Davoud:
> > > I tried to heed Richard Dawkins' call, issued at a TED Talk and in
> > > other places, to be not just an atheist, but a militant atheist,
Warren Oates:
> > I've never understood that. It just turns "Atheism" into some kind of
> > formal Religion.
Todd Allcock:
> Maybe. There are times when militant atheism is warranted, IMO, like
> when like your local school board wants to waste money building
> "intelligent design" into your schools' curriculum. Other than stuff
> like that, I don't get bent out of shape over things like whether stores
> say "Merry Christmas" instead of "Happy Holidays"- modern religion is a
> part of our culture, so as long as Christmas is a legal holiday, cities
> and towns are free, IMO, to erect "religious" displays like nativity
> scenes just like they put up Christmas trees and Santas. Why ban one
> mythical story and not another? ;)
A recent poll revealed that among religious people (i.e., most of the
world) atheists have the same level of respect and trusts as rapists.
You can't battle so-called intelligent design with atheism; you would
lose every time. You have to fight it with the law of the land. Expose
it as a thinly veiled religious doctrine and use the First Amendment's
establishment clause.
> > I'm an atheist, in that I don't believe in a god. Beyond that, I don't
> > care, and I really don't want to argue with religious people or agree
> > with Atheists that there are inconsistencies in the Bible (of course
> > there are, just like there are inconsistencies in Raymond Chandler and
> > who cares).
> I think the hope is that militant atheists will accelerate the (hopefully)
> inevitable evolution of the general population away from the fairy
> stories, and their associated baggage, of our ancestors.
Do militant (in-your-face) evangelical Christians stoke your desire to
adopt their superstitions? It happens sometimes that a smart believer
begins to look around and think about the way the world really is and
realizes that the existence of a god is extremely unlikely. But the
general rule remains that you can't reason people out of something that
they haven't been reasoned into. It's still the opiate of the masses.