Tuesday, October 25, 2005

Moving forward in reverse...


For those of you that are familiar with this 'blog, you will then know of my loathing for religion. All religion.

But recent events have turned this loathing into a growing fear of what is gradually emerging from the very thick buckle of the Bible Belt of North America that seems to be somewhat at odds with the rise of a similar blind, many-armed monster rising out of the East.

"Cory Burnell [or Charleston, South Carolina] wants to set up a Christian nation within the United States where abortion is illegal, gay marriage is banned, schools cannot teach evolution, children can pray to Jesus in public schools and the Ten Commandments are posted publicly."

I'm not entirely clued up on American law, but what I do know is, the United States of America chose British case law as the basis of its own. Also, like Britain, America has a very clear division between church and state, and with good reason, too.

To that end, Burnell, 29, left the Republican Party, moved from California and founded Christian Exodus two years ago with the goal of redirecting the United States by "redeeming" one state at a time."

A redirection is somewhat of an understatement. But then again, the current president of the United States of America seems to be complicit with such intent and would hardly stand in the way:

"The push comes at a time when Christian fundamentalism is a growing force in U.S. politics, displays of the Ten Commandments in government buildings are spurring litigation and President George W. Bush is touting the evangelical Christian credentials of Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers."

More worryingly:

"The organization's Web site says if it does not meet its goal of change, it will work to secede from the United States.

South Carolina was the first state to secede from the union in 1860, and the first shots of the U.S. Civil War were fired from Charleston's Battery onto Fort Sumter."

But things get worse:

"A British-based professor of sociology has testified in a US federal court that intelligent design (ID) is a scientific concept, not a religious one."

For those of you not familiar with so-called Intelligent Design, it is merely a re-branding of the old and tired and thoroughly exhausted Creationist movement.

A change of name is simply one more pathetic tactic in their never-ending denialist vendetta against the scientific community.

"Professor Fuller was called as a witness by the Dover Area School Board in Pennsylvania to help defend its decision to allow intelligent design to be taught in science classes, The Guardian reports.

Subsequently, a group of parents began legal proceedings against the school board, demanding that ID be removed from the science curriculum. They argue that it violates the constitutional separation of church and state, and is merely creationism in disguise."

Which is entirely correct.

Any connection between church and state must be a tenuous one.

"However, Professor Fuller holds that because scientists have inferred the existence of a designer from observations of biological phenomena, it should count as scientific.

"It seems to me in many respects the cards are stacked against radical, innovative views getting a fair hearing in science these days," he said."

My loathing for such talk-speak enrages me to the point of exhaustion.

There is nothing .. nothing even remotely 'radical' or 'innovative' about Intelligent Design:

"But the idea that an intelligent designer might be responsible for complex forms of life is hardly new or even radical. It was first put forward in 1802 by William Paley in his book Natural Theology."

Put simply, Intelligent Design is not an avenue for scientific enquiry. It is instead a means of closing down the very pursuit of knowledge, especially the pursuit of the kind of knowledge that undermines the values that these utterly blind and feckless morons believe in.

Put even more simply, the proponents of Intelligent Design would prefer that we take the word of their god and their teachings as holding to be true and cease and desist all further pursuit of knowledge.

Religion is a cancer. Over the years, we have developed ways of dealing with this cancer, and in time, we have managed to strip away those unhealthy cells and bring life to the dead flesh they occupied.

In time, we will remove them from the very body of society and we will be clean once more.

However, those remnants that now persist are only too aware of their impending demise and like all aggressive agents, their actions become ever more destructive.

In their shallow minds, this world seen through their coloured and blurred eyes would be better left as a baron husk, bereft of life than exist in any way, shape of form bereft of religion.

If there was ever a case for the existence of evil; of which I have yet to have such a thing presented to me, these people are the embodiment of evil, since it is in their minds that such things have a foundation in reality.

"For there is nothing either good or bad, thinking makes it so."
~ William Shakespeare 1564-1616, Hamlet, II.ii

Merely thinking such things makes them true...

10 Comments:

Blogger Onkroes said...

"Intelligent Design" implies an Intelligence - it doesn't imply God (as I understand it) - So either we have aliens of some sort to thank for the 'design' we witness, or..... maybe something that looks like Intelligence when viewed from a very narrow angle.

3:37 pm  
Blogger Wayne Smallman said...

Like I said, it's just a rouse. A route to obfuscation and a cheap ploy employed by the defeated.

By dropping all reference to theistic novelties and other such cumbersome non-scientific nonsense, they hope to come at their nemesis from another angle, appearing as a sensible scientific alternative to plain old common sense and logic .. you know? Those awkward stalwarts of human reason that keep getting in the way of their agenda.

Very, very sad and quite pathetic...

4:00 pm  
Blogger DJ said...

Wow, if we ever met, we'd get along like long lost pals, just on this topic alone

2:13 am  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

It's very saddening that this is actually an issue. I completely agree, religion is causing far more problems than it can ever hope to solve. Unfortunately, it has been this way for thousands of years. Wars, intolerance, and mass persecution have been caused by religion in the past, and I would be very happy to say that it won't happen again. I can't, however. There will probably be a religious group one of these days who will claim that, like all other religions do, that their way is the only way, but they will be different. They will preach of a Second Inquisition, and sensible people like us shall be killed or worse by them. Maybe I'm just paranoid. I hope I am.

1:41 am  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

the funniest thing about the christian exodus movement is that the guy who started it still lives in california. i believe there are only 6 or so people who have moved to the new "bible state", and the founder has said he "plans to move there in the next 2 years"

it was on The Daily Show during their Evolution:Schmevolution week...

2:21 am  
Blogger Shirley said...

I grew up in South Carolina, they're already so fundamentalist Baptist (and still reliving the Civil War from the 1860's) that they really think they're not really part of the United States anyway. Those six families didn't need to move there. That state already has more than it's share of true believers.

3:09 am  
Blogger LiVEwiRe said...

Religion is one of the things I get really, really touchy about. I do not enjoy thinking about it as I get exasperated. I do, however, want one of the little Fish with Feet for my car. You know... modified from being the 'jesus fish' and has legs added... ahh, is that evolution I hear? =) Then again, I just sort of like to irritate people. meh.

3:44 am  
Blogger Edie said...

Religion would dry up and flake off if socialism took hold.

4:12 am  
Blogger Wayne Smallman said...

Hi guys!

And thanks for all of the feedback.

Lot's to think about...

9:52 am  
Blogger Katie said...

Hi Wayne, I seem to loathe Religion too.. we share that dislike for it at least! I never could understand much about it when I got taught it in secondary school.

I agree with edie, if socialism took hold, religion would dry up, that's a good thought! At least you won't be bored thinking about all the feedback!

1:37 am  

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