Posts tagged ‘united states’

January 18th, 2010

Jesus Loves You… with a Bullet In Your Eye

What Would Jesus Do? Probably not quote himself on a weapon used to kill an enemy.

Oh the irony.

Whether they knew it or not, American soldiers have been displaying Biblical messages on their weapons. A Michigan company, Trijicon, has been inscribing New Testament verses in code on their high-powered rifle sights.

Seen here is a coded reference to John chapter 8 verse 12: "Then spake Jesus again unto them, saying, I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life." (photo from ABC News)

U.S. military rules specifically prohibit the proselytizing of any religion in Iraq or Afghanistan and were drawn up in order to prevent criticism that the U.S. was embarked on a religious “Crusade” in its war against al Qaeda and Iraqi insurgents.

Trijicon confirmed to ABCNews.com that it adds the biblical codes to the sights sold to the U.S. military. Tom Munson, director of sales and marketing for Trijicon, which is based in Wixom, Michigan, said the inscriptions “have always been there” and said there was nothing wrong or illegal with adding them. Munson said the issue was being raised by a group that is “not Christian.”

“We believe that America is great when its people are good,” says the [Trijicon] Web site. “This goodness has been based on Biblical standards throughout our history, and we will strive to follow those morals.”

“It’s wrong, it violates the Constitution, it violates a number of federal laws,” said Michael “Mikey” Weinstein of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, an advocacy group that seeks to preserve the separation of church and state in the military.

“This is probably the best example of violation of the separation of church and state in this country,” said Weinstein. “It’s literally pushing fundamentalist Christianity at the point of a gun against the people that we’re fighting. We’re emboldening an enemy.”

(source)

I realize that Trijicon is a private company that can basically do what it wants with its numbering systems. However, their products were sold to the secular government of the United States. By placing proselytizing messages, even in secret, on their products, they are endangering the delicate balance we hold here at home with the separation of church and state as well as the crumbling image we hold abroad. Especially after the reign of George W. Bush and his Jesus-is-coming-let’s-bomb-the-fuckers attitude, we are seen (even more so than usual) as a bullying Christian nation that will kill in the name of Jesus. These secretive methods just hammer home the antagonistic, anti-foreign-anything image we need to shed.

December 9th, 2009

Experts Give Up on Anti-Science America

Count on the best satirical source for news, The Onion, to hit on the truth behind our culture more than any of the “serious” news organizations. Case-in-point: Nation’s Experts Give Up, an amusing lament by scientists and experts on how Americans have ignored their advice for years. They give up!

“Since you don’t seem to care about things you don’t understand, screw you. We quit” [said Dr. Simon Peavy, vice-president of the National Association of Experts].

“My final piece of expert advice,” Peavy added, “is that all of you people should just go fuck yourselves.”

According to Peavy, despite the vast amounts of scientifically proven and historically sound advice provided by the nation’s experts, the National Association of Experts could cite no instances of advice being followed in the manner they had intended.

According to FDA spokesperson Jonathan Landau, the exiting advisors will be missed, but the nation must move forward. “We, of course, are deeply saddened to lose America’s most knowledgeable individuals in every field,” Landau said. “But at the same time, it’s important to recognize that their advice, however well-informed or well-intentioned, was almost always impractical.”

Landau said he plans to fill his own vacant advisory positions with “positive-minded, people-friendly sexperts, advice columnists and astrologers” as soon as funding can be arranged.

I spotted an exchange about this article on facebook:

FB-fundyCan you get any better than that fabulous Colbert quote immediately followed by a stellar example of Christian willful ignorance? Lisa admits that she’ll sit at the bottom of the intellectual heap and ignore anyone smarter than her so long as it fits what she thinks about her imaginary skygod friend, the “Man at the Top”. Being proud of ignoring wisdom, learning, science, and intelligence is ridiculous and yet oh-so-common within Fundamentalist circles.

August 25th, 2009

Science and Religon: Best Frenemies?

heliocentrism

Chris Mooney and Sheril Kirshenbaum of the Guardian.co.uk have called for a truce. They’re pushing science and religion into the center of the ring to call a draw. At the crux of the conflict is the topic of evolution–which we should all know is still a ridiculous point of contention in the United States due to the vast scientific ignorance of the largely religious American public.

We’ve read Richard Dawkins’ strong position on evolution vs. creationism. Should scientists and atheists be so adamantly vocal and in-your-face confrontational about the incongruity between the empirical universe and the invisible land of the spiritual? Or should we be open to partnerships with people of faith who support the cause of science?

It often appears as though [author Richard] Dawkins and … the New Atheists… want to change the country’s science community in a lasting way. They’d have scientists and defenders of reason be far more confrontational and blunt: No more coddling the faithful, no tolerating nonscientific beliefs. Scientific institutions, in their view, ought to stop putting out politic PR about science and religion being compatible.

A smaller but highly regarded nonprofit organisation called the National Centre for Science Education has drawn at least as much of the New Atheists’ ire, however. Based in Oakland, California, the centre is the leading organisation that promotes and defends the teaching of evolution in school districts across the country.

In this endeavour, it has, of necessity, made frequent alliances with religious believers who also support the teaching of evolution, seeking to forge a broad coalition capable of beating back the advances of fundamentalists who want to weaken textbooks or science standards.

[And here's the kicker] In this context, the New Atheists have chosen their course: confrontation. And groups like the NCSE have chosen the opposite route: Work with all who support the teaching of evolution regardless of their beliefs, and attempt to sway those who are uncertain but perhaps convincible.

So which way would best serve the needs of this ignorant population: Rallying the troops (or, rather, herding the cats) of adamant atheists for a duel lead more people to science as they see religion fall in defeat, or would a soft-spoken, more ecumenical approach fare better in the long run?

I must be a dichotomy. In my heart, I’m an ecumenical type of person; I would rather make peace than war. Despite my sarcastic banter and ranting, I dearly love my religious friends and family despite their mythical beliefs. I care more about connecting with people than proving them wrong. I think you can draw more bees with honey, as the saying goes. Still, I support being a loud and proud freethinker. We should not be ashamed! I freely and joyfully mock aspects of faith and practice that are ridiculous. When I first recognized the ludicrousness of my own beliefs, I was finally able to leave them behind. A little poking doesn’t hurt if it inspires people to think! Check out my post about Ridicule vs. Politeness and weigh in.

I just hope that science does “win out” in the end. If we are to grow as a nation and increase the intellectual and social wealth of our society, we need to get rid of this anti-scientific bias.

July 4th, 2009

Freedom Rings (But Sounds Better Autotuned)

© alykat
Dear United States of America,

Today is the day we recognize your childhood rebellion against the overbearing parental units of foreign power. May it be a lovely time to recognize that you don’t actually know everything and can be a bit of an obnoxious twat once in a while, but you’re still totally awesome and I love you to bits.

–GG

In honor of the beloved values of liberty and freedom, I’ve chosen to feature three of my favorite songs by The Gregory Brothers. They adapted, mixed, and autotuned three pivotal speeches from the 20th century–making them more memorable than ever. I hope you love them too!

  • “Martin Luther King Sings” samples the civil rights leader’s famous “I Have a Dream” speech given in 1963.
  • “John F. Kennedy backed by band from the future” brings new life to possibly the most stirring inaugural address of our history–given by former President John F. Kennedy.
  • “Winston Churchill backed by band from the future” (yes, a non-American!) is my favorite of the three adapted from the former British Prime Minister’s 1941 Great Declaration against the Nazi threat.

The mp3s are available for free download.
View a playlist of all three songs is below the cut:
read more »