Category Archives: Religion

Thor and Odin behind bars

Norse cult gains among inmates:

A pagan religion that some experts say can be interpreted as encouraging violence is gaining popularity among prison inmates, one of whom is scheduled to be executed this week for killing a fellow prisoner at the foot of an altar.
Michael Lenz is scheduled to die Thursday for the death of Brent Parker, who was stabbed dozens of times at Augusta Correctional Center during a gathering of inmates devoted to Asatru, whose followers worship Norse gods.
———-snip———-
Asatru is often associated with white supremacy, although most Asatru leaders deny that.

Does anyone know more about this?

The ecology of the Church

I hope you have heard the Diane Rehm Show on NPR this morning at 10EDT (the first hour of the show). The guest was the presiding Episcopal Bishop-Elect Katharine Jefferts Schori, the first woman to lead the Episcopal Church. She is an amazing woman. You should listen to the show here (Real Audio) or here (Windows Media) (the best parts are starting at about 8th minute). I especially liked the way her training in oceanography influences the way she looks at the world and the way her church should be organized.
For instance, she is aware that greater species diversity makes an ecosystem more robust and more resistant to disruption. Thus, she is afraid of a religiously unifrm society – she used the metaphor of a monoculture, where having a large plot of land covered in just one crop requires a huge investment in fertilizers, insecticides and work – all unneccessary in a diverse environment.
Another interesting example she used was one about the humpbacks whales. Apparently, individual whales from all around the world leave their groups and travel to a spot close to Hawaii a couple of times a year. There, they sing their songs and, as they listen to each other they modify their songs. They learn songs from each other. In the end, they all together make a single song which is a combination of the individual original songs they brought to the meeting. Then, each whale swims home and teaches neighbors the new song. There, in each locality, the song changes over time as diffeernt individuals make changes to it. Then, the whales go to a Hawaian meeting again with their new songs and make a new song again. She sees this as a model for how the church should operate – bringing the voices of the people to a bishops’ meeting, where they write policy, which affects people who respond to it, and so on and one, constantly being modified through this interchange between the clergy and their flocks.

Creationism Is Just One Symptom Of Conservative Pathology

Creationism Is Just One Symptom Of Conservative Pathology
This is one a couple of posts about Creationism, written originally on May 1st, 2005.

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I, Coturnix (or, Why I Am An Atheist)

ClockWeb%20logo2.JPG This is an early post of mine, written on February 11, 2005, a rare one in which I discuss my own lack of religion:

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The Future of Terrorism

The July issue of Discover Magazine has an excellent article on The Future of Terrorism. You should readthe whole thing, online or in hardcopy. Here are some choice quotes by people interviewed for the article:

“The war on terrorism is really a proxy for saying what is really a war on militant Islam. If we can’t confront the ideology, if you’re not willing to take on the ideology and try to develop a reformist, moderate Islam that makes militant Islam a fringe element, we haven’t much hope to stamp it out.”

Andrew C. McCarthy, former federal prosecutor who led the case against Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman.

“A nuclear terrorism attack is inevitable if we continue on the autopilot path we’re on.” The odds of a nuclear attack on U.S. soil in the next five years are “51-49.”

Graham Allison, assistant secretary of defense in the first Clinton administration and now director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University

“I’m less worried about terrorists becoming biologists than biologists becoming terrorists”

Gerald Epstein, senior fellow at the Homeland Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.

“It’s easy to go around whipping up hysteria. I’m not a terrorism expert, but they seem to favor things that blow up and make loud noises rather than subtle increases in deaths from infectious agents.”

Biologist Craig Venter, who is skeptical of the bioterrorism threat.

“The current leadership of the terrorist organizations are of a generation that doesn’t trust cyber means of attack. Once we see a new generation of leadership that is more comfortable with technology, we’re going to see more of this.”

Mike Skroch, Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

“You can never get a fingerprint online, but you can get a writeprint.” If there is a new message, I can tell you if it’s from Bin Laden or his lieutenant.”

Hsinchun Chen, designer of the Dark Web Project

“Do I think we’ll ever stop it? Could we get it to a manageable level? I think we can do that.”

Howard Safir, former New York City police commissioner

“We know from the basis of past periods of terrorism that they don’t last forever. This is a phenomenon, as troubling as it is, that will turn out to have a beginning, middle, and end.”

Michael Barkun, political scientist at the Maxwell School in Syracuse, New York

The most advanced technology that terrorists have at their disposal is television. “Essentially, it’s an image war. PR is everything in terrorism. Why? Look at what the terrorists are trying to achieve: political or ideological change. And if people don’t buy into a doctrine, the terrorists can’t succeed.”

Graham Dillon, heads the financial-crime advisory service of the London branch of the accounting firm KPMG

“There would be such enormous pressure for an immediate and devastating political response. Three Algerians from Paris blow up a bomb in Washington; we vaporize Tehran and get rid of everybody we don’t like: anyone who’s strategically culpable, whom we believe either supports terrorism [or] sponsors it directly or indirectly. If that happens, the world would be as different a place as after World War II.”

Scott Atran, an anthropologist at the University of Michigan and at the National Center for Scientific Research in Paris

“You can do preventative things. And you can make people safer. You can’t make people safe. You are never safe, because in an open and free society you’re always vulnerable to people who are extreme.”

Howard Safir

“…they’re just itching to get out!”

Back To The Woom is a blog that needs to get much more exposure. It is written by a very smart couple here in Raleigh, NC. The posts are always very thoughtfull and well-researched and the topics range from Ann Raynd to immigration, from capital punishment to harsh capitalism. Always worth your time to read (even if you disagree on a detail or two).
This time, I’d like to point your attention to the latest post – The moral majority is watching your inner child molester:

The implication is that, without the threat of eventual punishment at the hands of an omniscient cosmic dictator, many of us would just abandon all the ethical, social and juridical obligations that had hitherto constrained our behavior. Yep, God is all that keeps you from combusting into a terrible, murderous fury!

It describes what psychologists call the External Locus of Moral Authority. Go and check it out.

Home Churching

It is something like homeschooling, except there is no learning involved. People are performing their own private church services at home instead of going to the local megachurch. Why do you think this is catching on? Is it good or bad?

Obligatory Reading of the Day

Amanda reviews the lies about sex and contraception that are peddled by the Catholic church in their pre-marital classes:
Pandagon goes undercover the lazy way on a Catholic anti-contraception seminar
and
Pandagon goes undercover the lazy way on a Catholic anti-contraception seminar, Pt. II

Obligatory Readings of the Day

Archy on ‘belief in evolution’.
Lance Mannion about the Godless.