And don't you even think about disputing Strunk and White. That's E.B. White, the author of Charlotte's Web, who knew a little about correct usage.
"She was always using the word infer when she obviously meant imply. And I know some guys would put up with that kind of thing, but frankly, I can't imagine why."
Now I've got that Weird Al song stuck in my head...
"She was always using the word infer when she obviously meant imply. And I know some guys would put up with that kind of thing, but frankly, I can't imagine why."
I wouldn't put the blame on the church. This was obviously a deeply troubled person, angry at a crowd of people who were unable to deal with his behavior, angry enough to make threats that were ignored or missed. His parents were unable to get him the help he obviously needed, and he finally went over the brink. The parallels with Virginia Tech are almost perfect, except that today it's a church rather than a university. Again, see my post 76:I'm not trying to score Atheist "points" or imply that christians are "nutters" but the article seems to underscore the shooter's problem with christianity. It is almost as if the christian religion had created it's own Frankenstein...
So I don't blame the church for having created a monster, any more than I blame VT. Madness has its own reasons, that none of us can fathom.Lady I know was raised as a Southern Baptist. She ended up rejecting her faith not so much because she saw the irrationality of it, but because she found herself being rejected by the pretty, cheerleader-type girls in her parents church, because she was shy and bookish. She decided the "we all love each other" mantra was hypocritical, and left.
Fortunately, she's emotionally a strong person and was able to live with the rejection. What would have happened had she been a little unstable, and angry after years of frustration at being an outcast?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071211/ap_on_re_us/church_shootings
"God, I can't wait till I can kill you people. Feel no remorse, no sense of shame, I don't care if I live or die in the shoot-out. All I want to do is kill and injure as many of you ... as I can especially Christians who are to blame for most of the problems in the world."
People knew he was nuts... but what could they do? Nutty people exist. Maybe they thought he was possessed? Nutty people can own guns. We can be aware of the potential danger people pose without having the power to do anything about it. We can't lock people up based on what they might do. And the mentally ill tend to distrust those who might treat them.Apparently this nut-job posted his intentions online. Isn't it possibly that he also mentioned something to someone? Didn't anybody clue-in as to what this guy was all about???
I understand that, but some people would nevertheless take it that way. I was mostly reacting to the OP, which seems to be a case of adding insult to injury. Maybe I'm being too politically correct and cautious, but I think that when someone has just died, that sensitivity is the best approach.It's not gloating over someone's death
Heretic! I'm telling the elders on you! You're gonna lose your card!and there is no "atheists cause". We don't need to convert people to nonbelief
But wouldn't it be great if atheists came across as more mature than the pope?and sharing humor amongst each other rather than mocking the nutters to their face is rather tasteful given the regular blame they give to us for all the worlds problems--and not just on forums-- on the news-- to their parishioners. The pope just blamed atheists for all the worlds evils... don't rain on my private skeptical parade with moral platitudes, puppycow. We didn't shoot anyone. And THIS IS a skeptics forum I don't think any of the offended people will be hanging out here... and I don't think anyone said anything awful. Plus, it might be good for some humans to start thinking before bleating... perhaps our commentary could inspire less blatant god pandering amongst the faithful.
Well, I agree with that, although it seems that most of these facts (including the fact that the shooter was home-schooled by fundies) became known after the OP was posted.It's actually more offensive that the woman praised the grace of god for sparing her out loud in the media knowing that god didn't give that same grace to the dead folks. What are their loved ones to think? That was the insensitive statement--not anything said here. Everything an atheist says is judged much harsher than anything a believer says. We can't win. Even our own have absorbed the cultural "faith is good" meme.

I can absolve the church of any blame, while at the same time understand their illogical rationalizations. Those people who lost a loved one aren't thinking, "Why was my daughter killed, when she loved God as much as anyone else?" They're thinking, "She's in eternal bliss now, with God." When I hear that, I want to ask (but do not), "Then why are you crying?" The answer is, the answer has to be, because they are not 100% certain in their faith, there's that kernel of doubt inside that they dare not voice for fear of... well, they probably don't know. Releasing a psychological monster they would be too terrified to face?
It just adds to their tragedy, because if they truly believed to the depths of their souls, that their loved ones were with God, they would celebrate, not mourn. Faith is the belief in something for which you have no evidence, and it's a hard thing to come by. It's something these people have come to depend on, and when that faith is so harshly challenged, it doesn't always survive.
Well, I agree with that, although it seems that most of these facts (including the fact that the shooter was home-schooled by fundies) became known after the OP was posted.
I certainly reject the "faith is good" meme. I remember thinking the same thing watching TV in the wake of Katrina, when some people who had all lost their homes started bleating that it had increased their faith. A similar thing occurred with the Tsunami disaster. This is when I thought, not for the first time, that no wonder religion has been so successful. For some reason all evidence, good or bad, is interpreted by the believer as confirmation of their faith. And if they are impervious to logic, then it is useless to try to convince them with logic alone. Style is at least as important as substance. It also occurred to me that faith is a mechanism for dealing with emotional pain. If you could somehow convince yourself that your departed loved ones have gone to heaven, where you will one day be reunited, it would make it much easier to accept their death.
I remember taking a long road trip with one of my religious relatives. As we were driving together for several days, the conversation eventually turned to religion. What it came down to for him was that he just could not bear to accept that he would never see his parents again and, faced with that profound grief, I could not bring myself to hammer home any argument to try and convince him otherwise.
Because that would be cruel and possibly pointless. And besides you can get out your opinions here on a skeptics forum without hurting anybody. Biting your tongue is easier when you have a place to vent. Vent here amongst others who can appreciate your observations. I don't think anyone here would advocate hammering your lack of belief home to anyone.
And I would hope your relatives would show similar respect of your feelings and opinions should you be in a similar situation. Often the people expecting me to respect their feelings have very little respect for mine.
It was a strange experience. I actually had the feeling that, given enough time (which we had), I could probably bring him to doubt his faith. But I remember as soon as I had that "revelation," I thought to myself, "All you'd be doing is convincing him he'll never see his parents again without offering anything meaningful (to him) in return."
Can you see the difference? They are the bad guys, so they gloat. But we are the good guys so we merely note the irony! Like this:Nobody is gloating. We're noting the irony. Gloating might be what some theists were doing when they learned that Pat Tillman was an atheist and thus it was good that he died.
Can you see the irony in this?!We don't need to convert people to nonbelief and sharing humor amongst each other rather than mocking the nutters to their face is rather tasteful given the regular blame they give to us for all the worlds problems--and not just on forums-- on the news-- to their parishioners.
In the same way that typing "mocking blowhards to their face" is not knocking blowhards. The nutters and blowhard never recognize that they are the nutters and blowhards. If you aren't a nutter or a blowhard, it means nothing to you. It's a skeptics forum, remember.
I'm not walking into churches shouting, "Do you guys really believe this crap?"
You confuse reality with your strawmen all the time. You should get that checked out.
Thanks for that update. So, the kid finally hit the correct target.Police are now reporting the gunman took his own life.
The security guard scored multiple hits, and the gunman then shot himself.
articulett wrote: "... if we are going to be accused of being strident and shrill by every person certain that they are morally superior due to their faith... then at least let us engage in wicked irreverence."
It's a bit worse than being accused of being strident and shrill. If you've seen some of the spin put on the shootings you'll see some theists blaming, among other things, atheists, the secular media and Richard Dawkins. I've got the links to prove it:
http://normdoering.blogspot.com/2007/12/ugly-and-vile-spin-some-christianists.html