We do have a Drinking Liberally chapter here in lovely Morris, so if you just happen to catch this in time, the beer will be flowing at the Old #1 bar downtown at 8:00. We will talk and argue; personally, I want snarl about Holy Spirit Hillary. Someday, can we please have a president who doesn’t babble about magic ghosts? Pretty please?
Brian English says
Gotta love Hillary. She’ll do anything to elected. :)
MAJeff, OM says
Speaking of drinking….
Hey Bostonians! Ready for some more atheisty-sciency drinking? Now featuring Mike, the Mad Biologist!
Brian says
The rule seems to be that anyone who won’t do/say anything to get elected eventually gets eliminated.
Brian English says
Is there a Melbournian atheisty-sciency drinkathon organized?
Bad says
“Gotta love Hillary. She’ll do anything to elected. :)”
Unfortunately, this part is one of the things that’s almost certainly sincere.
MAJeff, OM says
Is there a Melbournian atheisty-sciency drinkathon organized?
Get to work!
Fernando Magyar says
I guess I can relate to Hillary’s life experience.
Heck, I too have been filled with the “Holy Spirit” upon occasion, though in my case it has usually led to a hangover the next morning.
raatrani says
This is a dissapointing departure from her position last summer, when she attended the Sojourners Convention. She had then expressed her suspicion of those who wore their faith on their sleeve.
Another one bites the dust, i guess.
Dennis says
“Someday, can we please have a president who doesn’t babble about magic ghosts? Pretty please?”
Don’t hold your breath.
Brian English says
#6 Get to work!
I’m a big idea kind of guy. The one who comes up with the concept. The concept is me getting shloshed and boring a heap of atheisty-sciency people senseless with my inanity.
The rest is details. I don’t do details. Someone tell me when this piss-up is organized. :)
raatrani says
Hey PZ, have you seen this?
http://www.breitbart.com/print.php?id=080304120710.ad7gm7i6&show_article
Zeno says
What? You didn’t enjoy the presidency of arch-atheist and Bible-burner Tom Jefferson?
prettyinpink says
At this point in time there is little chance of an atheist becoming a president or successfully running. They are one of the least trusted demographics in America, and there are too many Christians that use religion as the selling point. Speaking of demographics I’d love to see a face off between an atheist and a gay/lesbian. Who would America vote for? Hm…
Michael says
Still speaking of drinking…we are always looking for folks to start new Drinking Skeptically chapters in their area!
MAJeff, OM says
I love it. The Christians get together to ritually drink the blood of their savior. We just get together to ritually drink.
Brian English says
#14 A quote from the site
Remember that drinking skeptically means drinking responsibly. If there’s one thing science has taught us, it’s the effects of alcohol on the human body.
Well, I’m handing in my skeptic card right now. I now see why people say science is bad.
I want a piss-up, not quiet social drink and my neurons and liver can just like it or lump it. :)
Glen Davidson says
This seems something like an open thread, and I think I have something good for a bit of bar talk. It has some of the specifics of the Expelled film, and the ignorant blather of an engineer who thinks it’s a “revealing” movie:
There you are, Berlinski saying what he doesn’t know, the old bugabear of atheism, a bunch of cheesy animations to get around the fact that they can’t make a case out of their sad little morons.
Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/2kxyc7
Brian English says
Wow, that guy really like Expelled. Sounds like a great movie. Full of logic and facts I’m sure. I always suspected Naziism to require Darwinian evolution. After all, there was no slavery or racism before Darwin……..
danley says
Try that Polygamy Porter if you get a chance. It’s on Mitt.
MAJeff, OM says
It’s on Mitt.
He’s a bastard for dropping out. I wanted him to spend those kids broke.
Kseniya says
My, my, Glen. That’s very interesting.
Oh really?
(Funny how the unnamed reviewer declined to used titles in reference to Dr. Dawkins, Dr. Myers, or Dr. Ruse. Nor does Dr. Behe appear anywhere in that list alongside Drs. Demski, Gonzalez, Crocker et al. Curiouser and curiouser!)
According to the source URL, this was “A review of the film by a Baylor Professor.”
Oh really?
Gee… I wonder who wrote the “review”? Lessee… a Baylor professor who appears in the film?
Who could it be? Well, whoever it is, I’m sure he or she is completely unbiased, has no conflict of interest, and has offered a fair and appropriately critical review.
harv says
PZ sez: Someday, can we please have a president who doesn’t babble about magic ghosts? Pretty please?
harv sez: No.
danley says
Of course being an ignorant dumbass does not always lead to agreeing with Ben Stein. It is, though, sufficient enough.
Brian English says
PZ Meyers
Trying to enrage the evil PZ by misspelling his name. Is there nothing these IDiots won’t stoop to?
MAJeff, OM says
Gee… I wonder who wrote the “review”? Lessee… a Baylor professor who appears in the film?
Who could it be? Well, whoever it is, I’m sure he or she is completely unbiased, has no conflict of interest, and has offered a fair and appropriately critical review.
Is it teh sweaterz? NNNNNNOOOOOOOOEEEEEEEEEEZZZZZZZZ!!!!!!!
Zeno says
To paraphrase my hero Berlinski: The assumption of malice on the part of IDiots is consistent but not necessary in explaining the frequent use of “Meyers” in their rantings. A more parsimonious explanation is stupidity. These are really dumb people. We need not be surprised that they can’t even bother to check their spellings. Do they ever check anything? (Only their brains. At the door!)
Kseniya says
Sweaterz? Nah. I mean, I guess not. “Dr. William Dembski” appears in the list prior to “yours truly.”
But who knows?
Brian English says
Zeno: Do they ever check anything? (Only their brains. At the door!)
Good point.
donna says
Jefferson is the only president I would have wanted to have a beer with. Heck it probably would’ve been home brewed.
shane says
God it’s hard to tell just what is and isn’t satire these days. The Expelled review was satire wasn’t it?
Geral says
@ Glen D.
Thanks for the find. Oh boy. I cannot WAIT until this movie is released. PZ is going to rip it a good one.
bernarda says
It is of little consolation, but Obama is just as delusional as Hillary.
“I am a Christian, and I am a devout Christian. I believe in the redemptive death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. I believe that that faith gives me a path to be cleansed of sin and have eternal life. But most importantly, I believe in the example that Jesus set by feeding the hungry and healing the sick and always prioritizing the least of these over the powerful. I didn’t ‘fall out in church’ as they say, but there was a very strong awakening in me of the importance of these issues in my life. I didn’t want to walk alone on this journey. Accepting Jesus Christ in my life has been a powerful guide for my conduct and my values and my ideals.”
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2008/januaryweb-only/104-32.0.html?start=2
So Obama believes in hocus-pocus too.
MartinM says
OT, but Orac has a post up about a poll on Larry King’s website asking whether people believe that ‘vaccines cause or contribute to autism.’ Seems the hordes of ignorance have got an early head-start, with 80% of around 11,000 voters saying ‘yes.’ Perhaps we can help to provide a touch of sanity.
Fernando Magyar says
Re #17
Well, Feynman was right, you moron. Now maybe if more people start staring at you bozos you will go away too?
Patrick says
After reading the article, it’s not even that she believes in invisible, mind-altering entities that really bothers me. It’s more her comments that she believes the ENTIRE Bible is real. Now maybe she just meant that it physically exists in space but somehow I’m thinking she actually meant that the entire thing is true. How does one become a distinguished lawyer without learning how to tell if a document has been falsified numerous times? I mean politician, sure, but lawyers are supposed to work in some realm of evidence right? Maybe she just didn’t read it or skimmed it. Like that silly report that congress got before the war saying exactly what a poor and unjustified war it would be.
Lilly de Lure says
Well, to be fair it is revealing, as is his review. Just not in the way either he or it’s makers had intended.
How about if we threw beer over them whilst chanting “The Power of FSM Compels Thee”?
Fernando Magyar says
Dunno, but here is a lawyer I can actually raise a glass to.
http://www.cnn.com/2008/LIVING/wayoflife/03/06/military.religion.ap/index.html
Lilly de Lure says
Oh Goody – so the election to choose the most powerful human being on earth is turning into a decision about which of the following would make the most effective presidential adviser:
Eleanor Roosevelt’s ghost,
A common or garden sky fairy
An intelligent designer who can’t even wire eyes up the right way around
How is this situation supposed to be of even little consolation again?
Zeno says
Here’s a link for Lilly de Lure about the constantly recycled story of Hillary Clinton supposedly “channeling” Eleanor Roosevelt’s ghost. The junior senator from New York believes in the big sky fairy in a Methodist way, but she is not a New Age mystic. That helps a little, I suppose. [Link]
Both Democratic candidates are conventionally Christian. So is McCain, for that matter, but the Republican nominee has lain down with dogs like Hagee and is now covered with rabid fleas. (As for third-party candidates, I think Nader worships himself.)
Matt Penfold says
Now we know the US cannot be entirely populated by brain dead morons, you Americans here are evidence of that, but why are the only people who have any chance of being elected president people who you just know would not have a clue how to sit on a lavatory seat unless shown ?
I mean I live in the UK, and we did elect Blair (for which I can only apologise) but sometimes he did seem to have moments of lucidity in between his delusional fantasies.
Sinbad says
OT, but Orac has a post up about a poll on Larry King’s website asking whether people believe that ‘vaccines cause or contribute to autism.’ Seems the hordes of ignorance have got an early head-start, with 80% of around 11,000 voters saying ‘yes.’ Perhaps we can help to provide a touch of sanity.
Bill Maher waxes eloquent on evil vaccines regularly but Sam Harris puts him front-and-center in the so-called “Reason Project” anyway because he’s sufficiently anti-religious. Why let actual reasoning get in the way of ideology?
Kseniya says
Yeah, some of Maher’s stuff is pretty unsettling.
MAJeff, OM says
but why are the only people who have any chance of being elected president people who you just know would not have a clue how to sit on a lavatory seat unless shown ?
Because you Europeans sent your crazy religious people over here.
Rickles says
Brian English,
I’m in Melbourne, FL. Too bad you’re probably in Melbourne, Australia. I think a Drinking Liberally chapter would be a hoot!
BaldApe says
Between that and the war vote, I just can’t take her seriously. I’m sure Obama’s not going to be any better, but another few Supreme Court appointments by the GOP and we won’t have a constitution at all.