4 Reasons Atheists Have to Fight for Their Rights

This piece was originally published on AlterNet.

In the U.S., atheists have laws protecting us. But laws aren’t always obeyed, or enforced — and fighting for legal rights can have dire consequences.

“You atheists are just taking on the mantle of victimhood. There are laws protecting you — especially the First Amendment. Therefore, you’re not really discriminated against. And it’s ridiculous for you to claim that you are.”

Atheist activists get this one a lot. When we speak out about ways that anti-atheist bigotry plays out, we’re told that we’re not really oppressed. We’re told that, because we have legal protection, because anti-atheist discrimination is illegal, therefore we don’t really have any problems, and we’re just trying to gain unearned sympathy and win the victim Olympics. (I’d love to hear Bob Costas do the commentary for that!) It’s a classic Catch-22: If we speak out about oppression and point to examples of it, we’re accused of “playing the victim card,” and the oppression becomes invisible. And if we don’t speak out about oppression … then the oppression once again becomes invisible.

If you’ve ever made this “discrimination against atheists is against the law, therefore atheists need to shut up” argument, I have some really bad news for you. You may want to sit down for this, it may come as a shock:

People sometimes break the law. Continue reading “4 Reasons Atheists Have to Fight for Their Rights”

4 Reasons Atheists Have to Fight for Their Rights
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The Family Research Council Shooting

Whenever there’s a shooting or a bombing at an abortion clinic, I’m always appalled at how the right wing spin machine typically handles it. I’m always appalled at how often they equivocate, blame the victims, use it as an opportunity to promote their agenda. I’m always appalled at how difficult they find it to just say, without equivocation, “This is not acceptable. We do not shoot people just because we disagree with them.”

So I’m going to say this about the shooting at the Family Research Council:

This is not acceptable. We do not shoot people just because we disagree with them.

I disagree with the Family Research Council about pretty much everything. And right now, that is entirely irrelevant. We do not shoot people just because we disagree with them. This is not acceptable. Full stop.

The Family Research Council Shooting

Greta Speaking in San Francisco, Denver, SF Again, Salt Lake City, and Lakeland, FL!

UPDATE: The second San Francisco event on Sept. 8 has been postponed to January 13.

Hi, all! I have some speaking gigs and conferences coming up in August and September — in San Francisco, in Denver at the Atheist Alliance of America conference, in San Francisco again (different topic this time!), in Salt Lake City at the Sextravaganza event put on by SHIFT (the University of Utah’s secular student group), and in Lakeland, Florida at the Humanists of Florida Association Annual Conference. I’ll be speaking on Atheism and Sexuality, What the GLTB Movement Teaches the Atheist Movement, and Coming Out Atheist: How To Do It, How to Help Each Other Do It, And Why. If you’re in any of these towns, come by to hear me speak, buy my books, and say howdy! Details are below the jump. Continue reading “Greta Speaking in San Francisco, Denver, SF Again, Salt Lake City, and Lakeland, FL!”

Greta Speaking in San Francisco, Denver, SF Again, Salt Lake City, and Lakeland, FL!

Greta Interviewed by Dan Barker and Annie Laurie Gaylor on Freethought Radio!

Freethought Radio
I had the pleasure last week of being interviewed by Dan Barker and Annie Laurie Gaylor, for the Freedom of Religion Foundation’s radio/ podcast program, Freethought Radio. We talk about anger as a driving force for social change; the Santa Delusion and whether “religion makes people happy” is a good argument for religion; some of the best arguments against religion; and more. All in the context of discussing my new book, “Why Are You Atheists So Angry? 99 Things that Piss Off the Godless” (now available in audiobook, ebook, and print!).

On the same program, you can listen to Russian female punk band Pussy Riot protest the government in an Orthodox church, and hear Robert Ingersoll’s “Declaration of the Free” set to music.

It’s a good time. Dan and Annie Laurie are smart and charming, and we had a really fun and lively conversation. Check it out!

Greta Interviewed by Dan Barker and Annie Laurie Gaylor on Freethought Radio!

Street Art: Rejoice

From Balmy Alley in San Francisco. Because of the angle, it was hard to get a good photo of the whole image: these are the best I could do.

Balmy Alley is sort of famous. It’s in lots of guidebooks; they give tours of it; I rarely visit it without seeing other visitors there. I could do an entire series of Balmy Alley murals, and maybe someday I will. But this is probably my favorite.

I love that it’s sort of tucked away: not tucked away exactly, but it’s up high, away from the rest of the murals, easily missed. I missed it myself the first several times I visited the alley, and didn’t see it until it was spotted by a visitor we were showing around. I love that you’re walking along the alley, drinking in the magnificent artworks… and you look up, and you see this. Like a reminder. The top item on your art appreciation To-Do list.

I love that the lettering and the background are in a style commonly associated with religious art, and that the word is one that we typically hear in a religious context… but there’s no actual religious content in it. It could be a religious message… but it could easily be an entirely secular one. It makes me think of the thing so many of us keep saying in the atheist and secularist communities: that we need to look for the things people are getting from religion, things like community and continuity, ritual and rites of passage, and find secular ways to provide these basic human needs.

And I love the message. Rejoice.

Take joy.

When I wrote my piece on Gaultier a couple of weeks ago, I had this to say about joy:

Gaultier’s work is full of joy.

That’s the place where discipline and frivolity connect. The willingness to devote hundreds of hours to a single gown whose design is based on sailor suits? That’s joy. It’s the willingness to see life as absurd — and to throw yourself into it headfirst, and participate in it as thoroughly as you can. Not just in defiance of its absurdity… but in a passionate, delighted embrace of it.

This piece gives me the same feeling. It doesn’t have the same playful frivolity that Gaultier’s work does… but it has that same blend of discipline and exuberance. If I’m in a foul mood when I see it, it lifts me, or consoles me; if I’m in a wonderful mood, it nails it in. Every time I see it, it brings me into this place, this time, and reminds me that I’m alive… and that as challenging as that can be sometimes, it is a wondrous thing, a thing to be witnessed and celebrated.

Rejoice.

Street Art: Rejoice

"Why Are You Atheists So Angry?" Audiobook Now Available!

The audiobook edition of my new book, Why Are You Atheists So Angry? 99 Things That Piss Off the Godless, is now available! And you can still get it in print and ebook formats, too!

The audiobook version of Why Are You Atheists So Angry? is now available at Audible, iTunes, and Amazon. And yes, I did the recording for it! Doing the recording sessions was big fun, and with a book like this, I think it makes a big difference having the audio edition read in the author’s voice.

Ebook editions are still available in several formats: the Kindle edition is available on Amazon, the Nook edition is available at Barnes & Noble, and Smashwords has the book in multiple formats, including iBooks, Sony Reader, Kobo, Kindle (.mobi), Stanza, Aldiko, Adobe Digital Editions, any other reader that takes the Epub format, Palm Doc (PDB), PDF, RTF, Online Reading via HTML, and Plain Text for either downloading or viewing. All ebook editions and formats cost just $7.99.

The print edition is currently available through the Richard Dawkins Foundation bookstore, and can also be ordered directly from the publisher, Pitchstone Publishing — they’ll ship in early August. You can also pre-order the print edition through Amazon — but Amazon and most other retailers won’t have the book until the fall. The print edition is $14.95 USD.

Here is the description, and some wonderfully flattering blurbs. Thanks for supporting the book — and if you like it, please tell your friends! Continue reading “"Why Are You Atheists So Angry?" Audiobook Now Available!”

"Why Are You Atheists So Angry?" Audiobook Now Available!

Runway Recap: On Giving Up

Spoiler alert: This post contains spoilers about last Thursday’s episode of Project Runway: Season 10, Episode 4, “Women on the Go.” If you’re a fan of the show and you haven’t seen it yet — you stand warned.

So if you were on Project Runway, and you realized you were in over your head and couldn’t cope with the pressure… what do you think you’d do?

I don’t have a whole lot to say about this week’s winners and losers. Yes to Sonjia winning. Yes to Buffi going home. Yes to Fabio: at first I was puzzled about why this was on the bottom and not Melissa’s “friar of the Jawa monastery” look, but the judges made a good point that, at this level of the competition, you should be doing more than making a decent dress in a pretty print. And no, I don’t care how well-made it was: Christopher’s thing with the weird dangly asymmetrical handkerchief hem did not look like a “woman on the go.” It looked like Stevie Nicks dressed as a Goth pirate. Gunnar’s brown dress with the petals was way better, I thought: elegant but also sporty, and somehow magically both structured and soft. I’d wear it in a second. Continue reading “Runway Recap: On Giving Up”

Runway Recap: On Giving Up

Brief Blog Semi-Break

Last week was a horrorshow, and besides I’ve been falling behind schedule on work on my new book. So I’m going to take this week as a semi-break from the blog. I’ll be doing reprints, links to interviews, links to posts I’ve done elsewhere, event announcements, cat photos, street art photos, bringing unusually good comments up to post level. But I won’t be writing any new material for the blog this week. I need to recharge and give it a rest.

Except for the Runway Recap. I wouldn’t deprive you of that. I’m not a monster…

Brief Blog Semi-Break

Caturday: Random Acts of Catness

For no reason, and in no particular order: here are a bunch of pictures of our cats.

All three kittens snuggling on bed

Comet looking noble

Houdini on laptop

Snuggling tabbies

Comet and Houdini snuggling

Talisker and Houdini, mood lighiting

Houdini on condo, Comet on TV

All three kittens snuggling on bed

And now, for a stupid cat-themed song parody (here’s the original):

Your kitties ain’t sweet like mine
They eat the venison all of the time
And when I’m feeling lonesome and blue
My kitties know just what to do

They even walk on the telly
They even let me scratch their belly
We’d never put our kitties outdoors
Even when they shed all over our clothes
Don’t want to brag, just want to put you in line
Your kitties ain’t sweet like mine, no no
Your kitties ain’t sweet like mine

Caturday: Random Acts of Catness

Street Art: Parrot

On the other hand… here is a nice picture of a bird.

It’s been a few weeks since I’ve done a street art post, and I could use a little simple pleasure right about now. So here is a beautiful stencil of a parrot, on the sidewalk of either Valencia or Mission Street (I forget which). I’m a big fan of the big splashy murals and wall pieces, of course; but I also love how small pieces like this brighten up the city. Just little random moments of beauty, there to add a touch of joy to anyone who happens to pass by and notice. And I kind of like how the shadow of my camera is so vividly in the picture. Like the bird is about to perch on it.

If anyone knows who the artist or artists is/are, please let me know, so I can credit them properly.

Street Art: Parrot