Hey, thanks for that - I made the front page!! Outstanding!
I wasn't going to bother replying, but I think I ought to, now:
"Celebrating the death of someone you disagree with makes you a dick."
I agree.
I wouldn't ever celebrate the death of someone simply because I disagree with them. I celebrate the death of Falwell becuase he was a liar, hypocrite and homophobe. I made this exact comment elsewhere yesterday] I didn't celebrate the death of Pope John Paul XVIIDCLXXV, but neither was I saddened by it - he is just one of the millions of deaths each day. In the case of Rowan Williams, if he were to die, I would mourn him, despite his position as head of the second-largest christian sect.
This comment on your front page:
PWOT said:
But you start cheering his death, you've walked away from the one single baseline every remotely moral person has ever agreed on: the value of human life. And I know we all agree on that, because we can all can think of people we could've otherwise stabbed and gotten away with it.
is just pure BS. You're trying very hard to push your own moral standards, just as hard the guy who wants to kill Jesus a second time is pushing his.
Pots, kettles and the colour black.
1. You Can Do Terrible Things in the Name of Either One
I'll simply borrow Ken's answer for this:
[QUOTEtbken]No, people have never killed in the name of atheism. Atheism has no philosophy, belief system or dogma that tells anyone to do anything. To kill in the name of atheism is like saying a person killed in the name of not believing in pixies.[/QUOTE]
I would add that nearly all crime is committed by non-philatelists.
2. Both Sides Really Do Believe What They're Saying
Odd point, really, since one side believes in fact while the other side believes in fairies. "Belief" is the problem, but the statement is inherently correct, otherwsie they'd be agnostics.
3. In Everyday Life, You're Not That Different
Not quite. In many cases, you're right, but in as many, and possibly more cases, the statement is wrong. Many christians say grace and pray. Most of them attend church and give money to the church. I think the two sets tend to act quite differently a lot of the time, but in subtler ways than you might realise.
4. There Are Good People on Both Sides
Irrelevant point - there are good people in jail, just as there are bad cops.
5. Your Point of View is Legitimately Offensive to Them
No. If they read and believe the word of Jesus, that statement is crap. Zealots, maybe, but who cares? On the other hand, christianity isn't any more offensive to me than Loch Ness Monster or the Cottingley Fairies.
6. We Tend to Exaggerate About the Other Guy
Wrong, but with an element of truth, we all like to use hyperbole in speech - ever seen a politician talk? I think elements of fundamental christianity certainly exaggerate, but it's a minority. The statement is itself a vast exaggeration.
7. We Tend to Exaggerate About Ourselves, Too
In what way? That's a pretty general statement. Do both atheists and christians equally claim to have ten-inch dicks? People exaggerate, no news there.
8. Focusing on Negative Examples Makes You Stupid
No, you're simply obfuscating here. The negative examples are what makes the difference. When an irrational christian couple lets their kid die by praying instead of treating it, that's a reason to attack the belief that prayer cures the sick.
9. Both Sides Have Brought Good to the Table
Same level of irrelevancy [and the same point] as #4. Tautological excuse to give you a number 9.
The problem you overlook is that while literally millions of deaths can be laid directly at the door of christianity, none can be laid at the door of atheism. Certainly, atheists amy be murderes, but as has been pointed out
ad nauseum, the murders weren't committed in the name of atheism.
Both sides may have brought "good", but only brings "bad".
10. You'll Never Harass the Other Side Out of Existence
Depends on the level of harrassment, I guess. Sharia Law harrasses atheists into non-existence, that certainly works.
While there's some merit in some of your comments, overall, it seems to be written from the perspective of a little boy standing and whining, "Why can't we all just be friends....?" It doesn't raise any particularly valid points and contains nothing new, or even notable. It's exactly the same as going into the GS&P section and asking why we can't just bury the hatchet with Sylvia Browne and Uri Geller and all live happily ever after.
That's a perfectly acceptable attitude to have. Just don't expect too many to share it.