I'm disappointed to report that there has been very little in front page print media or online from major news sources about the Reason Rally so far. I hope that this situation improves through the day.
There is one interesting thing to link to, however. This "belief blog" post on CNN's back pages talks about the Reason Rally as a moment for atheists in this country to come out - there is a video featuring Richard Dawkins, too. And this one, posted yesterday, features Dave Silverman of American Atheists (one of the main organizers of the Rally).
The most interesting part is that there are well over 2000 comments below these two blog posts lost in the obscurity of CNN's back pages. CNN blogs rarely garner huge numbers of comments, especially this quickly. (Compare the comment number for these two entries with comments for the posts immediately preceding and following them). As usual, just the very idea of atheism sparks irrational outrage and backlash from theists. Most of the usual angry atheist/immoral godless tropes are dutifully trotted out in these comments.
Don't read them unless you want your day ruined!
Updated to Add: Mano Singham from FTB linked these three stories earlier this week.
Nonbelievers pull together... (The Washington Times)
Reason Rally, Religious freedom rally... (The Washington Post)
Atheists to cheer for godless USA... (USA Today)
ETA: Found this old post on Yahoo...with over 9,000 comments:
Atheists holding Reason Rally in Washington DC this weekend...
And this amusing example of "up is down, good is bad" rationalization from FauxNews:
Why the Reason Rally is unreasonable In there, you will find the usual accusations that atheists are arrogant and self-important, coming from those who believe that they know everything that needs to be known in the universe and that the earth, all of its living forms and the entire universe exists solely for their benefit. Classic.
I am of the opinion that articles like this from the "folks" at Faux is confirmation that they are aware that their ability to keep people in fear and ignorance is waning at long last. Reasonable people are standing up and that is making the right wing extremists - including their political arm, the Republican party and their chief propaganda arm, Fox media - very nervous.
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Reason Rally Today!
Today is the day! Atheists, freethinkers and people who value truth and science will be pouring into Washington DC and filling the national Mall with the sounds of great music, inspiring speakers and intelligent conversation. The Reason Rally has arrived!
I will be watching the various news outlets for coverage of this important event. Other, patently stupid events received huge media coverage, so I expect at least as much media attention for the Reason Rally.
Whatever happens, though, it is sure to be an exciting day for the participants (estimated crowds could be as large as 30,000-50,000 people!) and an eye-opener for those closeted atheists in the rest of the country who still think they are alone.
NPR's Woodstock for Atheists (March 23, 2012).
Friday, March 23, 2012
Let's Talk About Freedom
This post may not be complete - I happen to be the same very busy woman™ that I am in NiftyUniverse - but I will do my best right now to get the kernels of a few ideas out there.
As promised yesterday, I'm going to provide a few links to some good articles about current political events, especially the horrifying bombardment of oppressive and degrading legislation that is currently raining down on women in the so-called modern, progressive and "free" developed world.
Something I have been noticing with relief is that more and more people are beginning to connect the dots between all the talk about freedom by Republicans and the actual threat to individual freedoms in this country which is the goal of the Republican agenda. Many free thinkers have been grumbling about this agenda for years, while never seeming to quite believe that the extreme right wing could actually succeed in stripping away individual rights and freedoms.

Even when George W Bush was installed in the White House and set about fulfilling his promises to the wealthy and powerful religious and corporate elites to whom he owed his ascension to the presidency, many people could not seriously believe that the checks and balances of government power, coupled with the guarantees for individual rights and freedoms, could be strategically defeated by a determined and power-hungry enemy of long-held American ideals. People just could not believe that "it could happen here", and those who were talking and writing about it were ridiculed and marginalized as "conspiracy nuts".
But you know, sometimes there really is a conspiracy, and sometimes it only takes a few hours reading history to understand and remember that fact. Great civilizations before us were blindsided by what looked like suddenly rising dictators, but who were in fact the inevitable victors in a patient game of political maneuvering using the very ideals that people cherish - turned upside down and inside out - to undermine the glue which supports the society, concentrate power into a few very closely linked hands, and render an entire population suddenly bereft of the world they knew and understood. The tragedy is that the people themselves are used as the foot soldiers in the war against themselves. They are persuaded to give up their own freedoms and destroy their own country from within, leaving a damaged shell for the fascist cabal to take over and begin to rule.

These things had their genesis long ago, however. Like fascists throughout history, the unholy alliance of the extreme religious right and the extreme libertarian right have used the propaganda machine they have created very cleverly. In his book American Fascists, Chris Hedges talks about how this was an official strategy of the religious right, using the (very willing) Republican party as its political arm, to create an American theocracy. In The Family, Jeff Sharlet further explains the determination and careful organization of this far from recent strategy to subvert the American Constitution, dismantle the governmental checks and balances and create a theocratic state run, of course, by their own organization.
There is another post in every one of these paragraphs, but my time is really limited this week, so I am going to have to post links and keep coming back to these topics in shorter bursts.
Timothy Egan, the Opinionator, published a good piece in the New York Times which zeroes in directly on this subject of how the Republican party is turning the idea of freedom on its head for its own gain.
The appalling upside-down morality is front and center in this guest post in the Washington Post, but this comment (and other excellent comments), as well as the glimpse into the mindset of the theists who are attacking the country, makes it worth reading:
"By placing a financial burden on female employees that the mandate is meant to remove, the Catholic church is violating both the rights and the conscience of those employees. It is an absurd exaggeration to claim that the church is being forced to provide contraceptives. The church is no more providing them than if they employee goes and purchases contraceptives themselves using money they were paid by the church. What the church is attempting to do is impede the ability of its female employees to exercise their own conscience and to receive coverage that the law has deemed they should receive. To claim this is a violation of religious freedom is both ignorant and disingenuous. You do not have a right to bully and burden your employees. The reproductive choices of your female employees is not your business. It is between them, their doctors, and their insurers. The church has no right to interfere. Chip_M"
Maureen Dowd's column Don't Tread on Us, also in the NYT is a week old but still worth re-reading.
Alison Catalano is another principled professional who has taken a stand against the attacks on women's health access. This San Antonio online news article covers it. I am heartened to see people standing up to this legislative bullying, but I am appalled that individuals are having to risk their careers and their livelihoods to stand up for what is right and just.
Greg Laden of FTB has a brief post with video of the President's remarks (at last!) about the terrible murder of seventeen year old Trayvon Martin in Florida. Black Skeptic Frederick Sparks also posted a very restrained update on the President's remarks also at FTB. Scroll down his blog, however, to read more on the topic. If you are not a person of color, read the Black Skeptics' post about the burden racist paranoia places on minorities - especially, of course, young men of color in the USA.
As an antidote to the despair that the Trayvon Martin murder case might arouse, please read the brief summary, watch and enjoy this wonderful video Black Gold posted by Melissa McEwan on Shakesville.
Read Jen McCreight on the diversity of speakers at the Reason Rally - tomorrow! - and how important this rally is for making people aware that there are thousands of people like them in this country who are willing to stand up and come out in defense of reason, science and freedom from religion.
Finally, the Supreme Court is about to hear arguments for and against provisions in the Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare), and whatever the Supremes decide could have far-reaching effects which could be pivotal for social justice in this country. This is something people ought to be following. Here is an overview with some information on how to stay abreast of developments next week.
More tomorrow!
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Spring in Alabama?
Here is a piece of good news. Out of the winter of horrors for people who care about reproductive rights and the personhood of women, there comes this:
Spring in Alabama
And the blogger Whatever (Still Running Against the Wind) has posted an open letter from an anonymous ob/gyn who calls for doctors to defy the dehumanizing anti-woman bills (particularly the transvaginal ultrasound bills).
There is something very chilling about the fact that a doctor who is standing up for human rights - who wants to speak out against draconian legislation which is skating shockingly close to reducing women to sexual enslavement - must remain anonymous for his own professional and possibly personal safety.
I'm on vacation right now - spring break for the last chicks in the nest - so I have to soak up the time while I still have kids at home. But I am going on a mission in my downtime to dig up as many of these sorts of stories as I can find and I will post links.
I'd like to believe the tide is turning, but I'd like to do whatever I can to keep that momentum going.
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
Isn't That Just Ducky!
I am on a road trip!
I am rollin' on down the road. I am sailing, flying, ramblin' like a rolling stone.
I am on a road trip!
Isn't that just Ducky!
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