Find your denomination

Here’s a great set of maps showing exactly which religions populate which areas of the US:

http://www.valpo.edu/geomet/geo/courses/geo200/religion.html

Posted by Jake Covert on 4/19/2006, evening
Religion • No Comments yet • Permalink

Robertson suggests God smote Sharon

Pat Robertson, the level headed man of religion that he is, is calling Sharon’s stroke an act of God.

I love this guy.  He just makes religion fun!

http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/01/05/robertson.sharon/index.html?section=cnn_topstories

Posted by Jake Covert on 1/6/2006, evening
Religion • No Comments yet • Permalink

Religious Assassination

Did you hear that?  That’s the sound of Pat Robertson’s moral authority leaving the building.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/08/23/robertson.chavez/index.html

At lease, the democrats don’t have idiots on their side “helping out”, as Pat is for the religious right.

Posted by Jake Covert on 8/23/2005, the wee hours
Religion • No Comments yet • Permalink

Religion itself is the fount of most evil

http://www.sundayherald.com/50943

Posted by Jake Covert on 7/24/2005, early evening
Religion • No Comments yet • Permalink

Judge: Parents can’t teach pagan beliefs

http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050526/NEWS01/505260481

found this story via SEB.

An Indianapolis father is appealing a Marion County judge’s unusual order that prohibits him and his ex-wife from exposing their child to “non-mainstream religious beliefs and rituals.”

The parents practice Wicca, a contemporary pagan religion that emphasizes a balance in nature and reverence for the earth.

Cale J. Bradford, chief judge of the Marion Superior Court, kept the unusual provision in the couple’s divorce decree last year over their fierce objections, court records show. The order does not define a mainstream religion.

Posted by Jake Covert on 5/31/2005, the wee hours
Religion • (2) CommentsPermalink

Sticks and Stones and the “Secular Left”

—————-
This has been reposted from an email I got, without the Author’s approval.  His text remains unaltered.  Any mistakes in grammer are most likely caused by me during posting.
—————-

Published on Monday, May 23, 2005 by CommonDreams.org
by David Benjamin

At some point since last Novembers elections, a new term—which appears to have seismic connotations—has entered the American political lexicon. I only heard it two weeks ago, from right-wing propagandist Mary Matalin, on “Meet the Press.”

Throughout this session of “Meet the Press,” which included Matalin’s Clintonite husband James Carville, Matalin doggedly established the term “secular Left” as a synonym for “the Democratic Party.” At first, I thought Matalin had just suffered a slip of the tongue. Or maybe she was just being cute. But, she kept saying “secular Left”—more often than “Democrats.” Never once did she describe her ideological foes as either “liberal” or “progressive.”

This emergence of “secular Left” as the Right’s preferred pejorative for both Democrats and liberals is remarkable, if only because it suggests that Republicans and conservatives appear to have absorbed themselves, willingly, into the narrow faction of the “religious Right.” After all, if everyone west of the political center is now the “secular Left,” then everyone right of center must be the “religious Right.”

Posted by Jake Covert on 5/27/2005, terribly early in the morning
Public PolicyReligion • No Comments yet • Permalink

The Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design

This is an article about the non-science of intelligent design.  The original article and lots of discussion is available here:

http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2005/4/27/03541/2520

reposted w/out permission.

By benna
Wed Apr 27th, 2005 at 12:18:45 PM EST

The Dover, Pennsylvania school board recently adopted a policy requiring that high school science teachers teaching evolution tell their students that evolutionary theory, a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again, is flawed, and that intelligent design is a valid alternative. The ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union), along with the AUSCS (Americans United for the Separation of Church and State), and 11 parents, are suing the school board, accusing the board of violating the separation of church and state (Banerjee A16). They are quite right. The sole purpose of “Intelligent Design” is to make creationism look like a scientifically credible theory, so that it can be perpetuated in public schools, among other places. Intelligent Design, however, is not supported by scientific evidence, and is invalid as a scientific theory.

To understand the problems with Intelligent Design, first it is important to understand the theory it is attempting to oppose, evolution by natural selection. The theory is this: If organisms reproduce, offspring inherit traits from their progenitor(s), a variability of traits exists, and the environment cannot sustain all the members of an increasingly large population, then those members of the population that have poorly-adapted traits (to their environment) will die out, and those with well-adapted traits (to their environment) will prosper (Darwin 459). Over a long period of time, this process leads to extreme complexity, and adaptedness.

Posted by Jake Covert on 5/2/2005, terribly early in the morning
Public PolicyReligionScience • No Comments yet • Permalink

Get Drunk at the Ninja Monkie Bacchanal

Found this on my brother’s site.  Guess he got it from Dadahead:

Attention, members of the Religious Right: you are not a fucking oppressed minority. You are not being subjugated by liberal heathen elites. Just because the Supreme Court says that a public school can’t organize a prayer circle doesn’t mean your religion is in danger of being wiped from the earth. Is Christianity that fragile? Is your commitment to it so tenuous that the absence of school prayer is going to discourage you from practicing your faith? If not, stop your whining.

Posted by Jake Covert on 4/27/2005, early afternoon
Religion • No Comments yet • Permalink