evidence for absence. No, not proof of absence, just overwhelming evidence of.

      Remember, atheism is a statement of belief, agnosticism is a statement of knowledge.

    578. Re:It's so very odd..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      amen!

  2. god dammit by malignant_minded · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No see its ok. It's with a lowercase g so it's my god and not the real God.

    1. Re:god dammit by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      No see its ok. It's with a lowercase g so it's my god and not the real God.

      bite your blasphemous monotheistic tongue!

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    2. Re:god dammit by palegray.net · · Score: 4, Funny
      No, seriously... check out this quote from the article:

      Some commentators have sought to portray the blasphemy law as the desperate move of an unpopular ruling party, Fianna FÃil ...

      (emphasis added) The Failbus pulled up, and Ireland's ruling party hopped right on in a literal English interpretation of their name.

    3. Re:god dammit by john83 · · Score: 3, Informative

      The literal translation is "The Soldiers of Destiny".

      As an Irish man, may I just say this: fuck religion, and all its works.

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    4. Re:god dammit by sabt-pestnu · · Score: 2, Funny

      Naw, don't be fucking religion, it'll give ya a nasty rash.

    5. Re:god dammit by HappySmileMan · · Score: 1

      It's pronounced "Fall" and not "Fail"... Though on second thought I guess that's not a huge improvement.

    6. Re:god dammit by sorak · · Score: 1

      I never saw why God dammit is considered blasphemous...It is a request for the guy everybody believes in to do what he's best known for doing.

    7. Re:god dammit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fine Fail, Fine Gael and all those other retards need to be shot. I'd much rather have the communist party in charge, than these idiots.

    8. Re:god dammit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then vote Sinn Féin!

  3. God hates censorship. by Hatta · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What happens if I have a religious belief that censorship offends god? Can I get those advocating censorship tried under this law?

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    1. Re:God hates censorship. by LeneJ · · Score: 5, Informative

      Ireland is a Catholic country. They are to some degree, still very strict. It's the only European country that has a law against abortion (on religious ground), I believe. The nurses and doctors are not allowed to give information about abortion, even, and England has an influx of Irish girls going over to get an abortion, despite the risk of going to jail.

      --
      Un paio di scarpe, per favore!
    2. Re:God hates censorship. by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1

      No, because they have more power and guns than you do.

    3. Re:God hates censorship. by thirty-seven · · Score: 1

      England has an influx of Irish girls going over to get an abortion, despite the risk of going to jail.

      Why don't they just go to Northern Ireland?

      --

      Atheism is a religion to the same extent that not collecting stamps is a hobby.

    4. Re:God hates censorship. by martas · · Score: 1

      what if you have a religious belief that commands you to commit blasphemy? would the universe implode?

    5. Re:God hates censorship. by mrtommyb · · Score: 1

      It's illegal in Northern Ireland too.

    6. Re:God hates censorship. by LeneJ · · Score: 1

      Pure speculation here, but I think it's easier to go to England than to Northern Ireland. Flights are cheap, several airlines and you have plenty of flights to choose from. And it's less volatile than in Northern Ireland.

      --
      Un paio di scarpe, per favore!
    7. Re:God hates censorship. by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      @LeneJ: "Ireland is a Catholic country. They are to some degree, still very strict."

      Italy is a Catholic country, and its a pretty swingin' place. Too bad Ireland can't take a queue. Or a clue. Any time speech is restricted its a regress, not a progress. Funny how in the 21st century we have a rise in Islamic Fascism, Britain's Big Brother CCTV, America's paranoiac Government, the supposed vanguard of freedom, jailing and victimizing more and more of its own citizens, more violence, and more mass hysteria. Its enough to make one religious.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    8. Re:God hates censorship. by aamcf · · Score: 1

      Why don't they just go to Northern Ireland?

      Abortion is illegal in Northern Ireland, "except in limited circumstances where the mother's life or mental well being are considered at risk". It is one of those unusual things where there is cross-party agreement.

    9. Re:God hates censorship. by Fumus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      According to the new law, each religious person can be fined as each and every religion is blasphemous to every other, so atheists will simply shut up and watch as all religions sue themselves out of existence :p

    10. Re:God hates censorship. by HappySmileMan · · Score: 1

      Actually it's no longer illegal to give information about it, and I think it's legal to go abroad for an abortion since about a decade ago.

      Also some girl once won the right to have an abortion by threatening to kill herself if she had to go through with the pregnancy after being raped, because it's allowed if the mother's life is in danger and the judge took her threat seriously.
      I don't think the judges and government are as opposed to abortion as many people think, it's just that it can't be legalised without a referendum, and the last 2 times that's been tried it's been defeated, so you can blame the voting public.

    11. Re:God hates censorship. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ireland is a Catholic country

      Until today. It will fall to Sharia within a generation.

    12. Re:God hates censorship. by spads · · Score: 1

      Ireland is not strictly speaking a Catholic country. Ireland (to its credit) is essentially a pagan country, that was co-opted by the Catholics. The instability and fanaticism surrounding Irish Catholicism is a direct result of Catholicism's essential incompatibility with Ireland (again to Ireland's credit).

      Simple and gentle aren't bad, but are certainly prone to being taken advantage of.

      --
      Bukowski said it. I believe it. That settles it.
    13. Re:God hates censorship. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Are you being facetious or serious? I thought it was England that was being overrun by Muslims. Last time I checked, Ireland was still a pretty underpopulated country, relative to other European countries.

    14. Re:God hates censorship. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha! According to my religion I am God !
      I hate to be the poor sod that offends me...

    15. Re:God hates censorship. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the only European country that has a law against abortion (on religious ground)

      You forgot about Poland ... again.

    16. Re:God hates censorship. by biryokumaru · · Score: 1

      This really confuses me, don't they have, like, some of the best colleges in the world, free education for all and still beat the US for GDP per capita? Aren't they supposed to be, you know, smart?

      --
      When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
    17. Re:God hates censorship. by rmccann · · Score: 1

      Yes, Abortion is illegal in Ireland. It's also illegal in Malta BTW. However it is not against the law to distribute information about abortion. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abortion_in_Ireland

    18. Re:God hates censorship. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      To be more specific, here is a map showing distribution of belief in God across Europe. Ireland is at 70%; the only countries that are more religious are Portugal, Poland, Greece and Romania (the latter tops the chart). I don't count Turkey because culturally it isn't really Europe.

    19. Re:God hates censorship. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      England has an influx of Irish girls going over to get an abortion, despite the risk of going to jail.

      There is no risk of going to jail. The right to freedom of travel - even when it is performed to have an abortion that would otherwise be legal in Ireland - is specifically covered by the 13th Amendment to the Constitution of Ireland.

    20. Re:God hates censorship. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm no. Less than 15% of Irishmen attend church. Poland, Malta, and other European countries have stricter abortion laws. And Irish girls can not be jailed or punished in any way for aborting their babies in England.

    21. Re:God hates censorship. by Joe+Jay+Bee · · Score: 1

      England (or rather, the United Kingdom) is hardly being "overrun" by Muslims, either. The last census put them at 2.7% of the population. Even assuming there's more of them since then, I'd guesstimate the population stands at 3 or 4 percent. Again, hardly "overrun".

      The newspapers, however, like to pretend otherwise.

    22. Re:God hates censorship. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure I read something about a proposal to institute Sharia Law in England for Muslims.

      It's not unusual for minority groups to exercise more power than their population percentage would suggest they have.

    23. Re:God hates censorship. by Joe+Jay+Bee · · Score: 1

      It was, as always with anything involving Muslims in the UK in the press, bollocks. The plan was not to allow Sharia law to take precedence for criminal offences OR replace British courts, merely for civil disputes (i.e. marital disputes etc) to be settled using Sharia arbitration courts. In fact, they already are, quite successfully for the people who want to do things that way by all accounts - both sides of the case have to consent to be able to use it IIRC.

      Unfortunately, the press span all this as Sharia law (with all its unpleasant aspects to boot) getting the opportunity to take precedence over British courts, which was never the case (and, fwiw, should never be the case.)

    24. Re:God hates censorship. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For another Catholic hotbed try Portugal. The major TV and radio stations are controlled by the catholic church. Public school equals catholic school system.

      I remember how in grade 9 the school closed the gates when the bishop came to visit our high school so no one could take off. We were all forced to attend on threat of suspension. Jehova witnesses and folks like me who didn't care. So we climbed over the gate and were suspended. And do whom do you complaint to?

      It's changed but not a whole lot. No wonder Ireland and Portugal trail behind most of the other western European countries.

    25. Re:God hates censorship. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The real reason for the anti-blasphemy laws in europe is to protect the public from rampaging muslims. In many areas of europe, radical muslims have gained control. Instead of tossing violent muslims in jail or out of the country, governments now threaten to throw you in jail for doing such things as putting a cartoon image of muhammad on your web page.

      See Pat Condell's You Tube videos for his opinion on muslim protectionism.

    26. Re:God hates censorship. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Poland has a law against abortion too, except when the pregnancy threatens the life of the mother. It is not officialy based on religious ground, but obviously strongly supported by the Catholic Church, which is very influential here. Also, there's serious talk of banning in vitro fertilization...

    27. Re:God hates censorship. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Actually Doctors and nurses may give information on abortion. Usually about the risks involved. They information must be requested though. Doctors and Nurses can't volunteer it. They may also inform them of the location of any abortion clinics they consider reputable in other contries, just like anyone else can. There is no prison risk for having an abortion abroad (that I know of), however a few decades ago authorities could actually stop women from traveling if they we're SUSPECTED of traveling to get an abortion. Contraceptives we're also illegal at this time.

    28. Re:God hates censorship. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pretty most of that is wrong (score 5 for informative?!). Apart from a mention of "God" in the constitution preamble (like US constitution) there is very clear separation between church and state. Many people are nominally "catholic", but in practice I suspect it's no higher than the rest of western Europe. Abortion is not illegal on religious grounds: there is a clause in the constitution (8th amendment, 1983) which guarantees "... the right to life of the unborn and, with due regard to the equal right to life of the mother...". There is no religious justification to it, but obviously it was, and is, strong supported by Catholics. Nurses and doctors are allowed to provide information: that was clarified with the 14th amendment (1992). To the best of my knowledge no one ever was sent to jail for performing an abortion, providing information on an abortion or having an abortion. I don't have reference for that last point so I might be wrong.

    29. Re:God hates censorship. by farmerj · · Score: 2, Informative
      Most of that information is totally incorrect.

      Ireland is a Catholic country. They are to some degree, still very strict. It's the only European country that has a law against abortion (on religious ground), I believe.

      Here is a Wikipedia article on abortion law around the world. There are many countries in Europe that have restricted access to abortion.
      The wikipeida article on Abortion in Ireland has a good summary of the history and the current status of abortion in Ireland.

      The nurses and doctors are not allowed to give information about abortion, even, and England has an influx of Irish girls going over to get an abortion, despite the risk of going to jail.

      Abortion is illegal in Ireland (and also for the most part in Northern Ireland as well.)
      It has never been illegal to provide medical care to a women which would cause an indirect abortion.

      There was also a constitutional referendum in 1993 which guaranteed the right to travel and the right to information.
      It is not illegal to provide information about abortion in Ireland.
      It is not illegal to travel to another jurisdiction for the purposes of getting an abortion.
      It is not illegal to have an abortion in another jurisdiction.

      --
      Independence? That's middle-class blasphemy. We are all dependent on one another, every soul of us on earth. G.B Shaw
    30. Re:God hates censorship. by E++99 · · Score: 1

      To violate this law, the offending speech must be made with the intention of outraging you. Actually not just you, but a "significant number" of your religion. If your religion comprises only you, you're probably out of luck. (unless the number 1 counts as a "significant number".)

    31. Re:God hates censorship. by wall0159 · · Score: 1

      Atheists shut up?!? C'mon... ;-)

      (I say this as an atheist)

    32. Re:God hates censorship. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      And how long before they grow politically powerful enough to start demanding Sharia Law be used for everything else?

      Here's a photo of Muslims in the UK demanding that anyone who insults Islam be beheaded:
      http://plancksconstant.org/blog1/image2/sub3/protest_muslims_intolerant_clip_mrez.jpg

      Are you guys going to institute a law for that too, in order to appease them? We all remember how Chamberlain's appeasement of Germany went, but in spite of it being an obviously stupid move, Britain tried it anyway.

    33. Re:God hates censorship. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot Poland! (it also has anti-abortion laws)

  4. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  5. Ok, really? by Darkness404 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Expect this to be coming to the USA, though replace religious beliefs with some far-off claim about terrorism. Also expect it to have full bi-partisan support in congress.

    --
    Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    1. Re:Ok, really? by WiiVault · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Do you ever get tired of blaming the US for every one of the world's ills? Americans can be dumb, but no more or less than Europeans in many ways. Look at British privacy laws, or the anti-muslim shit France is always trying to pull. Face it you guys are no angels either.

    2. Re:Ok, really? by RazorSharp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who marked this interesting? Are you serious?

      That's the most absurd thing I've ever heard. Ireland is a Catholic nation whose politicians are all pretty much on the same page concerning religion. There is so much religious diversity in America that defining "blasphemy" from a political standpoint would be impossible without endorsing a single religion. It's not like Christianity is one religion. I'm Lutheran and my church has no problem with abortion or contraceptives. The Catholics find both blasphemous while the Baptists just find abortion to be.

      I hope you're not an American because everyone in this country should be aware of our freedoms of speech and religion. Even if congress were to ever pass an anti-blasphemy law all the smaller sects would take it to court and win. The Mormons and Scientologists have more power than you think, also. I couldn't see any Congressman, Republican or Democrat, supporting such a blatantly anti-American law. How do you disguise an anti-blasphemy law as anti-terrorist anyway? "Praise Allah" and "Praise God" mean the same thing and they reference the SAME GOD.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    3. Re:Ok, really? by Darkness404 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You must have mistaken me for European. I'm American and I'm honestly sick and tired of the government destroying every single shred of freedom in the name of "safety". Sure, parts of Europe are even more messed up than the US, but the US doesn't have to emulate Europe and neither does Europe have to emulate the US. The US should give its citizens its freedom back, rather than keep destroying it.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    4. Re:Ok, really? by WiiVault · · Score: 1

      I totally agree. I certainly was not trying to give the US a pass. I'm just so irritated when people try to blame one group of people for every problem so as to shield themselves from criticism. As I'm sure you know, that is pretty common here on Slashdot.

    5. Re:Ok, really? by gnick · · Score: 1

      "Praise Allah" and "Praise God" mean the same thing and they reference the SAME GOD.

      Tell that to the Hindus. Or Buddhists. Or Pagans. Or even the theistic agnostics.

      I'm just saying... Like you point out, frame of reference is pretty essential for these kind of debates and it's easy to lose track once you've spent much time embedded in one.

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    6. Re:Ok, really? by Talchas · · Score: 1

      If by "so much religious diversity" you mean "mainly lots of different types of Protestant Christians", you'd be right. There are plenty of people of other religions, but the majority is still definitely Protestant.

      --
      As the Americans learned so painfully in Earth's final century,free flow of information is the only safeguard against...
    7. Re:Ok, really? by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      "Praise Allah" and "Praise God" mean the same thing and they reference the SAME GOD.

      Tell that to the Hindus. Or Buddhists. Or Pagans.

      Try telling it to most Christians. I get a lot of flak from my family over this.

    8. Re:Ok, really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sorry dude but governments do not give freedoms back, even when you ask them very nicely

      if you want your freedoms back you'll need to take them back. actual work on your part involved - and yeah, i know, that sucks!

      btw, not really advocating revolution, at least not the kind with violence

      the first step back to freedom in the USA is breaking the stranglehold on politics that the existing parties have. democrats promise nice things to average people then give lots of money to large corporations. republicans have their promises and their corporations. my wants/needs and your wants/needs are dogshit to the lot of them (dems/repubs/corps) at all levels - not just talking Wash D.C here

      once you have viable third and fourth and fifth alternative parties then get back with me and we'll talk about what comes next. so i can expect you just about when? oh my, the whole system might collapse _again_ before then...

      i know, let's just move to canada!

      buzz. whirrr. clang [canadians hurriedly building fence]

    9. Re:Ok, really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm curious, what sort of anti-muslim shit do we pull in France? Maybe you're completely clueless, look up "secularism".

    10. Re:Ok, really? by Hasai · · Score: 1

      "Four legs good! Two legs bad! Four legs good! Two legs bad!"

      "Security good! Freedom bad! Security good! Freedom bad!"

      (bleat-bleat)

      --

      Regards;

      Hasai

    11. Re:Ok, really? by ForShizzle · · Score: 0

      While I whole heartedly agree with you, our government is taking away our rights with our approval as we continue to allow it. "...with thunderous applause" You know, it really makes me sick, too!

    12. Re:Ok, really? by pudro · · Score: 1

      See my sig. You are on your own. Stop expecting benevolence from you rulers.

      --
      Freedom is assumed. Then they try to take it away. The degree to which you resist is the degree to which you are free.
    13. Re:Ok, really? by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      Well, it's good to criticize your country for what you think is wrong with it, regardless of how it compares with other countries. Rest assured that the French, the Irish or the British do their share of being dissatisfied with their respective governments.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    14. Re:Ok, really? by Breconides · · Score: 1

      The US governmental system is organized in such a way that third (or fourth or fifth, etc.) parties can't become viable. If we had a parliamentary system that allowed for coalition governments, then it would be, but the US has always (except for some brief transition periods while one of the two parties was dying) had two dominant parties, although those parties have changed over time.

    15. Re:Ok, really? by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      It's much harder for the government to give freedom back than to take it. That's why things like the revolutionary war happened.

    16. Re:Ok, really? by WiiVault · · Score: 1

      Um headscarves ring a bell?

    17. Re:Ok, really? by E++99 · · Score: 1

      Your assumption about a definition of blasphemy arising from the Irish Catholic homogeneity is incorrect. If one were to RTFStatute, one would find little pertaining to the actual definition of blasphemy. It's basically a law against intentionally publishing something that outrages a large portion of the members of any religion.

      For example, it would probably cover those infamous Danish Mohammed cartoons... to the extent that they would be found to be made for the purpose of upsetting Muslims.

    18. Re:Ok, really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sir, are an idiot.

    19. Re:Ok, really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is eternal opposition between freedom and safety. I think that for many people safety is more important, so the governments benefits of that and limits freedom of their citizens.
      Iâ(TM)m from Poland and I have seen the people missing to ancient regime (communism) because of filing of to be protected. The government gave work, flats, everything⦠but the government demanded loyalty. Many people enjoyed it.
      I have chosen the freedom even if I have seen and knew that my personal safety has been lesser. Why? Because I know, that if the nations demand the safety, the price that they have had to pay is too high. These are Nazism, communism and all kind of totalitarianism.

  6. YRO??!! Why Is This On Slashdot?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This isn't really nerd news here, the online part of this story is ancillary to the main issue.

    This isn't news for nerds or stuff that matters.

    1. Re:YRO??!! Why Is This On Slashdot?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Free speach is NOT stuff that matters? Wakey wakey ...

    2. Re:YRO??!! Why Is This On Slashdot?? by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Its news because this is something that is out of touch with reality. It shows that a post WWII world is increasingly becoming very dystopian, and nerds read a lot of dystopian fiction and don't want the world to end up like how Orwell saw the future in 1984. The modern world basically decided to get rid of all these stupid laws and regulations after the American and French revolutions and the enlightenment just how WWII and the fall of the USSR marked the end of fascism and communism in the modern world respectively (well, with the exception of China).

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    3. Re:YRO??!! Why Is This On Slashdot?? by jdgeorge · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This isn't really nerd news here, the online part of this story is ancillary to the main issue.

      This isn't news for nerds or stuff that matters.

      Hmmm... this might seem like "stuff that matters" to people who live in Ireland.

    4. Re:YRO??!! Why Is This On Slashdot?? by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      (well, with the exception of China).

      ...and Cuba, and North Korea and Kazakhstan, and Iran and Saudi Arabia, and.. well you get the point. Fascism and authoritarianism is alive and well, and probably a good half or more of the population of the world lives under it currently.

      I think you may have a skewed idea of what "reality" is truly like outside of the West.

      In any event, I find the appeal to "reality" to be silly. Reality is what you make of it. In 1600, the "reality" was what you are decrying now. In 2100 it may be the same thing as 1600, except with robotic overlords. If what you are saying is that you prefer Western liberal democracy with speech protections, then say that.

      Don't try and trump the argument by appealing to the common experience, because you may find yourself surprised about that most people find "stupid" or "modern". There are people out there that would rather be thrown in jail than give out their name, but they demand nationalized health care and a host of other programs where they are more than happy to give any and all information away to the government.

      I'm more worried about the people who are trying to be "modern" than I am about some blue law in Ireland that no one is going to enforce anyway.

    5. Re:YRO??!! Why Is This On Slashdot?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And, yet again, it must be pointed out that if it's not nerd-specific, you can get that news anywhere.

    6. Re:YRO??!! Why Is This On Slashdot?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being in Ireland and a geek, it matters to me.

  7. Nobody expects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    the Irish inquisition!

    1. Re:Nobody expects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Norway used to have this law. Life of Brian was actually banned when it came out.

    2. Re:Nobody expects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the Irish inquisition... to be sober!

    3. Re:Nobody expects... by HertzaHaeon · · Score: 2

      Their three weapons are stupidity, narrow-mindedness and oppression of freedom... and and an almost fanatical devotion to the Pope.

    4. Re:Nobody expects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the Irish inquisition!

      That's not what I expected....

    5. Re:Nobody expects... by Doghouse+Riley · · Score: 2, Funny

      Naaah, their three weapons are Enya, drisheen, road bowling and Michael Flatley.

    6. Re:Nobody expects... by barocco · · Score: 1

      Mashed-potato-boarding

    7. Re:Nobody expects... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Our chief weapon is obscurity!

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    8. Re:Nobody expects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their three weapons are stupidity, narrow-mindedness and oppression of freedom... and and an almost fanatical devotion to the Pope.

      Isn't that redundant?

    9. Re:Nobody expects... by HappySmileMan · · Score: 1

      The Life of Brian was banned in Ireland when it came out too. For blasphemy.
      Although it wasn't technically a legal thing, the Film censors commision refused to rate it and it's illegal to sell unrated films in Ireland, though I think it's only happened with about 9 or 10 films ever.

      Also Blasphemy is banned by the Irish constitution, so in a sense it was always illegal, it was just never really enforced. This bill as far as I know simply sets a maximum fine and formally defines blasphemy, so in a way it can actually be considered less restrictive than it was before.
      Though the problem is that very few people knew blasphemy was illegal and it was never enforced, so while this bill may make it less likely for an act to be considered blasphemy, it's a much more well known and defined law, so it's more likely someone will be charged and found guilty.

    10. Re:Nobody expects... by lorenlal · · Score: 1

      The Inquistion, what a show
      The Inquistion, here we go
      We know you're wishing
      That we'd go away
      But the Inquistion's here and it's here to stay!

    11. Re:Nobody expects... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Their three weapons are drunkenness, fighting, narrow-mindedness and and an almost fanatical hatred of the British.

      How many Irishmen does it take to change a light bulb? Three; one to hold the bulb and two to drink until the room spins.

      If you're in a pub and hear somone speaking with a British accent, how do you tell if he's English, Scottish, or Irish? Wait until a fly lands in his beer. An Englishman will make a face, push the beer aside and politely oder a fresh one. A Scottsman will make a face, remove the fly and continue drinking. The Irishman will pull the fly out of the beer and scream SPIT IT OUT, YOU LITTLE BASTARD!

      (Disclaimer: my anscestors were thrown out of Ireland by that asshat Crommwell)

    12. Re:Nobody expects... by Forum-Matter · · Score: 1

      I was *SO* not expecting that.

    13. Re:Nobody expects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yehova, Yehova, Yehova...

    14. Re:Nobody expects... by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      Have you ever talked to an Irishman? Nobody can understand the Irish Inquisition.

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  8. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  9. Blinded by Religion by sanosuke001 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is the biggest reason why I can't stand religion. If you are so frightened by others' opinions as to attack them if they disagree with you then you have no right to make any decisions. It's the same with censorship. If you don't like it, ignore it.

    Can we outlaw thinking for ourselves while we're at it? (/s)

    --
    -SaNo
    1. Re:Blinded by Religion by just_another_sean · · Score: 1

      Can we outlaw thinking for ourselves while we're at it? (/s)

      Sarcasm aside, not thinking for yourself is not mandatory yet but it is strongly encouraged so I don't think you'll need to wait too long. This is definitely quite a good start for Ireland. As another poster mentioned I wonder in what form and when this is coming to the US?

      --
      Creationist Textbook Stickers Declared Unconstitutional by CowboyNeal
    2. Re:Blinded by Religion by JeanPaulBob · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is the biggest reason why I can't stand religion. If you are so frightened by others' opinions as to attack them if they disagree with you then you have no right to make any decisions. It's the same with censorship. If you don't like it, ignore it.

      Can we outlaw thinking for ourselves while we're at it? (/s)

      Hmm... Does broad-brushing "religion" with criticism that should be aimed at "forced religion" count as "thinking for yourself"?

      I suppose it does. Sloppy, unreasonable thinking is still thinking, after all. It just doesn't deserve any more respect than what you're (rightly) criticizing.

    3. Re:Blinded by Religion by iloveGod08 · · Score: 1

      I'm a christian and this blatant censorship is a huge no in my book. Freedom is a double edged sword and I, for one, don't mind hearing the other side if anything just to provoke critical thinking from all sides.

    4. Re:Blinded by Religion by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      I concur. Forcing the public to abide by our (OK, this is Catholicism we're talking about: their) preferred religious behavior does nothing but alienate the public.

    5. Re:Blinded by Religion by sanosuke001 · · Score: 1

      I understand what you're saying, even if you are saying it in a very passive-aggressive way. I could have been a bit less sarcastic myself in saying "This is one of the many reasons I do not like religion."

      However, my statement stands. It might be a broad generalization, as humans like to generalize, but there are many more religious people advocating censorship and conformity than there are atheists doing the same.

      You can also think for yourself and still agree with others. However, when your opinions are forced on you, as with something like this, then you are no longer thinking for yourself lest you don't mind breaking the law.

      --
      -SaNo
    6. Re:Blinded by Religion by thisnamestoolong · · Score: 1

      Well, to be fair, attacking those who disagree is a fairly central tenet of most religions. The claims made by religion are extremely flimsy and based on literally no evidence, and as such will fall apart under any sort of meaningful debate. I will come to your side, though, JeanPaulBob and admit that there are certainly SOME religious people who are willing to discuss their faith with atheists, but I have to say I have never seen such a discussion end up being anything but disgraceful on the behalf of the religious person, as religion and rational thought are simply two separate enterprises.

      --
      To the haters: You can't win. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    7. Re:Blinded by Religion by sanosuke001 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'd like to add that, no, I don't believe these people are thinking for themselves (sloppily or not). I believe they are being "blinded by religion" as my topic title states. They don't want to be confronted by something they don't agree with which might make them think for themselves, so they outlaw it.

      However, now that you bring it up and I think about it a bit more, I wonder if this has anything to do with the Catholic/Protestant split has anything to do with this. (I read the first page of the article. Didn't see it mentioned.)

      --
      -SaNo
    8. Re:Blinded by Religion by pcolaman · · Score: 1

      It's not religion you can't stand, it's those engaging in it's practice who are narrow minded and do not have the sense to understand that it takes the free will of someone deciding that they want to practice and worship within that religion making the decision to do so, rather than somehow being able to pitch god (or any other deity) like a ShamWow. As someone of christian faith, I'd gladly talk to anyone who had questions about my beliefs or about the religion I practice. But I'm not going to go all Billy Mays (RIP Billy) and start trying to sell him to people. That's the easiest way to turn off someone that might be the slightest bit interested in any given religion, anyways. I'd much rather someone ask me to tell them about my religion than to go beat down their doors throwing it at them like a monkey throwing poop.

    9. Re:Blinded by Religion by aamcf · · Score: 1

      Don't tar all religious people with the same brush. I'm religious (I self-label as liberal Christian) and I don't mind[1] when people blaspheme Christianity

      [1] In the sense that although I disagree with them, I don't think I need to take any action to prevent them from expressing their opinion.

    10. Re:Blinded by Religion by E++99 · · Score: 1

      They don't want to be confronted by something they don't agree with which might make them think for themselves, so they outlaw it.

      There's no outlawing of any expression of any particular view or belief in this law. For that, you would have to go to Germany where you can be put in jail for saying the holocaust didn't happen.

  10. OMG by furrydave · · Score: 2, Funny

    OH MY GOD! oh crap, I'm going to jail.

    --
    Who stole my key?
    1. Re:OMG by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      Official: furrydave, son of Deuteronomy of Gath ...
      furrydave: (to Official's Helper): Do I say "Yes"?
      Official's Helper: Yes.
      furrydave: Yes.
      Official: You have been found guilty by the elders of the town of uttering the name of our Lord and so as a blasphemer you are to be stoned to death.
      furrydave: Look, I'd had a lovely supper and all I said to my wife was, "That piece of halibut was good enough for God"
      Official: Blasphemy! He's said it again.
      Crowd: Yes, he did.
      Official: Did you hear him?
      Crowd: Yes we did. Really.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  11. I feel sorry for all Irish black metal bands... by meketrefi · · Score: 3, Funny

    I feel sorry for all Irish black metal bands and for those in Ireland that would expect Cradle of Filth to play there...

    1. Re:I feel sorry for all Irish black metal bands... by xerxesVII · · Score: 1

      I do, too.

      Probably not for the same reason you do, though.

      --
      "We shall grapple with the ineffable, and see if we may not eff it after all." - Douglas Adams
    2. Re:I feel sorry for all Irish black metal bands... by billius · · Score: 1

      Cradle of Filth? Hell, what about Gorgoroth? I was stunned by how much trouble they got in for a gig they did in Poland that violated Polish blasphemy laws, which prohibit "offending religious feelings." This law sounds like it's similar in spirit (ie both countries are Catholic, both justify themselves by saying that they simply oppose bigotry, etc). I think it's an important question to ask what kind of effect this will have on music in Ireland, whether we're talking about black metal, alt rock, or anything else.

  12. Chilling by Jawn98685 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...and I mean that literally. When I read that a modern western country has enacted a law that allows for the prosecution of the "crime" of "blasphemy", I got a cold chill down my spine. What's next? Imprisonment and torture for various forms of heresy?
    WTF?

    1. Re:Chilling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it's OK for those same western countries to suppress/fine/jail Christian theologians who preach that homosexuality is a sin?

    2. Re:Chilling by ForShizzle · · Score: 0

      In this day, all it takes is enough money and you can really push about any agenda you want. In the USA, we have religious conservatives who wish to align our constitution with the laws of the christian bible. With the right amount of money and persuasion, we could be facing the exact sort of thing that Ireland is dealing with. That being, making it a crime to say anything blasphemous regarding jesus and pals. While I honestly believe most politicians use the christian religion as a means to further their political gains, there are still enough people in this country who do 'cling to their guns and bibles' to make the threat of a theocracy a feasible reality. All you need is the right amount of money and a mastermind with a horrible vision to high jack a country. It could happen any time and it scares the hell right out of me!

    3. Re:Chilling by VirginMary · · Score: 1

      > But it's OK for those same western countries to suppress/fine/jail Christian theologians who preach that homosexuality is a sin?

      Yes, yes it is!

      --
      When 1person suffers from a delusion,it is called insanity.When many people suffer from a delusion,it is called religion
    4. Re:Chilling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, it ain't! Welcome to FREEDOM OF SPEECH.

    5. Re:Chilling by maxume · · Score: 1

      The semantics get interesting here. Can a state be modern while it simultaneously prosecutes blasphemy?

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    6. Re:Chilling by dasunt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It is easy to point at this and say "OMG RELIGION MUST BE BAD!" But perhaps a better lesson to take away from this is that society tends to punish those who break commonly held cultural norms, at the expense of the health of society and personal liberty.

      Many modern western democracies have laws against "hate" speech. The US is one of the major exceptions because of the first amendment. I doubt racism is any worse in the US than most of Europe (other than there are more racial heterogeneity in the US to hate). But even with the example of the US thriving with rather liberal free speech rights, much of Europe believes such laws are necessary to promote the greater good.

      One could make a strong argument that restrictions on hate speech just drives the groups underground instead of keeping them in the public where they can be refuted and mocked.

      But, as I said, cultural norms tend to be enforced through punishing the rule breakers. This is true in the US and in Europe -- much of Europe has hate speech criminalized, while in the US, there is a strong social condemnation for groups that fight for the freedom of all speech, including unpopular speech (such as the ACLU's support of neo-NAZIs).

      Perhaps we should do a lot less patting ourselves on the back and saying that we are better than the Irish law makers, and take some time to look at our own laws and what has been legislated from a visceral reaction. For USians, a good start would be examining any law that was supposed to "protect the children".

    7. Re:Chilling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think we are going to need a citation on a christian theologian being jailed for preaching that homosexuality is a sin.

    8. Re:Chilling by VirginMary · · Score: 1

      > But it's OK for those same western countries to suppress/fine/jail Christian theologians who preach that homosexuality is a sin?

      How would you feel if they preached that being black was a sin? How is this any different? And don't give me any crap about that being different because being homosexual is "a choice!" I am perfectly straight, have zero problems with gays and lesbians yet have not even once been interested in having sex with another man. It's not a choice. It it was I'd be doing it! I probably feel physically attracted to a woman at least 360 days every year and I have never been attracted to a man in my 50 years of life. Yet, I have zero hang-ups about it. So, not a choice at all! Either people are attracted to members of the same sex or not. If they are, I see nothing wrong with it and I hope all those fuckin' homophobes die a painful death!!

      --
      When 1person suffers from a delusion,it is called insanity.When many people suffer from a delusion,it is called religion
    9. Re:Chilling by rkit · · Score: 1

      Well this is nothing special. E.g. Greece has a similar law.

      --
      sig intentionally left blank
    10. Re:Chilling by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, in England...

      We've found a witch! May we burn her?

    11. Re:Chilling by tmosley · · Score: 1

      No, that is another aspect of the same beast. Only if they incite violence is it a crime.

    12. Re:Chilling by pcolaman · · Score: 1

      Well, something tells me that the US will definitely meet it's quota of Irish immigrants this year. Not the we don't have our own issues, but anyone even attempting to pass such a bill in the US would be met by fierce protests, and rightfully so. If I wanna talk shit about your religion, I have the right to do so, and you have the right to talk shit about my religion (even though my religion could totally whoop your religions ass and then bust a cap in it's knees) Oh wait, forgot, I took a trip to Ireland, who's at the door no$#*!~ -NO CONNECTION-

    13. Re:Chilling by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      How would you feel if they preached that being black was a sin?

      He'd be an idiot, but entitled to his opinion.
      If he tries to do more than just talk about it though...

    14. Re:Chilling by stubob · · Score: 1

      A joke from my childhood:

      How does every racist joke start?

      *looks around*

      --
      Planning to be moderated ± 1: Bad Pun.
    15. Re:Chilling by wasabii · · Score: 1

      And when has this happened? Link please.

    16. Re:Chilling by GofG · · Score: 1

      I disagree. Being black is very, very genetic. Lots of research has been done to try to find the gay gene, and we haven't found it yet. I'm more apt to believe that homosexuality is caused by various environmental factors during childhood. Or that we're all bisexual, and then shaped to be gay or straight based on tradition and societal factors. Because I'm pretty sure it isn't genetic. Obviously it isn't a choice.

      --
      GFA/M/S d-- s: a--- C++++ UBL++$ P+ L+++ !E- W++ N+ !o K- w--- !O !M !V PS++ PE Y+ PGP+ t+++ 5- X+ R tv@ b++ DI++++ D+ G
    17. Re:Chilling by Langalf · · Score: 1

      Do you not know the proper punishment for heresy is burning at the stake?? Come on, get with the (ancient) times.

    18. Re:Chilling by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Who said it's okay? I'm against all "hatred" speech laws, be it religion, sexuality, or race, so long as people aren't inciting violence (we already have laws against that - and in that case it isn't comparable to blasphemy).

    19. Re:Chilling by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps we should do a lot less patting ourselves on the back and saying that we are better than the Irish law makers, and take some time to look at our own laws and what has been legislated from a visceral reaction. For USians, a good start would be examining any law that was supposed to "protect the children".

      Are you new here? :) Pretty much any story about such laws, in the US or elsewhere, receives overwhelming criticism here on Slashdot. Especially any law that claims "OMG Think Of The Children" as a reason.

    20. Re:Chilling by khellendros1984 · · Score: 1

      Cardinal Fang! Fetch...THE COMFY CHAIR!

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    21. Re:Chilling by Jawn98685 · · Score: 1

      But it's OK for those same western countries to suppress/fine/jail Christian theologians who preach that homosexuality is a sin?

      Well..., no. It wouldn't be, if that's what was actually happening. Preaching that this or that arbitrary behavior is a sin is, in my country at least, protected speech. Always has been and, I pray, always will be. On the other hand, inciting violence against such "sinners" is not, and should be prosecuted with all the vigor the law allows.
      BTW, constitutionally protected speech is not a guarantee that the speaker is entitled to any given platform, so if you're thinking of some recent homophobic beauty pageant hypocrite being handed her walking papers, try again.

  13. No one's yet gone for the obvious... by PapagenoX · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Oh, Jesus Chr... oops!

  14. God is smart; Religion is stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'nuff said

  15. Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Isn't it funny how the religionists keep whining about antagonistic and mean atheists are, and how that is their primary rebuttal to the arguments of public intellectuals like Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens, and yet, given the free hand to manipulate the government, they go and pass laws like this. They'd do it in America too, have done it in the past, if not for that pesky First Amendment and the strident efforts of "militant" atheists and civil rights organizations.

    1. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by TheCarp · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Its true. They keep saying how religion is under attack... but whats so under attack?

      It doesn't matter whether the issue is abortion, same sex marriage, prayer in school, its always the same broken record about how they need to "defend", and they are "under attack". Yet, are never able to actually articulate how other people having choices in life constitutes an attack on them and theirs.

      Apparently its an attack on their youth because of their children were to grow up with choices, they might choose not to be boneheaded, zombie worshiping, fucktards, and THEN what would happen to the world?!?

      I recently saw a facebook discussion between an old friend who went hardcore muslim and some of her friends about opening a dialog with other "people of the book" but how "we have to be sure they know we see them as wrong and they need to come to the light of allah" and all that bullshit.

      All the same bullshit, all the same "we are the victim", "our way of life is under attack". All just sounding like somebody needs to grow the fuck up and realize that its a big world and not everyone is going to be duped into believing in some random set of myths about some god that you can't see, hear, touch, or taste, but assuredly, must exist.... and all the other mythological beings that you also can't see hear, touch, or taste must obviously not exist.

      Yet their all powerful god can't protect them from a small number of people who aren't even organized, and couldn't care less what silly crap they waste their time with. Yes, they have a very powerful god indeed.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    2. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by strack · · Score: 0

      "Criminalizes Blasphemy." yeah dude. this is a atheist plot alright. you just hit it right on the head.

    3. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't it funny how the religionists keep whining about antagonistic and mean atheists are, and how that is their primary rebuttal to the arguments of public intellectuals like Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens...

      No, it's our primary response to idiots on slashdot. There are plenty of rebuttals pointing out just how sloppy and unintellectual Hitchens's and Dawkins's books on religion are.

      and yet, given the free hand to manipulate the government,

      My goodness, they voted for politicians who would represent their views... THE MANIPULATIVE BASTARDS! Using their votes democratically!! Unforgivable!!!

    4. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by thisnamestoolong · · Score: 1

      This has provided me non-stop anger ever since I was old enough to understand the world around me -- religion demands respect, but by respect they mean total silence. It should say something about your worldview when you cannot tolerate any sort of challenge to it, maybe you ought to consider that your worldview just might not stand up to criticism, eh? We are expected to sit back in "respectful" silence while the religious trample all over our rights -- they accuse us of having no morals, and they refuse to vote for us. We are called less than human. They claim to be under attack by us, though they still control the government, the courts, and have made in-roads into the schools. god (that word does not deserve capitalization, even at the beginning of a sentence) is on our money and in our pledge (which I have other objections to, but that's another issue). They have corrupted countless young minds with their psychologically abusive brainwashing and horror stories. Many aspects of science are decades behind where they ought to be, lest we upset jeebus. Religion is outdated and provably does not work. We need to abandon these imaginary friends and throw off our psychological crutches now, before its too late.

      --
      To the haters: You can't win. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    5. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by iloveGod08 · · Score: 1

      I've never argued against an idea by demeaning public individuals, that's bad logic. This law Ireland passed is just plain silly because under the same grounds of reasoning, it could become illegal to evangelize.

    6. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by LuvlyOvipositor · · Score: 1
      I would just like you to read the rest of this thread, and legitimately say to me that atheists are not antagonistic towards religion. This topic has some very strong parallels to the article on racism a day or two ago: do you have the right to be offensive?

      I would argue that yes, you have the right to be offensive. However, you don't have the right to be heard. Also, being offensive just shows that you are a dick.

      The way I see it, I believe something; you might believe something else. Does that make it ok for me to call you stupid and uneducated? And FFS, stop stereotyping Christians as anti-environmental, anti-technology ass-backwards inbreeds. Most of the Christians that don't care about the environment are in direct contradiction to the Bible that they supposedly hold true to (it specifically says that we are to care for the world).

      Look at yourself before you go spouting off hate at "religionists" who all supposedly spend their time trying to screw atheists.

      --
      Where do we go from here?
    7. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Belisarivs · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Well, Christopher Hitchens (whom, while I disagree with him, do admire) is a polemicist and makes a living at stirring things up. But you're being intellectually dishonest when you reduce those who disagree with him on religion as being little more than thugs. For every Richard Dawkins you cite, I can come up with a theologian like William Lane Craig or C.S. Lewis. Should I judge atheism by the rantings of my college's atheists when they said the Christians killed Galileo (they didn't) and that the Church thought the world was flat (they didn't)? Or should I accept that there are loudmouthed idiots in the world?

      Europe has been moving towards a concept of religious tolerance that puts it at odds with the concept of free speech. This is evident in the reaction towards the Danish cartoons and British clamping down of criticism of Islam in recent years. To me, it doesn't seem inherently Christian, nor "religionist" in nature, but rather pan-European trend, that is a trend of the cosmopolitan bureaucracies that make up the EU.

      I am a little bit sad that the common reaction on Slashdot has been to try and be as offensive to Christians as possible. For those that RTFA:

      "In fact, the new law is a very modern phenomenon. Rather than harking back to the days of God-fearing, or at least priest-fearing, Ireland, the blasphemy law has more in common with contemporary politically correct measures of social control."

      So not exactly imposing papal doctrine on the masses. Going after Christians is petty and vindictive, especially when they have as much to lose with this law as anyone.

    8. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who are "they"? I am not "they". Your "they" is a fictional group of people that you can then lump everyone who you don't agree with into, cherry picking select statements taking them out of context and ascribing them to a much larger population that doesn't agree with those statements and then use to justify your disagreement with. If you were really interested in understanding, instead of insulting out of fear or anger, you'd have to do some actual research. Your rant reads like that of an angsty 15 year old.

    9. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by smellsofbikes · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Thing is -- religion *is* under attack, because it used to control everything, and now it doesn't. That's why it's under attack: it is slowly losing its power over people, governments, and countries. And unless/until it controls everything again, they'll keep on about how it's under attack. From their viewpoint, they're right. It's just that from the viewpoint of many religious people, not believing in God in the same way that they do, should be a crime.

      Religion is under attack, and I say more power to the attackers.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    10. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      zombie worshiping,

      I've never understood this comment when people "cutely" refer to Christ/Christianity.
      Zombies are mindless undead with a hunger for brains or raw human flesh.
      Christ (if you believe) did stuff as a person (of sorts) until he ascended. Not very zombie like.
      If it was said that he attacked people after dying I'd buy the reference.

      This is coming from somebody who's a Christian (but not registered) and likes the Penny Arcade "Jesus Saves" and "Don't be a dick." jokes.

    11. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      Well, if you ask me, its a slap in the face to Voodoism. As is all Zombie movies, really. No one ever does the actual research to see what a Zombie is how they are created or how they can be saved.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    12. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason religious advocates have a persecution complex, and spread the impression of imminent attack and oppression ,is because crisis is gasoline to the engine of faith.

    13. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      Apparently its an attack on their youth because of their children were to grow up with choices, they might choose not to be boneheaded, zombie worshiping, fucktards, and THEN what would happen to the world?!?

      Just answered your own question. They believe that their way of life is the only correct way, and anything that shows other choices as being equally valid is viewed as an attack, since it means that they are wrong about their way being the only correct way.

    14. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Improv · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's fair to lump all followers of a faith under the same brush. Many religious folk have a lot to lose from laws like this, and they know it - the core tenets of their (protestant or otherwise) faith may be deemed blasphemous to Catholicism. Both in the US and in other parts of the world there are religious folk who believe in a secular government mostly out of these concerns.

      --
      For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
    15. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by db32 · · Score: 1

      Good to see so many slashdotters reading the article. The article pretty clearly states the religious groups didn't push this, it was pandering from a failing political group trying to win points. But hey, don't let reality get in the way of your own hypocritical bigotry.

      I just love watching people leap and attack on religious groups when it is perceived they are behind something all the while screaming about how those religious groups do the very same thing. It is like these two groups of extremists were meant for each other.

      Richard Dawkins isn't a "public intellectual" he is a loud mouthed asshat just like the most extremist religious clowns. Ken Miller has done more to beat back religious extremist crap where it matters and he does it without being an arrogant prick. The pro/anti religious groups cling to the very same biblical sources demanding that they must all be taken in absolute literalist terms to support their arguments for/against it. They both insist that everyone comes to their method of viewing things, with no exception, and mock the other side for being ignorant. The only time it really matters is when either group is trying to enforce their beliefs on the populace through legal strong arming and both sides do this quite frequently.

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    16. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by johnthuss · · Score: 1

      Read the article before saying ridiculous things. I quote: "Put simply, the religious lobby is not behind the move to criminalise blasphemy." This is not religious people doing anything.

      they [religionists] go and pass laws like this. They'd do it in America too, have done it in the past, if not for that pesky First Amendment and the strident efforts of "militant" atheists and civil rights organizations.

    17. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by ImprovOmega · · Score: 1

      You have to take a societal view to really understand it. Like, if you saw your best friend shooting heroin every day while his life went down the toilet you'd probably try to get him to stop. Basically, the Christian viewpoint is that society as a whole is screwing itself up with immoral choices and laws and they're trying to do something about it.

      I think it's become the wrong tack to take when we're not essentially a Christian society anymore. Realistically there need to be new methods worked out that don't depend on the majority already holding a religion as true and using that to guide societies laws. Christians have done great harm to themselves and their cause by playing by the same old rules (well, that and letting people call themselves Christians and turn out to be hypocrites).

    18. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Apparently its an attack on their youth because of their children were to grow up with choices, they might choose not to be boneheaded, zombie worshiping, fucktards, and THEN what would happen to the world?!?

      No, but they might realize how arbitrary it is. Take a look at the world map for the biggest religions here and you see it's predominantly decided by where you're born, kinda like what sports team you cheer for. If you presented the top four religions as equal options most children would go "WTF, you want me to believe one of those crazy stories?" but give them only one and you can raise christian kids, muslim kids, buddhist kids or hindu kids. If religious indoctrination of children was outlawed they'd collapse like a house of cards and soon go the way of superstition, magic and fairytale creatures. As in "fun to watch with Harry Potter" but nothing to take seriously.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    19. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Being raised Catholic in the modern era (I'm only 26) one of the things I liked about the Church is we were taught to question it, that it had been wrong, and to ALWAYS explore other religions and denominations ESPECIALLY when they criticized us. If you listen to criticism then either you recognize your own short comings (hopefully when the criticism is valid) or you strengthen your position by better understanding why you would it (hopefully when the criticism isn't valid). Ultimately, we are humans and we make mistakes though so it doesn't always work out like its suppose to. So based on my religious beliefs, I support the freedoms that are supposed to exist in America. I was actually rather shocked when I met a Russian Orthodox* in high school who said if he could he would turn the USA into a theocracy and force convert people; it just contradicted my feelings that the USA system is best as there is room for disagreement and criticism and yet if Christian can actually witness like they're supposed to the religion can grow properly.

      *I'm sure not all Russian Orthodox are that way and I would even wager some Roman Catholics are that way; its just one example.

    20. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > Your rant reads like that of an angsty 15 year old.

      Well that is why they call it a rant. Also, I would point out that neither being 15 nor ranting, nor even being immature actually precludes someone from having a valid point. Just like being a zombie worshiper doesn't stop people from having a point. In fact, they frequently do have a point, but I for one ask that they make it without considering age old stories as proof of anything, and actually defend it with reasonable discourse and not "Its an attack on everything we hold dear!".

      I find news of this sort of backsliding triumph of superstition and ridiculousness to be quite a frustrating thing. I hear argument after argument on issues that merely play the "we are under attack" card without actually ever having to explain why or how.

      It irks me to no end to see them win with this drivel...anywhere, ever. Oh and since I can't jump down peoples throats about it at work, being able to rant like a 15 year old makes for a nice release.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    21. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is why the ACLU sues any school where a student mentions the name of Jesus. Two can play this game, and both have. In recent years we have had a number of rulings that have prevented schools from banning religious expression by students.

    22. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      I do it for one reason only, it makes me giggle.

      As an ex-catholic, who left the church before even enrolling in one of their high schools, I tend to appreciate humor about Christians more than I would Muslims. I am sure I could easily work in some sort of colorful Mohamed reference, but the problem is, I wouldn't even find it that funny, I just don't have the context. Plus I don't have to explain zombie jesus... if I have to go into a 10 minute discussion of the meaning of Haram just to explain my own jokes, well, even I am going to be annoyed.

      As the Mahareeshi Hashish Yogi once said "Familiarity Breeds Attempt". If I run into a Chritian or a Jew, I can make a pretty good guess as to how to get under his skin and press some buttons. Put a Sikh in front of me and what am I gonna do say "Yah well, Nice hair! I bet you don't even carry a comb"...that might press his buttons... but it also sent half the people reading this to the Wikipedia page to figure out what the hell I am talking about.

      But Zombie Jesus, well... everybody in my culture knows Jesus (and almost as many know Jebus), and they all know about zombies too. Combine them and you get one of several pretty clear and pretty funny pictures. Zombie Jesus shambling across the sea of galilee, Turning water into brains....

      It also accurately reflects, through its absolute silliness, my view on where religion belongs in the public debate. Cast aside, ridiculed, and ignored where it belongs. Very similar to the FSM in that regard really, just more directly derogatory instead of simply mocking. but... I am strangely comfortable with that.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    23. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      No, zombies are not "mindless undead", except in Hollywood movies. In real life (yes, they do exist), they're people who are drugged so they appear dead, then buried, then dug up by whomever drugged them, and then kept drugged and used as mindless slaves. When other people see them, they consider them "zombies" because they were at their funeral and saw them "dead". It's apparently a fairly common occurrence in Haiti.

    24. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Europe has been moving towards a concept of religious tolerance that puts it at odds with the concept of free speech. This is evident in the reaction towards the Danish cartoons and British clamping down of criticism of Islam in recent years.

      No idea about Britain, but if anything, the European reaction to Danish cartoons - or rather, the reaction to Muslim outrage all over the world over those cartoons - demonstrated that people in the West care about freedom of speech and expression first, and religious sensitivities second. Just remember "buy Danish". And public statements by most European countries were generally quite reasonable ("We do not subscribe to what was said in those cartoons, but our cultural values are to let everyone speak freely and openly on such matters").

    25. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by yoshi_mon · · Score: 1

      Exactly, and furthermore religion is under attack like never before.

      Back in the day there were never any good answers to the big questions that religion(s) would provide their 'answers' for. That has changed with not only the physical sciences but the big kicker the biological sciences.

      As badly as they reacted to having the whole earth not being the center of the universe deal they are downright scared shitless of evolution. The whole cloud of 'I don't know' is shrinking when people ask the 'big questions' about life and the universe. And go figure that people seem to prefer rational explanations to things rather than mythology.

      --

      Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
    26. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Eil · · Score: 1

      All just sounding like somebody needs to grow the fuck up and realize that its a big world and not everyone is going to be duped into believing in some random set of myths about some god that you can't see, hear, touch, or taste, but assuredly, must exist.... and all the other mythological beings that you also can't see hear, touch, or taste must obviously not exist.

      You're my hero. You sound just like Penn Jilette. (That's a compliment.)

      Yet their all powerful god can't protect them from a small number of people who aren't even organized, and couldn't care less what silly crap they waste their time with. Yes, they have a very powerful god indeed.

      This is what kills me the most about religious extremists. They don't stop to think, "wait a minute... my god is all-powerful and all-knowing... maybe he can figure out defend himself from people calling him names?"

    27. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by thrawn_aj · · Score: 1

      THIS!

      After one digs through all the bullshit, this is the stark reality one is left with. I feel your anger and the pain that lies beneath it. The only reassurance I can give you is that the forces of rationality have been fighting the good fight for millennia. Slowly but surely, we have reached a stage where heretics are no longer burned at the stake. Irreligion is simply something that will eventually penetrate the hallowed* halls of politics. And the fact is that for all its faults, humanity is growing up as a species. Unfortunately, most of humanity can never be completely rational. Fortunately, that is not necessary for the rationals to move on to better things once we don't have to waste our time shoveling manure out of our driveways everyday before going to work.

      ____ *roflmao, etc...

    28. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rant, if you'd like. But don't expect anyone to take any points you've embedded seriously.

    29. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      ...and yet, given the free hand to manipulate the government, they go and pass laws like this.

      When ANYONE is given a free hand to manipulate government they pass laws like this. Look at the anti-religion laws of the communists. This is precisely why no one group should ever be given a free hand with government, least of all politicians.

    30. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Try RTFA. The whole problem is that this wasn't put to the vote (and hence the constitution couldn't be amended). It's unclear whether that particular clause on its own was ever voted on.

    31. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by MadUndergrad · · Score: 1

      South Park's portrayal of Mel Gibson is spot on, I think. A lot of religious people seem to have a hard-on for being repressed because it makes them kind of like Jesus. They love things that make them seem like Jesus! It's the second-best thing to having their own halo. So whenever you see someone preaching about how they're under attack, etc. what they're really saying is "look at me! I'm being crucified! We're all being crucified by those Romans/athiests/liberals! Yeah, twist my nipples!"

    32. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      I would just like you to read the rest of this thread, and legitimately say to me that atheists are not antagonistic towards religion.

      So what if they are? And at least they're not calling for religious people to be criminalised for expressing their beliefs, unlike the other way round.

      This topic has some very strong parallels to the article on racism a day or two ago: do you have the right to be offensive?

      You're seriously comparing criticising religion - organisations, and belief systems - to offending people based on their skin colour? (Not to mention that racism isn't simply offending people - it's the rather bigger problems of discrimination, abuse and violence.)

      I would argue that yes, you have the right to be offensive. However, you don't have the right to be heard.

      Sure. And it looks like that the people who own Slashdot are fine with letting him be heard on this site.

      Who exactly is being offensive, btw? The OP certainly wasn't. Can you link me some examples here?

      The way I see it, I believe something; you might believe something else. Does that make it ok for me to call you stupid and uneducated?

      Depends whether the belief is stupid and uneducated. Surely you're not implying that all beliefs are equally valid?

      And FFS, stop stereotyping Christians as anti-environmental, anti-technology ass-backwards inbreeds.

      Who claimed this?

      Look at yourself before you go spouting off hate at "religionists" who all supposedly spend their time trying to screw atheists.

      The issue here, in case you haven't noticed it, is a law against blasphemy. Other things that atheists argue against include religious indoctrination of children; placing faith as a virtue over rationality; terrorism; teaching of creationism in schools.

      Last time I looked, I didn't open a book of Dawkins to "OMG, there are religious people being offensive to me on Slashdot!" If that's the worse you have to worry about, then there's nothing to bother you. Quit whining.

    33. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, then you might like this joke:

      Q: How is a picture of Jesus different from Jesus?
      A: It only takes one nail to hang the picture.

      Crap. Now I can't go to Ireland...

      - T

    34. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by timmyw29 · · Score: 1

      Its true. They keep saying how religion is under attack... but whats so under attack?

      ...

      Apparently its an attack on their youth because of their children were to grow up with choices, they might choose not to be boneheaded, zombie worshiping, fucktards, and THEN what would happen to the world?!?

      Sure sounds like you're making an attack, there.

    35. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by E++99 · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter whether the issue is abortion, same sex marriage, prayer in school, its always the same broken record about how they need to "defend", and they are "under attack". Yet, are never able to actually articulate how other people having choices in life constitutes an attack on them and theirs.

      What are you talking about? All Christians are asking for is the same freedoms as everyone else -- the application of the 1st amendment. Where people are allowed to talk about God in schools, to pray out loud, to bring a Bible into a school, to have bible-study clubs, and all the other privileges that every other non-Christian school of thought has.

    36. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by jez9999 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In Britain, NONE of the mainstream press decided to reprint the Mohammed cartoons. That includes the precious BBC that so many here on /. seem to idolize. That says something about British culture.

    37. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by theghost · · Score: 1

      Yet, are never able to actually articulate how other people having choices in life constitutes an attack on them and theirs.

      Isn't it obvious? You are infringing on their right to tell everyone else how to act and think. If you could just stop thinking about your freedom and your rights for one second you could see how oppressed they are, you insensitive clod!

      --
      The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
    38. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      Yes, and let me tell you something. As one of the people who actually does believe in going on the attack against their beliefs in the most fundamental way.... its a very lonely position. Very very few agree or are willing to stand up and say so.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    39. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      I dunno, its what passes for Score 5: Insightful on slashdot :)

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    40. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by init100 · · Score: 1

      when they said the Christians killed Galileo (they didn't)

      No, they killed (by burning at the stake) Giordano Bruno (among others) instead.

    41. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      That says something about British culture.

      Or maybe it says something about British demographics today. You don't want to piss off tomorrow's electorate.

    42. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I meant people that don't already have the same 5th grade understanding of the topic.

      Just like you could go to a discussion group that specialized in religious debate and get a +5 insightful post for pointing out that evolution was "just a theory".

    43. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > What are you talking about? All Christians are asking for is the same freedoms as everyone else -- the application
      > of the 1st amendment. Where people are allowed to talk about God in schools, to pray out loud, to bring a Bible into
      > a school, to have bible-study clubs, and all the other privileges that every other non-Christian school of thought
      > has.

      Would that include the right to have its tennents questioned? To have its absurdities drawn out for people?

      First of all
      A) I am unaware of ANY proscription against a christian brigning a Bible to school.
      B) If Bible study clubs are to be allowed, then how about Torah and Talmud study clubs? Koran? How about study of the Upinishads? What about a buddhist meditation club?
      C) Praying out loud during the times when a student may direct his own attentions is not prohibited. Praying out loud at other times is just as much a disruption as anything else. Nobody is stopping students from voluntary prayer. In fact, I would bet quite a lot of prayer goes on just before tests.

      Would you support an Altar in classrooms for those whose religious prayer traditions include blood letting?

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    44. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by E++99 · · Score: 1

      Would that include the right to have its tennents questioned? To have its absurdities drawn out for people?

      Of course. I know of no Christian who wouldn't welcome this. As Thomas Jefferson said, it's only error that needs government protection to survive. Truth can defend itself.

      A) I am unaware of ANY proscription against a christian brigning a Bible to school.

      I know there's been at least one famous court case arising from this.

      B) If Bible study clubs are to be allowed, then how about Torah and Talmud study clubs? Koran? How about study of the Upinishads? What about a buddhist meditation club?

      Of course. That's the problem. Those things are -- and should be -- allowed. Then someone wants to start a Christian bible-study club and the officials start talking about "separation of church and state" and getting sued by the ACLU.

      C) Praying out loud during the times when a student may direct his own attentions is not prohibited. Praying out loud at other times is just as much a disruption as anything else. Nobody is stopping students from voluntary prayer.

      Teachers are stopped from voluntary audible prayer. Short prayers before football games by coaches have been the subjects of successful lawsuits to silence them. The practice of forcing a religious society to be sterilized of any appearance of religion in public is outrageous. Even the history books nowadays are whitewashed of the religious motivations and philosophies of historical figures. Let the coach say a freakin prayer. This isn't the USSR. Why is it okay to open every session of congress with a prayer, but if you try to open the school-year with a prayer, you get a lawsuit because it violates the 1st amendment?! An amendment that is nothing but a limitation on what CONGRESS may do? The prayer before congress is allowed because a prayer before congress doesn't implement a state religion. A prayer before a football game doesn't implement a state religion either.

      Would you support an Altar in classrooms for those whose religious prayer traditions include blood letting?

      If it was a school in a village where the large majority of the kids practiced that religion, then I certainly would. If it was done in a typical American school you'd probably get a lot of parents complaining that it was something that was highly objectionable from their religious views, and they wanted it stopped on the grounds that they find it objectionable. And that is completely legitimate and schools should desist from doing anything that significant numbers of parents find objectionable. What is not legitimate is to try to make the claim that the 1st Amendment prohibits bloodletting in classrooms, because it does not . Nor does the 1st Amendment prohibit teacher-lead prayers in classrooms. It doesn't even prohibit schools from adopting official religions. I would love to see public Christian schools, Jewish schools and Muslim schools in places where the local populations overwhelmingly those religions. Though I am Christian, I would rather send my kids to a Jewish or Muslim school than a secular school.

    45. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by notrandomly · · Score: 1, Informative
      Funny you should mention W.L. Craig, as he is a disgusting liar, and uses the worst red herrings, straw men and ad hominems when debating Atheists. He is truly an offensive bastard.

      Going after Christians when they are being assholes is not a problem at all.

    46. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by notrandomly · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Any criticism of religion is offensive to the religious. Thus, if one criticizes religion, one is a dick according to you.

      But I am actually offended when you claim that atheists are antagonistic. So that makes YOU a dick, because anyone who says something which offends someone, anyone, is a dick.

    47. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      I actually think that's funny rather than blasphemous. Christian's have mixed feelings on the crusifiction. On one hand it was a necessary sacrificial act of Love for God to be killed. On the other hand, its the expression of Man's worst nature, that he could actually do that to a perfect innocent. It's like the debate over where Judas is in eternity. On one hand the crucifix was necessary, on the other hand he chose to kill Jesus and then Killed himself.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    48. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      I want to address two points here as they come directly from my experience:
      > Teachers are stopped from voluntary audible prayer. Short prayers before football games by
      > coaches have been the subjects of successful lawsuits to silence them.

      I went to a Catholic High School by choice. My parents paid for it, I chose to go. Even though I became an athiest at 11 years old, I still chose them over the public schools because the education mattered to me.

      As a Christian, these may seem like positive things to you. As a person who chose to go to the school that I did, I chose to be subjected to it. I can tell you, it is NOT a positive experience to be the outsider when everyone else is bowing their heads in prayer.

      You may call it "leading voluntary prayer" if you want, but it is an exclusionary practice, and a practice that directly identifies and excludes any outsiders who don't participate in it. I chose that experience, many people don't get that choice. I could not support tax dollars funding and paying for public schools, which is the only option for those who can't afford private schools that engage in this.

      It may make christians feel bonded together in the class, or the team, but it makes anyone else feel excluded, because they are. This should be done in private in voluntary groups, not just so called voluntary prayer in a non-voluntary group.

      I don't see why or how this has any place in school. You have churches, you have homes. You have plenty of places to pray, worship, and have your little spiritual circle jerks.

      We are a secular nation that has a majority of Christians, NOT a Christian nation. Its an important distinction. The whole point of ideals like liberty and freedom are to protect the minority. The majority doesn't need protection. Liberty means nothing unless it means the liberty to be and do that which the majority of people don't approve of without fear of persecution. Being subject to singling out and ridicule for being different (and we are talking about school here, not a place where everyone is mature and grown up) is not really liberty.

      Speaking as the atheist who followed everyone in line and had ash smeared on his forehead because he wasn't comfortable admitting he was different freshman year (by the next year I had befriended some of the jews in school and realized I could be different and it wasn't too bad), and who felt alienated and seperated from his own team when his coach lead prayers.... well.... I think I know what I am talking about.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    49. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by E++99 · · Score: 1

      I was an atheistic highschooler in a religious school as well. If people ridiculed you for being an atheist, then they shouldn't have. Ridicule of any sort doesn't have a proper place in school. That's not something that falls under the 1st amendment though. There is no right to not be in the minority in one's beliefs or attitudes, and a practice of trying to pretend that differences in beliefs and attitudes don't exist is absurd. Silencing behaviors that are based on certain beliefs and attitudes just because they aren't unanimously shared is worse that absurd. It's detrimental to an open society. A school should be a place of open exchange and intellectual honesty, not hiding behind political correctness.

      Having the coach say a prayer before a game when I was an atheist didn't harm me in any way. It just made me feel like I was the only one who wasn't an idiot. I never once felt like I needed to be shielded from the beliefs of others. I felt like my beliefs were well-founded and didn't need sheltering and could stand up to anyone else's.

      As I grew up, those beliefs happened to change, but I think the point remains. The idea that thinking and talking about God should be limited to churches and homes is absurd. Thought and speech about God does not harm people. Schools are a place of education, and an education sterilized of the concepts of God and religion is no education.

    50. Re:Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      Actually, I was less ridiculed, almost not at all, at the catholic school for being an atheist than at public schools. I chaulk that mostly up to age differences... younger kids tend to be more into ridicule.

      However, its not just about ridicule, its about the fact that it just has no place there. There is no compelling reason to have prayer in school, unless you accept that there is a god, and a correct religion to be praying within the confines of. Thats a position that no public institution should be taking, nor anyone representing that institution while on the job.

      Nobody is going to get a worst education or have a bad time in school because there was no organized prayer. However, it does setup a situation where people may feel alienated by it. Also, school is set to prepare people for the work world, which is often far more restrictive than schools. Wearing your religion on your sleeve when you represent a company is also unprofessional. I would dare say that anything that could be considered as setting up a hostile work environment should also be considered the same in school.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
  16. Re:Jesus titty-fucking Christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Its 2010 and some people still long for the middle ages.

    And I was so close to being the first to discover time travel. DARN YOU!

  17. Cue the next Soutpark episode! by erroneus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seriously, the Southpark guys are frikken heroes when it comes to freedom of speech and expression and trampling on stupidity. They depicted Muhammad without causing riots somehow. They exposed scientology to the world for all its ridiculousness and countless other things. Southpark needs to create an answer to all of this and the spokesperson for Ireland really needs to be the Lucky Charms guy ... and/or the Irish Spring guy going around and cutting into everyone's soap.

    Religion is a choice that people make. It is rooted into culture and geography and nearly all other aspects of human existence, but it is not beyond question or criticism.

    All hail the flying spaghetti monster.

    1. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      "I'm sorry Mormon was the correct religion."

      "Ooooohhhhh..."

    2. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by TheSpoom · · Score: 3, Interesting

      FYI, in one of the best displays of irony in recent memory, Comedy Central actually censored the image of Muhammad during that South Park episode. I shit you not.

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
    3. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by Selfbain · · Score: 4, Informative

      He was portrayed on a previous episode of the show however and there was no uproar until the danish cartoon thing happened.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Best_Friends

      --
      Well, it has never been successfully tested.
    4. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by mobby_6kl · · Score: 1

      I don't think they need to make a new episode for this purpose. If the Irish government could collect the fines for all the work they've already done (it's not just South Park!), they could easily fix their economy and buy every priest an altar boy and everybody else a pony.

    5. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by adiposity · · Score: 1

      All hail the flying spaghetti monster.

      Funny you should mention the FSM. South park did an episode partially devoted to debunking the effectiveness of the FSM as a counter argument to god:

      http://www.evolutionnews.org/2008/08/the_proper_rebuttal_to_the_fly.html

      They also did an episode mocking the idea that religion is the source of zealotry (in the future, Atheist factions battle against each other with the cry "Science Damn You!"

      They've also argued the case that evolution is the "how" and not the "why" of creation. People who disagree with this idea are mocked by the episode.

      SP does mock many kinds of zealots, including religious ones. But they clearly do not fall on the side of atheism when it comes to their biases. I doubt they would support this law, of course. They are against all censorship, presumably.

      -Dan

    6. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They depicted Muhammad without causing riots somehow.

      No, Comedy Central censored that scene.

    7. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      let's not forget the mormons

      dumb dumb dumb dumb dumb, dumb dumb dumb dumb dumb

    8. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by erroneus · · Score: 1

      Southpark has no biases at all. I understand all that you have pointed out with regards to all of those things. You cannot pick out any one agenda or point of view with Southpark. It mocks them all and mocks them well. But still, it is irrelevant to my point. The point of the flying spaghetti monster is to point out how arbitrary religion can be while remaining "impossible to disprove" and therefore "true."

      Southpark argues a multitude of things and it isn't even necessary that they believe in the arguments themselves which is also part of why Southpark is cool. I also make lots of cases that I don't necessarily believe in myself. Once again, irrelevant to my original point.

      They need to attack this particular thing... government enforcement/protection of religion. Not only would it make a good show, but serves to further what Southpark does best.

    9. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      From a scientific point of view, "Science damn you" doesn't make a lick of sense.

    10. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Best_Friends

      Prior to the episode you're thinking of, South Park depicted Muhammad without issue in 2001. A later proposed reshowing resulted in much wailing and gnashing of teeth.

    11. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by tsstahl · · Score: 1

      Does the Flying Spaghetti Monster have a web site?

      Do you hail it, revere it, or put it in a holding pattern for approach?

      Doctrinal questions abound...

    12. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by Yogiz · · Score: 1

      Religion is a choice that people make.

      Ya rly? So if children weren't brainwashed from birth you think they would still choose religion? Or is it okay if other religious people make the choice for you?

    13. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by erroneus · · Score: 1

      "In theory" when you become an adult responsible for everything you think, say and do, religion becomes a choice.

      You might say brainwashed, but what you mean is "raised in that environment." I grew up Christian, believed in Santa Claus, the tooth fairy and a wide variety of things and I outgrew each and every one of them from a fairly early age. I outgrew Christianity thanks to the kind influence of public TV showing shows about dinosaurs, the history and origins of man and the universe and those things REALLY got me thinking. And before anyone in my family realized it, I was reading voraciously about archaeology and learning about ancient religions and I even memorized and used Egyptian writing just for the fun of it. I prayed to the ancient gods of many cultures as a child, just to see what would happen... nothing special happened except for the occasional rising of the hairs on the back of my neck and other eerie sensations. It was then that I realized that these sensations weren't unique to the brands of Christianity that I have been raised under. I then realized, more or less, what religion really is and realized its purposes and I got into some pretty dark understandings at that point. I did all this before the age of 12. I don't think I came out of my closet, as it were, until I was in my late 20s even though my family already knew I detested going to any church at all.

      All that meaningless rambling goes to show one thing -- people can be taught things all their lives and STILL have their own independent thoughts, understandings and revelations. It's truly sad that most people never actually use their brains as independently as I or much of the slashdot demographic does, but that is mostly because the masses of people are taught that being wrong and making mistakes is "bad" and should be avoided at all costs. This results in such fear of making mistakes or of being wrong that they pretty much stick to doing, saying and thinking what everyone else does, says and thinks. Perhaps I am simplifying things a bit, but I believe that, in large part, is how it all happens. How babies who are curious and eager to learn grow into adults who know little more than they did in 6th grade and often less than that.

    14. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      No, Southpark has the extreme-moderatist bias of the South Park creators, who are actually pretty ignorant guys. Cynical, but generally ignorant. The Richard Dawkins episode was based on pure straw man; they made the episode after getting pissed about Richard Dawkins coming out with his most recent book when they never even read it or looked at what's inside--they get offended simply by telling people that religion is wrong. Of course, they're hypocrites when it comes to Scientology when they could be scathing, but again, they're pretty ignorant guys. Penn Jillette, who is/was friends with the South Park creators, and is an admirer of Dawkins, was pretty shocked when he saw that episode and how they treated Dawkins.

    15. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by adiposity · · Score: 1

      Southpark has no biases at all.

      Ok, but its creators do. They are humans. From what I can tell, they are libertarian leaning moderates.

      I like the show, and have watched many episodes. It's pretty easy to see they are biased against "hollywood liberals" and the like. They also hold grudges (see Chef's final episode where they equate his allegiance to scientology to membership in NAMBLA). None of this changes your point, of course. I just found in amusing that you invoke South Park and the FSM in the same post, since SP creators have mocked the FSM argument before.

      -Dan

    16. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by Tom · · Score: 1

      Religion is a choice that people make.

      In the vast majority of cases, that is as far from the truth as it gets.

      Religion is one of the things that get imprinted very early on, because it has become part of culture. Children are confronted with religion almost from the get go. At that age, they are very, very, very easy to manipulate. In fact, for the first few years of life, a kid will accept anything it learns from a person of trust as truth.

      For most kids, that includes the basic facts of life, such as "pain is bad", "mother will feed me", "must listen to father", "don't eat the funny berries" and "god exists and we must worship him".

      Just ask people why they choose to believe in their respective deity, and from most of them you'll get funny looks. They never actually choose, religion was just something they picked up along the way.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    17. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by notrandomly · · Score: 1, Interesting

      South park did an episode partially devoted to debunking the effectiveness of the FSM as a counter argument to god:

      How does that debunk the FSM exactly? All I can see is a rambling creationist moron going on about it. But if you actually read the text from the episode it doesn't even get close to debunking the FSM as a counter-argument to religious irrational nonsense. The South Park episode in question and the blog post make no sense. It's basically the Chewbacca Defense, because they can't seem to come up with anything valid.

      And since you blindly linked to that blog without checking the validity of the argument, I am tempted to conclude that you, too, are just another creationist moron.

    18. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by notrandomly · · Score: 1

      SP creators have mocked the FSM argument before

      They tried, and failed. You don't mock something by using a straw man.

    19. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by adiposity · · Score: 1

      The FSM episode is stupid and does not make any rational argument. I was not suggesting otherwise.

      I did not blindly link that blog, I linked it to inform on what the content of the episode was and how apologetic christians might have interpreted it.

      I am an atheist and was disgusted with that SP episode. I just find it IRONIC that someone would invoke SP to protect us from religion in the same post that they bring up the FSM, which anology SP creators also spat on.

      -Dan

    20. Re:Cue the next Soutpark episode! by adiposity · · Score: 1

      You can mock something any way you like. Trust me, the episode mocks the FSM analogy. It may not be effective to you or me, but christians loved it.

      For the record, I am an atheist. I did not consider their argument particularly compelling.

      -Dan

  18. Tonight At 11 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    U.S.A. to follow shortly

    Fuck Ireland.

    Yours In Allah,
    Kilgore Trout

  19. And yet some people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    still don't understand why we don't want a united ireland...

  20. What about comics? by liposuction · · Score: 1

    Are they allowed to link/post/draw/imagine comics that depict Muhammad with a bomb-head?

    --
    "Thoughts are more powerful than any weapon, and I don't even let my people own guns." --Joseph Stalin
  21. Wait I thought this only happened in the US! by WiiVault · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    or at least that is what I'm told by my hip American hating Euro friends. Nice to know you guys are just as dumb as we are really.

    1. Re:Wait I thought this only happened in the US! by nomadic · · Score: 1

      or at least that is what I'm told by my hip American hating Euro friends. Nice to know you guys are just as dumb as we are really.

      Europeans tend to have a medieval view of speech rights. This isn't surprising at all if you look at Europe as a whole.

    2. Re:Wait I thought this only happened in the US! by WiiVault · · Score: 1

      Ever glad you wasted some idiots mod points thus keeping them from having real impact on the discussion? Gotta love good karma.

  22. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by boaworm · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If they would also make Jedi an official religion like in Australia (IIRC), so next time people have a Star Trek convention they could go there, start a flamebait topic between Star Wars-fans and Trekkies, and start collecting cash. On the other hand... Trekkies rarely have tons of cash.

    1: Pass a law preventing making fun of religion
    2: Start a new, silly religion (like I believe in an all-powerful, all-knowing being who needs your MONEY!)
    3: Profit!

    We don't even need the "???" :-)

    --
    Probable impossibilities are to be preferred to improbable possibilities.
    Aristotele
  23. Nobody expects . . . by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 2, Funny

    . . . The Irish Inquisition . . . ?

    "Our two main weapons are a pint of Guinness, a shot of Jameson and a Shillelagh . . . "

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    1. Re:Nobody expects . . . by geek2k5 · · Score: 1

      Isn't that three weapons?

    2. Re:Nobody expects . . . by Pvt_Ryan · · Score: 1

      He's Irish.

    3. Re:Nobody expects . . . by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      I'll come in again.

    4. Re:Nobody expects . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll come in again

    5. Re:Nobody expects . . . by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      Isn't that a whoosh?

    6. Re:Nobody expects . . . by RichardDeVries · · Score: 1

      Blasphemer! Hand in your geek card, study this video and you may be allowed to re-apply. If you survive 'the rack', of course.

      --
      Error 001
      Security Scan and Virus Detection do not work with your operating system.
    7. Re:Nobody expects . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      . . . The Irish Inquisition . . . ?

      "Our two main weapons are a pint of Guinness, a shot of Jameson and a Shillelagh . . . "

      .... And a potato

    8. Re:Nobody expects . . . by Ogive17 · · Score: 1

      Guinness and Jameson are key ingredients in making an Irish Car Bomb. Our local pub also uses a bit of Bailey's.

      --
      "Action without philosophy is a lethal weapon; philosophy without action is worthless."
    9. Re:Nobody expects . . . by pcolaman · · Score: 1

      No because he gets two servings of each.

    10. Re:Nobody expects . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't that a whoosh?

      No, but this is.

  24. Religion didn't call for this by Reziac · · Score: 2, Informative

    In fact, per TFA, the Church has nothing to do with it. Rather, it's the Big Brother socialist control freak segment of the political class.

    The article makes many excellent points. Read it, even if doing so is against *your* religion.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    1. Re:Religion didn't call for this by sanosuke001 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The church might not be asking for it directly, but it is still being done because of religion. Same outcome either way except I would expect it coming directly from the church.

      --
      -SaNo
    2. Re:Religion didn't call for this by oliderid · · Score: 5, Informative

      ...Big Brother socialist

      Lol...Socialists banning blasphemy? Do you seriously expect to be taken seriously?
      Does "Religion is the opium of the people" ring any bell?

      The Church has nothing to do and that's true. It is simply well known that the Irish society is "very" traditional (divorce was only introduced in the 90's). The leading party of the Irish government is Fianna FÃil. A liberal party. The rest of the coalition is composed by a green party and independents. There is no socialist party in the coalition AFAIK. Stop using Socialism like a buzzword to describe any political event in Europe. It is simply ridiculous.

    3. Re:Religion didn't call for this by TheLink · · Score: 1

      1) Even though some crazy guy could be doing terrible things in the name of Britney Spears (or sanosuke002), if you're a rational thinking person you should only blame Britney Spears for the stuff she actually does (or the stuff she doesn't do that she legally should do ;) ).

      2) It's a general "offend religious belief" law, it doesn't cover only the Church. There are many other religions in Ireland. Maybe the neo-pagans might have some fun with this law. My guess is the muslims will find it really handy too.

      --
    4. Re:Religion didn't call for this by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1

      In fact, per TFA, the Church has nothing to do with it. Rather, it's the Big Brother socialist control freak segment of the political class.

      The article makes many excellent points. Read it, even if doing so is against *your* religion.

      Fianna Fail would be a bit horrified if you called them 'socialist.' The Irish Republic has never had a socialist government.

      BTW, I picked my username many years ago and I'm stuck with it. I'd pick something different nowadays.

      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
    5. Re:Religion didn't call for this by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Just because something is done in the name of religion doesn't necessarily mean religion or beliefs had anything to do with it. (It can, but it's not a given.)

      At any rate, read the article, it's rather enlightening as to the mindset involved here, and clarifies the issue.

      It also should serve as a warning to we in the U.S. -- Ireland is a step or two ahead of us on the way to Komradeville.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    6. Re:Religion didn't call for this by Reziac · · Score: 1

      'Lol...Socialists banning blasphemy? Do you seriously expect to be taken seriously? Does "Religion is the opium of the people" ring any bell?'

      That's a good deal of the point. The church is losing influence in Ireland, so ban blasphemy to strengthen the influence of the church; that in turn keeps the people 'sedated' so to speak.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    7. Re:Religion didn't call for this by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      Given the influence that the Catholic Church (Come on, you cannot be serious with that stuff about other religions. Do you know anything about Ireland?) has in educating children in Ireland I think it can reasonably be said that it indirectly has a hand in this law, even though it may not have been involved directly. It seems like a bit of a stretch, but only if you ignore the extraordinary power of childhood indoctrination. I know religiously brought up people, who consider themselves atheists and yet will feel extremely uneasy, almost fearful, about saying anything bad about God or religion. That's how deep it's been beaten into their brain at the time when it was still developing and very susceptible to molding however the adults in charge wanted.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    8. Re:Religion didn't call for this by 4D6963 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Muahaha, Fianna Fail, socialist. They're a lot closer to Slashdot libertarians than any flavour of socialism. Also, stop using the word socialism, it doesn't mean what you or Glenn Beck think it does. Actually it doesn't mean much without a context, it's very much an umbrella term.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    9. Re:Religion didn't call for this by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      BTW, I picked my username many years ago and I'm stuck with it. I'd pick something different nowadays.

      Haha oh man, fiannaFailMan, I just pictured someone bitterly tearing a Bertie Ahern poster off his bedroom wall ;-).

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    10. Re:Religion didn't call for this by jhylkema · · Score: 1

      divorce was only introduced in the 90's

      Right, and Mother Theresa campaigned against it. Of course, she was happy that her "good friend" Princess Di was able to get out of her "unhappy" marriage.

      Yet another example of the Catholic Church affording the rich special privileges while requiring the rest of us to live up to an impossibly high standard of conduct.

    11. Re:Religion didn't call for this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Socialist has something to do with this because?

      Sweden, socialist coutry, is one of the most secularized countries in the world. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secularism

    12. Re:Religion didn't call for this by TheLink · · Score: 1

      RTFA:

      Firstly, the Green Party, a minority partner in Ireland's coalition government that has no ties to traditional, rural Ireland, saved the blasphemy legislation from defeat in the Seanad, Ireland's undemocratic pretend parliament for various worthies and failed politicians. Likewise, the opposition Labour Party, home to Ireland's liberal elites, has not sought to have the law struck down, instead favouring its amendment to make it more palatable to the cultural constituency. Labour's Pat Rabbitte sought a reformulation that excepts from the definition of blasphemy material which has 'literary, artistic, social or academic merit', harking back to the interminable debates about what is art and what is pornography (6). ...
      and while the Catholic Church grumbles about a decline in spiritual values it has not actually demanded this law, nor are there many votes to be picked up on a 'Catholic Ireland' ticket. Even the other usual suspects, the 'mad mullahs' of Islam, are notable by their absence from the debate. Put simply, the religious lobby is not behind the move to criminalise blasphemy.

      --
    13. Re:Religion didn't call for this by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Lol...Socialists banning blasphemy? Do you seriously expect to be taken seriously?
      Does "Religion is the opium of the people" ring any bell?

      "Opiate of the people" was used by Marx; most socialists aren't Marxists (most communists are Marxists, with the exception of anarcho-communists; but most socialists aren't communists).

      As a side note, even in Russia, the country in which the Church was vigorously persecuted initially (by Lenin) in accordance with the Marxist doctrine, the tide has changed early on. Stalin has already recognized how powerful subservient institutionalized religion can be in the hands of the ruler (confession of sins is particularly handy for the secret police; in tsarist Russia, it was therefore mandated for everyone under law, with administrative penalties for those who avoided it), and reversed the persecutions, restoring the Russian Patriarchy in 1943, rebuilding churches, and so on. Of course, persecutions didn't end; it's just that from there on they were targeted at those faithful who rejected the officialized part of the Church that collaborated with the Communist government.

    14. Re:Religion didn't call for this by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I wonder if the GP realises that Big Brother was alive and well in both Nazi Germany and Facist Italy?

    15. Re:Religion didn't call for this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to be careful about using the word "liberal" in this context. In an American context, I think Fianna Fail would be considered "conservative" (i.e., center-right), not "liberal."

    16. Re:Religion didn't call for this by Diabolus+Advocatus · · Score: 1

      No, not socialist. Fianna Fail - the majority ruling party - are centre right and have been shifting further right for years due to the influence of the Progressive Democrats party. While in power they sold off most of the state and semi-state companies, while outsourcing to private companies things that they should be looking after themselves. Letting private companies build hospitals on land of a public hospital is not socialism! Letting private companies charge us tolls to use roads that were built with our tax money is not socialism! I could go on for pages. Jesus fucking christ I hate this country...

    17. Re:Religion didn't call for this by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Does "Religion is the opium of the people" ring any bell?

      I thought that was Guinness.

  25. Parse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I parsed it as [offending religious belief]{is-a}[criminal offence]. I guess it's supposed to parse [offending][religious belief]{is-a}[criminal offence].

    I like my parse better. It's all offensive to me. Was so looking forward to slap the next batch of jesus-mongers down when they ring the door.

    'It's been 10 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment'. Yet here I am, trying to post another one. Wasting time. For what? Because my lowid, full karma account can't be trusted with posting twice within 10 minutes? Jesus Fucking Christ that's as stupid as a Christian who's never heard of Gilgamesh.

  26. As a Religious / Spiritual Person... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...I find this to be terrible. I don't like it when people run around with "fuck god" and "religious people are all idiots", but it should not be a criminal act to have those opinions and voice them. This is a step towards yet another police state. I never expected something like this out of Ireland - maybe France, or Britain, or California.

  27. Thats Why I use a French Domain Registrar by kk49 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    My domains are Blasphemous in English and the French Government seems refuse to recognise English and France is pretty ant-religious zealotry to boot.

    --
    You can have your god back when you are old enough to handle the responsibility.
    1. Re:Thats Why I use a French Domain Registrar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My domains are Blasphemous in English and the French Government seems refuse to recognise English and France is pretty ant-religious zealotry to boot.

      Except if push comes to shove, you know France will surrender.

    2. Re:Thats Why I use a French Domain Registrar by ThrowAwaySociety · · Score: 1

      and France is pretty ant-religious zealotry to boot.

      Indeed. It's just become legal there to shop on Sundays!

      (Oh, wait. That's a "cultural" and "labor" policy, not a religious one. It's just coincidental that the day off happens to be the Lord's day.)

    3. Re:Thats Why I use a French Domain Registrar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You use a French registrar instead of a British one because Ireland passed a law against blasphemy?

      Ireland has been an independent nation from the United Kingdom (And therefore England) for quite a little while now...

    4. Re:Thats Why I use a French Domain Registrar by kk49 · · Score: 1

      I was thinking more long term, I registered my domain when Slashdot anounced that ICANN was allowing fuck/shit/etc... in domain names.

      My (somewhat facetious) take on the French government's protection of the French language leads to "fuckjesus.com" meaning nothing in a French court of law.

      --
      You can have your god back when you are old enough to handle the responsibility.
  28. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  29. Re:Jesus titty-fucking Christ by evil_aar0n · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Yeah, in America, we call them Republicans.

    --
    Truth, Justice. Or the American Way.
  30. Guinness is Piss! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Take that, Defamation Act!

    1. Re:Guinness is Piss! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may want to see a doctor...

  31. Ugh by sircastor · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm a very religious person and this kind of stuff makes me sick. One of the foundations of my country is that it has no state-sponsored religion, or that it's not a (specific) religion-sponsored state. Governments have responsibility to protect their citizens from harm, but not at the expense of freedom. I may not agree with what you teach, what you share, what you distribute, but it is your God-given right (or as some may prefer, your natural right, or Spaghetti-given right) to believe, practice, share, and disagree. This kind of thing is a tragedy as it will hamper the rights of individuals and their ability to express themselves.

    1. Re:Ugh by WiiVault · · Score: 1

      I urge you to contact your legislators, get involved in your religious community and spread the message of tolerance. I think it would mean a lot more coming from a person like you whom they see eye to eye with on many things, than from the people on the "outside".

    2. Re:Ugh by E++99 · · Score: 1

      It's actually not a religion-specific statute, despite the word "blasphemy" which would tend to imply otherwise. It's basically a law against intentionally upsetting any religious group.

    3. Re:Ugh by sircastor · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the fundamental point is that the people (or a person) cannot freely speak regarding a religion (unless presumably, they speak well of it). It's a denial of freedom being done in the name of religion, even if no specific religion is named.

  32. So... by WoRLoKKeD · · Score: 1

    ...Does this mean that True Irish Black Metal has been stopped in it's tracks?

    --
    Immolation is the sincerest form of flattery.
  33. Culturally destructive by dyingtolive · · Score: 1

    What will this do to the Subgenius movement?

    --
    Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
    1. Re:Culturally destructive by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

      Or Scientology.

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    2. Re:Culturally destructive by dyingtolive · · Score: 1

      Or Scientology.

      I see your point, but lets worry about REAL religions here.

      --
      Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
  34. Better than the alternative! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously this Irish law certainly has precendent. A few millenia ago they'd crucify anybody silly enough to offend the established religious order!

  35. Obligatory by MozeeToby · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have no problem with God...

    It's his fan club that I hate.

    1. Re:Obligatory by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      His fan club is just a bunch of deterministic automatons whose brains and environment are simply ticking through the laws of physics. How can you hate them?

      God's supposedly the one who can make a difference, and doesn't.

    2. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What I want to know is why can't we call oppression by its real name? Why do we insist on using terms like "clamping down" and "cracking down" to describe oppression? This only waters down the true reality of it, as if government should have been "clamping down" all along, but never had the time.

      Let's call a spade a spade. When government attacks freedom of speech, or any natural human right, the term is oppression, not "clamping down".

    3. Re:Obligatory by Old97 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are engaging in the kind of mindless bigotry that you probably condemn when its directed elsewhere. God has many fans and many fan clubs. Some are responsible for ending the practice of slavery (at least in the west) , increasing racial and ethnic tolerance and even protection of the environment. Others justify their own evil, violence, intolerance and bigotry by invoking God's name. I have it on good authority that God doesn't approve of the latter group. I hear he is pretty sure that they aren't even real fans. He feels used.

      --
      Very often, people confuse simple with simplistic. The nuance is lost on most. - Clement Mok
    4. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      agree!

      Jesus Fucking Christ, there come and arrest me you ridiculous fools. What ever happened to free speech?

    5. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wasn't it Ghandi who said, and I paraphrase:

      "I like your Christ. It is your Christians that I do not like because they are so unlike Christ."

    6. Re:Obligatory by sonnejw0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Aren't we all deterministic automotons governed by the laws of physics? How can free will exist? I think many religious followers are the first to try to claim that free will caused humanity's fall and the subsequent assholishness of people. As a neuroscientist, I don't believe in free will, but that doesn't negate the concepts of responsibility. David Hume, an early Anglo philosopher put it simply that the idea of cause-and-effect necessitates determinism, so free will (reacting to something according to your past experience) is actually determinism.

      If you believe in a God and an afterlife, then what does it matter if God helps people now? The idea the God should do good things is just an excuse for Christians to be bad people.

      Religion is simply a social construct that provides a community with a reason to be altruistic, altruism being the bond that makes society possible. The trouble arises when individuals turn that tool upside down and start to pervert it into an "us v them" mindset. That was the genius of Jesus and particularly Paul of Tarsus who founded a religion inclusive of all of humanity ... or Buddha ... or Krishna ... or any number of other loving religious iconoclasts or revolutionaries.

    7. Re:Obligatory by flaming+error · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > I have it on good authority that God doesn't approve of the latter group.

      What authority would that be? That "latter group" may "have it on good authority" that God doesn't approve of your group.

      Just sayin'.

    8. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      I have it on good authority that God doesn't approve of the latter group.

      What is your authority?

      Are you using Judeo-Christian sources which were collated / written by committee approximately 1700 years ago?

      Or something a bit more divine?

    9. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read the article
      "Put simply, the religious lobby is not behind the move to criminalise blasphemy"
      and
      "the blasphemy law has more in common with contemporary politically correct measures of social control."

    10. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are engaging in the kind of mindless bigotry that you probably condemn when its directed elsewhere. God has many fans and many fan clubs. Some are responsible for creating the practice of slavery all over the world , increasing racial and ethnic hate, starting racial wars and even destruction of the environment. Others justify their own evil, violence, intolerance and bigotry by invoking God's name. I have convinced myself that God hates people who don't believe the same things I do.

      Fixed that for you

    11. Re:Obligatory by DarthVain · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Heh, I feel the same way about the Toronto Maple Leafs.

    12. Re:Obligatory by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      Hey mods: why is this a troll? You might disagree, but he makes a valid point.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    13. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Good lord! You're on the Internet. Google it!

      "I like your Christ, I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ." - Ghandi :)

    14. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is possible to both make a valid comment and be a troll.

      Though I'm not sure it's that valid. You'll find that most famous (and not infamous) religion experts will agree that the latter group is bad. Would you complain if I said that I had it on good authority that gravity makes things go down?

    15. Re:Obligatory by El+Torico · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I have it on good authority that God doesn't approve of ...

      This is the kind of BS that we all really don't need. Start producing real evidence or STFU.

      --
      In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is usually crucified.
    16. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Some are responsible for ending the practice of slavery (at least in the west) , increasing racial and ethnic tolerance and even protection of the environment. Others justify their own evil, violence, intolerance and bigotry by invoking God's name."

      hahaha what a troll..

    17. Re:Obligatory by EsbenMoseHansen · · Score: 2, Informative

      David Hume, an early Anglo philosopher put it simply that the idea of cause-and-effect necessitates determinism, so free will (reacting to something according to your past experience) is actually determinism.

      I am not claiming anything about free will, but do note that there are events without any apparent causes (vacuum particles, atomic decay at the very least). And it does look like there really is no cause, though I am certainly no expert.

      --
      Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.
    18. Re:Obligatory by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      B.S. While there may have been a few small groups of religionists in the past who had good goals like eliminating slavery and protecting the environment, they have been far, far, far overshadowed by the ones practicing evil, violence, intolerance, and bigotry. The ones who exist now are certainly overwhelmingly like this. Just look at Sarah Palin.

    19. Re:Obligatory by Morlark · · Score: 1

      So essentially what you're saying is that if a people or a country happens to have an opinion on what is normal or morally right that differs from what you believe or what your country touts as right, then ultimately you are always right, and they are always wrong?

      Look, I personally don't agree with this law, but, from TFA, the Irish saw fit to include provisions against blasphemy in their constitution when they originally wrote it. It was their choice to do that, and it's not your place to say that they can't. This legislation is merely maintaining the status quo. If the Irish people really felt strongly enough about it to want to change it, well that's what elections are for.

      --
      Santa's suicide mission go!
    20. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are engaging in the kind of mindless bigotry that you probably condemn when its directed elsewhere. God has many fans and many fan clubs.

      You name me any religion, and I'll find you a good reason to condemn them.

      Given your usage of God capitalised, and referring to him as "he", I'm going to guess you're Christian or Catholic? Well, I'm against both because they indoctrinate children at an early age, and educate them with "God's word" as the whole truth. Both groups attempt to convert others, and preach that everyone who isn't in their club will suffer eternal torment. Catholicism I especially dislike because they are hampering sexual education efforts to slow the spread of aids in Africa

    21. Re:Obligatory by fugue · · Score: 1

      I'm glad you refer to religious experts--rather than invoking some random superbeing--as the good authority. That's the first step. The second step is understanding what makes someone a religious expert--it's not exactly divine inspiration. The third step is left as an exercise to the reader.

      Religions do disagree. They can't all be right. If you have faith, then by definition your opinion is untestable (if you could test it it wouldn't be faith, but science). So any claim about which religion is correct is, by definition, bullshit.

      --
      "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
    22. Re:Obligatory by ultramk · · Score: 1

      Others justify their own evil, violence, intolerance and bigotry by invoking God's name. I have it on good authority that God doesn't approve of the latter group. I hear he is pretty sure that they aren't even real fans. He feels used.

      Ah, that's a wonderful example of the "No True Scotsman" fallacy. Sorry, but just because you're ashamed of the behavior of your fellow god-botherers doesn't mean that you can willy-nilly redefine them into a category you're comfortable with.

      Mindless bigotry? It's a learned response to negative stimuli.

      M-

      --
      You catch enchiladas by picking them up behind the head and holding them underwater until they don't kick anymore -VeGas
    23. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (citation needed)

    24. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are engaging in the kind of mindless bigotry that you probably condemn when its directed elsewhere.

      I'm agnostic. I don't care who/what/when/where/how/if you believe. Keep it to yourself and stop using your beliefs as justification to interfere in my life and as a platform to preach at me. When a very large majority of your fan club is actively attempting to recruit new members, change laws, influence global policy, preach morals, and generally condemn my agnostic life, I believe it is appropriate to categorize all members of your fan club as complicit.

      If only it were more like Fight Club... i.e. the first rule of Jesus Fan Club is 'don't talk about Jesus Fan Club'.

      God has many fans and many fan clubs. Some are responsible for ending the practice of slavery (at least in the west) , increasing racial and ethnic tolerance and even protection of the environment.

      Also... some are responsible for enacting slavery (at least in the west), increasing racial tensions, performing ethnic cleansing, and even polluting the environment. Even more interesting, the Bible does not cast slavery down as an abomination, actually contains guidelines for practicing slavery, and even approves of it if the slaves are strangers or heathens (Leviticus 25:44-46).

      Others justify their own evil, violence, intolerance and bigotry by invoking God's name.

      Others justify subjugating others to their own views on what is good, moral, and tolerant by invoking God's name.

      I have it on good authority that God doesn't approve of the latter group. I hear he is pretty sure that they aren't even real fans. He feels used.

      You have it on whose authority? God's? Based on what? The Bible? Violence? Really? The same Bible that approves of animal sacrifice (genesis 4:8), destruction of everything when you are displeased (genesis 7:4), murderous revenge (exodus 2:11-12), more animal sacrifice (exodus 29:11-41), killing anyone who works on the sabbath (exodus 35:2), casting out the sick (numbers 5:1-4), killing children (Deuteronomy 3:6)... and that's the short list. The Bible is full of God's violence, God's commands to committ violence, and God's followers committing violence.

    25. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the Irish people really felt strongly enough about it to want to change it, well that's what elections are for.

      It's Ireland. That's what bombings and assassinations are for.

      Flamebait? Maybe. But I'm an Irish guy. That's how Ireland works. We ignore laws and do what we think is right.

    26. Re:Obligatory by Old97 · · Score: 1

      The ones who exist now are certainly overwhelmingly like this. Just look at Sarah Palin.

      Are "certainly"? And your evidence is what? Opinion polls take in the U.S. show that you are wrong about the vast majority of practicing Christians and Jews. I'd bet you don't know any personally and your contact with them is limited to what you see in the media or the ones who knock on your door to offer you some of their literature.

      You've provided me with plenty of evidence of your own intolerance and bigotry. What makes you better than Palin? Nothing from what I can see here.

      --
      Very often, people confuse simple with simplistic. The nuance is lost on most. - Clement Mok
    27. Re:Obligatory by ceoyoyo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Aren't we all deterministic automotons governed by the laws of physics"

      The laws of physics in their present form don't really allow for any strict determinism. The basis for your argument is a century or so out of date.

    28. Re:Obligatory by Old97 · · Score: 1

      You clearly don't understand what you've read. That analogy is off. Being a Scotsman is by birth. You are or your aren't. It's not a belief system that you choose. (You may attribute qualities to Scotsmen, but that's the fallacy.) If you claim adherence to a belief system and then your consistently act contrary to it, I'd say that's good evidence that you don't really believe in what you say you do.

      It's kind of like when slashdotters claim that they hate religious people because they are all intolerant bigots.

      --
      Very often, people confuse simple with simplistic. The nuance is lost on most. - Clement Mok
    29. Re:Obligatory by mcgrew · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Amen to that. Yesterday (Sunday) I was channel surfing, and stopped the remote on a fat man in an expensive suit who wore a ncktie that cost more than my most expensive piece of clothing, in what looked like a very opulant, expensive building, decrying generational welfare (never mind that we did away with generational welfare over ten years ago) and blamed it on the drug problems, alcoholism, broken families and crime "that is tearing apart our Christian nation". He was exhorting his followers to decry compassion and denounced charity. His message was the exact opposite of Jesus'.

      The man is not a Christian. He is what Jesus called "a wolf in sheep's clothing". He is a right wing political figure disguised as a Christian preacher. His kind has converted more Christians to athiesm than all the athiests at slashdtot combined.

      Oddly, the next channel I surfed to had an elderly man in a tattered suit preaching forgiveness and charity.

    30. Re:Obligatory by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Don't be dense. A BASIC program is deterministic, regardless of quantum effects and radioactive decay. No matter how many times you run it you're going to get the same results.

      A brain is deterministic too. Your mind is no more affected by random phenomena than you can feel someone stepping on a twig thirty miles away. It's just not a part of your virtual "mind-system's" experience.

      Sure, maybe at some point a cosmic ray emitted by random effects may flip a bit and you'll get a different result. But that's one interaction in 10^44 planck times per second!

    31. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would you complain if I said that I had it on good authority that gravity makes things go down?

      I'm from Austrailia, and I have it on good authority that gravity makes things go up, you insensitive clod!

    32. Re:Obligatory by PatrickThomson · · Score: 2, Funny

      Amen. As an academic exercise, if I was satan and I wanted to undermine christianity, I wouldn't remove another millimeter from britney's neckline, I'd encourage those guys. The hellfire and damnation preachers. The gay-bashing uptight holier-than-thou proclamation-shouting judgemental weasels who popularised this law. They're human beings and I love them and forgive them, but they have to stop. They are damaging christianity and turning millions of people away from God.

      Think of the typical slashdotter's attitude towards us. That exists because of these guys, because of the media, because of the angry internet atheists. I guess it's like my opinion of America. I have this vague idea of litigious fat assholes, but of course every american I've personally met is an awesome dude or dudette.

      --
      I am one of many. My idea is not unique, nor do I expect my voice alone to sway you. I speak in a chorus of opinion.
    33. Re:Obligatory by ultramk · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sorry, but you're the one who can't seem to understand that you're stretching and defining the category of religionist to suit yourself, which is precisely the point of the fallacy.

      When presented with an example of a religionist who contradicts your ideal example, you quickly and conveniently redefine the boundaries of who is and who is not a religionist. This is precisely what the fallacy is about.

      It has nothing to do with the boolean nature of being a Scotsman. (Which really is not so clear-cut after all: I know plenty of self-identified Italians who have never been to Europe, and have met a few self-identified Pakistanis born in Scotland.)

      As for tolerance: I refuse to tolerate the intolerance of others. Sue me.

      --
      You catch enchiladas by picking them up behind the head and holding them underwater until they don't kick anymore -VeGas
    34. Re:Obligatory by Cstryon · · Score: 1

      Religions do disagree. They can't all be right. If you have faith, then by definition your opinion is untestable (if you could test it it wouldn't be faith, but science). So any claim about which religion is correct is, by definition, bullshit.

      So this would be your opinion. This is how you feel about any claim about which religion is correct. So that would mean you're opinion is, by your definition, untestable, meaning it is also bullshit.

      Apply this to Gravity, it goes down. But how? It's still just a theory. Sure we can "test" it, but other than showing what we already know (Things fall towards the bigger mass), it proves nothing.

      I can test my faith, and my opinion. I have faith I will fall towards earth, and in my opinion, I am correct.

      --
      Indoctrinate : to instruct especially in fundamentals or rudiments Educate : to develop mentally, morally, or aestheti
    35. Re:Obligatory by aaandre · · Score: 2

      Religion is simply a social construct that provides a community with a reason to be altruistic

      Religion is also a social construct that provides a community with a reason to indoctrinate human children without giving them any choice, installing a middle man between them and their own sense of divinity, to sell "God" in exchange of obedience, control and cash. Using the concept of God for obedience training (for life) is cruel and inhumane.

      Currently what most people believe is chosen for them and depends on what zone of religious influence they were born.

      When choice of religion happens independent of parents' religious practices and at voting age, then maybe we can say religion is a choice. Until then, it's indoctrination and brainwashing of infants with the goal of control.

      There are spiritual practices that aim at enlightenment and altruism. Religious dogma is about control and ganging on "others."

      There's a lot of power in being the spokesperson for the invisible entity humans are conditioned to believe they must obey. The price is the perversion and tainting of our natural pure relationship with our own divinity (initially by saying it comes from the outside, does not belong to us, and then taking it from there).

      Dark, dark stuff. Time to stop it.

    36. Re:Obligatory by orngjce223 · · Score: 1

      While you were on the Internet, you should have noticed that his name was spelled Gandhi, not Ghandi.

      --
      Note: I was 13 when I wrote most of this. Take with several grains of salt.
    37. Re:Obligatory by Cstryon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I was taught many things as a child. The importance of my faith was impressed upon me, as was the importance of taking a bath, eating breakfast, looking both ways before crossing the street, not stealing, work hard, get an education, read the scriptures and find out for myself what it is true. I was told that I shouldn't have sex before marriage, but if I am going to, be smart about it. My childhood was not full of indoctrination, rather, it was full of teachings.

      My parents taught me what they believed was true, taught me what faith means, and asked me to learn for myself.

      Where you "indoctrinated" with anything as a child? Where you "taught" anything as a child? And when is there a line drawn between the two?

      --
      Indoctrinate : to instruct especially in fundamentals or rudiments Educate : to develop mentally, morally, or aestheti
    38. Re:Obligatory by fugue · · Score: 1

      So this would be your opinion.

      Sorry, what is my opinion? That defending one untestable theory at the expense of another is bullshit? Given that there is no way to justify a preference between untestable theories besides wishful thinking, my "opinion" is just a pretty conventional definition of bullshit.

      Apply this to Gravity, it goes down. But how? It's still just a theory. Sure we can "test" it, but other than showing what we already know (Things fall towards the bigger mass), it proves nothing.

      Sorry, I'm not quite sure what you're getting at here. The theory of gravitation makes predictions. My alternative theory of gravitation is that you'll fall sideways--now go and figure out which is correct. Further, it's easy to test Newtonian gravity vs. Einsteinian gravity and determine which is more correct.

      I can test my faith, and my opinion.

      I don't understand. If you can demonstrate that it is correct, then how is it "faith"?

      --
      "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
    39. Re:Obligatory by Cstryon · · Score: 1

      The Old testament is (As Eddie Izzard calls it) the big beard Testament.

        Not all Christian religions are the same, nor do they interpret the Bible the same way. The LDS church believes the Bible is only the word of God, if it is Translated correctly. http://scriptures.lds.org/en/a_of_f/1 (See number 8)

      They also believe the Old testament is the Old Law, the Law of Moses. Much of what was practiced before Christ was meant to go away with the coming of Christ, and the Higher Law. http://scriptures.lds.org/en/gs/l/12

      The Higher Law, in a Nutshell, is to do unto others as you would have them do unto you, Love one another, and all that passive stuff.
      Any Christian faith, that condones animal Sacrifice, killing anyone when it's not in defense of yourself, your family, or your country, or any of some of the bizarre things required by the Israelites in the old Testament, is not following Christ's teachings.

      Maybe you and I at least can agree on one thing though. You believe ( or don't believe ) how you wish, and I will how I wish. I will not chuck you into a big group, and assume you are like the worst, and I would love to also not be chucked into the big group that claim they are doing the Lords work, when they contradict the Lords teachings

      --
      Indoctrinate : to instruct especially in fundamentals or rudiments Educate : to develop mentally, morally, or aestheti
    40. Re:Obligatory by Trahloc · · Score: 1

      Until it gets hit with irregular voltage that causes memory errors or just simply dies. But that just complicates your tirade doesn't it?

      --
      The Goal: A long simple life filled with many complex toys.
    41. Re:Obligatory by arminw · · Score: 0, Troll

      ...A brain is deterministic too....

      We don't really know exactly how the brain works except maybe you do? If your computer would say to you how much it loves you, will you believe that? If your wife or girlfriend or boyfriend tells you the same thing is that any different? If you really believe in your heart that your brain is deterministic and their brain is deterministic, you are not human and neither are they, but are no different than your computer.

      --
      All theory is gray
    42. Re:Obligatory by martinX · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up. Some people seem to think we are at the zenith of our knowledge RIGHT NOW. That's as exasperatingly dumb as teenagers who know it all.

      Religious dude: OK, we'll accept that vaccines, microsurgery, antibiotics, CPUs, radios, V8 cars, tall buildings, modern farming, genetic engineering, lunar landings and quantum mechanics are all the products of science and engineering and really don't require an interventionist god, but can you explain the behaviour of that weird quark? No? Ergo, god exists. And he'll smite your ass :-) .

      Normal dude: FFS. Chk-chk boom.

      --
      When they came for the communists, I said "He's next door. Take him away. Goddam commies."
    43. Re:Obligatory by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...What authority would that be?.....

      On the authority of the holy Bible! The Bible claims to be God's Word, inspired human writers wrote down what God told him to write.

      Even by human standards the Bible is a very unusual book. Actually it is a collection of 66 books penned by 40 different writers over a time span of at least 1500 years. Yet it has a very unified central authorship and message concerning the dealings of God with mankind. Much of it depicts human history written down before it ever took place. Some of this history, written in advance, is taking place right before our very eyes in our time. We can read the content of tomorrow's newspaper headlines in some of the passages of the Bible.

      For thousands of years, all human writing had to be laboriously copied by hand. When the art of printing was finally invented by Johannes Gutenberg, guess which human writing was first printed? Guess which human writing is distributed more widely than any other and translated into more languages and dialects than any other? Guess which book its enemies have endeavored to destroy more than any other? There are many religious writings, but none of them come even remotely close to the content and distribution of this remarkable book.

      I personally believe that Jesus Christ is who he claimed to be, namely the son of God come in the flesh, in order to rescue human beings and give them life. He proved this by rising from the dead and promises to all who believe in him that they too will rise from the dead.

      --
      All theory is gray
    44. Re:Obligatory by Alsn · · Score: 1

      It still is ;)

    45. Re:Obligatory by uzytkownik · · Score: 1

      Aren't we all deterministic automotons governed by the laws of physics? How can free will exist? I think many religious followers are the first to try to claim that free will caused humanity's fall and the subsequent assholishness of people. As a neuroscientist, I don't believe in free will, but that doesn't negate the concepts of responsibility. David Hume, an early Anglo philosopher put it simply that the idea of cause-and-effect necessitates determinism, so free will (reacting to something according to your past experience) is actually determinism.

      Well - I'm not a specialist but last time I checked important branch of physics was non-determined[1] - but i haven't heard that cause-effect relationship has been denied. [1] Of course there is no concept of purly random number - every random number have certain distribution and in some cases (linear distribution) range.

      --
      I've probably left my head... somewhere. Please wait untill I find it.
      Homepage: http://blog.piechotka.com.pl/
    46. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm also unclear what authority you cite. It kind of sounds like you might be citing some unnamed survey of religious studies graduates who achieved a certain threshold of fame.

      I'm not sure that fame makes somebody authoritative. And while "religious experts" by definition know their particular ritualized forms of worship well, there is little evidence to indicate they share a dedicated phone line with deity.

    47. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spoken like someone who has never darkened a church door. You really have no idea what you're talking about.

    48. Re:Obligatory by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

      A BASIC program is approximately deterministic, which is to say, not actually deterministic. That 1 in whatever (not sure what you want the Planck time to do with anything here) is pretty dang important.

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    49. Re:Obligatory by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

      Aren't we all deterministic automotons governed by the laws of physics?

      IAAPhysicist. We might well all be automatons governed by the laws of physics. You'd know better than I, I suppose. But the laws of physics are definitely not deterministic (or non-local, but non-locality doesn't really seem to get you much of anywhere useful). Read up on the EPR paradox and Bell's inequality sometime. That case is closed.

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    50. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > inspired human writers wrote down what God told him to write.
      How can I verify this?

      You refer to a superlative number of distributions and translations, then allege that no book has been more attacked. If what you say is true, then this book is simultaneously the most popular and most unpopular book on earth. You seem to be saying that its popularity proves its truth, and its unpopularity proves its truth. To the unindoctrinated, this might seem confusing.

      I wonder if you might clarify the Cosmic Algorithm of Truth Detection for those less enlightened than yourself.

    51. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know that one where Muhammad is giving Jesus a blow-job while a nigger Buddhist Rabbi is killing a pig and drinking its blood and God is masturbating while looking at them all, only that she isn't because she doesn't exist?
      Anyways, fuck Ireland!

    52. Re:Obligatory by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 1

      How does that extreme improbability inject sufficient magic to allow us to reject determinism? Does falling in love only happen when god rolls the dice and sends a cosmic ray your way? Is god excused from the problem of evil because that once-in-a-million-years proton decayed in Eve's brain and randomly condemned Man to suffering? Face it, we're so vanishingly close to deterministic that it's not even worth talking about.

      Don't get caught up in the scifi fantasy of going back in time and 1 tiny little change affects the whole course of history. The reality is nobody will notice and nobody's life will be any different.

    53. Re:Obligatory by youngone · · Score: 1

      ...What authority would that be?.....

      On the authority of the holy Bible! The Bible claims to be God's Word, inspired human writers wrote down what God told him to write.

      Even by human standards the Bible is a very unusual book. Actually it is a collection of 66 books penned by 40 different writers over a time span of at least 1500 years. Yet it has a very unified central authorship and message concerning the dealings of a God with mankind. Much of it depicts human history written down before it ever took place. Some of this history, written in advance, is taking place right before our very eyes in our time. We can read the content of tomorrow's newspaper headlines in some of the passages of the Bible.

      For thousands of years, all human writing had to be laboriously copied by hand. When the art of printing was finally invented by Some Chinese Guy, guess which human writing was first printed? (Some Chinese text) Guess which human writing is distributed more widely than any other and translated into more languages and dialects than any other? Guess which book its enemies have endeavored to destroy more than any other? There are many religious writings, but none of them come even remotely close to the content and distribution of this remarkable book.

      I personally believe that Jesus Christ is who he claimed to be, namely the son of God come in the flesh, in order to rescue human beings and give them life. He proved this by rising from the dead and promises to all who believe in him that they too will rise from the dead.

      There, fixed that for you.

    54. Re:Obligatory by Old97 · · Score: 1

      First of all it is you who are talking about "religionists" whatever they are supposed to be. Not me. It is you that are making sweeping generalizations about a very large group of people few of whom you've ever met, not me. So it is you that has an ideal example that I've been contradicting by saying that not all religious people are bad, intolerant, or whatever. You are committing the fallacy.

      In the post to which you are responding I made a statement that in other words said that there are people who claim to believe one thing, but preach another and that you should not confuse God or the teachings of a particular prophet with what some of their so-called followers do. Christ preached love and tolerance. If someone claims to be a Christian preaches hate and intolerance then they are a fraud because they are directly contradicting the very teachings they profess to believe. That's not an indictment of religion or God, it's an indictment of some people.

      The take away I get from this entire topic is that many of the posters to this thread, like yourself, would be perfectly happy living in a country that banned blasphemy or other forms of speech as long as you were the ones defining it. You are completely intolerant of any opinion about religion that isn't entirely negative.

      --
      Very often, people confuse simple with simplistic. The nuance is lost on most. - Clement Mok
    55. Re:Obligatory by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "I have no problem with God...

      It's his fan club that I hate."

      Gods are _nothing_ more than their fan clubs.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    56. Re:Obligatory by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 1

      True that. I was raised Evangelical, it took a couple of slick-haired, slick talking ministers to convince me, at age 30, that it was all crap. I had gone through conflicts with my family regarding gay rights, the value of free choice and not theocratic rule, science vs. biblical literalism, but the ministers clinched it. Everyone who serves one of these fake-smile, lie about how good your life is megachurches should realize they've destroyed my faith and I can never have it back. You see, even by choice, you can't will yourself to believe in something your brain thinks is complete crap. Oh, believe me, faced with obliteration and the nothingness of actual death, I tried. It can't be done. I'm an Atheist, and even if I found a belief system I liked better, I couldn't just will myself to believe something just because I liked it better. Truth is ugly but at least it's real. YMMV and if you've seen evidence for a god, it's logical for you to believe in one. I just haven't, so it's logical for me not to.

    57. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I don't believe in free will, but that doesn't negate the concepts of responsibility.

      Could you explain that some more? If someone really holds us responsible for things we are powerless to affect, I believe I'm obliged to fart in their general direction. (Sorry for being crude - not my choice, believe me. Losing free will is a bitch.)

    58. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > We don't really know exactly how the brain works except maybe you do?
      There are electrical inputs, some processing I may never understand, then electrical outputs.

      > If your computer would say to you how much it loves you, will you believe that?
      You may have lost me here. How could my belief in hallucinations and/or amorous software answer the question of whether mankind has free will?

      > If you really believe in your heart that your brain is deterministic
      > and their brain is deterministic, you are not human
      Now you've really lost me. Since when is species classification based on the specimen's personal beliefs? Or is this your arbitrary personal criterion?

    59. Re:Obligatory by Artifakt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Religions are a subset of philosophies. Just try a little substitution in your screed, for example "When choice of philosophy happens independent of parents' philosophical practices and at voting age, then maybe we can say holding a philosophy is a choice. Until then, it's indoctrination and brainwashing of infants with the goal of control." Blocking people from passing on formal religions, while letting them use the same indoctrination and brainwashing for philosophical models that aren't explicitly religious, will still have all the problems.
              Humans can be conditioned to believe they must obey society or the state too, and if they are never even exposed before adulthood to the idea they might have an immortal aspect or be an aspect of the very ground of being, or whatever, then they are easily told there is absolutely nothing more enduring or powerful than the all powerful government, and opposing that government is absolute wrongthink. I'd even argue that we have the darkness in most organized religions because we as a species bring that same darkness into all our other philosophies. It's time to stop all of it, and we can only do that by working on our individual selves, and after taking enough responsibility there, with groups of people we can genuinely trust and respect enough to avoid importing the BS elements into our relationships.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    60. Re:Obligatory by Thunderstruck · · Score: 1

      What authority would you accept?

      No, really. What would it take to persuade YOU that one particular faith's omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent, incomprehensible, infinitely complex, but basically good god actually existed?

      --
      Trying to use sarcasm in text-based forums does not work.
    61. Re:Obligatory by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      Religions do disagree, sometimes even about serious things. But, mostly not as much as you might think. Take a big gap, i.e. Christianity and Buddhism. I heard from a lot of Christians that Buddhism taught reincarnation with a gradual process of enlightenment over many lifespans, a concept called Karma that made forgiveness of sin irrelevant, and neither souls as most Christians conceive of them nor a heaven, nor a supreme God (And these claims were all from the educated Christians, not the crowd of people who called them all damned heathens and left it at that). I heard, not just from religious experts, but secular and scientific ones, that Hinduism was a polytheism, that Islam required accepting the whole Koran literally and not translating it from Arabic, and lots of other claims like those.

            And it turns out none of those claims about other religions are true. Yep, look at that first paragraph - Buddhism, Hinduism, and Islam, as a whole, none of those religions have a commitment to any of those things I outlined as a core of either their beliefs or practices. Some select branches do, and its among those select branches we find most of the groups willing to embrace violence, so maybe that's why we are hearing more about them.

          Gradual enlightenment over many reincarnations? Zen is all about enlightenment in this lifetime, coming as quick as lightning. No heaven for souls - Oh, you must have been talking to a Theravadist, not a Mahayanist, and certainly not a Vajrayanist. Brahma, Vishnu, Ganisha? It's all really Atman. And ask a Sufi about Islam.

            I mostly practice as a Christian. OK, there's some Gnostic and Kabalistic roots in my case, and I'm perhaps too well aware that the original Greek word translated in the new testament as 'sin' comes from archery and means roughly 'missing the mark', and I do sitting meditation. But I've had good relations with plenty of Episcopalians and Methodists who don't see those opinions as a bar to practice, and by Unitarian standards, I'm a more rigidly dogmatic Christian than some. I've got friends who fit into most of the groups I cited above, though I'm not currently in touch with any Sufis. Basically, we see a lot of common ground, either find underlying agreement or don't see the differences as fundamental, and often aren't sure what other people are fighting about.

            I have plenty of disagreements with other religions. I'll look right at a Wiccan and tell them that their claims to a continuous historical link to the old religion are at least as spurious as Madame Blavatski's Mu, and they'd better hope they are getting spiritual inspiration now, because they can't really prove their roots go back to even the middle ages. But is the core of their religion proving all the claims of historical continuity are correct, or is it in their relationship with nature and its feminine and masculine aspects? It's not like we're all in total lockstep, but then, neither is Science nor scientists, and that's a strength, not a weakness.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    62. Re:Obligatory by Artifakt · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The way you use the word faith seems to be the core of the problem. Would it surprise you to learn many Christians don't accept blind faith like you are describing either?

      I'm going to do a big paraphrase of the Bible here. People disagreeing with this are certainly welcome to read the original and offer their opinions in place of this one:

            Saint Paul (arguably at least a pretty mainstream Christian), made an argument in one of his letters. He discussed people who were telling the local Christians that there couldn't be eternal life for the soul, and he pointed out rational reasons to believe there could. He mentioned cases they all knew of people in that community who had become diseased or feeble with age, but whose minds had gotten sharper, not been dragged down by their health. He cited people who had some very poor physical health, but were focused on helping other people to the point where their spiritual conduct had improved even as their health worsened, rather than being dragged down by their bodies. So, he said in essence, 'you have evidence that what happens to the mind and the spirit is not governed by the body, and you should keep your faith, because you have this evidence to confirm it.'. That's how the word faith gets used at some points in the Bible, particularly the New Testament.

            Paul couldn't demonstrate that there was a soul that actually survived death, so he urged faith. But he could demonstrate two things. 1. Some subtler parts of the human being, like their rational minds, or their choice to focus only on their immediate physical survival or still treat other people's lives as important, weren't always governed by the health of the body. 2. The people who claimed to have a nice, tidy, rational argument that the mind was always yoked to the body were cherry picking examples to support their opinions, ignoring counterexamples, and therefore were themselves making a leap of faith to get to their conclusion.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    63. Re:Obligatory by The_Quinn · · Score: 1

      Aren't we all deterministic automotons governed by the laws of physics?

      Why do determinists so frequently choose to ask questions?

    64. Re:Obligatory by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      It's not a case of ideal examples. If I claim to be a Communist, and advocate that the Capitalist class should be allowed to bring back debtor's prisons, then I simply am not a Communist at all, not some Communist who has a perfect right to claim to be a Communist except somebody is redefining some boundaries to exclude me. If I claim to be a Scientist, but announce the scientific method should be modified to allow me to count Phrenology as scientific, I'm not really a scientist at all, not someone being redefined by a No True Scotsman fallacy into being a non-scientist.
              That has to go for religions just like anything else. If no person can be genuinely wrong about the way they claim to belong to a religion or practice it, and its all a matter of 'redefinition' then the religion has no unalterable tenets or principles. It really has no core content at all. So what you are saying is that the No True Scotsman principle requires all religions be nothing but mush.
              I can claim to be a Christian, but believe that my neighbor has to be of my ethnic group or its OK to rob him at knife-point. To hell with what that wimpy Jesus guy said about my neighbor being anyone who would stop to help me if I lay in a ditch, and I should love him regardless of his being Jewish like me or a Samaritan. That wimpy Jesus guy was wrong, and I should know, I'm the true Christian around here. By your argument, if anyone says I'm not a Christian, they're just No True Scotsmaning me.
           

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    65. Re:Obligatory by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Two channels and two preachers.

      Why I've given up on TV.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    66. Re:Obligatory by Cassius+Corodes · · Score: 1

      What makes you think they chose?
      In seriousness some of the arguments here are very poor

      Just become something is non-deterministic does not make it free-will compatible. If a quantum fluctuation, random dice roll or baba gunush causes the life you lead that doesn't make it any better than a straight equation.

      Determinism doesn't mean you don't make choices, its just means that the answer you give to those choices could have been predicted 100% beforehand if theoretically you had ALL the information about the universe at time 0 (whatever that is).

      If determinism is true then it doesn't change the world very much at all. People will still be sent to jail for their crimes (rehabilitation and deterrent are all still valid).

      --
      Control is an illusion, order our comforting lie. From chaos, through chaos, into chaos we fly
    67. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And do you want to multiply that up to the magnitude of the universe too?

    68. Re:Obligatory by PiSkyHi · · Score: 1

      Your post reminded me of thoughts about the butterfly effect and how intertwined your behavior and decisions are with the universe that gave you life.

      I agree with most of what you say here, at least with respect to religion.

      I disagree on the point of free will. Whilst I see that as a neuroscientist, you would suggest that all actions you consciously decide are in fact subconsciously determined by the physics of the brain, I believe the nature of time itself needs to be understood to answer the questions of free will's existence.

      If free will did not exist, then time itself would be deterministic, in this scenario the future is already determined and could be calculated through an accurate simulation of space-time, the simulations conclusions could then be reversed by an act of free will. I see free will as an act of creation - an act that defies the bounds of a deterministic past - an act that can only occur in the now.

      I believe creation and destruction of information are real, and so can occur at any time and not just at the beginning or the end, as a purely deterministic view would have it.

      As purveyors of a mostly causal environment (well, all that is certain is causal), we can instigate in the now with our conciousness something that could not possibly be replicated, even if a perfect simulation were designed. Its not an effect limited to humans, but may possibly be limited to conciousness.

    69. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (...)vaccines, microsurgery, antibiotics, CPUs, radios, V8 cars, tall buildings, modern farming, genetic engineering, lunar landings and quantum mechanics(...)

      Did anyone else expect "what have the Romans ever done for us?" after that?

    70. Re:Obligatory by t_ban · · Score: 1

      Aren't we all deterministic automotons governed by the laws of physics? How can free will exist?

      Methinks you're taking a lot for granted; I am not a physicist, but AFAIK, science hasn't yet reached the conclusion that the universe is deterministic. Perhaps someone who knows more on this subject can elaborate?

      --
      First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win. -Gandhi
    71. Re:Obligatory by amoe · · Score: 2, Informative
      --
      You look beautiful! Incidentally, my favourite artist is Picasso.
    72. Re:Obligatory by The_Quinn · · Score: 1

      Free will is the ability to focus your consciousness, or relax it. It is an epistemological function, and it controls your awareness.

      That you can change your focus can be determined by introspection.

      This is not a proof, just an observation

    73. Re:Obligatory by Cassius+Corodes · · Score: 1

      What exactly do you mean?

      What does it mean to focus or relax your consciousness? How does this differ from any other state of consciousness? Just being conscious of an event does not mean that you control it. I don't know how epistemology comes into play here.

      I'm not sure where to start with the second statement. Given the current technology, a deterministic agent cannot sense his determinism, likewise a free willed agent can never tell if his actions are his own or due to something else. Imagine yourself as a complex but deterministic agent - how would the world be different?

      Free will is simply the ability to control (instigate) your actions - likewise, no free will means that you make actions as a direct result of other things acting upon you.

      The human brain is a complex organ and there is a temptation due to this to believe magical things are going on inside. However if the forces of the universe (including its causal nature) as we understand them hold for the brain as they do for similar objects then nothing inside that organ can instigate actions on its own. It can only serve as a complex device for taking in inputs from the environment (including stochasticity) and turn them into actions. Hence this leads me to conclude that free will cannot exist, barring some radical development in the sciences.

      --
      Control is an illusion, order our comforting lie. From chaos, through chaos, into chaos we fly
    74. Re:Obligatory by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I think your post was mismodded; it shoud have been "insightful" rather than "funny". I agreed with all of it up until every american I've personally met is an awesome dude or dudette. I've known some people who were seriously in need of better parents.

    75. Re:Obligatory by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I'm an Atheist, and even if I found a belief system I liked better, I couldn't just will myself to believe something just because I liked it better.

      Athiest or not, read the first four books of the New Testament. Whether you believe Jesus of Nazareth was the messiah or just an intelligent, compassionate, lucky man (lucky until they executed him anyway), his message can benefit anyone, believer or not.

      His message was nothing like the evangelicals preach.

    76. Re:Obligatory by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      It was also Gandhi who told the victims of the Holocaust and of World War II to kill themselves in protest rather than fight back against the Nazis.

    77. Re:Obligatory by fugue · · Score: 1
      It sounds to me like the core of your argument goes something like this:

      Religions disagree. However, reasonable people all tend to be in it in order to find some reasonable spiritual guidance, and those who share this goal tend to be able to have intelligent conversations together rather than blowing each other up.

      Is that the gist? If not, sorry!

      That makes sense. But I take issue with people who claim to belong to some group that has a doctrine--for example, that if your child disobeys you then you should stone him to death--and then put qualifiers on it, like "oh, well, that wasn't meant to be taken literally--it's just a metaphor." If a religion has a doctrine and you pick and choose and interpret and modify, then how are you a part of that religion?

      What you're doing there is having a brain. You are a spiritual person seeking some sort of guidance, and you read widely and think for yourself. You've decided that some of Catholicism is good and some of Zoroastrianism is good and some of FSM is good, and you're constructing your own personal spirituality with your brain. It's not coming from a religion; it's coming from your own thoughts, and religions are nothing but sources of inspiration.

      Why then do you call yourself Christian? You're not Christian if you disagree with chunks of Christian doctrine. Not that it's really possible to write down what most kinds of Christianity's doctrines are, although with Catholics you can always ask the Pope--that religion was clever enough to include an oracle.

      Amongst people with brains, being able to say you believe something because it feels right, and maybe cite a few sources, is usually enough, but the fact that you're citing Christian sources doesn't make you Christian, does it? If you read the Qu'ran one night and suddenly start citing that instead but your beliefs haven't changed, are you now Muslim?

      But is the core of their religion proving all the claims of historical continuity are correct, or is it in their relationship with nature and its feminine and masculine aspects?

      Indeed. I've claimed above that being a part of a religion involves believing in and following its precepts. If one part of Wiccan doctrine is that their religion is old, then if you don't believe that, you are certainly less Wiccan. You may borrow from their doctrine in order to interpret your feelings, and you may order pizza with people who call themselves Wiccans--does that make you Wiccan?

      Back to the real argument:

      It's not like we're all in total lockstep, but then, neither is Science nor scientists, and that's a strength, not a weakness.

      Completely different.

      In the case of religion, we can all believe whatever we want (subject to the internal constraints of whatever brains we happen to have applied to the question, to whatever stuff society has taught us is right, etc...).

      In sharp contrast, science is converging on the truth. It is absolutely provable that science is more correct now than it was at any (documented) time in the past. Why is this unquestionable? Because if you question it, then we can take some old science and some new science and make some measurements and see which predicts the data more accurately. Neat, huh? Try that with religion.

      Saying that scientists are not in lockstep in the same way that religious thinkers are not in lockstep is disingenuous. In science, we're not in lockstep in the bleeding edge, and that's due to not having precise enough measurements, or powerful enough colliders, or the ability to gather enough data. Once enough quality data are available, we get into lockstep very quickly. For example, nobody believes that Newtonian gravitation is correct anymore, because we have very precise data showing that Einsteinian gravitation explains the data better, and we know our measurements are precise enough. There is no "I believe in Newtonia

      --
      "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
    78. Re:Obligatory by fugue · · Score: 1

      HTML FAIL!!!! Haha. For do I too not suck?

      --
      "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
    79. Re:Obligatory by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....How can I verify this?...

      In the end, you can only believe or disbelieve that the Bible is the truth. The Bible itself tells us that without faith it is impossible to please God, (Hebrews 11:6) We humans say: "I will believe that if you show me", what God says: "If you believed me I will show you."

      I have believed in Jesus Christ and he has revealed himself to me to be exactly who said he is, namely the risen and glorified God the Son.

      --
      All theory is gray
    80. Re:Obligatory by BoothbyTCD · · Score: 1

      Humans can be conditioned to believe they must obey society or the state too, and if they are never even exposed before adulthood to the idea they might have an immortal aspect or be an aspect of the very ground of being, or whatever, then they are easily told there is absolutely nothing more enduring or powerful than the all powerful government, and opposing that government is absolute wrongthink.

      And that is how Marines are made.

      --
      snig
    81. Re:Obligatory by fugue · · Score: 1

      I honestly don't know whether Paul's "argument" is better than what you call "blind faith".

      He's at least trying. He makes an argument that is missing some pieces, and he touches upon what those pieces need to look like. It may be easier to refute "The mind is immortal because it's not in the same condition as the liver" than "We have souls." He even points out that he doesn't have that piece and suggests a future research direction, which is consistent with good science!

      But then he goes on to say that while he can't prove his hypothesis, he still believes it, and moreover he wants to persuade others to believe it despite the glaring lack of evidence--because "there is no credible evidence to the contrary." That is unfortunate.

      So after a bit of good observation, he resorts to making a more precise but still untestable claim, and asks people not to try to help him investigate this fascinating question further, but to accept the untestable claim because it's shiny. That's consistent with what I think of as faith.

      --
      "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
    82. Re:Obligatory by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      That's not true: Bohmian mechanics is deterministic and gives the exact same results as standard quantum mechanics.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    83. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      God lies.

      Ezekiel 14:9 "And if a prophet be deceived when he hath spoken a thing, I the Lord have deceived that prophet."

      Or does he?

      Hebrews 6:18 "It was impossible for God to lie."

      Wait, what?

      2 Thessalonians 2:11 "For this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie."

      Eh?

      1 Kings 22:23 "Now, therefore, behold, the Lord hath put a lying spirit in the mouth of these thy prophets, and the Lord hath spoken evil concerning thee."

      In the end, you can only believe or disbelieve that the Bible is the truth.

      In the end, you only believe the parts of the Bible that you like and ignore the rest.

      Have you beaten your children lately? Why not? The Bible says you should, and don't stop when they cry!

      Proverbs 13:24 He that spareth his rod hateth his son: but he that loveth him chasteneth him betimes.
      Proverbs 19:18 Chasten thy son while there is hope, and let not thy soul spare for his crying.
      Proverbs 22:15 Foolishness is bound in the heart of a child; but the rod of correction shall drive it far from him.
      Proverbs 23:13 Withhold not correction from the child: for if thou beatest him with the rod, he shall not die.
      Proverbs 23:14 Thou shalt beat him with the rod, and shalt deliver his soul from hell.
      Proverbs 29:15 The rod and reproof give wisdom: but a child left to himself bringeth his mother to shame.

      Has your child ever cursed at you? Why did you let him live?

      Matthew 15:4 For God commanded, saying, Honour thy father and mother: and, He that curseth father or mother, let him die the death.

    84. Re:Obligatory by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I'd call "the theory says the universe is deterministic, but it also says we can never, ever measure the values required for that determinism" strictly deterministic. Philosophers certainly could, and have, argued about what that sort of determinism means for what we call free will.

      When strictly deterministic (the theory is deterministic AND you can actually MAKE predictions) Newtonian mechanics popped up, it seemed that free will was out the window. Chaotic behaviour was considered by may to give it a reprieve - sure, the universe was theoretically deterministic but you could never actually do the determining. The Copenhagen interpretation is nondeterministic and does away with the whole question - there's plenty of room for free will. The Bohm interpretation is deterministic but leaves even more room for free will than does Newton+chaos.

      Perhaps "the laws of physics in their present form don't really allow for strong determinism" would be a better phrasing.

    85. Re:Obligatory by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      If by "strong determinism" you mean that someone inside the deterministic universe can do unlimited predictions about that universe, then I think "strong determinism" isn't attainable anyway. After all, under this premise, the state of the universe includes the state of the very person trying to predict it. So to determine the future of the universe, he must also predict his own future predictions, which would probably give an infinite regress.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    86. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until it gets hit with irregular voltage that causes memory errors or just simply dies.

      Yet that's also deterministic, with enough simulation we can determine exactly what happens if there's a weak signal as it fans out throughout the system. That this input was unexpected or unhandled in the application does not change that "crashed computer" followed from "voltage fluctuation".

    87. Re:Obligatory by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      I think we could even settle for some sort of determinism that was less comprehensive. I can't predict, even over the short term, exactly how a subatomic particle is going to behave, even in principle, even if the Bohm prediction is correct. Supposing something like a brain is at least somewhat sensitive to quantum effects, which it probably is, that means we have no hope, even theoretically, of predicting accurately, in detail what a brain will do. In the past, that has been more than enough to allow philosophers of mind not to dismiss the possibility of free will.

      Phrased another way, free will requires some sort of unpredictability. Newtonian mechanics takes that unpredictability away - the universe is mechanistic. If you know the states of all the particles accurately enough, and there's no reason why you can't, you can predict any event in the future to any degree of accuracy you desire. What we now call chaos was hailed as restoring the unpredictability - for many systems it is impractical, though still possible in principle, to measure the initial states accurately enough to make any useful predictions.

      Quantum mechanics brings back an even stronger unpredictability. We cannot, even in principle, ever measure the initial state to an arbitrary degree of accuracy. In the Copenhagen interpretation there simply is no such thing. In the Bohm interpretation there is, but we still can't ever observe it.

      Thus we may all be relieved that we still have free will.

    88. Re:Obligatory by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      In the end, you can only believe or disbelieve that the Bible is the truth.

      But that's what the Scientologists say, too, and they got to me first. How can I tell who's lying?

      I have believed in Jesus Christ and he has revealed himself to me to be exactly who said he is, namely the risen and glorified God the Son.

      How do you know you didn't experience a transient stroke, an acid flashback, or another common mental glitch?

    89. Re:Obligatory by smithmc · · Score: 1

      Aren't we all deterministic automotons governed by the laws of physics? How can free will exist? I think many religious followers are the first to try to claim that free will caused humanity's fall and the subsequent assholishness of people. As a neuroscientist, I don't believe in free will, but that doesn't negate the concepts of responsibility.

      Of course it does. If people don't have will over their actions, if they're predetermined, then how can we be held responsible for what we do? Moral responsibility for one's actions absolutely requires free will. (Free will does not, on the other hand, require moral responsibility, but it does in my opinion, at least.)

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    90. Re:Obligatory by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      I disagree. Philosophy is a logical basis for morality rather than a fantastical one.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
  36. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For example, if someone blasphemes my diety, the Flying Spaghetti Monster, will they be treated the same as somebody who blasphemes against Jesus of Nazareth, (who is clearly an undead minion of Satan?)

    No, but if you blaspheme Mohammed expect to have your country's embassies car-bombed and your country's products boycotted

  37. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by wjousts · · Score: 1

    2: Start a new, silly religion (like I believe in an all-powerful, all-knowing being who needs your MONEY!)

    You missed step 2b: Get silly celebrities to become prominent members and spokespersons for you religion.

    Worked for L.Ron

  38. Step 2 by JJJK · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I guess now it's up to the religious leaders to redefine what "blasphemy" means. We'll see what they come up with...

    So when a religious person and an atheist meet and say something like "I find your views completely ridiculous" at the same time to each other then the religious person can sue the atheist but not vice versa?
    Reminds me of this

    1. Re:Step 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I understand the rule to be not specific to any given religion. Does this mean that, say, a Buddhist could go after the church for preaching that "A fool has said in his heart there is no god", only to face a counterstrike from the church for "We are the only means to our salvation"?

    2. Re:Step 2 by Eil · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So when a religious person and an atheist meet and say something like "I find your views completely ridiculous" at the same time to each other then the religious person can sue the atheist but not vice versa?

      This is not so much in reply to your comment as the comic you linked to...

      As an athiest, I would give anything to have Christians or followers of other religions come up to me and say, "I find your views completely ridiculous and here's why." It would show me that they are at least evaluating their own views (in comparison to mine, granted) instead of just running around spewing out all the half-baked ideas that were preached into them since they were 4 years old. Like so many people I've run into throughout my life.

  39. Where is your god now? by royallthefourth · · Score: 1

    Apparently he's in the Irish legislature!

  40. Blasphemy. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a victimless crime.

  41. It's already illegal in Canada and New Zealand by Vahokif · · Score: 2, Interesting
  42. what's the irish word... by gandhi_2 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...for Sharia?

    1. Re:what's the irish word... by GungaDan · · Score: 1

      It's the same, but spelled with a bunch of extraneous Fs, Gs and Hs.

      --
      Eloi are stupid, throw morlocks at them!
    2. Re:what's the irish word... by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      what's the irish word... for Sharia?

      Arsed.

    3. Re:what's the irish word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the Irish word for Sharia?

      Halachah

    4. Re:what's the irish word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Deuteronomy.

    5. Re:what's the irish word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Leave Muslims out of this, Ireland doesn't even have that many, and if you read the article it says that Muslims were absent from this discussion

    6. Re:what's the irish word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i don't know, but the ruler-based combat some of their nuns have developed is quite formidable!

  43. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  44. When Blasphemy is outlawed, only Blasphemers... by number6x · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If I had 2p for every time my grandmother took the lord's name in vain, I'd have enough to pay off several offender's fines.

    This is a woman who used to carry food to republican fighters hiding in fields and graveyards at night during the revolution.

    Though she was a deeply devout woman, she would have had no qualms about any divine beings know just how screwed up they were. If she felt she should take the belt to God or Jesus, no blasphemy laws would have stopped her.

    If they classify the abuse of minors by clergy and religious orders as a form of blasphemy, there might night be enough room in gaol.

    Good Luck!

    1. Re:When Blasphemy is outlawed, only Blasphemers... by pcolaman · · Score: 1

      During the revolution? How the fuck old is your grandmother? Ohhhh, you mean the Irish Revolution...

    2. Re:When Blasphemy is outlawed, only Blasphemers... by jaavaaguru · · Score: 1

      Since the article is about Ireland, I naturally assumed it was the Irish Revolution... why would you assume anything else?

    3. Re:When Blasphemy is outlawed, only Blasphemers... by pcolaman · · Score: 1

      Because we all know Ireland is just fiction invented to entertain us...

  45. Typo in title by wjousts · · Score: 1

    Surely it was supposed to read "Afghanistan Criminalizes Blashphemy" or "Iran Criminalizes Blashphemy". This isn't supposed to happen in "modern", "enlightened" western countries.

  46. Jesus Christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps the Second Coming is upon us?

  47. How is this different from "hate speech" by CannonballHead · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I realize that most people are going to be complaining about this without reading the article.

    So my question is, how is this different than shielding from "hate speech" about... say, homosexuality? Go look at Canada's laws. It's pretty much against the law to say anything bad about homosexuality up there, from what I understand from some Canadian friends that I have.

    I'm not saying this law is a good thing. I'm a pretty conservative Christian, in fact, and I don't particularly think this is a good law, and I think if anything it will drive more people away. Plus it kind of implies a religion-set-up-by-government, which - Ireland being "Catholic" and thus claiming to believe in Jesus Christ from the Bible - is NOT what Jesus talked about. I don't think it's necessarily wrong to have the law - and I don't see how anyone else can say "this law is wrong!" without some basis for what is right or wrong. However, I don't see that it's necessarily right either. Just explaining my conservative Christian viewpoint. I think most slashdotters are going to be thinking that conservative Christians are going to think this is a great thing.

    Anyways. I'm still interested in knowing why this is any more frightening, annoying, upsetting, infuriating, unfair, or censoring than saying I can't tell people that being gay is ... hmmm, let's say, condemned by God, or ... bad for humanity ... or morally bad ... or bad for society... or any number of other "bad" things that would be "hate" speech in some countries.

    I'm not asking if it IS condemned, bad, or hateful. I'm asking how this is different, just because it's a different belief. Yes, belief. Homosexuality being good or bad for society is a belief, too...

    1. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anita+Coney · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "how is this different than shielding from "hate speech" about"

      There isn't any difference. Which is why so many people are against hate speech laws.

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    2. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      I'm a pretty conservative Christian...Plus it kind of implies a religion-set-up-by-government, which - Ireland being "Catholic" and thus claiming to believe in Jesus Christ from the Bible - is NOT what Jesus talked about.

      Which, of course, is why you and your buddies are not trying to prevent homosexual marriage, abortion, etc. And, you all are not trying to introduce creationism, prayer, and other bits of religion in schools. And, you all would never lie about the religious affiliations of the founding fathers or whether the United States is a Christian nation.

      Oh, wait, that is exactly what conservative Christians have been doing and continue to do.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    3. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Drakkenmensch · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So my question is, how is this different than shielding from "hate speech" about... say, homosexuality? Go look at Canada's laws. It's pretty much against the law to say anything bad about homosexuality up there, from what I understand from some Canadian friends that I have.

      The difference is that casual swearing rarely ever leads to someone of that particular religious inclination to being beaten or killed by an angry mob.

    4. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by oneirophrenos · · Score: 1

      The difference is in choice. Nobody chooses to be gay. But you choose whether you follow a religion or not. That's why the law should disallow the bashing of gays but allow the bashing of religion.

    5. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And anyway, as a Christian, you'd agree that Jesus Christ *is* God. That's blasphemy to a muslim. I can see the Mohammedans trying to use this on Christian publishing houses.

      *(Actually, it seems that thinking for yourself seems to be blasphemy to a muslim, but that's another issue.)

    6. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I don't think it's necessarily wrong to have the law - and I don't see how anyone else can say "this law is wrong!" without some basis for what is right or wrong.

      Bullshit. Some things are just fucking wrong as they are inherent violations of human rights. Joe Atheist's right to talk smack about my (Christian) God is far more important than my right not to be offended by it.

      I hate this moral relativism crap, and I'm kind of surprised that any self-described conservative would go along with it. Female mutilation in Sharia turf isn't OK just because "their culture allows it". Screw Godwin: the Holocaust wasn't OK just because "their culture allowed it". Well, religious censorship isn't OK just because "their culture allows it".

      I was also a conservative Christian until I decided that having the power to prevent activity I disliked would suck if the tide ever turned against my beliefs. I'm now a libertarian Christian because I want the right to act, worship, and speak as I want even if it means that people I disagree with get to do the same. This is the case here. It's not that I'm keen on blasphemy, but if I want the right to say "Allah is a dork", then I have to let others say the same about Jehovah.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    7. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anita+Coney · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Choice irrelevant. The fact of the matter is that in both instances people can be charged criminally based merely on their expressed thoughts. That may sound OK to you, maybe locking up people who make you feel bad would give you some joy, but it scares the frick out of me.

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    8. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So my question is, how is this different than shielding from "hate speech" about... say, homosexuality?

      It has to do with whether real people are being hurt for a characteristic that they were born with. Granted, some "hate speech" laws are poorly written and overly broad but, at least in theory, you want a system of laws based on factual observation rather than arbitrary "belief".

      From what I read, the justification to for Ireland blasphemy law was that it's required by their constitution so if I were writing the law I would have required that the offended deity bring the complaint in person.

    9. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if hate speech laws are considered acceptable, blasphemy laws are still wrong because, unlike tangible humans, an omnipotent supernatural being shouldn't need the government to protect it from hurt feelings.

    10. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Sklivvz · · Score: 1

      The difference is that God is a joke and people who get offended by blasphemy should get their heads checked by a shrink.

    11. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the asshats on your side that keep trying to kill me and mine. Seems like that's the difference.

    12. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by shadowofwind · · Score: 1

      It is a misunderstanding of atheists and secularists to say they have no basis for right and wrong. They do have a basis, its just not an appeal to divine authority.

      Yes, we should all be equally free to say what we think about homosexuality and Christianity. I think you're not going to find much disagreement with you here about 'hate speech' laws, insofar as these are intended to suppress free expression of ideas. Personally I believe that hateful verbal or written attacks against people or groups of people shouldn't be considered acceptable. But criticism should be acceptable, its hard to draw the line exactly, and it should not in any case be controlled by law.

      In my view censoring anti-Christians is pretty seriously wrong. And the more right and true the things believed by Christians are, the more wrong it is to censor criticism around those things. If honest scrutiny is not tolerated, then it is not the God of Truth that is being worshipped, it has become idolatry.

      I find your "I'm not saying this law is good" criticism to be pretty weak, particularly considering the strength of your resentment against being censored about homosexuality. I think the persecution complex that many Christians have in America to be somewhat ridiculous, considering the freedom and power that they have, and their relaxed attitude towards suppression of free inquiry when it favors their own belief structure.

    13. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As another conservative christian, I'd have to agree. Passing this law reflects bad on both Irish catholics and christianity as a whole... not to mention free speech.

    14. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2 simple reasons:

      1. Religion is totally arbitrary therefore the definition of blasphemy is arbitrary too.
      What if the Church says "evolutionism" is blasphemy ?
      Waht if the Church says "religion X" is blasphemy ?
      What if the Church says is blasphemy ?

      2. You don't get killed by people swearing or believing other gods, they are not attacking any person that may get physically hurt.

    15. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know what the Canadian law you're talking about looks like, although I have a feeling you're probably setting up a straw man.

      That said - GENERALLY speaking, no, it's not different from criminalizing speaking ill of, say, homosexuality. You should have a right to do say "God hates fags!" and the like all you want.

      That being said, as a gay man, allow me to say that if you actually believe that being gay is "condemned by God" or "bad for humanity/society" or "morally bad", then you're still a fucking wanker.

    16. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by eddy+the+lip · · Score: 3, Informative

      Go look at Canada's laws. It's pretty much against the law to say anything bad about homosexuality up there, from what I understand from some Canadian friends that I have.

      That sounds like a slight misinterpretation to me. According to Seciton 319 of the Criminal Code:

      Every one who, by communicating statements in any public place, incites hatred against any identifiable group where such incitement is likely to lead to a breach of the peace is guilty of

      (a) an indictable offence and is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years; or

      (b) an offence punishable on summary conviction.

      In other words (as far as I understand it) "God condemns homosexuality", or even "I hate queers" likely won't get you prosecuted, but "We should be stoning fags" would. The key parts are that the statements must be public and be likely to disturb the peace.

      The new Irish law targets blasphemy, which (according to the Irish Times) is defined as

      ...matter "that is grossly abusive or insulting in relation to matters held sacred by any religion, thereby causing outrage among a substantial number of the adherents of that religion; and he or she intends, by the publication of the matter concerned, to cause such outrage."

      So the Canadian law is about attempting to incite action against any identifiable group, the Irish blasphemy law is criminalizing saying things religious organizations find offensive. I think this is a significant difference, both in terms of what is illegal (an attempt to incite harm versus "outraging" someone) and in terms of who is protected (any identifiable group versus religious organizations.)

      --

      This is the voice of World Control. I bring you Peace.

    17. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by wakingrufus · · Score: 1

      bzzzzt im sorry, you don't understand free speech. first, the fact that "religion is a choice" is not 100% true. people are indoctrinated from a young age into their religion. BUT that doesn't even matter. if you believe in free speech, you should believe that people can bash religion, sexual orientation, and yes, even ethnicity and Race [sic].

    18. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes it's the unfortunate truth damn I feel bad just typing this because it may be minimising a life but that law against bad mouthing homosexuality (if it truly does ban speaking against it in all circumstances) is bad because it is essentially saying that if you say something bad against it you might also kill the person so we stop you from saying it. Cue thoughtcrime.
      There ought to be harsher punishments for actual hate crimes that result in actual hurt to people but we can't be criminilizing insulting someone.
      Btw, I'm an athiest that believes we can't go making the same mistakes that the religious people do, we can't have hypocrisies.

    19. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by jipn4 · · Score: 1

      Anyways. I'm still interested in knowing why this is any more frightening, annoying, upsetting, infuriating, unfair, or censoring than saying I can't tell people that being gay is ... hmmm, let's say, condemned by God, or ... bad for humanity ... or morally bad ... or bad for society... or any number of other "bad" things that would be "hate" speech in some countries.

      I know of no community, state, or nation where homosexuality is receiving more legal protection than Christianity. Can you point at any?

    20. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Drakkenmensch · · Score: 1

      Yes it's the unfortunate truth damn I feel bad just typing this because it may be minimising a life but that law against bad mouthing homosexuality (if it truly does ban speaking against it in all circumstances) is bad because it is essentially saying that if you say something bad against it you might also kill the person so we stop you from saying it. Cue thoughtcrime.

      Don't you just love anyone who cries wolf and says thoughtcrime! whenever discrimination laws are mentionned? The simple fact is that if you allow hurtful speech to be used at someone pointing out how different their are (sex, religion, ethnicity, orientation, etc) there's always a chance that someone will go beyond words and actually pick up a weapon and attack the victim physically. It's not just a thought crime anymore, it's outright aggresion. And hurling the insults that egged the criminal into hurting people makes you as guilty as those doing the deed... just ask the former president of Kenya who went on a crime against humanity trial for inciting the kenyan ethnic majority to murder and slaughter the minority. It was just words he said, but he might as well have held the machette himself.

    21. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      . Nobody chooses to be gay. .

      Sorry, you are wrong. While there may be people who have no choice but be gay, I have met people who chose to be gay and argued very strenuously that it whether or not to be gay was a choice.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    22. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Choice irrelevant. The fact of the matter is that in both instances people can be charged criminally based merely on their expressed thoughts.

      So, if the "thought" is the address of someone in witness protection and if I happen to "express" this thought to certain criminal organizations - that's all OK? I mean, I'm only "expressing a thought". Or, if I run over someone with my car, it doesn't matter at all whether it was intentional or accidental? I mean, why should I be punished for my thoughts?

      My view is that, ultimately, laws should be based on factual observation. If factual observation allows us to conclude that a particular action is unavoidably hurting someone who should not be hurt then it's OK to punish that action regardless of what that action happens to be. Having said that, speech and thoughts don't generally hurt people (at least not unavoidably - if someone is saying something you don't like, you generally don't have to listen).

    23. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by pcolaman · · Score: 1

      Unless it's in a primarily Muslim country and the subject of the casual swearing is versus Mohamed. I wouldn't expect you'd last long if that were the case.

    24. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by JJJK · · Score: 1

      I don't think anti-hate speech laws (or hate crime laws in the USA... a crime is a crime!) are a good thing, but I do understand where they come from. Using your example: Gay people are a minority facing a lot of violence and hate coming from (mostly) religious people for no good reason. And a government needs to protect minorities from harm (In my opinion that's only violence and discrimination, not being offended), so that's probably the best they could think of. In Ireland, it might be a misguided attempt to lower religious violence - although its very non-secular constitution might suggest other reasons.

      Yes, belief. Homosexuality being good or bad for society is a belief, too...

      Semantically that's true, but "The sun is revolving around the earth" or "1+1=3" are beliefs too. Thinking that a statement is true (believing it) does not mean that there isn't strong evidence or proof to the contrary. Especially for homosexuality there are studies that show that it is neither voluntary or changeable (at the moment) and as for the "bad for society/humanity" issue - as long as we use statements we both agree on, we could find a definite answer for that. But I think the burden of proof is on your side. If it wasn't, I could say something like "shoes are responsible for 10% of all deaths" and then go around yelling at all people who wear shoes, urging them to prove me wrong.

      So, personally I find the logical errors (and their consequences) made by religious people frightening, annoying, upsetting, infuriating, morally bad and bad for society. But other than "bad for society" that's all just emotional, irrelevant stuff that has nothing to do with law. But I'm inclined to agree with you that blasphemy laws and hate laws are equally unfair, just based on the notions that free speech is desirable and that there will always be some group that will not receive the same protection.

    25. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by CannonballHead · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Here we go again, though:

      as they are inherent violations of human rights

      Who gets to define what human rights I have?

      I agree, female mutilation isn't OK. Incidentally, it's the "Well it's their culture, we shouldn't tell them it's wrong" opinions tend to be less on the "Let's base things on the Bible/God/whatever" side and more on the "We need to base things on the way they have been in history" side.

      Religious censorship or non-religious-censorship isn't OK because their culture allows it. I agree. That's a bad basis of "OK" and "not OK." On the other hand, saying it's NOT ok simply because YOU think it's a violation of these "inherent" (inherent to what?) human rights doesn't seem like a logical argument either. Rights are things that are given. No, all rights are not given "by God." But rights ARE given by "the government." Or taken away. Etc. Whether or not they government SHOULD give/take those rights is what we're discussing, thus the "OK" has to be based on something higher than human government... so here we are again: who decides?

      And ... why is Ireland's basis for their decision better or worse than yours?

      Again, I'm not advocating for or against the law, but arguing that the position taken by most "This is awful!" people seems like it tends to be based on a vague "this violates my inalienable rights" idea with no explanation of where these "inalienable" rights came from.

    26. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      ut you choose whether you follow a religion or not.

      Says whom? And on what basis? I don't see why, if a gay says "I didn't choose to be gay" and you believe him, I can't say "I didn't choose to be [insert religion]" and be believed.

      I'm not arguing for either position here. I'm saying you're accepting this based largely on the statements of those that ARE gay, or ARE of whatever religion. Of course, most "religionists" don't say they had no choice in the matter. So let's say you're right; you don't choose to be gay, and you choose to be a certain religion. I guess I have no right to CHOOSE to be anything; I am only allowed to have the right to be what I DIDN'T choose to be.

      I somehow doubt that will fly very far in most people's minds. The RIGHT TO CHOOSE seems to be far greater, in most people's eyes, than the right to be what I DIDN'T CHOOSE to be. :)

    27. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there's always a chance that someone will go beyond words

      YES, there's always a chance someone will but do you punish everyone cause someone might ?
      So shall we arrest all anarchists then? Or all government conspiracy types? Cause surely if some psycho thinks that the ideas justify violence they are just as responsible?
      Congrats for totally missing the point I was making.

    28. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Again, I'm not advocating for or against the law, but arguing that the position taken by most "This is awful!" people seems like it tends to be based on a vague "this violates my inalienable rights" idea with no explanation of where these "inalienable" rights came from.

      That pretty well sums up the differences of our opinions. I agree with Jefferson: life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness are inherent rights that all people are born with, period. Contrary to your position, I believe that government can only restrict rights and can't grant new ones. Given a default state of freedom, after all, where can a government do other than agree to restrict you the least amount necessary for society to function correctly? With this in mind, I truly can't think of any right more fundamentally important than freedom to speak your opinion. If it's illegal for me to say that I disagree with something, then nothing else matters, does it?

      Honestly, I'm a little horrified to find people in the Western world who think restrictions on religious freedom are tolerable and maybe even good. As I said, if I want to speak against Islam or Scientology or the FSM, then I have to permit others to speak against my God. There are no circumstances in which it's acceptable for the government to declare one religion as good and protected above others.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    29. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      prevent homosexual marriage

      I don't see why government needs to have any say in the matter, anyways. Leave religious ceremonies to religion. Drop all government-related involvement in the matter (tax filings, etc).

      abortion

      This boils down to whether or not it's legalized murder.

      And, you all are not trying to introduce creationism

      I think we would settle for abiogenesis not being stated as fact. I would.

      prayer

      Noone is demanding it be put in. Rather, it is being perceived as being forced out and people are making noise about that.

      And, you all would never lie about the religious affiliations of the founding fathers...

      [citation needed]

      ...or whether the United States is a Christian nation.

      I find that particular debate by my brethren to ring rather hollow. Too often seems to be used to justify forcing moral standards on non-believers.

    30. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      Well said.

    31. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

      "So, if the "thought" is the address of someone in witness protection..."
      "Or, if I run over someone with my car, it doesn't matter..."

      Those thoughts are being combined with acts. Expressing the whereabouts of a person hiding to someone looking to hurt him is ratting him out. Expressing an intent to run someone over and then running him over is an assault and battery. Those added acts create the crime. The fact that they were done intentionally adds to the punishment because we as a society recognize that crimes committed accidentally deserves less punishment from those done intentionally. But should me expressing hate, in and of itself, really be worthy of being a crime?!

      Think of it this way. I hate all mammals including humans. Mammals have no choice to be mammals, so apparently, that makes my hatred worse. I'm not entirely sure why. Should my expression of hatred for mammals, without any act, be a crime? Are you calling the cops right now due to my expression of hate?

      "unavoidably hurting someone who should not be hurt then it's OK to punish that action regardless of what that action happens to be"

      Does that include hurt feelings? I'm not talking about an assault. "I hate you and I'm going to hurt you." Assault is already against the law. I'm talking about an expression of hate in and of itself.

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    32. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the third is missing "random issue" before "is blasphemy ?"

    33. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by ForShizzle · · Score: 0

      Because being religious is a choice. Being gay isn't a choice. Ask a gay person. A gay man can choose to have sex with a woman, but hes likely still attracted to men and is still gay. Sort of like attacking a person for being retarded. They didn't choose to be retarded, and they last thing they need is someone putting them down because of it. So that is the main difference.

    34. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by ForShizzle · · Score: 0

      While I agree that women can choose to be gay, I find it a hard pressed matter for a man to choose to be gay. A man may find himself so desperate for sexual gratification that he will have sex with a another man, but he will likely still rather have a woman. Or rather, his attraction is to women but he will get off with another man. Sure, its a gay act, but the man isn't that attracted to men.

    35. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by justinlee37 · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's a misunderstanding at all. You might personally feel that way, and believe in notions of an objective right/wrong morality, but there are plenty of nihilists out there who also happen to be atheist/agnostic/secular. Personally I evaluate the desirability of an action based on whether or not it is efficient or inefficient in creating happiness for myself and my friends, and that's the closest thing to a moral compass you'll find with me.

      The point is that there is no secular "church," and the only misunderstanding here is thinking that all atheists have the same system of morality. They don't. They're all a little different.

    36. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by DeepHurtn! · · Score: 1

      You should take your own advice: go look at Canada's laws. Especially before you spout off on them without knowing what you're talking about. Parroting what your "Canadian friends" say just shows your ignorance. None of the things you indignantly claim you can't say in "some countries" would qualify as hate speech.

      But let me guess: your "Canadian friends" are probably social conservative homophobes who resent the fact that Canadian society and government both reject their bigotry, right?

    37. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      That is the stupidest thing I will have read this month.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    38. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Personally I evaluate the desirability of an action based on whether or not it is efficient or inefficient in creating happiness for myself and my friends

      Please live as far away from me as possible, unless you count humanity in toto as your friends. Basically, your own happiness may cause a whole awful lot of unhappiness for others ("whee, what fun to kill his cat!"), making that a rather sociopathic calculus.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    39. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by planetoid · · Score: 1

      Don't you know that Christians feel "persecuted" whenever the people they hate have equal rights? You don't have to strike against Christianity at all -- you just have to act in favor of a group of individuals that their book says is acceptable to hate, and the Bible thumpers play the persecution card.

      --
      Slashdot requires you to wait longer between hitting 'reply' and submitting a comment.
    40. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      As I said, if I want to speak against Islam or Scientology or the FSM, then I have to permit others to speak against my God.

      I agree with that. That's how a "free democracy" sort of thing works.

      But the question still exists ... where do inherent rights come from? I believe Jefferson was a Deist and believe they came, ultimately, from God, didn't he? Kinda throws a wrench into "separation of church and state," which most seem to think means "separation of anything related to religion/God/non-"natural" and state." I would argue that true freedom that makes sense is not going to come apart from saying where the freedom comes from.

      Unless, as you say, my freedom comes from the will of the people or the will of the government... which, actually, I would agree with you in disagreeing with that proposition. (i.e., I agree that government can only restrict rights).

      Sorry if I am rambling too much. Actually enjoying the discussion. Maybe that's the problem ;)

    41. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      I believe Jefferson was a Deist and believe they came, ultimately, from God, didn't he?

      According to said Declaration:

      We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

      So yeah, at least in that one document, Jefferson held that rights were divinely endowed by God. However, if he'd said "they are endowed by their Creator with two legs and two arms (on average)", I could still agree with his conclusion even if I disagreed with the source. FWIW, I do happen to agree with the source in this case, but that's unimportant to me. The important part is that we do possess these inherent rights, even if atheists might chalk them up to the virtue of our humanity rather than the grant of a Creator.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    42. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      Hmm. Yes, the important part is the rights themselves, but when arguing about what rights we have (or don't have), the source of those rights is very important when discussing whether or not it's ok to take away a "right." Example: what about the "right" to "entertainment." Or how about the "right to die" (euthanasia). How about the "right" to have an abortion?

      The question of where those "rights" come from is pretty important. It's the fashion nowadays to claim they don't come from a "religion" (or Deity, etc) because that's promoting one religion/belief/whatever over another. Instead, it seems that many ... let's just say "humanists" think that it's the people that decide who has what rights.

      One example of this being an issue is California's voters deciding homosexual couples can't be called "married." They denied them that "right." The source of the "right" is very important there, because a lot of people would argue they didn't have that "right" to begin with, so we're not suddenly deciding to "revoke" the right.

      Definitely a much smaller scope than not being able to talk badly about a given religion, but still shows the point of the source of rights as being pretty important to the discussion of whether or not it should be allowed or denied.

      Thanks for the conversation. :)

    43. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dunno about where you live, but here in the US that whole Bill of Rights thing here is owned by the people not the government. It specifically says what the government cannot do.

    44. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      God gave you the ability to choose whether to believe in Him or not. He also gave you the ability to choose whether to believe His written word or not. I doubt if any comment I make will make an impression on you, but I must make the effort and ask that you hold back the flames in return.

      The acts of homosexuality are condemned in both the Old and New Testaments. So is a bunch of other stuff. A lot of people say some things are black, some are gray areas, and some are white. There is only white or not-white with God and the not-white stuff cuts you off from Him (regardless of whether it's the topic at hand or something else... lying, stealing, or any of a host of sex sins outside homosexuality to name just a few). That is fact, and implying it isn't condemned by God is incorrect.

      You may not want to believe that those words express God's thoughts, but they are part of what the Christian Church accepts as His transmitted words to us. We accept His plan for salvation as presented in that work as fact and depend on it for eternal life. We accept His plan for those who do not accept His plan for salvation equally as fact. But let's be clear. God loves all His creation and isn't willing for any to perish. He wants all to accept His plan for their life and His plan of salvation and repent of all their sin. That's also in the manual you don't want to believe. I have no animosity toward those who haven't accepted that plan and don't go around trying to beat them up physically or verbally, regardless of what they've done that keeps them separated from God. But my belief system says that they are, in fact, separated, and it isn't the way God wants it to be.

      I've seen enough unexplained things happen that the world would call healings or miracles (in people I know) to believe that God exists and is still acting in ways that the Bible says He will. Seeing current events unfold like the Bible says I can expect makes me believe that the future events will also unfold as it describes. I don't pretend to understand why He chose to condemn some things that He did, but that doesn't change the fact that He did so. I don't have to like that. You don't have to like that. It doesn't change His nature a bit, and I can assure you He doesn't care what either of us thinks. He is a righteous judge who will execute judgment (probably sooner rather than later looking at the world today). The Bible implies that His basic nature is unchanging, and from near one end of recorded Bible history to the other end of prophetical history, certain things consistently stand out as actions He will judge. It's a good time to accept His plan of salvation and start working out your daily repentance just as I must.

      Your history with Christians doesn't appear to be very good, and sadly we haven't done a very good job of living up to Christ's standards when trying to present the truths we believe. Perhaps I haven't here either. The acceptance of those truths is up to the hearer or reader. I hope you can get over the hate from the past and find Him. Once you discover that He actually is, it changes your outlook on your life and the world. Until that happens, it's easy to believe there is no merit to the Christian argument and to rail against it. Salvation is the easy part. The road of repentance isn't easy, regardless of what background you are coming from.

    45. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      You clearly know nobody that is gay.

    46. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my conversations with those claiming to renounce moral relativism while also pronouncing freedom as an important societal attribute, and I have not had 'satasfactory' success in determining where the inalienable rights come from... Usually, it ends with the foundation for the belief as that some specific action is yucky.

            As I gather, all people are moral relativists including those who claim they are not. It is just that their version of relativism is the belief that they hold an objective morality (on sets of actions) based on their cultural upbringing. If a person actually claims staunchly to have an objective morality, all those I know have admitted at some stage to that morality coming from a religious dogma, which then precludes any authority for claiming universal application.

            Having the basis for the morailty of an action as how much you are offended by its yuckiness is not necessarily a bad thing. I am assuming here, but I think what we don't like about it is that the arguments using this are often arguments for inaction. Like, "Well, we cannot really be offended because it is okay in their culture, so let's not help those people." This doesn't have to be the case. There three core ways I as a concerned person know how to approach this. One is by simply not trying to pretend to have moral authority that I don't actually have. I think this only infuriates people more while seeming to not actually providing any usefulness. Another is a litmus test for a specific question: Can society as I enjoy it function if this action is allowed to take place on a broad scale? So, if everyone takes a pebble from the Grand Canyon, it will eventually be devoid of pebbles. If murder is allowed, there will be no trust. The moral relativism plays out in questions like this: "Earth - population 5,000,000,000 - Are gay relationships producing no offpsring okay? Yes" "Earth - population 100,000 - Same question? No"
            If we think female mutilation is wrong, change it. However, there is no 'moral authority' to fall back on. We are doing it because it offends our sensibilities. The third is the golden rule, applied from different perspectives. We could argue, "how would the males like it if half of the penile flesh was taken out as a baby?" This could counter the perspective, "How would we like it if someone told us what we are doing is wrong and focefully stoppe us" since this could be a straw-man for avoiding answering the first statement...

            The main point to discovering the source of moral authority is that we want to avoid admitting that the authority is gained only through application of greatest threat-of-force. Rather than correct vs. incorrect being dictated by those with greatest power, we want there to be right and wrong 'morality.'

    47. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo · · Score: 1

      Best post I've read in a long time. It's about time somebody explained that not all Christians are of the insane variety.

      --
      "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
    48. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Mesa+MIke · · Score: 1

      You seem to be a Bible expert, so I'm gonna ask you to help me.
      I've heard the the Bible tells Christians that it's "acceptable to hate" certain groups of people.

      My problem is I can't find a reference to that anywhere in the Bible. But that's probably just 'cause the Bible is so big and I probably just don't know where to look.

      Can you, the expert, give me a scripture reference?

      Remember, I'm asking about hating groups of people, not their behaviors.

    49. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by justinlee37 · · Score: 1

      Generally speaking, causing unhappiness in others (say by randomly killing neighborhood cats or stealing) tends to eventually result in unhappiness for oneself, through subconscious psychologically conditioned feelings of guilt, punishment by law enforcement, or exile from the community. People are much happier when they cultivate honest and respectful relationships with others.

      However, yes, I am aware that personal happiness is sometimes at odds with community happiness, and that it is sociopathic calculus. Those are elementary concepts. Thanks for telling me what I basically just told you.

      If you take an issue with my beliefs but you eat meat and eggs then you're guilty of the same sort of selfish behavior and "social contract" morality that I am, which makes you a hypocrite. I suspect that you do because by saying "unless you count humanity ... as your friends" you have excluded the consideration of the happiness of animals. If that is the case then you're willing to cause "a whole awful lot of unhappiness" for animals for your own happiness by killing, skinning and eating them.

      Most people in the world engage in some selfish and "evil" behavior, no matter how "good" they are. So please, get of the high horse, it's unbecoming of your humanity.

    50. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by E++99 · · Score: 1

      The law doesn't say anything about religious organizations or what the organizations find offensive. It refers to the members of any religion, and if it intentionally outrages large numbers of people belonging to that religion.

    51. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which do you want, the Pauline Epistles, or the OT

    52. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Drakkenmensch · · Score: 1

      So shall we arrest all anarchists then? Or all government conspiracy types? Cause surely if some psycho thinks that the ideas justify violence they are just as responsible?

      Can you name one instance of someone talking about how the government is harassing people, or how The Man is conceiling evidence about the moon landing or area 51 where a group of people spontaneously rose up and screamed "You're right!" and beat up to death a nearby elected official or civil servant? I can pick up any newspaper, however, and find an article of a gay or transexual people beaten and killed in anger.

    53. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahhh, a moral relativist. If you believe in moral relativism, you can never justify any human right, ever. That's what "we hold these truths to be self evident" was written. You might as well position yourself as a modern-day Machiavelli, and speak only in terms of power. Without a few axioms, it's impossible to construct any logical system.

      On moral relativism, here's a quote from General Napier (1782 - 1853):

      "You say that it is your custom to burn widows. Very well. We also have a custom: when men burn a woman alive, we tie a rope around their necks and we hang them. Build your funeral pyre; beside it, my carpenters will build a gallows. You may follow your custom. And then we will follow ours."

      Like it or not, Western civilisation is rapidly heading towards a situation in which the philosophical beliefs of most people are determined by a few simple axioms. This is a good thing. The most successful societies use "do unto others as you would have them do unto you", combined with a respect for rational thought enlightened by evidence.

      The hopeless loser societies where everyone is dirt poor, and people slaughter each other at the drop of a hat, tend to adopt the "my God hates you, you are the wrong colour, you think the wrong things, and that gives me special privileges to have you locked up, beaten, burned, beheaded, etc...".

      The fact that the religious control-freak loonies always manage to wreck society and arrest or kill people who I think are sensible, makes me think that their ways don't work.

    54. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NO. Rights are not "given" by governments. Governments are created to protect "natural" rights. I was BORN with the ability to say whatever I want. I did not have to be told how to do so, or issued a permit by a faceless government entity. Until you can grasp that crystal-clear concept, you are a slave licking the hand of your master and will ever be so.

    55. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Who gets to define what human rights I have ...
      no explanation of where these "inalienable" rights came from."

      Humans make Human Rights.

      There, i explained that for you.

    56. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by eddy+the+lip · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the clarification. Does it need to be a state-recognized religion?

      It seems to be a rather open-ended law...

      --

      This is the voice of World Control. I bring you Peace.

    57. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by jeffersontan · · Score: 1

      ``In other words (as far as I understand it) "God condemns homosexuality", or even "I hate queers" likely won't get you prosecuted'' -- apparently, less than that can get you prosecuted.

      Stephen Boisson sent a letter in 2002 to the Red Deer Advocate where he attacks, not gays in general, but activists of a homosexual agenda. He was prosecuted for this letter reproduced here:

      http://rootleweb.blogspot.com/2008/06/boissons-letter-to-red-deer-advocate.html

      He was ordered to pay a $5000 fine, and his own legal fees, and was ordered by the court not to make further "disparaging comments against homosexuality".

      In 2008, Fr. Alphonse deValk published a defense of the Catholic position on homosexuality and same sex marriage in a Catholic publication, Catholic Insight. He quotes the Bible, the Catechism, papal encyclicals, etc. He is facing thousands in legal fees and fines. As I understand it, even if he wins, he pays for his own fees, and gets nothing for the trouble.

      Admittedly, the Irish definition of blasphemous libel can be abused too. Just as in the Canadian case, where the question of whether or not a publication or public act "incites hatred" can be stretched to cover many things.

      But I am starting to think that this is indeed just a political maneuver to cover a gap in the constitution while not really intended for enforcing the law, as some have opined above.

      It is also unlikely, from a Catholic perspective, that grave abuse in a publication concerning sacred Catholic matters will ever be acted upon. We've been insulted on Jesus, his mother, the Eucharist, the popes, the Bible, etc., for a pretty long time now, with not a lawsuit lodged against anyone.

      But.. I just thought I'd point out that the Canadian situation is not as far-fetched nor as harmless as one might think.

    58. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by E++99 · · Score: 1

      It just says "any religion". But it also says you have to cause outrage among "a substantial number of the adherents of that religion". So it would at least have to be a religion that has a "substantial" (whatever that means) number of adherents. That's how I would interpret it anyway. I suppose it would be possible to interpret "substantial number" to mean a substantial percentage, in which case any size or description of religion would count. So yeah, it's pretty open-ended.

    59. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      The Conspiracy theory called "the homosexual agenda" is smokes and mirrors to attack gays in general. I have no knowledge of the other case and considering the media circus put out in Quebec because nuts of every religious group decided to coordinate and complain about everything under the sun, and all getting the ear of the government, I wouldn't be surprised we get a few years of the pendulum going the other way again. And Ireland is a nation with the Catholic church almost inscribed in the constitution.

    60. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by jeffersontan · · Score: 1

      Well the whole point of legislation is hopefully to make sensible and fair laws regardless of how the pendulum swings, if by this you mean in terms of a majority in either secular- or religious-minded citizens and members of parliament. No one wants to go back to lawlessness where some group holds power unchecked.

      As for religious "nuts" complaining too much in Canada, I'm not so sure that a $5000 fine plus legal fees for exercising free speech in the context of public debate about impending legislation is too much. And, I have yet to hear of any case of religious groups "getting the ear of the government" concerning human rights abuses against their groups in Canada.

      In the Catholic Insight case, it's more than a little unsettling when someone is prosecuted for stating the Catholic viewpoint in a Catholic publication. But that just goes to show that laws can be stretched beyond appropriate applications. It's almost up to people not to sue at the slightest itch, because lawyers can run rings around laws that seem reasonable, at least on the surface.

    61. Re:How is this different from "hate speech" by Keynan · · Score: 1

      Simply put, Your inalienable rights are: freedom to do what ever you want so long as it does not infringe on the rights of others.

      Think interns of land ownership. If our rights are represented as a plot of land then we all have the same size/quality of land and are free to do anything on our land but we may not enter onto another persons plot.

  48. not a religious thing by buddyglass · · Score: 3, Informative

    From the article, which is just one journalist's opinion:

    while the Catholic Church grumbles about a decline in spiritual values it has not actually demanded this law, nor are there many votes to be picked up on a âCatholic Irelandâ(TM) ticket. Even the other usual suspects, the âmad mullahsâ(TM) of Islam, are notable by their absence from the debate. Put simply, the religious lobby is not behind the move to criminalise blasphemy.

    Dawkins appears to have misunderstood the nature of the proposed legislation. The reintroduction of blasphemy as an offence isnâ(TM)t evidence of Ireland backsliding into traditional religious superstition â" in fact, it shows just how up-to-date Ireland is when it comes to contemporary conceits.

    In fact, the new law is a very modern phenomenon. Rather than harking back to the days of God-fearing, or at least priest-fearing, Ireland, the blasphemy law has more in common with contemporary politically correct measures of social control.

    1. Re:not a religious thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the stupidest thing I've read all day, and I've read quite a few posts and articles today, including that one about wikipedia photographs. Blasphemy isn't about religion in the same way that prostitution isn't about sexuality, which is to say, it's totally about religion.

    2. Re:not a religious thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is both true and false.

      It's quite true that the law was designed to pander to the "sensitivities" of religous minorities - think the Danish Cartoons of Muhammad, and having a law in place for any kind of repeat in Ireland. To be honest the authorities are scared shitless of some ejit provoking the ire of an extremist with some ill placed comment. Given Ireland's history of religously motivated bloodshed - there's certainly a bigish motivation there..

      However, the real reason I feel is that Fianna Fail - the governing party - big gorilla of Irish politics - is feeling itself attacked from the right by a party called Fine Gael - FF has gone from 43% popularity to about 25% inside of two years. Added to which is the fact that a major abuse report some 5 or 10 years in the making has recently broken - and this law is a helpful distraction from the toxic fallout of the report - a nod and a wink to the opus dei crowd i.e. the REAL nut jobs.

      The report was graphic and harrowing - detailing literally decads of clerical abuse - and state deference and inaction. It's pretty brutal stuff.

      It's quite likely that the next government will simply hold a referendum to remove the pretinent section of the constitution.

      In other news spagetti creationism - now in the menu in Irish schools.

    3. Re:not a religious thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That opinion is worthless hot air. Why does the author not comment on what the actual effects of the law will be, and stop trying to misdirect?

  49. Good luck with that by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm of Irish ancestry. I've been to Ireland. Stopping blasphemy would require shuttering the Guinness plant and every bar in Ireland, and believe me, that will cause a LOT more swearing!

    --
    stuff |
    1. Re:Good luck with that by pcolaman · · Score: 1

      And probably another revolution. They'll call it the War of a Hundred Beers.

    2. Re:Good luck with that by Squeeonline · · Score: 2, Funny

      And probably another revolution. They'll call it the War of a Hundred Beers.



      pfft, hundred... american pussy.

      Atleast a thousand for a couple of people to be tipsy. This is Ireland we are talking about.

      In all seriousness, there's no way it will be enforced. If it is, it will ignored so badly that all the big newspapers will be threatened with being closed until there is public outcry.

      most people here (Dublin) have barely heard of the law and less care. No one is going to stop swearing.

      Fuckin' aborted foetuses and rapist priests.

      *hides from Gestapo*
  50. As an American, allow me to say... by DragonPup · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Fuck the corrupt politicians and religious leaders of Ireland who passed this travesty of freedom. In fact, I hope they just fuck themselves rather than underage boys. Again. Oh, and a special fuck you to the religious leaders whose faith is so weak they can not stand any criticism of their beliefs.

    --
    "Useless organic meatbag" -HK-47
    1. Re:As an American, allow me to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope you said that in a "Free Speech Zone".

  51. Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Europe, unlike USA, has experienced a true invasion of muslim immigrants and their culture on its territory in recent years. USA didnt because it became far more restrictive about who to let in. UK is particulary open because of all the ol' Empire stuff. It may be just my guess but I have a feeling this law has been influenced by muslim lobby and will mostly be executed towards offending muslim faith, which takes any signs of offence waaay too serious. Unlike any other religion.

    1. Re:Not really by rkit · · Score: 1

      Who modded this paranoid rant insightful? Any idea what "invasion" means?

      --
      sig intentionally left blank
    2. Re:Not really by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      It's really not that paranoid, don't you read international news? There's a huge amount of immigration flowing right from the middle east into all parts of europe. England recently removed a picture of a police dog from posters because Muslims don't care for dogs -- a POLICE DOG! Granted it's just a dog but it's not a stretch for them to next claim that if you are Muslim the police are not allowed to use K-9 units in your presence.. which is a completely ludicrous precedent to set -- there's no difference between that and "Oh we don't like cars", or pants, or whistles, and claim the use of whatever you don't like is insulting and degrading and racist. The riots in France a few years ago were caused by a disproportionately large number of young muslims, and even worse, a few years back Paris banned topless sunbathing on its beaches. You can't tell me a Frenchman came up with that idea. Belgium had quite a tiff with their muslim population over the printing of cartoons depicting Mohammed if you recall. Oh, and Sweden's quickly climbed to the top of the list of "Places for a Young Muslims to Travel and Find Young Girls to Rape". I'm not claiming they're the rapin'est folk around, but there's clearly a cultural clash going on that is being handled VERY fucking poorly by the immigrants. Painting things broadly, much of the immigration moving in to Europe has no intention of ever integrating into the society around them. I've heard a number of islamic religious leaders prattling on about the return of lands that rightfully belong to the muslims -- that would be Europe -- through invasion -- that would be immigration. There's a difference between a military invasion and a social invasion. A social invasion (I'm sure there's a better term) is more of a mass migration, a large movement of one people into the lands of another people and displacing the previously established culture through sheer weight.

      Yes, Europe on a whole is bowing down to the Muslim immigrants and doing what it is that they do best... appeasement. Appeasement is never seen as a kindness, always a weakness.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    3. Re:Not really by rkit · · Score: 1

      I live in one of those countries, so I can read national news. Even better, I can form my opinion from first hand experience. You may read this stuff in the tabloid press, but that does not make it true. How do you know that "much of the immigration moving in to Europe has no intention of ever integrating"? And let me add something about the riots in Paris: these are not caused by cultural differences, but by largescale unemployment. Think South Central Los Angeles.

      --
      sig intentionally left blank
    4. Re:Not really by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      Right.. but the ranks of the unemployed are often both young, and often immigrants as well. I'm guessing it's weighted even worse towards young and immigrants in France, I've heard tell of some wacky labor laws over there.

      Oh, and I can tell they have no intention of integrating because well.. DO they? It doesn't take a majority of an immigrant population refusing to integrate into the existing society to cause issues. We've got issues with that here in the states, even, and we don't really have people moving here from highly oppressive extremist nations that continue to espouse the same beliefs that turned their former homeland into a shithole. Good example would be that police dog over in England. Had to remove the poor lil guy's picture from.. eh I forget what they were passing out, some sort of flyer or something, but there was an outcry from muslims because dogs are unclean vile beasties. How's that for integrating? A demand that their new homeland change to accommodate them rather than they change to accommodate their new homeland. Or the riots in Belgium, launched by an immigrant population who felt that their beliefs were more important than the standing traditions of their new homeland. Again, a lack of flexibility in integrating into a new society. It's not that immigrants must throw away old customs and just fade into the crowd, but I know when I'm visiting someone else's house I don't begin telling them how to run the place.

      It's not that I'm painting with a broad brush here. All the muslims I've personally met have been just regular people, not hate-spewing suicide bombers, but nor have they been rattling sabers at everything they could find in this country that didn't match up with the way things were back home. Er, to put it another way, it's a bit like the stereotypical American tourist who goes overseas and gets pissed because nobody speaks English -- except in this case, it'd be more "moving there" instead of "visiting" and "can't fit their SUV down the main streets" or whatever other typically patently American behaviour you'd find distasteful across the pond.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    5. Re:Not really by rkit · · Score: 1

      Seems like your personal experiences do not fit your generalizations. Think about it. Before I forget, there are lots of local people who do not understand or care for democracy, human rights, etc. (In my country, a lot of these guys are also quite anti-american, probably because they believe that America is ruled by the "jews".) Unfortunately, your arguments/anectdotes sound a lot like theirs.

      --
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    6. Re:Not really by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      Not exactly. I'm going to assume the folk you're referring to wish immigrants to adopt the traditions of their new land. That's not necessary, all that should be expected is that they respect them (and they should assume a mutual respect of their traditions as well, at least to the extent allowed by law -- no killing people and such). Much different than what I think you're understanding me to be saying.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    7. Re:Not really by rkit · · Score: 1
      I meant sentences like

      Oh, and Sweden's quickly climbed to the top of the list of "Places for a Young Muslims to Travel and Find Young Girls to Rape".

      much of the immigration moving in to Europe has no intention of ever integrating into the society around them

      This is just the kind of unsubstantiated stuff the european far-right parties keep repeating.

      --
      sig intentionally left blank
  52. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    "my diety, the Flying Spaghetti Monster"

    I wish it were possible to mod something +5 Unintentionally Funny.

  53. Re:Jesus titty-fucking Christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's 2010 already? Damn this year went by fast.

  54. Step by DaMattster · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That's one small step for man, one giant step for mankind ...... backward

    1. Re:Step by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dniknam rof pets tniag eno, nam rof pets llams eno s'taht?

  55. Three questions by Gauchito · · Score: 1

    Although I probably know the answer to the first one:<BR>

    1)  Is it strictly blasphemy against Christianity?  Or any religion?  So would, say, a certain book that refers to a particularly religion's verses as being satanic be outlawed in Ireland?

    2)  Kind of follows from the first one in a way.  Does that mean the Irish judges will now be deciding what is blasphemy or what isn't?  If they cast a wide net on affected religions, does that mean that they'll need to be theologians on several major religions for this law not be the so obviously biased for Christians?

    3)  Scary freedom of speech backpedaling and medieval thinking resurgeance aside (two dumb enough reasons not to do this), is this a monumentally stupid law to pass in a country that not so long ago and for the longest time had half of the country at the other half's throat based on to which Christian sect they belonged?  The first Protestant judge that passes this judgement on a Catholic or vice versa will, I expect, be somewhat explosive.

    1. Re:Three questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) It's not limited to Chirstianity. Artistic works, amoung other things, are exempted.

      2) Yes, they will, broadly, decide. However, if anyone seriously fights a charge out in court, it'll probably be overturned at the supreme, or european, level.

      3) Your understanding of the Irish political/social situation doesn't even approach rudimentary, so the best answer to this question is probably 'mu'. It seems fair to infer you've never actually been to Ireland, certainly for more than a holiday.
      I'm all against this law, but we really aren't going to get the scenario you describe, that's just absurd.

  56. Re:As a Christian...... by spaten · · Score: 1

    money grab? i seriously doubt it.

    if those in power were simply looking for a money grab, they'd slap a tax or fine like this on something much more mundane that would slip through the news tendrils without even a wince.

    to use something as incredibly inciting as this for the base of nothing more than a money grab seems a bit daft, even for those in political power.

  57. The country of paganism? orly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Color me surprised....but this also goes to show you how arbitrary laws are. They can be about anything and can just as easily be more about conformity than justice.

  58. Blasphemy is illegal in Massachusetts. by Doug52392 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Ironically, blasphemy has been illegal where I live (Massachusetts) for hundreds of years. M.G.L: Chapter 272: Section 36. Blasphemy

    Chapter 272: Section 36. Blasphemy Section 36. Whoever wilfully blasphemes the holy name of God by denying, cursing or contumeliously reproaching God, his creation, government or final judging of the world, or by cursing or contumeliously reproaching Jesus Christ or the Holy Ghost, or by cursing or contumeliously reproaching or exposing to contempt and ridicule, the holy word of God contained in the holy scriptures shall be punished by imprisonment in jail for not more than one year or by a fine of not more than three hundred dollars, and may also be bound to good behavior.

    It's one of those old laws that's been in the books for years, but never removed. Someone could still be arrested and charged with blasphemy in Massachusetts (although that would probably cause a shitstorm of controversy these days), but the last time that happened was in 1838.

    1. Re:Blasphemy is illegal in Massachusetts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      t's one of those old laws that's been in the books for years, but never removed. Someone could still be arrested and charged with blasphemy in Massachusetts (although that would probably cause a shitstorm of controversy these days), but the last time that happened was in 1838 [wikipedia.org].

      One might note that in 1838, the 14th amendment hadn't been passed yet and states were generally able to ignore rights guaranteed to citizens by the US constitution - those rights were held to only matter for the federal government, with state governments only being bound by the state constitutions instead.

      In the past 140 years, however, this law has been unconstitutional and therefore invalid, and I suppose that's one reason why noone's been convicted of blasphemy even in Massachusetts anymore.

    2. Re:Blasphemy is illegal in Massachusetts. by pcolaman · · Score: 1

      Only to have any competent lawyer have the case thrown and the legislature review the law for violating a constitutional right. Assuming a judge didn't automatically throw the case out, any appellate court would quickly reverse a judgement that favored the city/county/etc over the defendant. No law can be made in any municipality that would directly contradict one of the rights spelled out in the constitution. Now I know, in reality, there are plenty of laws that at least get close to trampling on the constitution, but in theory, it should be relatively easy for any lawyer to argue their way to an easy dismissal of such a charge.

    3. Re:Blasphemy is illegal in Massachusetts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's one of the fun bits about our Supreme Court not being able to issue advisory opinions. Instead, it requires a real case or controversy. The law may be unconstitutional, but it won't be deemed so until someone is arrested, convicted, and appeals to the Supreme Court.

      Police won't enforce this law, but because of idiotic citizens, politicians likely won't work to repeal it. It's one of those silly things that really doesn't matter.

    4. Re:Blasphemy is illegal in Massachusetts. by akirapill · · Score: 1

      The problem with challenging these kinds of "blue laws" is that if you lose, then a law that used to never be enforced suddenly has the backing of a modern court precedent. This has happened in some states with sodomy laws. Civil rights lawyers just let these sleeping dogs lie and only challenge them in the unlikely event that someone today gets charged with one.

  59. We Still Have Blasphemy Laws by sycodon · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "The modern world basically decided to get rid of all these stupid laws and regulations..."

    We still have Blasphemy laws, they just changed the subject of the blasphemy from Religion to a hodgepodge of special interest groups.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/07/17/hate-crimes-law-expansion_n_237389.html

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    1. Re:We Still Have Blasphemy Laws by tritonman · · Score: 1

      I think nowadays it's perfectly fine in America to say something that offends most everyone, as long as you don't offend any minorities, then it's a hate crime.

  60. As a Christian, let me say this is a terrible idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I could care less if people blaspheme my religion (and they do). It affects me in no way. As in times past, the people who will receive the most persecution by this yet another Catholic power-grab are Bible believing Christians. Under this law, a pastor who stands up and says the Roman Catholic religion is a wicked Satanic abomination or that Islam is leading billions to hell will be fined or jailed.

    Now... let the knee-jerk mod-downs commence!

  61. Re:Jesus titty-fucking Christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not to worry, just steal his invention, travel back in time, and claim it's yours!

  62. Ireland is still super-Catholic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Up until very recently, you could only get condoms through a doctor's prescription. Even now, they are behind the counter at the drugstore. The legacy of Catholicism survives in Ireland!

  63. Re:Jesus titty-fucking Christ by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I dare you to say the same thing, except insert Muslim prophet's name instead. It is probably more accurate as well ;)

    Christians are just wimps, and easy pickings. And yet people fear them more than the Muslims.

    --
    Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  64. "Hate Speech" in Canada by Xocet_00 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Canadian Laws regarding "hate speech" have to do with inciting others to violence against any distinct group of people, whether they be gays, muslims or WASPs. Criticism in and of itself is not prohibited. For example:

    "Go forth and kill all Pastafarians." This is iIllegal in both Canada and Ireland.

    "All Pastafarians are idiots." This is legal in Canada, but illegal in Ireland.

    IANAL and all that, but so far as I understand it, it is legal to criticize religious (or whatever) groups in Canada, but not legal to incite others to commit violence against them.

    1. Re:"Hate Speech" in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said.

      To me its all a slippery slope. Free speech really is an all or nothing propostion and quite frankly we dont got it.

    2. Re:"Hate Speech" in Canada by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      I wasn't specifically referring to religious groups so much. Wikipedia link for info on Canada's stuff.... It appears that a lot of those laws actually specifically mention "offend" or "affront" more than "incite to violence," the general idea being that you can be accused of "hate speech" for less than inciting to violence, more along the lines of being publically offensive. And "offensive" can refer to "God hates [insert something here]" or "[insert something here] causes [insert disease here]" or "[insert something here] causes social breakdown."

    3. Re:"Hate Speech" in Canada by Medgur · · Score: 2, Informative

      You have it correct.

      There's been a few cases surrounding this now that have developed some interesting precedent. IANAL, but IIRC there was a fairly high-profile early case of a holocaust denier who managed to evade the consequences of our hate speech laws until he stupidly called for violence against Jews. Likewise, in Richmond and Surrey there were a few Imams calling for violence against Jews and Christians in Canada who came under criminal charges as a result.

      But in each case it was quite clear that their offense was directly inciting others to commit violence. Saying things like "We'd be better off without " or "All should die" is ok, as long as you don't say "Go forth and be violent against ".

      Where it gets tricky is in the act of random violence. In Vancouver and recently Courtney there have been random beatings against Blacks, Homosexuals, and Sikhs which have been hard to pin down as "Hate Crimes". From what I understand it requires that a witness can verify that in some way the aggressors targeted the individual because of race/sexuality. It seems like this is very, very hard to do. Even with video showing a group beat-down and witnesses verifying racial-motivated threats and slurs.

    4. Re:"Hate Speech" in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      IANAL and all that, but so far as I understand it, it is legal to criticize religious (or whatever) groups in Canada, but not legal to incite others to commit violence against them.

      This is false.

      In Canada, publication of verses of the bible to promote a religious view (however repugnant) is hate speech.

      For the tl;dr group, this is illegal in Canada:

      The bumper sticker in the advertisement displayed references to four Bible passages: Romans 1, Leviticus 18:22, Leviticus 20:13 and 1 Corinthians 6:9-10, on the left side of the sticker. An equal sign (=) was situated in the middle of the sticker, with a symbol on the right side of the sticker. The symbol on the right side was comprised of two males holding hands with the universal symbol of a red circle with a diagonal bar superimposed over top.

      This is clearly promotion of an opinion (an opinion that is hate of another group), it is CLEARLY not inciting violence.

      Canada's hate speech laws specifically outlaw not "inciting violence" but rather "inciting public hatred", which is what that bumper sticker encouraged.

      Whether the law is just or not, I don't know. But we need to get it right.

      Here's the law itself.

      318 outlaws promotion of genocide.
      319 outlaws promotion of hatred.
      320 permits permanent government seizure, and disposal of anything that violates 318 and 319.

      There are probably laws against inciting violence/riots (in general), but they aren't under this part of the Criminal Code.

    5. Re:"Hate Speech" in Canada by Yogiz · · Score: 1

      "All Pastafarians are idiots." This is legal in Canada, but illegal in Ireland.

      Hahahahahaha. I can't believe you actually think that the law is meant to protect all the religions.

    6. Re:"Hate Speech" in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Go forth and kill all Pastafarians." This is iIllegal in both Canada and Ireland.

      "All Pastafarians are idiots." This is legal in Canada, but illegal in Ireland.

      I'm pretty sure the blasphemy laws in Ireland are related to Christian blasphemy only (correct me if I'm wrong though), so both of those may be legal in Ireland (though I suppose it's possible that "go forth and kill [any demographic]" might be illegal for non-religious reasons)

      As for the reason behind this new legislation (which I don't think anyone's actually broached here) - the reason behind it is that the Irish constitution necessitated it. The Irish constitution was written in a time of huge strife and conflict between Irish Catholics and British Protestants, it is a completely 100% Christian constitution through and through, so any time new legislation is brought in with regards anything at all, it must adhere to the text of the Constitution (obviously).

      This legislation had nothing to do with blasphemy initially, it's related to defamation in general. For legal reasons, all forms of defamation had to be included in the new laws, and according to the text of the Constitution blasphemy was one of those forms.

      Amending the Constitution is a significantly more major process requiring major public discussion and a national referendum. Enacting a law is a shorter simpler process.

    7. Re:"Hate Speech" in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a Pastafarian, you insensitive clod!

    8. Re:"Hate Speech" in Canada by ground.zero.612 · · Score: 1

      So in other words, it's illegal to speak freely, with your speaking voice, in public, and around people; for fear that they might hear you and do something you said, thus making you guilty. I think I get it now.

      --
      "Be prepared, son. That's my motto. Be prepared." --Joe Hallenbeck
    9. Re:"Hate Speech" in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you don't understand the concept of an example.

      Look it up, boy.

    10. Re:"Hate Speech" in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not necessarily. In Canada, people have been silenced from claiming that the Holocaust is a lie. The reasoning behind this is that just by virtue of telling people that the Holocaust is a lie you are inciting them to violence. I don't agree wit h this, but don't act like such laws cannot be used to silence dissent.

    11. Re:"Hate Speech" in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  65. Any religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are something very wrong in that concept, at least if is for any religion

    What about religions with human sacrifices? Jailing or even criticizing the ones that practices them would be against the law

    Satanism could count as religion? Its very existence could be seen as blasphemy to other religions.

    What about religions that have their gods shaped as animals? If someone say i.e. that God is a goat, that would count as bible to some religions, and as blasphemy to others.

    Atheism can count as religion? if so that very law could be count as blasphemy, leading to some interesting paradoxes.

    And last but least... free software will be banned in Ireland? Should be a blasphemy for money worshiper bankers.

  66. What does the EU say? by HertzaHaeon · · Score: 1

    I'm hoping that the EU can strike this down somehow. But IIRC, the European Convention on Human Rights isn't binding, unless the Lisbon treaty is signed, which amusingly Ireland is probably putting a stop to. Also, articles 9 and 10 in the convention would seem to go against blasphemy laws, but both have convenient loopholes for exceptions that are "necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety, for the protection of public order, health or morals".

    1. Re:What does the EU say? by WiiVault · · Score: 1

      I cannot believe they included "morals" on that list. Were they too fucking stupid too realize what a giant exception that is? What's even the point of something with a loophole bigger than the western hemisphere?

  67. Re:As a Christian, let me say this is a terrible i by gx5000 · · Score: 1

    I would have modded you up but you went for the anonym....

    --
    End of Line.
  68. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by yoshi_mon · · Score: 0

    Uh, it's not unintended. FSM is real, Google it!

    Disclaimer: Your version of reality might be different than others.

    --

    Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
  69. Blasphemy is a crime in Germany by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Paragraph 166 StGB (translated): Whosoever publicly or through dissemination of written materials (section 11 (3)) defames the religion or ideology of others in a manner that is capable of disturbing the public peace, shall be liable to imprisonment of not more than three years or a fine. Whosoever publicly or through dissemination of written materials (section 11 (3)) defames a church or other religious or ideological association within Germany, or their institutions or customs in a manner that is capable of disturbing the public peace, shall incur the same penalty.

    More blasphemy laws at Wikipedia.

  70. Rock and roll outlaws by Garbad+Ropedink · · Score: 1

    This looks like bad news for Heavy Metal bands in Ireland.

    Maybe they ought to hold some giant concert in defiance of this obscene law.

    --
    And that was the last Terry Fox run I ever participated in.
  71. Time to dust off my "No Irish" sign! by FatSean · · Score: 1

    If a sane majority of Irish don't stand up and get this absurd law repealed, I'm going to have to dust off my "No Irish" sign! Once again, religion forces the sane to become self-hating ;)

    --
    Blar.
  72. Three obvious words for this law by bjdevil66 · · Score: 1

    Maybe they should change that 25,000 fine to 30 pieces of silver... That's what a man was paid for turning in another man who taught a religious point of view that the powers that be at the time found to be blasphemous.

    Being a Christian, sometimes I'm stunned at the sheer ignorance that some people have of the lessons being taught by their own religion which they claim to be defending...

  73. That means that bible is now frbidden in Ireland ? by edavid · · Score: 1

    Let's see this : saying there is one only god is a blasphemy towards all polytheists religions (and cversely). That means that bible is now forbidden in Ireland...

  74. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by wookaru · · Score: 1

    2: Start a new, silly religion (like I believe in an all-powerful, all-knowing being who needs your MONEY!)

    You mean like Scientology?

  75. Complaints here by funkatron · · Score: 2, Informative

    If this bothers you try contacting the office of the Taoiseach (seems to be like a prime minister). I've already sent a message saying that I don't want to be in the same EU a country that thinks this law is a good idea.

    --
    "Welcome to our world. We are the wasted youth. And we are the future too." Yes, I know these are stupid lyrics.
  76. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by BradleyAndersen · · Score: 1

    Ummm, he was referring to the fact that the poster wrote 'diety' in stead of 'deity'. Which, given the name of the deity in question, is pretty unintentionally funny.

  77. Wow. by yoshi_mon · · Score: 1

    I just happened to come across a small pic of the FSM yesterday and while reading up on that, love the idea/movement/et all, wondered what the breakdown of belief was in the world.

    The best I could come up with on the interwebs was: http://www.adherents.com/Religions_By_Adherents.html

    By those numbers alone Ireland is going to be putting a serious hurting on their tourism. And it's not like they have oil like the other countries that have such draconian laws.

    --

    Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
  78. The deep problem is with Bible and Koran by Budenny · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The really deep problem they have is with those sections of the Bible and the Koran which do not simply denigrate, but actively promote violence against, non believers. What are they to do with them?

    Blasphemy laws can only work if the protection of the law is confined to one religion, or if there are no religions that condemn other ones. Alas, there are very few indeed of the latter.

  79. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

    Hey, you just described $cientology's business model!

    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  80. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    woosh. (...or just english not your native language)

    DIET-y. As in diet.
    vs. Deity (a divinity or god)

  81. Note to self by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Refrain from ordering the halibut in Ireland. Failing that, refrain from commenting, "This halibut is good enough for Jehovah!"

  82. does that make Ireland a religion-free zone? by jipn4 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Islam is blasphemous to Christianity, Christianity and Islam are blasphemous to Jews, Catholicism is blasphemous to protestants, and protestantism is blasphemous to Catholics. Does that mean the Irish can (finally!) kick the entire lot off the island?

    And why should Christians be allowed to insult atheists with impunity?

    Or does this law only apply to protect big, arrogant sky-god religions? Oh, why do I even ask, it's Ireland we're talking about.

    1. Re:does that make Ireland a religion-free zone? by pcolaman · · Score: 1

      What this law really means is that the entire country of Ireland is about to become one gigantic Japanese gameshow, which means just another form of entertainment for U.S. Americans, such as therefore.

    2. Re:does that make Ireland a religion-free zone? by Curate · · Score: 1

      That link you posted was a real eye-opener. I am truly shocked to learn that the Pope opposes atheism!

    3. Re:does that make Ireland a religion-free zone? by E++99 · · Score: 1

      That's not what the law says. It's a law against intentionally offending any religious group. Sorry, atheists insist they're not a religious group, so they're fair game for offense.

  83. Join my new religion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's called "The Threes" and anyone that mispronounced the word "three" and "tree" is a blasphemer.

  84. Blasphemy is NOT "hate speech" by ivan_w · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Blasphemy is not "hate speech"

    Blasphemy targets the deity in which religious people believe, NOT the people themselves.

    Now, I am quite convinced that if any supernatural being existed, it would be quite capable of handling "blasphemy" gracefully, which may be untrue for cultural/religous/lifestyle groups - which the "hate speech" laws in certain countries attempt to protect.

    Nonetheless, I am also opposed to those anti "hate speech" laws since it both creates a breach in freedom of speech - but - even more dangerous - segregates those groups unto special status - and - de-facto - creates a rift between group of individuals.

    To push my point further, when a country promotes a law prohibiting "hate speech" towards - say - homosexuals, they are specifically stating that homosexual have *different* rights than heterosexuals ! and *I* believe this is wrong.

    --Ivan

    1. Re:Blasphemy is NOT "hate speech" by E++99 · · Score: 1

      You're right. Blasphemy is totally different from hate speech. But this so-called "blasphemy" law is actually a hate speech law "protecting" all religious groups.

    2. Re:Blasphemy is NOT "hate speech" by E++99 · · Score: 1

      You know, considering the history of religious violence in Ireland, I probably shouldn't have put "protecting" in quotes. It is a law against intentionally inciting religious outrage. I think it's actually maybe a valuable law for that country.

  85. Doesn't the EU have something to say? by PhysicsPhil · · Score: 1

    I would have thought various EU policies and directives on free expression would also have effect here. For the Europeans out there, what happens when the laws of a member county come into conflict with EU directives?

  86. and now something entirely different.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sir Bedevere: There are ways of telling whether she is a witch.
    Peasant 1: Are there? Oh well, tell us.
    Sir Bedevere: Tell me. What do you do with witches?
    Peasant 1: Burn them.
    Sir Bedevere: And what do you burn, apart from witches?
    Peasant 1: More witches.
    Peasant 2: Wood.
    Sir Bedevere: Good. Now, why do witches burn?
    Peasant 3: ...because they're made of... wood?
    Sir Bedevere: Good. So how do you tell whether she is made of wood?
    Peasant 1: Build a bridge out of her.
    Sir Bedevere: But can you not also build bridges out of stone?
    Peasant 1: Oh yeah.
    Sir Bedevere: Does wood sink in water?
    Peasant 1: No, no, it floats!... It floats! Throw her into the pond!
    Sir Bedevere: No, no. What else floats in water?
    Peasant 1: Bread.
    Peasant 2: Apples.
    Peasant 3: Very small rocks.
    Peasant 1: Cider.
    Peasant 2: Gravy.
    Peasant 3: Cherries.
    Peasant 1: Mud.
    Peasant 2: Churches.
    Peasant 3: Lead! Lead!
    King Arthur: A Duck.
    Sir Bedevere: ...Exactly. So, logically...
    Peasant 1: If she weighed the same as a duck... she's made of wood.
    Sir Bedevere: And therefore...
    Peasant 2: ...A witch!

  87. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the religious types keep pushing such legislation we should just jump ship and create a religion that holds privacy, encryption, universal Internet access, etc. sacred. There's a non-zero chance it'd gain non-negligible following and have some positive effects.

    On the other hand, the other religions might feel threatened and start lobbying against our goals...

    Bonus points for constructing a religion with a dogma that doesn't lead to people killing each other, and makes even blind followers sound intelligent.

  88. Catch 22 by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

    So, assuming I was in Ireland, If I said that Jesus isn't the messiah, I would offend Christians and would fall victim to this law. If I said he is the messiah, I offend Jews and fall victim to this law. Since everyone's religious views pretty much contradict someone else's views - even within the same religion - how will they sort this out? Furthermore, it wouldn't just be limited to religious statements. If I said that the Earth formed 4.5 billion years ago, would I be arrested for offending a Young Earth Creationist's religious views? People shouldn't have a Right To Be Free From Offense. In fact, quite the opposite. People should have the right to offend other people whenever they so choose. Fining the person $35,500+ US for offending a person's religious views is just idiotic.

    --
    My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
  89. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  90. Serious question: by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

    What do you expect from schizophrenics (religiously infected people)? If you believe your bullshit story strongly enough, you can make people do everything you want.

    Logic has nothing to do with this. Dumbing down has.

    How sad. I really liked Ireland and its people.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  91. It's not about religion, it's against free speech. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Is that you, Cheney? Laws against free speech are what is needed to hide what you want to do.

  92. In Greece it's been a crime since forever by jsa95 · · Score: 1

    Greek Penal Code Chapter 7:

    • Article 198: Cursing God in public and with a malicious intention is punishable by prison and/or fine. So is showing disrespect towards deities.
    • Article 199: Cursing or otherwise ridiculing (in public and maliciously) the Eastern Orthodox Church or any other officially recognized church is punishable by prison and/or fine. (officially unrecognized churches have no rights, and certain eastern orthodox priests routinely curse them in public and very maliciously if I am any judge)
  93. Which blasphemy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So does this just cover Catholic/Protestant christian beliefs? Stating that Jesus was the son of God would be considered blasphemous to a Muslim, and stating that there was a son of God would be blasphemous to a Jew. It would be mildly humorous to see the government crack down on publishing houses churning out bibles because someone doesn't like them.

    1. Re:Which blasphemy? by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      So does this just cover Catholic/Protestant christian beliefs?

      I doubt Protestantism is safe.

  94. Does this include that bizarre sect by kawabago · · Score: 1

    Does this law also protect that weird sect that uses magic bread and magic wine in the ritual canibalism of a man who died 2,000 years ago? Aren't we allowed to at least comment on that belief being a bit off center?

  95. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by novakreo · · Score: 1

    If they would also make Jedi an official religion like in Australia (IIRC)

    Not quite. Religious freedom is protected in our constitution (s116), and as such we have no official religions, mainstream or otherwise.

    --
    O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!
  96. Problem is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Now the Irish government gets to decide what constitutes blasphemy for all faiths that practice there. This can be quite tricky. No longer will religions have control over their own faiths. Likewise, should it be determined in the law by the faiths themselves, the bar can be set so low that the mere practice of another faith or having no faith at all, will constitute blasphemy and lead to conviction, as in Saudi Arabia, where it is blasphemous to practice or discuss faiths other than Saudi Islam. This is a no-win situation and is a classic example of the wisdom of the American First Amendment. I'm going to assume that the European human rights commission will get to hear about this.

  97. What about the fiscal copycat newcomer? by Jaazaniah · · Score: 1

    Scientology anyone?

  98. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, because your religion doesn't matter. The state religion is Catholicism, and only that religion is protected.

  99. Definitions, Noahide Laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noahidism

    "Presidential Proclamation 5956"

    Notice this is in line with what George H. W. Bush signed into law during 1989 in the USA.

    I'd also like to clarify the definition of blasphemy; so what's in a name? Way back when, Mr. Smith would have been a blacksmith. A person's name was their way, what they did, a relation to their character. Therefore attributing things to God's name which are not of God's way is the orthodox definition of blasphemy, not offending another person's views on God.

  100. er...um... the Liberals are no better, yunno by Orleron · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They may not make laws against blasphemy...but politically correct speech and other things that "hurt my feelings", they take the cake on that.
    Therefore, I'd say it's not religious zealots OR liberal idiots that are responsible alone, but rather people in general who fall to the extremes.

    1. Re:er...um... the Liberals are no better, yunno by copponex · · Score: 1

      You sort of have a point, except that no one has been tortured to death or hung by a government or church official because they participated in hate speech.

      Hate speech is outlawed under the guise of protecting people from persecution and abuse, especially groups who are regularly assaulted after verbal confrontations. Blasphemy is outlawed so we don't offend Invisible Dad. Who is apparently omniscient, omnipresent, and a totally whiny pussy if you claim he doesn't exist.

      I know which position I find more ridiculous.

    2. Re:er...um... the Liberals are no better, yunno by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They may not make laws against blasphemy...but politically correct speech and other things that "hurt my feelings", they take the cake on that.

      [citation needed]

    3. Re:er...um... the Liberals are no better, yunno by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Boohoo I'm not allowed to tell people to shoot blacks and bash queers to death ;;
      Seriously, fail more?

    4. Re:er...um... the Liberals are no better, yunno by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is being politically incorrect isn't illegal - it's just ill-advised.

  101. other democracies do this by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    There are other democracies with weird laws prohibiting speech that defames a religion. For example in India, the largest democracy in the world.

    As an American with a right to free speech (when it comes to religion) I'd just like to say God damn you catholics/jews/hindus/protestants/daoists/etc are full of crap. Not that I believe that, but I just needed to exercise my right to say it. Doesn't seem like all that useful of a right though, but I'm willing to throw as much tea into the harbor as necessary to preserve that right.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    1. Re:other democracies do this by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > God damn you catholics/jews/hindus/protestants/daoists/etc are full of crap.

      I note the omission of the one religion that would actually kill you for criticizing it. Come on nancy boy, man up and back the lofty words up. I'll even go first.

      FUCK ALLAH AND HIS PEDOPHILE PROPHET SQUARELY IN THE EYEHOLES.

      The day saying that is a crime is the day I grab my sporting goods and 'recall' every faithless Congresscritter who voted on the bill.

      There, now I'm on pretty much everybody's list. Now come on ya pansies and join me. Too many of 'yall talk a good 1st Amendment defense but can't be bothered to actually defend it if it might have any actual risk involved.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    2. Re:other democracies do this by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      Muhammad was a woman.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    3. Re:other democracies do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wanna bet your state still has blasphemy laws on the books?

  102. I hear Ireland needs some money. by FoolishBluntman · · Score: 1

    Fuck Jesus.
    Fuck God.
    Fuck the Virgin Mary....A Virgin, I mean who are we kidding, what you say if you were doing it with the stable boy ?.
    Fuck them all.
    Damn all the saints and Angels to hell.
    I hear there old Lucifer is there anyway.

    There, now if I go to Ireland they can collect and get out of their financial crisis.

    Is this really all it takes to get people excited, to cause problems?
    Don't we have real problems in the world?
    Global Warming/Cooling(depends who you talk to).
    Pollution.
    Low sperm count in most males and declining faster than the U.S. real estate market.
    Yes, the movie "Children of Men" may not be as far in the future as you think.
    On going wars to fatten Halliburton's pockets and do little else but maim.


    Does Ireland not want to be taken seriously as a country?

  103. Reminds me of "The Life of Brian" by mistermocha · · Score: 1

    I suppose a huge fine like that is better than being stoned to death

  104. Ireland as a Catholic theocracy by rumblin'rabbit · · Score: 1

    Ireland is indeed exceptional. Their constitution specifically allows for criminalizing blasphemy. The legislation that did so was struck down (in 1981?) for being too vague.

    We tend to think of Ireland is a liberal democracy, but historically it has been more like a Catholic Iran, with bishops as Ayatollah.

    1. Re:Ireland as a Catholic theocracy by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      We tend to think of Ireland is a liberal democracy, but historically it has been more like a Catholic Iran, with bishops as Ayatollah.

      Do they hang gays, or stone women to death for adultery?

      Also, last I checked, Ireland has proper democratic elections, without any interesting "safeguards" like the Guardian Council in Iran.

      Be more careful with your analogies.

    2. Re:Ireland as a Catholic theocracy by rumblin'rabbit · · Score: 2, Interesting
      You expected my analogy to mean that Ireland was once under Sharia law, perhaps?

      Historically even the democratically elected governments were under the thumb of the Catholic Church. Here's a quote from Wikipedia:

      The Roman Catholic Church had a powerful influence over the Irish state for much of its history. The clergy's influence meant that the Irish state had very conservative social policies, forbidding, for example, divorce, contraception, abortion, pornography as well as encouraging the censoring and banning of many books and films. In addition the Church largely controlled the State's hospitals, schools and remained the largest provider of many other social services.

  105. No by Burz · · Score: 1

    It proves that religion has long been a useful justification for seizing wealth and power, mainly because religion is a tool for putting something (a policy, a war, your social network) beyond argument. And for that very reason, unlike with other justifications, the religious ones have tended to remain unchallenged for hundreds of years.

  106. Not passed by "religionists" by mdmkolbe · · Score: 1

    It's also funny that your post is just the sort of ad hominem that "religionists" complain about antagonistic and mean atheists using. (Here's hoping that me pointing that out isn't too mean.)

    Anyway ... according to the article the Catholic Church isn't calling for this law. You'll have to look elsewhere for someone to blame. (The article claims this is part of a trend in the Irish government's "micromanaging peopleâ(TM)s behaviour" along with a total ban on public smoking, a tax on plastic bags, a ban on incandescent lightbulbs and new government communication surveillance powers. However, I don't know enough about Irish politics to evaluate that claim.)

  107. Think of the difference like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you think "I don't know if God exists, but I'll act like he does just in case", then your an agnostic.

    If you think "I know God exists and will act like it" then you're theistic.

    If you think "I don't CARE if God exists, I will act like I feel right doing" then you're atheistic.

  108. Zeal by Kenshin · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Nobody knows whether there is a god ... I believe that there are no gods.

    Zealots, of any sort, can't tell the difference between "knowing" and "believing". That's what you have to take into consideration.

    As for myself, I'm an agnostic. I believe there's no way we can actually say whether there is or is not a god, but I feel there is none. People say that stance lacks conviction, but I feel I'm being more realistic on the matter.

    --

    Does it make you happy you're so strange?

    1. Re:Zeal by El+Torico · · Score: 1

      Zealots, of any sort, can't tell the difference between "knowing" and "believing". That's what you have to take into consideration.

      Actually, that's just the evidence that a rational society needs to either exile them or commit them to mental institutions.

      --
      In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is usually crucified.
    2. Re:Zeal by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      Or as I sometimes say; believers believe they know, and non-believers know they believe.

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    3. Re:Zeal by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Conviction is just faith. The only reasonable position is "we don't know." You can go a step further and say "we don't know, but it's extremely unlikely there is a god, certainly as described by any major religion," but that's about it.

      So being an agnostic is lacking conviction/faith? Yes, it most definitely is. And that's a good thing.

    4. Re:Zeal by wall0159 · · Score: 1

      Well, to know something you need to believe it, but to know it it also has to be _true_.

      Since this is something we can never resolve, I am happy to put any god in the same box as Bertrand Russel's invisible teapot that might-or-might-not be flying around in space.

      Saying that you're agnostic because you can't _know_ one way or the other, is like saying we shouldn't teach evolutionary theory in school because we haven't _proved_ it.

      I think it's totally defensible to describe oneself as an atheist while conceding that one might be wrong. That is not zealotry. In fact, it is the _only_ defensible position with regard to believing something for which there is no evidence; for once you go down that road you have to also believe in a flying spaghetti monster, and then a flying macaroni monster (because after all, that's just as likely), then a flying lasagna monster, etc, etc.

    5. Re:Zeal by wall0159 · · Score: 1

      Just further to this post, and to clarify my point, I could better have written the last paragraph as:

      I think it's totally defensible to describe oneself as an atheist while conceding that one might be wrong. That is not zealotry. In fact, it is the _only_ defensible position with regard to believing something for which there is no evidence; for once you go down that road you have to also concede the possibility* of a flying spaghetti monster, and then a flying macaroni monster (because after all, that's just as likely), then a flying lasagna monster, etc, etc.

      *I'm trying not to confuse the idea of belief with a-lack-of-disbelief

    6. Re:Zeal by aaandre · · Score: 1

      What if, as powerful creators using our imagination, we have the capacity to determine God's existence in our own reality?

      So, for some of us, the universe really contains entities and deities that run our lives. For others, the universe is being run by the total sum of ... the universe. Chaos theory. Unknown sum of undiscovered yet laws of physics, matter, time, math too complex for us apes to figure out. Some of it's patterns may be interpreted as beings by our brains wired for faces, tigers, spiders and boobies. Some may feel like love and warmth. Knowledge in this field takes personal exploration and may result in personal, unique discoveries.

      Bottom line is, others live in worlds that are not 100% like our own. Let's have the courage to respect this.

      Some of us are indoctrinated very young into believing others' beliefs, without proof. That creates a lot of tension and suffering as they now have to protect the reality that was forced onto them, or face the deep trauma of being robbed of their own personal discovery of their own divinity.

    7. Re:Zeal by bky1701 · · Score: 1

      You can reach an almost certain conclusion in the absence of fact, advocate that conclusion, and not even approach zealotry.

      Science states that until proof exists, a given statement should be assumed to be false. It also states that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

      Let me show you why;

      "On Pluto, there is a race of mole-people living just beneth the surface, with hyper-advanced technology, and they are plotting our destruction, which will take place on 2012."

      Can you prove that's not true? No, you can't. But I'd bet dollars to donuts, you don't believe that. Why are you such a zealot???

      That is why we assume things to be false.

      Therefore, we cannot know if a god exists or not, but we can be damn sure in an assumption one doesn't, for one reason. Zero proof - the universe over. Zero proof, when such a claim would require more than ANY OTHER THEORY POSTULATED IN HISTORY to be taken as true.

      It is not a "belief", it is not a guess; it is the reasonable, default position for any assumption: "I don't believe you, but I may reconsider if you show me enough proof that you're right." God is no special case.


      Thus, there are 3 kinds of agnostics:
      1. I think there is a god, but I don't know which one it is.
      2. I don't know if there is a god or not, and do not understand the scientific method.
      3. I don't know if there is a god or not, and I don't want to apply the scientific method.

      Say what you will, it's ether wall-sitting or failure to understand the basic tenants of science.

    8. Re:Zeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know there is not a God because I wake up and suffer every day of my life

    9. Re:Zeal by The_Quinn · · Score: 1

      Zealots, of any sort, can't tell the difference between "knowing" and "believing".

      Believing is a form of knowing that lacks certainty. It specifically refers to instances where there is more evidence to examine, or more mental work to reach a firm conclusion.

      there's no way we can actually say whether there is or is not a god, but I feel there is none.

      You use the word "feel" here as a euphemism for "believing" (I hope), because feelings, i.e., emotions, do not provide any knowledge at all. Emotions are responses, they are not tools of cognition.

    10. Re:Zeal by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      I'm more concerned with indirect evidence than your hypothetical no evidence somethings. There's more reason to reject a flying spaghetti monster than some alternate hypothesi. In general the idea that creation could begin with an action such as being touched by His noodly appendage is the sort of thing we can and should dismiss automatically. It becomes a linguistic game, one of how can we redefine spaghetti to mean a substance that existed before the universe when we normally mean a substance that only came into existence after men first milled flour, and to preserve the FSM as a hypothesis we have to play many other such word games.
            Some models of God are the same way. If I insist that my theoretical God loves everybody, and that he is going to send 90% or more to burn eternally for not loving him back enough, I've proposed something internally absurd. But those models aren't the only ones. You, in your position, are faced with claims that God exists, and He is further defined by most with other traits such as Omnescience. That still leaves you stuck in some ways. Can something be hypothesized that isn't omnescient but still creates at least one universe? Is it still fair to use the term God if that something has some limits? What does omnescience really mean anyway, is it knowing everything simultaneously, or just knowing as much as can be known from one viewpoint? Would something that knows a lot more than us, but not everything, count as God, or as something else? Does a hypothetical God have to be able to make four sided triangles, or could it be limited at least in such ways?
            That's why conceding you might be wrong is a good idea for both sides. I might define something that has enough logical consistency and supporting evidence to at least be an interesting theory, and either of us might even see ways to verify or disprove at least part of it and thus bring it into the domain of the sciences, but you might even accept all of that and then argue just as successfully that the something shouldn't even be called God.
            My own opinion is that a rational Atheist has to have thought about just what kind of hypotheticals might exist, enough to quickly reject some classes and maybe even to identify others that there is less reason to reject, or they lose the right to claim to be rational. It's sort of like trying to explain a five ton boulder you found in your driveway one morning. You don't have to believe it got there by an invisible giant putting it there, and you're certainly free to look for a more naturalistic explanation, but you should swiftly reject the idea that the neighborhood toddlers you saw playing the day before did it unassisted.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    11. Re:Zeal by EsbenMoseHansen · · Score: 1

      I believe there's no way we can actually say whether there is or is not a god, but I feel there is none. People say that stance lacks conviction, but I feel I'm being more realistic on the matter.

      That is how atheists typically puts it. You sir, are an atheist and an agnostic. Welcome to the crowd.

      --
      Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.
    12. Re:Zeal by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      It's telling that "lacking conviction" is considered a criticism. Sometimes it is a bad thing. But not always. Conviction from a position of ignorance doesn't sound good to me!

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    13. Re:Zeal by Grumbleduke · · Score: 1

      Personally, I think that we have a problem with a word having two possible meanings. Atheism, to most people, describes one of two stances:

      a) I do not believe (whichever) god exists.

      b) I believe (whichever) god does not exist.

      Those two statements are subtly, but significantly different. b) is a religious belief. a) is not. b) requires a leap of faith to connect the observable evidence and logical deductions to the conclusion, a) does not as it does not state the existence of any beliefs.

    14. Re:Zeal by mcvos · · Score: 1

      I believe there's no way we can actually say whether there is or is not a god, but I feel there is none. People say that stance lacks conviction, but I feel I'm being more realistic on the matter.

      I'd say it's conviction tempered by reason. Conviction doesn't have to be wholly irrational.

    15. Re:Zeal by Phoghat · · Score: 1
      Doubt is not a pleasant condition, but certainty is absurd.

      Voltaire

      --
      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
    16. Re:Zeal by SandFrog · · Score: 1

      I cannot absolutely know that there is no Easter Bunny.
      I can see about the same probability for the Easter Bunny and Sky Daddy
      (or Zeus). I guess that makes me an agnostic. Kind of trivializes the
      distinction between agnosticism and atheism.

      --
      Contentment is the greatest wealth
      - Sukhavagga Dhammapada
      Contentment is the goal behind all goals.
    17. Re:Zeal by E++99 · · Score: 1

      Science states that until proof exists, a given statement should be assumed to be false. It also states that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

      Wow. This is utterly NOT what science is. First of all, the statement that "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence" is a statement of prejudice if not zealotry. What constitutes an "extraordinary claim" is entirely subjective. I know that Carl Sagan coined this phrase, and I generally respect him -- but the only legitimacy in the phrase is what I believe was the underlying motivation Carl had in saying this, which was that for the extraordinary things that he wanted to believe in he should set a very high standard of evidence for himself before believing in them. I think that's an underlying honorable intention to guard against prejudice, but the statement itself is one that ironically embraces and amplifies prejudice, and is therefore anti-scientific.

      As for assuming a statement false until proof, that is wrong on several levels. First, when scientists assume a statement to be false, they drop the matter, and run no experiments to learn more about the truth or falsity of the statement. So if your claim was true, science would never learn anything, because every proposed theory they would assume to be false and not test. No assumptions are made about the truth of new statements or theories until accumulated evidence gradually builds a case for or against it. Evidence can and does often prove theories false, but evidence can never prove a theory true. However scientists will often functionally assume (or "believe") that a theory is true once the preponderance of new evidence has has repeatedly confirmed the predictions of the theory. However, every good scientist will be willing to hold every theory in doubt and to be on the lookout for flaws or counter-indications.

      "On Pluto, there is a race of mole-people living just beneth the surface, with hyper-advanced technology, and they are plotting our destruction, which will take place on 2012."

      Can you prove that's not true? No, you can't. But I'd bet dollars to donuts, you don't believe that. Why are you such a zealot???

      That is why we assume things to be false.

      That has nothing to do with science. That has to do about the nature of human interaction and empathy. These allow anyone listening to you to credibly assume that you created that example as an example of a fictional thing, rather than something you observed or otherwise have evidence to believe. So there's a good and rational reason to believe that the statement is false. But that is human rationality, not science. Science doesn't assume anything about the statement.

      Therefore, we cannot know if a god exists or not, but we can be damn sure in an assumption one doesn't, for one reason. Zero proof - the universe over. Zero proof, when such a claim would require more than ANY OTHER THEORY POSTULATED IN HISTORY to be taken as true.

      It is not a "belief", it is not a guess; it is the reasonable, default position for any assumption: "I don't believe you, but I may reconsider if you show me enough proof that you're right." God is no special case.

      Again, every theory or proposition has zero proof. All are based on assumptions and beliefs, if not prejudices. Even mathematical proofs rest on "self-evident" assumptions called axioms. The idea of proof in math or science all, therefore, rests on the idea that "self-evident reason" is the highest form of proof. Any other proof is necessarily weaker, because it depends on the axioms based on that criteria. And even in science "self-evident reason", when extraordinary men, like Einstein, have been willing to embrace it and make assumptions, such as the assumption of locality, the assumption of causality, the assumption that all the laws of physics apply equally in any fixed inertial frame, and the

    18. Re:Zeal by E++99 · · Score: 1

      You baselessly assume that God would not find value in you suffering every day of your life.

    19. Re:Zeal by Kenshin · · Score: 1

      Kind of trivializes the distinction between agnosticism and atheism.

      My dad is an atheist. He says there is no god, end of story.
      I'm agnostic. I say there probably (in most likelihood) isn't a god, but I could be wrong.

      My definition of the two terms could be wrong, but it's what I go by.

      --

      Does it make you happy you're so strange?

  109. Google has servers in Ireland by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google has servers in Ireland (or at least they did last time I looked.) Some of the pages that are cached there will contain blasphemous. How long before Google's servers are raided, or Google pulls out of Ireland entirely?

  110. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Except unless it's actually codified in law, you can hire a lawyer to use the relevant laws in favour of any registered religion.

  111. ladies and gentlemen by nimbius · · Score: 4, Interesting

    as you depart the plane here at Dublin international, remember to please set your watches back 6 centuries.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  112. Unless you're DEAD NOBODY knows if there is a God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a non-position then to take that definition. You have to believe one way or the other to take ANY position. And an agnostic and atheist are the same.

    But do you let the possible existence of a God change how you act?

    No? You're an atheist.

    Yes? You're a theist.

    An agnostic is like Calvin believing in Santa because if he doesn't and wrong, he gets no presents. If he doesn't and is right, he gets no presents, therefore the only upside is believing in Santa because if he's right then, he gets presents.

  113. Free Speech is not free by OrangeMonkey11 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Through out our live we've all been told and live under the illusion that we all have the right to free speech but that is not the case. Free speech does not mean you can freely speak your mind but rather what your government consider appropriate. I've once heard someone quoting "freedom of speech is only free if you are willing to fight for it everyday"

  114. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by allaunjsilverfox2 · · Score: 1

    I would LOVE to see how Scientology pans out if the law were enforced. Since it has been mentioned Ireland has a catholic base, the law could be used in interesting, if not unfair ways. I personally dislike most mass religions but that doesn't mean I wish to see a point of view repressed. No matter my personal view on its constituents behavior.

    --
    Restore the madness of youth's lechery
  115. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by pcolaman · · Score: 1

    No, but if you blaspheme Mohammed expect to have your country's embassies car-bombed and your country's products boycotted

    Good thing America doesn't actually make anything anymore, nothing to have boycotted by other countries other than beef jerky, F-22's, and the NFL, and I'd rather we keep those three things to ourselves anyways.

  116. Re:Jesus titty-fucking Christ by dr2chase · · Score: 1

    I double-dog-dare you to make fun of the Flying Spaghetti Monster and his noodly appendages.

  117. Re:Attn: MODS by c6gunner · · Score: 0, Troll

    No. You're an idiot, and I would have modded you "flamebait" also, despite the fact that I'm an outspoken critic of religion. Your comment is worthless as it provides no information and does nothing to add to the conversation - it serves only to provoke and insult.

  118. Do you follow the news at all by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Theres nothing wrong with that though. Now, if you actually -do- any of those things, yes it is wrong. But talking about it? No one gets hurt so therefore it should not be prohibited.

    South Africa, last year. Incitement to hatred against immigrants: result, countless attacks and weeks of unrest as the locals attacked immigrants and forced them to flee for their lives.

    Rwanda, several years ago. Incitement to hatred against one "race": result, 1 million dead, many hacked to bits as they sought shelter. In a few weeks they killed then half a year of all the concentration camps of WW2.

    Germany, Crystal Night. incitement to hatred against jews. Result: several dead, buildings burned and the prelude to the holocaust.

    There are lots of other examples, and you DARE to say that incitement to hatred should not be a crime.

    That is EXACTLY the same as saying that offering a contract on someones life should not be a crime because it is only words.

    Read a book. Any book. Just once and grow up mate.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Do you follow the news at all by Darkness404 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There are lots of other examples, and you DARE to say that incitement to hatred should not be a crime.

      In most cases, they require a martyr to actually go beyond the belief stage. Just look at the internet, you can find statements to back up any belief, yet its only information. Look at the development of religions, especially Christianity, the more it was persecuted, the larger it grew and the more rapidly while today it isn't in a rapid phase of growth due to increased religious tolerance. Have you not heard of the Streisand effect? Basically the more you try to censor "hate" speech the further and more radical it gets. You only encourage "hate" speech by attempting to stop it. For example, on the internet you can find all sorts of crazy theries such as that contrails in the sky are actually mind altering chemicals ( http://educate-yourself.org/ct/ ) that Paul McCartney really died in the '60s ( http://digilander.libero.it/jamespaul/fc1.html ) and other more absurd conspiracy theories. However, they get lost in the sea of information that is the internet. The same thing happens with "hate" speech when it is not criminalized.

      That is EXACTLY the same as saying that offering a contract on someones life should not be a crime because it is only words.

      If it was a legal contract, the person was actually hired and really was going to commit murder, it is not a free speech violation to apprehend them. Signing the contract and agreeing to go through with it similarly is not a free speech violation if you get caught.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    2. Re:Do you follow the news at all by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      And yet, it's perfectly acceptable to argue to go to war, even though many (innocent!) people will die or people on the wrong end of the political stick. Keep your self-righteousness to yourself.

    3. Re:Do you follow the news at all by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

      South Africa, last year. Incitement to hatred against immigrants: result, countless attacks and weeks of unrest as the locals attacked immigrants and forced them to flee for their lives.
      Rwanda, several years ago. Incitement to hatred against one "race": result, 1 million dead, many hacked to bits as they sought shelter. In a few weeks they killed then half a year of all the concentration camps of WW2.

      We’re talking about Ireland, a significantly different civilization than Africa.

      If there is a people who certainly don’t need protection against hate speech, it’s the irish, given how much shit they have been dragged through throughout History, courtesy of the britshit

    4. Re:Do you follow the news at all by forkazoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There are lots of other examples, and you DARE to say that incitement to hatred should not be a crime.

      I'll dare to say that. Nobody ever wanted to ban the speech they agreed with. Nobody ever tried to ban speech that was pleasant. Nobody ever needed to codify a freedom of speech to protect pleasantries. Freedom of speech only exists to protect the speech we find hateful, terrible, and horrible. Freedom of speech only protects the speech that we want desperately to ban because the speech that nobody wants to ban never needed the protection.

      Once you decide that it is okay to ban speech that you don't like, then you are giving approval for somebody else to ban speech that they don't like as soon as they get their turn in power. Even if they don't like speech that you consider vitally important to humanity.

      The second you try to stop the KKK from blaming problems on niggers, you establish the basic legal framework that the next guy can try to use to outlaw talking about evolution.

    5. Re:Do you follow the news at all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Read a book. Any book"....what, like 'Mein Kampf'?? Or how about some revisionist history by David Irving? Or perhaps you believe authors are automatically good little liberals?

    6. Re:Do you follow the news at all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is EXACTLY the same as saying that offering a contract on someones life should not be a crime because it is only words.

      Well, yes. Ideally, this should be the case. Instead, we sacrifice some of our freedom of speech in order to buy a little security. Maybe that's a good deal. Maybe it will continue to be a good deal in the future. But to deny that it's a sacrifice of freedom would be dishonest.

    7. Re:Do you follow the news at all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      South Africa, last year. Incitement to hatred against immigrants: result, countless attacks and weeks of unrest as the locals attacked immigrants and forced them to flee for their lives.

      Rwanda, several years ago. Incitement to hatred against one "race": result, 1 million dead, many hacked to bits as they sought shelter. In a few weeks they killed then half a year of all the concentration camps of WW2.

      Germany, Crystal Night. incitement to hatred against jews. Result: several dead, buildings burned and the prelude to the holocaust.

      Well, that's what you get in countries that curtail free speech.

      Since you were probably attempting to provide examples to support your postion, I'll be generous and give you another try. What was the last genocide that happened in a country with a culture and laws that defended free speech to the utmost for all individuals, including hatemongers?

    8. Re:Do you follow the news at all by jas1552 · · Score: 1

      You've made a case for a law against incitement to genocide. You haven't made a compelling case for a law against incitement to hatred or any other emotion, belief or thought. I'm afraid any argument for a law against incitement to believe something or feel an emotion is simply an excuse to pass a law to avoid being offended. Even if that's not the stated intention behind such laws it certainly has the effect of undermining the entire concept of free speech. What does it mean that you can't incite to hatred? I can't say group A has undesirable trait X because now i've incited you to hate group A? How about if i say "religious people are stupid and wicked"? Does that make me a criminal under your incite to hatred law?

    9. Re:Do you follow the news at all by jammer170 · · Score: 1

      South Africa, last year. Incitement to hatred against immigrants: result, countless attacks and weeks of unrest as the locals attacked immigrants and forced them to flee for their lives.

      Lets see, assault, currently illegal in most countries in the world.

      Rwanda, several years ago. Incitement to hatred against one "race": result, 1 million dead, many hacked to bits as they sought shelter. In a few weeks they killed then half a year of all the concentration camps of WW2.

      Assault and murder, also illegal in most countries in the world.

      Germany, Crystal Night. incitement to hatred against jews. Result: several dead, buildings burned and the prelude to the holocaust.

      Again, murder.

      There are lots of other examples, and you DARE to say that incitement to hatred should not be a crime.

      None of those acts were just words. Every single one had illegal actions follow. If those people had attended the rallies, heard the words, and then gone home, even if they went home with hate in their hearts, it wouldn't have harmed anyone. Hate by itself is useless. Incitement to hatred should never be a crime.

      That is EXACTLY the same as saying that offering a contract on someones life should not be a crime because it is only words.

      That is not hate speech. That is conspiracy to commit murder, an action, not just words. It is the second component, the plan of illegal acts, that causes it to become illegal. Hate speech is asking someone to agree with your low opinion and to spread that opinion around. That is the difference. You argument is nothing but a straw man.

      --
      Remember, you can't look dignified when your having fun! Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out of it alive
    10. Re:Do you follow the news at all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Weimar Germany was pretty liberal in all aspects compared to the US at that time. Including extensive free speech.

  119. Future to the Back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We're going back in time... Hold on. It's gonna be a bumpy ride.

  120. Speech is action too: analog, not digital by gobbo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Words do not have the power to kill or otherwise (really) hurt someone. Therfore they should be unregulated unless dealing with a contract or an offer to trade.

    I so wish you were right. The problem is that we don't want to acknowledge the elephant in the room... propaganda works, on enough people to make a difference. Ask a Rwandan or Bosnian, or study Himmler (who famously claimed that it was the loudspeaker that conquered Germany). Sometimes, during genocide, it's hard for people to separate the words from the machete; one is an extension of the other.

    I don't mean that in any mystical sense, I'm thinking of the stanford prison experiment etc. The line between speech and a decision to act disappears. Your conviction (and my wishes) about the independence of speech from action is an abstraction, since it requires humans who are uniformly well-schooled to be proud individualists, skeptics, and responsible citizens.

    Perhaps we can find a functional way to make political speech a social contract that is bound to regulation like other transactions... after all, genocide relies on fraudulent and deceptive claims. The problem always resides with who gets to determine the truth.

    1. Re:Speech is action too: analog, not digital by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      If you have a genocide chances are it's a lot more than just a few words that started the conflict, and if you have people supporting it no law is going to protect you as the people in power are going to look the other way. That's the problem, people seem to think they can magically will away the "forces of darkness" by invoking some government or god that is neutral and will always do its job. That's a far, far cry from reality.

    2. Re:Speech is action too: analog, not digital by ivucica · · Score: 1

      Ask a Rwandan or Bosnian

      No idea about Rwanda, but there was a bit more than just words that started the war(s?) in former Yugoslavia. Since I am a national of one of the countries, I have a very subjective opinion on the matter, but please don't say it was just words, because it went much deeper than that.

    3. Re:Speech is action too: analog, not digital by gobbo · · Score: 1

      please don't say it was just words, because it went much deeper than that.

      Did anyone actually say it was just words that caused genocide? The point was that you can't run a genocide (or a totalitarian state, etc.) without propaganda, so it gets hard to separate the two.

    4. Re:Speech is action too: analog, not digital by gobbo · · Score: 1

      Yes, the relationship between public discourse and the sociopaths who take power for genocidal reasons is very interesting and easily described as the forces of darkness. You still can't be evil at that scale without a massive web of lies to reprogram society.

      So why aren't we concentrating on sociopaths? They're the crux.

    5. Re:Speech is action too: analog, not digital by ivucica · · Score: 1

      There wasn't much propaganda needed here, people were already on the edge, and still were edgy until only a few years ago. Even nowadays people have prejudices. Publicly spoken words have some meaning here, but much fire was ignited in people's private homes, much fire was ignited by treatment in the workplace, much fire was transferred from parents to children.

      Especially since on this issue the official stance of former Yugoslavia was: "Brotherhood and unity", not "Let's slaughter each other". In fact, until late 1980s, there were only occasional eruptions of nationalism and various peoples lived with each other quite happily. What was spoken behind closed doors was exactly that - spoken behind closed doors. It wasn't "hate everybody" situation; it was "don't like a faceless group".

      So what happened? Well, nationalism simply erupted. It was politicians who started the whole thing, but, no matter that people lived with each other, no matter that people didn't actively hate their neighbors, no matter that people didn't really particularly care until late 1980s (except for a few small occasions), still, the dislike was amassing in people. And it exploded.

      By suppressing some portions of free speech as you propose, you might prevent politicians from triggering a revolution. But what happens when the revolution is silently burning inside entire nations? What happens when over 90% of voters side with independence, as was the case in several countries of former Yugoslavia?

      You may silence the individual that started it in 1989, 1990 or 1991. But you'd get another individual, this time a non-politician, that would start the same thing in 1995, 1996 or 1997.

      In other words, suppression of free speech may just delay the inevitable. On the other hand, in some cases it may contain a fire for much longer. But where do we say free speech must be suppressed? Where do you draw the line?

      It is unconstitutional in most countries to demand independence. What if the country does not respect the wishes of some of its citizens? Do you suppress the wishes of the citizens because the law says so?

      If someone went out to speak out against, say, European Union, or against the Federal Government of the USA, demanding exit from the Union or independence for the state from the USA, what would you do? Suppress that man, just to prevent violence? What if people of the country, or the state, want exit or independence?

      Would you do the same as EU, pushing Lisbon Agreement when the European Constitution fails? And would you call it an agreement, just to avoid sending it on a referendum in most of its member states? Would you be like Croatian politicians and media, proclaiming support for Lisbon Agreement just because that way Croatia will be able to enter EU sooner that way? In Croatia, media keep mentioning that Lisbon Agreement is the key to our entry in EU, without mentioning its contents or explaining the reasons. Most of my countrymen are blind.

      So where is free speech the key to liberties, and where is suppression of it key to security and nonviolence? I can't tell. I think free speech is suppressed enough already, and suppression doesn't bring us any good. Especially since the essence of what needs to be said is sometimes already in hearts and minds of the people.

    6. Re:Speech is action too: analog, not digital by gobbo · · Score: 1

      By suppressing some portions of free speech as you propose

      What proposal? Which post were you reading? I thought I was just saying that it's tough to do but every society tries.

      Maybe you don't think it should be criminal to shout "Fire Fire" in a crowded theatre, just to watch the trampling? Is that free speech? Where does that cross over into "burn that bastard"?

      I was speculating that since we pretty universally agree that fraudulent transactions need regulating, there might be a corollary in the advocacy of violence. In other words, if you expend a lot of energy calling for a murder, and then it happens, maybe you should be liable.

      My only real recommendation? ban sociopaths from politics. Not currently possible, but necessary.

      P.S. propaganda doesn't come only from politicians: it propagates from many points.

    7. Re:Speech is action too: analog, not digital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "stanford prison experiment"
      When will everyone realize that the 'experiment' was extremely flawed and proves nothing?!

  121. I'm a militant agnostic, myself... by alispguru · · Score: 1

    I'm a militant agnostic, myself... as brilliantly explained to Buck Godot.

    Seriously, the difference between Bertrand Russell's atheism ("Insufficient evidence, sir.") and militant agnosticism is the apparent willingness to have your mind changed.

    --

    To a Lisp hacker, XML is S-expressions in drag.
  122. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2: Start a new, silly religion (like I believe in an all-powerful, all-knowing being who needs your MONEY!)

    Scientology isn't really new.

  123. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1: Pass a law preventing making fun of religion
    2: Start a new, silly religion (like I believe in an all-powerful, all-knowing being who needs your MONEY!)
    3: Profit!^W Scientology!

    Fixed that for you

  124. anonymous coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To the Irish Politicos and their masters, the Princes of the Catholic Church, your god does not exist. I hope this is blasphemous enough. Just in case, inspired by Monty Python, I fart in the general direction of all your past, present and future gods.

  125. Re:Attn: MODS by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 1

    See his name. Please do not feed in the future.

    --
    "But this one goes to 11!"
  126. Re:Jesus titty-fucking Christ by c6gunner · · Score: 1

    I dare you to say the same thing, except insert Muslim prophet's name instead. It is probably more accurate as well ;)

    Ok: "Mohammed titty fucking Mohammed on a pogo-stick, that is a draconian law. Its 2010 and some people still long for the middle ages."

    I dunno, it just doesn't have the same ring to it somehow.

    Christians are just wimps, and easy pickings. And yet people fear them more than the Muslims.

    Nobody fears Christians any more. Well, ok, the LRA are an exception, but IN GENERAL, nobody fears Christians any more. We're just worried about government enforcement of religions of any kind. If theists had any common sense, they'd be just as opposed to it.

  127. As an agnostice... You must admit then... by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    Tiny pink unicorns flying round the solar system. Could be... could be....

     

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:As an agnostice... You must admit then... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Tiny pink unicorns flying round the solar system.

      Do they orbit clockwise or anticlockwise?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    2. Re:As an agnostice... You must admit then... by autocracy · · Score: 1

      They don't use a two dimensional anchored plane, you insensitive clod.

      --
      SIG: HUP
    3. Re:As an agnostice... You must admit then... by flitty · · Score: 1

      He's been watching too much ST:TOS. There is no Z-axis in space...

      --
      Whether or not there is some sort of god, I'm not supposed to say/god is a word and the argument ends there-Smog
  128. Trent Reznor said it best by scorp1us · · Score: 1

    "I am sure there is a god. I am just not sure of his relevance"

    And given that, how would one prosecute under this new law? Would they seek prosecution of something that is questionably relevant? And if he is relevant, can't god dish out his wrath as he sees fit? I don't think he needs our help thankyouverymuch. And if his isn't relevant or capable, what do we care?

    --
    Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
  129. Some sense please.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You people are taking this way out of proportion.

    The only reason this stupid law was introduced was because it is stated in the constitution that blasphemy is illegal but it has never been enforced. So instead of running an expensive referendum to change the constitution the minister had to update the law in order not to belittle the constitution. The new law is deliberately ambiguous so that it will be impossible to charge anybody with 'blasphemy'.

    Okay?

    1. Re:Some sense please.... by edraven · · Score: 1

      That all seems perfectly reasonable. So, this constitution, it's only a couple of weeks old, then? Because if it hasn't been enforced for something more like 70 years, for example, it would make less sense to feel a sudden need to start enforcing it now.

  130. Re:Jesus titty-fucking Christ by MozeeToby · · Score: 1

    I refuse to even look at the context that this comment is made in. The fact that it is moderated 'informative' is, quite possibly, the most awesome thing I have ever seen on slashdot.

  131. mod parent down by biscon · · Score: 1

    There is evidence of creation all around us and there is much evidence that can be plausibly linked to an intelligent creator. [citation needed]

    On another note, how can you be seemingly intelligent and believe in that ID crap? I accept that intelligent people can believe in god, but ID and young earth creationism? Puuhleeze

  132. if only they would... by purpleraison · · Score: 1

    criminalize the lord of the dance.

    --
    I am open source, and Linux baby!
  133. Eh? Yeah it is rings a bell. A red one by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 2, Informative

    Opium of the masses is a COMMUNIST stance.

    Mind you, I think I should translate english to american for you:

    Capatalist: Someone who does NOT pay taxes on 1+ million dollar salaries but expect the goverment to give them a social security check, oops sorry, bailout when they screw up.

    Socialist: Someone who pays their illegal a wage that is enough to avoid immidiate starvation with 120 hours work per week.

    Pinko: Someone who dares to suggest that for people who work a normal job making a normal salery without ever having a real chance to become superrich, it is kinda silly to worry about the tax rate for the superrich. Or indeed, to ask why any who already has more money they can ever spend to worry about a small increase on their taxes. Gosh someone with a million+ dollar income is going to go in the poor house from a 10$ increase.

    Radical: Someone who dares to ask why you can't say fuck, show a titty or teach kids about safe sex, but everyone should be allowed to carry a machine gun and see torture morders on tv.

    Commie: Someone who think thats paying taxes to the goverment is just like paying someone for services rendered and that you should worry less about how much you pay in taxes and more about what you actually get as a society for said taxes.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Eh? Yeah it is rings a bell. A red one by oliderid · · Score: 1

      No, it is a marxist stance. And I'm Belgian not American.

      The differences between a communist and a socialist is the path to their collectivist society.

      Communist will do it by revolution while socialists will do it by reforms.

      This is why they left the last "international" end of the XIXth (along with anarchists).

      See the funding documents of Socialist parties around Europe (Charte de Quaregnon in Belgium for example).

      But yes I agree they have changed and now they promote social-democracy as they call it. Anyway it wasn't the point, the real point was the battle between socialist and catholics in the XIXth...And there are even traces of these epic battles in today politic.

  134. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by corbettw · · Score: 2, Insightful

    1: Pass a law preventing making fun of religion
    2: Start a new, silly religion (like I believe in an all-powerful, all-knowing being who needs your MONEY!)
    3: Profit!

    That's different from all other religions how?

    --
    God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
  135. Oh my God by Dani+Filth · · Score: 1

    What to wear now?

  136. Stand Up Philosopher... Oh! A bullshit artist by Joe+U · · Score: 1

    Leonard Peikoff is a Mel Brooks joke. (Stand Up Philosopher) I could tell that 3 seconds into his website.

    Many people honestly believe that humans have the ability to even begin to understand what a god is and what he/she/they want. I do not. It does not make me any better or worse.

    Honestly, as an agnostic, I do not like organized religion. (Atheists are religious, just not to any deity) I view most organized religions as just another way to force people to think the way some other people want them to. Some groups are better, some are worse, the majority are power plays. That being said, they have every right to exist and people have every right to believe in what they want to believe in.

    However, I will not stand for ANYONE pushing their beliefs on me, it's my life and my decision. Unless I request spiritual guidance, I do not wish it visited upon me. Woe betide anyone who tries otherwise.

    1. Re:Stand Up Philosopher... Oh! A bullshit artist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (Atheists are religious, just not to any deity)

      Words have meanings. You don't get to make them up as you go along.

    2. Re:Stand Up Philosopher... Oh! A bullshit artist by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      Words have meanings. You don't get to make them up as you go along

      Sure, I'll use Websters:

      Athiest: one who believes that there is no deity
      Religious: relating to or manifesting faithful devotion to an acknowledged ultimate reality or deity

      Therefore: Athiests have a faithful devotion to an acknowleded ultimate reality in which there is no God.

  137. I can't believe it...well maybe... by elkstoy · · Score: 1

    Wow...I have such a hard time believing that the inflammatory remarks being made here toward people of faith and even God himsilf. I thought most of us were about open source, live and let live, free speech, etc. I do believe in God and I do not believe what they have done in Ireland is right. You can't legislate morals or faith, period. Unfortunately what prompted me to post is the dichotomy displayed in so many of the posts. If I attributed the responses of the extremists to any particular group of people, I might decide that everyone in the South belongs to the KKK, or all blacks are gangbangers. Come on, there are a lot of people out here that believe in God, read the bible, and go to church but are level headed, fun loving, normal folks. Those of you who claim the religeous people are the people of hate, try reading some of the words above. What if I told you to F*** you or your mom, your wife, or anything else that you love and cherish? I personally think that is pretty mean and hateful. Youall continue your hate fest but who is more irrational...The man who believes in a God he can not see, or the man who is offended by and attacks a God he does not believe in.

  138. From an Irish Coward. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All I can say is:

    JEHOVAH!

    This is just a case of the government being too afraid to correct a constitutional abnormality with a referendum... because people would just vote 'No' out of spite. So instead, they rushed through a piece of legislation they don't intend to enforce, but will probably be abused like a Choir boy in a CBS by 'relevant parties'. Jesus Christ, just by saying Jesus Christ I'm a criminal....

  139. That's Great! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now all they need to do is recognize Agnosticism and Darwinism as religions and all will be good!!!....
    Either that or they're going to start trying to get the police to raid public schools...
    yea I hate reality....

  140. JESUS IS COMING by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    all over my carpet....

    eeeewwww!

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
  141. Let a Christian speak... by WheelDweller · · Score: 0

    First, kudos on the honesty to post with your own ID.

    Second, I'm yanked by this as well. This serves it's opposite purpose, as well as rejecting good Christian practices. (But then, when an abortion bomber strikes, we get blamed for that, too.)

    Christianity isn't about perfection; it's about realizing we don't have it, and trying hard to walk the line.

    Part of that line is to not bash-convert people. Our intent is to make the word available, answer any questions, but if it isn't wanted, to "shake the dust" off our feet and leave the person alone.

    And yeah, "my panties are in a wad" every time legislation points ME out to be a terrorist (like a couple of months ago, by Homeland Security) or every April when another kook organization attempts to pawn-off a lie that Christ never existed.

    Unlike you, there WILL be a day when I'll have a gun to my head for being a Christian. Because offering hope has become a 'hate crime'. Because life itself is a crime.

    But unlike you, I'm ready to go. Not a 'church-goer', I'm actually a different person since I sought my salvation of Jesus Christ. It's there for you, too; all you have to do is _genuinely_ ask.

    Or, you could just hate Christians and snipe at them on websites.

    (Can I get someone to troll THIS guy, instead of me this time?)

    --
    --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
  142. Re:Attn: MODS by c6gunner · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well YOU might be happy with letting global Troll populations starve to death, but I actually care about the genetic diversity of our planet. We might not be able to prevent a large-scale die-off, but at least we can preserve enough specimens to start breeding programs in a handful of zoos.

  143. Holy shit ^H^H^H^H catfish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is great news for people who want to export blasphemic materials into Ireland, if blasphemy is outlawed, only outlaws can blaspheme.

    First step, go after the church for suggesting God is some kind of devil that pushes people into the fires of some place called hell. I find that blasphemic. :-)

  144. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  145. This should be interesting. by Nekomusume · · Score: 1

    Every religion's core teachings are blasphemous to at least one other religion. The possibilities of where this could go boggle the mind.

  146. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  147. Yes, it's logical fallacy day here on Slashdot by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

    Someone being an agnostic does not mean they are also unsure about the separation of church and state. The founding fathers, who wrote the concept into the nation's documentation, were deists, not atheists. I know Christians who *hate* the mixing of religion and politics.

    You cannot absolutely derive an individual's stance on church/state separation from their stance on theology.

    The Zeus gambit: People can be agnostic of basic theological concepts, but be atheistic about Zeus sitting on Olympus. It's general agnosticism versus specific agnosticism. Most self describe agnostics are actually of the latter kind. When you venture into the absolutist realm of "If a person thinks X they must think Y" you need to review your position.

    Personally, I'm an apatheist. It means I don't care if there is any sort of higher order, and I personally expand that in include not giving a gnat's fart what you or anyone else thinks about that. However, I stand firmly on the side of separation of church and state, and have been active on that front for many years.

    1. Re:Yes, it's logical fallacy day here on Slashdot by E++99 · · Score: 1

      The founding fathers, who wrote the concept into the nation's documentation, were deists, not atheists.

      This is a modern myth that really annoys me. The closest anyone can find to a deist among the founding fathers is Ben Franklin, who at times called himself a deist. But he also spoke in favor of Divine Providence, which is opposed to the central tenants of deism. Thomas Paine was a Christian, then an atheist while he was in France, and then at the end of his life a Christian again. Every other founding father was a Christian. None of the best of them bought into dogmas of any one denomination. Each had their own idea of Christianity. They were all free-thinkers. That's why they were the founding fathers.

  148. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  149. Leonard Peikoff is an troll. by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 1

    He thinks he is avoiding any position that will antagonize anybody.

    1. Agnostics don't feel they're avoiding a position. Their position is clear: conclusions cannot be drawn in the absence of evidence.

    2. Why should an agnostic be intrinsically afraid of antagonism? Disagreeing with any organized religion automatically opens you up to antagonism from adherents, no matter what your position is. The statement reeks of troll.

    the agnostic treats arbitrary claims as meriting cognitive consideration and epistemological respect

    Any claim merits cognitive consideration (also known as thinking about it). Dismissing claims entirely outright because of the claimant specifically or the "arbitrary" appearance of such a claim would violate the fundamental aspects of the scientific method.

    Peikoff is essentially criticizing the very thing that keeps agnostics credible: their unwavering belief in reason and reason alone.

    He treats the arbitrary as on a par with the rational and evidentially supported.

    This does not logically follow the former. Weighing all the evidence instead of discounting something out-of-hand because of personal prejudice doesn't necessarily suddenly make all the evidence "equal."

    The fact is that his view is one of the falsest--and most cowardly--stands there can be.

    The fact is, is it? Peikoff's definition of fact needs work.

    1. Re:Leonard Peikoff is an troll. by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 4, Interesting

      1. Agnostics don't feel they're avoiding a position. Their position is clear: conclusions cannot be drawn in the absence of evidence.

      You're right, but you're not taking your own statement far enough. Conclusions cannot be drawn in the absence of evidence, and evidence cannot be found for something that has no definition. The only thing about "God(s)" that people can agree on is that the word, when written in English, has three letters, four if plural. If we can't define something by consensus, then we can reach no conclusions regarding its existence.

      (Inevitably, the reply to this is, "But my idea of God is the omnipresent Creator of all space and time. I don't believe in any of that Jesus stuff." To which my response is, "Then we're clearly not talking about the same thing. Most peoples' God seems to be a lot more specific in His likes and dislikes than yours, and that's a problem for the rest of us.")

      Any claim merits cognitive consideration (also known as thinking about it). Dismissing claims entirely outright because of the claimant specifically or the "arbitrary" appearance of such a claim would violate the fundamental aspects of the scientific method.

      Life's too short to take the idea of leprechauns and unicorns seriously. Treating all claims as equally worthy of consideration is just plain silliness. Only when we exhaust the possibilities of the natural, will there be time to consider the supernatural.

    2. Re:Leonard Peikoff is an troll. by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 1

      Treating all claims as equally worthy of consideration is just plain silliness.

      Tell that to Copernicus.

      Only when we exhaust the possibilities of the natural, will there be time to consider the supernatural.

      "Humanity needs practical men, who get the most out of their work, and, without forgetting the general good, safeguard their own interests. But humanity also needs dreamers, for whom the disinterested development of an enterprise is so captivating that it becomes impossible for them to devote their care to their own material profit."

      -Marie Curie

    3. Re:Leonard Peikoff is an troll. by spitzig · · Score: 1

      Evidence of something with no definition can't be proven. But, what you say after that is not that people don't have a definition of God/gods. You say that LOTS of people have LOTS of definitions. And, WITHIN religions, there are plenty of people who do define things by consensus.

    4. Re:Leonard Peikoff is an troll. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Only idiots argue by authority."

      - Me

    5. Re:Leonard Peikoff is an troll. by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      And, WITHIN religions, there are plenty of people who do define things by consensus.

      No, not really. Take two Christians from the same denomination -- heck, even the same physical church building, and put them two separate rooms. Then ask each of them in turn to tell you everything they know about their God. Their accounts will diverge rapidly.

      It will soon become clear that they're describing something they've never seen, felt, heard, or understood. All they'll be able to agree on is that God hates the same people they do.

    6. Re:Leonard Peikoff is an troll. by Some+Bitch · · Score: 1

      Treating all claims as equally worthy of consideration is just plain silliness.

      Most agnostics don't do that though. Personally I feel neither the claims of atheists nor the claims of theists are worthy of any consideration whatsoever. Nobody can prove A, nobody can prove B, therefore I have no interest in arguments by either side.

    7. Re:Leonard Peikoff is an troll. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody can prove A, nobody can prove B, therefore I have no interest in arguments by either side.

      Which is an attitude that, if widespread enough, would allow religious people to undermine the very foundations of the Enlightenment.

    8. Re:Leonard Peikoff is an troll. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, the more people sit around arguing whether or not any conception of deity actually exists, the most I wonder how much time people spend, you know, actually doing something meaningful with their lives.

      Like becoming a Big Brother or Big Sister. Or volunteering at a homeless shelter. Or reading to kids at the local library. Or cleaning up the park. You know, stuff that means getting the hell out of the house and going outside.

      Arguing is great because it means that you don't actually have to get off your asses and accomplish something.

      Seeya. I've got shit to do before I die.

    9. Re:Leonard Peikoff is an troll. by Some+Bitch · · Score: 1

      Which is an attitude that, if widespread enough, would allow religious people to undermine the very foundations of the Enlightenment.

      No it wouldn't, we're not listening to them. They are utterly insignificant to my world view as are atheists, I file both under "meaningless blather".

    10. Re:Leonard Peikoff is an troll. by E++99 · · Score: 1

      You are exaggerating the differences between the concepts of God. The concept of God is one of the infinite, eternal, immutable, singular, source of the finite, temporal, and mutable universe. God is Being itself and Coming-Into-Being itself. Everything else that exists, or seems to exist, does so though extension of the only Real Existence, which is God. God is Life itself. Nothing else lives, but only receives life from God. The more removed from God something is, the less it can be said to be alive. The spiritual is closer to God than the natural; the mind is closer to God than the body. God is Good itself and Truth itself. The further from God something is, the less it is good and the less it is true. The order that is implicit and immutable in God is the order which is inscribed into the spiritual world and the natural world arising from God, and which govern how they operate. Insight into the nature of God can therefore be obtained through the observation of the order of natural and spiritual worlds. For an individual to live a life of order, one must live a life that is good and true. Such a life comprises charity, generosity, reflection, sincerity, modesty, humility, contentment, moderation, and restraint of one's appetites and passions.

      These are the teachings of the scholars and theologians of every monotheistic religion and philosophy, including but not limited to Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Sikhism, Zoroastrianism, Confucianism, Pythagoreanism, and Platonism. Those remaining religions which are not consistent with the entire description are consistent with most of it. I believe that those who compare religions and see mostly difference (though this may be most people, religious or not) lack fundamental understanding of religion. As Ghandi said, all the major religions are fundamentally true.

  150. +1 by ZeRu · · Score: 1

    I know that I'll be modded down as troll, but Ireland rocks for doing this. The only people who are more dumb than religious lunatics are anti-religion lunatics, so the world would be a better place without them.

    --
    If you post as an AC, don't expect me to spend a mod point on you.
  151. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Yogiz · · Score: 1

    No silly. You're not catholic.

  152. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by HappySmileMan · · Score: 2

    The state religion is Catholicism

    No, it's not, the constitution has been amended to remove all references to Catholicism as far as I know and it recognises many religions.

    Although unofficially I guess Catholicism is the main religion (for example my school is supposedly non-denominational but we were still required to go to Mass at least once a year on school time, held by the local priest in the Gym), Catholicism isn't granted any legal benefits by the constitution or any laws, it's just biased judges you'd have to worry about I guess.

  153. The Problem is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is the Irish, they're a bunch of religious assholes, and so is their DOG, I mean god.

    Fuck Ireland!

  154. Could a lamb know what are they doing? by Cesaradf · · Score: 1

    ...Since they are all lambs, the religious people could not think about anything they are doing. I am not a dumb lamb, I think, I ask, I study, I am always trying to be a better person, and most of all, I am an atheist. Most religious people just follow blindly their book and stories, and forget to be peacefull, use their intelects, and most of all... be tolerant with the differences. "use reasonable force"? What is that? 500 years after inquisition, and nothing was learned? I am happy to be a brazilian, despite the "non-seriously" brazilian way of life, we are extremelly tolerant, and everybody lives in peace about their religious beliefs. Sorry about all the Irish people, about their politics, sorry about the world! Just an atheist that will never travel to Ireland

  155. Fear by Weedhopper · · Score: 1

    Nobody fears Christians any more. Well, ok, the LRA are an exception, but IN GENERAL, nobody fears Christians any more. We're just worried about government enforcement of religions of any kind. If theists had any common sense, they'd be just as opposed to it.

    Really? Because I've spent a lot of time in Northern Uganda. I was there in Gulu during the worst of the night commutes, when children would walk kilometers each day to sleep on the streets of town so they wouldn't be kidnapped to turn into child soldiers.

    Yesterday, here on Slashdot, I made a joke about the purpose of gas giants. People are still flaming me about my "anti-Christian bigotry."

    I was never really afraid of the LRA. Not the way I fear the fundamentalist Christian right taking charge.

    It's funny. When I was in the Army, we had respect for each others' religious beliefs, even though we still made fun of everyone's beliefs to their faces. Out here, I'm the enemy because I find the Fox News crowd to have disturbing implications.

    1. Re:Fear by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Really? Because I've spent a lot of time in Northern Uganda ... children would walk kilometers ... so they wouldn't be kidnapped to turn into child soldiers.

      Uh ... yeah ... that would be why I mentioned the LRA specifically, and why I said that they're the exception. Did you not read that part of my comment?

      Yesterday, here on Slashdot, I made a joke about the purpose of gas giants. People are still flaming me about my "anti-Christian bigotry."

      Yes, I remember your joke. I thought it was rather amusing. I'm not sure why you think you should be immune from flaming, though. Half the jokes I make result in similar responses.

      When I was in the Army, we had respect for each others' religious beliefs, even though we still made fun of everyone's beliefs to their faces. Out here, I'm the enemy because I find the Fox News crowd to have disturbing implications.

      No, here you're the enemy because this is a forum for debate.

      In the army we had more important things to worry about, and making fun of each other was a way to build camaraderie. Plus soldiers aren't as touchy as civilians - when your job description includes being the target for bullets and explosives, having people hurling words at you doesn't seem to be very important any more. Slashdot is a completely different environment - you shouldn't take their animosity so personally. The whole point of this place is to discuss, disseminate, disagree and dispute. Getting upset when people use the site for it's intended purpose is just silly.

    2. Re:Fear by Weedhopper · · Score: 1

      Uh ... yeah ... that would be why I mentioned the LRA specifically, and why I said that they're the exception. Did you not read that part of my comment?

      I'm sorry, my point wasn't clear because I added a line between the sentence you quoted and my point.

      The LRA is at the point of fading into irrelevancy. Aside from the Christmas massacres, their widespread campaign of terror has faded to the point that Northern Uganda is a relatively peaceful place.

      That said, even during the peal of their terror campaign, I never feared or had a fear that the LRA would have lasting global social impact. Not the way I feel the fundamentalists of any stripe can and do. Here in the US, this would be the Christian right.

      Yes, I remember your joke. I thought it was rather amusing. I'm not sure why you think you should be immune from flaming, though. Half the jokes I make result in similar responses.

      I think you're reading too much into what I'm saying and what you believe my stance to be. I'm not saying that I should be immune from criticism. I'm saying that I made an irreverent joke about what I believe to be a silly idea. From two lines about purpose and the age the universe, people were crawling out of the woodwork, drawing all kinds of inferences regarding what they don't know about my religious beliefs and what they perceived to be a personal attack aimed at all Christians. It's very irrational and if that's the kind of fire that a single comment obviously made in jest can draw, then maybe something is wrong with the people who buy into that system of belief.

      So far, no death threats, except for one obvious joker. I've had those on here before, too.

      Slashdot is a completely different environment - you shouldn't take their animosity so personally. The whole point of this place is to discuss, disseminate, disagree and dispute. Getting upset when people use the site for it's intended purpose is just silly.

      I'm taking it personally. What I'm saying is that it's an indicator.

      Any internet discussion forum tends to polarize and pushes people to the farther wings of any given spectrum. That's a given. The anonymizing mechanism of the internet gives people the ability to say what they're thinking. Things that they wouldn't have the courage to say another's face IRL. I find this instructive.

      One thing I've noticed the world over is that it's a very dangerous thing when a large enough group of people develop a persecution complex.

    3. Re:Fear by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, my point wasn't clear ... The LRA is at the point of fading into irrelevancy ... even during the peal of their terror campaign, I never feared or had a fear that the LRA would have lasting global social impact. Not the way I feel the fundamentalists of any stripe can and do.

      I get ya. I just don't share your fear. I'm certainly apprehensive about the evangelicals, and I take every opportunity to fight them, but I don't believe that they're a serious threat. It would take decades of neglect on our part, and some serious brainwashing of mainstream Christians, for Christianity to become the threat that Islam is today.

      As for the rest of your comment, I would have modded you insightful if I could have. We clearly share many of the same views - I just don't share your fear of Christianity, and I think people who feel the same way that you do are a very small minority. We all have some apprehension about what the fundies are doing, but few of us take it to the same extreme as you.

  156. Re:Attn: MODS by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Funny

    We might not be able to prevent a large-scale die-off, but at least we can preserve enough specimens to start breeding programs in a handful of zoos.

    If you want to save the Trolls you'll have to do that anyway, since they are rarely if ever known to breed in the wild.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  157. Blasphemy by the Bush Administration by cohomology · · Score: 2, Funny

    It will be amusing to watch the Irish Gov't try to enforce this. They might have to ban statements by recent U.S. officials. Following the 9/11 attack, the Department of Defense designated the military response as Operation Infinite Justice. Surely that concept is blasphemous to Christians, Jews, Muslims, and people of many other faiths. I'm an agnostic, and I called it blasphemous.

    --
    Don't mess with The Phone Company. Piss them off and you'll be using two tin cans and a piece of string.
  158. Sweet Feathery Jesus! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Load of Bullshit. Being miserable and spouting blasphemous words all day is everyones god-given right

  159. Yup, and in Canada and Sweden... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... it is the same thing, except that it is homosexuality that is given special rights. Yup, pastors in both Canada and Sweden have been imprisoned for claiming that homosexuality is sinful, and have ended up behind bars. And if some in the USA get their way, the same is destined to happen there. That's right, we will have freedom of speech -- except when it comes to the screaming gays who want special rights.

    And lest you think the USA has some special place in all this, try "hate speech". Even thinking becomes a crime with this legislation. Try this YouTube video:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lM6wtYp2o5E

    Here is a quote from the video:

    Today only actions are crimes. If we pass this legislation, opinions will become crimes. What is to stop us following the lead of European countries and American college campuses where certain speech is criminalized? Can priests, pastors, rabbis, be sure their preaching will not be prosecuted? In Canada...

  160. Re:It's so very odd.....did you by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

    Did you take the Red pill or the Blue pill today?

  161. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry my friend, Scientology has beaten you to it...

  162. No, it isn't. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Faith is normally blind and dogmatic, i.e. unreasonable.

    Lack of faith isn't, specially when most people put social pressure on you to believe into something...

    1. Re:No, it isn't. by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      Not believing in God is having faith in people.

    2. Re:No, it isn't. by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      Now that's a fucked up religion!

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
  163. You can't probe a negative.... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    The onus is on religious people to probe there is a god: http://rationalwiki.com/wiki/Negative_proof

    So far, they have failed miserably.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:You can't probe a negative.... by afabbro · · Score: 1

      The onus is on religious people to probe there is a god: http://rationalwiki.com/wiki/Negative_proof

      So far, they have failed miserably.

      I can think of five good proofs right off the top of my head...

      Of course, you'd need a bit of training in philosophy to understand them.

      --
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    2. Re:You can't probe a negative.... by PinkyDead · · Score: 1

      They are not five good proofs.

      They are five attempted proofs that have all been refuted quite substantially... by philosophers. Each one of them contains a fatal flaw, that granted, you need might a training in philosophy to understand.

      The cosmological argument, more commonly insists that everything must have a first cause, therefore god - yet ignore the special pleading for gods. Interestingly, the wikipedia page provided does not have this flaw, but unfortunately, for it, therefore does not require the universe to have a first cause. Contingency and unmoved mover are pretty much the same.

      Argument from degree fails because it is uses extrapolation beyond justifiable bounds.

      And the telelogical argument contradicts itself by identifying design in contrast to nature and then proposing that therefore nature is designed.

      On top of this they are all deistic, not theistic, proofs. And deism is, for practical purposes, indistinguishable from atheism.

      --
      Genesis 1:32 And God typed :wq!
    3. Re:You can't probe a negative.... by afabbro · · Score: 1

      They are five attempted proofs that have all been refuted quite substantially... by philosophers.

      Pop philosophers, maybe. The ill-educated Dawkins of the world, perhaps. Men of learning...not so much.

      The cosmological argument, more commonly insists that everything must have a first cause, therefore god - yet ignore the special pleading for gods.

      And already you're lost.

      On top of this they are all deistic, not theistic, proofs. And deism is, for practical purposes, indistinguishable from atheism.

      If you seriously think that, then you're too confused to bother with.

      --
      Advice: on VPS providers
    4. Re:You can't probe a negative.... by PinkyDead · · Score: 1

      Good answers.

      Well, "good" using the same definition of good that you used before - the correct spelling of that, however, is "pathetic".

      Strange, I would have thought that the "Philosophy for Dummies" you just bought would have "Ad Hominum" on the first page. Obviously not - when you get to page 2, get back to me.

      --
      Genesis 1:32 And God typed :wq!
  164. You can be both by aepervius · · Score: 1

    There are 4 category of people :
    1) Gnostic Theist (yes the question of whether it is KNOWABLE that god exists can be answer by yes, and, oh my, yes I belive in God)
    2) Agnostic Theist (I don't think the "god existence" question is really knowable , still I *believe* there is a God)
    3) agnostic Atheist (I don't think the question whether God exists is really knowable, but I don't see any reason to believe anyway)
    4) gnostic theist (yes , the god existence question is answerable and yes the dude don't exists)

    Some people says 1) and 4) are both about as arrogant, I am not too sure, I think it depends on how far they would eb ready to revise their belief is provided a proof going agaisnt their belief (if it does exists...).

    Agnosticism DO NOT mean that you are neither atheist nor theist (what you believe) it only means that you think the question of God's existence is unknowable. Those which think it is a neutral position don't really understand the meaning of agnosticism, and are either weak believer or weak atheist without realizing it.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
    1. Re:You can be both by dyingtolive · · Score: 1

      5) People who simply do not care to think about it one way or another?

      --
      Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
  165. This law is just a technicality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. I'm Irish

    2. I'm an atheist.

    3. I think this law is stupid and embarassing

    4. I don't think it's as big a deal as it's being made out to be.

    The reason it's being brought in has to do with a clause that's been in our constitution since independence, which requires that blasphemy be a crime. There was a gap in the legislation because this constitutional imperative wasn't being complied with. This law is an attempt to reconcile legislation with the constitution while introducing a defamation bill. There are provisions in the law to prevent it being applied where the blasphemy is deemed to have any cultural or artistic value, etc.

    There would be absolute uproar if it was ever enforced, and I severely doubt it will be.

  166. Turnabout is fair play by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    All over the world the Muslims have people walking on eggshells for fear of offending them and getting them up in arms. While Christians have had to put up with a steady stream of official persecution like the Federal Government paying artists to immerse a Crucifix in their own urine or form the Virgin Mary out of dung and put it on public display.

    If Christians starting beheading people for blasphemy the way that Muslims do, maybe they would finally get equal treatment instead of constant government sponsored persecution.

  167. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by discord5 · · Score: 1

    Trekkies rarely have tons of cash.

    Those DVD boxes cost so much, not to mention the miniature model of the Enterprise(s) and the captain Kirk figurine (with matching blue chick action figurine).

    If you take their collection, and ebay it, I'm pretty sure it'll cover the cost.

  168. http://blasphemy.ie/ by 4D6963 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    http://blasphemy.ie/

    Just thought I'd share.

    --
    You just got troll'd!
  169. So, what's next for Ireland? by tekrat · · Score: 0, Troll

    I assume they'll make it legal for Preists to rape alter boys?

    This "Church" has blasphemized itself over the years with scandal after scandal. And that's only the shit we KNOW about. How is it that they can't clean their own house before intruding on the rights of others? Do they not follow their own teachings?

    Martin Luther, where art thou?

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
  170. Dear Ireland by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

    Dear Ireland,

    Jesus wore pantyhose, because he was a tranny.

    Yours, Sincerely,

    Bob9113

  171. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2: Start a new, silly religion (like I believe in an all-powerful, all-knowing being who needs your MONEY!)

    Pfff...L. Ron Hubbard beat you to that one.

  172. /boggle by Fizzol · · Score: 1

    I'm suddenly, and for the first time, ashamed of my heritage.

    1. Re:/boggle by Holi · · Score: 1

      really just now? you know, setting off car bombs in england, injuring and killing innocent people pretty much did it for me decades ago.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
  173. In this case though... by TheLink · · Score: 1

    His fan club apparently aren't responsible for this particular mess. Seems like the Green Party and Liberals are responsible this time.

    From the article:

    " while the Catholic Church grumbles about a decline in spiritual values it has not actually demanded this law, nor are there many votes to be picked up on a 'Catholic Ireland' ticket. Even the other usual suspects, the 'mad mullahs' of Islam, are notable by their absence from the debate. Put simply, the religious lobby is not behind the move to criminalise blasphemy."

    And:

    " Firstly, the Green Party, a minority partner in Ireland's coalition government that has no ties to traditional, rural Ireland, saved the blasphemy legislation from defeat in the Seanad, Ireland's undemocratic pretend parliament for various worthies and failed politicians. Likewise, the opposition Labour Party, home to Ireland's liberal elites, has not sought to have the law struck down, instead favouring its amendment to make it more palatable to the cultural constituency. Labour's Pat Rabbitte sought a reformulation that excepts from the definition of blasphemy material which has 'literary, artistic, social or academic merit', harking back to the interminable debates about what is art and what is pornography (6). "

    But so many atheists here are blaming Religion.

    Ironically, the Great Dawkins Himself (May the FSM Bless Him ;) ) said something to the effect that "Atheists should be proud, not apologetic, because atheism is evidence of a healthy, independent, rational mind".

    Me thinks someone has a bit too much faith in the wrong thing.

    --
    1. Re:In this case though... by afabbro · · Score: 1

      But so many atheists here are blaming Religion.

      Arguing in the Internet is all atheists have.

      Which is perhaps why it's not surprising that they are a tiny minority in the world. 92% of the world is non-atheistic.

      --
      Advice: on VPS providers
    2. Re:In this case though... by daveime · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And a tiny majority of people are nuclear physicists, while the vast majority of people are thick as pig shit ... your point is what exactly ?

      Just because something is believed in by a majority doesn't make it true ...

  174. God has Zits by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    Seriously. It's time to pick a side and stand up for it.

    You're asking people to believe. Beliefs are bad, ideas are good. Keep repeating that, it's the way of science.

    For instance, can you prove that our universe is not a simulation? If you go try to figure this out, there's actually more evidence now that we are rather than we aren't in a simulated universe (the missing gravity waves are showing up instead as 'holographic' interference patterns). That we're not in a root universe ought to have little effect on our lives, except that somebody had to build it.

    This in no way addresses any magical Gods of any revered texts. I doubt it precludes them either.

    Could major religions accept that their God was a PFY in his own Universe? At least one text suggests he grew up a bit on our timescale of 6-2 thousand years ago.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  175. Costly and unwarranted? by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

    It is true that the repeal of the 1961 Defamation Act and its replacement with (slightly) less outrageous legislation would leave a hole in the statute books if blasphemy were not outlawed. Yet the obvious answer is to amend the constitution, which, in Ireland, requires a popular referendum. Yet the minister behind the update to the defamation laws, Dermot Ahern, says that a referendum would be âcostly and unwarrantedâ(TM)

    Somehow I'm still shocked that a government official would justify killing free speech by saying it's more cost effective than having a vote.

  176. Atheism Is Not A Belief System by Kneo24 · · Score: 1

    A lot of Atheists these days have gone away from the literal dictionary definition because it's a bit denigrating and is designed to make you look like a heathen, or even somehow make you feel less.

    By saying that you believe there is no god or any god, to a religious person, you sound like you're in denial. Hopefully, what you mean is that you have a lack of faith, or a lack of a belief in them. It's a bit nit-picky, but it holds a certain distinction and clarification. By saying that you have no belief, you are implying that based on what you know, there's no reason to believe anything. Where's the empirical evidence? Etc... As an atheist, this is the point you want to get across.

    I realize there are some people out there who just don't understand the lack of belief, and not believing, but it's rather quite simple. With the lack of belief, you have nothing. It's like having zero apples. When you say you don't believe, you still have something and when you word it that way, there are people who think that you have oranges, but you simply deny that you have them.

  177. Ok for homosexuals, but don't anyone else try! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe I'm just missing them, but I still can't find all the stories decrying the silencing of any disagreement with homosexuality, Islam, etc., or the current legislation being pushed to throw minister's in jail for teaching that homosexuality is wrong. Its already in place in other countries and is being hard fought for in the US. You aren't spoon fed that in our media like this, instead it takes place quietly and is labeled hate speech. But stand up for something you believe in that isn't politically correct, and all the sudden everyone is up in arms. Yep, sounds fair to me. Yay for free speech.

  178. Re:Jesus titty-fucking Christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Noodly appendages? Tentacle Rape!!!

  179. Mindthe free publicity effect by musicmaster · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of the Dutch blasphemy law in the 1970s. The time spirit had become liberal, but there were still those old laws. So they prosecuted some writers who had written blasphemous books (if I remember well in one God had sex with a donkey). The writers were condemned to some fine. But the free publicity for their books had been such that they didn't care at all.

  180. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by pjabardo · · Score: 1

    You don't have to go that far. Almost by definition any religious ceremony is blasfemous to all other religions.

  181. I don't want to start any blasphemous rumours by Dretep · · Score: 1

    But I think the Irish have a sick sense of humour...

  182. Many times it is religion itself being twisted by pizzach · · Score: 1

    I'd like to add that, no, I don't believe these people are thinking for themselves (sloppily or not). I believe they are being "blinded by religion" as my topic title states. They don't want to be confronted by something they don't agree with which might make them think for themselves, so they outlaw it.

    Religions are quite often warped for people to get it to say what they want it to say. On top of that, books like the bible even has a tendency to contradict itself (like things between the new and old testimate.) Warping would occur even without religion, usually through something popularly called propaganda. I'm sure you're familiar with it.

    Republican are Christian. Republicans like War. Republican Christians kill people. Christians can't go to heaven for breaking commandment. So were they Christian to begin with?

    Republicans hate hippies. Republicans are Christians. Jesus has a beard. Republicans hate Jesus. (The Christian church should do away with the bear already.)

    --
    Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
    1. Re:Many times it is religion itself being twisted by internewt · · Score: 1

      (like things between the new and old testimate.)

      The word you are looking for there is testicle. The new and old testicle.

      It's easy to remember, the whole bible is a load of bollocks.

      --
      Car analogies break down.
    2. Re:Many times it is religion itself being twisted by pizzach · · Score: 1

      Your comment was oddly insightful. Thank you. :D

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
  183. A great point by WiiVault · · Score: 1

    I don't think I've ever heard it presented in this way, but you are right on.

  184. from: glaglaglagla of bbbbbdddz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I find your lack of faith.... disturbing.

  185. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by rrohbeck · · Score: 1

    If they would also make Jedi an official religion like in Australia (IIRC), so next time people have a Star Trek convention they could go there, start a flamebait topic between Star Wars-fans and Trekkies, and start collecting cash. On the other hand... Trekkies rarely have tons of cash.

    1: Pass a law preventing making fun of religion
    2: Start a new, silly religion (like I believe in an all-powerful, all-knowing being who needs your MONEY!)
    3: Profit!

    We don't even need the "???" :-)

    L. Ron Hubbard and Joseph Smith would have agreed wholeheartedly.

  186. Which Blasphemy? by b4upoo · · Score: 1

    Forgetting completely imported religions how about statements taken to be blasphemy by Catholics from protestants and visa-versa? For example some protestants have questioned the salvation of Mary as she may never have been baptized and repented and we don't know if she accepted Christ as her personal savior. The point being that blasphemy is not clear cut and is in the eye of the beholder. And to any protestant and most Catholics suggesting that Allah is God is in itself a serious blasphemy. Even allowing non Christian forms of worship can be taken as "putting other gods before me". Some could even claim a divine command to destroy all non Christian faiths as Satanic doctrines.

  187. I wonder? by gubers33 · · Score: 1

    Does this mean they are going to bring back the Salem Witch Trials, but change the name to the Dublin Witch Trials. Burning people at the stake, drowning them would make water boarding and other Gitmo torture seem a whole lot less harsh.

    --
    Just because you are wrong and I called you out on it doesn't mean I am a Troll.
  188. Don't Blame Religion, Scientists can be Worse by Hercules+Peanut · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you give the Bible-thumping idiots an inch, they will take the field.

    You could have eliminated "Bible-thumping" from that statement and had a much more effective position. Here on Slashdot I have seen scientists want to decertify other scientists who speak against global warming. Worse still some who speak against global warming may even receive death threats

    Frankly, a 25,000E fine seems fairly mild by comparison.

    Perhaps, if we blamed overreaction and intolerance (common human traits) rather than the beliefs of people we don't agree with, we might make some progress dealing with these kinds of things.

    Sadly, looking at a lot of the posts here on slashdot, it looks like we have a long way to go.

    1. Re:Don't Blame Religion, Scientists can be Worse by The_Quinn · · Score: 1

      it looks like we have a long way to go.

      Even worse, we are going in the wrong direction.

      The article, as well as the example you cited, are a dangerous trend toward censorship.

  189. Secular taliban by Msdose · · Score: 1

    The godless religion of political correctness is the stalking-horse of communism. By preventing criticism of religion they allow the communist takeover of their country to proceed unimpeded. All countries that follow political correctness have fallen toward communism, which is why their economies are shrinking. Capitalism is a law of nature, communism is a religion.

    Religion is proof that there is no god.

  190. A string of falacies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You assume that each of the atrocities was solely or primarily the result of "speech". In reality, however, there was a well-supplied *organization* behind all of these, with long-term conspiracy and preparation that went far beyond mere speech for years.

    "Any book" is good, history books are better.

  191. So making fun of "Buffy the Vampire Killer" would by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    be a violation since it makes fun of the Vampire Religion?

    IF you are going to stupidly 'protect' one religion, you better stupidly protects even the stupid religions!!!

  192. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by yoshi_mon · · Score: 0, Redundant

    woosh. (...or just english not your native language)

    DIET-y. As in diet.
    vs. Deity (a divinity or god)

    --

    Ummm, he was referring to the fact that the poster wrote 'diety' in stead of 'deity'. Which, given the name of the deity in question, is pretty unintentionally funny.

    Woosh and ummm to you both! I actually missed that but I'm quite sure, again research FSM!, that it was intentional.

    Those who warship the FSM refer to themselves as Pastafarians fer cipes sake.

    --

    Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
  193. The Land of Ire by mvg · · Score: 1

    Don't forget -- almost everybody that posted here, *even the religious zealots*, would be subject to raids, enormous fines, and probably imprisonment if they lived in The Land of Ire and they decided to start enforcing that anti-speech BS. I certainly have no intention of ever visiting such a place (and yes, I'm aware of worse situations in seemingly harmless countries).

  194. god damn irish! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    now seriously. if this is what irish people want, i'm okey with that. i just expect nobody decide for me if i can or i can blasphemy.

    although, from a global point of view, it does not sound very scalable to mix law and religion.

  195. Blasphemy is Catholicism's biggest problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought it was rampant altar-boy buggery, followed by drunken wife beatings?! Wifey McBeaty's FTW!

  196. re: pick a side by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    I've got to say, I found this whole debate/thread very interesting.

    I've considered myself an atheist, yet the "agnostics" have put forth a rather intriguing argument, that at least some of them consider themselves such, because they simply believe it's "unknowable" if a god or gods exist.

    I guess I've always felt, previously, that the "agnostics" simply felt "uncertain" about the type/nature of god(s) that might be out there, so simply didn't want to subscribe to a particular "faith". (So in effect, it was sort of a label for "I very generically believe in some sort of creator, but don't want to follow any one religion.")

    I'd also agree that organized religions have done considerable harm to society, but wouldn't go so far as to say religion is universally a "bad" concept. If nothing else, it probably serves as a "scare tactic" that tends to keep a lot of people away from a life of crime. Their reasoning is arguably simplistic and flawed, but in the end, the results are the only thing that really matter to the rest of us. (If someone decides not to shoot and kill you out of anger, only because of their fear of "eternal punishment", you should be glad your life was spared, period!)

    But beyond that, many organized religions believe in charitable works, which do benefit society as a whole. I'd much rather see these things being done on a strictly volunteer basis by church groups, than as government mandates, with the funding forcibly taken out of my paycheck every week!

    When you speak of "religions holding humanity back", I'm not really convinced this is so. Lumping all of us together as "humanity" is a pretty BROAD brush to paint with. Individuals will always vary, from the most clever, insightful and philosophical among us to the most simple-minded and disinterested. If you eliminated religion, I'm not sure what would replace it for some people?

  197. Does the Flying Spaghetti Monster have a web site? by Mr.+Firewall · · Score: 1
    --
    In times of universal deceit, telling the truth gets you modded -1 Troll
  198. Ireland isn't a modern country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a foreigner living in Ireland; I'm not surprised at all. People just assume that Ireland is a modern country. It is not. And now you all know that as well.

  199. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is english YOUR native language? Diety is not a word.

  200. A nip of blasphemy in your tea? by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

    GOD is clearly an invention of people, for the purposes of:
    a) helping us over the shock of realizing they were conscious, and mortal,
    b) putting the fear of GOD into uppity peons who might wish to usurp
    the established hierarchy with one of their own!
    c) Keeping people civilized by providing cause-effect narratives, plausible
    at least to the weak of mind or uneducated, tieing bad behaviour to nasty
    consequences and good or cooperative behaviour to rewards.

    Whack-Fol-the-daddy-o !

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  201. As a devoted follower of Christ, this is scary by anomaly · · Score: 1

    Free speech rights are important. I think that definition of hate crimes and speech limits are slippery slopes which can turn out to have consequences far different than the original intent. I found Penn Jillette's incessant blasphemy during his Las Vegas show offensive, but should not be criminalized.

    I have a friend who recently visited Kazakhstan.He tells me that the growing influence of Islam there means that there will be a significant restriction of religious freedom there, and that Christians are very likely to soon be oppressed by those in power who oppose their religious beliefs.

    As much as I value my religious beliefs and desire not to have them attacked, it is critical that freedom of expression be defended, even when it offends me. (Within certain limits - not yelling fire in a crowded theater, kiddie porn, etc.)

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
  202. May you be half an hour in heaven by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

    before you realize that it doesn't exist,

    and then realize that you can't realize anything because you're dead
    and your neurons have stopped firing,

    and then disappear in a puff of logic.

    Amen

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  203. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, they have to walk the plank. Arrrrr!

  204. Not YET law in Ireland. President calls an audible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anybody pointed out that this is in fact not yet law in Ireland? It has passed both the Dail (lower house) and Seanad (Senate) but the President who signs bills into law has had a "hang on a sec" moment. She has convened a Council of State (bit like the Jedis) to see if both bills are to be referred to the Supreme Court to challenge their constitutionality.
    http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/breaking/2009/0717/breaking34.html
    "Both the Defamation Bill and the Criminal Justice (Amendment) Bill were passed by the Dáil last week and sent to the President for her signature.
    She has the authority, after consultation with the Council of State, to refer a Bill to the Supreme Court to test its constitutionality. The court is allowed up to 60 days to consider the matter."
    http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2009/0718/1224250903398.html
    "The Constitution does provide that blasphemy is a crime to be punished "in accordance with law". However, the Law Reform Commission has stated that there is no place for a law of blasphemy in a modern Constitution guaranteeing freedom of speech."

  205. Demon Haunted World by StarTux · · Score: 1

    More proof as if its needed that Carl Sagan's "Demon Haunted World" is worsening...

    Matt

  206. Cause and Effect by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    Theres nothing wrong with that though. Now, if you actually -do- any of those things, yes it is wrong. But talking about it? No one gets hurt so therefore it should not be prohibited.

    So if a group of people are making extremely detailed plans about a terrorist attack you should just ignore it until they actually blow up a building and kill hundreds of people? I'll grant you that in most cases there will be actions to back up the plans but those might only be performed by a one or two members of the group. However surely all should be guilty of terrorism?

    I agree with your principle and I am very reluctant to cross the line but I think there there are cases where it does need to be crossed to prevent loss of life.

  207. I'm an American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and all I can think to say is, Jesus Titty Fucking Christ! this is absurd.

  208. 25,000 whats? by Ichijo · · Score: 1

    Dollars? Euros?

    --
    Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
  209. MOD Parent Up etc etc by PinkyDead · · Score: 1

    Nobody seems to have picked up on this yet.

    As I sit here in the last remnants of the enlightened Irish republic (there's a joke) - I'd like to point out that athiests were very well represented in the GPO in Easter 1916 and I'm sure James Connolly is spinning furiously in his grave. If ever there was a solution desperately seeking a problem...

    But anyway let me take this opportunity to say "God bless you. Mary Mc." - and while I'm at it "Fuck you, Jesus Christ, the pope, allah, mohammed etc and the various horses yous rode in on" and plenty more blasphemy that would never have seen the light of day had it not been for this outrageous attempt by a truly pathetic government to divert focus off their shystering and ineptitude.

    Now who do I write the 25,000 cheque to?

    --
    Genesis 1:32 And God typed :wq!
  210. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CIA world factbook on Ireland: Religions:
    Roman Catholic 87.4%
    Church of Ireland 2.9%,
    other Christian 1.9%,
    other 2.1%,
    unspecified 1.5%,
    none 4.2% (2006 census)

    So, 92.2% Christian. Over half of the non-Christian population has NO religion.

    Yeah, I'm going to go with not very fairly...

  211. hypocrites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    isn't it illegal to have cartoons of mohammed? or to have a swastika in austria/germany??? this is just as barbaric. stop being selective in your indignation, you bunch of loons.

  212. The one good thing about this legistlation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At least with all the blasphemy on this article, everyone in Ireland is spared from reading Slashdot.

  213. It's all about islam by BubbaDave · · Score: 1

    We all bloody well know this will only be enforced when the blasphemy is against islam...

    Dave

  214. Unkees Monkle by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    Alright, alright, we did not come from apes. Can I go now?
         

  215. Not the default by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    No it isn't. Atheism is the default position. It is, simply, a case of not endorsing or subscribing to purported religious facts for which there is no evidence.

    No Atheism is not the "default" - where default presumably means completely rational and provable - position. Agnosticism is because it implies that the person is open to be persuaded by evidence one way or the other whereas active disbelief, (the definition of atheism), to be rational, requires evidence to prove that whatever is disbelieved does not exist. As any scientist will tell you: absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.

    Dawkins has a point when he complains that we don't make the fine distinction between "no evidence one way or the other" vs. "does not exist" for things like unicorns and dragons. However we do make the distinction for religion. So either he has a faithed based position (atheism) or a purely rational based position (agnosticism). He might not like it but it's the language we have.

  216. whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Posting as an anonymous Irish coward here...

    Seriously, if I didn't read teh intarwebs as much as I do, it'd be news to me as well. But it's still not the dumbest thing the Irish government has ever done, so take solace in the fact that this bill probably isn't a result of actual malice - that's crediting them with far too much intelligence.

    My countrymen tend to be dumb as a box of rocks as well, so chances are no one will give a flying shit about this until some case comes up where someone gets done for blasphemy, and then it's good odds that the judge will toss it out of court for being bloody stupid.

    But really, Ireland isn't a bad place to live, overall. Nobody cares about religion, not like in the States. We're all supposed to be Catholic, so it just becomes part of the woodwork or something - like, funerals and weddings or whatever. We don't take it seriously from day to day. And Mass on Sundays is more about meeting people and having a chat than about the actual ceremony, if you go at all. I've seen god botherers out on the streets of Cork handing out leaflets, and you wouldn't believe the funny looks they get. There's no stigma attached to contraception that I know of, and the one pharmacist I asked was horrified at the idea that someone could refuse to dispense any drug on moral grounds.

    The abortion thing will probably go the way of the dodo at some point. Going to England to get it... well, the doctors aren't allowed to tell you anything, but everyone knows a friend of a friend who does, and who'd know any different if you just happened to take a trip over? It's not like they make you take a pregnancy test to get a ticket.

    So it isn't all bad. If it wasn't for the government being terminally stupid, I'd be recommending it to you lot as a nice place to live.

  217. Failure to Read the Article by mlund · · Score: 1

    Four paragraphs into the article they note that the Irish Constitution (from 1937) explicitly prohibits the publication of blasphemy. "it goes on to prohibit the publication of 'blasphemous, seditious, or indecent matter'

    .

    Further even in the First Paragraph they note that the new law came into being in removing the old 1961 Defamation Act. So the title of the original post is completely misleading. Blasphemy has been prohibited under Irish law for a long time. This is not a new situation in that regard. In the Sixth Paragraph the author notes: "only one case was ever taken under the blasphemy prohibition since the introduction of the constitution in 1937 (a 1999 case against a newspaper, in which the Supreme Court concluded that it was not possible to say 'of what the offence of blasphemy consists' and that 'the state is not placed in the position of an arbiter of religious truth')."

    .

    In other words, this is much to do about nothing. Ireland doesn't prosecute blasphemy. It does have a need to do a little house-cleaning on the wording of its Constitution to bring it into line with popular practice, though.

  218. It's all good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So now Ireland is JUST LIKE the Fanatical Muslims they all love to hate.

    besides Jesus is not Catholic he is a Hindu!

  219. You're all being idiots. by Auberon · · Score: 1

    While I agree that this is bollocks, I do not agree with the sheer amount of stupidity a lot of the repliers have. Religion is not the problem here. Yes, they're doing something stupid in the name of religion. But if there was no religions of the world then they'd be doing some stupid or horrible in the name of something else. They'd have other beliefs that they formed one way or another and there would be people who formed that same belief and they'd be trying to force it on people regardless of anything else. And I hate to break it to you, but you atheists are exactly like theists, but you don't believe in any gods. Have you looked at yourselves lately? At what other atheists are doing? You may say that one atheist doesn't represent ou all but you still all have that hive mentality because you all fall into the same mindset of "I'm right you're wrong because of this and this"...Just like theists. And you go around trying to force your beliefs, or lack thereof, on others, cram it down their throats and tell them you're just trying to help them live a better life because they won't be wasting their time on their religion. Which really isn't much different than someone coming to you and telling you that whatever TV show, Comic Book or whatever sucks and they should stop watching it and stop collecting memorabilia because they didn't like it and thought it was a waste of your life. You want religious stuff taken out of everyday life, they want more in it. You're exactly the same. You're not better than them even though you act like you are. Even that makes you exactly the same. They think the same about you, that they're better because they have faith, and you think you're better because you don't. (And don't tell me you AREN'T like that because I've yet to meet an atheist that wasn't, and I know a lot. And again, you'd probably say the same thing about Christians, and Christians would say they're not all the same as well. Which brings me back to my point. People are idiots and regardless of their beliefs or lack there of. They're always going to force their ideals on others no matter WHAT fuels them to do so. Stop acting like you have the world's best views at heart because you're exactly the same as them. You don't want religious folks cramming their religion down your throat, well they don't want you shoving your lack of beliefs down theirs either. You're just as stupid and bigoted as them. Get the bloody hell over it.

    1. Re:You're all being idiots. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1

      And I hate to break it to you, but you atheists are exactly like theists, but you don't believe in any gods..

      Agreed.

      I'd call dogmatic thinking of any sort to be a kind of worship.

      Dogmatics are all spooky.

      The kind of brainwashing used on regular church goers seems innocent enough from a certain angle, but it is quite plain to me that should the church decide so, they could within short order turn a significant portion of the god-fearing masses into an army of zombie killers who will burn my house down because they have unquestioning faith that doing so is God's will.

      Atheist dogmatics spook me for the same reasons, though their commands issue from the 'Discovery Channel' rather than the pulpit. For instance, one day, a platoon of idiots with machine guns could easily arrive under orders to jab everybody in my town with a mystery fluid for the good of society because 'Science' told them to. Marvelous.

      Of course, my personal belief system states that anybody who acts selfishly and destructively and whose brain isn't wired for human emotions should be tattooed with a big "Beware" symbol or simply locked up. --Except we'd have to rebuild the most of the government from the ground up. (Plan 'B' simply consists of learning how to recognize and avoid giving power to assholes.)

      -FL

  220. What does blasphemy mean ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Ireland, blasphemy actually means spitting out alcohol !!!

  221. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Rik+Rohl · · Score: 1

    Scientology

    that is all...

  222. How did this ignorant troll get modded 5 insightf? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So what do you propose we do? Ban "hate speech"? Well, I've got news for you. Limiting free speech always works for oppressive governments in the end. Your comments display both a stellar ignorance on the topics you (barely) touch upon, and on the history of censorship and free speech in general. Read a book. Any book. Just once and grow up mate. And if you're too lazy to do that, at least watch this: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6379618149058958603

  223. For my country by UbuntuniX · · Score: 0

    As an Irish citizen, I've long been doing my part by being as offensive to our church as possible. Making it illegal will just double the fun!

  224. Bullsh*t by E++99 · · Score: 1

    Name a single "Bible-thumping idiot" who is in favor of limiting any kind of speech concerning God. (The motivation in TFA is a constitutional, not religious.)

  225. Re:Jesus titty-fucking Christ by VanessaE · · Score: 1

    Nonono - if you're going to offend, go for the gold: Jesus H. ben Joseph in a fucking handbasket.

  226. I love the 1490's ! by nehumanuscrede · · Score: 1

    Seriously, blasphemy a criminal offense ( again ) ? It's really tough to take any government ( or country )
    seriously when they revert to dark age laws. . . What's next ? Going to revert back to the Earth being flat
    or the center of the universe theory ? Sink some witches in the nearby river to see if they float perhaps ?

    What a grand idea. . . so does the new law specify a specific religion ? Or just Christianity ? Everyone knows that any religion
    other than the local 'accepted' one, is blasphemous to the local groups for the 'other' heathens do not believe in the 'right' God. So will the
    Yahweh-Squads start kicking down doors at the local mosque ? Round up the Buddhists ? Re-educate the Atheists ? Will works
    by Dawkins and similar authors in your library become grounds for your arrest ?

    Of course, this is likely the "whatever-you-do-don't-anger-the-muslims" law.

    Just . . . wow.

  227. (God || ! 2(God)) == the_question by TiggertheMad · · Score: 1

    I believe that accepting a personal state of functional atheism requires more up-front intellectual honesty

    I can say that there is no evidence I have witnessed that there is a god. I can also say that there is no evidence I have witnessed that tells me there isn't a god. Just because a position has poor evidence to support it, does not automatically make the opposite position a correct one.

    I think that Athiesim is just as shaky as religion's claims. How is that personal honesty? Either side 's claims rely on faith.

    I'll keep an open mind until I see proof provided by one side or the other.

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
    1. Re:(God || ! 2(God)) == the_question by JerkBoB · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think that Athiesim is just as shaky as religion's claims. How is that personal honesty? Either side's claims rely on faith.

      I'll keep an open mind until I see proof provided by one side or the other.

      No, not really. This is a tiresome strawman argument against Atheism. Are you keeping an open mind about the possible existence of Unicorns? Leprechauns? The end of the world in 2012 as predicted by the Mayan calendar?

      As an Atheist, I am simply living my life without belief in the Divine. I don't know with certainty because it is impossible to prove the nonexistence of something unobservable. In the absence of any tangible evidence of the Divine, however, I can confidently assume that at best, it is almost certain there is no Divine, and at worst, it is irrelevant to my daily life.

      What does keeping an open mind about the potential existence of God mean to you? Are you hoping to hedge your bets somehow? Are you hoping that when you get to the pearly gates, if they exist, that you can tell St. Pete that you weren't an Atheist, so you should still be OK? Or are you just uncomfortable with the idea that rejection of belief in the supernatural puts you in the minority and on the wrong side of a whole lot of potentially scary people with a shared delusion?

      --
      A host is a host from coast to coast...
      Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
    2. Re:(God || ! 2(God)) == the_question by TiggertheMad · · Score: 1

      No, not really. This is a tiresome strawman argument against Atheism. Are you keeping an open mind about the possible existence of Unicorns? Leprechauns? The end of the world in 2012 as predicted by the Mayan calendar?

      The claims about unicorns and leprechauns are far easier to test and negate than claims about god, and there lies the problem with your examples.

      I am just saying that an Atheist's claim is as untestable and as much of an article of faith as as those of a believer's.

      --

      HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
    3. Re:(God || ! 2(God)) == the_question by JerkBoB · · Score: 1

      The claims about unicorns and leprechauns are far easier to test and negate than claims about god, and there lies the problem with your examples.

      How does one test for the (non-)existence of Unicorns or Leprechauns? They're magical. If they don't want you to see them, they won't appear to you. Likewise, it is impossible to prove that they don't exist.

      I am just saying that an Atheist's claim is as untestable and as much of an article of faith as as those of a believer's.

      What is an Atheist's claim, exactly? I am an Atheist. I am not claiming anything untestable. I am simply asserting that the logical position with regard to the potential existence of something for which zero evidence has been found is to assume that it does not exist.

      You keep asserting that my disbelief is based in faith. I do not have faith that there is no God; I simply do not have faith that there is a God. Furthermore, the question of whether or not there is a God is irrelevant to my daily decision-making process. Perhaps God does exist, somehow, in an unobservable state. I have seen no evidence for the existence of God, however, and you seem to concur. In the absence of observable evidence of God, then is it not logical to assume that for all practical purposes, there is no God?

      Try substituting Leprechauns for God in the above paragraph, and see whether or not it becomes any more palatable to you. If you are truly agnostic and unable to assume, for all practical purposes, that God does not exist, then your feelings should not change at all when you consider the potential existence of Leprechauns. In other words, a true Agnostic would claim that it is unknowable whether or not Leprechauns exist, and accept either position. I suspect that if you're honest with yourself, you don't really believe that you need to see proof of the nonexistence of Leprechauns to assume that they don't exist.

      --
      A host is a host from coast to coast...
      Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
  228. Diversity failing again by hessian · · Score: 1

    Diversity -- religions, ideological, cultural, linguistic and ethnic -- is inherent flawed because two values systems cannot occupy the same place at the same time.

    One man's blasphemy is another man's progressivism.

    So by endorsing "diversity," we demand an agree-to-disagree society that ensures we will have no values outside of commerce and laws.

    A long, slow tumble to the end.

  229. How long before... by zarathud · · Score: 1

    How long before they start going after Google for linking to 'blaspheming' sites.

  230. Stupid by seeker_1us · · Score: 1

    God will punish (and forgive) blasphemy. God doesn't need the Irish, or anyone else for that matter, to do it for Him.

  231. Blasphemy Law has nothing to do with "Blasphemy" by E++99 · · Score: 2, Informative

    (2) For the purposes of this section, a person publishes or utters blasphemous matter if (a) he or she publishes or utters matter that is grossly abusive or insulting in relation to matters held sacred by any religion, thereby causing outrage among a substantial number of the adherents of that religion, and (b) he or she intends, by the publication or utterance of the matter concerned, to cause such outrage.

    The Constitution requires a blasphemy law, so they call it a blasphemy law. But it is not a blasphemy law. It is a law against intentionally causing widespread religious outrage. Well, isn't intentionally causing widespread religious outrage in Ireland is tantamount to inciting violence? Seems like a reasonable restriction to me. When a behavior has no potential benefit and significant potential harm, I believe that a condition where it is reasonable to outlaw the behavior. And I don't believe there is ever potential benefit in intentionally causing widespread religious outrage. That would always be an act of malice. And it would often have a significant potential for public harm.

    That said, I seriously doubt it's a necessary law. The one act that I can think of that ever would have violated it was the Danish Muhammad cartoons. Someone decided to intentionally outrage the entire Muslim community just to show that they could. Did it convince Muslims that they should chill out a bit? No. It deepened the rifts that divide us all as human beings, and it lead to over 100 deaths. I do not find it a morally justifiable act, and I have no problem with it being prohibited. The valid principle of free speech -- which I would give my life to defend -- is not the freedom to incite. It is the freedom to communicate ideas. If the same cartoons caused the same outrage but were made in an effort to critique the state of Islam, rather than an intentional effort to incite, then that would be a matter of free speech that should always be protected.

    Even in America, intentionally inciting to imminent violence or other unlawful action is illegal, and not protected by the 1st Amendment. Intentionally causing widespread religious outrage is a step back from that, but I think a rather small one. There have been several times in American history where we've had tighter constraints on speech than that.

  232. Re:Blasphemy Law has nothing to do with "Blasphemy by E++99 · · Score: 1

    As a side-note, I think all this outrage over the intent to outlaw the intent to outrage would be better redirected at Germany and other European countries where they actually outlaw the communication of specific ideas (in particular the idea that the holocaust didn't happen or is exaggerated). That is the real dagger in the heart of the God-given right to free speech -- the right to simply communicate what one thinks or believes. That is the real outrage. That is what Thomas Jefferson would be angry about.

  233. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Those who warship the FSM refer to themselves as Pastafarians fer crepes sake.

    FTFY =)

    --
    Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
  234. I didn't expect the Spanish inquisition. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But then, ....

  235. Re: The default position is "I don't know". by presidenteloco · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes, but soon after "I don't know" will come, for a scientist, investigation, logic, reasoning, occam's razor, and probability theory, which are used, in combination with the mostly self-consistent (and very large) body of current scientific knowledge (or "educated, principled belief, if you prefer) to assess the likelihood of various extraordinary claims even prior to any experimental evidence being obtained.

    Scientists are busy people, and they need to know what has already been pretty well covered and understood, and what is overwhelmingly probably false, or is not a well-formed concept, so they can get on with pushing the legitimate boundaries of scientific knowledge.

    Many religious claims (those to do with specific acts of Gods) don't even stand up to basic logical tests of internal self-consistency nor conformance with the known laws of physics, so can be discounted rather quickly as self-serving twaddle on the part of religious organizers.

    There may be a few actually interesting questions about the nature of consciousness or "purpose" of life or origin of life, destiny of life etc., but science is, in general, advancing on even these challenging fronts, so the "gap" into which divine intervention may fall is ever narrowing.

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  236. Ireland making a mockery of freedom od speech! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am wondering how criminalizing "blasphemy" will play with the EU constitution, which quite widely protects freedom of speech.
    Note that the edict of religion, in Maryland also criminalized deying the theory of trinity: it was then punished by death!

    I hope the post-enlightment european will fight Ireland, and Poland, when they try over, and over again to force an extremist* religions agenda.
    -A-

    * This is an extremist agenda, for many reasons, and try to define "blasphemy" and make happy every religious groups, and the atheisths, agnostics etc...
          Good Luck!

  237. Re:Attn: MODS by mjwx · · Score: 1

    but at least we can preserve enough specimens to start breeding programs in a handful of zoos.

    But we've never been able to maintain a captive breeding program for Trolls, they just become even more apathetic and irate then they just completely give up on mating. It's hard enough for them to mate in the wild.

    --
    Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  238. Male mutilation too ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And there's another funny worm in the can - male circumcision - nothing less than genital mutilation, justified by fairytales and ancient mystic beliefs - and even the mainstream "Desperate Housewives" tried to address the issue and ended up completely washing out the outrage. Said Bree van der Camp: "I just want him to be like everyone else at school".
    You won't hear too many jumping up and down about that, because it's proscribed by the majority faiths, but female circumcision is apparently qualitatively different.
    They're both sick practices practiced by sick thinking, completely unjustified, and that they are being treated differently in law and "public opinion" is evidence that we can all be guilty of stupidity out of habit.

    I'm an atheist now, the WORST kind, being an apostate to boot. I saw the light, and it wasn't there.
    And proud to state that I'm going STRAIGHT to the Xian's hell and glad of it.
    It doesn't exist, and anyone that feels sorry for me is wasting their existence, parents included.

    But I'm also a stoic, and that helps a lot.
    Frankly, I don't give a shit what most people believe in - I just live in a world, like the rest of the gloriously multitude of humanity, where determinacy is mistakenly hailed as "a virtue" - I don't like it, I don't antagonise the overtly or covertly religious, I just keep out of the way. Act smart, like don't go to bars renown for repeated violence, and don't go to social clubs (churches) renown for head fuckery. The dodgy bar has beer, and the church has some of my family and friends, it still doesn't mean it's smart to walk in the door.
    But as a stoic, you can go right ahead and do what you want, and I won't bat an eyelid. I have my life, you have yours.

    If you bring your violence or your headfuckery out of your building though, you can expect to find yourself in a hostile environment sometimes, and better be prepared to justify yourself. I'm prepared to go to prison for blasphemy. Hell fucking yeah !!! Fuck the myth of JC and the pox-ridden donkey Osiris it rode in on. Enough damage already - can't we move on from "resurrected" ancient Egyptian mythology, please?

    "People of the book", indeed. "People with store-bought morals" is what I call them.
    How can you be truly moral if you accept some external, arbitrary definition of morality without examining it?
    That makes "faith" sound like a close cousin to "laziness" to me - too lazy to think what I'm doing or saying, because it's "in the good book" and that means it's RIGHT !
    I was told as a junior that "God is good". Well, frankly, I can't imagine what "good" means any more in that context, cause carefully reading the Bible (as they told me to) showed me that God is apparently one mean motherfucking merciless two-faced prick, and that goes for whichever book you want to choose as your "guide".

    I once thought I should take a personal mission to destroy other people's illusions - a more mature view brought me back to continue working on destroying my own instead...
    'Avoid vexatious people' is the best advice I EVER heard, and there's plenty of them in organised religion.

  239. Holy.... by zerospeaks · · Score: 0

    OH MY GOD!!! ....... wait..... did I just break a law? Darn.

    --
    http://wwww.zerospeaks.com
  240. I Am A Gnostic Atheist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..and i do think that science CAN prove that there can't be any such supernatural beings as described in the judeo-christian mythology. I know that the default position of science is that supernatural claims are unfalsifiable and thus it's impossible to have a proof against them but i beg to differ here. Here are my two cents :

    I do think that godel's incompleteness theorems PROVE that there is no God because according to them, God is a complete system ( as omniscient it has an answer for any claim and can even prove it's own validity ) and thus inconsistent. ( We can also derive that it's complete from the fact that the god system is inconsistent. Why it is inconsistent ? Simple, it comes out from the omnipotent thing : god is omnipotent therefore he can do anything, thus he can create a stone with such a mass that he cannot move it. Since he cannot move it he is not omnipotent. Here is the inconsistency. ) So, since in nature only consistent systems exist ( an apple will fall both in australia and US ), god is just an imaginary system

  241. The Problem w/ Your View by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

    "Aren't we all deterministic automotons governed by the laws of physics? How can free will exist?"

    So if we aren't designed to apprehend truth and our thoughts are also caused deterministically, you have no basis for trusting.your own thoughts. Including your reasoning about these matters.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  242. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mr. Hubbard, is that you?

  243. to paraphrase Gandhi by dogganos · · Score: 1

    Is it blasphemy to curse Christians?

    CURSE YOU, DAMNED IDIOTS!

  244. Ireland...land of the cynic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ireland is supposedly a 90% Catholic country but in living here I have learnt it's mostly the old people who still go to church whereas the younger generation is pretty cynical towards religion and rightly so. It's not as if the priests and christian schools have a good record here just as they don't in Boston.

    What concerns me is that this law is set out to protect "minorities" and I wonder who will benefit. In Ireland people have questioned WW2, Israel, the Holocaust, will this no longer be allowed as in Austria and Germany? Could historians find themselves jailed when asking questions about alleged facts?

  245. They were not thinking about contradicting laws. by taara · · Score: 1

    Someone has to register the "Almighty Filesharer" polytheistic religion in Ireland. They might worship gods named BitTorrent, aMule (also known as eMule - god is known to walk with many names), Limewire, etc. Worshipers everyday mantra should be: "Information wants to be free! **** *** MAFIAA!". Lets see who is blasphemous enough to criticize them!

  246. Another one down the drain by IrquiM · · Score: 1

    One less country where I could potentially settle down if I have to relocate.

    My existence in itself would be enough to trigger the blasphemy law.

    --
    This is blinging
  247. Eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "David Hume, an early Anglo philosopher"

    What a curiously constructed phrase.

    He's not particularly "early", being entirely 18th Century and "Anglo"? He's a bloody SCOT, for gods sake! Given the subject of the original post, methinks "Anglo" is being used in the usual derogeratory sense and is thus hate speech.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Hume

  248. Not what it seems by psicic · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's hard to believe that such a law would pass, but let me point out that the Act is not exactly what it seems. (Yes, I'm Irish)

    The Law Reform Commission - the people who are charged with updating legislation in Ireland, recommended that a law had to be put in place for blasphemy because it was provided for in the constitution.

    They also said it didn't have to be done any time soon, and that a referendum would remove the requirement. The Irish government is very touchy at the moment about holding any additional referenda (especially in light of an upcoming referendum that affects all 27 EU members), so it decided to pass a law.

    People - from the left, the right and the centre - all let out a collective 'gasp!' of surprise. The man responsible probably thinks he has been clever.

    You see, what has actually transpired is not so much a 'blasphemy law' but a law that is unenforceable. The law, as written, cannot be used in the courts.... and deliberately so.

    It's an Irish solution to an Irish problem: We need a law if the article remains in the constitution. The constitution won't be changed, so the article will remain. However, the crime is outdated and we actually do not want anybody to be charged under this law. Therefore, the only remaining choice is to draft a law that is unworkable.

    Is it's a silly, high-cost manoeuvre? Yes.

    But it's a tried and tested method.

    Why it was rushed through is anyones guess - a mixture of pandering to a far-right that may not currently exist in Ireland (but one suspects is probably going to gain ground in recession times), a particular individual trying to score a quick victory or just an ill thought out move.

    Some of our politicians are quite slow to recognise the obvious and will latch on to an idea.

    --
    Concrete analysis...
  249. Re:Jesus titty-fucking Christ by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

    Christians are just wimps, and easy pickings. And yet people fear them more than the Muslims.

    Your choice of words indicates the answer that you're expecting. "the Muslims" are something "over there", a long way away, and by implication the Christians are (relatively) close by.

    I had been considering Ireland as a potential recipient for my taxation (i.e., by emigrating) ; somehow I think not now. (Though the malign and pervasive influence of religion did not come as a surprise to me.)

    --
    Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  250. No One called Ghandi by t_ban · · Score: 1

    Wasn't it Ghandi who said

    There was no one called Ghandi.
    At least, no one famous by that name.
    But perhaps you're referring to Mohandas Karamchand GANDHI, the apostle of peace.
    Do look it up, and please do not repeat this common mistake.

    --
    First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win. -Gandhi
  251. Walsh exaggerates a reasonable concern by jeffersontan · · Score: 1

    What Jason Walsh writes is incorrect. The bill's amendment concerning blasphemy does not "seek to shield religious belief from criticism". The amendment to the Defamation Bill defines what the constitution does not, and so clarifies the law. It describes blasphemous matter as .. matter "that is *grossly abusive* or insulting in relation to matters held sacred by any religion, thereby causing outrage among a substantial number of the adherents of that religion; *and he or she intends*, by the publication of the matter concerned, to cause such outrage." (emphasis mine)

    (source: http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/frontpage/2009/0429/1224245599892.html)

    Other countries have similar laws to protect ethnic minorities from unwarranted contempt. The above definition is actually narrower, as it specifically pertains to

    - grossly abusive attacks,
    - to what is held to be sacred by a religious group, such as religious items,
    - and where the purpose is to cause outrage.

    This does not include criticizing a doctrine, the actions of a bishop or the pope, nor the text from ecclesiastical literature. Perhaps we need to remember that criticism seeks as its objective some form of correction. While outrage may be a response of those criticized, the former is not the objective of criticism.

    Freedom of speech should not include grossly abusive speech that would take away from other people their own freedom to hold beliefs without anxiety about arbitrary gross insults. Engaging in healthy criticism and the debate that ensues is one thing, and is welcome. There is a meeting of minds and a clash of ideas. It is an entirely different thing to grossly abuse the beliefs of a group of people concerning what they hold to be sacred matter simply for the sake of insulting them.

    It would be nice if governments didn't need to legislate such things, and for the citizenry to exercise common decency and engage instead in honest criticism whose objective is to right wrongs in the context of dialogue. Unfortunately, we have many published celebrities today who instead exercise their ego and vile contempt for those whom they disagree with, and copycats aplenty with blogs, YouTube accounts and art degrees at their disposal.

  252. Stephen Fryup ( Annoymnous Noel) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Homophobic and Racist language is outlawed in England but verbal and policitacl attacks against those who hold Religious beliefs are par for the course. Many people of different faiths have lost thier jobs simply because they have dared to wear a symbol to show thier religious belief. And this is a country where the police fly pink flags outside police stations in support of gay lobby groups.

    One government minister under the guidance of an unrepresentative lobby group wants to ban children from using the word "gay" which in its casual everyday meaning - just means "naff". So much for free speech.

    Ironically the people who support Politically Correctness have a different mind set when it comes to religion and are all for any speech that antagonises people with sincerely held religious beliefs simply because they believe they are intellectually inferior and wrong just for beleiving in God and having religion.

    I am not Religious AT ALL but I'm all for free speech and that means being free to comment on homosexuals blacks Irish Catholics English idiots and the hypocritical endorsers of politicial correctness.

  253. Where's the political correctness for atheists? by smchris · · Score: 1

    Ireland is in the EU. This is fine with the Hague? Europeans should be as ashamed of Ireland as the U.S. is of Kentucky (Creation Museum) -- and, well, yeah, several other nearby states.

  254. Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a Christian country not some "multi-cult" shit hole. If that law keeps Sasha Cohen off their streets then good for them!

  255. Re:Jesus titty-fucking Christ by notrandomly · · Score: 1

    Its 2010

    Is that you, John Titor?

  256. All religious books by He+who+knows · · Score: 1

    all religious books are blasphemous to the FSM. now we can get rid of them all.

  257. Re: The default position is "I don't know". by mea37 · · Score: 1

    It's interesting that you list Occam's Razor, because outside of pop culture nobody actually interprets it as "proving" anything.

    Yes, scientists examine the unknown as the opportunity provides. There are so far no tests of string theory (though there have been some recent claims in that space, which may prove interesting). That does not lead scientists to say string theory is false. Likewise there are no tests of whether God exists, and one of the stronger agnostic positions is that there will never be such a test. To go from there to "there is no God" is a leap of faith.

    You talk about "what has been covered and understood"; well, provide evidence that has covered the non-existance of God and the debate will be over.

    Your comments about the stories of "acts of God" make me think you're hung up on the idea that to allow for belief in God, one has to believe in the Bible as a literal history. This is entirely incorrect.

    (As an aside, I think atheists who dismiss stories of miracles on the grounds that the violate laws of physics perhaps miss the point of what a miracle is supposed to be, but that's neither here nor there.)

  258. Sex Abuse by DiSKiLLeR · · Score: 1

    What I don't get is... what IS it with Catholic Churches, Ireland, and Child Sex Abuse??

    Breaking Story: New 'shock' report into church sex abuse

    URL: http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,25818510-5005962,00.html

    New 'shock' report into church sex abuse
    Article from: Agence France-Presse

    July 21, 2009 11:19pm

    A SHOCKING new report has identified hundreds of victims of child sex abuse by Irish Catholic priests, officials and clerics say, two months after a landmark study found "endemic" mistreatment.
    A Government-appointed commission of investigation headed by a judge has been probing allegations of abuse by priests in the archdiocese of Dublin - the country's biggest - since March 2006.

    Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has warned that the report - being presented to Justice Minister Dermot Ahern on Tuesday - would "shock us all".

    It is the first time the state has investigated how the once-powerful Church in mainly Catholic Ireland has run its affairs.

    It probed whether the Church reported abuse allegations or attempted to "obstruct, prevent or interfere with the proper investigation" of complaints.

    A spokeswoman for the archdiocese said the Church authorities had identified between 400 and 450 people that allege they were abused by one of 152 Dublin priests since 1940.

    "I would like to stress that that is a very conservative estimate and is likely to rise," she said.

    It is not yet clear when the report will be published. "The minister will refer the report to the Attorney General Paul Gallagher to see how best to proceed," the justice spokesman said.

    In May Ireland was rocked by a landmark report that concluded sexual, physical and emotional abuse was "endemic" in Church-run industrial and reformatory schools, orphanages and other childcare institutions dating back to the 1930s.

    Prime Minister Brian Cowen said it contained a "shattering litany of abuse of children in care in this country over many decades".

    He told Parliament the report was the gravest in the history of the country and contained "such horrific stories that it is difficult to know where to begin in talking about it".

    This scary question remains: Would I be breaking Irelands new anti-blasphemy law by bringing this up?

    --
    You can tell how powerful someone is by the magnitude of the crime they can commit and be able to get away with.
  259. It's a ruse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many cynics would have the opinion that this is a deliberate distraction by Fianna Fail (ruling party) of the dire economic mess that they have made and of the necessary cleanup (public sector reform in particular). I believe there is nobody lobbying for this (including the Catholic church). It's a non issue.

  260. Agnosticism is a Character Strength Not a Weakness by srobert · · Score: 1

    Your comment makes it seem as if the agnostic is merely a person who lacks the courage to take a side in an important fight. It is as though you feel theists are perpetrating nothing but evil, and if we agnostics refuse to help defeat them by marching under your atheist banner, then we are the lowliest cowards imaginable. But my take is that both atheists and theists are usually reasonably good people. My agnosticism stems from a philosophy that I do not attempt to force myself to claim to know the answer to a question that I have no way of knowing the answer to ("belief"). I do not see that this is a character flaw on my part, or that it prevents me from speaking up against injustice, whether that injustice is perpetrated by theists, atheists, or even other agnostics. I am not as you say "hiding behind agnosticism". I am courageously admitting that I do not know and have no way of knowing the answer to the proposition "God exists." Unless you know something I don't, you don't know the answer either. To insist that we must take a stand on the proposition being true or false is not courageous. It is merely arrogant.

  261. Re: Proofs of non-existence of God by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

    There is a new kind of science (or maybe it is just appplied mathematical philosophy) emerging, which so far does not operate by absolute proof, but rather, does the following: 1. It posits a set of operating principles or constraints for how a complex system will behave over time. 2. It creates computerized simulations of a system that operates according to those constraints. 3. It looks to see if that system generates emergent structure or behaviour that is strongly analogous with (isomorphic to) a real complex system. If there appears to be a strong similarity with traits of the real system, the set of operating principles is deemed to be a plausible explanatory mechanism for the emergent structure/behaviour.

    The very complexity of the systems is what renders the generative mechanism plausible, in that it is combinatorically unlikely that the observed emergent regularities would "just happen" if the process constraints were not driving things in that direction.

    These kinds of simulations, using the mathematics of game theory, and factoring in thermodynamics principles of systems trending toward energy efficiency, for example, can generate plausible explanations for social constraints that are found in human and animal societies, such as "Do unto others" and "thou shalt not kill" type moral rules, as well as rules stipulating payment of a tax/tythe to a hierarchical coordinating authority in exchange for protections and energy efficiencies offered by a functioning group.

    My personal "belief" and it is only that at this stage, is that these simulable models will be able to produce plausible explanations for all of the significant, universal aspects of religious group and adherant behaviour, including the workings of authority and social guidance systems based on obedience to a god/powerful adult/king figure posited and taught as the source of wisdom and punishment reward.

    That would not be a proof of the non-existence of "real, instantiated God", but it would be an explanation for all of the relevant related human behaviour, and thus would be support for the alternative hypothesis of "socially constructed God (God the utilitarian abstract concept, like money, or taxes, or shunning of the uncooperative)".

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  262. Re: Proofs of non-existence of God by mea37 · · Score: 1

    I don't know that I see this approach as that radically separate from what science has always done. It's never been about "absolute proof", and every scientific fact is subject to further investigation.

    So someone theorizes "this complex set of principles could lead to an observed phenomenon" and that is tested; fine. If that generates a useful model of a complex system, that's as good a starting point as any - though that model is still only a model, and is subject to further investigation just like any model used in science. The main danger - as with any science - is over-interpretation (especially since formal logic rejects a fallacy concluding a cause from an effect).

    Yet, explaining every aspect of "how" things came to be as they are would say nothing about whether some sort of god was behind it all. Even showing that society would evolve to believe soemthing even were that belief false, would not prove the belief to be false.

    I think you've acknowledged as much in your own post, so I guess while this is an interesting side note I don't see how it relates to the agnostic/atheist debate.

  263. So, you do NOT read the news by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    Because recently (granted in northern ireland which is controlled by the brits) immigrants were chased from their houses and forced to flee. And this follows years of troubles in which thousands were killed for belonging to a certain church.

    Yeah, Ireland is different alright. How exactly?

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  264. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

    1: Pass a law preventing making fun of religion

    2: Start a new, silly religion (like I believe in an all-powerful, all-knowing being who needs your MONEY!)

    3: Profit!

    That's different from all other religions how?

    For most religions, the order of the first two steps is reversed.

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  265. Let the punishment fit the crime! by Xylene2301 · · Score: 1

    They should burn offenders at the stake! Or at the very least, bring back the ducking chair. Slashdot physicists: What makes witches float anyway?

  266. Understanding Faith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > God says: "If you believed me I will show you."
    Why would God require such a precondition? Does a penchant for believing fantastic, unverifiable stories make one holy?

  267. Re: The default position is "I don't know". by E++99 · · Score: 1

    Science is "natural philosophy". It is a subset of philosophy which is constrained to the natural world. This constraint is powerful, because natural evidence from the natural world can be objectively measured and requires no subjective agreements. In a sense it is the easiest branch of philosophy for this reason.

    However the idea that the natural world is all of reality, and thus science is actually the study of everything (the doctrine of naturalism is one of these "extraordinary claims" that you mention, for which there is no extraordinary evidence.

    Many religious claims (those to do with specific acts of Gods) don't even stand up to basic logical tests of internal self-consistency nor conformance with the known laws of physics

    One could -- and many did -- say the same things about the initial claims of quantum mechanics.

  268. blasphemy? by dbehr · · Score: 1

    does this pave the way for the enforcement of sharia? what if I'm insulting mohamed, is that blasphemy?

  269. An Irish Gent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As an Irish Gent, I think that I must add this to the mix, since it would seem that this has been hijacked by the extremes of US religious fervour. The truth is that in Ireland, while there is a proportion of the population who do adamantly believe in the bible above all, the majority of the population under the age of 30 would, I would think, consider themselves either non-practicing Catholics, agnostic, or atheist. Religion in this country was, up to the original repulsion of this act, the main cornerstone of Irish life, in almost every way. In recent years however, there has been a major backlash against the many abuses members of the church committed against certain vulnerable members of society, most notably, children. In fact, it should be noted that many of the cases of child sexual and other abuse were exposed in Ireland before they were in many other countries, including, I believe, the US. Almost every Irish comedian has made it a point of ripping the Church, and religion in general, to shreads, the most apt example being Father Ted. Also, because there is a state run education system, we do not suffer from the bane of creationism as much as the US (although, for some bizarre reason we still have some, but of course, Darwinism states that the weak will be weeded out, so itâ(TM)s just a matter of time). We are not, as the introduction of this bill might suggest, some shower of backward, unwashed, bible thumpers. It is just unfortunate that our government is a shower of incompetent, dim witted, soon to be unemployed, farm boys.

  270. Re: Proofs of non-existence of God by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

    Is agnostic/atheist an either/or, or is it a dimension. For example, which category would your put someone in who says "I believe it is overwhelmingly improbable that there is a god behind it all for these reasons: 1. Perfectly adequate alternative plausible explanations for the phenomenology usually associated with God. 2. Gratuitously excessive complexity of a system that includes not only the observed physical states and behaviours (which don't need an extra explanation for the way they are) but also the god thing itself and the very complex way, presumeably, that they interact.
    3. Gross imprecision in definition of what god is or is like. For example, if god (and special parts of his domain, like heaven) is in any way physical, then he/it is not an explanation for anything, but merely a new subject for scientific investigation. If on the other hand God is not physical, yet not just a product of our collective imagination, then what rough category would one put him in, with respect to everything else? What properties do things in that category have? Are any of these properties measurable, verifiable in any way? Is there any room for this category in a rational ontology tied to observation?"

    Would a person believing thus be an atheist or an agnostic? I would call them an atheist, even though they are not saying "There is no God" has the same necessary truth as "1 + 1 = 2", but rather are saying "There is no god" in the same way they would say "If I jump off this cliff I will fall to my death because of gravity and the fact that rocks are hard and pointy." Not necessarily true, but overwhelmingly probable.

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  271. Yet more from your own sources by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

    http://www.allaboutphilosophy.org/agnostic.htm - "many agnostics are "practical atheists,"".

    http://www.allaboutphilosophy.org/atheism.htm - "There are two basic forms of atheism: "strong" atheism and "weak" atheism. Strong atheism is the doctrine that there is no God or gods. Weak atheism is the disbelief in or denial of the existence of God or gods. Weak atheism is often confused with agnosticism, the lack of belief or disbelief in God or gods, and skepticism, the doctrine that the absolute knowledge of God's existence is unobtainable by mere man."

    (And http://www.merriam-webster.com/ only gives your definition under "broadly" - according to them, there is no primary term that can be used for those who simply don't believe in God.)

  272. Re: Is science the study of everything? by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

    I will admit that science is not tasked with the study of the "woo eee woo eee" world.

    Domains that are only about subjective agreement are perhaps best suited to cocktail party repartee or the battlefield.

    However, there are domains, such as religion, which have a subjective agreement component, and a utilitarian social organization component. The connection of the form and content of the typical subjective agreements in the domain to the social benefits can be studied scientifically, as can the question of how these forms of subjective agreement evolved.

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  273. Re:Will at be enforced fairly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, duh. However, diet IS a word, so if somebody used the word diety, a native English speaker could infer what was meant and would be okay with it, unless they were a pedantic arsehole. ;)

  274. The analogy is poor by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

    At best

    1. Re:The analogy is poor by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Is it? There is indeed a major difference between choosing to believe in something, and choosing to believe in nothing at all. The dinner analogy fits perfectly. We don't call those that eat beef "chicken-atheistic", since they chose to eat the beef. The person who eats nothing at all is the one who goes hungry. And then gets a little bitter and passive-aggressive about it.

  275. I see, good thing I'm not atheist by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

    However, the atheist simply points out that what you're eating is not, in fact, meat. And then bites. And let's face it, choosing to disbelieve all but one divinity is not the same thing as choosing meats for dinner, if your ethics have so little importance to you, I suggest you revise them.

    1. Re:I see, good thing I'm not atheist by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      That's why it's called an analogy. It IS more important than choosing things for dinner, but the analogy is valid. There is a very important difference between picking between various choices, and failing to choose at all. While I understand it's quite vogue these days to recite trite Hitchens-esque aphorisms like "Christians are atheists for everything but Christianity", by and large these arguments are not rational, nor right, but merely clever-sounding. Next I'll expect you to claim that Occam's Razor proves the non-existence of God...

      Not choosing to believe in anything is itself a choice, and not a very good one at that. It essentially a form of philosophical cowardice, that a person is so afraid to be wrong, he fails to decide to do anything at all - which is itself a failure.

  276. Jehova! by formfeed · · Score: 0
    I don't think it ought to be blasphemy, just saying 'Jehovah'.

    Jehovah! Jehovah! Jehovah!

  277. I am LEPRICAUN AGNOSTIC. Always wanted to say that by TiggertheMad · · Score: 1

    Well, your unicorns and leprechauns aren't like any I have read about in folklore, but lest suppose they have all the qualities of the christian god that make him/her/it so impossible to prove or disprove. In that case, I have absolutely no problem saying they could exist. I am a 'odd unicorn agnostic'.

    See, I am not trying to use it as a dodge to leave some chance for their existence in the argument. I am simply trying to be honest and scientific as possible. What can I say about invisible, intangible creatures? Absolutely nothing. They could exist, work out a good rigorous test and we will talk. The most accurate and honest thing to say is that you cannot say anything about said beings. A conventional unicorn was supposedly a living tangible thing. They didn't exist. They would have left traces and been detectable in some fashion, as most tangible creatures are. Lack of physical evidence for such a creature is pretty convincing. But God? Untouchable, unknowable, unmeasurable. Pretty hard to dream up a test that would confirm or deny existence of such a creature.

    I keep trying to tell you that you are operating on faith because you have nothing to prove that god doesn't exist. That what religious faith is, a belief in something absent of fact or proof. You are willing to take a side in a debate that requires faith on way or another to participate.

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
  278. Re:I am LEPRICAUN AGNOSTIC. Always wanted to say t by JerkBoB · · Score: 1

    I keep trying to tell you that you are operating on faith because you have nothing to prove that god doesn't exist. That what religious faith is, a belief in something absent of fact or proof. You are willing to take a side in a debate that requires faith on way or another to participate.

    It seems that we are talking past one another, or engaging in some weird exercise in pedantry. You keep claiming that my position on the question of God's (or leprechauns, etc.) existence is somehow based in faith. That I believe in their nonexistence, based on nothing other than my personal desire for my position to be true. If this were the case, I would agree with you that I am somehow a faithful atheist.

    All that having been said, my position is not based in faith. It is based in pragmatism. I do not, in fact, believe, have faith, hope, pray, desire, etc. that God does not exist. I simply assume it is so, just as I assume likewise that neither leprechauns nor unicorns nor Zeus nor ghosts nor astral power centers exist. There is no evidence for these things, therefore I do not give any credence to the idea that they might exist. This is very, very different from a faith-based position, in that were solid evidence for their existence to be presented, I would happily change my outlook.

    My original point, several posts ago, is that I will agree with anyone who says that it is possible that God exists. It IS possible! It's just unlikely, to the degree that it's irrelevant! Even if there is some higher power responsible for the creation of the universe, the idea that said power cares a rat's ass about whom I sleep with or whether or not I cook the flesh of a beast in its mother's milk or whether or not I attend church every Sunday is preposterous.

    The reason I take a firm stance on this, rather than some wishy-washy "well, I don't really know, no one really knows, that nutjob who wants to stone my sister for having sex before she's married MIGHT be on to something, or at least it's OK in his religion" is that I am deeply troubled by the acceptance of a belief system which encourages uncritical acceptance of dogma and discourages logical evaluation of evidence. In the end, if one is not buying in to all of the baggage of a religion, then what's the fucking point? Either you believe that your god or gods want you do do shit to keep them happy and give you eternal life, or you don't. A vague belief in some higher power is harmless, but it's also useless.

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    A host is a host from coast to coast...
    Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
  279. I dont believe you are an Athiest. hahaha...*ahem* by TiggertheMad · · Score: 1

    is that I will agree with anyone who says that it is possible that God exists. It IS possible! It's just unlikely,

    Then you aren't an Atheist. Dictionary.com: Atheist - a person who denies or disbelieves the existence of a supreme being or beings.

    Sounds to me like you are just Agnostic if you are willing to accept that there could be a god. I think your primary complaint is dogma, not faith. Personally, I think that religion is great for people, and organized religion is the worst idea ever. Its only when it gets organized that it gets ugly.

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    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
  280. Sorry to break this to you... by plnix0 · · Score: 1

    ...but real life is far worse than V for Vendetta.