I’m writing the resource guide for my upcoming book, “Why Are You Atheists So Angry? 99 Things That Piss Off the Godless” — and I could use some suggestions. What are the organizations, online forums and support groups, books, blogs, etc., that you think atheists should know about? If someone wants to learn more about atheism, or participate in the atheist community/ movement, where should they start? Please provide the name and (if appropriate) the URL. Thanks.
"Why Are You Atheists So Angry?" – Suggestions for Resource Guide?
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Pretty much all the FtB blogs.
Hemant Mehta’s Friendly Atheist blog http://www.patheos.com/blogs/friendlyatheist/
American Atheists blog http://atheists.org/blog/
Unreasonable Faith blog http://www.patheos.com/blogs/unreasonablefaith/
Atheist Ethicist blog http://atheistethicist.blogspot.com/
Daylight Atheism blog http://bigthink.com/blogs/daylight-atheism
I’d give more but I’ve probably already put this post into moderation because of all the urls.
Not sure if it’s exactly what you’re looking for, but I’d suggest ‘The Quotable Atheist’ by Jack Huberman: a load of quotes by various people on the subject of God and the lack thereof, interesting and also pretty funny (and nice to know that many notable historical figures are on our side). Thought I’d mention it as I haven’t seen it mentioned in any blogs etc, don’t know if it’s generally known about.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Quotable-Atheist-Ammunition-Nonbelievers-Hell-bound/dp/1560259698
Greta,
I’m made a post with a bunch of urls. It’s in moderation but you might want to look at it.
Are you looking for podcast suggestions as well? If so, Reasonable Doubts is excellent.
I really like the counter-apologetics wiki made by the ACA.
http://wiki.ironchariots.org/index.php?title=Main_Page
The Skeptics Annotated Bible is good too.
Shaun
What pisses me off is when I hear the suggestion that “you atheists” are all alike. Atheists are as diverse as the population at large… if not more so.
Hi Greta,
I hope I haven’t missed the point of this assignment, but as we know religion can be dangerous. Not so much when it is running soup kitchens and providing shelter for the homeless, but when it is running inquisitions, then that’s another thing and the links I provide are from people who has faced religion in its most menacing aspect.
Many of these are British organisations, sites etc, but you would have similar movements and organisations in America.
So, here goes.
Fed up of Islam? So are they.
http://ex-muslim.org.uk/
Some excellent articles from Maryam on religion here:
http://www.maryamnamazie.com/
Threats to women in Iran:
http://www.equalrightsnow-iran.com/
More from the religion of peace:
http://stopstonningnow.com/wpress/
Some wonderful essays from a late marxist thinker on religions place in society:
http://hekmat.public-archive.net/indexEn.html
Always fighting the good fight. Articles and links to horror stories galore.
http://www.secularism.org.uk/
We have gone global:
http://www.atheistalliance.org/support-aai/store
Humanist and rational Associations in all states are options too.
Recommended reading. The Torah, Bible and Qu’ran?
Some more.
I adore this woman!
http://www.taslimanasrin.com/
You would have similar in America, I trust, but hey, you’re aiming for the glabal market! Right?
http://www.lawyerssecularsociety.org/
http://www.religiondispatches.org/
The name says it all.
http://www.womenagainstfundamentalism.org.uk/
Atheists and free-thinkers in the Middle East. Some brave folk here:
https://e-paa.org/
I think that’s my entire ‘favourites’ list delivered to you.
I loved “Does God Hate Women?” by Ophelia Benson and Jeremy Stangroom. Explains and gives examples of how all religions are sexist bullshit.
You could also use your own list of atheists of color and the list of awesome female atheists from BlagHag, since it can be hard for minority atheists to find each other.
Greta,
Books? I’d strongly recommend Atheism: The Case Against God by George H. Smith. It’s well-written, logical, and thoroughly discusses arguments against God including design arguments, faith vs. reason, and the ethics of Christian belief. You don’t have to have a background in philosophy to appreciate it! It’s a great source for beginning atheists.
Websites? Too many to recommend, but other than Freethought Blogs, the sites I would suggest are Daylight Atheism (as well as Ebon Musings) and the Secular Web.
Hope this helps you and anyone reading this. Looking forward to reading the book when it comes out!
I would include Hemant’s (Guest Contributor) list of gods christians / atheists do not believe. Sans comments.
Questions for your Sunday School Teacher. Free to use and modify, no attribution necessary.
In Genesis 1:1,
the bible claims that the earth was created before the sun. Please explain how the earth, having a mass 330,000 times less than the sun, did not fall into the sun. Why does the biblical version agree with the beliefs of ancient peoples that the earth was the centre of the universe, while science proves that the earth is not even the centre of our solar system?
In Genesis 1:3 to 1:5,
the bible says god made day and night on the first day. How did this happen when the sun was created on the fourth day?
In Genesis 1:6 to 1:8
Why have none of the interplanetary probes, especially Voyager 1, launched September 5, 1977, detected any “firmament”?
In Genesis 1:11 to 1:13
How did the vegetation survive without photosynthesis?
In Genesis 1:14 to 1:19
Having a “Firmament” implies a geocentric universe. This corresponds with ancient belief, not reality. Ancient humans believed the earth to be the centre of the observable universe, and the sun, moon and stars appeared so small by comparison to the earth. Stars were no brighter than fireflies. We now know that there are trillions of stars, some more massive than our sun and their distance from us is beyond the imagination of early man, who could only see about 6000 of the trillions of stars. Why did it take 5 days to create the earth and only 1 day to create the rest of the universe?
In Genesis 1:26 to 1:31
God made man in his image, male and female. So in Genesis 2:5 to 2:7
Why, if humans had been created male and female on the sixth day, did they have to be recreated after god had rested on the seventh day? Why does Genesis 2:21 to 2:23
claim that woman came from Adam’s rib when she had been created on the sixth day, without any male rib involved?
In Genesis 3:8 to 3:9
We see god interacting with humans, no faith needed. If god presented himself to humans thousands of years ago, why does god not do so today? Why, if god is omniscient, did he not know where Adam was?
In Genesis 3:16
Why should the husband be the ruler?
In Genesis 7:21 to 7:23
Why would god have to destroy all life on earth other than what was on the ark? Could not an omnipotent being remove the evil from evil people? Why would babies be killed because some people were considered to be evil?
In 2 Kings 2:23 to 2:24
God sends two bears to rip up 42 little children for making fun of Elisha’s bald head. Is this a sample of biblical morality?
Keith Parsons lists key works and authors for the most sophisticated contemporary professional philosophical refutations of theism in his blog post declaring he was quitting the God debates: http://secularoutpost.infidels.org/2010/09/goodbye-to-all-that.html
I also recommend John Shook’s book The God Debates.
Finally, Keith Ansell Pearson and Duncan Large have edited a superb collection of Nietzsche’s writings called The Nietzsche Reader (Blackwell Readers). Nietzsche’s writings are as classic and valuable for an atheist as any others. This volume is an excellent resource for engaging with some of the depth and breadth of his thinking and giving a representative picture of the arc of his career
I enjoyed “50 reasons people give for believing in a god” by Guy p harrison. Fairly inoffensive book if you’re looking to share something with believers. It covers most of the common reasons people give (ex its obvious he exists).
It isn’t specifically on atheism, but Carl Sagan’s The Demon Haunted World has always been a perennial favorite of mine.
There is also Christopher Hitchen’s the Quotable Atheist .
I also enjoyed Atheism: A Reader edited by S.T. Joshi (it is more academic, and also dated now. The Quotable Atheist can probably replace it.)
Life Sex and Ideas by A.C. Grayling
In Defense of Atheism by Michel Onfray
The Ways of an Atheist by Bernard Katz
The Little Book of Atheist Spirituality by André Comte-Sponville
Bertrand Russell!
And for web: I used to hand out at infidels.org (the Secular Web), they have great forums and a great online library of articles.
lesswrong.com is a must.
Don’t forget Dale McGowan’s Parenting Beyond Belief— absolutely a must-own for anybody with kids. His website (Meming of Life) is fantastic, too– with three kids in school himself (in Atlanta), he’s “down in the trenches”, so to speak. Many *outstanding* posts on bringing up freethinking, non-indoctrinated, thoughtful children; dealing with religious relatives; what to do when your kid comes home reporting that his science teacher used overheads pushing ID to start the biology unit… highly recommend his site.
In case you get any UK clergy reading it –
http://clergyproject.org/preview
It’s been set up by Richard Dawkins to help clergy who lose their faith. I don’t know if there’s anything similar in the US?
Alom Shaha’s The Young Atheist Handbook.
This blog is the online presence of Britain’s oldest atheist magazine, The Freethinker.
http://freethinker.co.uk/
I don’t think enough time is spent stressing sentiments like donnbarnes says above
“What pisses me off is when I hear the suggestion that “you atheists” are all alike. Atheists are as diverse as the population at large… if not more so.”
A great swath of humanity always seems to need someone to tell them how to do things, what to wear, what to eat, blah blah blah. Some folk don’t need much instruction. What they need to hear is: Stop believing in gods. Viola! You’re now officially an atheist, so go and live your life. They don’t need clubs and groups and books and community. Even for these people it’s often nice to know that others recognize that they don’t have to be activists or conference organizers. All they have to do is not believe in gods. When such people read about the dramas and crap and neediness that come from “the community” it seems divisive to them, exclusionary even.
So if you’re going to write a book about what pisses atheists off you might consider giving some space to recognizing that small group of atheists. This group is told by both believers and non-believers that they are supposed to be part of a group and do this and that and the other thing. None of it makes any sense, it’s all drama and wasted effort. Elevatorgate? Really? psssst Wake me up when they start talking about atheism again. It pisses me off that people think that I’m supposed to need community or want fellowship. F(&*^! If I liked you before we talked about religion we are friends. Just because you don’t believe in gods doesn’t mean we’re going to be friends. I don’t judge who my friends are by what foods they won’t eat or what hobbies they don’t have or what colors they don’t like. Picking friends that way is effing stupid. Yeah, don’t tell me that community increases the chance that I’ll get along with someone. That’s like going to a sheep ranch to try to find an iguana.
If you can find a resource for it, it might be good to mention why Pat Robertson’s god never saw fit to thrown a hurricane at CoS’s believers? Why the ever vengeful Allah doesn’t punish the Mormons. It pisses me off why no one ever talks about why all these gods are not out punishing each others creations. They all seem to want to punish fags and those with bad dress sense but never seem to want to punish apostates or those who believe in other gods… well, except the Jews, they seem to get punished no matter what they do.
The excellent Living After Faith podcast (official podcast of Recovering from Religion)
http://livingafterfaith.blogspot.com/
Also http://whywontgodhealamputees.com/
As a resource for understanding science (esp. versus religion) in a fun, easily comprehensible, enjoyable way I’d recoomend almost all of Isaac Asimov’s essays and some of his fiction as well.
Plus Carl Sagan’s works.
Plus much more. But that’s a good start.
I’d also recommend the ‘Bible Verses Never Read in Church’ ypoutibe series aomg others for some of the wierder things & more messed up items in the Bible – see for instance :
WARNING: Some obscene language, Not Safe For work
Then there’s the Non-stamp collector youtube channel :
again, among others .. Like this :
messed up bible stories series again via youtube.
Hope these are useful / enjoyable /helpful for y’all.
Center for Inquiry (CFI): http://www.centerforinquiry.net
List of US and international CFI Branches: http://centerforinquiry.net/about/branches
Council for Secular Humanism: http://www.secularhumanism.org
Free Inquiry magazine: http://www.secularhumanism.org/fi
African Americans for Humanism: http://aahumanism.net/
Committee for Skeptical Inquiry: http://www.csicop.org/
Skeptical Inquirer magazine: http://www.csicop.org/si
Jen Hancock’s blog has a tone helpful to someone making the transition from a religious life: Happiness Through Humanism
People have already hit the other blogs I could mention, so I’ll add a few books.
David Fitzgerald’s Nailed
Hemant Mehta’s I Sold My Soul on eBay
Thomas Quinn’s What Do You Do With A Chocolate Jesus?
All of these are informative, quick reads.
A Canadian multi-author website: Canadian Atheist: http://canadianatheist.com/
Choice in Dying: http://choiceindying.com/
Seems like most of the links have been covered. I would put in another vote for the following which helped a good deal for myself to start thinking about things more critically:
Why Won’t God Heal Amputees? – http://whywontgodhealamputees.com/
Skeptic’s Annotated Bible – http://skepticsannotatedbible.com/
Talk Origins – http://talkorigins.org/ (Creationism always seems to get intermingled in the issues)
Snopes – http://snopes.com/ (I get e-mails and such with interesting “facts” that are many times already debunked on Snopes)
2 books by Bob Altemeyer, a prof emeritus at U of Manitoba:
The Authoritarians
available free on pdf
http://members.shaw.ca/jeanaltemeyer/drbob/TheAuthoritarians.pdf
Amazing Conversions: Why Some Turn to Faith & Others Abandon Religion
in collaboration with Bruce Hunsberger
http://www.amazon.com/Amazing-Conversions-Others-Abandon-Religion/dp/1573921475/ref=sr_1_sc_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1328454293&sr=8-1-spell
Also, the Reasonable Doubts podcast. I know someone already mentioned it. It’s that good.
For practical, research-based advice and resources on building, growing, and marketing nonreligious communities, the Humanist Community Project is the place to go! We have resources on parenting, education, billboard design, communication of Humanist values, fundraising, secular celebrancy, storytelling, building a diverse community, framing, building book clubs and sharing circles, and a lot more!
http://HumanistCommunityProject.org
Be sure to include the Secular Coalition for America and Sean Faircloth’s book: Attack of the Theocrats. Sean outlines a program for restoring America to its secular basics.
Jerry Coyne’s Why Evolution Is True web site is invaluable to me. http://whyevolutionistrue.wordpress.com/
Also invaluable, Eric MacDonald at Choice in Dying: http://choiceindying.com/
You might find Asimov’s The Relativity of Wrong a useful work to cite. Also, Atheist Ireland, the Campaign to get rid of the Irish blasphemy law, The Humanist Association of Ireland, and Count Me Out, which helps people to defect from the Roman Catholic Church.
TRiG.
The Caged Virgin (by Ayaan Hirsi Ali)
The End of Biblical Studies (by Hector Avalos)
The Christian Delusion (ed. John W. Loftus)
Nailed: Ten Christian Myths That Show Jesus Never Existed at All (by David Fitzgerald)
Also, if you’re including fiction:
Isaac Asmiov’s “The Last Question”, “The Last Answer”, “Hell-Fire”, and “The Last Trump”
Salman Rushdie’s “The Satanic Verses”
Arthur C. Clake’s “Childhood’s End” and “The Star”
Robert A. Heinlein’s “Stranger in a Strange Land”
Hi Greta,
I’ve found lots of cool stuff on Atheist Nexus:
http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.atheistnexus.org%2F&h=SAQH8il8gAQH07Hck7sxITxKwKzyRnVcwm61EWPHYP2UOiQ&enc=AZPC4Yt_e6lEiRKZqDhKLQd2lhBEJBfqRiGr8ucpoc1Ovz35bmdtvqHNzdmld1y-rfVV_fRLrc89Byd4pGaybv5mAL0iE0oHF48zpmO-g6Y0gw
They have lots of forums, including humor. The only thing that gets a person in trouble is re-starting a discussion that’s al ready happened, that and being rude, illogical, stuff like that.
This guy is really smart: http://atheismblog.blogspot.com/ He is a professor (Matt McCormick) and devout (heh, heh) atheist.
Atheists: Mad, Bad, and Dangerous to Know.
This site has a ton of info which can be made into arguments/points: http://religiouschildmaltreatment.com/
Hope this helps.
As for books, the Robert A. Heinlein juvenile novel, Orphans of the Sky is stupendous, as it completely situates religion as a man-made artifact. It passed his strict censor Alice because she was focused on sex.
The story, the first of its kind, by the way, is about a generational starship where the inhabitants have been in space so long their descendants do not realize they are on a ship, and their god, and holy book, is….well, don’t want to spoil it but it concludes with a stunning psychological insight into how fervent believers cling to their beliefs despite facts to the contrary.
Written in 1951, by the way. His very first novel I believe but fully enjoyable by adults. I first read it during the golden age of sci-fi – 9 yrs old – and it forever crystalized some ideas floating in my head about religion.
This is a great page put up by atheism resource, titled “When people ask why I have a problem with religion, it’s hard to come up with a single answer..” and then a long scroll of news articles of all sorts of religious intolerance, of all stripes, from all around the world. It’s kind of a quick whack in the face, but I’ve found it handy to direct people to in several on-line discussions…
http://www.atheismresource.com/2012/religious-intolerance
Both for its historical interest and content : the first essay devoted to atheism, written circa 1725 “Testament: Memoir of the Thoughts and Sentiments of Jean Meslier”.
Heavily quoted by Voltaire and d’Holbach, Meslier had lived as a Catholic priest and is arguably the first person to have put his name to an incontrovertibly atheist document.
Another mention for infidels.org
http://www.infidels.org/
Has a HUGE library with all sorts of material on all things atheism, from historical writings to more technical philosophy papers. Very helpful to research that, especially for new atheists (“new” as in just starting out as one, not the “new atheist” usage).
Brian
Another mention for NonStampCollector, in Britain the NSS website, the Atheist Ireland people are very competent, Jesus and Mo.
I might be old fashioned, but I am still a fan of the old fashioned discussion board, and naturally enough I have a soft spot for the one I helped found, Secular Cafe.
David B
Oh and I forgot to mention Skeptics Dictionary. There is more to freethought than religion, and Skepdic is an invaluable recourse on all sorts of woo.
In particular on Skepdic, the article on what Bob Carroll calls ‘the hidden persuaders’.
David B
lesswrong.com has a bunch of stuff like lists of human biases and exercises to be more rational.
For people from religious backgrounds (especially those indoctrinated as children):
Caws, Peter, and Stefani Jones, eds. Religious Upbringing and the Costs of Freedom: Personal and Philosophical Essays. University Park, Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2010.
The authors of the essays in the book are not all atheists (most are, I think), but all were religiously indoctrinated as children, and all are philosophers, most have left the religions of their upbringing and are now atheists or agnostics, etc. Great read.
And of course, Dawkins’ “The God Delusion”, Sam Harris’ “Letter to a Christian Nation”, Daniel Dennett’s “Breaking the Spell”, etc.
Freethought Kampala
http://freethoughtkampala.wordpress.com/
Charles Freeman’s The Closing of the Western Mind
http://www.amazon.com/Closing-Western-Mind-Faith-Reason/dp/140004085X
Blogs:
~Atheist Media Blog: atheistmedia.com
Podcasts & Public Access:
~Ask an Atheist (http://askanatheist.tv/)
~Atheist Experience (http://www.atheist-experience.com/)
Books:
~Infidel by Ayaan Hirsi Ali
~The Moral Landscape by Sam Harris: http://www.amazon.com/Moral-Landscape-Science-Determine-Values/dp/B006W3YQTK/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1328518506&sr=1-1
~Anti-Creationist Handbook (http://www.amazon.com/Counter-Creationism-Handbook-Mark-Isaak/dp/0520249267/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1328517284&sr=8-1)
~Atheist Guide to Christmas: http://www.amazon.com/Atheists-Guide-Christmas-Robin-Harvie/dp/B005DI8DWQ/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1328517332&sr=1-1
~End of Faith by Sam Harris (http://www.amazon.com/End-Faith-Religion-Terror-Future/dp/0393327655/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1328517449&sr=1-1)
~Confessions of a Buddhist Atheist by Stpehen Batchelor(http://www.amazon.com/Confession-Buddhist-Atheist-Stephen-Batchelor/dp/0385527071/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1328517494&sr=1-2)
~Ken’s Guide to the Bible by Ken Smith (http://www.amazon.com/Kens-Guide-Bible-Ken-Smith/dp/0922233179/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1328517593&sr=8-1)
Community resources in the Western WA area:
~Seattle Atheists: http://www.seattleatheists.org/ & http://www.meetup.com/seattle-atheists/
~Humanists of North Puget Sound: http://www.meetup.com/HumanistsNPS/
~Kitsap Atheists/Agnostics: http://www.meetup.com/Kitsap-Atheists-and-Agnostics/
~Auburn Freethought Society: http://www.meetup.com/Auburn-Freethought-Society/
~Tacoma Atheists: http://www.meetup.com/tacomaatheists/
~Secular Seattle: http://www.meetup.com/SecularSeattle/
~Northwest Freethought Coalition: http://www.meetup.com/NWFC-Events/
~North of Seattle Atheists: http://www.meetup.com/North-Of-Seattle-Atheists/
~Eastside Atheists: http://www.meetup.com/Eastside-Atheists-Agnostics/
~Camp Quest NW: http://campquestnorthwest.org/
One of the things Theists say that annoys me greatly is the claim that only religion offers a basis for ethics, that nonbelievers have no “foundations” for ethics. Over the years I’ve written several essays about this for different audiences. Here I’ll just mention a book, GOOD AND EVIL: A NEW DIRECTION by Richard Taylor.
I have found “The Portable Atheist” to be an excellent collection of atheist thought. For current podcasts, I recommend the Godless Bitches. They are quite brilliant.
Greta,
As a vet, I’ve found the below site to be particularly poignant. I have a lot of friends who are amputees. It’s a good resource for all questions regarding medical miracles and faith healing.
http://whydoesgodhateamputees.com/
Atheist Nexus is an excellent social network site
http://www.atheistnexus.org/
Hello Greta Christina! 🙂
I do not know if this will help, but I will tell you this anyway. I was listening to you on YouTube {Why “A” R so Angry}
and you have lots 2 B angry about!
I am a Neo-Agnostic (only been in “freethought” mode for 2yrs), and I am NOT OUT About it. WHY? For some of the very reasons that you are angry! I am a {Black} American woman who lives in the southeast U.S. {yeah, the bible belt}, and having to deal with racism/sexism is so painful, that I have decided NOT to come out of the closet about my beliefs {or lack thereof}.
I am not financially independent, and have to look to fundy/conservative/theists for financial help. I have to keep my mouth shut at age 35-45-something yrs. old, in order to have food/clothing/shelter NOT taken from me and my family. *SIGH*
I fear the harassment that will come, if I attend the skeptic/non-believers’ meetings that are in my home town.
I would tell you more about the horrors as a teen/college student and sexuality “harrassment” but I don’t want to take up your whole blog about me. I am an Admin. to an online group of freethinkers – Universal Temple of Common Sense, our website is a work in progress {not online yet}, but we have a blog and a Facebook page: http://unitesense.wordpress.com/
http://www.facebook.com/groups/147220565321169/
Here’s a resource for atheist/agnostic alcoholics:
http://www.agnosticaanyc.org/worldwide.html#California
You can have sobriety without the woo.
Caveman Logic by Hank Davis is a neat look into how evolution has given us cognitive biases in favor of religion and superstition, and it’s written in a very approachable way. It does a good job of explaining why skepticism is necessary, and it doesn’t exclusively criticize religion – it also targets sports fans, new age beliefs, cryptozoology, ghosts, psychics, and a host of other irrational beliefs. I’ll admit it’s not a very angry book, but I think the lack of anger helps it get its points across better, and I think it would make a great companion and/or supplement to what you’re writing.
As far as websites go, aside from resources others have already linked, ExChristian.net is a brilliant resource for former Christians and those in the process of losing their faith. It fills a pretty significant hole I’ve noticed in the wider atheist community by providing emotional support that’s specific to those that have been harmed by Christianity, as well as information about the various ways Christianity – especially fundamentalist Christianity – harms individuals and families.
Not that this is directly related to atheism (not all scientists are atheists), but it does help set the record straight re: creationist “science”. Very Helpful.
http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Scientists_Confront_Creationism
Can’t leave out the The Brick Testament!
I also love the webcomic Tree Lobsters.
And of course the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster (pesto be upon Him).
And another vote for ex-christian.net, as well. That’s a great resource. And I’m sure somebody already mentioned the SGU podcast, that one would be a given, yes?
African Americans For Humanism: http://aahumanism.net/
How about The Geologic Podcast #246, which includes the Twitter comments regarding the Trend: God Is Not Great (meant to honor Christopher Hitchens after his death.) We know not all religious people are like this, but when an atheist says something even stupid, mean, or unfair, most of us speak up. This group of obviously religious folk was disgusting.
It may be useful to note, for those that haven’t listined to Geologic Podcast before, that the first 5 minutes or more of this particular episode exhibits George practicing his Ukrainian. This is not his usual language. Skip to 41:23 minutes for the section I mentioned.
Some resources I most frequently recommend to people in response to questions (of various kinds) on reddit’s /r/atheism:
http://wiki.ironchariots.org/index.php?title=Main_Page
http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Main_Page
http://www.talkorigins.org/ (especially
http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/list.html)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_logical_fallacies#Informal_fallacies
Books:
Misquoting Jesus, Bart Ehrman
The Demon-haunted World, Carl Sagan
Why Evolution Is True, Jerry Coyne
Forums:
http://www.reddit.com/r/atheism (hundreds of thousands of people, but very high noise; it mentions a lot of resources in its FAQ)
http://www.reddit.com/r/atheismbot (filters out almost all the dross)
http://www.reddit.com/r/atheistgems (the highlights of /r/atheism; its FAQ is worth a mention on its own)
http://www.reddit.com/r/atheisthavens – finding accomodation for atheists suddenly without accomodation
(etc – there are dozens of atheist groups there, shop around)
Blogs:
The one blog I recommend really often is yours!
I’d like to help, but really the only thing that makes me angry is when one of “the faithful” asks me why I’m so angry. Religious people in general, and Christians in particular, act as if they are embattled minorities under attack by the evil Atheist hordes. I’d like them to understand that Atheists are just trying – desperately – to stand up for our own rights, and for religious freedom in general.
HRC pdf about blasphemy laws:
http://www.humanrightsfirst.org/wp-content/uploads/Blasphemy_Cases.pdf
http://i.imgur.com/txf9U.jpg
This recently got a bunch of atheists riled up after someone stated that it was a vaguely poor representation of an entire belief system.
Look around you and see the beauty of God’s creation!
I think your Blog is a best informative one. I will come back again.
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