Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Faith in Reason


I finished reading Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion a few days ago, prompting me to be more outspoken about my views. I'm an atheist and not only unafraid of saying it, but proud. Although I've held this position for a while, a public disclosure is a milestone for me, and it represents (on a small scale) an event I'm looking forward to: a social awakening.

A celebrated evolutionary biologist, Oxford Professor, and author (The Selfish Gene), Dawkins presents a compellingly logical yet entertaining and eloquent treatise for atheism that may do better by its constituency than by those it is trying to convert. His intention is to change the minds of the religious to that of reasonable skepticism. Instead, he's preaching to the choir.

I don't mean to say that this is insignificant. The God Delusion and books like it are, I hope, giving the doubters the courage to stand and be counted. Dawkins compares a movement like this to that of the gay revolution, and admitting disbelief to a kind of "coming out." We free-thinkers should demand a change in our circumstances, and the status quo is religiousness; a standard which engenders intolerance, oppression, bigotry, arrogance, child abuse, homophobia, abortion-clinic bombings, cruelties to women, war, suicide bombers, and educational systems that teach ignorance when it comes to math and science.

Seventy percent of Americans believe in angels. Yet The God Delusion has garnered much praise, even in the Bible-belt. God Is Not Great, a similar book by Christopher Hitchens, has had equally surprising success. Are these achievements indicative of a social trend? Are we finally ready to allow logic to prevail? I hope that following generations will be reading our holy texts in schools as literary culture (as we do the legends of Greek and Roman gods) rather than as their educational basis (as the supporters of intelligent design are trying to impose); and use those like Richard Dawkins as an example of enlightened revolutionists. Reason is at a precipice, and I think the coming years will decide if it will fall at God's feet.

Friday, November 9, 2007

Might take a while.

I haven't posted in a few days.
This is mostly because I'm thinking of ways to make my life more interesting, which would theoretically make it more interesting to write about. Maybe I ought to write about something besides my life?
I'll chew on that.

Saturday, November 3, 2007

It's been done.


Michael is working on something he calls Project 365.
On his flickr photo set, he eloquently sums up the plan, "I'm going to take a picture of myself every day, or at least that's the idea. "

I found that people have been participating in this mostly photographic aim for quite a while (the details are unclear because I don't care enough to research it), and undertakings like it have become a trend amongst those damn hippie trendsters.

Well, I've never really been trendy myself, which totally isn't fair. I don't even own a beret.

So, at the cost of being another bandwagon-jumper, I've decided I too will do something to the effect of "365" (without all that pot-smoking): as drawr-ings. I have just made so little "art" since I was 12 (you should have seen my Powdered Toast Man; and damn could I draw lobsters!); It's something I love yet neglect. I haven't decided if they'll all be self-portraits [note artist's rendering], but it is my new year-long resolution to draw at least one sketch (or related) daily.

I may even use hemp paper.

Good for the Soul


I be lovin these chips, girlfriend.
http://www.nabisco.com/gardenharvest/

You be all like "mmm" an' they be all like "uh-uh" an' you be all like "mm-hmm" an' they like "fuh real?" an' you be like "wer'"

Friday, November 2, 2007

The first post.

I'm sure this is usually rather awkward. The virgin blog comment.
I'd like to say I have a clear vision of the future of this page, possibly political or entertainment-centric or satirical, with the underlying delusions of grandeur; but I don't have a damn clue what I'm doing with this. I don't claim any specific expertise and I easily digress so I probably couldn't maintain a theme anyway.
I'll write about me and my interests and I won't apologize for it, because blogs are inherently self-indulgent.
Oh Jesus. I'm already bored.
...Ideas?