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Comments

Rana

They are great. A very well-chosen selection. Always thought-provoking.

However one general point - please keep these little pithy words of wisdom coming, but there is really no need to embed it in so much padding "this is an atheist meme, they are on Facebook, spread the word, etc"

You really don't need any of that description around each quote. It is good enough, and highly appreciated, to just get a little snippet of sense from you each day to pass the time between your more lengthy blog posts. We know what they are. Like a "tweet" I suppose.

Keep it up anyway.

chicago dyke

the war never ends. also, we always lose. that's the depressing part of being an atheist. you're drafted into the Cause by declaring your status. from there, it's mostly drudgery. still, we battle on. what choice do we have? i'm not willing to give up my uterus to the sky fairies.

Joreth

I don't have Facebook, so I get these memes from your blog. I then re-blog them in my own LiveJournal and I tweet them. I love the meme, but sometimes it can be a challenge to condense it into 140 characters. Have you considered doing a Twitter version?

Gilgamesh

Gretta - I keep up with you on facebook and here at the blog, I just wanted to say, thanks for what you do.

techskeptic

I like them posted here.

backoffscience.wordpress.com

So many of these are totally spot on, so good to get some actual positive things in atheism. But you've got to see that you can't criticise the beliefs of religion to religious people. It is a moral act. They can't accept what you say and keep their belief. If atheists just concentrated on what relgious people did, not what they believe, the world might be a better place. You can't believe in religious freedom and also believe you are free to try and get the religious believer to say things which would destroy their faith if they did. That's a conversion attempt, a conversion into nothing admittedly, but a conversion all the same.

Greta Christina

backoffscience.wordpress.com: I don't understand why you think that's a bad thing. Why is it bad to try to persuade people that they're mistaken about something? We do it about all kinds of other ideas. Why is it bad to do it about religion?

Of course I believe in religious freedom. I believe people have the complete right to believe whatever religion they like. I also believe people have the right to believe whatever political opinions they like. But if I think their opinions are mistaken, I'm going to try to persuade them of that. Why is it okay to do that about politics and not religion? How does "I think you're mistaken, and here's why" translate as "I think you don't have the right of religious freedom"?

efrique


backoffscience: Freedom to believe as you choose is NOT freedom from ever being questioned or criticized. [If someone wants to criticize my atheism (and many certainly do!) then good luck to them; my atheism isn't so pathetically weak and shaky it can't bear examination. But criticism of ideas about the universe goes *both* ways]

It's very much like freedom of expression. You're free to say what you like, and I'm free to say it's a load of bollocks. And vice versa.

Greta - I like the daily version. (If you want to go weekly, well that's better than not posting them at all.)

Hey, if you come up with 365 of them you could publish a thought-a-day calendar.


Maria

Hey, if you come up with 365 of them you could publish a thought-a-day calendar.

That is a really good idea. An atheist calendar with one of these for each day would sell, I'm sure.

Eclectic

backoffscience: Um, isn't it better to try to stop mistakes before they're made? As soon as I understand the intention to make them?

I'm usually quick to state things like "I don't think that ladder will support your weight" or "be careful, the floor is slippery" or "there's no sense going to the store; it closes at 6" as soon as I understand someone's intention to do a foolish thing. You could say I'm trying to prevent them, but don't confuse that with an attempt at coercion.

And more importantly, if someone is making claims in public that I consider to be erroneous, why do I not have just as much right to voice my opinion? Don't any arguments for allowing the first speaker to state their claims apply with equal force to me?

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