The Confraternity of Catholic Clergy doesn’t like me


An organization of the Catholic leadership has now condemned my actions. This is sad news: it’s clear that at least this tier of the Catholic hierarchy is as deranged as the wackaloons flooding my mailbox.

We find the actions of University of Minnesota (Morris) Professor Paul Myers reprehensible, inexcusable, and unconstitutional. His flagrant display of irreverence by profaning a consecrated Host from a Catholic church goes beyond the limit of academic freedom and free speech.

Hmmm. Who is the Confraternity of Catholic Clergy to decide the limits of freedom? Flagrant irreverence towards a cracker ought to be fair game, I should think…and that’s all this action was: irreverence. You cannot demand that all members of a pluralist society be reverent towards any random humdrum article that a guy in a dress declares holy.

The same Bill of Rights which protect freedom of speech also protect freedom of religion. The Founding Fathers did not envision a freedom FROM religion, rather a freedom OF religion. In other words, our nation’s constitution protects the rights of ALL religions, not one and not just a few.

Man, that is a tired old argument — usually you see that fine-grained parsing of the words of the bill of rights from right-wing sources, trying to distort the meaning. Do they really think a bunch of high-minded Enlightenment dudes dedicated to the principle of liberty were thinking, “We need a clause here that could be used to compel people to be a member of a church—we’ll just give them the freedom to choose which church they’ll be forced to join”? That’s insane. I am free of religion. I am free to make that choice, just as everyone is free to choose to be Catholic.

And my personal choice not to believe in the silliness of religion is not an infringement on the rights of any religion.

The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance.

This is the funniest statement in the whole declaration.

Freedom of speech means I do have the right to malign and make fun of any religion I want. I can’t interfere with your right to practice your religion, but that hasn’t happened — all I’ve done is laugh at you.

That last clause, though…do they seriously believe that only Catholics are allowed to criticize Catholics, and that this restriction is enshrined in the constitution? That’s a fine catch, that catch-22. So only Catholics can malign the faith, but if they do, then they can be kicked out of the faith, which means they can’t criticize it anymore. That sounds like a ripe piece of theological logic to me.

The Chancellor of the University refused to reprimand or censure the teacher, who ironically is a Biology Professor. One fails to see the relevance of the desecration of a Catholic sacrament to the science of Biology. Were Myers a Professor of Theology, there would have been at least a presumption of competency to express religious opinions in a classroom. Yet, for a scientist to ridicule and show utter contempt for the most sacred and precious article of a major world religion, is inappropriate, unprofessional, unconstitutional and disingenuous.

Ummm, I don’t discuss religion in the classroom. I teach biology. My ‘desecration’ was performed at home, on my own time. There’s nothing ironic about the fact that I’m a biologist, nor did I claim my profession gave me special qualifications to see through the foolishness of faith. Go ahead, any of you can do it — you don’t need to be a theologian to see that it is just a cracker.

A biologist has no business ‘dissing’ any religion, rather, they should be busy teaching the scientific discipline they were hired to teach. Tolerating such behavior by university officials is equally repugnant as it lends credibility to the act of religious hatred. We also pray that Professor Myers contritely repent and apologize.

Wait, what? This is another attempt to shield a ridiculous religion, by declaring that members of certain professions are not allowed to criticize — that only Catholic theologians are permitted to rebuke the absurdities in their faith.

As for the idea that I’m supposed to be teaching biology 24-7…what, I can’t have a hobby? I can tell you that when I try to tell my wife late evening on Wednesday night that I can’t take out the trash because I’m too busy teaching biology, well, that excuse won’t fly very far.

I am not contrite, I will not repent, and I’m certainly not going to apologize for tossing a cracker in the garbage. All the Confraternity of Catholic Clergy will get from me is laughter.

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Comments

  1. says

    The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance.

    You do not have the right to not be offended.

    This is one of the dumber press releases I’ve ever read from anyone.

    I’m including Britney Spears and her ilk as well.

  2. says

    This is another attempt to shield a ridiculous religion, by declaring that members of certain professions are not allowed to criticize — that only Catholic theologians are permitted to rebuke the absurdities in their faith.

    And by logical extension, Catholic priests are not allowed to discuss the weather, because they’re not meteorologists.

  3. Renee says

    When people demand apologies for something stupid, I like to respond ‘All right, I’m sorry that you’re an idiot.’

    What, that’s not what they meant?

  4. Shaden Freud says

    A biologist has no business ‘dissing’ any religion….

    CCC up in this mothafucka!

  5. Barklikeadog says

    Browbeating for dummies. Funny. I tell my students to get Human Anatomy & Physiology for Dummies before taking the entrance exam to my programs. Maybe we could have a Press Release for Dummies and have Amazon give the Catholics 25% off.

  6. says

    You didn’t even need to provide them with a shovel. They are digging a hole with the hands faster than a burrowing wombat!

  7. says

    Right. They’ve fired the opening shot; I propose that our response should be to make this an annual event, tentatively entitled International Dogma Rejection Day (or International Symbolism Repudiation Day, or…).

    On that day, all participants will perform some act which demonstrates their rejection of the value of some symbol, dogma, or article of faith — perhaps while affirming the importance of the thing it is supposed to represent (in some cases, you may have to stretch quite a bit to find something).

    Basic ground rules: nothing illegal or dangerous; common sense should be followed. The target is rules that are solely based on dogma, because they are obviously in desperate need of some smackdown.

    Using wafer destruction as the example (and it need not be religious; stomping on flags or the sacred images of our cephalopod overlords would be fine too — whatever sacred cows have ticked you off lately), the participant would then go and write a blog entry celebrating whatever it is that the wafers stand for, which would be… uhh…. well, they’re supposed to be Jesus’s body turned into bread, so… fast food? Cannibalism? Self-sacrifice? The fact that the answer to this question isn’t more obvious just shows how meaningless and pointless the symbolism is.

    By this act of senseless destruction plus writing, we would actually be making a contribution to understanding the meaning behind the symbol — much more of a contribution to understanding than mindless following of a ritual could ever be.

  8. clinteas says

    “Confraternity of Catholic Clergy”

    Invokes images of juicy altarboys being fair game,that name does,not that I had ever heard of them before….

    But here’s the good stuff:

    //A biologist has no business ‘dissing’ any religion, rather, they should be busy teaching the scientific discipline they were hired to teach. Tolerating such behavior by university officials is equally repugnant as it lends credibility to the act of religious hatred. We also pray that Professor Myers contritely repent and apologize.//

    As in,a cricket player/novelist/teacher/plumber/waiter has no business dissing any religion?
    This so nicely shows their understanding of freedom of speech,doesnt it !

    Oh,PZ,dont ever delete any of the cracker threads,they are evidence for all eternity of catholic bigotry and dumbassness.

  9. Jason Failes says

    Much like the creationist arguments we are all far more familiar with, the enraged Catholics are beginning to fall into the fine art of repeating refuted points, but louder:

    A biology professor shouldn’t do this! It’s unprofessional!
    It was on his personal blog on his personal time.
    A biology professor shouldn’t do this!!! It’s unprofessional!!!

    The Founding Fathers did not envision a freedom FROM religion, rather a freedom OF religion!
    No, here are some links to what the founding fathers actually wrote. Freedom of religion is worthless without freedom from religion.
    The Founding Fathers did not envision a freedom FROM religion, rather a freedom OF religion!!!

    The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition!
    No, it means we can’t physically interfere with your own religious choices. We can make fun all we want. Freedom of speech, beeyatches.
    The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition!!!

    And so on.

  10. says

    The tired rantings of Catholics aside (Rreally, can they still truly be going on about this?) I really want that picture on a shirt. I will buy it and wear it proudly.

    As for the rantings…

    It seems to have become common place in this country for the Christian conservative side of American politics to both wave the flag of free speech while at the same time shitting on it. They must have all the free speech they can get to keep from being persecuted for their beliefs, but the moment someone doesn’t agree, then there need to be limits. Of course these limits must be one sided, the religious can still cross them, just not the godless heathens.

  11. says

    I hope at some point the Vatican will comment on this BS. You certainly attracked the Catholic flea organizations… You’re really on to something here with all this hysteria of a bland ritz.

  12. Robert says

    Ok, before this, I kinda thought the whole cracker desecration thing was just a bit too far. I thought that it was mean to intentionally desecrate something someone holds so sacred regardless of how utterly retarded those reasons were (well kinda, I guess I really just don’t like rilling people up). But declaring that freedom of religion means no one has the right ot attack them? Now I am fucking pissed. This makes me completly support everything you have done, and makes me want to stage some kind of desecration of my own.

    I am not beholden to their goddamn lunacy, and I certainly don’t have to respect and tolerate idiocy and stupidity.

  13. cls says

    I needed a good giggle, I’ve been doing the graphic design for the annual financial report for a certain mega church all week.

    Don’t worry, they will stop praying for you soon, the new trailer for the next Harry Potter film just got released and they have bigger fish to fry.

  14. says

    Well, at least they put “dissing” in quotes. I have to give them points for that.

    As for the rest … if biologists shouldn’t talk about religion, should priests be trying their hands at marriage counseling? They have no personal experience of the marital state, except in the rare cases where clerics are widowers who went into the priesthood after losing their spouses (e.g., England’s Cardinal Manning, who considered his wife’s death “God’s special mercy,” since it allowed him to become a priest).

  15. mk says

    And just when you thought the thousand comments per thread days were over! Heh-heh. ;^}

  16. MaryLupin says

    Citing the idea of freedom of religion notions of the American founding fathers was pretty funny since, in part, it was envisaged as freedom from the oppression of high Anglicans and Catholics.

  17. says

    Boy, they sure have a lot of gall, criticizing an atheist when they are not atheists themselves.

    Another thing, that Koran you desecrated wasn’t a “real” Koran. Only a Koran that is written in Arabic is “real”. Everything else is just some translator’s interpretation.

  18. Jason Failes says

    “Attacking the most sacred elements of a religion is not free speech anymore than would be perjury in a court or libel in a newspaper.”

    ohhhhhh, they do not want to go there.

    Both of their analogies depend upon truth-claims, and if the truth-claim of “this cracker is the transubstantiated flesh of out messiah” ever has to go head to head with “It’s just a fracking cracker”, say in a court of law, well, guess which truth-claim will come out looking like a fraud?

  19. Hank Fox says

    PZ, their site calls for “reparation.” I’m guessing you’re expected either to send them a nickel for the cracker you desecrated, or else bring a tenth of an ounce of Jesus back to life.

    Speaking of reparations, I’d like the Catholic Church to pony up too. I want the Dark Ages fixed. Maybe they can also do something about Pat Robertson.

  20. Ashley Moore says

    As a practising Hindu, I consider cows to be sacred.
    I hereby demand all Catholics stop killing and eating cattle.

    For you see, the establishment clause provided freedom OF religion, not freedom FROM religion…

  21. says

    Chuck @ #3:

    More to the point, doesn’t that mean that the spokespeople for the CCC aren’t allowed to comment on PZ’s teaching style, since they’re not educators?

  22. Interrobang says

    I thought that it was mean to intentionally desecrate something someone holds so sacred regardless of how utterly retarded those reasons were

    You mean, more mean than issuing death threats after PZ’s hyperbolic threat to do it? Keep in mind, Cook had also gotten death threats for (apparently) unintentionally desecrating a Communion wafer.

    I agree with PZ in this case. When bullies try to shut you up, the worst thing you can do is shut up; then they feel like they’ve won and they double and redouble their efforts to make your life miserable. When it comes to the sorts of bullies I’m used to dealing with, getting louder is the least powerful of the effective responses…

  23. Greg says

    “We find the actions of University of Minnesota (Morris) Professor Paul Myers reprehensible, inexcusable, and unconstitutional.”

    I don’t know, PZ. The Unconstitutional part, for me, was the funniest thing I read from the whole thing. Mainly because it set up what was idea a hilarious read.

  24. C R Stamey says

    I have to agree with MaryLupin @ #20.

    The fact they used the “freedom of religion” argument while ignoring why it was implemented in the first place is priceless. My irony meter had a meltdown.

    Whatever reservations I had about Crackergate are gone. The point PZ has made is long overdue and the press release confirms that.

  25. says

    We find the actions of University of Minnesota (Morris) Professor Paul Myers reprehensible, inexcusable, and unconstitutional.

    Unconstitutional? I know what that word means. I don’t think it means what they think it means.

  26. Sven DiMilo says

    The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance.

    ‘K, I ‘ve read that 5 times now, and it’s not only Stoo-oo-oopid, but it’s illiteate as well, no? Isn’t there a missing “to which” or “in which” or something?

    One wonders (does one not?) how much of this ridiculous over-reaction is traceable to the small, silent fear deep within their lizardbrains that the whole profitable, self-serving, silly shebang is on the cusp of crashing down around them if their “sheep” start to think about stuff a little bit.

  27. says

    Umm… “dissing?”

    Yo! DJ PZ is gettin’ all up in thems Catlick grillz, and he be bustin’ it old-school like crazy Lutha with no need for their ills.

    Instead of nailin some rag to the Wittenberg door, DJ PZ spiked a wafer and shouted “no fucking more!”

  28. says

    If they want respect they can earn it. Until then they can STFU. This is my letter to the Catholic League:

    If I should come to possess a consecrated host, I swear to treat it in the most disrespectful, sacrilegious manner possible. It’s just a symbol, but what if Bill Donohue was right?

    If there really is a Jesus Christ, and he really does transform himself at the priest’s bidding, then he is there as an active participant in satisfying the priest’s desires during mass. He is also there as an active participant in satisfying the priest’s desires during what went on downstairs with that same priest. He was right there as an active participant in taking away my childhood and leaving me with nightmares for forty years. Instead of transforming those nightmares or preserving that child, his only interest was in transforming hosts for the child’s tormentor.

    And he demands my respect? No. He gets the contempt he has earned through his own actions. His accomplices and enablers in the church needn’t fear I will lower myself to his level by seeking out new victims to abuse, however if Jesus Christ is in some sense present in the host, and if I should ever come again find myself with one, the very least I could do is perform a cathartic healing and act of symbolic justice by utterly desecrating and destroying it.

  29. Wodwose says

    In knitting one must learn to “cast off” so that scarves and such do not go on forever. Catholics should learn this technique for use in their pointless bitching and complaining.

    I am wondering tho’, if the National Committee on What You Can’t Talk About has placed an injunction against biologists talking about religion, is there something that we chemical engineers are forbidden to talk about? I missed the memo.

  30. Michelle says

    I think the greatest part is the picture at the end of your post! Who made it? :)

  31. Nuno says

    After reading all this BS and nonsense from this silly people that do not tolerate whoever thinks different from them, I really feel compeled by, all the catholics that I read here, to go to a mess and take the cracker home.

  32. John C. Randolph says

    Sorry, I just can’t scrape together any sympathy for an organization with a history of protecting child molesters from prosecution.

    To any catholic priests who may be reading this: we’re not playing along with your pretentious nonsense. Grow up and get a real job. A cracker is a cracker, even if you hold your breath until you turn blue about it.

    -jcr

  33. says

    PZ – your post was worth reading for this one sentence alone:

    “You cannot demand that all members of a pluralist society be reverent towards any random humdrum article that a guy in a dress declares holy.”

    A trifecta! Making a good point with adroit prose while executing a well-aimed kick in the balls.

    Keep it up.

  34. Boosterz says

    Theists are always making the false claim that atheism is a form of religion. Does this press release mean that theists aren’t allowed to criticize atheism now since they aren’t atheists?

    They must not have though about the crap in that press release for more then 3 or 4 seconds before publishing it.

  35. negentropyeater says

    One quick look at their website (geebus what a mess !), shows that this is yet another group of conservative fundamentalists :

    Furthermore, we pledge to explain and encourage our faithful to fully know, understand and comply with authentic Christian morality contained in this encyclical, especially on the intrinsic evils of abortion and contraception.

    We strongly urge the faithful to exercise their political power as tax paying voters to elect and influence governors and legislators so they will enact state amendments to prevent the alteration, expansion or redefinition of marriage.

    We resolve to support every bishop who courageously defends the sanctity and integrity of the Holy Eucharist by denying Communion to notorious and unrepentant politicians who are openly supportive of abortion and/or euthanasia.

    Their plea can gladly be ignored, anyway, what do they know about all these things, this bunch of old frustrated men completely detached from reality with all their delusions, what a joke !

    Do they realise that they really look like old perverts on those pictures ?

  36. Robert in NYC says

    The Confraternity’s grasp of Constitutional law is poor. Almost all of the provisions of the Bill of Rights are binding on government, and not on individuals. (Slaveholding is an exception — individuals are not allowed to own slaves.) The First Amendment limits the goverment’s power to impose restrictions on the press and and speech and establish a state religion. But it imposes no restrictions on individuals. There must be “state action” for the Bill of Rights to be involved in most cirucmstances. State action is absent here. Other laws, of course, may apply.

  37. kid bitzer says

    okay, they just flunked their con law exam.

    that is the *saddest* exposition of the establishment clause i have *ever* read.

    as well as being utterly illiterate, as sven in #32 notes.

    man, at least the calflicks i knew 50 years ago were well-educated–say what you like about jesuits, at least they knew how to write a grammatical sentence, and in several different languages.

    these guys are just stoopid.

  38. Jams says

    I hear – as a first step toward this new understanding of freedom of religion and speech – Catholics are removing from their sermons and texts all references to non-Catholics as well as all comments on subjects other than Catholicism. Rumour has it that their new Bible makes for a refreshingly hate-free read, loaded with… oh wait, this just in… my apologies: The catholic church will continue to embrace unrestrained authority over all matters, reserving the additional right to vilify, slander, libel, mislead and condemn as they see fit.

  39. NC Paul says

    Catholic priests using their divine connection to Jesus as a bully pulpit to tell people what to do with their life?

    Say it ain’t so!

    This is why you have separation of church and state. Given an inch, these whackaloons will be in your bedroom telling you what you can and can’t do, should and shouldn’t think. It’s what they did in Ireland till we got wise to the scam (and even still, we have a legacy of illiberal laws on the statue books and in our constitution from that time).

    Thank you Confraternity of Catholic Clergy for amply demonstrating that religion is the enemy of personal freedom.

  40. Lee Salisbury says

    Experience witnesseth that eccelsiastical establishments, instead of maintaining the purity and efficacy of Religion, have had a contrary operation. During almost fifteen centuries has the legal establishment of Christianity been on trial. What have been its fruits? More or less in all places, pride and indolence in the Clergy, ignorance and servility in the laity, in both, superstition, bigotry and persecution.
    — James Madison, A Memorial and Remonstrance Against Religious Assessments, addressed to the Virginia General Assemby, June 20, 1785

  41. says

    Wait, this has a bright side. If you can’t criticse Catholicism unless you’re a catholic…

    Then priests can’t criticize any sexual behaviors of any kind, they’re not having sex.

    The Catholic Clergy can’t criticize gay people, they’re not gay.

    The Catholic Clergy can’t criticize marriage in any form, they can’t get married.

    I mean, think about it, if they want to use THAT logic, then we have a shot to get them to STFU about anything that isn’t a direct part of Catholicism.

  42. llewelly says

    The Confraternity of Catholic Clergy had their chance. They could have repudiated all of the death and violence threats emerging from Bill Donahue’s flying monkeys. But no.

  43. Docwazoo says

    Re Woozle #9: I think we should write up a checklist of possible desecrations for all relevant religious symbols – I’m having trouble thinking up good Jewish desecrations to perform in Israel (granted, we don’t have the same kind of constitutional freedom you guys have).

  44. Bodach says

    “The Founding Fathers did not envision a freedom FROM religion, rather a freedom OF religion!”
    Well, okay then; they’ve convinced me with their blinding logic. From this day forward I will no longer be an atheist but will become a member of the null set religion. I don’t feel any different, still want to laugh at and berate those dress wearing pedophiles…

    And Dan @ 33? I feel you, aight?

  45. Cheezits says

    And by logical extension, Catholic priests are not allowed to discuss the weather, because they’re not meteorologists.

    They’re not allowed to discuss birth control either.

  46. says

    Keep up the good work!

    I would like those clowns to find where in the constitution it’s prohibited to abuse crackers…

  47. Jason Failes says

    PZ, their own “logic”,

    Priests are humans.
    Humans are biological.
    You are a biologist.
    Therefore, you can critique them all you want.

    You are an atheist.
    Atheists are not Catholics.
    Priests are Catholics.
    Therefore, they can’t say anything about you at all.

  48. qbsmd says

    So now no one can say that it’s just Bill Donahue, who isn’t part of the Catholic hierarchy.

    They must not have though about the crap in that press release for more then 3 or 4 seconds before publishing it.

    Posted by: Boosterz

    Their theology sounds like no one thought it over either, even though we know people have. I think it’s just the quality of the minds involved.

  49. Wicked Lad says

    The Confraternity (“Confraternity”? Really?) of Catholic Clergy wrote:

    His flagrant display of irreverence by profaning a consecrated Host from a Catholic church goes beyond the limit of academic freedom and free speech…. The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance.

    As Noam Chomsky has written, though:

    If we don’t believe in freedom of expression for people we despise, we don’t believe in it at all.

  50. Umilik says

    Nearly 500 years after Galileo and Bruno the medieval hatemongering idiotic mindset seems alive and well.
    Well, it’s obviously off to the stake with you, my good man. Best invest in some asbestos underwear.

    Man, somebody get me off this planet….

  51. JHJEFFERY says

    PZ

    Greeting:

    As a lawyer of some 33 years, and a bit of an expert on the First Amendment, I have a suggestion for the Catholics who wrote this:

    “The same Bill of Rights which protect (sic) freedom of speech also protect(sic)freedom of religion. The Founding Fathers did not envision a freedom FROM religion, rather a freedom OF religion. In other words, our nation’s constitution protects the rights of ALL religions, not one and not just a few. Attacking the most sacred elements of a religion is not free speech anymore than would be perjury in a court or libel in a newspaper.”

    The suggestion is that they should actually READ the First Amendment before they opine on it, or call me and I will tell them what it means for an entirely reasonable fee. The Amendment reads, in pari materia: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof . . . ”

    This does not, in any sense, prohibit you from descrating a cracker. However, I do not think that Congress could pass a law requiring that you do so. You may belittle and descrate all you want. You may also paint swasticas all over a church, subject to other penal code provisions–such actions are not unconstitutional. The clause following the above-quoted protects your right of free speech, including content-laden actions such as the desecration of a cracker. Maybe they were unaware of this little clause.

    I will drop them a nice note to the above effect.

    As to their comment about you not being a theologian (ironic from theologians giving legal opinions–without a license), I, like Prof. Dawkins, am not a fairiologist and take no position on the issue.

    Cheers,

    JHJEFFERY

  52. says

  53. * So as long as we form a religion that has a sacred tradition of mocking ridiculous beliefs, it’s all good?
  54. * Confraternity of Catholic Clergy – anyone else get a visual of a bunch of drunk priest sitting in a room watching porn and opening bottles of holy wine with various unusual parts of their anatomy?
  55. Mena says

    It needs to be said, this being an internet forum and all:

    “I’m in ur churches killin ur crackers.”

    Or something like that.

  56. DuckPhup says

    Irreverence is unconstitutional? OK… I’m screwed.

    (Dang… I must have been absent that day…)

  57. Thoracantha says

    So, by Confraternity of Catholic Clergy understandings, they can not criticize Wiccans, Muslims, Satanist, or even the most evil of evils atheist, because they don’t belong to that group?

    Wait,.. Wouldn’t one of the most important doctrines of the Catholic Church, that it, and it alone, is the one truth faith, and therefor all other religions are false, be considered criticism of these other religious view points? By their logic would Catholicism be unconstitutional? Therefor, criticism of Catholic would be constitutional because the view point espoused by Catholics is unconstitutional, and there can be no constitutional protection for unconstitutional action…. (Head explodes at this point.

  58. Kseniya says

    That press release is a fine example of why there should be (and is) a clearly-defined and constitutionally-guaranteed separation of church and state. The fact that the authors characterize PZ’s actions and words as “unconstitutional” demonstrates that those fools don’t know the meaning of the word. Let us keep as much political power out of their hands as possible.

  59. says

    Well considering that they are defining what people of certain disciplines should do, lets define their duties too..
    A religious person, who easily offends has no business reading a science blog or discussing a biology professor. Lets do that

  60. SEF says

    Of course these limits must be one sided, the religious can still cross them, just not the godless heathens.

    It makes me think of those road markings (in the UK anyway) with a solid line next to a dashed line along the centre to indicate that only one of the two flows of traffic is allowed to encroach upon the other’s territory. That, with no changeover for the return of the privilege, is what the dishonest religious people want “free” speech etc to be like.

  61. Sastra says

    “Lies and hate speech which incite contempt or violence are not protected under the law. Hence, inscribing Swastikas on Jewish synagogues or publicly burning copies of the Christian Bible or the Muslim Koran, especially by a faculty member of a public university, are just as heinous and just as unconstitutional.”

    Burning a Bible is against the law? Really? Where? Since when does inciting “contempt” become equivalent to inciting violence? Do these people have no brakes? Or do they just assume other people shouldn’t be expected to?

    I think PZ owes The Confraternity of Catholic Clergy a debt of gratitude. Their arguments are making the rationale for your actions explicit and clear. No, you did not desecrate the cracker to upset individual Catholics. You did so to make a larger point.

    Statements like “The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance” and “Attacking the most sacred elements of a religion is not free speech anymore than would be perjury in a court or libel in a newspaper” need to be refuted in the strongest terms possible.

    They’re making your case for you. When it comes down to it, it’s not really about the Catholics themselves. If a “Flag Desecration” Amendment criminalizing the “rude” treatment of the American flag were to pass through Congress, a lot of Americans who have no particular grievance against the government would burn flags in protest. We should not hold either symbols — or people’s sensitive “feelings” — sacred.

    And religion gets no pass on this. The real reason they want no criticism in this area is because “faith” arguments are weak, and can’t stand up to ridicule. They depend on everyone playing along, and agreeing that having faith is a wonderful characteristic requiring strength and depth. Thus, religion is a sanctuary where nobody is allowed to question or be rude.

    They can mandate that in their churches, among their followers. Only.

    By the way, I love the way they gratuitously threw in the Courtier’s Reply, just for the heck of it (“Were Myers a Professor of Theology, there would have been at least a presumption of competency to express religious opinions in a classroom.”) How ironic.

  62. Chem Geek says

    Re: #26

    “This is all Canada’s fault

    Posted by: Lago | July 30, 2008 9:47 AM

    Anyone know how to contact Trey Parker and Matt Stone? This WOULD make a great epidsode.

    Tonight on Southpark…

  63. 43Alley says

    “The Chancellor of the University refused to reprimand or censure the teacher, who ironically is a Biology Professor.”

    That’s not irony. These Catholics are worse than play-by-play sportscasters.

  64. Benjamin Franklin says

    New Revolutionary CHRISTOCRACKERS

    Freedom of crackers is not freedom from crackers

    ..
    .

  65. Randy says

    “The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance”

    Man, get rid of that and homosexuality and they wouldn’t have anything to talk/screech about on Sunday.

  66. Lago says

    The Lutheran Church was founded on the criticism of the Catholic Church. Does the Lutheran Church have a Constitutional right to exist according to the Confraternity of Catholic Clergy?

  67. says

    Sastra (#66):

    If a “Flag Desecration” Amendment criminalizing the “rude” treatment of the American flag were to pass through Congress, a lot of Americans who have no particular grievance against the government would burn flags in protest.

    Hell, I’d pull a William Lloyd Garrison for good measure and burn copies of the Constitution, too.

    By the way, I love the way they gratuitously threw in the Courtier’s Reply

    Don’t you mean the Responsum Aucili? ;-)

    (By the way, do you have the photos from wandering around the last day of TAM 6?)

  68. alloy says

    By this logic, any and all attempts at evangelism should cease forthwith.

    Catholic priests should not (in theory at least) have any comment to make on fornication. (or marriage gay or otherwise)

    Babtist ministers should refrain from talking about booze, gambling and pornography.

    Etc Etc.

  69. Richard Eis says

    -For a scientist to ridicule and show utter contempt for the most sacred and precious article of a major world religion, is inappropriate, unprofessional, unconstitutional and disingenuous.-

    That implies that it is most sacred…considering only a tiny subset of people actually cared (and their sock puppets) and since that subset generally are following a different version of said religion than most christians I fail too see their point.

  70. Kseniya says

    Attacking the most sacred elements of a religion is not free speech anymore

    This typo neatly reveals their desire and agenda.

  71. LMR says

    I think they are correct on one point, people should stick to their discipline.

    Therefore, they should reject all religious teaching from a CARPENTER of all people. They can close their doors now.

  72. Vince says

    “And by logical extension, Catholic priests are not allowed to discuss the weather, because they’re not meteorologists.”

    Remembering when the American Council of Bishops urged Catholics to vote for “W”, lets take the logic one more step and say they’re not qualified to discuss politics either.

  73. Duvenoy says

    Being from an agnostic/atheist family, I have been religion-FREE for some 68 years, now. As nothing has come along to convince me that any sort of Big Juju has ever existed, I rather doubt that I will change my mind.

    The Confraternity of Catholic Clergy is merely another group of blatherskites in funny cloths with a little authority over some portion of the world’s deluded, said authority granted them by those same deluded. The Klan might be seen as similar, but they haven’t done as many lynchings as the Church. Happily, the Klan is waining and, if what I’ve read is correct, the Church’s recruitment is down a bit. May the ascent into reason continue……

    doov

  74. PoxyHowzes says

    One of their popes declared in all seriousness that roman catholics should support freedom of religion anywhere that rc’s were in a minority and nowhere that rc’s were in a majority.

  75. says

    And by logical extension, Catholic priests are not allowed to discuss the weather, because they’re not meteorologists.

    On the flip side, they should be able to expound at length on the matter of proctology as it applies to young boys.

  76. shonny says

    Their plea can gladly be ignored, anyway, what do they know about all these things, this bunch of old frustrated men completely detached from reality with all their delusions, what a joke !

    Do they realise that they really look like old perverts on those pictures ?

    Posted by: negentropyeater | July 30, 2008 9:56 AM

    neg,
    They don’t just LOOK like old perverts, they ARE old perverts!
    (No doubt they themselves consider pedophilia ‘normal’, which I guess it is for the cat’lickin’ clergy)

  77. says

    @Benjamin Geiger, #25:

    Well, the author could be both a priest and an educator, but I take your point. Meanwhile, I couldn’t help picking out this quote:

    Were Myers a Professor of Theology, there would have been at least a presumption of competency to express religious opinions in a classroom.

    Don’t these blithering idiots ever bother to think about what they’re writing before publishing it? What the hell does this brouhaha have to do with the classroom?

  78. Mr.Pendent says

    Slightly OT, but that image at the end of the post reminds me of the TV show Scrubs, and JD’s favorite game…”Hide the Saltine”

    Sorry.

  79. says

    I can’t get over the fact that he’s claiming a right for a religion.

    Religions don’t have rights. Humans have rights. Hell, he’s even saying that religions have rights that humans do not. That’s the dumbest damn thing I’ve read this month.

    A person who belongs to a religion has rights, as does a person who does not belong to a religion. A religion can’t have rights because a religion is not a person. It is, at best, an abstract concept. It’s like saying an emotion has rights. Madness.

  80. Dunc says

    Hank Fox

    Speaking of reparations, I’d like the Catholic Church to pony up too. I want the Dark Ages fixed.

    Not this again. If you think the Catholic Church was responsible for the Dark Ages, you do not know what the term “Dark Ages” means (in modern technical usage, anyway). If anybody is responsible for the Dark Ages, it’s the Visigoths. Plus the Dark Ages were not nearly as bad as the Catholic Church subsequently made them out to be.

    What the hell do they teach in history class over there? Everything you think you know about the Dark Ages is wrong.

  81. Benjamin Franklin says

    Docwazoo@ #49

    I’m having trouble thinking up good Jewish desecrations to perform

    Pay over-retail price!
    or more simply, buy from SkyMall

  82. Lago says

    Anyone feel like eating some annelids right about now? I know I feel like switching to a Diet of Worms.

  83. says

    These people defending this cracker like it is their life are about as ignorant as they come. Move on losers…its a frackin’ cracker! If I was a religious person I would be embarrassed at the worship of a cracker.

  84. Stephen Wells says

    Wasn’t there one of the idiots in the cracker threads who spent all his time chortling about how the evidence the cracker was consecrated wouldn’t pass peer review, and therefore you were going to lose your job? He seemed to have a similar idea to this bunch; apparently once you’re a scientist then EVERY SINGLE THING YOU DO must be research or teaching.

  85. Malocchio says

    So a congregation of professional crossdressers is having a hissy fit on your behalf? Feel honored. I know I would.

  86. says

    Totally off topic to Duvenoy:

    I’ve not heard Blatherskite used since Ducktales and Gizmo Duck.

    Nostalgia is a wonderful thing.

  87. cbpooh says

    I don’t think they could have interpreted the First Amendment more shabbily if they had tried. Seriously, did they not consult an attorney before they used words like “unconstitutional” to describe the act of desecration? There is absolutely nothing in the Constitution that limits the actions of individual citizens in the United States. The purpose of the Constitution was to provide a framework for a federal government and then limit the GOVERNMENT’S powers. I’m really finding it difficult to believe that this is a serious organization. Whether you like what PZ did or not, this statement displays almost breathtaking ignorance. My 13 year old daughter was able to find the giant flaw. Time to rethink that curriculum in the Catholic schools if this is what it eventually produces.

  88. says

    “We ask all Catholics of Minnesota and of the entire nation to join in a day of prayer and fasting that such offenses never happen again.”

    Your actions are going to make for hungry Catholics everywhere. I’m impressed! :)

    Seriously though… That’s a really stupid press release. It would be nice if people would stop interpreting “Freedom of Religion” to mean “Freedom for me to impose MY Religion on whomever I chose”.

  89. Cheezits says

    According to my religious belief, not only are lying, covering up abuse, and promoting STUPID doctrines immoral, but failing to criticize the perpetrators and point out how STUPID their beliefs are is a sin.

  90. Jason says

    Your actions have offended the sensitivities of millions of people. Should you not put on your bigboy pants and apologise? You act like a preadolesant who is spoiled as hell.

  91. says

    As an ex-Catholic, I can say that Catholicism wouldn’t lend itself to criticism if it wasn’t so stupid and, at times, cruel. So they started it.

  92. Tophe says

    @ Woozle, #9

    The Discordians already have this covered in their Pentabarf:

    3. A Discordian is Required during his early Illumination to Go Off Alone & Partake Joyously of a Hot Dog on a Friday; this Devotive Ceremony to Remonstrate against the popular Paganisms of the Day: of Roman Catholic Christendom (no meat on Friday), of Judaism (no meat of Pork), of Hindic Peoples (no meat of Beef), of Buddhists (no meat of animal), and of Discordians (no Hot Dog Buns).

  93. Docwazoo says

    Ben Franklin #94:
    Ouch! If I were still Jewish I’d call you an antisemite!
    Seriously though, we already eat pork outdoors, defile the Sabbath, and sell leavened bread on passover. It still doesn’t piss off the orthodox enough!

  94. SC says

    Spending time at Mixing Memory can be a frustrating experience.

    But everyone here has already heard my rants! :)

  95. craig says

    The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance.

    By this logic, most of the sermons performed in the Catholic church are “unconstitutional.”

    Are they seriously trying to say that they never criticize non-Catholics in their sermons? They never say that atheists or others are immoral and bound for hell?

    Morons.

  96. says

    Your actions have offended the sensitivities of millions of people. Should you not put on your bigboy pants and apologise? You act like a preadolesant who is spoiled as hell.

    Oh boo hooo Jason.

    You offended us. We’re going to cry.

    You do not have the right to not be offended Jason.

    Why don’t all of you put on your big boy pants and stop believing in fairy tales?

  97. raven says

    A biologist has no business ‘dissing’ any religion, rather, they should be busy teaching the scientific discipline they were hired to teach. Tolerating such behavior by university officials is equally repugnant as it lends credibility to the act of religious hatred. We also pray that Professor Myers contritely repent and apologize.

    What right do old celibate male virgins have to tell people how to run their sex life and how many children they should have?

    According to the RCC, they are supposedly the world experts and authorities on sex and children. According to their own members, none at all and they just ignore them.

    And why is it that religions (not usually the Catholics in this case) proud of their ignorance and stupidity feel qualified to tell most scientists that they are completely wrong about just about everything. Fundie mythology contradicts most of physics, biology, paleontology, geology, astronomy, archaeology, and history.

    The Catholic confraternity has not made a case for anything except that they are homesick for the Dark Ages. They’ve been over for centuries, DEAL WITH IT.

  98. negentropyeater says

    Maybe every time a group of priests comes up with a press release like this suggesting that you don’t have the right to do this and that, you should just go ahead and desecrate another cracker.
    After a while, maybe they’ll get the message and keep quiet.

  99. Richard Harris says

    “…Flagrant irreverence towards a cracker…”

    They’re crackers. And can’t their feckin’ god-thing fight its own battles? No, because feckin’ Jehova/Jesus/Ghost thing doesn’t exist.

  100. ryanb says

    I have to ask if:

    1. They claim atheism is a religion.
    2. They claim people who are not members of a religion cannot criticize it.

    Doesn’t that mean they shouldn’t be allowed to bad mouth atheism, or even question it?

    Even if you concede they believe this is how the system is supposed to work – doesn’t seem to me they even follow their own ideas of how the system works.

    aka – They are lying and they know it. They genuinely do not believe any of this, they just want to make some noise.

  101. CSBSH says

    Damn, that press release was almost dumber than those comming from Bill Donohue. What the writer has done is desecrating his own mind.

  102. Bureaucratus Minimis says

    LOLzer! Sounds like their press release was written by someone with the same grasp of law as Fr. J, Pharyngula’s favorite canon lawyer. Hey, J, did you write that?

    Not to worry, PZ, it’s just puffery to assuage their base.

  103. Matt says

    #48:
    The Confraternity of Catholic Clergy had their chance. They could have repudiated all of the death and violence threats emerging from Bill Donahue’s flying monkeys. But no.

    But the CCC did say: We ask all Catholics of Minnesota and of the entire nation to join in a day of prayer and fasting that such offenses never happen again. Isn’t that the same thing as saying ‘do nothing’?
    Just sayin’.
    – Matt

  104. Moggie says

    # 99:

    I’m really finding it difficult to believe that this is a serious organization.

    It’s only serious if people take it seriously. That, in a way, is what this whole saga has been about.

  105. says

    You cannot demand that all members of a pluralist society be reverent towards any random humdrum article that a guy in a dress declares holy.
    I’m just repeating this again because it’s so brilliant I want to burn it into my memory.

  106. Nino says

    How can they expect anyone to take action against PZ?

    There is no proof !

    Even if they found the cracker in his bin. How can they proof that it is a cracker that was turned into Jesus by a priests magick ? Even if PZ believed that the cracker that was sent to him had been magicked. It might not have been. And then its just a nail in a cracker and can not be used for actions against him. Even if he admits to “killing” a cracker.

    And without proof that the cracker was indeed consecrated, there is no crime.

    So why do they continue with whitch hunt they cant win?
    I suppose its tradition with them….

    PS. If they can present scientific proof, if a random sample cracker is consecrated or not, I’ll become a catholic immediately.

  107. Todd says

    Yet, for a scientist to ridicule and show utter contempt for the most sacred and precious article of a major world religion, is inappropriate, unprofessional, unconstitutional and disingenuous.

    Disingenuous? Really? These people not only need to read the Constitution, but they probably could use a dictionary, too.

  108. Sastra says

    Jason #102 wrote:

    Your actions have offended the sensitivities of millions of people. Should you not put on your bigboy pants and apologise?

    No. I think the point here is that the people with the “offended sensitivities” need to put on their big boy pants and get over it.

  109. jonathan says

    This Confraternity is a group of 600 or so priests and deacons, not the Church itself, so take what they say with an appropriate grain of salt. The actual Church would never issue a statement that discussed America’s Constitution – and if it did, it would certainly get right the completely established meaning of the “free exercise clause” of the 1st Amendment, that it prevents the Government from entangling itself with religion and prevents the Government from restricting the free exercise of religion.

  110. True Bob says

    Okay, two notes:

    My favorite example for the “it ain’t freedom FROM religion” canard is from the Good Ole Days (Roman Empire style). It’s a nice poke in the eye:

    In Roman days, some rulers insisted on being considered gods. You could still worship your own god, but you had to also worship Caesar as a god. Well, christers were KILLED for not worshipping El Jefe. Martyred, even. They had freedom OF religion, they just didn’t have freedom FROM religion. Oh SNAP!

    Second, I like the annual hollyday idea. My proposed name for it is “My Karma Runs Over Your Dogma Day”.

  111. says

    PZ — I HAVE A REQUEST

    ok, now that I have your attention —

    how do I got about acquiring a Eucharist? Your point about exercising first amendment rights is a good one, and I think it’s our responsibility to remind everyone (the Catholic League especially) what the 1st amendment allows us. Freedoms have an unfortunate “use em or lose em” property.

    I’m not intending to suggest that you are somehow the ringleader in this affair, cajoling us into mass desecrations of religious icons — but I am voluntarily wanting to make a statement of patriotism by exercising my free speech.

    I’ve looked on ebay and had no luck. Suggestions? Perhaps an equal alternative? I really don’t want to get into book-burning (there’s enough CO2 and wasted dead-trees as it is) — but I’m open to suggestions. A eucharist would be ideal since it’s culturally relevant right now (and would have a clear message).

  112. craig says

    It’s looking like this press release is so obviously stupid even the religious trolls don’t dare try to defend it.

  113. Jen says

    The Confraternity of Catholic Clergy is a US institution with a mere 600 members or so. Their hobbies appear to include whinging about abortion and threatening to withhold their Jesus-crackers from any Catholic who doesn’t agree with them.

    Not exactly ‘the Catholic hierarchy’, really. I refuse to be impressed until you get a letter of condemnation from the Vatican, signed by one of those guys whose job it is to fake the Pope’s signature all the time so it looks like he cares.

    (I was baptised Catholic. It didn’t take, but I’m wondering if I could still be excommunicated? Would I get a certificate, or at least a cookie?)

  114. says

    # 67

    This WOULD make a great epidsode.
    Tonight on Southpark…
    Posted by: Chem Geek | July 30, 2008 10:14 AM

    This already IS an episode of South Park. South Park is REAL, and we’re living in it.

    PZ has even killed Kenny a few times on Pharyngula.

  115. BlueIndependent says

    Hmmm. Methinks this group should keep putting out these insane statements claiming acts that don’t harm anybody are “unconstitutional”, and that freedom of religion does not and cannot mean freedom from it. Could they possibly sound any dumber while blatantly painting a scenario in which they can never be criticized by anyone for anything?

    This one is a rare gem that is so unmasked and uncoded in its ignorance and self-congratulatory logic.

  116. negentropyeater says

    Kseniya,

    Spending time at Mixing Memory can be a frustrating experience.

    Well, I read all the comments on that thread and Chris’s original post, and I almost forgot the big picture, but then there was this press release from the Confraternity of Catholic Clergy and that rapidly brought me back to reality, and I said to myself, wooh hooo, these guys are nuts, why do we need to defend any of these cracker worshipping nuts ?

  117. Reginald Selkirk says

    We find the actions of University of Minnesota (Morris) Professor Paul Myers reprehensible, inexcusable, and unconstitutional.

    Woo! Woo! Woo! These cannibal cult clergy have judge envy. It must be the black robes that appeal to them.

    Maybe they could sell you some indulgences.

  118. says

    @Sastra # 121: AMEN!

    Seriously, my Catholic friends, take it from an ex-Catholic. If your god is as great as you say he is, a nail through a cracker is not going to harm him in the slightest.

    If your god wants to mete out punishment over the desecration of a cracker, he’ll take care of it himself.

    Move on, please.

  119. Whateverman says

    Wow…

    I mostly supported PZ before reading this, although I expressed a bit of disappointment that he chose to poke Catholicism with a stick.

    Now, however, I am in full agreement. The CCC are reacting in a way that’s completely out of touch with reality. And despite being a cautious deist, I too am going to find myself a cracker and desecrate it. I wonder if I can gather enough to make a decent mock apple pie

    To all of the Catholics who stayed out of this little debate or weren’t taking part in the buffoonery, I apologize in advance.

  120. Nino says

    Jason #102
    “Your actions have offended the sensitivities of millions of people. Should you not put on your bigboy pants and apologise”

    Jason, This might com as a shock to you…. but most of us who read this blog are VERY offended by the actions of the University and Catholic Church in Florida who started this mess. They should be the one apologising to the student !! They were the ones who started trampeling on others religiopus feelings (or lack ther of)

  121. anon says

    Alloy (@75)

    Babtist ministers should refrain from talking about booze, gambling and pornography.

    Some of the most interesting porn I found in a previous professional life was on a Babtist minister’s computer.

  122. craig says

    I’m a more petty and vindictive person than PZ is.
    Because if it were me, I’d wait until they had their national “day of prayer and fasting so that it never happens again,” and then do it again.
    I’d post more pics and say “Oh gosh, your fasting and prayers didn’t work! Maybe you should pray and fast for a whole week next time!” and then do it AGAIN.

    Nice way to prove that prayer is bullshit.

  123. richard Eis says

    Your actions have offended the sensitivities of millions of people. Should you not put on your bigboy pants and apologise? You act like a preadolesant who is spoiled as hell.

    No, it didn’t. A few bigots got on their high horse about it so they could squeal persecution (their favourite word at the moment)

  124. SteveM says

    Aside from the ridiculous “unconstitutional” argument and all the rest, what the frak is the big deal? If Catholics see PZ’s act as a desecration, then it is his “sin” alone. At most they should be sad that someone has chosen to damn himself to hell. What is the outrage for? [rhetorical qustion]

    On a seperate note. Someone earlier said that by their logic only Catholics can criticize the Catholic church. This was actually a concept floating around back in the 80’s when lots of people were identifying as ex-Catholics but still offended by non-Catholics criticizing the church; “only ex’s can do that”. Anyway, as a baptized, communed and confirmed Catholic, I believe the church still considers me Catholic even though I don’t, I guess I can criticize the RCC all I want. And I just want to say that this “Confraternity” are fucking morons, the ignorance and intolerance displayed in that document is mind boggling.

  125. raven says

    Going to give the RCC an F for crackergate. They would have been far better off just ignoring this and taking the high road with the death threaters and Donohue the loon and disavowing them.

    Evreyone gets their 15 minutes of fame and these days it is more like 5 minutes and the world moves on. At the end of the day it was just a cracker.

    Not sure what is going on here but the Catholic leadership doesn’t seem very smart or media savvy. My guess, they haven’t been attracting the brightest bulbs on the tree ever since celibacy went out of fashion. And most priests are probably pretty old and showing signs of age.

  126. jen says

    The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance.

    So, only a follower of David Koresh has the right to critique his interpretation of the Bible? Only a Muslim can argue that martyrdom isn’t a direct path to 72 virgins? Only an FLDS member in good standing can argue that isolating children from the world is a good way to make sure they never learn “extraneous” information like “sexual molestation of a child is against the law” and the legal age of consent?

  127. says

    Aaron, you can get communion wafers online at just about any church supplies website. You may even be able to get them at christian bookstores in your hometown, though I don’t know if that’s actually possible.

    Of course, they have to be consecrated by a priest before they’re considered officially Holy. But frankly, I think you should be able to get the same effect by just saying some nice words over it…

  128. says

    They really missed the “nothing should be held sacred” part of your statement, didn’t they? I mean, if you want to get overly sensitive over the whole thing, it was an equal opportunity offending act. You even included atheists in the bunch.

    To be honest, the thing that I find the funniest, is that the Catholics, instead of the Muslims, are the ones having a collective childish temper tantrum over something so mundane. It’s actually quite funny, really, considering how sensitive they are about their faith. I was half expecting a fatwā or a dozen when BD tried to get them involved.

  129. Ric says

    Unconstitutional? Seriously? That’s about the dumbest thing I’ve heard since… well, since the last time I read Uncommon Descent.

  130. Benjamin Franklin says

    Jason @ #102

    Should you not put on your bigboy pants and apologise?

    I’m wearing shorts, because it is 93 degrees today, but anyway, here goes:

    I am very sorry that in the year 2008 you still think that a cracker can be magically, mysteriously, and divinely transubstantiated into the physical body of Jesus Christ, Saviour, Son of God.

    I will pray for you, my son.

  131. says

    You did a good job taking apart their press release. But go ahead and look at their website: http://www.catholic-clergy.org/

    They just had a meeting where some resolutions were passed. Here’s a sampling of my favorites:

    We resolve as priests and deacons of the Catholic Church to reaffirm our unequivocal and complete acceptance and support of the magisterial teachings contained in the papal encyclical ‘Humanae Vitae’…especially on the intrinsic evils of abortion and contraception.

    Reproductive freedom goes out the window along with your free speech. Condoms are bad! Every sperm is sacred!!

    We resolve as pastors and spiritual leaders to aggressively engage our people to defend and protect the sanctity of marriage as a union of one man and one woman.

    You think you might have the freedom to marry the one you love? Only if you follow our bronze age morality.

    We resolve to support every bishop who courageously defends the sanctity and integrity of the Holy Eucharist by denying Communion to notorious and unrepentant politicians who are openly supportive of abortion and/or euthanasia.

    See, that one at least makes sense. “You can’t participate in our religious ceremonies because we don’t like your moral stance.” They can do that because they have freedom of religion!

    Other resolutions involve practices of worship, all which stays within the confines of their churches. Once you reach outside that, yes, we’re going to complain. Teach these things to your followers. Don’t try and enforce it by law on the rest of us. THIS is at the heart of the separation between church and state.

    Sorry, we don’t want to be in your club, so we don’t need to follow your rules.

    /rant

  132. Reginald Selkirk says

    The Conflagration of Cannibal Cult Clergy should heed the words of Thomas Jefferson:

    But it does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods or no God. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.

    Cracker desecration neither picks their pockets* nor breaks their legs. They should buck up and take it like men in dresses.

    * Do they have pockets in those dresses?

  133. Aegis says

    Confraternity of Catholic Clergy, I was going to write a long missive about all the reasons your “article” was wrong. Then I just decided to say “fuck you all”.

  134. Reginald Selkirk says

    We resolve to support every bishop who courageously defends the sanctity and integrity of the Holy Eucharist by denying Communion to notorious and unrepentant politicians who are openly supportive of abortion and/or euthanasia.

    Odd that they don’t take the same stance against politicians who support the death penalty, which is also against current Catholic doctrine. I suppose that would remind too many people about the Inquisition.

  135. says

    Oh yeah, missed this part. The most blatant example of what I waas ratning about, in continuation of the part about “marriage between and man and a woman…”

    We strongly urge the faithful to exercise their political power as tax paying voters to elect and influence governors and legislators so they will enact state amendments to prevent the alteration, expansion or redefinition of marriage.

    GGGGGRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!!!!

  136. SC says

    Well, I read all the comments on that thread and Chris’s original post, and I almost forgot the big picture, but then there was this press release from the Confraternity of Catholic Clergy

    Hey! I linked to it in a comment on that thread! Not a very close reading there, neg. ;)

  137. jagannath says

    I have a dream…

    of a flashmob gathering in front of a catholic church brandishing a cracker and chanting ‘cracker’ on top of their lungs then collecting them into a waste bin. Then the mob would recite ‘mumbo jumbo’ and then together yell ‘jesus’ while pointing at the waste bin. Then just scattering and repeating the process at different church at different day.

  138. says

    One of the MANY, many, many questions I have about transubstantiation relates to physical limits. Ok, let’s assume that a communion wafer does, crazily, become the body of christ upon being blessed. All disgusting, cannibalistic thoughts aside, if that’s the case, where does it go once you’ve eaten it?

    I ask because I’m thinking mathematically, here. Let’s assume Jesus weighed 160 pounds. It could have been less, but let’s just give him that benefit of the doubt, ok? That’s 2560 ounces. Let’s assume, also, that a communion wafer is, what, .25 oz? That gives us, assuming we’re doing Native American thing and using his whole body (not just flesh), 10,240 jesus-flesh crackers. Where, then, does the flesh come from after the first 10,240 communions were completed? Are we in a loaves and fishes situation here?

  139. Benjamin Franklin says

    Docwazoo @ # 105

    You want desecration? I got your desecration right here!

    Mayonaise on a corned beef sandwich!

  140. says

    We ought to thank them for treating us to such a delicious smörgåsbord of irony, stupidity, and ignorance of history, law, logic, and grammar. Nothing feeds the appetite for rejecting religion so well as this written admission of turpitude, nescience, and hypocrisy by the Brotherhood of Befrocked Buffoons.

  141. Qwerty says

    I went to the Confraternity of Catholic Clergy’s website to check them out. I found more amusement.

    It seems they are also bitch slapping some nuns who want some language changes in the mass.

    From the clergy’s website: “The Confraternity of Catholic Clergy respectfully asks the Bishops of the United States (USCCB) to disregard the recent letter from the National Coalition of American Nuns on Liturgical Translations.”

    From the nuns letter:

    “For example, why would the words ‘consubstantial to the Father’ be used in the Creed? What meaning do these words have for 21st century English speaking Catholics? Why use a medieval expression like, “We pray you bid” in the new Missal? This is not the way people speak today in the English-speaking world.”

    More from the letter:

    “The proposed text, ‘he who was born ineffably of the inviolate Virgin,’ is not easily understandable to Christian people, much less to the youth who are leaving the Church because of its irrelevancy.”

    I am sure these nuns are too “liberal” for the clergy. After all, they also want George W. Bush and Dick Chaney impeached for lying to the American public.

  142. NickG says

    “The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance.”

    Um, except that the existence of certain faiths does exactly that for other faiths…. see Islam and the Baha’i or Satanism and Catholicism. Baha’i grossly offend Islam by its existence and Satanism grossly offends Catholicism by its existence.

    And if by their thinking a biologist does not possess the credentials to criticize theology, how do they possess the credentials to criticize a biologist?

  143. negentropyeater says

    The brains of the members of this CCC are so fuckingly eaten up by their idiotic delusions, their sexual frustrations, their failures at touching their own penises, that they are so detached from reality that whatever they come up as reaction only serves as purpose to drive people away from their pathetic little cult.
    They don’t even realise that, but this press release is probably the best thing they can do to help the the cause of freethinkers.
    Thank you morons.

  144. qbsmd says

    Are they seriously trying to say that they never criticize non-Catholics in their sermons? They never say that atheists or others are immoral and bound for hell?

    Morons.

    Posted by: craig

    I don’t think I ever heard a sermon like that, but I may have just not been paying attention. From what I remember, sermons were a discussion of whatever part of the gospel was read; what does Jesus want you to do kind of stuff.

    Totally off topic to Duvenoy:

    I’ve not heard Blatherskite used since Ducktales and Gizmo Duck.

    Nostalgia is a wonderful thing.

    Posted by: Notkieran

    You are not alone.

  145. Kseniya says

    The evils of contraception? Holy Ritz Bitz, Batman! These people have not sense of proportion or responsibility.

    If only we could completely ignore these fools – but THEY WON’T SHUT UP.

    I mostly supported PZ before reading this, although I expressed a bit of disappointment that he chose to poke Catholicism with a stick.

    He didn’t exactly chose Catholicism. In a way, It chose him. Let’s not forget that PZ didn’t start all this. It was a response to the threats made against that college student who made off with a cracker. Gosh, what was his name again?

    :-)

  146. SteveM says

    The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance.

    By this logic, most of the sermons performed in the Catholic church are “unconstitutional.”

    Are they seriously trying to say that they never criticize non-Catholics in their sermons? They never say that atheists or others are immoral and bound for hell?

    No, don’t you see? They think that “freedom of religion” means that only religions should be free of any government restrictions. So if you don’t have a religion you don’t have a right to any freedom. So religion has a right to free speech, atheists do not.

    Morons

    Indeed!

  147. G says

    I must implore all of you to stop eating spaghetti. As a pastafarian of the Church of the FSM, the act of eating spaghetti comprises a sacrilegious act that pains me greatly — especially when cheap bottled sauce is dumped on my creator’s boiled physical manifestation.

    FSM’s noodly appendages are here to guide us, and to help us find our way to a higher state of being. If you cannot refrain from eating pasta at least confine your gastronomic selections to hollow tube pastas, such as penne, manicotti, etc., as these shapes are not filled with the wisdom of the FSM.

    If you must continue eating the boiled body of my creator, at least have the courtesy to put virgin olive oil on him before consummating your irreverent act.

    FSM Evangelical
    Weed, California

  148. craig says

    Also, don’t assume that they know PZ didn’t do this in class.

    That’s the one thing about the religious. They don’t ever bother to investigate matters themselves, they don’t look to see if what they’ve been told is true… so accounts of things “blasphemous” are like a game of telephone… these people likely were told and believe that PZ did this in a classroom as part of teaching. And being religious, they didn’t bother to confirm it.

    When “The Last Temptation of Christ” came out, the paper I worked at got paid to run ads from various churches telling people not to go see the film. The churches were saying it was blasphemous without ever having seen it. They just play their game of telephone.
    The funny part? The ads all called the movie “The Temptation of Jesus,” and we ran them uncorrected. Nice demonstration of them not having had a clue what the movie was that they were declaring scandalous.

  149. Joe Cracker says

    Hilarious!

    A clergyman has NO business in talking about:
    1) physics
    2) biology
    3) meteorology
    4) medicine

    An they made some reaaaaaaly wacky assertions in all of those domains. Assertions with real-life consequences!

    They are indeed digging their own hole.

  150. tsg says

    Their entire complaint can be summed up thusly: “We won’t tolerate your intolerance of our intolerance.” Whatever.

    The Founding Fathers did not envision a freedom FROM religion, rather a freedom OF religion.

    *sigh* You can’t have freedom OF religion without freedom FROM religion. In order to be free to practice your religion, you have to be free from practicing mine. What part of that don’t you understand?

  151. richard Eis says

    -Then just scattering and repeating the process at different church at different day.-

    Yes, but you see, we have lives…and proper work to do. Sounds like fun though.

  152. raven says

    We resolve as priests and deacons of the Catholic Church to reaffirm our unequivocal and complete acceptance and support of the magisterial teachings contained in the papal encyclical ‘Humanae Vitae’…especially on the intrinsic evils of abortion and contraception.

    If they tossed out all their members who used contraception for family planning, 90% to 95% of them would be gone. The birth rate for Catholics in the USA is identical to the national average at 2+/family.

    No members, no money every week. A recipe for cult suicide.

    In practice it is don’t ask, don’t tell. And one of the problems of the RCC in Europe and the USA: because they have an old man celibate clergy, they have been diverging from their membership for many decades.

  153. AK47 says

    PZ, on occasion in the past you have used profanity in situations where I thought it was gratuitous and really not necessary.

    But in this instance you really should have told the Confraternity of Catholic Clergy to go fuck themselves.

  154. ar says

    The Flying Spaghetti Monster should reveal to his/her/its devotees that all spaghetti is sacred, and all must say “ramen” before eating it. Any other use of spaghetti is a desecration.

  155. Jon says

    A biologist has no business ‘dissing’ any religion, rather, they should be busy teaching the scientific discipline they were hired to teach.

    If only the religious community would take their own advice in this matter…How quick they are to bring up the separation of religion and science when it applies to their argument.

  156. says

    Am I the only one that sees an appallingly ironic double standard?

    How many Catholics not only advocated the desecration of the Koran, but went the extra step of actually sending PZ one?

    So let me get this straight… the limits to free speech (assuming that ‘fire’ in a crowded theater isn’t the only one) apply abundantly to their religion, but really if another religion gets bashed in the process, it somehow evens things out?

    It would appear to me that they really aren’t in a position to be sanctimonious about offending a religion since they’re perfectly willing to do it so long as it isn’t their own.

  157. John Robie says

    Ouch, their law is as weak as their philosophy. As a big city attorney, I would point out to the Catholic leaders the first clause of that amendment they’re parsing so closely: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” This is interpreted as Freedom of Religion. PZ is not the United States Congress so the amendment does not apply to him. The Bill of Rights does not place restrictions on the actions of individuals only on the power of the Federal government.

    Of course under the 14th amendment the incorporation doctrine extends the core rights of the Bill of Rights to state governments, meaning the State of Minnesota can not take action respecting the establishment of a state religion (despite the capital’s name).

    Thus the very closest one could get to the Bill of Rights applying to PZ is in his professional capacity. The University of Minnesota is, I believe, an organ of the state and so neither it nor PZ could, for instance, require a student to pray in class (or I think, desecrate a cracker in class). PZ can nevertheless do whatever he likes as a private citizen.

    Silly Catholics.

  158. Joel says

    I would be OK with a compromise — here, Catholics, how about this: I’ll go along with respecting your “right” to not to be offended, so long as you respect my “right” to be free from all consequences of Catholic beliefs penetrating the public sphere. So if you stop voting, I’ll stop offending you. Deal?

  159. SteveM says

    All disgusting, cannibalistic thoughts aside, if that’s the case, where does it go once you’ve eaten it?

    That was answered several thousand comments ago in one of the other 12 threads about cracker-gate. Once the wafer has been dissolved to the point of no longer being “bread”, i.e. dissolved to simple sugars and amino acids, it is no longer considered the “body of Christ”. So, when Christ said “take this bread it is my body”, he was not saying the bread becomes flesh, but instead that he was really bread.

  160. Snitzels says

    1. They claim atheism is a religion.
    2. They claim people who are not members of a religion cannot criticize it.

    Doesn’t that mean they shouldn’t be allowed to bad mouth atheism, or even question it?

    No no no, you see, this doesn’t apply to THEM, only everyone else. Silly…

  161. karen says

    Hey, at least they spelled Minnesota correctly!

    I’m with craig:

    I’d wait until they had their national “day of prayer and fasting so that it never happens again,” and then do it again.

    But then, I’m a bit of a vindictive bitch.

  162. Nerd of Redhead says

    By their logic, since they aren’t politicians, shouldn’t they stay out of politics?
    They couldn’t think their way out of a wet paper bag with a rip in it. I just couldn’t believe that press release, since the Catholic clergy is supposed to be well educated.

  163. says

    Re #127 – for further comparison, this group has about 600 members (priests AND deacons), and there are about 46,000 Catholic priests in the USA according to allaboutreligion.org , so we’re talking less than 1%.

  164. qbsmd says

    For anyone who hasn’t looked at http://www.catholic-clergy.org/ yet, it strikingly resembles the 100 page email PZ received a few months ago in terms of rainbow coloring, randoms size and font changes, and even has highlighting. It also has a total of 12 “donate” buttons in various colors and styles.

  165. ngong says

    As a practising Hindu, I consider cows to be sacred.
    I hereby demand all Catholics stop killing and eating cattle.

    It gets worse. After all, don’t some Satanists make a practice of doing exactly the opposite of what Christianity dictates? Their “faith” demands precisely that they desecrate certain symbols.

  166. Bob L says

    So the Catholic Conservatives find PZ Meyers politically incorrect?

    Lines like “You don’t have freedom from religion” are about what you would expect from a organization that was one of the biggest supporters of the fascists dictators like Mussolini and Franco.

  167. SplendidMonkey says

    Religions don’t have rights. Humans have rights. Hell, he’s even saying that religions have rights that humans do not. That’s the dumbest damn thing I’ve read this month.

    And the dude authored Catholicism For Dummies too…

    Here’s a funny picture for you.

  168. says

    # 124 Most of the Aarons I know are Jewish fellows. If you are of Jewish descent, this might not be a REAL good idea.

    a. Some of these people are actually crazy
    b. There’s a frightening history to consider
    c. PZ has the protection of being somewhat hi-profile
    d. You might get the ADL and JDL pissed off at you as well

    I’m sure there’s other reasons, but personal safety is a high consideration, especially with kids and all.

    If I’m mistaken about your ethnic backqground or the name Aaron, ignore this post.

  169. says

    Ack! Just OVER 1%. I know, I know. I haven’t had my coffee yet. I can haz slide rule?

    Also, a google search for the CCC has this blog come up #5, looks like you’ve gotten some unknowns some nice press here.

  170. says

    Two bits of idiocy in the CCC statement that I noticed:

    1) They mention ‘academic freedom’ (as have many other detractors in this case). Since this was done on one’s own time and NOT as part of Dr. Myers’ job duties, how can ‘academic freedom’ even be an issue? This is PURELY a free speech issue – which is why I guess they don’t want to mention that, because, well, then they’d sound like the fascists they are.

    2) “Freedom of religion<>freedom from religion” – this is one of the most obviously ridiculous tropes out there. For one to be free to practice their own religion REQUIRES that one be free from the religious strictures of other faiths. Otherwise, christians must observe the sabbath on Saturday as well like jewish people, pray five times a day facing toward Mecca like muslims, eat babies like atheists (just kidding), etc….

    Like most religious-apologist pap, it’s designed to SOUND good to the point that the pretty appearance hides its complete lack of content.

  171. Qwerty says

    It is funny. It is such a poorly thought out and written piece of Catholic crap! (I was raised Catholic. So, I feel liberated to say “Catholic crap!”) This is a group of VERY orthodox old men who support a VERY orthodox old man in Rome.

    Anyhow, your “dissing” led to their “hissing.”

    If this is the best they can do, then their belief system seems to be nothing more than a house of cards.

  172. Richard Eis says

    So because of their tirade, your site is coming up if people look for them?

    Oh deary me…

    Can we get it above their own do you think?

  173. True Bob says

    raven @ 168,

    The rest would have to leave because of the prohibitions on gayness and abortion (I’ve known 2 grown up catholic schoolgirls – both had abortions).

  174. says

    Wow, the absurdity just never ends, does it?

    On the topic of Catholic lunacy…Robert Spencer would have us believe that the Crusades were entirely justified. The interview (hosted by mainstream catholic broadcasting network EWTN) concludes:

    In the face of this, Westerners should not be embarrassed by the Crusades. It’s time to say, “enough,” and teach our children to take pride in their own heritage.

    They should know that they have a culture and a history of which they can and should be grateful; that they are not the children and grandchildren of oppressors and villains; and that their homes and families are worth defending against those who want to take them away, and are willing to kill to do so.

  175. kermit says

    PZ, I am not as confrontational as you, and cringed when you first took action, altho I have been following subsequent events with interest. I just want to say that I have joined the many atheists who have come around to your way of thinking on this issue. The Confraternity of Catholic Clergy has convinced me that we have a moral obligation to confront people with the superstitious and savage beliefs they would impose on others, given a chance. It’s not enough that these pedophile hiders would “convert” us by force if possible, and that they value crackers over human lives and the reputation of their peers over the sanity and innocence of children, but their bizarre blindness even extends to the reading of a simple document and its interpretation over the history of the US. The devout loons are enemies of civilization, joy, morality, and knowledge, and I will call them out on it when I see it. The Confraternity of Catholic Clergy has produced another convert.

  176. says

    The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance.

    I was baptized a Catholic; I have not been excommunicated; Therefore: I am a Catholic and will exercise my right to attack (only verbally), malign AND grossly offend your faith tradition.

    Dear Confraternity of Catholic Clergy,
    Your tradition of faith is utterly, completely, and devastatingly bat-shit insane. I find your attempt to suppress dissent to be odious and beneath contempt. Grow up, ass-hats.

    There.

    P.S.: Your Pope dresses funny.

  177. SteveM says

    @177: have you just defined Jesus as a bread golem?

    Yes, I guess I did, (LOL) but more like a Matzoh Golem actually (since it was the Passover meal).

  178. says

    @Daedalus2u,

    Just kind of an FYI: The fact that the Qur’an wasn’t in Arabic does not mean it was not a real Qur’an. Muslims, like Jews, dispose of sacred texts in a certain way. Muslims either burn or bury them, and will do this for transliterations, translations, and any other incarnation of the Qur’an. Arabic script has changed sufficiently that one could honestly say that the current Qur’ans are not written in “real” Arabic. They are all held in relatively equal regard as sacred texts.

    Actually, if you want to get really technical, the Qur’an can only exist in verbal form. The word Qur’an in its context means “that which is recited”, and so the physical book is just a recitation guide. That doesn’t stop it from being sacred to Muslims whatever form it happens to take.

  179. Blaise Pascal says

    I looked into the “Confraternity of Catholic Clergy”. Their web-site says they are an association of 600 Catholic Priests and Deacons in the US. As near as I can tell, they don’t claim endorsement of or official recognition from the Holy See, and don’t represent the official views of the Church any more than the Catholic League.

    I also looked into the number of Catholic clergy in the US. I got a figure of 46,000 priests, and about 14,000 deacons. So the CCC represents about 1% of the Catholic priesthood and deaconship.

    Based on the content of the web-site (basically a collection of press releases) it is probably the most conservative and orthodox of the clergy at that. At least one press release listed the Catholic League as other organizations working on the same issue as the press release, so there is some interaction between the two organizations.

  180. Pierce R. Butler says

    Prof. Myers, now all can see that you made a serious mistake in driving a rusty nail through that Christ Crispy™ and dumping it out with the household trash.

    Obviously, you should have used a wooden stake, as is traditional.

    Now, the damn cookie has demonstrated the immortal truth of Catholic doctrine, proving that it is Jesus Christ by returning among us. It simply cannot be killed!

    Remember for the next time: use a wooden stake, and bury it at a crossroads, at midnight, with lots of garlic. If you insist on including supplemental materials, use the mil-spec versions: pages from an Arabic Qu’ran and The Origin of Species might work better at holding the beast down.

  181. Chip says

    PZ did the cracker return after three days or not? If it did then I think we could get Bush to declare another holiday – Good Thursday – I am all in favor of another day off from work. I know this has nothing to do with the post but I was curious and the lunatic ravings have been address so well by others. How about selling the trash can on e-bay…like the James ossuary only it’s THE “cracker trash can.”

  182. BMcP says

    Wow.. unconstitutional, that’s a new angle to attempt to play. To say desecrating religious symbols is unconstitutional is the same as saying an individual not believing in a religion is unconstitutional.

    Sorry, there is no freedom from being offended.

  183. CrypticLife says

    “Catholic Clergy Call for Reparation in Response to Communion Desecration”

    Well, it seems only fair since someone presumably breached the implied contract of eating the cracker. Crackers are worth what, 2 cents each? Give them a nickel and tell them to keep the change…

  184. Hoosier X says

    Anyone know how to contact Trey Parker and Matt Stone? This WOULD make a great epidsode.

    I doubt it.

    They would include their lame “caricatures” of Al Gore and Bono and ruin it.

    South Park jumped the shark long ago.

    (Although I did recently watch the episode where they decide Butters is bi-curious and send him off to anti-gay camp to cure his confusion. Hilarious.)

  185. Carl Caster says

    Prof. Myers, little did you realize I followed the trash truck that picked up your trash to the landfill and rummaged through its output until I FOUND THE BODY OF CHRIST!!! He he he…. I now have the little sucker all trussed up on a little Cracker Cross ™ where it belongs and I will soon auction the little guy on eBay.

    If those barking mad wackos can believe their incredibly stupid religion, then they can believe this. Screw ’em.

    Now that I think about it, I think I will toss the little Cracker Guy ™ in the fireplace.

  186. Scrofulum says

    In the spirit of piss-taking solidarity, I’m hoping to kidnap a whole load of transubstantiated magic sky-genie flesh, but I don’t fancy them crackers. They look a tad bland.

    Anyone know if I can get a tube of Pringles blessed?

  187. CrypticLife says

    They’re claiming unconstitutionality because Myers teaches at a public school. They fail to note that he did not do this in class, but outside of it. If they really want to hold to this kind of a standard, we’d have to fire plenty of public school teachers who advocate religion on their own time. One internet board I frequent for ps teachers even has a “prayer request forum” section.

    Ironic that these are the same people who will argue that a teacher can post the Ten Commandos on their wall and keep a Bible displayed on their desk at a high school.

  188. Jon W says

    Thanks for posting my silly cartoon, PZ. I was afraid the cracker theme was becoming too dated to warrant it… (thanks CCC?)

  189. SASnSA says

    The Constitution on Freedom of Religion:

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

    PZ, I didn’t realize you were in Congress! Why this just states that government can’t say what people have to believe in or can’t believe in. That seems to include believing in nothing.

    These fools really need to check their references before using them to support the condemnation of others.

  190. Adrienne says

    I think PZ’s desecration was essentially a stunt designed to piss people off, and so I think it was a jerky thing for him to have done. BUT, having said that, at least it proved that all this “PZ would be fired for trashing a Koran” stuff false.

    But anyhoo, I wanted to comment mostly to note that I saw this press release yesterday. I noted that the man who wrote it is an Opus Dei priest. Veddy interesting I think he’s also one of the Catholic “Q & A” experts on EWTN’s website.

  191. HostHostage says

    I was the guy who provided PZ with the cracker that he used in the photo. I also made a video of the event at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHPZFsGrt-Y

    The video has received lots of comments but you’re only allowed 500 characters to make responses. I hope PZ won’t mind if I use this thread to outline my answer to the numerous objections I got from Catholics. Here goes:

    Many opinions have been expressed by Catholics and their sympathisers on the subject of ‘host desecration’ as an unacceptable form of protest against the activities of the Church. I would like to attempt to sort the wood from the trees and provide my justifications for my action.

    Firstly, let’s establish the irrelevance of the law to this question. It is a moral issue, not a legal one. Whether or not ‘host desecration’ should be made illegal in a particular legal jurisdiction is beyond my scope here. If you find yourself using the word ‘law’ in any response to me then your point probably belongs in a separate discussion.

    Let us also agree that there is little point in even having a discussion on this subject if one party expects the other to accord respect to a set of moral values handed to them on a plate from a third party. If you choose to do that, then I’d be best advised to have my discussion with that third party, not you. Specifically, if you choose to quote moral principles that derive from Scripture or the Church’s teaching, then be prepared to justify that morality using rational/secular arguments that have relevance to those who don’t share your religious belief.

    Let’s us also agree on the moral right of every citizen to protest in a ‘free country’. That surely is not a bone of contention between us. Our differences derive from our differing perspectives on what kind of protests are morally acceptable. In order to establish any worthwhile moral principles here, it may help if I pose an evolving, hypothetical scenario:

    Is it morally acceptable that I should take up a placard bearing some written criticism of the government, and walk down the street holding it aloft? Some people might say that it depends on the nature of the criticism. Let’s say the placard simply read “The governments position on infanticide is wrong”. I’m sure 99% of people would have no moral objection.

    Lets say I changed the wording to “The Prime Minister’s position on infanticide is wrong”. Again, despite the attack on on individual’s ideas, I suspect there’d be no moral problem for most people. What about “The Prime Minister’s ideas on infanticide are stupid”. It’s now a personal attack but if you draw the line here then I think we have little room for further discussion. At least if you do draw the line here then our standards of morality differ on a far deeper level than that of ‘desecration of the host.

    What about if my placard involved Bunga Bunga (a religion set up last week, with two members and a stray dog) and read “Bunga Bunga’s teaching on infanticide is stupid”. If you waited this long to draw the line then you accord religion a status for which I have difficulty seeing any moral justification. You need to ask yourself questions about the rights of religious organisations and/or what constitutes a religion. Surely, the logical conclusion of your position is that you make it possible to morally justify the proscription of any criticism of virtually any idea or icon, if proponents of that idea/icon declare themselves, and it, to be part of a religion. Mind you, you’re not alone. The Western press already started the rot on that score when they refused to publish the cartoons of Muhammad some time ago.

    For those of you who have yet to draw the moral line, let me now make clear that Bunga Bunga’s specific policy on infanticide is that the law of the land should be changed to make the killing of second-born girls mandatory and that in countries where it’s not mandatory, uneducated and simple-minded parents are encouraged to kill their second-born girls. Let us also say that Bunga Bunga has churches in which it carries out ceremonies that involve the worship of Bunglips (a tulip-like flower that they ‘consecrate’ using coal tar and turkey semen) which are then handed out to the congregation to be eaten on the spot in honour of their murdered children. What if my placard was having little effect outside on the street. What if I put it down and entered their church and accepted a Bunglip from the high priest, removed it from the church and then treated it with a level of disrespect that outraged the Bunga Bunga church into making a response? Let’s say that as a result of putting my video of the ‘desecration’ of the Bunglip on YouTube, more than 5000 people viewed it, members of Bunga Bunga said lots of Bunga Bunga prayers for me; others suggested that I would rot in Bunga Hell; but a small few understood my objections to infanticide. Did I do a good thing or an evil thing?

    If you don’t draw the moral line at this point then I fail to understand your moral outrage at the ‘desecration’ of crackers. If you do draw the line at this point then I find the nature of your morality depressing; and your willingness to put respect for inanimate objects above that of the lives of your fellow human beings, truly terrifying.

  192. Adrienne says

    I think PZ’s desecration was essentially a stunt designed to piss people off, and so I think it was a jerky thing for him to have done. BUT, having said that, at least it proved that all this “PZ would be fired for trashing a Koran” stuff false.

    But anyhoo, I wanted to comment mostly to note that I saw this press release yesterday. I noted that the man who wrote it is an Opus Dei priest: John Trigilio, Jr. Veddy interesting I think he’s also one of the Catholic “Q & A” experts on EWTN’s website.

  193. Docwazoo says

    Mayonaise on a corned beef sandwich!

    Ashamed to say I don’t get it, not being American.
    LOL, got any better ideas?

  194. AlanWCan says

    THis is actually pretty good. This means that, if biologists aren’t allowed to criticise religion because they’re not theologians, then fair turnabout all these ridiculous religious morons (and dentists and engineers) aren’t allowed to criticise biology, so can they please leave us alone about the theory of evolution.

    One fails to see the relevance of uninformed of criticism a major cornerstone of modern science to the wooly wonders of theology. Were a Professor of Biology, there would have been at least a presumption of competency to express scientific opinions in a classroom. Yet, for a religious nutbar to ridicule and show utter contempt for the theory underpinning a major scientific discipline, is inappropriate, unprofessional, unconstitutional and disingenuous.

    What do you think? Will they abide by their own rules?

    Nahh didn’t think so.

    I’d still love to see this level of outrage from the catholics over their priests’ transgressions against choirboys or their military arm in the goings on of Sinn Fein and the IRA wouldn’t you?

  195. says

    Following some of the links from the press announcement led me to Church Security Solutions, LLC (whose logo looks like a mogen David stamped with a cross).

    I don’t see anything on their site about monitoring congregants to make sure they eat baby Jesus in a timely manner, though.

  196. SteveM says

    211:
    They’re claiming unconstitutionality because Myers teaches at a public school. They fail to note that he did not do this in class, but outside of it.

    Even if he did it in class, it would not be unconstitutional, possibly unlawful, but not unconstitutional. Only laws can be unconstitutional, not individual actions. The CCC is wrong on so many levels it approaches “fractal wrongness”

  197. BobC says

    We also pray that Professor Myers contritely repent and apologize.

    Repent means ‘ask god for forgiveness or else go to hell’.

    The most moderate Catholics in the world believe atheists go to hell and deserve to go there. Therefore there is no such thing as a moderate Catholic. They’re all assholes, every single one of them.

    Also, all Catholics (and other Christians) believe in the Resurrection, also known as the ‘Jebus was a zombie’ belief. Therefore all Catholics and Christians, no matter how moderate they think they are, are batshit crazy.

    Also, all religious people, no matter how moderate they think they are, brainwash their children with magic man woo-woo. This is the worst kind of child abuse. This kind of lying can permanently ruin a child’s life. There is nothing moderate about mentally abusing children. Therefore every single religious person in the world is an asshole.

    Religious people disgust me. A sky fairy hiding in the clouds? A person has to be insane to believe that. What disgusts me even more than the god nuts are the atheists who think religious insanity should be respected. To be religious is worse than being a racist. I will never respect any of it. I don’t care how pro-science they are. If they believe there’s an invisible man hiding in the clouds, they’re nuts and they need to be told they’re nuts.

  198. Rayven Alandria says

    It looks to me as though the Confraternity of Catholic Clergy hasn’t a clue about what actually transpired. They seem to think you did the deed while in class. I guess they didn’t bother to take five minutes to come read your blog. That right there tells me the issue really isn’t all that important to them.

    They are just blustering about and trying to use this as a way to manipulate people into going back to church. (Which means more money in their pockets) It’s nothing but a publicity stunt.

  199. says

    Religion is WAY TOTALLY THE REALM OF BIOLOGY. Psychology is just one link down the chain of interdependence from biology, and religion is a psychological phenomenon of homo sapiens. You could take one more link and say it’s largely and anthropology thing, but either way, it’s not that far.

    And they’re going to keep pretending that they can’t see this anyway.

  200. says

    We ask all Catholics of Minnesota and of the entire nation to join in a day of prayer and fasting that such offenses never happen again.

    I found this funny. They would starve themselves because you threw away a cracker? That’s awesome! If you don’t change, do they refrain from eating for the rest of their (short) lives?

    But, I was disappointed when I looked up exactly what fasting meant to Catholics…

    For Roman Catholics, fasting is the reduction of one’s intake of food to one full meal (which may not contain meat during Fridays in Lent) and two small meals (known liturgically as collations, taken in the morning and the evening).

    Three meals a day! Shit, that’s more than I eat on any given day. That’s not fasting… it’s eating properly.

  201. Jason says

    Oh… my… goodness.
    I still get over how brutally pathetic they are for trying to get you fired. PROFACT: nothing says you are a bully more than trying to beat somebody up and take away their lunch money.

  202. 386sx says

    The Chancellor of the University refused to reprimand or censure the teacher, who ironically is a Biology Professor.

    I don’t see the irony in that. Who wrote this article, some kind of an idiot or something?

    One fails to see the relevance of the desecration of a Catholic sacrament to the science of Biology. Were Myers a Professor of Theology, there would have been at least a presumption of competency to express religious opinions in a classroom.

    What kind of a lame committee wrote this article, and how long did it take them to write it? That’s freakin hilarious.

  203. True Bob says

    but The 502 @ 225

    What about second breakfasts? Won’t someone please think of the hobbitses?

  204. Adrienne says

    One fails to see the relevance of the desecration of a Catholic sacrament to the science of Biology. Were Myers a Professor of Theology, there would have been at least a presumption of competency to express religious opinions in a classroom.

    Cue the Courtier’s Reply. Not to mention that PZ didn’t do the stunt in the classroom, but at home.

  205. Randomfactor says

    Hey, guys, if you can spare a moment for a local idiocy, here’s a poll for ya.

    http://www.bakersfield.com

    Should atheists be barred from public office?
    Yes. 59 29%

    No. 145 71%

    ————————————————

    Total 204

    (Background: local high school trustee (fundie) has been pushing all sorts of ID/”In Go D Wet Rust”/fascist nonsense, and is running for re-election, having stated that his higher obligations supercede his oath as a trustee, and atheists can’t uphold that oath anyway, so there.)

  206. True Bob says

    Professor of Theology = Professor of Invisible Pink Unicornology

    At least a Professor of Pastafarianism can cook (else they’d be a student).

  207. says

    Hank Fox @ #23:

    or else bring a tenth of an ounce of Jesus back to life.

    I can transubstantiate Jesus’ holy blood into urine. Does that count?

  208. Randomfactor says

    Hey, guys, if you can spare a moment for a local idiocy, here’s a poll for ya.

    http://www.bakersfield.com

    Should atheists be barred from public office?
    Yes. 59 29%

    No. 145 71%

    ————————————————

    Total 204

    (Background: local high school trustee (fundie) has been pushing all sorts of ID/”In Go D Wet Rust”/fascist nonsense, and is running for re-election, having stated that his higher obligations supercede his oath as a trustee, and atheists can’t uphold that oath anyway, so there.)

  209. Hockey Bob says

    From the CCC website;


    CCC supports all bishops who ban Communion to Catholic politicians and voters who publicly and obstinately promote or support abortion. The CCC also supports legislation to protect and defend sanctity of human life (from conception to natural death), of traditional marriage (between a man & a woman), and of the family (mother & father who are also husband & wife, with their children)

    So, let me get this straight… they’re against abortion, euthanasia, and birth control, but state-sponsored murder (capital punishment) is okay? WTF?

    I think we’d all be better off with the FSM; hell, at least you could have a decent meal for communion – I’ll bring the garlic cheese bread, even.

    (Recovering Minnesotan catholic here, btw…)

  210. says

    Wow that is one dumb poll. Why would they even entertain .. oh never mind. I know why.

    Me thinks they need to reference Article VI section 3 of that little thing we like to call the Constitution.

  211. Ryan F Stello says

    @Randomfactor

    Thanks! I’ve been missing the daily stupid polls ’round here.

  212. Sarcastro says

    Man, if ‘clergy’ were only spelled with a leading K this organization would be the CoCK.

  213. says

    #222:

    The most moderate Catholics in the world believe atheists go to hell and deserve to go there

    This is just plain untrue. I mean to the extent where almost every Catholic I know is a counter-example. Even the church hierarchy has a concept of “natural goodness” amongst the non-believers. And at least in a Catholic majority country membership sticks with regardless of beliefs so there are plenty of atheist Catholics (cf Dara O’Brein’s bit about “Once a Catholic always a Catholic” – “I’m pretty sure I could join Al Queda and I’d only be considered a bad Catholic”)

  214. says

    Don’t they know you’re going to publish their prattle and give us all a good laugh about it?

    And this:

    what, I can’t have a hobby?

    is why you Da Man.

  215. Adrienne says

    The official Catholic teaching is that nobody knows the state of anyone else’s soul (and thus can say for sure who’s going to hell/heaven/purgatory).

  216. Pierce R. Butler says

    Dunc @ # 92: If anybody is responsible for the Dark Ages, it’s the Visigoths.

    Didn’t the Goths in general adopt Christianism along with most of the other forms of the Empire they conquered but failed to maintain?

    You might want to read Charles Freeman’s The Closing of the Western Mind: The Rise of Faith and the Fall of Reason before you exculpate the library-burning, intellectual-persecuting crackerolaters entirely…

  217. Lynnai says

    You do not have the right to not be offended.

    I never read that as people intend me to.

    I DO have the right not to be offended, if I don’t want to be offended I have every right NOT to be offened! See if I don’t! Nobody can force me to be offended! So there!

    But I know that’s not what’s ment, I know it was ment as you do not have the right to protection from offence…. I just felt like being silly and getting that off my chest I feel better now, please carry on.

  218. Pablo says

    CCC supports all bishops who ban Communion to Catholic politicians and voters who publicly and obstinately promote or support abortion.

    I will tell you that even from a Catholic religion perspective, there is a problem with this stance.

    Even if we grant that promoting or supporting abortion is a mortal sin which makes a catholic unworthy of receiving communion, the bishop in question does not know that the politician has been to confession since the last time their position was made public, and has been absolved of the sin. Moreover, given the sanctity of the confessional, it’s not like the priest can call the bishop and say, “I just heard John Kerry’s confession – he’s ok.”

    In the end, the decision about who is worthy to receive communion has to be made by the recipient, who is the only one who knows whether he/she is in the sufficient state to receive it. The church can only provide the guidelines by which the recipient should evaluate themselves, but given their rules on confession and absolution, they can’t enforse it (unless they have witnessed the act occuring and can ensure that the person in question has not been in contact with a priest (as I said, no priest can comment confirm or deny that they heard a confession from anyone)

  219. Logicel says

    Mystery is the Catholic Church’s calling card; it is the aspect that draws and keeps believers mumbling, genuflecting, tithing away, confessing, etc. PZ calling attention to the fact that their mystery card is the joker’s card is not sitting well with these intellectually and emotionally stunted creeps who desperately need the Catholic Ponzi scheme to continue, at least in their lifetimes.

  220. me says

    I DO have the right not to be offended, if I don’t want to be offended I have every right NOT to be offened! See if I don’t! Nobody can force me to be offended! So there!

    Huh? Just because you don’t have the right to not be offended, doesn’t mean you are obliged to be.

  221. dubiquiabs says

    Maybe it’s just that Father John Trigilio has his cilice a bit too tight.

  222. Hockey Bob says

    @ #102 – Jason

    “…bigboy pants…”

    You know, even with all of the fancy dresses the clergy wears, you Catholics sure do have a strange attraction towards OTHER PEOPLES’ PANTS. Keep your hands to yourself, pal.

    By the way, did you ever work in Minneapolis? I might know you!

  223. Hap says

    1) I thought press releases were supposed to advance a cause, not hinder it. Putting your misunderstanding of the Constitution and law and your hypocrisy on parade wouldn’t exactly count as advancing your cause, unless that is your cause…

    2) As said before, if you have to compel respect from others, then you can’t earn it, and if the others are smart, you will not get it (at least until you can earn it). Attempting to do so only underlines the reasons why you are unworthy of respect, and makes it harder for you to obtain it by any method other than force. (Although that would explain why the CCC so misunderstands the 1st Amendment – they might like to go back to the days when they could enforce respect. Add history to the list of things they don’t know.)

    3) The right not to be offended is inconsistent with existence – people get sick, commit violence, etc., and the only way to avoid offensive and hurtful things is not to exist. I know in the past, people have decided that the right not to be offended gives them licence to end the lives of those offending them, but that doesn’t work out so well – after getting rid of the offensive others, fake piety won’t be an effective defense when other people decide to return the favor.

    Hey, CCC – the first rule of holes is stop digging. You might consider giving up now before you make your stupidity impossible for more people to ignore.

  224. says

    I was baptized a Catholic; I have not been excommunicated;

    I’m prepared to bet that you have. Although it’s damn-near impossible to get a ferendæ sententiæ excommunication these days (formal sentence of an ecclesiastical court), it’s pretty hard not to do something that incurs a latæ sententiæ (automatic) excommunication under Canon Law, such as heresy or apostasy, unless you’re batshit insane.

  225. Dahan says

    Well, MY religion “Dahanism” states that all Catholics have to give me all their money and can never have children, otherwise it’s an affront to the great god Dahan. (Hey! That’s me!) To do otherwise is to mock my religion and smacks of bigotry of the highest order! I’d rather be gunned down in the street than to watch such an ugly thing as them not giving me all their money. If any of them decide to not give me all their money and are currently working in any state or government position. I demand they be fired and jailed immediately for their hate crimes!

    BTW, if you join Dahanism today, you can et a cut of the profits. Those converting first will see the largest percentages.

  226. chancelikely says

    SteveM #199: If Jesus is a Matzo Golem, does that explain where Matzo Balls come from?

  227. says

    BTW, if you join Dahanism today, you can et a cut of the profits. Those converting first will see the largest percentages.

    Ooh, ooh, count me in! Do I need to sell vitamins and shampoo, or is it one of those religions where I get to lounge around having sex with acolytes?

  228. Onkel Bob says

    Dunc #92 is wrong, Pierce #243 is correct, the Visigoths were indeed “Christians.” However, they subscribed to heresy – the Arian Christianity and so were not Roman Catholics.
    The Dark Ages existed because the vikings burned everything, and so removed from our vision the documents that would “enlighten” us as to the goings on of the time between 800 – 1000 CE. That is not to say the Vikings were without value. They redistributed wealth that was being locked up in these castle keeps.
    The Roman Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodox church arguably retarded social progress for 500 plus years. BUt they are not solely to blame. The Romans weren’t going anywhere fast by 378 CE, the Sasanians weren’t doing much either, and of all people the Visigoths were making the strides in technology. (Did they invent the stirrup?) The RCC and EOC were more concerned with looming escathological debate then improving the here and now. It wasn’t until the Islamic traders reopened the trade routes east that any new ideas (zero anyone?) were introduced to the European continent, and those were confined to Spain.

  229. Lynnai says

    Huh? Just because you don’t have the right to not be offended, doesn’t mean you are obliged to be.

    Yeah it kinda does. We know that isn’t what is ment becuase common sense over rides but on a straight lingual logical level that sentance says I am obligated to be offended. Double negatives do create a positive but they also more often then not create a very specific set of peramiters.

    I do not have the right to kill people.
    I do not have the right to steal things.
    I do not have the right to rape, pillage or burn fedreal propery.
    I do not have the right not to be offended.

    It doesn’t quite follow does it? It doesn’t say that other people don’t have the right to offend me, it says I have the obligation be in a state of general offendedness becuase I do not have the right to NOT be in that state.

    But as I said I know what was actually ment, I just found the idea of forced offence amusing.

  230. 386sx says

    Hey, CCC – the first rule of holes is stop digging. You might consider giving up now before you make your stupidity impossible for more people to ignore.

    They don’t have much choice if they really believe all that stuff. They think God will get mad at everybody if they don’t pray and speak out and hold ritual “cleansing” and “forgiveness” ceremonies and whatnot.

  231. Kate says

    You are a sad, sad soul! I will pray for you and for others like you who find it pleasing to make a mockery of a core belief of Catholic Christians. May God Bless you (despite your complete and dispicable irreverence for Him).

  232. Sean D. says

    “We find the actions of University of Minnesota (Morris) Professor Paul Myers reprehensible, inexcusable, and unconstitutional.”

    Unconstitutional?

    Clearly these asshats are getting access to some really killer BC Buds(tm), when do the rest of us get some?

  233. says

    Re the cartoon: He’s got his foot on the Bible! The horror! Desecration! Disrespect!!eleven!!

    Should have been a LOLcat, though. Change the spelling and punctuation a bit: “YUR CRACKERS! R NOT SAFE”

    YUR stands in for both “Your” and “You’re” that way.

    :)

  234. says

    @ BF 105: For lunch I’m eating Corned Beef and Swiss with Basil Sauce on Asiago Bread. It’s Michigan, unless you’re at Zingerman’s they don’t know any better (but it IS delicious sacrelige)

  235. True Bob says

    We find the actions of University of Minnesota (Morris) Professor Paul Myers reprehensible, inexcusable, and unconstitutional.

    AFAIK, in christerology, there is only one thing that is actually inexcusable, and that it is to “blaspheme” the “Holy Spirit”. May the STDs of every afflicted resident on Africa take up residence in his filthy Satan-inviting bunghole.

  236. Adrienne says

    Hmm, interesting. Father Trigilio saw this post on Pharyngula and commented on it on what is apparently his own blog: http://blackbiretta.blogspot.com/2008/07/biologist-will-not-balk.html.

    Not much interesting reading there, though. To wit:

    No one is laughing. Many of us are in tears that our beloved Savior would be subjected to such vile treatment AGAIN. Was it not enough that Jesus was scourged at the pillar, crowned with thorns, and then nailed to a cross for three hours until He died? Like Our Lady of Sorrows, we must weep at the foot of Calvary once more as the Body of Christ is treated with the same disdain and dishonor. PRAY FOR PROFESSOR MYERS. We wish him no harm, rather, we pray for his soul that he abandon his pursuit of offending Catholic Christians. He may never come to believe what we believe, but he can at least respect our right to believe and profess what we believe without resorting to beligerant ridicule and attack.

    So I wonder, did the guy actually *weep* at what PZ did?

  237. says

    You are a sad, sad soul! I will pray for you and for others like you who find it pleasing to make a mockery of a core belief of Catholic Christians. May God Bless you (despite your complete and dispicable irreverence for Him).

    Yes please pray for us all. As much as you can. Every day, all day.

    The more time you spend praying and wasting your time the less time you’ll be bothering us and wasting ours.

  238. DaveG says

    Ask the Squealots to post their evidence for transubstatiation on Arxiv… Is the cracker the body of Jesus the Man or Jesus the God? I’m curious how Divinity can be described in material terms. If something is Supernatural, how can its presence be verified in the Natural realm? My head’s getting light…

  239. SteveM says

    I will pray for you and for others like you who find it pleasing to make a mockery of a core belief of Catholic Christians.

    I’d rather you knit yourself a pair of socks or something, you know, actually do something productive rather than muttering to yourself while fingering a set beads.

  240. Lee Picton says

    I googled Confraternity of Catholic Clergy and PZ, your blog entry was on the same page. Now if a whole lot of people did the same, your blog entry could be bumped up closer to the top. Clickety-click anyone?

  241. says

    Somewhat related.
    PBS will air ‘The Bible’s Buried Secrets’ on Nov. 18. A two hour special based on archaeological and historical research which debunks the Old Testament. Shows that most of its stories were lifted from surrounding cultures or just invented and did not represent real historical events. Evidently even mentions Yahweh’s wife Asherah – a goddess borrowed from Mesopotamia, but was rubbed out somewhere along the way. Martial problems perhaps, and that might explain why he was always so pissed off.

    Producer Paula Apsell said: “…It’s designed for intelligent people who are willing to change their mind.
    The Catholics, and naturally the Fundies, are already clogging the internet forums raising hell about PBS and in some cases demanding that it not be aired.

  242. me says

    Yeah it kinda does. We know that isn’t what is ment becuase common sense over rides but on a straight lingual logical level that sentance says I am obligated to be offended. Double negatives do create a positive but they also more often then not create a very specific set of peramiters.

    I’m no linguist, but I think this is misuse of the word “right”. Try this, “You don’t have the right to beat the shit out of someone.” This is true, but if you are boxer in a boxing ring, you have that privilege. In other words, just because you don’t have the right to do something doesn’t mean you can’t do it.

  243. FollowTheGourd says

    @272

    I googled “Confraternity of Catholic Clergy” and hit 6 might well reveal the identity of one of everybody’s favourite crackerphiles!

  244. Cheezits says

    PRAY FOR PROFESSOR MYERS

    He ought to be praying for forgiveness for idolatry. And calling a cracker Jesus should be condemned as blasphemy.

  245. says

    You are a sad, sad soul!

    If you believe in souls, you’re a moron.

    I will pray for you and for others like you who find it pleasing to make a mockery of a core belief of Catholic Christians.

    If you don’t like your beliefs being ridiculed, you should avoid believing ridiculous things.

    May God Bless you (despite your complete and dispicable irreverence for Him).

    No thanks. Your petty, evil, genocidal, homophobic, misogynist God can stuff his blessings up his supernatural cornhole; the Pope and all of the other child-rape enablers who claim to be his servants can kiss my shiny white ass.

  246. Sastra says

    tsg #166 wrote:

    Their entire complaint can be summed up thusly: “We won’t tolerate your intolerance of our intolerance.” Whatever.

    Not bad. A good part of this entire debate hinges on what it means to be “intolerant.”

    It’s not just the Catholics. The followers of religion in general have tried to carve out a special niche where criticism, dissent, mockery, and rudeness towards specific faith beliefs is automatically classified as “intolerant.” If you say that the Catholics (or the Muslims or the Wiccans) are wrong, then you’re being intolerant. You’re attacking people in their private sanctuary and trampling on their “right to believe whatever they want.”

    In other words, those who dissent are BULLIES, attacking the weak. They violate the necessary civility of a civil society, and break the harmony. Civil = polite. Respecting others means no arguing with them. No trying to persuade them to change. Accept and honor them as is.

    We, of course, see “harmony” as another word for “consensus,” and all forms of dissent as necessary to a civil society. Civil = befitting a citizen in a free and open society. Respecting others means considering them as equals, as the precursor to argument. You cannot bully your equals.

    And there is no genuine “respect” in separating the religious from the common ground of reason by patting them on the head and putting them in a little glass box marked “sacred.”

    It sometimes seems like we’re using different dictionaries.

  247. Lee Picton says

    I went over to Fr. What-is-name’s blog and noticed that not a single comment has been printed. I left him a message, and don’t see it, either. Why is that, do you suppose?

  248. says

    @ Adrianne – tee hee, if you look at the Father’s blogger identity, he includes his horoscope sign. ! oh giggle i do.

  249. Kevin Klein says

    People who don’t want their beliefs to be laughed at shouldn’t have such funny beliefs.

  250. Alex Ess says

    Well, that press release convinced me

    …to start using communion wafers instead of toilet paper, that is.

  251. robotaholic says

    Thats it! – I’m going out of my way to be offensive to religious people like this! Fuck catholacism, fuck Donahue, fuck the pope, fuck baptists, fuck jehovah’s witnesses, fuck all religions, fuck fortune tellers, fuck astrology, fuck islam, fuck terrorists, fuck suicide bombers, fuck every stupid big fat dress wearing preaching molesting priest and fuck people who think it’s ok to worship something that is supposed to send me or anyone i know or anyone at all to buring hell fire torture, fuck brain washing zombie religious nuts ruining the peace and scientific progress of the human race- fuck black screaming psychopathic preachers who spout racisim, fuck McDonald’s boycotting right wing homosexual hating biggots!

    /rant

  252. says

    You are a sad, sad soul! I will pray for you and for others like you who find it pleasing to make a mockery of a core belief of Catholic Christians. May God Bless you (despite your complete and dispicable irreverence for Him).

    Everyone, I should chime in with some support for Kate @ 259 here – her pitiful comment and bad spelling are at least partly my fault. You see, we used to be sexually involved a few years ago (like many Catholic girls, she’s uptight in public but a rabid pagan slut in bed) and I broke up with her because I got tired of having her condemn me for being an atheist – especially right after she swallowed my load (and did so ironically, I might add!). She didn’t take well, and become a lonely bitter young woman locked in her room at her computer, scouring the intertoobs looking for semi-random targets for badly-written religiously motivated scorn.

    Kate, I’m so sorry. I didn’t mean for you to turn out this way.

    By the way, do you still swallow?

  253. says

    holy crap someone needs to write a piece on the Padre. He wrote all these books like ‘John Paul II for Dummies’ and has links to them on his website, what a money grubber. AND he has cartoons and commentary that make fun of liberal catholics and nuns who don’t wear a habit ‘he calls them ‘LPNs – Likes to Play Nun’. I guess he’s ‘allowed’ to do that, according to the CCC since he’s Catholic, but what a judgemental prick.

  254. says

    Scrofulum, as a fully paid up and ordained minister in the Church of The SubGenius, I hereby declare that from this point on, any can of Pringles you choose is hereby consecrated in the faith of (Religion Name Here) as the (fill in the blank) of (fill in the blank) for any purpose whatsoever the owner of said can of Pringles deems fit and proper!

    According to Church doctrine, ANYTHING a SubGenius says is automatically scripturally correct Church doctrine, ergo, the next can of Pringles you buy is therefore actually a can full of tasty Catholic hosts.

  255. me says

    @284
    “They told me nothing
    Nothing but lies!
    Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes!
    Fuck! Fuck! Fuck! Fuck!
    Fuck me! Fuck me!
    Fuck you! Fuck you!
    Fuck everyone! Fuck the church!
    Fuck Jesus! Fuck Mary!
    Fuck the Jews! Fuck the Bhuddists!
    Fuck the Hindus! Fuck George Bush!
    Fuck his ugly wife! Fuck Tipper Gore!
    Fuck everyone! Fuck Gorbachev!
    Fuck Noriega! Fuck all these assholes!
    Fuck you! Fuck me! Fuck all of you!
    Stigmata! Stigmata! Stigmata! Stigmata!
    They told me nothing but lies!
    Lies! Lies! Lies! Lies! ”

    Ministry – Stigmata

  256. Dahan says

    Brownian @ 255,

    “Ooh, ooh, count me in! Do I need to sell vitamins and shampoo, or is it one of those religions where I get to lounge around having sex with acolytes?”

    Well, it’s kinda complicated, but I think we’re going for the “sex with acolytes who sell vitamins and shampoo for us”” theme in general.

  257. robotaholic says

    I totally have the entire ministry discography lol – i like thier 80’s industrial music the best lol

  258. says

    After following a few more links, I stumbled upon this letter, in which the Catholic Confraternity denounces a proposal to make priests’ celibacy optional.

    The fact that some celibate clergy (bishops, priests and deacons) have sexually abused children and adolescents, however, warrants realistic remedies which conform to traditional discipline and defined doctrine.

    Please note the word “realistic”, and switch off all irony-sensitive devices before proceeding to the next few paragraphs.

    Optional celibacy is not the answer, nor is it the panacea; it is a placebo. It will do nothing. […] Heterodoxy as taught by dissident theologians in seminaries and Catholic colleges, supported by liturgical abuses and an iconoclastic crusade to remove reverence from public worship, will inevitably produce immoral behavior.

    We ask you and the entire Conference of Bishops to thoroughly, completely and systematically investigate and eliminate all vestiges of heterodoxy, homosexuality and liturgical abuse from all seminaries

    You may now point and laugh, and thank you for flying What The Hell Are They Smoking Airlines.

  259. Benjamin Franklin says

    Megan @ # 264

    That sounds pretty sacredelicious. But as I posted yesterday in the pork v beef bbq debate, I’m an ‘eat and let eat’ kinda guy.

  260. James says

    #273 Nothing new, that is what they teach in Catholic Biblical Studies for over a 100 years. Hence why the Catholic Church does not follow Sola Scripture (Bible alone theology) nor does it supports Creationism. For Catholics, scripture is meant to be read prayerfully (called Lectio Divina) and not as a science book (this was a major arguement by members of the Magesterium during Galileo–they were right!). Yes, for Catholics Scripture is the word of God, written by man but Tradition does not allow literally meanings, it goes by the original intent of the author, to the audience of the time, and by the original language it was written (Greek and Hebrew). The few that is taken literally is just the portions where the Hebrew or Greek syntax requires it. So, in short, the PBS special will probably drive the fundies crazy (which is fun). Those claiming to be Catholic need to realize the the P.B.C. contributed, probably the charsmatic catholic groups, they hate tradition, historical critical, and non-literal interpretation.

  261. Gary Bohn says

    Sounds to me like the Catholic church is trying to incite hatred against atheistic, cephalopod loving biologists.

  262. Benjamin Franklin says

    Adrienne @ #267

    did the guy actually *weep* at what PZ did?

    Only crocodile tears, which gives him only 20% binocularity, better for on-line ambushing. See what you learn from the History Channel?

  263. Adrienne says

    Hey, I’m going to do a minor threadjack here to do a public service announcement. For those of you who want to oppose and even royally piss off Catholics/Fundies *while supporting a very good cause*, forget the Eucharistic desecrations and try volunteering some time at your local women’s clinic that does abortions instead. I do this every fourth or fifth Saturday morning, helping to escort scared patients past a small but ridiculously vocal group of screaming meemies (mostly Catholics, of course) who try to deceive or intimidate patients into going to the local Catholic-run “crisis pregnancy center” instead.

  264. Hockey Bob says

    @ 198


    P.S.: Your Pope dresses funny.

    I put on my robe and wizard hat.

    ;-)

  265. says

    Supporting a local women’s medical clinic is an excellent idea! One problem: there is no local clinic that does abortions. There is apparently only one place in all of Minnesota where you can get them done; one of the doctors in Minneapolis flies in to South Dakota regularly to do them, and otherwise, South Dakota would be completely lacking in that service.

    People have no idea of the magnitude of the suppression of basic health services around here, all caused by religious nuts.

  266. mikeg says

    huh? (+)… is this the transubstantiated butthole of jesus… really? no, really?

  267. oriole says

    Hey, outraged Catholics, maybe you could work out a deal with PZ. If you could get your priests to stop sexually abusing their altar boys, you could probably get PZ to stop abusing your stupid crackers.

    Great priorities you’ve got there on your outrage meters, Catholics.

  268. CaryT says

    Unconstitutional? wtf? It’s been awhile since my constitutional history coursework but I seem to remember the purpose of the bill of rights being to protect the people from the government. Individual citizens can be very prejudiced for or against any religion at any time. The First Amendment prohibits government from doing this.

    If the Cathtards are arguing that PZ is a public employee then sure, he’s a public employee when in a classroom or speaking for the university. What he does on his own time, be it cracker malediction, biological ejaculations, or octopus molestation, that’s his own business and not relevant to the U.S. Constitution or any of its amendments.

  269. cicely says

    Emmet @ 156, I am indebted to you for introducing me to a fun new word…nescience. I like it!

    And, everybody…Etha’s back!

  270. Raiko says

    I see the point. Really.

    In my religion, we habitually take little round crackers, dip them in blood (well, ketchup), walk across them with dirty sneakers and then rub them against an old banana peel. According to my religion, these crackers are the embodiment of Ghangjlick’s soul, the master of evil who beheaded our prophet, Lord Inklunx. We perform this ritual regularly every Wednesday to ensure our safety from Ghangjlick and Those He Poisoned through the power of Lord Inklunx’ (intelligently designed) banana, the symbol of his natural purity and endless power.

    I feel greatly offended that some cult out there would ridicule our ritual by EATING the cracker and thus smearing themselves with the evil of Ghangjlick and the blood of our Lord Inklunx the Great! These heathens don’t know what they’re doing!

    But alas. Freedom of religion means I have to let them — ew —- eat Ghangjilick’s incarnation.

    May Inklunx have mercy on them. I pray for them.

  271. raven says

    Father Trigilio:

    No one is laughing. Many of us are in tears that our beloved Savior would be subjected to such vile treatment AGAIN.

    Huh!!! What!!! This makes no sense.

    The Jesus in the cracker is the all powerful, omniscient creator of the universe. The last time he and his father who are the same being got irritated with humans, they flooded the earth with 10 miles of water and killed all but 8 people.

    Seems to me that such a powerful entity could get out of a cracker before it hits the trash can. And turn PZ into a frog without breathing hard.

    The priests have some explaining to do. Why is god/Jesus so feeble these days that he can’t even call 911? Everyone has a cell phone.

  272. Adrienne says

    Oh hey, there is a critical comment showing up at Trigilio’s blog. Let’s see how long it stays there….

  273. says

    WTF, really? WTF?

    A bit over the top?

    A bit.

    I’m all for poking fun at the religious whiners that show up here but I try to stick to things we know about them. Like their religion and all the dumb things that surround it.

  274. mathyoo says

    His flagrant display of irreverence by profaning a consecrated Host from a Catholic church goes beyond the limit of academic freedom and free speech.

    If you put limits on academic freedom and free speech, they aren’t free any more. Moron.

  275. akshelby says

    Rev.BigDumbChimp @314 regarding #285

    Thank you. I’ve been following Crackergate quite closely and I’m all for knocking the godbots and trolls around based on the things they say and believe. But #285 was knocking her about based on her being a woman and sexually denigrating her. Totally uncalled for.

  276. says

    A bit.

    I’m all for poking fun at the religious whiners that show up here but I try to stick to things we know about them. Like their religion and all the dumb things that surround it.

    Respectfully noted. And thank you.

    For what it’s worth, I was having a snarky moment and felt like plucking one of the random drive-by troll grenades out of the air and just casually chucking it right back in the the thrower’s lap so that hilarity might ensue. And I hope everyone realizes that I truly have no idea who this Kate person is, nor do I have any reason to think that she even stuck around after lifting her nose and clicking the “post” button.

  277. Austin says

    Since their sacrament claims that their magical spell turns the cracker into the literal–and therefore BIOLOGICAL–flesh of Jesus, then who better than a biologist to point out that, actually, it’s still a frakkin’ cracker?

    …well, okay, the FDA, maybe. The crackers might be okay, but I bet Jesus is WAY past his ‘Sell By’ date.

  278. says

    With regard to my “for what it’s worth” comment, let me be the first to flatly say that it ain’t worth squat. Everyone who jumped on my ass about it was right, I was wrong, I apologize, and I will not go that sort of off-color route again.

  279. Jon W says

    RE #299

    I may be a part-time “concern troll,” but I contribute other stuff too (the cartoon in PZ’s post, for example).

  280. Sean D. says

    #321

    I thought it was funny Eric, but then I’ve been accused of being a dirty bastard.

  281. Rey Fox says

    So, over 300 comments and only two trolls? So much for the whole “the storm is just beginning” thing.

    Although, to be honest, one of the reasons the cracker threads were so crazy is that PZ was busy jetting around the country at the time, and didn’t have time to do his usual half-dozen posts per day, thus everything got concentrated on the one big topic of the moment.

    Meanwhile, I am TOTALLY in favor of the idea of PZ paying a “reparation” by sending the CCC a nickel in an envelope. It would serve to more fully illustrate how crazy they are, and the difference between host desecration and the acts of actual vandalism that populate all the BS “analogies” made by the bed-wetting set.

    This already IS an episode of South Park. South Park is REAL, and we’re living in it.

    PZ has even killed Kenny a few times on Pharyngula.

    And if PZ had ever inflicted widespread disemvowelment on Kenny, then the analogy would be perfect.

    “Y cn’t gnr NDs. Mllns f ppl hv ywtnss tstmny f grt lght nd flng f vrwhlmng lv.”

    “Ha ha ha ha! Kenny, you’re so dirty!”

    Wow, SacreDElicious is my new favorite word. Sold!

    No no no no no. It’s sacreLICious.

    Do I need to sell vitamins and shampoo, or is it one of those religions where I get to lounge around having sex with acolytes?

    No, only the high priests get to do that. As a regular religious peon, you get to toil in the fields all day in the hopes of being rewarded in the afterlife. Don’t you know how these things work?

  282. says

    I may be a part-time “concern troll,” but I contribute other stuff too (the cartoon in PZ’s post, for example).

    Jon W, please let me follow up my #321 by apologizing in particular to you. I so totally deserved to get metaphorically smacked upside the head, as you were quick to do.

  283. DjtHeutii says

    The “unconstitutional” part is hilarious. Is PZ now the government or something? These guys have no idea how that “Constitution” thing works at all do they?

  284. Eupraxsopher says

    It’s amazing that presumably high-echelon religious organizations use logic and fallacy that an average nine year-old could spot.

  285. les says

    “The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance.”

    I assume this means we can continue to tastefully offend their faith tradition, as we are all wont to do.

  286. IceFarmer says

    PZ,

    You should ask for them for another Eucharist directly from these guys. Since it was Jebus himself that was wounded directly, you wish to discuss the afore mentioned actions, apologies and terms of reparations that Jebus wants. If you come to a mutual understanding with the cracker… Jebus… then you will consider apologizing to the cracker and the cracker alone. All the other Catholics can go F themselves accordingly. If you & Jebus disagree, or worse ye, the discussion doesn’t go anywhere, then you’ll the Eucharist to piss off and send him back via ground mail from whence he/it came.

  287. says

    So much to read from charming and intelligent people, so much stupidity still to experience from the credulous. Alas, time has passed and I wave goodbye to all. Have enjoyed most of my time here, especially now that I installed killfile (smile).

    I suggest SC, of the sexy mind, and Wowbagger for the next Molly awards as both had insightful comments during crackerpazoola.

    PZ, thank you for this blog, it has been a source of both education and joy.

    Ciao all.

  288. Lynnai says

    I’m no linguist, but I think this is misuse of the word “right”. Try this, “You don’t have the right to beat the shit out of someone.” This is true, but if you are boxer in a boxing ring, you have that privilege. In other words, just because you don’t have the right to do something doesn’t mean you can’t do it.

    either you are letting your common sense take over and are going back to what was clearly implied in context (which I did say I understood and that I was just being silly pointing out what was actually logically read into the statement); or you are missing the point. It is actually a very fine and sticky piece of logic which results in some very silly thoughts.

    It isn’t about talking about rights in negatives, it is about talking about rights in double negatives.

    example: You have the right to free speach. This means you can speak and express your self freely.

    Step two: You do not have the right to free speach. This means you don’t get to say what you want all the time and some of your actions might be cutrailed.

    Step three: You do not have the right not to free speach. Which means you must speak freely…. how much of the day and to how to judge whether or not you are speaking freely is of course impossible to judge and creates a totaly conundrum as maybe not speaking is your choice of expression = total silliness. Please note, although in the end the practical result is the right to free speach it does so by setting up an obligation to speak freely.

    Not having the right not to be offended of course leaves me still with the ability to not be offended, just not the constitutional right to do so. That boxer has set themselves up an exception to not having the right to beat the shit out of someone but he still has the right to not beat the shit out of them, it’s not unconstitutional to be a bad boxer. But if it was set up that boxers did not have the right not to beat the shit out of someone, then they would constitutionally HAVE to beat the shit out of someone. Although it doesn’t stipulate when or how much. This is my point, you can not speak of rights in double negatives wihtout getting silly.

    How about a non constitutional example, here’s a sextuple negative for you: “I don’t not know nobody who doesn’t not want no nine inch nails” = everybody I know wants nine inch nails, not just some people but everybody. (It’s not true, some people I know never do heavy carpentry and think Trent Resnor is a wanker.)

    Remember I’m primarilly talking about the logical form of the sentance.

  289. Jon W says

    RE #321 and #325

    Whoops, I should read ahead before I comment. No apology necessary (to me, anyway).

  290. Kseniya says

    JeffreyD: Stop in when you get a chance. Til then, be well, and stay safe. xo

  291. says

    Maybe we should write to the pope and ask his opinion on all this?

    We’ve got all these speaking supposedly on behalf of the Catholics, perhaps Benny could deign to weigh in on this?

  292. Patricia says

    Goodbye JefferyD!!! Have fun, but please come back. I send you a big *SMOOCH* Don’t forget to twirl! ;)

  293. hf says

    I was surprised to see the CCC calling itself a national (American) group. But maybe their right-wing views could explain their ignorance of the Constitution and/or the facts of this case.

  294. raven says

    It’s amazing that presumably high-echelon religious organizations use logic and fallacy that an average nine year-old could spot.

    That was my thought. There is a huge gap in priest recruitment and they must be getting old.

    They need to drop the celibate priest thing and quickly. There is no scriptural basis for it anyway. Otherwise they will end up with a very small group of very old men running the church and most of them will have alzheimers.

  295. Blondin says

    “A celibate clergy is an especially good idea, because it tends to suppress any hereditary propensity toward fanaticism.”

    — Carl Sagan

  296. says

    Reading the CCC site, they really are completely divorced from reality. Total nutters. There also appears to be an error on their logo: the ribbon should read “ani puerorum in aeternum” not “tu es sacerdos in aeternum”.

  297. crossbuck says

    When the Catholic crazies came out of the woodwork when the first of these posts went up, one thing came into my mind. All of them, clergy and laity alike reminded me of an episode of Married With Children, where they were all threatened by a fortune teller. Kelly (the dumb blonde) was sitting on the couch, rubbing a box of Lucky Charms and chanting, “They’re magically delicious” over and over. She seemed no sillier than the cracker-worshipers.

  298. mk says

    Darn! Doesn’t look like this one’s going to make it a thousand!

    C’mon you jesus freaks! Lost your will to annoy or something?

  299. Geoff Schroeder says

    The declaration, incredibly, is phrased very similarly to the sentence passed by the Inquisition upon Galileo. The full test can be found in Bertrand Russell’s The Scientific Outlook. The cadence and lofty language thus:
    Invoking then the Most Holy Name of Our Lord Jesus Christ, and of His most glorious Mother Mary, ever Virgin, for this Our definite sentence, the which sitting pro tribunali, by the counsel and opinion of the Reverent Masters of theology and doctors of both laws, Our Counsellors, we present in these writings, in the cause and causes currently before Us, between the magnificent Carlo Sinceri, doctor of both laws, procurator fiscal of this Holy Office on the one part, and thou Galileo Galilei, guilty, here present, confessed and judged, on the other part:

    “We say, pronounce, sentence, and declare, that thou, the said Galileo, by the things deduced during this trial, and by thee confessed as above, hast rendered thyself vehemently suspected of heresy by this Holy Office, that is, of having believed and held a doctrine which is false, and contrary to the Holy Scriptures, to wit: that the Sun is the centre of the universe, and that it does not move from east to west, and that the Earth moves and is not the centre of the universe: and that an opinion may be held and defended as probable after having been declared and defined as contrary to Holy Scripture; and in consequence thou hast incurred all the censures and penalties of the Sacred Canons, and other Decrees both general and particular, against such offenders imposed and promulgated. From the which We are content that thou shouldst be absolved, if, first of all, with a sincere heart and unfeigned faith, thou dost before Us abjure, curse, and detest the above-mentioned errors and heresies and any other error and heresy contrary to the Catholic and Apostolic Roman Church, after the manner that We shall require of thee.

    “And to the end that this thy grave error and transgression remain not entirely unpunished, and that thou mayst be more cautious in the future, and an example to others to abstain from and avoid similar offences,

  300. Christophe Thill says

    The idea that the University should scrutinize the private life of its professors and fire them when they say something inappropriate outside of their working time is a repulsive and totalitarian one.

    “The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance.”

    OK guys! From now on, you’ll treat other religions with due respect. No more mocking the human sacrifices to Quetzalcoatl, the Egyptian gods with animal heads, the silly adultery stories of the Olympian gods. No more bad words about the Wiccans, the worshippers of Odin or the various heretics of the past. Of course, no more caricatures of Muhammad. And please, treat with respect the various mutilations (genital or otherwise) performed in the name of a religious tradition. Understood?

  301. says

    You know, if you hadn’t thrown out that cracker, you could have sprayed some Cheez Whiz on it and had a delicious snack.

    In my youth I was forced to partake of many a communion wafer. The Nuns told us that we weren’t allowed to chew it. Indeed, if our teeth even touched it, it would be a sin. It seems you’re not supposed to bite the body of Christ, you’re supposed to let him melt in your mouth like M&Ms. Sadly they were made of some sticky, styrofoam-like substance that simply wouldn’t dissolve. You don’t know how many times I had to pry the body of Christ off the roof of my mouth with my finger!

    – Maggie

  302. JHJEFFERY says

    OK, Here’s the letter I wrote to Father Trigilio’s organization. The best defense is a good offense. Let’s see if we can get the asshole fired.

    Just in case he does not share my response with you, I provide you with a summary of my letter to Father Trigilio.

    First, I was perturbed to find two grammatical and one spelling error in a post from the editor of your newsletter.

    More importantly, Father Trigilio may or may not know scripture, but his understanding of the U.S. Constitution is at a grade school level, if that. I am, humbly, an expert on the First Amendment, particularly on the first clause thereof and I have practiced law for thirty-three years. Freedom of religion does not resemble the concept of your priest. Instead, it means that each of us has the right to practice his or her own religion in the manner in which we see fit. No one can be compelled to practice, or respect, any other religion. The idea that Father Trigilio wants to silence someone who has contempt for his particular religion might be treated with nothing but derision if it did not come from a platform such as your organization. But it did. It is blatantly unAmerican, subversive of the principles upon which this country was founded, and generally authoritarian and reprehensible. I suggest that Father Trigilio be required to memorize the First Amendment (or at least read it) before opining again.

    Oddly enough, Father Trigilio then proceeds to say that Professor Myers cannot have an opinion on theological matters. This is in the paragraph after the good Father has given us his legal opinion.

    In short, I am outraged by the fascist and tyrannical rant of Father Trigilio. Please let me know if you have in place any type of disciplinary board or procedure of which I might have access in order to seek the dismissal, or at least the discipline of this most unAmerican person.

    I will await your response.

    Jerry H. Jeffery
    (telephone number here)

  303. 386sx says

    …that is, of having believed and held a doctrine which is false, and contrary to the Holy Scriptures, to wit: that the Sun is the centre of the universe, blah blah blah…

    So let me see if I have this right: They were the bleepin apostolic successors ordainerd by the one and only Jesus Frakin H. Christ His Holy Bleepin Self, and they got the scriptures completely bassed baskwards. Correct me if I’m wrong!

  304. Tom Coward says

    My apologies if this point has been made before (this is a long thread that I have not had a chance to read entirely):

    The constitutional thesis put out by these Catholics is so bad it is “not even wrong.” The Constitution protects the peolple from the Government, not from each other. The First Amendment restrains the Government from establishing a religion, prohibiting the free excersise of a religion, abridging the freedom of speech or of the press, and so on. The Constitution doesn’t stop a private person from doing anything. The First Amenedment is what keeps the Catholics (for example) from getting the Government to stop PZ from desecrating their biscuit. The First Amendment in fact is what gurantees PZ’s right to do this, and to insult their religion in any other way he wants.

  305. Christophe Thill says

    Oh, and this :

    “Were Myers a Professor of Theology, there would have been at least a presumption of competency to express religious opinions in a classroom.”

    So, that’s what it is? Theology is just “expressing religious opinions”? An opinion is merely “that’s what I think, and I stick to it”. I don’t see how it could form the base of anything ending in -logy. Politology is not just a professor stating in front of his students: “I’ll vote for X, whether you like it or not”. Oenology is not just saying: “I really, really like this wine here”. Why would theology be any different?

    (Except, of course, that politicians and wines do exist)

  306. says

    Eric Saveau, thanks for the apology in regards to your snark about Kate. You demonstrated what the hardcore catholics hounding PZ haven’t: understanding criticism, realizing you went too far, and then apologizing for it. So many fundies and conservatives believe “staying the course” and not “flip-flopping” is better than admitting their own mistakes.

    That said, the stupid from this press release hurts my brain. I just bought a brand-new irony meter after the whole crackergate deal, too–and now I have to shop around for another one.

  307. Ian says

    PZ – Here’s something to blog about: if the cracker evolves into Jesus, then why are there still crackers?

  308. VoteNader2008 says

    I can’t get over the fact that he’s claiming a right for a religion.

    Religions don’t have rights. Humans have rights. Hell, he’s even saying that religions have rights that humans do not. That’s the dumbest damn thing I’ve read this month.

    A person who belongs to a religion has rights, as does a person who does not belong to a religion. A religion can’t have rights because a religion is not a person. It is, at best, an abstract concept. It’s like saying an emotion has rights. Madness.

    …. but noooooobody has a problem with corporations having human rights…. and would rather vote for a corporate candidate then someone that would stand up for the American “people”, like Ralph Nader.

  309. says

    sez raven @ 340: “[Catholics] need to drop the celibate priest thing and quickly. There is no scriptural basis for it anyway. Otherwise they will end up with a very small group of very old men running the church and most of them will have alzheimers.”
    Hmmm. “will end up with”? Are you sure that’s the right tense for that sentence..?

  310. Nick Gotts says

    They need to drop the celibate priest thing and quickly. There is no scriptural basis for it anyway. Otherwise they will end up with a very small group of very old men running the church and most of them will have alzheimers. – raven

    Cloning?

  311. Sastra says

    Tom Coward #352 wrote:

    The Constitution protects the people from the Government, not from each other.

    As much as they disparage the idea of “Big Brother,” a lot of Americans seem to want the government to turn into “Big Mommy.” It’s as if our society is a great big birthday party, and it’s Big Mommy’s job to make sure all the little tykes feel good about themselves, and there are no fights or hurt feelings.

    Harmony above all. This is the United States, and religious belief is supposed to be a HAPPY occasion. Let’s not have all this bickering and arguing.

  312. True Bob says

    VoteNader, I have a huge problem with corporations having human rights (and benefiting from the BoR). I also have a huge problem with declaring war on pastimes (drugs), economic conditions (poverty and more secretively, anyone not quite upper class), and a tactic (terrrrrrrrrrrrsm).

    Unfortunately, I don’t think Ralphy is really in a place to make a difference in any of that, and his timing is oh so suspect (where was he in 2004?). I DO think almost everyone at a national political level has been compromised. Not that any of that helps me sleep at night.

  313. Stark says

    Does anybody have contact info for JeffreyD?

    I don’t know the man personally but I am worried for him. I have been occasionally reading his blog (as I do for most of those I see posted here – just to get a sense of who people are) and he has been dealing with some rough stuff. Suicide of a loved one, declining health, etc…

    The wording of that last post is somewhat disturbing to somebody who has seen too many last notes from suicide victims.

    It could just be that his health issues are precluding him from spending much time on the PC…but please, if anybody has contact info give him a ring and see if he’s OK.

  314. True Bob says

    I’m no linguist, but I think this is misuse of the word “right”.

    Au contraire, I find you to be quite the cunning linguist.

  315. says

    @ Pierce R. Butler #243

    The book you recommended is trash.

    There is so much bollocks flying around regarding the Dark Ages and who caused them.

    First of all, there is no “dark ages”. There was a medieval period certainly, but there is no clear dividing line: Here be dark ages, there be wisdom, and the people/things responsible are x,y, and z.

    You could blame anyone and anything you want for it precisely because it is a nebulous concept describing a fairly short period of time.

    Indian Ocean trade continued long after the rise of the Roman successor states and the Romans weren’t super amazing scientists and rationalists in the first place. That’s not to say they didn’t contribute, but much of what they had they took from the Greeks and Egyptians along the Nile, the Ionian colonies, and Athens. Other things they picked up through Silk Road trade. This idea that Europe (if there is such a thing) was plunged into a clearly defined age of particular hardship and cruelty because of clearly a few defined causes is utter bullshit.

    You want uncivilized hardship and persecution? Look up the Assyrians.

  316. John Marshall says

    So they’re praying and fasting that this won’t happen again. Guess that means if PZ doesn’t repeat his stunt their praying works… Tricky Cathylicks.

  317. NanuNanu says

    Anyone voting for Nader deserves to be ridiculed just as much as these Catholic Priests.

    That is all.

  318. Sven DiMilo says

    Nice analysis there, Nanu. There are actually excellent rational reasons one might choose to cast a vote for Ralph Nader. Why the ridicule? Because Nader might siphon votes from your preferred Korporate Kandidate?
    That said, I now live in a potential swing state, so I don’t plan to vote for him either. This time.

  319. Stark says

    Rev. BDC – No new posts over there since the 11th and the last one seemed reasonably up-tempo (for posts there anyhow) but that wording in his last post here has me concerened. Nothing much I can do about it though- too many Jeff* D’s in Charleston and I’m on the wrong coast anyhow.

  320. SC says

    NO!!! How did I miss JeffreyD?! Why is he leaving?

    Well, JeffreyD, if by chance you’re still reading: Thank you for the nomination – I couldn’t be more flattered and touched. You’re by far one of my favorite people here, and I always look forward to your comments (still laughing about the “in his cracker form” post from the “FYI” thread). I hope you stay well and safe. I’ll continue to check your blog, and perhaps even leave a comment someday… Please take good care, and I wish you all the best. In blog-friendship,

    SC

  321. rebelest says

    I find the common and familiar practice of a large majority of Christians who find offence in criticism and ridicule of their faith and beliefs to be the pinnacle of hypocrisy while their “holy book” condemns atheists as fools who are corrupt and do NO good.

    Psalm 14:1 KJV

    The fool has said in his heart,”There is no God.” They are corrupt, They have done abominable works, There is none who does good.

    So let us reserve the right and obligation to criticize, mock and laugh at their religion, faith and beliefs, until they cease to have any power over the credulous.

  322. NanuNanu says

    I didn’t mean to be a dick but It just seems to me that the type of people that vote for Nader are typically more liberal minded and would otherwise vote for Obama more than Mccain. Considering that a Mccain presidency would be disastrous I don’t think we can AFFORD to have a “conscience vote”. Public support for a third party candidate is not enough and realistically in this election we cant go voting for which ever candidate we think supports all our views but rather the one that is most close to our views while having a chance of winning. And though there is an argument that if everyone voted for who they wanted the most we could shunt off the 2 party system I think that it is most likely not that there are millions of people who WOULD vote for Nader but don’t, but rather that the moderate base of people who vote within their party bounds far outweighs those that would embrace a independent candidate. It’s just that, in this political climate, in this election with these stakes voting for Nader or someone else who won’t win is siphoning off votes that could be putting a large lead in front of Mccain.

    I’m sorry if that came off as incoherent.

  323. says

    There’s a bit of irony here – liberal factions have promoted and passed “hate speech” laws or similar, in which one can be punished for distressing someone over their race, etc. Wikipedia FWIW has the following elaborate definition:

    Hate speech is a term for speech intended to degrade, intimidate, or incite violence or prejudicial action against a person or group of people based on their race, gender, age, ethnicity, nationality, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, disability, language ability, moral or political views, socioeconomic class, occupation or appearance (such as height, weight, and hair color), mental capacity and any other distinction-liability. The term covers written as well as oral communication and some forms of behaviors in a public setting. It is also sometimes called antilocution and is the first point on Allport’s scale which measures prejudice in a society.

    Note that religion is included. Well, if you can accept that psychological distress is a valid “tort” then the concept of the hate speech (or “expression” by extension) should be valid and remediable by law, at least the civil kind. In any case it certainly would also be a basis for condemnation (and our system actually already did accept mental distress before hate-speech/crime laws entered the more modern phase, which I admit I don’t know much about since I’m making a general point. But certainly “physical harm” was not a necessary threshold – sadly it isn’t a sufficient one to the current administration …)

    Hence, can those of you who accept the other kinds and enforcement of “hate speech” and hate crimes (in principle, not about matter of degree) explain why the “crackergate” episode just shouldn’t count as a matter of principle? Perhaps it’s a matter of “whose ox is being gored,” as Hentoff has explained in ref. below. Of course, in the vein Hentoff describes, conservatives could be asked the same question in reverse: if you think crackergate was horrible, then you shouldn’t be so hard on liberal versions of “hate crime” complaints, etc.

    Now, maybe someone can actually come up with good answers here, it’s just a Socratic challenge with no insinuation that you can’t succeed.

    (BTW I count in net as liberal from liking the environment, the working class, politically wary of religion and independent in thinking about it, usually voting Democratic and being a Unitarian Universalist, visceral revulsion to the right-wing “culture”, having a rational basis for ethics etc.)

    Nat Hentoff:
    Free Speech for Me — But Not for Thee: How the American Left and Right Relentlessly Censor Each Other (1993)
    ISBN 0-06-099510-6

  324. NanuNanu says

    I don’t think many here are pro-hate speech laws. Also, in order for something to be a hate crime a crime has to be committed in the first place.
    Just my 2 cents, I know I’m likely not part of the targeted group for the challenge.

  325. Sastra says

    Neil B #376 wrote:

    There’s a bit of irony here – liberal factions have promoted and passed “hate speech” laws or similar, in which one can be punished for distressing someone over their race, etc.

    I agree — you would think it wouldn’t be considered “liberal” to quash dissent.

    At any rate, your question isn’t aimed at me either, because I’m firmly against “hate speech” laws, and a fan of Hentoff’s argument here (which he also made in the Council for Secular Humanism’s magazine Free Inquiry.) I suspect PZ and Ed Brayton both agree on this one.

  326. Patricia says

    Just for fun – deaths in the bible due to gawd from floods, fiery serpents, famines, war, etc – 2,270,365. Deaths due to Satan – 10. Thanks to Richard Dawkins web site.
    Yep, boys and girls, gawd is love.

  327. says

    It’s time to turn the tables on the Christofascists and ask, “Why are you so sensitive about any statement that could even be construed as hinting that your god doesn’t exist?” I mean, in many cultures, saying “Your mother’s a whore!” is a surefire way to make someone angry, but “Your mother doesn’t exist!” would be greeted with quizzical looks. If these religious folks are so secure in their god’s existence, then they should simply shrug their shoulders and shake their heads at we poor nonbelievers. That’s how emotionally secure people react to those who deny the obvious.

  328. George G. (also known as Cafeeine) says

    I just posted this in Trigilio’s blog

    While I am not PZ Myers, I agree with his actions, and will offer my position in their defense (which is my own and he may or may not agree with), and I will repost this in his Pharyngula blog.

    With respect, you are still making the same mistake most Catholics whose comments I have read on this issue are making.

    Your position of faith is that the consecrated Host is the Body & Blood, Soul & Divinity of Christ. You have the undeniable right to hold that faith.

    I have the undeniable right to think this is untrue, that it is a mass delusion I also have the right to hold the position that the wafer you use in your ceremony remains unchanged, and that it is possible to corroborate my position through scientific examination of such a wafer.

    You ask that I not call your ceremonial wafer a ‘cracker’, to give it a worth I do not personally think it deserves, which means that you are asking me to either accept your own belief as valid (in essence take it on faith) or to refrain from making comments as a sign of respect to fellow human beings.

    As I do not accept your belief as valid, I cannot adhere to the first option. I do adhere to the second one. This is not meant to imply tacit acceptance of your doctrine as valid, just a position of ‘be and let be’.

    This type of moratorium, from my point of view is not irrevocable, but subject to your own religion’s actions. When the members of your church in Florida displayed some egregious behavior against Webster Cook, and it deserved no respect, either from your church nor from me. I notice, after a cursory inspection that you failed to make mention of the initial incident anywhere in your blog. I’ll grant that it may have been considered a local issue at the time, yet even after the event exploded, I found nothing.

    So Myers made his initial comment. At the time, he had dome nothing but express his views on the Eucharist and his coming intentions as a clear response to that particular issue. Yet scores of Catholic responders, like the fool who was being shown the Moon and who instead stared at the pointing finger, ignored for the most part the initial incident and expressed the worst kind of catholic love for Myers, including, to my own knowledge threats of violence and at least one death threat. Still, the initial goal of Myers’ action, to give the initial incident publicity was a resounding success. People from all around the world took notice.

    When your own members show such wanton disregard for their fellow human and their own religion’s doctrines of love, don’t you think this deserves more then an off-hand comment about disavowing threats of violence?

    Myers, like me, held no particular reverence to that wafer. In asking him to act as if he did, you are demanding deference to your beliefs.

    You claim that Myers (and those who agree with him in this, I say) should “at least respect [your] right to believe and profess what [you] believe without resorting to beligerant ridicule and attack.”

    Personally I believe that the world is operated by natural laws that have a basis in logic. Every time any religion talks about the supernatural, about things that ‘defy logic or nature’ that there is a Divine Being whom we can only perceive through faith and divine revelation, I consider that belligerent ridicule of my own beliefs. Every time a Christian tells me I believe in nothing I consider that belligerent ridicule of my own beliefs. Every time a religion forces children in a public school to either pray or pretend to pray in deference to their interpretation of a Divine Being, I view that as an attack.Every time a religion causes its members to attack & bully others over these illogical claims, to use fear to indoctrinate people into their own worldview, I view that as an attack. I do not however start writing letters to get professors expelled, nor do I send death threats, nor do I demand not to be offended..

    My belief that your religion is illogical is not meant to be offensive to you, just as your beliefs in transcendent beings and an afterlife are not meant to be offensive to me. Yet they both are. And we both must learn to live with it. Trying to force acquiescence through force of numbers while downplaying the original issue only makes your argument weaker. And how can you claim to want rational discussion, when you propose irrational precepts, like that the Eucharist is the actual Body of Christ?

  329. Angie says

    They can evoke the Founding Fathers as much as they like though it’s pointless because this issue is a Catholic one, therefore it’s international. Outside of the U.S. the Constitution, Bill of Rights, [any U.S. document] is irrelevant. The sentiments and ideas may be universal and reasonable (when interpreted correctly) but they need a better argument to back up their warped views. It won’t wash elsewhere. What do I care what the FF intended? Here in Australia I’ve just put up with World Youth Day bullshit and attempted censorship of any protests. How would they try to stop me calling their rituals ridiculous without using the Bill of Rights argument? Call me a big meanie??

    I know that in this case they are talking about a U.S. citizen in America, but their arguments should have enough depth to apply to anyone who attacks their (worldwide) faith. This doesn’t.

  330. Sven DiMilo says

    I’m firmly opposed to hate-speech laws. However, I favor a variety of other speech-restriction laws, such as mildly-offensive-to-Swedish/Italian-people-of-a-certain-age-speech laws, door-to-door-proselytization-in-my-neighboorhood-speech laws, and yet-another-mention-of-Cheez-Whiz-in-Ineffable-Magical-Baked-Goods-related-blog-comment-
    thread-speech laws. To name just a few.

  331. LisaJ says

    Wow, that was some fantastic dinner time comedy. Frigging hilarious, and also very disturbing.

  332. Sven DiMilo says

    Ralph Nader has no chance of winning, ever. Protest votes are a waste.

    ? But, of course, protest votes have little or nothing to do with trying to help determine the winner. Protest voters are playing a different game, and in their game it’s not a waste. I voted for Nader twice, but it’s because I lived in Oklahoma at the time and I knew damn well that a vote for Gore or Kerry would be a “waste.” So I thought I’d send a message to anybody looking at the detailed results. That message being, I guess, that there were a few people in Oklahoma that agreed with Nader’s basic message. I still agree with it–I hope to be proven wrong, but I fear that Obama is already too Establishment-bound to effect any truly meaningful “change”–but I now live in a state where my vote might mean something, and in this new circumstance I pl,an to cast a cautiously optimnistic vote for O.

  333. VoteNader2008 says

    VoteNader, I have a huge problem with corporations having human rights (and benefiting from the BoR). I also have a huge problem with declaring war on pastimes (drugs), economic conditions (poverty and more secretively, anyone not quite upper class), and a tactic (terrrrrrrrrrrrsm).

    Unfortunately, I don’t think Ralphy is really in a place to make a difference in any of that, and his timing is oh so suspect (where was he in 2004?). I DO think almost everyone at a national political level has been compromised. Not that any of that helps me sleep at night.

    Oh, he was there running for president, but you wouldnt have noticed then, like in 2000 or now because of the black out from the MSM AND because of Bonusgate, thats right the democratic party used our tax dollars to keep Nader off the ballot. Where was he? You know how hard it is for an independent candidate to get on all the ballots? Its an obstacle course devised to keep it a two party system. Even if he wasnt on the ballot in my state(he will be) I’d write in his name and Matt Gonzalezs’.

  334. fatherdaddy says

    I am imagining a milk carton with a picture of a cracker, “Have you seen me?”

    Now, someone with a picture of a cracker, a picture of a milk carton, and Photoshop needs to get to work.

  335. valor says

    Slightly off topic, but I am reminded of an old George Carlin (sob) saying “I have just as much authority as the Pope, it’s just that fewer people believe it”.

    As much as I dislike this clusterf*ck that all started, essentially, with a kid actually trying to educate a friend about his religion, I must speak in defense of some Catholics. Jesuits are still pretty smart; I’m sure they had nothing to do with this poorly written and poorly thought out press release.

    I find it a bit silly that they keep bringing up PZ’s position at a state run university as an excuse to consider his actions unconstitutional. Personal time, people, personal time. I know you’re priests all the time, but PZ wears many hats.

  336. DLC says

    I’d like to think that no group of catholic priests is that ignorant. Yet they offer proof with press releases like that.
    Perhaps I should fee comforted that the witch-doctors are that clueless.

  337. Moggie says

    Kate @ #259:

    You are a sad, sad soul! I will pray for you and for others like you who find it pleasing to make a mockery of a core belief of Catholic Christians.

    I notice you don’t say you’ll fast, despite the CCC’s recommendation that Catholics pray and fast over this matter. What, don’t you care enough? But this is a really tough case: Catholics have been praying over Crackergate for some time now, without noticeable effect, so clearly just skimping on breakfast won’t cut it. I suggest going without food entirely for a couple of days (but check with your doctor first). Do you care enough to do that to defend one of your “core beliefs”?

  338. frog says

    NeilB: Hate speech is a term for speech intended to degrade, intimidate, or incite violence or prejudicial action

    Hence, can those of you who accept the other kinds and enforcement of “hate speech” and hate crimes (in principle, not about matter of degree) explain why the “crackergate” episode just shouldn’t count as a matter of principle? Perhaps it’s a matter of “whose ox is being gored,” as Hentoff has explained in ref. below. Of course, in the vein Hentoff describes, conservatives could be asked the same question in reverse: if you think crackergate was horrible, then you shouldn’t be so hard on liberal versions of “hate crime” complaints, etc.

    Why does this simple-minded argument come up over and over again? Inciting violence is clearly a crime; intimidation is often a crime, completely independently of any “hate speech” legislation. Finally, degradation may mean an attempt to exclude from the public space a member of a group.

    What the hell would be the problem with any of those, you boob? If at my work place, I harangued my employees with statements that Catholics were all bastards who should lose their civil rights, isn’t it obvious that The State — aka, the rest of us — should step in and put a stop to that? Or if I told ’em I was going to follow them home and shoot them? Or if I told my other employees that they’d get a bonus if they punched a Catholic employee?

    That’s no limitation on Free Speech in general. The question is venue and threat. It’s not at all about whose ox is being gored — but about allowing people to be free from violence and intimidation.

    Of course, it can be overly broadly interpreted by whiners and totalitarians. But that’s the case for any law — this standing on some abstract principle regardless of reality is just using your proctological apparatus to think with. There are dangers in laws that limit threatening expression – but only a cretin would throw out the baby with the bathwater, or fail to recognize the distinction between expression of ideas per se, and the real implications of specific expressions at specific venues.

    Slippery slope arguments are the most imbecilic class of arguments — worse than from authority. Always make you sound like a college freshman who just discovered the idea of logical consistency, but hasn’t yet discovered that logical systems have bounds.

    Crackergate was about the freedom to make symbols. There was no implicit threat against Catholics, either violent or economically. There was no exclusion from the public sphere. There was nothing threatening in any way, shape or form — it was purely a political and theological discussion.

    But I guess subtle distinctions go over the heads of folks who want to simplify life to one law, one rule, one system. Buncha brain-damaged freaking crypto-totalitarians. “In principle, not matter of degree” — what a more thorough illustration of stupidity? Degree always matters.

  339. Faid says

    This has probably beel mentioned a dozen times already, but…

    “The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance”

    …If that’s the case, why are Catholics eating beef? haven’t they heard that cows are sacred to members of a certain religion, those desecrating bastards?

    This is beyond silly.

  340. Steve_C says

    Nader is a putz and a spoiler. He unelectable because he’s a horrible campaigner. Not because of the media. If you hadn’t noticed the public doesn’t vote for the smartest guy, or the most qualified, unfortunately it’s for the guy they like the best and who most closely matches the voter’s own beliefs.

    Nader isn’t likeable, he’s not smarter than Obama (arguably) and he certainly doesn’t have much in common with 96% of the american public.

    If you want a 3rd party… form one with platform and a candidate that’s appealing. Nader has neither. He’s no better than Lyndon LaRouche or every other unelectable solo party of me candidate.

    Dennis Kucinich is just as progressive and he had the balls to run within the party. He actually wanted to get elected.

  341. Sastra says

    Sven DiMilo #385 wrote:

    However, I favor a variety of other speech-restriction laws, such as mildly-offensive-to-Swedish/Italian-people-of-a-certain-age-speech laws, door-to-door-proselytization-in-my-neighboorhood-speech laws, and yet-another-mention-of-Cheez-Whiz-in-Ineffable-Magical-Baked-Goods-related-blog-comment-
    thread-speech laws.

    Good thing you’re “used to occasional disappointment.” ;)

  342. Sven DiMilo says

    I agree with you, Steve_C. Nader’s no politician.
    And I like Kucinich. Doubt he’ll ever be “electable” either, though.

  343. Faid says

    Actually, now that I think about it, *nobody* has the right to eat beef, unless they’re Hindu.

    Now that makes sense.

  344. JoJo says

    During the 2000 election Nader insisted there was no difference between the two major political parties. Bush or Gore, he said, would be just the same. It didn’t matter which of the two became President. Obama nailed it when he said of Nader, “He thought that there was no difference between Al Gore and George Bush and eight years later I think people realize that Ralph did not know what he was talking about.”

  345. Catholism is nuts says

    “The tired rantings of Catholics aside (Rreally, can they still truly be going on about this?) I really want that picture on a shirt. I will buy it and wear it proudly.”

    OMG I’m going to make one of these this weekend. You can buy iron on printer paper and a white T-Shirt then print, iron on and blaspheme away!

  346. Neil B. ♪ ♪ ♪ says

    frog, you should realize that I was challenging people here to see if they could get around a certain line of consistency criticism and even accepted maybe it could be done, not really presenting the hate-crimes argument as from myself or intractable. But even aside from that, you miss one of the key aspects of hate speech which is in fact the psychological distress it causes. It doesn’t have to be the other rights pressures you refer to (making feel intimidated, etc.) You say, “Finally, degradation may mean an attempt to exclude from the public space a member of a group.” Yeah, and it may mean just plain “degradation” (and that’s from a consensus definition of hate speech as presumed in the article, not just my own prejudices.) Hence, a person who vilifies Jews or blacks per se is considered hateful, so poor old Don Imus gets the axe for making fun of black girls in a basketball team – he wasn’t interfering with them at all in the ways you describe. If a person tramples on a Menorah or Star of David in public most would consider it hate speech (as expression.) OTOH, many think we have the right to burn the American flag as a form of expression – maybe the difference is, the acts which denigrate a segment of society and not the whole nation are considered wrong, as “separating” acts. That’s just one theory.

    But I’m not even sure myself what’s for the best, just challenging others for some consistency and to tease out their justifications. Nothing for an honest, secure respondent to misinterpret or bitch about there. And yes degree matters, I just wanted something pertaining to the principle which matters too, silly.

    PS – make sure you’re more on the ball before throwing around bullshit about someone being a “boob.”

  347. tangent_woman says

    I have to wonder; Where is the line between insanity and religion? Is it only okay to act on beliefs in intangible irrational things if your belief is shared by a large number of people?

    If I were to go quite mad and declare that I was a prophet of the Great Creator Zog, and stood on street corners declaiming that we must all strip naked, paint ourselves purple and hold carrots to be sacred, would the stance of the Catholic church (as outlined in the article being discussed) mean that all people who eat carrots are desecrating a sacred object?

    Furthermore; Would a person trying to get me some psychiatric care be interfering with my right to freedom of religion?

  348. Neil B. ☼ says

    What JoJo said! That self-righteous dork Nader, he didn’t have to actually run (knowing he couldn’t win) to make a point, and look what happened. Is he really going to try his scheme again and maybe pull it out for McCain? (But it’s sad to pick on him since otherwise, I think he cares about the nation and does really cut through the crap of traditional politics. Sorry, it’s just a paradox that I can’t resolve.)

  349. R Hampton says

    Thomas Jefferson – you know, that godless communist from Virginia – believed Reason was the best medicine for Religion:

    “Religion” –
    Notes on the State of Virginia

    …Reason and experiment have been indulged, and error has fled before them. It is error alone which needs the support of government. Truth can stand by itself. Subject opinion to coercion: whom will you make your inquisitors? Fallible men; men governed by bad passions, by private as well as public reasons. And why subject it to coercion? To produce uniformity. But is uniformity of opinion desireable? No more than of face and stature. Introduce the bed of Procrustes then, and as there is danger that the large men may beat the small, make us all of a size, by lopping the former and stretching the latter.

    Difference of opinion is advantageous in religion. The several sects perform the office of a Censor morum over each other. Is uniformity attainable? Millions of innocent men, women, and children, since the introduction of Christianity, have been burnt, tortured, fined, imprisoned; yet we have not advanced one inch towards uniformity. What has been the effect of coercion? To make one half the world fools, and the other half hypocrites. To support roguery and error all over the earth.

    Let us reflect that it is inhabited by a thousand millions of people. That these profess probably a thousand different systems of religion. That ours is but one of that thousand. That if there be but one right, and ours that one, we should wish to see the 999 wandering sects gathered into the fold of truth. But against such a majority we cannot effect this by force. Reason and persuasion are the only practicable instruments. To make way for these, free enquiry must be indulged; and how can we wish others to indulge it while we refuse it ourselves.

  350. says

    Nader is a putz, but the Democrats could have (and still could) neutralize him in an instant if they acknowledged that he’s right on the issues. Instead of dissing him, Obama’s people could say “I understand his frustration. Most of Congress is at the beck and call of corporations who are looking to enrich themselves at the expense of American health, safety, and national security.”

  351. Meschlum says

    Pish. All these comments about offending hindus by eating meat? Far too limited.

    Try the Jain. Killing animals is now out – and it has the furhter benefit of being an established religion, avoiding any outraged claims about loopholes.

  352. Arnosium Upinarum says

    “We also pray that Professor Myers contritely repent and apologize.”

    What the hell do they want? For centuries they have urged people to “repent”. A constant drumbeat of it.

    Ya know? Every atheist I know who was previously religious has repented. You can leave ’em alone now. It worked. They’re free of religious bullshit.

    Now they “pray” that PZ repents…contritely.

    If contrition is worth anything, it is based on honest personal introspection and initiative. How can that possibly be induced in other people through prayer?

    What “prayer” of this ilk essentially amounts to is as banal as schoolyard intimidation. A whining exhibition of snitching on one’s fellow brothers and sisters. (“MOMMEEE!!!DADDEEE!!! PZ did a nasty no-no again!!! This time he nailed a cracker!!!”).

    Like whenever these bozos “pray” for God to have mercy on some deathrow soul just before executing them. Just how disingenuous can anybody possibly get? It’s all for show, to supply the appearance of probity (just in case). Let’s be honest for a change: the actual thoughts are something more along the lines of, “I hope that scum-sucker cooks in boiling tomato sauce hell forever and ever. Amen.”

    Every time I read through crap like this lofty pronouncement by the esteemed “Confraternity of Catholic Clergy” my astonishment is renewed. It’s breathtaking how completely their ability to think rationally has been subsumed by that insufferable catachemismic lingo. They don’t make sense, and they don’t know or care that they make no sense.

    Catholics, both the elite ordained clergy as well as their lay flock, are literally trained (“brainwashed”) from the earliest age to repeat proscribed responses during mass. And if you’re a good little parrot, Polly gets the cracker.

    Heck, you might even get to sit on a priest’s lap.

  353. Wowbagger says

    Re Neil B, #402:

    I think it would have been different if PZ had gone to a church to nail the cracker in front of a congregation, or even done it in a public place to create a spectacle.

    Heck, he was called a bigot simply for suggesting that he was going to do it, without having done anything at all. In a way I’d have been happier if he hadn’t ever done anything other than threaten, since that made the squawking all that more ludicrous since it was about something that hadn’t even happened.

    It’s about hurt feelings. Eating meat hurts vegetarians’ feelings; eating cheese hurts vegans’ feelings – but those of us who like cheeseburgers aren’t deferring to them, and no-one’s going to call choosing to eat one in the window of a burger chain in full view of the PETA protester outside an act of hate.

    I don’t like offending people, but I do agree we have to accept that some of the things we believe aren’t shared by everyone and that we don’t have the right not to be offended if other people don’t revere what we revere.

  354. Coragyps says

    Duvenoy!!!!

    You’re still around! HOORAY!

    Go register at TalkRational! Now!

  355. says

    Ultimately, Wowbagger, I think you are basically right. It’s a hard and sloppy judgment call about what’s just too confrontational and demeaning to tolerate, and society has made some such choices based on things like historical injustice and lingering sensitivity of noticeable affected groups (which more befit blacks and Jews in this country than Catholics, albeit the KKK didn’t like the latter either as I learned from my Catholic boyhood friend.) We should err on the side of free expression. (BTW, what do you or others here think of what happened to Imus?)

    My main point was to take a hard look at *consistency* issues, since you would admit some liberal types (maybe not even anyone right here) do make a big whoop about other things approximately as “bad” as PZM’s handling of the cracker situation. That’s where I think the “whose ox” comes in. So, what’s their excuse? Can they be considered consistent somehow?

  356. says

    Eating cows is sacrilege to Hindus, and it doesn’t matter whose kine they are: all cattle are holy. In fact, kind of like those tasteless crackers, they represent Godhood–or Goddesshood to be precise–and the divine bounty of the universe. So anyone who thinks PZ is wrong to diss their cracker had better be ready to swear off beef, leather, and cheese made with rennet so as not to insult others’ religions. After all, it’s worse than kidnapping. Right????

  357. says

    I almost did a spit-take when I read the phrase “flagrant display of irreverence.” It sounds like something a stuffy old lady in a movie would say about dancing, before feigning fainting.

  358. Sven DiMilo says

    During the 2000 election Nader insisted there was no difference between the two major political parties. Bush or Gore, he said, would be just the same. It didn’t matter which of the two became President. Obama nailed it when he said of Nader, “He thought that there was no difference between Al Gore and George Bush and eight years later I think people realize that Ralph did not know what he was talking about.”

    Oh, yeah, Obama nailed it with his special powers of 20/20 hindsight.

    At the time, Bush’s entire campaign was all about “reaching across the aisle,” “bringing Democrats and Republicnas together,” etc., all moderate all the time. Nobody knew what an evil disaster his presidency could be (except maybe Cheney). On the other hand, Gore, far from the pro-environment crusader he is now viewed as, was going way out of his way to appear as bland and cookie-cutter a moderate politician as he possibly could, and his campaign was benefitting from all the same corporations that hit the jackpot with Bush’s faux-win. Nader was closer to right than wrong as far as anybody could have known at the time.

  359. Keanus says

    I’m with Adrienne (in #297) on the question of abortion. I also volunteer one weekday morning, about five hours typically, escorting the same scared young women through the verbally abusive protesters. Some are Catholic but just as many are Protestant fundies. With a couple of exceptions, all are nasty, rude and insulting, and ignorant to boot. I strongly urge anyone who lives within proximity to a clinic that offers abortions to volunteer their time, if they have it. But before doing so, just remember that escorts must have thick skins and be able to resist the urge to scream back, or even offer a counter argument, given that protesters are certifiable nuts and incapable of rational discussions.

    Back on topic, I find it amusing for the conflagration (or whatever) of Catholic priests to argue that only Catholics can criticize or deride Catholic practices. Following that logic, they surely agree that Catholic priests, who are versed only in Catholic theology, are unqualified to speak on either marriage or abortion.

  360. Samantha Vimes says

    Constitutional Scholarship Epic Fail by the priests.

    I don’t know why I’m even mildly surprised, though.

  361. Wowbagger says

    Neil B,

    It is a complicated issue and for me part of it is the inability to understand where the religious are coming from.

    I struggled hard to think of an object or symbol that might engender similar outrage in me – but there isn’t one. There are writers and musicians whose works provide me immense joy but to see an image of a book burned or cd scratched wouldn’t affect me at all beyond a head-shake at the stupidity.

    Since I’m not in the US I can’t comment too much on the Imus thing – though I did hear about it – because I struggle to understand what it’s like there. I do agree that it’s stupid to make the sort of remarks he made, but perhaps there were better ways of dealing with him than calling for his firing.

    The problem with calling something ‘hate’ – whether it be in a choice of language or the threat of desecration – is that there’s the implication of an intent that may very well not be present. And that’s getting awfully close to a thought-crime in my opinion.

  362. Bob Bekker says

    I don’t understand. I don’t think you will be the last to criticize Catholics but why would you go into someone’s house a take something that is precious to them under false pretences? Rationalize it anyway you like, it was wrong.

  363. Jasso says

    All this reminds me of a quote I’ve seen floating around:

    “Freedom to differ is not limited to things that do not matter much. That would be a mere shadow of freedom. The test of its substance is the right to differ as to things that touch the heart of the existing order.”

    (Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson in the 1943 case West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette.)

  364. llewelly says

    Nader was closer to right than wrong as far as anybody could have known at the time.

    The stupid irony of the situation, is that if Gore’s 2000 campaign had championed the issues he had fucking argued for on the fucking senate floor between about 1984 and 1992, the vast difference between the candidates would have been obvious. But no, Gore felt the need to run a centrist campaign. A strategy that has always a huge disadvantage for democrats, except when the right splits, and a Ross Perot bleeds off a fat lot of the Republican candidate’s votes. And again, in this election Obama’s greatest risk for failure is to run a centrist campaign. And we can see with his fisa vote, that’s what he’s swerving toward.

  365. Wowbagger says

    Bob Bekker, #421, wrote:

    but why would you go into someone’s house a take something that is precious to them under false pretences?

    Two problems with this, Bob.

    The first is he didn’t go into someone’s house. The cracker he used was given to him by a catholic who’d kept it – something that we’ve been informed is quite common.

    Secondly, there’s a problem with your use of the term
    ‘precious’. The cracker is intended to be destroyed in the process, with nothing of it remaining for any use whatsoever (unlike a body about to be cremated, for example) – if he suggested that people take bibles or other objects that aren’t intended for destruction then you might have a point. But he didn’t.

    To consider the cracker precious in this situation means you imbue it with a significance exclusive to a subset of people (because even other catholics have posted about not being bothered by what PZ did) within your religion.

    You’re free to believe whatever you want – but you don’t have the right to not be offended if someone doesn’t share those beliefs.

  366. Phrenolepsy says

    MAH TWO CENTS:

    Look, I’m a lapsed Catholic and I’ve got issues with the Church from here to the Moon, but I’ve got to say that what you did went ten steps passed irreverence. It was just a petty, assholish thing to do to anti-up the Church’s overblown reaction to a violation of Catholic protocol by a guy’s ignorant curiosity. Not that anyone cares what I think, but I think both sides need to apologize to each other and knock off this stupidity. Death threats and religious desecration are NOT COOL.

  367. JoJo says

    At the time, Bush’s entire campaign was all about “reaching across the aisle,” “bringing Democrats and Republicnas together,” etc., all moderate all the time. Nobody knew what an evil disaster his presidency could be (except maybe Cheney).

    Oh bull. You may have been fooled by Bush’s “compassionate conservatism” but those of us who paying attention to his antics as Texas governor knew better. He made no secret of his love of supply-side economics, the same thing his father called “voodoo economics.” Bush and Cheney spoke loud and long about abortion, gays and lesbians, and secularism.

    If you thought there was no difference between Bush and Gore based on their campaigns, that can only be because you weren’t paying attention. You apparently were impressed by a man who claimed to be anti-corporate but owned more than $3 million in stocks and money market funds. Nader may not have owned a car, and wore the same suit for a week at a time, but it was not because he had to live that lifestyle.

    When Nader ran for President in 2000, he got more or less a free pass from his opponents. Gore didn’t want to alienate Nader voters and Bush knew that none of the Nader votes were coming from his column. And please, don’t tell me that Nader’s 90K votes in Florida came from people who would have voted for Bush or not voted at all.

    Sorry, but I don’t the last eight years of chaos and disaster are worth that Nader’s ego.

  368. John Morales says

    Phrenolepsy:

    Not that anyone cares what I think

    Some of us care, PZ cares, so he’s kindly showing you just how COOL the Catholics are.

    It’s called consciousness-raising.

  369. Ricardo Sandoval says

    I have mixed felling about all this.

    On the negative side:
    Some beliefs of the catholic church may be ridiculous
    but at least they are not against the theory of evolution,
    as many other christians are. They conveniently separated truths of physical sciences from religion matters some time ago, wisely I guess.

    But on the positive side:
    As someone that was converted to catholicism when young (now I am an atheist) I can say that they don’t start preaching by saying stuff such as eucharist(cracker) but when they do, you are already into most aspects of their religion.

    This kind of action may (I hope) increase the public awareness of such aspects of their faith forcing them to sell the whole package of beliefs at once, a more honest thing to do.

  370. Patricia says

    This whole episode has shown the catholics their worst fear, on center stage.
    Gawd is no longer relevant.

  371. stogoe says

    I don’t understand. I don’t think you will be the last to criticize Catholics but why would you go into someone’s house a take something that is precious to them under false pretences? Rationalize it anyway you like, it was wrong.

    If I came to your house, and we cooked a meal together, and then you packed up some leftovers, you would be batshit insane and a criminal to then try to tackle me and physically stop me from taking leftovers home, and you would be doubly batshit insane and a criminal to threaten to kill me for taking those leftovers.

    It’s a cracker(flag/book/idol/etc). It has no power but what you give it. And you have given it far too much.

  372. John C. Randolph says

    If anybody is responsible for the Dark Ages, it’s the Visigoths.

    Nah.. The visigoths helped to topple the Roman Empire, but for the most part it collapsed because it wasn’t economically sustainable once the emperors started bribing the mob with bread and circuses.

    The church certainly extended the dark ages by stifling thought for a couple of centuries, though.

    -jcr

  373. Ichthyic says

    I don’t like offending people, but I do agree we have to accept that some of the things we believe aren’t shared by everyone and that we don’t have the right not to be offended if other people don’t revere what we revere.

    I keep thinking people quickly forget how far we HAVE come by denigrating and rejecting the beliefs of the faithful.

    If not, I suppose we’d still be studying geocentrism, for one thing.

    basically, we would have stayed in the dark ages for quite a bit longer, if religious authority never was challenged.

  374. ChrisKG says

    Megan jerseydevil77 #410

    I Love you.

    That was the best post yet. Everyone should read her blog on this “so called” Dr.

    Chris

  375. John C. Randolph says

    Jojo,

    Nader is a hypocrite, but blaming him for Gore’s loss is asinine. He had every right to run for office, just as you had every right to vote for someone else.

    BTW, if you think Gore would have handled Iraq any differently, I suggest you have a look at what he had to say on the matter here:

    He praises the war that Bush senior ran, and then lambastes him for not cracking down on Saddam.

    -jcr

  376. says

    #425 Prenolepsy: ” Not that anyone cares what I think, but I think both sides need to apologize to each other and knock off this stupidity. Death threats and religious desecration are NOT COOL.

    Wait… what? Throwing a cracker in the trash and threatening to kill someone or have them thrown from their job are somehow equivalent?

    Thanks for that moment of clarity, man.

  377. Arnosium Upinarum says

    Just to add to the blah-blah:

    If you keep it up PZ, watch out – next thing you know they’ll threaten you with Excommunication. (SHUDDER…now performing the ritual symbolic cricifix by touching out forehead, sternum, and both armpits…followed by a quick smooch to an imaginary Rosary delivered to one’s thumb…Latin-style. There. That should protect me from the hideous atheist vamps).

    Excommunication. Big Baaaad. Major. CATASTROPHIC even. You would henceforth be barred from enjoying the many perqs the Church bestows on it’s flock. Like……um, like…uh, lessee…wait, it’ll come to me…hmmm…hold on a second…damn, it’s on the tip of my tongue…no, wait, really, I got it…hold on, I think……ah, right, bugger me, I got it now:

    Like SALVATION in the form of an an EVERLASTING AFTERLIFE in HEAVEN.

    Whoa, I gotta bone up on my homeopathic memory aids. How can I ever have missed it?

    Fair enough reward for all those parishisoners dutifully keeping to their end of the bargain by regularly observing an ages-long sacrificial custom that preceeded theirs and filling those usher-wielded baskets with their hard-earned bucks.

    I mean, come on, let’s face it. How else could all those Good Men of God ever make a living in order to help relieve people of some of their burden of income? They get an eternity in paradise in exchange. Perfect insurance! Excellent deal!

    I wonder how the stock is running right now on the Vartican. What? Oh. Right. Of course. Catholics stockholders are already guaranteed the most divine of all dividends.

    Whadyaknow? It DOES make sense! I wonder how that eluded me for so long.

  378. says

    I don’t understand. I don’t think you will be the last to criticize Catholics but why would you go into someone’s house a take something that is precious to them under false pretences?

    Posted by: Bob Bekker | July 30, 2008 9:39 PM

    That’s the whole point. If a mass-produced piece of bread is precious to you, then you are messed up in the head.

  379. says

    At the time, Bush’s entire campaign was all about “reaching across the aisle,” “bringing Democrats and Republicnas together,” etc., all moderate all the time. Nobody knew what an evil disaster his presidency could be (except maybe Cheney).

    Posted by: Sven DiMilo | July 30, 2008 9:14 PM

    Speak for yourself. Some of us were paying attention.

    On the other hand, Gore, far from the pro-environment crusader he is now viewed as, was going way out of his way to appear as bland and cookie-cutter a moderate politician as he possibly could, and his campaign was benefitting from all the same corporations that hit the jackpot with Bush’s faux-win.

    Posted by: Sven DiMilo | July 30, 2008 9:14 PM

    On that you are 100% correct. Kerry did the same thing in 2004, and I fear Obama is going to do the same thing now. Some people never learn.

  380. Wowbagger says

    I suspect the difference between what Gore would have done post 9/11 would depend more on whether those who have since profited from the unreasonably prolonged conflict chose to make the same phone calls to him as they did to Bush.

  381. says

    I suspect the difference between what Gore would have done post 9/11 would depend more on whether those who have since profited from the unreasonably prolonged conflict chose to make the same phone calls to him as they did to Bush.

    Posted by: Wowbagger | July 30, 2008 10:53 PM

    Very true. But I’m confident Gore would have at least knew the difference between a Shia and Sunni Muslim. I also suspect that, if Gore had been handed an intelligence briefing entitled “Al Qaeda Determined to Attack Within the US”, he would have bothered to read it.

  382. Pierce R. Butler says

    The Chemist @ # 366: If the book I recommended is trash, the review you link to is no better, implying as it does that the early christians could do no wrong and the pagans could do nothing else. To pick just one of the reviewer’s logical fallacies: whether the Greek temples were packed in times of disaster tells us as little about the worth of contemporary philosophers as the popularity of British reality tv does about the validity of Stephen Hawkings’s cosmology.

    Sorry: while “good guys” were few and far between back then, the fanaticism and anti-/pseudo-intellectualism of the Church in its Imperial phase were unquestionably destructive to the best of that era’s cultural traditions (particularly in Alexandria and Rome itself). Had Julian the Apostate succeeded in removing the bishops’ exclusive privileges and restoring freedom of thought, the following millennium would have been much less brutal and stupid, even with those blond blue-eyed northern barbarians sacking & burning as heartily as ever.

    As for the “Dark Ages”, I agree with you and Dunc that the name has led to all sorts of counterfactual connotations and is much too often confused with the (ecclesiastical) nastiness that stifled European culture through most of the Medieval period.

    It’s funny you should mention the Assyrians. I just finished reading Michael White’s The Pope and the Heretic, and was reminded of their cruelties to war captives by the particulars of the bloody way the Roman Inquisition silenced Giordano Bruno when he attempted to address the crowds on his way to being burned at the stake.

  383. Patricia says

    #425 – Phrenolepsy – What kind of idiot are you?! Both sides need to apologize. HAAA! What PZ did is assholish and petty. How the hell does that compare to genocide, torture, misogyny, killing of homosexuals, child molesting, enslavement of native peoples – just to name a few of the church’s crimes?
    In my family alone the damned church has killed women for no reason. Check out Mary Ayer Parker, and the Hewitts, Nutters and Dixons of the Pendle Forrest.
    Gawd is love – bullshit, gawd is death. I for one will never apologize for any blasphemy I can commit against the church.

  384. Wowbagger says

    ndt wrote:

    I also suspect that, if Gore had been handed an intelligence briefing entitled “Al Qaeda Determined to Attack Within the US”, he would have bothered to read it.

    Yep. Bowing to war profiteers because you’re dependant on them for the ridiculous amounts of money required to operate a political party is one thing; being so incompetent that you allow a preventable attack of such magnitude to happen is another.

    That the US mainstream became so anti-intellectual that someone like Bush was even considered as a candidate is a serious problem.

  385. crossbuck says

    For whoever brings up Imus, be mindful he didn’t get arrested or face any criminal or civil complaints for his speech. His free speech was not infringed upon by the government. He just got fired. BIIIIG difference. If I were to hear a TV or radio personality offend me (and it would take much to do so, I’m not easily offended), I would consider it my right to complain to the station, any sponsors of the show and the FCC. While everyone has a right to free speech, broadcasting is another matter entirely, unless you’re such an free-speech absolutist that you see nothing wrong with Radio Rwanda.

  386. says

    Since my comments on Trigilio’s blog won’t likely ever see the light of day, I’ll post them here for reference.

    “A biologist has no business ‘dissing’ any religion, rather, they should be busy teaching the scientific discipline they were hired to teach.”

    By this logic, you should not be commenting on legal or constitutional matters, as you are clearly not a lawyer.

    “Mocking religion is not pleasing to God.”
    Nothing would would make converts of atheists more quickly than if God actually demonstrated his displeasure. However, to date, only humans are demonstrating that displeasure.

    “We ask all Catholics of Minnesota and of the entire nation to join in a day of prayer and fasting that such offenses never happen again.”
    Please let the world know when this day of prayer and fasting happens. Many of us will be very interested to see the results.

  387. Son of Trypho says

    As a non-Christian I have followed this matter with some interest and would like to explore it further with others on this site – I couldn’t get any answers from Catholics.

    Lets grant that the “cracker” is literally that and nothing more. It would then be reasonable to suggest that belief in anything more than that would be deeply irrational and/or delusional – would you agree?

    And then let us consider that the reaction to Dr Myers’ actions have been emotional/irrational/extremist as a result of the fact that the “cracker” is literally that – would you agree with that characterisation?

    Would you also agree that Dr Myers knew, with certainty, that the “cracker” was merely itself and not something more?

    Do you then think it was rational for Dr Myers’ to proceed with his actions, if he knew the “cracker” was merely itself and he had received death threats from clearly irrational and/or delusional people who had demonstrated that they were prepared to use force?

    Do you also think it is rational to proceed with actions based on principles with little and/or no value to be achieved from those actions? Or by undertaking actions based on feeling forced to react to confrontation?

    Do you think that Dr Myers’ motivation in this matter was to express solidarity with the student? If so, do you think this action has actually benefitted the student more than say, assisting the student with legal advice?

    Similarly, do you consider that Catholic beliefs are hateful and/or delusional/foolish and/or dangerous to individuals and/or society? If so, how then, rationally, do you argue that these beliefs should be permitted in society or that these beliefs should be permitted to be taught at all?

  388. c says

    TO THE MYERS-IAN ATHEISTS:

    IF YOU TRULY BELIEVE “NOTHING IS SACRED”, WHY DO YOU MINDLESSLY BOW DOWN & WORSHIP YOUR GOD, P.Z. MYERS, EVER FOLLOWING EVERY WORD OF HIS GOSPEL?????

    How many times need I remind you folks that Science itself was the result of CATHOLICS in the first place!

    It’s interesting to note that the first scientists were all monks, they were all clerics!

    So, yes, there was “assistance from the imaginary”; that is, it was the Catholic Faith of the first Scientists who were Catholic that drove them to Science in the first place and inspired them to discovery and seek out the very workings of God’s Creation!

    The Big Bang theory that the universe originated in an extremely dense and hot space and expanded was developed by Belgian priest, Fr. George Lemaître.

    People today aren’t even aware of this fact!

    Here are some examples of scientists who were Catholic clergy:

    1. Mendel, a monk, first established the laws of heredity, which gave the final blow to the theory of natural selection.
    2. Copernicus, a priest, expounded the Copernican system.
    3. Steensen, a Bishop, was the father of geology.
    4. Regiomontanus, a Bishop and Papal astronomer; was the father of modern astronomy.
    5. Theodoric, a Bishop, discovered anesthesia in the 13th century.
    6. Kircher, a priest, made the first definite statement of the germ theory of disease.
    7. Cassiodorus, a priest, invented the watch.
    8. Picard, a priest, was the first to measure accurately a degree of the meridian.

    The conflict between evolutionary science and creationism in the United States comes from the Protestant tradition, not the Catholic one.

    American Catholicism is in a Protestant culture. We borrow a lot of our attitudes, along with a lot of our hymns, and not always the best of either.

    LIST OF CATHOLIC SCIENTISTS

    Algue, a priest, invented the barocyclonometer, to detect approach of cyclones.

    Ampere was founder of the science of electrodynamics, and investigator of the laws of electro-magnetism.

    Becquerel, Antoine Cesar, was the founder of electro-chemistry.

    Becquerel, Antoine Henri, was the discoverer of radio-activity.

    Binet, mathematician and astronomer, set forth the principle, “Binet’s Theorem.”

    Braille invented the Braille system for the blind.

    Buffon wrote the first work on natural history.

    Carrell, Nobel prize winner in medicine and physiology, is renowned for his work in surgical technique.

    Caesalpinus, a Papal physician, was the first to construct a system of botany.

    Cassiodorus, a priest, invented the watch.

    Columbo discovered the pulmonary circulation of the blood.

    Copernicus, a priest, expounded the Copernican system.

    Coulomb established the fundamental laws of static electricity.

    De Chauliac, a Papal physician, was the father of modern surgery and hospitals.

    De Vico, a priest, discovered six comets. Descartes founded analytical geometry.

    Dumas invented a method of ascertaining vapor densities.

    Endlicher, botanist and historian, established a new system of classifying plants.

    Eustachius, for whom the Eustachian tube was named, was one of the founders of modern anatomy.

    Fabricius discovered the valvular system of the veins.

    Fallopius, for whom the Fallopian tube was named, was an eminent physiologist.

    Fizeau was the first to determine experimentally the velocity of light.

    Foucault invented the first practical electric arc lamp; he refuted the corpuscular theory of light; he invented the gyroscope.

    Fraunhofer was initiator of spectrum analysis; he established laws of diffraction.

    Fresnel contributed more to the science of optics than any other man.

    Galilei, a great astronomer, is the father of experimental science.

    Galvani, one of the pioneers of electricity, was also an anatomist and physiologist.

    Gioja, father of scientific navigation, invented the mariner’s compass.

    Gramme invented the Gramme dynamo.

    Guttenberg invented printing.

    Herzog discovered a cure for infantile paralysis.

    Holland invented the first practical sub marine.

    Kircher, a priest, made the first definite statement of the germ theory of disease.

    Laennec invented the stethoscope.

    Lancist, a Papal physician, was the father of clinical medicine.

    Latreille was pioneer in entomology.

    Lavoisier is called Father of Modern Chemistry.

    Leverrier discovered the planet Neptune.

    Lully is said to have been the first to employ chemical symbols.

    Malpighi, a Papal physician, was a botanist, and the father of comparative physiology.

    Marconi’s place in radio is unsurpassed. Mariotte discovered Mariotte’s law of gases.

    Mendel, a monk, first established the laws of heredity, which gave the final blow to the theory of natural selection.

    Morgagni, founder of modern pathology; made important studies in aneurisms.

    Muller was the greatest biologist of the 19th century, founder of modern physiology.

    Pashcal demonstrated practically that a column of air has weight.

    Pasteur, called the “Father of Bacteriology,” and inventor of bio-therapeutics, was the leading scientist of the 19th century.

    Picard, a priest, was the first to measure accurately a degree of the meridian.

    Regiomontanus, a Bishop and Papal astronomer; was the father of modern astronomy.

    Scheiner, a priest, invented the pantograph, and made a telescope that permitted the first systematic investigation of sun spots.

    Secchi invented the meteorograph. Steensen, a Bishop, was the father of geology.

    Theodoric, a Bishop, discovered anesthesia in the 13th century.

    Torricelli invented the barometer.

    Vesalius was the founder of modern anatomical science.

    Volta invented the first; complete galvanic battery; the “volt” is named after him.

    Other scientists: Agricola, Albertus Magnus, Bacon, Bartholomeus, Bayma, Beccaria, Behalm, Bernard, Biondo, Biot, Bolzano, Borrus, Boscovitch, Bosio, Bourgeois, Branly, Caldani, Cambou, Camel, Cardan, Carnoy, Cassini, Cauchy, Cavaliere, Caxton, Champollion, Chevreul, Clavius, De Rossi, Divisch, Dulong, Dwight, Eckhel, Epee, Fabre, Fabri, Faye, Ferrari, Gassendi, Gay-Lussac, Gordon, Grimaldi, Hauy, Heis, Helmont, Hengler, Heude, Hilgard, Jussieu, Kelly, Lamarck, Laplace, Linacre, Malus, Mersenne, Monge, Muller, Murphy, Murray, Nelston, Nieuwland, Nobili, Nollet, Ortelius, Ozaman, Pelouze, Piazzi, Pitra, Plumier, Pouget, Provancher, Regnault, Riccioli, Sahagun, Santorini, Schwann, Schwarz, Secchi, Semmelweis, Spallanzani, Takamine, Tieffentaller, Toscanelli, Tulasne, Valentine, Vernier, Vieta, Da Vinci, Waldseemuller, Wincklemann, Windle, and a host of others, too many to mention.

    CRACKERS RULE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  389. says

    Megan @ 410:

    Great research. What I find especially fascinating: his “diploma” was issued in 2002. All those books were published in 2005 or later. Sure does seem like he got the degree in order to give him some publisher cred.

  390. says

    I hate to switch gears from Catholic to Southern Baptist,but … can anyone here point me to a source or 2 that show the connection between the SB’s and the KKK?

    Thanks,
    Stacy

  391. Steve_C says

    Trypho’s Son,

    Yes it’s delusional and irrational, all religions are.

    Should it be banned? Nope. Not anymore than beleif in ghosts and demons.

    It wasn’t a forced confrontation. It was just a cracker.

  392. Mims says

    No one is disputing the contributions of catholics to science. More than a few, I would think, were catholics in the same way many soviet scientists were members of the communist party, some probably true believers, but many were members because doing science would have been impossible otherwise. Interesting that Galileo Galilei is included in this list. A classic example of a catholic scientist and the troubles they could have with the church. Anyway, this has nothing to do with the question of whether catholic beliefs are protected by the Constitution against ridicule.

    I was glad for the link to the confraternity’s website. I emailed them to tell them how confused they are about what rights they have in this country according to our laws. I actually read some of the articles on their website. Truly frightening people.

  393. tomrad says

    Phew! First I thought you had pierced a silicon wafer, the mother of all blasphemies. After all, computers and electronics made our lives so much better. Just check the light effects of those fundamentalist mega-churches.
    Then I realized it was a Communion Wafer, which is no big deal to me. Funny how people worry about wafers while thousands get slaughtered monthly in the name of some religion. As for Kurt Whatshisname, I tried to finish reading his Salon article, but I couldn’t, as my tolerance for intellectual offal is not what it used to be. Basically science can not explain everything and this -somehow- implies that religion can. There is a meta-reality and is accessible to us by revelation only. Caveat: if you have the wrong revelation we may kill you. To the dude who has no better hobby than listing Catholic scientists: how about the great Indian, Greek, Chinese and Arab scientists. Was you catholic god drunk when it revealed mysteries to those folks?

  394. Son of Trypho says

    Steve_C (or anyone else)

    Thanks for the reply.

    Assuming that Dr Myers knew that it was merely a cracker, then what was his motivation for undertaking this course of action?

    Also – acknowledging that religion is delusional and irrational, and belief in them are the same, and by extension, these views are dangerous, how then is it rational for people who subscribe to these views to be permitted to say, teach them to others?

    As to the confrontation aspect – I read a comment from someone supporting Dr Myers’ actions, one of his students I think, asserting in their opinion, that Dr Myers felt compelled to act because he couldn’t back down publicly in the face of threats etc. This struck me as, to be frank, a little emotional and irrational, if it is true.

  395. Jasso says

    @ #448

    “Science itself was the result of CATHOLICS in the first place…”

    You mean with things like gunpowder? (oops, the Chinese did that one)
    How about algebra? (oops, that was the Arabians)
    How about astronomy? (oops, that was the Greek, Arabians and Chinese)
    Chemistry? (oops, that was based in alchemy, a no-no according to Catholics)
    Heliocentrism? (oops, mother church tried to hide that one for 400 years)
    And so on…

    The truth is that Science has prevailed not because of the church, but in fact, in SPITE of the church. Just ask friar Bacon, the guy they imprisoned because he showed how rainbows form.

    Those scientists did not invoke supernatural beliefs in order to explain the natural world. They used observation and experimentation.

    And I guess we have to believe in the Greek gods because they developed modern philosophy, or the ancient Chinese because they invented lighter than air travel…

    In other words, it’s irrelevant what someone’s beliefs are.

  396. John Morales says

    Son of Trypho, all the answers to your questions are in the 15000+ comments in the various crackergate threads.

    Or, you could read the actual posts only, the answers are there too.

  397. Steve_C says

    PZ answers all your questions himself.

    You seem to be saying backing down from bullies like The Catholic League is the rational response. I disagree.

    PZ was using his freedom of speech. That’s all. His point being that nothing is sacred.

    If you hadn’t notice, all sorts of delusional ideas are taught all the time. Religion just being one of them.

  398. says

    Son of Trypho:
    “acknowledging that religion is delusional and irrational, and belief in them are the same, and by extension, these views are dangerous”
    Your phrase “by extension” is the problem with your slippery slope fallacy. Belief in religion may be delusional and irrational, but that belief is not dangerous. Actions are dangerous. Belief in astrology isn’t dangerous any more than belief in religion is necessarily dangerous. A very small subset of people take dangerous actions based on their beliefs (in a great many things) but that doesn’t mean we should ban the beliefs outright.

  399. Nick barron says

    This has gone on too long.

    If you really want to shut them up, Dr. Myers should offer an apology on one condition.

    The Pope must make a decree that all Catholics are to give up milk and beef out of respect for the hindu believe in the sacredness of cows.

    Game over.

  400. dcb says

    I just skimmed this comment thread, I’ve already read enough thousands of crackergate comments. Please forgive redundancy (heh.)

    1. That picture is hilarious.

    2. The Confraternity of Catholic Clergy have a rather unique interpretation of the religion clause of the first amendment. Completely divorced from reality (whether legal, traditional, historical, logical.) They should stick to their make-believe theology stuff and let the grownups get on with running the country.

    3. Did I also see a Courtier’s reply in there?

    One fails to see the relevance of the desecration of a Catholic sacrament to the science of Biology. Were Myers a Professor of Theology, there would have been at least a presumption of competency to express religious opinions in a classroom.

    I mean, leaving aside their assertion that PZ is dissing religion in class, they’re dismissing his criticism because he’s a biologist, not a theologan. If Myers had worked in the imaginary clothing industry he would surely be aware that… Maybe they snuck it in there to see if he would catch it.

    Crackergate is getting fun.

  401. Son of Trypho says

    John Morales

    – thanks, I’ll desist from an attempt at sensible dialogue and leave it to those like #448, 436, 409 etc.

    (I’m sure you’ve noticed that of the 15,000+ comments etc that the vast majority of them have been, arguably, devoid of any value on this matter.)

  402. Kseniya says

    It’s true that many of the early European scientists were Catholic. Everybody was Catholic back then – well, everybody who hadn’t been burned at the stake, hung as a witch, or whose hands hadn’t been cut off.

    It is true that the Church lightened up a bit in the Middle Ages, and in some areas did provide an environment in which inquiries into the natural would could flourish, but there’s quite a bit of “in spite of” in that history, as well. The Church wasn’t above suppressing conclusions that contradicted Scripture. Need I mention Galileo?

    Part of the problem here, “c”, is that some of those attitudes still prevail today. Scientific conclusions are ok as long as they Leave Room For God – regardless of the facts. See anything wrong with that? Anything?

  403. Patricia says

    When was the last time you stupid gawd fearing fucks actually DID obey the word of gawd?

  404. John Morales says

    No worries, Son. I do get tired of repeating the same thing to those too lazy to read.

    And, to quibble with PZ:

    […] it’s clear that at least this tier of the Catholic hierarchy is as deranged as the wackaloons flooding my mailbox.

    The Confraternity of Catholic Clergy aren’t part of the hierarchy.

  405. Patricia says

    Kseniya – Good point.
    These dumb asses seem to forget that the Church was the only thing going in half of the world until Luther and Henry the VIII.
    Isn’t it amusing that atheists are better bible scholars than these ‘believers’! You’d think their invisible friend would bless them with divine knowledge greater than ours.

  406. Son of Trypho says

    I don’t like to leave if there are open responses so I decided to reply; :)

    Rick (and to a certain sense Steve_C)
    -I’ve considered what you have said and, to be fair, have to agree that it might be leading towards a slippery slope fallacy.
    Upon reflection I have leaned in that direction because (i) death threats were involved and, (ii) physical force was used by Catholics in the original incident IIRC. To me, those factors combined, can be reasonably considered dangerous. Would you agree?

    Similarly, based on previous acts of violence by people who identify as religious and claimed that their motivation for violence was their religion, I cannot see how you can justify allowing the potential risk of these beliefs to be propagated, especially if their harm to humanity has been as widespread as discussed in these threads?

  407. says

    Son of Trypho @466
    “Upon reflection I have leaned in that direction because (i) death threats were involved and, (ii) physical force was used by Catholics in the original incident IIRC. To me, those factors combined, can be reasonably considered dangerous.”
    Now we move on to the hasty generalization fallacy. I’ll repeat what I said in post 458:
    A very small subset of people take dangerous actions based on their beliefs (in a great many things) but that doesn’t mean we should ban the beliefs outright.

    Sorry, you are not going to bait me (or many others hopefully) into your trap. Humanity’s harm to humanity has been widespread. Shall we do away with it all? Or should we work to remove irrational beliefs in a peaceful manner until we can no longer make hasty generalizations?

  408. Wowbagger says

    Son of Trypho wrote:

    I cannot see how you can justify allowing the potential risk of these beliefs to be propagated, especially if their harm to humanity has been as widespread as discussed in these threads?

    You’re fishing for something here but I’m not sure what – so I’ll bite.

    I’ll say we can ‘justfiy allowing the beliefs’ because the harm they do can be minimised – if not removed completely – without removing the beliefs themselves.

    There’s never going to be a society where people don’t do stupid, counterproductive things. I drink more than I should and get hungover; legally, I’m doing the wrong thing if I drink and drive, because I’m a danger to myself and others. But is banning alcohol the best solution for that? No. I just have to learn when to stop – and not to get behind the wheel of a car when I’ve had a few.

  409. John Morales says

    Son:

    Similarly, based on previous acts of violence by people who identify as religious and claimed that their motivation for violence was their religion, I cannot see how you can justify allowing the potential risk of these beliefs to be propagated, especially if their harm to humanity has been as widespread as discussed in these threads?

    My troll sniffer is twitching, but I’m feeling charitable.

    What, we should spend out entire lives righting wrongs?

    And, BTW, you’ve just answered your own earlier question – remember this?

    Assuming that Dr Myers knew that it was merely a cracker, then what was his motivation for undertaking this course of action?

  410. Melissa says

    You know, it’s really a wafer not a cracker. Crackers don’t taste like styrofoam. They also don’t lodge themselves in the roof of your mouth right after you eat them.

  411. Patricia says

    Wowbagger – I’m with you here…maybe it’s the heavily limed sangria – but I can’t figure out WTF this Son guy is on about. He makes no damned sense whatsoever, and I’m all for abstract points.

  412. Patricia says

    Interesting – Trypho is a self proclaimed circumcised Hebrew… and that has what to do with a catholic cracker?

  413. Son of Trypho says

    Rick/Wowbagger/John Morales
    -to be honest, I’m not trying to set any snares/traps and I’m not trolling – I think perhaps the controversy with some of the more “extreme” posters may have made you a little suspicious of an attempt at genuine dialogue. :)

    my preference would be to work towards (peacefully) a state where humanity uses reason to guide its actions rather than faith.
    my concern is that, rationally, religious faith (I’ll generalise about the 3 monotheisms) cannot simply be left to its own devices whilst it provides inspiration for actual discrimination (against homosexuality, reproductive rights etc) in society. the question, for me to consider, is how best to handle/react to this fact?

    incidentally, it would be interesting to read your views on hate speech legislation? should it be banned because of its content and nature in and of itself, or merely when it incites violence? (IMO I think this is an example which can bear some scrutiny when compared to the 3 monotheisms)

    I acknowledge that Dr Myers’ actions have provoked a demonstration of the delusional/irrational beliefs of religious faith. This can be considered valuable as it exposes extremism to scrutiny and examination.

    However, what fundamental value was obtained by the actions in their original sense?

    Was he experimenting to see if the cracker would spurt blood? or that something would happen caused by a divine force? or some other scientific benefit? (I suspect no to these)

    was he expressing solidarity with the student? wouldn’t this be better done through legal/lobbying assistance?

    was he hoping that his actions would change the views of religious people? (If so, I’m not sure how?)

    against this, he has exposed himself, and his family, to personal risk from people who are clearly delusional/irrational and (I consider) dangerous. Is this, rationally speaking, sensible?

  414. John Morales says

    [belated meta]

    I gotta say, Eric Saveau, that was well done after the initial faux pas.

  415. scooter says

    ‘Hate speech’ is just another bullshit distraction. It will be applied to jail punks who paint an anarchy sign on a church or Exxon building, while elitists and political pimps use airwaves to call for the destruction of entire nations and peoples all day long.

  416. Patricia says

    #474 – Scooter – Trypho is going to be so full of wind that he could suck start a shovelhead.

  417. Steven Carr says

    1 Kings 18:27

    When it was noon, Elijah taunted them: “Call louder, for he is a god and may be meditating, or may have retired, or may be on a journey. Perhaps he is asleep and must be awakened.”

    At last , some hate speech and mockery against other religions other than Catholicism.

    Nothing wrong with mockery of religions. The Bible teaches us that it is right to mock religions, if we believe they are false.

    Hopefully, we can get some emails started to get this ‘Bible’ withdrawn from places where impressionable young minds can learn that it is right to mock religious people.

  418. John Morales says

    Son of Trypho,
    First, each commenter here speaks for themselves.
    Second, genuine dialogue is certainly to be had here. Please note many commenters respond to the tone, manner and subtext of posts as much as the ostensible content.
    Third, I may be jaded, but my understanding of human nature indicates that “a state where humanity uses reason to guide its actions rather than faith” is not a realistic goal.
    Fourth, regarding your concern about the discrimination implicit is most religious faith, I think consciousness-raising is an important first step. See also the “Overton window”.
    Fifth, regarding hate speech legislation, my personal view is I don’t like it. I’m for freedom of expression, and existing laws cover libel etc.
    Sixth, regarding “what fundamental value was obtained”, I’m not sure how to interpret your question.
    Seventh

    Was he experimenting to see if the cracker would spurt blood? or that something would happen caused by a divine force? or some other scientific benefit? (I suspect no to these)

    No. He was pointing out that it’s only a cracker, and that the artificial and arbitrary respect demanded of believers is unjustified.
    He also showed how these hypocrites “turn the other cheek”.
    Eighth, I very much doubt he was hoping that his actions would change the views of religious people. Refer to the fourth point.
    Ninth, PZ is smart and worldly enough to have considered the likely risk, and decided to proceed anyway. Probably because he’s not cowardly that way.
    Tenth, Whether it’s, rationally speaking, sensible is a judgement call. I think so, many don’t.

  419. Wowbagger says

    I don’t think you have to make everything in your life rational in order to be a generally rational person.

    For example, there’s no rational reason why I like reading fiction other than the pleasure it gives me; if I were to be rational about it I’d be better of spending my time doing the much-needed renovations to my house.

    But I don’t. Most of the time I’d rather kick back with a decent book.

    Doing the occasional irrational thing isn’t the same as adhering to an irrational belief system whereupon you act in a certain way, like considering the misuse of a holy cracker to be worse than the kidnapping, rape and/or murder of your family members – something we were told was the equivalent of what PZ did to catholics.

  420. Patricia says

    Don’t keep the faith ye godless bastards!
    I bid ye a night filled with blasphemy, drunkenness, fornication, gluttony, sloth,… and er… something naughty.
    Good night sweethearts!

  421. articulett says

    Son of Trypho, this is why he did it.

    “By the way, I didn’t want to single out just the cracker, so I nailed it to a few ripped-out pages from the Qur’an and The God Delusion. They are just paper. Nothing must be held sacred. Question everything. God is not great, Jesus is not your lord, you are not disciples of any charismatic prophet. You are all human beings who must make your way through your life by thinking and learning, and you have the job of advancing humanity’s knowledge by winnowing out the errors of past generations and finding deeper understanding of reality. You will not find wisdom in rituals and sacraments and dogma, which build only self-satisfied ignorance, but you can find truth by looking at your world with fresh eyes and a questioning mind.”
    ________________________________________________
    No must be forced to defer to another’s dogma, superstition, or bigotry… though all religions and bigots would wish to dictate the morality and behavior of others. If we do not exercise our freedoms, there’s always someone claiming we never had them in the first place. Think of PZ as showing some folks, that it’s just a “man” behind the curtain– not the “MIGHTY OZ” or anything else to be afraid of.

    It’s silly that the Catholic church has been able to pull off the “sacred cracker” for so long and that it feels entitled to pull it’s weight with PZ’s employers. I thought the “transubstantiation” was weird when I was a Catholic kid; –I’m glad to have it demonstrated now that I’m a rational adult unencumbered by any religious dogma. I’m embarrassed for those still beholden to a dogma.

    I imagine PZ’s act will gives more than a few kids the courage to let go of the fear and find out the facts. Don’t underestimate how many people are saved from the superstitions of their youth by former believers who speak out against the faith which once enslaved their minds– and acts like those of PZ. It’s good to “believe in” true things– and not to have faith in those who proffer lies that must never be questioned.

  422. John C. Randolph says

    How many times need I remind you folks that Science itself was the result of CATHOLICS in the first place!

    I’m sure that will come as a tremendous surprise to the Chinese and the Greeks, to name two.

    -jcr

  423. John C. Randolph says

    How about algebra? (oops, that was the Arabians)

    The Indians, actually. Europeans thought the Arabs came up with it, because europe became aware of it through Arab texts.

    -jcr

  424. Son of Trypho says

    John Morales/wowbagger/articulett

    thanks for your time and thoughts (and courtesy) in your responses. I’ll think further on the points you have raised.

  425. says

    P.Z., that cartoon is perfect– although I would have captioned it in the style of LOLcats:
    “All yer crakkers are belong to us.”

    If Jeebus would have just teleported out of the damned plastic baggie and then sent an e-mail assuring all of his followers that he was unharmed, the whole mediac mess could have been avoided.

    Galileo must be laughing heartily to find himself on #448’s list of Catholic scientists. Considering the Holy Roman Church’s reaction to an earth revolving around the sun. Well well well.

    P.Z. you punctured the cracker with a rusty nail. The old rumors about Jewish folks stabbing Catholic babies. I get that.
    You threw it in the garbage with pages of both a Koran and a Richard Dawkins book. The whole sacred cow thing. I get that.
    You threw in some coffee grounds. Considering that at one time, the Holy Roman Church thought coffee-drinking was bad, I get that.
    But a banana peel? Maybe the Confounded Catholic Clergy and the Catholic League were smoking them. Okay, I get that.

    And thanks P.Z. Because of you and all this press, I actually got a comment on my own blog. The commenter did not get that we can have satisfying lives without worshipping anything but no matter. A comment is a comment.

    spike

  426. Christophe Thill says

    Re #448

    I don’t really understand what’s this crazy list of “Catholic” scientists that gets cross-posted everywhere. It looks like another whack-a-mole game! Whack it here, and it pops up somewhere else. But it still deserves some serious whacking.

    1. Please show some taste, and don’t include Galilei.

    2. Pascal is not “Pashcal”. By the way, he was a Jansenist, so he was considered as some kind of heretic by the Catholic authorities.

    3. Mendel’s discoveries didn’t “give the final blow to the theory of natural selection”. They were seen as quite at odds with it in the beginning. Now, they’re one of the pillars of the modern synthetic theory of evolution, natural selection being another one.

    4. “Carrell” is Alexis Carrel. You might consider taking him out too, as he advocated the use of the gas chamber for the criminals, along with other unpleasant ideas. There used to be streets bearing his name, in France. You don’t find any now.

    5. Da Vinci? You mean, ol’ Leonardo? I know he wrote some stuff on geology, but calling him a scientist is definitely strange.

    6. Laplace! “-And where does God fit in your system? -Sire, I had no need of that hypothesis”. I know the story is apocryphal, Laplace didn’t really say that sentence… but he definitely would have!

    7. It’s Gutenberg, not Guttenberg. It’s not like he was some osbcure guy nobody has ever heard of…

    8. Lully was a composer. I don’t think he used chemical symbols. Those were introduced by Berzelius.

    Etc…

    My main grudge with that stupid list: all those “Catholics” are actually people who lived in a Catholic-dominated culture or political regime, no matter what their personal religious practices or beliefs actually were. It’s a bit like those people who talk about “Catholic children” when they should say “children of a Catholic family” (as Dawkins says).

    For those who were believers, or even priests, no proof is given that their beliefs inspired their science, for the simple reason that they didn’t. There was a remarkable number of Communist scientists in Europe after WWII: why not tally them up too, and pretend it shows that Communist ideas boost science?

    Another grudge is that the writer clearly has no idea of who most of those people were (cf. all the spelling mistakes). It’s just mindless name-dropping (very likely plundered from other people’s webpages) without any thought behind it.

    This is just sad…

  427. Lucretius says

    If you scroll down to near the bottom (no pun intended )of the Confraternity page linked to above you will see that they are, it appears, a branch of the Opus Dei cult ,a seriously deranged (even for Catholics) group of people .
    As I am still technically a Catholic, not having been excommunicated (yet), does that mean that I can say that this whole thing about the Eucharist and transsubstantiation is a whole pile of crap ?

  428. Jim says

    If being an atheist is so important to you, PZ, why would you waste even one second baiting believers and pulling juvenile stunts like this? You may be a very good biologist, I don’t know. You may be a fine professor, I don’t know. The only reason I know who you are is because you were looking for your fifteen minutes of fame by being a world class jerk. If you want to revel in it, be my guest. I just feel sorry that such a learned person could be so lacking in common sense and basic decency toward others with differing beliefs.

  429. spurge says

    Wow Jim.

    I guess it is too much trouble for you to actually read all the posts PZ wrote clearly explaining why he did what he did.

  430. Hamsterpoop says

    PZ should just tell everyone

    “I’m sorry. I can’t *insert chore*. I’m far too busy… being delicious…”

  431. True Bob says

    Third, I may be jaded, but my understanding of human nature indicates that “a state where humanity uses reason to guide its actions rather than faith” is not a realistic goal.

    Not only not realistic, demonstrably* impossible. Humans make choices and take positions using processes unrelated to reason, then apply reason to justify the choice they already made.

    *Please don’t make me dig up the study, the results of which I summarized.

  432. Richard Eis says

    -If being an atheist is so important to you, PZ, why would you waste even one second baiting believers and pulling juvenile stunts like this?-

    Short answer, because if we didn’t, in 10 years religion would take over and being an atheist would be a capital offence, punishable by extra-painful death from the caring, turn-the-other-cheek christians. As it was in the past.

    It would appear that ridicule is to Jesus what kryptonite is to Superman. He can do nothing against it’s awesome power and must ask his minions to save him from the Lex Luthor evilutionists.

  433. Desnes Diev says

    “The freedom of religion means that no one has the right to attack, malign or grossly offend a faith tradition they personally do not have membership or ascribe allegiance.”

    Once upon a time, in some societies, human sacrifice was considered a “faith tradition”. Should the only ones allowed to say something be those handling the knife?

    Desnes Diev

  434. John Morales says

    True Bob @496, I’m glad my understanding is in concordance with the study to which you allude ;)

  435. True Bob says

    Me too, John. Of course, I believe I could rationally justify not digging it up ;)