thaiboxerken
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2001
- Messages
- 34,573
When theists see someone like Dawkins as "ANGRY" there really is no way to not look angry as an atheist.
You know you are just a tad angrier of an atheist than most.When atheists are angry it's usually because some sappy theist is spouting vapid platitudes and they're being forced to hold their tongue. .....
Being mean and nasty, however, is no way to convert anyone. I have certainly become annoyed my fair share of times in the forum. But I cannot imagine any skeptic attacking anyone physically or spamming them with death threats, expletives, and/or ostracizing them for their beliefs. Behavior like that is common among a minority of god believers whom appear to be threatened by those who think differently than they do. I suspect reactions from mean comments to outright violence occur when one cannot argue rational logic or the evidence. Atheists may sometimes exhibit rude behavior in response to being on the receiving end of rude behavior. But not death threats.
While humans get angry when people don't accept their point of view, I'm not sure you can attribute all atheists who lose their temper in an argument to specifically be angry atheists. There are some, Hitchens for one. Obviously he isn't the only one. But it just doesn't come close to those death threats that predictably come out when extremists are raging about their religious beliefs. How many atheists can be counted on to send theists death threats when they block stem cell research, for example?I've seen this stated by several people in this thread, but I'm not sure it's really true. Sure, maybe you're friendly, and maybe I'm friendly, but check out a few atheist videos on YouTube and that angry, snarling stereotype isn't hard to find. Guys who seem to need to have a cigarette to speak, who can't express themselves without obscenity...
It may be true that most atheists are friendly and in the closet, but I think it's naive to claim that the stereotype has no basis in reality. Lots of folks who are out of the closet fit the stereotype to a T.
Yes, the more I thought about it, the more I realized there would be the usual assortment of atheists as in any usual assortment of humans. But do see my comment above about the death threats. Are you aware of atheists making death threats to theists?I can. Skeptics aren't any different from other humans. Granted, I would hope that we'd take the long view, but it can still happen that one of us will lose our temper and do something monstrously stupid. Bear in mind, at the time of this writing, we're a minor minority. There's a butt-load of Christians, which means that there's a proportional number of Buttheads for Jesus who do Really Stupid Thingstm.
If skeptics & atheists get more populous, we'll start seeing more angry skeptics & atheists, more happy ones, more melancholy ones, more stupid ones. There are angry atheists out there. There's just not enough to be a real issue.
To those theists.When theists see someone like Dawkins as "ANGRY" there really is no way to not look angry as an atheist.
No, I think I get the idea. You choose to be outraged by piddly little things that most adults would shrug off. Tormented and teased in the boy scouts? Poor thing. "Accosted" by a nurse? Did she manhandle you? Or did she just express an opinion that she had no right to express?When I was in boy scouts I was tormented and teased for not being Christian while the adults looked the other way. I was accosted by a nurse when my hours-old daughter lay dying because I didn't want to have her baptized. I have a former President of the United States telling me I'm not a real citizen because I don't believe in god. I have no end of morons insisting that my child be taught their religious beliefs because they don't understand evolution. I have other parents criticizing me because my son doesn't go to catechism with their kids (and we're not Jewish). And in social settings with people I don't know very well, if the subject of religion comes up, I have to bite my tongue and remain silent for fear of offending others, being called and thought of as evil, and hated for simply believing in one fewer god than they do. Shall I continue?
The boy scouts were jerks, and the adults should have known better than to let them continue to behave that way.Note that in none of these situations did I make my atheism at all apparent until asked to conform to some other person's religious beliefs. The incident in boy scouts started because we were marched to chapel on a Sunday morning while camping and it was very obvious I had never attended services before.
I'll take your word for it. She's one person, and her opinion has no effect on your life today except the one you're allowing it to have.The hospital nurse asked me if I wanted her to get the chaplain when it looked like my daughter might not make it "just in case" and treated me with absolute derision and contempt when I said "that won't be necessary".
How is this "scorn" expressed? Do they brandish crosses at you when you go out to get your mail? Give you dirty looks in the supermarket? How have you ascertained that the "scorn" you're perceiving is based on nothing more than your son's absence from religious classes?My son's mere absence from religious classes is enough to warrant scorn from other parents.
That's the way it looks to me, sorry. Maybe there's something you're not telling me, but when you have to invoke "Bush Sr. said I wasn't a citizen" and "There are people who want to teach Genesis in school" to fill out your persecution roster, it seems like you've scraped the barrel pretty thoroughly. Even if Bush did say that (and it's not certain), none of your rights as a citizen have been infringed, and as far as I know, the creationists haven't managed to insert their religious beliefs in any public school classroom in the country.Chip on my shoulder, my ass. Except for here, I keep my lack of beliefs to myself unless asked or expected to conform to someone else's.
I heard the purported Bush quote, and shrugged. I saw the attempt to alter the curriculum in Dover, and was gratified to see it thwarted. I didn't see the boy scouts tease you, and I didn't see the nurse offend you, and I didn't see your neighbors' scorn. I was teased in boy scouts too, big deal, I also got into a lot of fights, at scout camp and elsewhere. Kids (including me) can be childish, and there's no excuse for the adults who let it continue. That was a long time ago, and the kids who were teasing you then are not all the theists in the world today. If you still have anger toward them that you need to express, you should probably track them down and express it instead of carrying it around to unleash on anyone who innocently asks you to join them in prayer or whatever it is that pushes your buttons. Just my opinion.Not that I expect you to care about any of this. I'm just an angry atheist with a chip on his shoulder who is overreacting to imagined injustices that aren't happening because you don't see them.
No, I think I get the idea. You choose to be outraged by piddly little things that most adults would shrug off.
Yes, the more I thought about it, the more I realized there would be the usual assortment of atheists as in any usual assortment of humans. But do see my comment above about the death threats. Are you aware of atheists making death threats to theists?
I haven't heard of any yet. I think that's a good thing. I'd like nothing better than to have all the crazies on the other side.But it just doesn't come close to those death threats that predictably come out when extremists are raging about their religious beliefs. How many atheists can be counted on to send theists death threats when they block stem cell research, for example?
I agree with the YouTuber. We're supposed to be the rational team. It's more effective in the long run to be just that.But I did go looking on YouTube since you brought it up. I found this very pleasant (calming music in the background) ~3 minute comment on angry atheists.
I already alluded to the fact we atheists have no special human qualities. But somewhere in my experiences, I know there is a different quality to "killing for god" than there is to "killing for atheism". I think you are ignoring that difference.Hold onna sec...
Fnord! I'm gonna kill you!
Ok, there's an atheist making a death threat against a theist. It can happen. Granted, I just did it in jest to prove a point, but there is nothing special about our moral code that would necessarily preclude that sort of behavior being done in seriousness.
I'd hope, as I think you would as well, that atheists would stop and think before they'd do something as stupid as making death threats (or worse, carrying them out), but there is no guarantee. WE atheists are not better, morally, than theists, we just don't allow ourselves the crutch of one or more deities to "guide our paths". Granted, our evolution has manifested quite a nice little tool box to keep us going, but that's distributed on a bell curve. To think that we're more moral, nicer, or whatever positive attribute-er than theists is to commit the naturalistic fallacy, writ large.
You're not eleven any more. When I was nine or ten, the scoutmaster was talking smack about my mother, because I had the audacity to observe that she sharpened knives differently than the way he was showing us. The other scouts took that as permission to tease me about being a "mama's boy" too. It stung at the time, but I don't carry it around with me now. I'll tell you how I dare -- I grew up.I was eleven when I was in the boy scouts jackass. Shrug that off. And now I'm done with you. I'm not even bothering to read the rest of your drivel. You no longer have anything to say that I'm interested in hearing. How dare you?
What incredible power you wield, when you stop your ears and sing "Tra-la-la I'm not listening." I'm just guessing here, but maybe the scorn you perceive from your neighbors has less to do with your son's absence from religious classes, and more to do with the level of maturity they observe in you.I'm automatically dismissing, out of hand, without even reading it, any argument containing the words "militant" or "angry atheist" as atheist bashing. Sorry guys, you fit the atheist bashing stereotype. That means I don't have to even acknowledge you might have a point.
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I already alluded to the fact we atheists have no special human qualities. But somewhere in my experiences, I know there is a different quality to "killing for god" than there is to "killing for atheism". I think you are ignoring that difference.
Thatn and there are asshats in this world. Even more so online.The JREF forums are about the free exchange of ideas.
The reason we sometimes aren't sweet and full of treacle is that not all ideas are created equal.
I agree, but isn't it the very point of many here, that it is this prejudiced view of atheists that are prevailing, and that in many cases it really doesn't matter if you are toned down and respectful?If he is, I expect it's by people who know nothing about him beyond the fact that he's written a book called "The God Delusion." Anyone who's actually seen him express an opinion would be hard-pressed to characterize his style as "angry."
There are many countries where the conflict between theists and atheists are not as widespread or as common or expressed in this way. Where the notion of "the angry atheist" doesn't exist to the extent that is described in this thread.
I agree with tsg, his feelings are not irrational in the least.
Who needs an excuse not to listen? You don't have the right to force anyone to listen to you, they do it at their discretion. They are not stupidly assuming you have nothing to say because you are angry. They are rationally assuming you have nothing to say that they want to hear.As it is mine.
Labeling someone an "angry atheist" is an excuse to not have to listen to them. Assuming I have nothing to say because I'm angry is, frankly, stupid.
I was eleven when I was in the boy scouts jackass. Shrug that off. And now I'm done with you. I'm not even bothering to read the rest of your drivel. You no longer have anything to say that I'm interested in hearing. How dare you?
I've got the perfect solution to this. Stereotypes work both ways. I'm automatically dismissing, out of hand, without even reading it, any argument containing the words "militant" or "angry atheist" as atheist bashing. Sorry guys, you fit the atheist bashing stereotype. That means I don't have to even acknowledge you might have a point.
He's made you angry. Now you're not listening to him. Is it because you are assuming that the other has nothing to say or are you assuming that you don't want to hear whatever it is he has to say?I'm sorry. I seem to have left you with the mistaken impression that I have the slightest bit of interest in anything you have to say. Let me be more clear: I don't.