There are some words I’m very careful to avoid using. “Hate” is the one I’m keenest to avoid, and lately I’ve realised I’m none to fond of the word “scorn” either, both for the mental images they summon. One which I used to toss around in my youth with (ha!) gay abandon was “evil”, but that too has become a word I find myself very reluctant to use – particularly when describing people.

Yet, when I consider the GOP Presidential selection campaign, I’m unable to express my feelings any other way than the following:

The GOP presidential selection race is a celebration of arch stupidity; it’s a deliberate, calculated embracement of mean spirited obtuseness with the goal of maximising divisiveness and persecution whilst appealing to the very worst parts of human nature – selfishness, cruelty, savageness and narcissism. They heap scorn on the poor, the non-heterosexual and the non-christians who dare to want to live their own lives as equals and with respect. They shit kick and they bully for no other reason than the simple fact that it’s a blood sport to ignorant fools and bigoted arseholes who are too afraid to step outside their own blinkered worldview to see life in the full glory it can be beheld. I wish injury or death on no-one, and yet, if I were the only person in the street and saw any of these candidates on fire, I doubt I could even bring myself to piss on them, they’re so abhorrent. They are all, without a doubt to me, fundamentally hateful individuals who bring no worth to the mental evolution of the human race.

That these people can be held up as paragons of morality or democracy by anyone at all is a sad inditement on the state of politics and the influence of radical religious belief in the United States.

For years I wondered what “GOP” stood for in relation to the republican party. It seems that, at best, it means “Glorifying Obtuse People”.

 

Don't feed the trolls

Every now and then I see someone (hopefully jokingly!) make reference to some problem they’re having, and how they’re going to contact one of the Australian “current affair” TV programmes.

These aren’t current affairs programmes; they’re bogan hysteria generation systems deliberately designed to make people get indignant about either the wrong or the inconsequential things while the real issues, the ones that take more than 30 seconds to explain, are safely ignored.

They belong in a new genre of television – flatutainment; that’s right, they’re about as entertaining as watching someone fart for 30 minutes. Likely less, since there’s a lot of people out there who happen to find fart jokes amusing. Yet they stink far worse than 30 minutes worth of farts.

Ultimately, these shows are just trolling – they spout bigotry rivalled only by radio shock jocks, and they parrot on about minor transgressions as if they’re world-shattering events, spending their time bullying either people who have committed some petty misdemeanour, or worse, the innocent and the helpless who are unable to respond to defend themselves. Why? Because it’s easier to cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war when those dogs are going up against people who can’t defend themselves. This is a blood sport, pure and simple.

They have no interest in tackling real issues, because real issues take more time to explain, and if the sorts of people who watch those shows have to spend more than 90 seconds trying to grasp an issue, they change channels, which means advertising revenue is lost. That’s what it’s all about, in the end: advertising revenue. And since those shows are jam packed with ads (when they’re not themselves being a giant ad for a corporate sponsor), they’re optimised for a fevered, indignant, captive audience. Nothing else matters.

Please, people, don’t feed the trolls.

 

I’ve been thinking a little more about the pathetic diatribe Barnaby Joyce made in the Canberra Times a few days ago, and the utter hypocrisy therein.

In particular, when calling atheists “the sneaky sect”, he claimed:

Yes, this sect’s followers make their way on to your veranda then hold a righteous court of sneering indignation about the crib in the park. You can hear yourself muttering under your breath, ”I wish you would go drown yourself, you pseudo-intellectual Gucci flea.” They write letters to complain about the incorrectness of carols at the school and picket the Christmas tree. To not insult their religion, you must no longer follow yours.

What a hypocritical, ignorant, condescending, arrogant piece of shit that paragraph was.

At the time I said that atheists had hardly pioneered letter writing campaigns or protests. After all, look at the number of letters schools get every year about “immoral” books, or all those christians protesting abortion clinics, funerals, etc.

But now that I’ve had more time to think about it what really makes me angry is the incredibly hypocritical part:

…make their way on to your veranda then hold a righteous court of sneering indignation about the crib in the park…

Are you kidding me, you sad troll?

Barnaby Joyce: I’m now 38 years of age, I’ve lived in three states of Australia for varying lengths of time, I’ve had multiple houses and phone numbers, some listed, some unlisted.

And here’s the consistent thing between all those addresses and phone numbers:

  • I get christians door-knocking to try to convert me or sell me salvation;
  • I get christians letter-dropping pamphlets about Jesus, salvation, and the immorality of homosexuals;
  • I get christian organisations calling me asking for donations.

I’ve not once, in all my life, had an atheist knock on my door, drop a letter or pamphlet in my mailbox, or call me at night asking me for support.

And you, Barnaby Joyce, have the gall to accuse atheists of this?

Crawl back into your sad and bitter little hole, troll.

Yes, I’m pissed off. Nothing irks me more than overpowering hypocrisy, and Barnaby has it in spades.

 

A while ago, Barnaby Joyce, the leader of the LNP in the Australian Senate, said, when speaking of his daughters and the issue of same sex marriage:

“We know that the best protection for those girls is that they get themselves into a secure relationship with a loving husband and I want that to happen for them.

“I don’t want any legislator to take that right away from me.”

(“Gay marriage should be ridiculed, says Independent Bob Katter“, Mat Sadler, Perth Now, 16 August 2011)

Now, at the time, I said opponents such as Barnaby and Bob were coming across as batshit crazy, using stupid arguments about girls not being able to marry men if same-sex marriage were allowed, and (the horror!) “gay” being used to describe homosexuals rather than light happiness.

As we hit the end of December, Barnaby has come out swinging again, this time against atheists. You see, he doesn’t like us, and says:

“My war is always against that religion called atheist extremism, that sneaky sect. Its advocates’ belief in nothing is more affirmed and uncompromising than just about anyone else’s belief in anything.”

(“The ‘sneaky sect’“, Barnaby Joyce, The Canberra Times, 22 December 2011.)

Whoa, Barnaby, starting by calling atheists a ‘sect’ is an interesting proposition, but you blew yourself out of the water when you said we believe in ‘nothing’.

You see, atheists actually believe in quite a lot. Now, I hate to fight fiction with fiction, but I’ll fall back to a quote from Stargate: The Ark Of Truth:

“We believe in the systematic understanding of the physical world through observation and experimentation, through argument and debate, but, most of all, freedom of will.”

You see, atheists aren’t non-believers, they’re generally very staunch believers – in things that can be seen, and proven. Now, I can’t speak for all atheists, but my take on the world is that I want explanations that have a firm basis in fact. It doesn’t mean that I personally have to see and experience it all, but it does mean that reputable scientists for instance, do. That’s why I believe climate change is real. (Barnaby, however, is an unbeliever on that front.)

Now, here’s where Barnaby gets down and dirty with his little rant:

Yes, this sect’s followers make their way on to your veranda then hold a righteous court of sneering indignation about the crib in the park. You can hear yourself muttering under your breath, ”I wish you would go drown yourself, you pseudo-intellectual Gucci flea.”

(“The ‘sneaky sect’“, Barnaby Joyce, The Canberra Times, 22 December 2011.)

An interesting turn of phrase, one has to admit. It kind of reminds me of:

“Put her in the same chaff bag as Julia Gillard and throw them both out to sea.”

(Alan Jones Breakfast Radio Show, 29th June 2011, as quoted on Media Watch.)

Unfortunately, this seems to be a fairly standard response from the extreme right wing. It’s a violent and nasty path to turn own.

Let’s take a catalogue of what I know I believe in, versus what I know Barnaby believes in, just for comparison here.

I believe:

  • In a world view based on details about the physical world which can be independently verified;
  • That people whom I’m debating a topic with still have a right to live, regardless of whether I agree with their belief;
  • That climate change is real, given the vast majority of the world’s scientists concur on it;
  • That the right for same-sex couples to marry will not impact the rights of heterosexual couples to marry.

On the other hand, Barnaby believes:

  • That the accumulated writings of dozens or more people from thousands of years ago represent the truth from an omnipotent deity who started the Universe from nothing and while seemingly all powerful and all-good allows terrible things to happen (well, except those bits that are no longer acceptable to believe in, such as slavery, killing people who work on Sunday, etc.)
  • That someone like him, in a situation being confronted by people who disagree with their world view, would wish those naysayers ill, or even death;
  • That all the scientists in the world can be part of some vast conspiracy (or a part of a “league of morons”, perhaps?) and be completely arse-up wrong about climate change;
  • That if same-sex couples can get married, his daughters may not be able to get married.

I’m going to do this not because I’m feeling smugly superior, but because I need to make the point:

Who is actually on the moral highground with their beliefs? Barnaby, or me?

Barnaby then desperately tries to scramble back onto some ground, let alone moral highground, by insisting of atheists:

“They write letters to complain about the incorrectness of carols at the school and picket the Christmas tree. To not insult their religion, you must no longer follow yours.”

(“The ‘sneaky sect’“, Barnaby Joyce, The Canberra Times, 22 December 2011.)

Interestingly in this, Barnaby seems to forget all the letter writing campaigns by christians in Australia over the years about a plethora of topics. Moral outrage accompanied by a pen and a sheet of paper has lead to untold numbers of letters to schools complaining about Catcher in the Rye, Sons and Lovers – even Harry Potter.

He seems to forget those christians who have been picketing abortion clinics for 20+ years, sometimes hurling vitriol at the people coming and going, or those christians who have been picketing funerals for the express purposes of spreading their hate speech further.

People in glass houses, Barnaby? Don’t start talking about letter writing and picketing as if it’s something atheists invented.

Barnaby fails to grasp the simple facts here – while some atheists undoubtedly would like to see religion made illegal, what people choose to believe in within the privacy of their own home or property is entirely their right. And equally, if people choose to congregate in a church to pray to something I equally believe doesn’t exist, then I may feel sorry for them, but I don’t run out screaming the church should be pulled down.

What I do object to though, and what so many other atheists object to, is the forced, public indoctrination of people into religion. Using Barnaby’s example, why should children be forced into singing christmas carols if either they, or their parents, aren’t religious? (If he thinks that’s OK, well let me tell you as a child who was forced to do that, it’s not. It’s not OK to have a religious teacher single you out as the kid who doesn’t want to sing along to a religious song and make you sing it in front of the entire class.)

Atheists are anything but sneaky. We’re open, and we’re often very up front about our belief in real evidence. We don’t use tomes written hundreds or thousands of years ago and undoubtedly modified countless times since to pick and choose our defences for bigoted world views from, and we don’t need said book to teach us a moral path in life. We also choose to live this life now for fulfilment and happiness, since there’s no evidence at all that there’s any form of life after death.

Barnaby insists that atheists should:

“all just remain at work while the rest of us go on holidays, and we can double the pleasure by knowing that, when we return, they can go on theirs. This doubles the time away from each other.”

(Ibid.)

The age old argument, “If you don’t believe in religion you shouldn’t go on federal instituted holidays that fall at religious times!” Cry me a river, Barnaby. After all, the timing hasn’t really got anything to do with the date of birth for … oh, wait, you’ve got something to add about that? Let’s hear it:

“The timing at the end of December has more to do with the celebration of the pagan festival of Saturnalia rather than when Christ was actually born. Those politically incorrect early Christians had the good sense to roll with the customs rather than to rage against them.”

(Ibid.)

Thanks for saving me the words, Barnaby! If you want to talk about traditions, christmas isn’t really christmas but a pagan festival. So why are so-called traditionalists getting hung up if some people would like to more generically call it a “festive season” or a “holiday season” so as to (a) still pay respect to those who see it as important, (b) recognise the social importance of the time of the year, and (c) not violate their own beliefs in doing so?

Sneaky is as sneaky does, and sneaky people write opinion pieces accusing atheists of being a religious sect so they supposedly have equal ground to argue on, or issue press releases stating that a world famous atheist, having recently died, would now be a believer.

 

Kim Jong Il

A lot will be said of Kim Jong Il over the next few days, but I think what we need to also think of are the people left behind. And so, here’s what I say to them:

Do not mourn the monster who passed into the night. His ravages now are ended, yet his legacy lives on. Look around you, at the empty chairs and empty beds – the places where your loved ones should be. They’re not there, and it’s because of him. His excesses and his cruelty robbed you of your families, your lovers, and your friends. The sycophantic wailing you’re required to show for fear of your own life should hide a secret cheering: the monster is dead.

The joy of his death is of course overshadowed by the plain, simple fact that life is not going to instantly change. His son will likely be as decadent and crazy as his father was, but we can hope his excesses may be a little less so than his fathers’. We can hope that change does come, and that you can start revealing your true emotions in the light without fear of persecution, either for yourself, or those you care most about.

And remember, when you are forced to talk “dear leader”, to think in the safety of your own mind, “capricious monster”.

 

When I hear people exclaim excitedly that this god thing saved a baby, pulled from the rubble 72 hours or more after an earthquake, I’m reminded of Doctor Who, who said:

“You let one of them go, but that’s nothing new. Every now and then, a little victim’s spared because she smiled, because he’s got freckles, because they begged. And that’s how you live with yourself. That’s how you slaughter millions. Because once in a while, on a whim, if the wind’s in the right direction, you happen to be kind.”

And I think:

“What a capricious, horrid monster this god thing is.”

And it makes me proud to be an atheist.

 

It’s sad to say that there is still violent crime in society. People can and sometimes do become mass murderers, or just one-off murderers, or rapists, or child rapists, and so on. For one reason or another, they go down a path that has them destroy another person’s life. I’m not someone who believes in predestined paths, but only an idiot would suggest that when someone is murdered, that was “their time to go”, or that when someone is raped (either as an adult, or a child) that it doesn’t in any way alter where their life would have gone.

Society has strong notions of justice, repentance and rehabilitation. Committing a crime is a breaking of the social contract, and as such, you must do your part to reapply for full admission to society. Prison, fines, etc., are often mistakenly considered to be all about the notion of punishment, but that’s only meant to be half the equation; the other half, of course, is meant to be about rehabilitation. It’s about having someone come to terms with what they’ve done wrong, and through measured time and self analysis, admit their wrong doing and develop a means of avoiding doing it again.

Sometimes this works, and sometimes it doesn’t. (Some foolish people think that’s what a death penalty should be for – that if someone’s crime is “too great” or that they are continual recidivists in relation to serious crimes, that eventually a death sentence should be applied. That’s a load of crap, really – it’s a cheat’s way out. It’s a section of society saying “We believe there’s a higher authority, we’ll punt this person to that authority rather than dealing with it ourselves”. It’s also not real punishment. Murder the murderer, and their time reflecting on what they’ve done has finished as the light fades from their eyes. Wouldn’t real punishment in that situation actually be keeping them alive for decades? Capital punishment isn’t a solution.)

Ahem. I digress.

While some people jump up and down and claim that the justice system isn’t effective enough, and I’d certainly agree that there’s a lot that needs to be done to reduce recidivism rates overall, the notion of “do society wrong, get punishment+rehabilitate” is actually about the best and most humane option society has been able to develop so far.

Let’s consider an alternate model though:

  • Imagine a situation where a child rapist offers the parents of the victim $100,000 so long as the matter doesn’t go further.
  • Imagine a situation where a child rapist offers to help fund a new park in the community so long as the matter doesn’t go further.
  • Imagine a situation where a doctor who tells a patient condoms will give him AIDS offers to ensure there’s clean water and food for someone in another country so long as the matter doesn’t go further, after that patient has unprotected sex and comes back with HIV.

In other words, imagine a justice system where the perpetrator buys his or her freedom, and nominal absolution.

Coins

You can probably see where I’m going for this. (And for what it’s worth, I fully acknowledge I decided to write this blog post after being referred to Christopher Hitchens’ part in a debate about the merits of religion.)

At a personal, individual level, most of us would find it completely repugnant notion that we could allow people to buy their way out of crime – it’s like putting a price on a life, or on innocence.

Yet, at a collective level it’s something that has been allowed for centuries. Organised religions have, by and large, gotten away with the most atrocious of crimes, not through real absolution and penance, but through two continual crumbs:

  • Selling salvation in the ‘next life’ to people suffering in the now;
  • Providing charitable services.

How is this anything other than buying your way out of a crime?

Isn’t it time that we stopped allowing organisations to throw petty crumbs at society in return for ongoing, perpetual absolution?

Even for all the talk of charity offered by religious groups, it’s never entirely charitable. They attach riders specifically to their charity, requiring people to hear a sermon, or refuse to have anything to do with safe sex, or flatly refuse to help certain people in need because they happen to be gay or lesbian. And then their charitable works become poisoned with corruption, too – even the most basic ones that should be incorruptible.

To be sure, there are people who work in these charitable arms who are genuinely wonderful, giving human beings, who care about others and want to do their utmost to help them. But their work is tainted and degraded by the tawdry nature of the organisation paying its way back into the good graces of society.

These organisations shouldn’t be buying their way out of the misery and suffering they’ve caused. They should be dropping to their knees and profoundly, completely and utterly begging humanity for forgiveness. They should be opening their histories to the world, and exposing all the criminals they’ve shielded over the years to justice, and ending the quest for profit covered up by creative accounting standards.

After all, if a child rapist donated a hamper of food to a hungry family, we wouldn’t say “there there, all is forgiven now”.

It’s time we stopped doing the same for religious organisations that shield their sins behind the petty crumbs of self-absolution via charitable works. Self-absolution doesn’t work. It just leads to continued abuse. After all, if you got away with it once, who is to say you won’t get away with it again?

This isn’t about revenge, it’s about society needing to collectively make the decision to say “Enough is enough: You must work harder for your forgiveness, and you must show penance. Take your dirty money back, and learn to be humans again.”

 

Not Gay

I’d heard about this study ages ago, and at the time it just seemed deliciously ironic. However, the last 15 years has well and truly proved to me that there’s a strong element of truth to it, too. After all, we’ve all heard about:

  • Ex-gay groups headed by gay men who supposedly overcome their desires, only to come out years later.
  • Pastors who lead churches that can “deliver” people from homosexuality, then take young men on trips overseas and “deliver” them happy endings.
  • Fire and brimstone preachers who end up getting caught with a $30 male prostitute … ahem … taking one for the team.
  • Politicians who pass anti-gay laws then get discovered looking for sex in urinals at airports.
  • Politicians who pass anti-gay laws and write papers called “Growing Up Straight: What Families Should Know About Homosexuality”, then hire rent boys to “carry their luggage”.

The list just goes on and on. There’s quite a few public lists out there that are worth checking out, such as this one, this one, and this one.

There are always titillating stories in the gay community of known politicians, sports people, etc., who don’t necessarily have the most gay-welcoming of public stances but privately lead a double life. Some of these stories undoubtedly are wishful thinking, but some are 100% accurate.

Now, returning to the study I mentioned at the start…

Someone tweeted about it this week, kindly reminding me of it (though I’ll admit I’ve unkindly forgotten who it was who sent it around – if it was you, let me know). It was conducted in 1996, and was titled: “Is homophobia associated with homosexual arousal?

Quoting from the abtract:

“The authors investigated the role of homosexual arousal in exclusively heterosexual men who admitted negative affect towards homosexual individuals.”

They broke the study up into two groups – a collection of 35 men who were homophobic, and a collection of 29 men who had no issue with gays.

They then proceeded to show the men “stimuli” – aka, “porn”, of 3 varieties: regular heterosexual porn, gay male porn, and lesbian porn. As would be expected, both groups got rather excited about the heterosexual porn and lesbian porn.

However, what was the real corker – and something just about anyone in the gay community would attest to – was that the homophobic men were the only group to get aroused about gay male porn. That’s right:

“Homophobia is apparently associated with homosexual arousal that the homophobic individual is either unaware of or denies.”

So, next time some guy starts blathering on homophobically about gays, just ask yourself this one question:

Is he a top, or a bottom?

 

News

Malcolm Turnbull suggests, in a recent speech, that the current media inquiry being held by the Federal Government may be asking the wrong questions:

“Rather than spending too much time on how many newspapers are owned by Rupert Murdoch, we should be asking whether there will be any newspapers left for him, or anyone else, to own at all.”

(Turnbull, in “Media woes a ‘threat to democracy’“, Michael Gordon, The Age, 8 December 2011.)

Turnbull is right, of course – but he’s also dead wrong.

The real question is far more low-level, and far more important:

Does mainstream media deserve to survive?

That’s right – if we look at how the current Australian mainstream media works: print, radio, and television, do they have an inherent right to exist, or do they need to prove themselves to us?

It seems in a lot of ways that a significant portion of the Australian media is oriented towards conflict and friction. Just take a few examples:

  • News Limited seems so far right leaning that some of its papers can look into their own left ears – Miranda Devine, Andrew Bolt, etc., make a living out of writing harsh, opinionated pieces that a casual observer might feel are deliberately designed to stir the pot as opposed to having a meaningful discussion over;
  • Fairfax’s online business seems so obsessed with ad-click revenue that it significantly increases the number of ads per page and uses sometimes wildly at-odds headlines to the content of the stories (they’re also strangely blinkered when it comes to denouncing particular products);
  • Channel Nine used to be the respected leader of news in Australia, but you have to judge it by the lowest common denominator, and that would undoubtedly be A Current Affair;
  • Channel Seven tries to be a respected news source in Australia, but you again have to judge it by the lowest common denominator, and that would undoubtedly be Today Tonight;
  • Channel Ten doesn’t really think much of news, but it does host an Andrew Bolt show – again, lowest common denominator sort of stuff;
  • Australian Radio is full of shock jocks who make a living out of being hypocritically mean. They’re usually little more than “current affairs” shows, but with even less factual backing. They’re also driven by egos that form reality distortion fields far worse than anything levelled at former Apple CEO Steve Jobs, too.

The mainstream media seems almost dedicated to finding the most sensationalist ways of reporting basic details; the moderate opinion seems to be rarely sought because the moderate opinion doesn’t stir heated debate and ratings. You see, commercial journalism is all about ratings, because ratings indicate how much you can charge advertisers. That’s why even the ABC seeks out extremists like Jim Wallace from the “Australian Christian Lobby” to talk about same sex marriage – to the point where even the Victorian Council of Churches has denounced the constant quoting of these sources and requested a healthy debate instead.

The Australian shock jocks seem to lead the way, doing their damnedest to pull Australia to a “Faux News” style of US media coverage, where facts and figures are fast and loose, and denunciations make some people wonder – is that a threat? Of the Prime Minister, Jones said on 6 July 2011:

“The woman’s off her tree and quite frankly they should shove her and Bob Brown in a chaff bag and take them as far out to sea as they can and tell them to swim home.”

(Quoted on Media Watch.)

Now, I’m the first to say that I don’t really have a lot of time for our current prime minister; I’m pretty disappointed in her and I’ve been blunt in saying it; but I’ve equally never gone to the point of suggesting she and other politicians be dumped at sea. Regardless of my personal feelings towards anyone in a debate, I don’t see the point of making any form of threat against them.

Returning to Malcolm’s speech and opinion piece, he suggests that:

“If newspapers die off, we will struggle to remain a free society.”

(“Independent Media Inquiry“, Malcolm Turnbull, The Age, December 8 2011.)

One must ask though – how free a society does the current trend in news, exemplified by various newspapers, allow us to be at the moment? They’re increasingly full of opinion, not fact, and readers aren’t always provided sufficient prompts to know the difference:

“…sometimes comment is indistinguishable from news reporting. The signals or branding that journalists say indicate what is comment and what is news are either not understood or they are just not there … over 60% have difficulty distinguishing fact, news, from comment.”

(“Sources of News and Current Affairs” Professor David Flint, quoted in “The fewer the facts, the strong the opinion?“, Belinda Weaver, 2001 eJournalist.)

Belinda Weaver goes on to quote Tom Koch:

“For democracy to have meaning, its members must be able to act responsibly, and their ability to do so depends, in turn, on the availability of accurate and reasonably complete information.”

(Ibid)

Yet, if Australian news in general is increasingly turning to opinion pieces and relying on the histrionic bleating of shock jocks, columnists and others who routinely espouse their own personal views as “fact”.

So here’s the most basic rub – I look at mainstream media in Australia, then compare it to various dedicated online sources, and I find mainstream media news for the most part very wanting. Facts are replaced with opinions, moderate views are drowned out by extremists, and egos and advertising goals seemingly trump integrity. Perhaps never has this been demonstrated so strongly than the overall boganisation of the asylum seeker discussion in Australia.

Malcolm is entirely right in his general premise that democracy needs news and facts to survive, but is he correct that the Australian media gives us this? We get a dumbed down political debate for the most part in the mainstream media because TV and radio news is primarily interested in the 30 second sound grab, which is hardly enough for an intelligent conversation on deep and complicated issues. The equivalent to the 30 second sound grab in newspapers is the pull-quote, and that doesn’t deliver much better. There may be plenty of accurate and factual information out there, but increasingly we have to ask ourselves whether that information is presented by or obscured by the mainstream media.

So the real question isn’t whether there’ll be any newspapers left for Rupert Murdoch (or anyone else) to own, but whether there should be. I’d say they need to work harder at proving an inherent right to a continued presence in our lives.

 

The Reverend Margaret Court, a former tennis player, and leader of a church in Perth, has today come out swinging against same-sex marriage, saying:

“To dismantle this sole definition of marriage and try to legitimise what God calls abominable sexual practices that include sodomy, reveals our ignorance as to the ills that come when society is forced to accept law that violates their very own God-given nature of what is right and what is wrong.”

(“Legend condemns gay marriage“, thewest.com.au, 7 December 2011).

To Margaret, and any other female pastor who has the audacity to decry same sex relationships, and claim to be on some moral high ground when it comes to attacking the GBLTI community, I say this:

I strongly believe you’re acting like a hypocrite, and likely a bigot, too.

Why?

Because like so many who cling to religious authority to deny equal rights, you conveniently ignore any biblical directive that doesn’t suit your purpose. And in this case, let’s consider Timothy 2:11-12:

“A woman should learn in quietness and full submission. I do not permit a woman to teach or have authority over a man; she must be silent.”

Female pastors, reverends, whatever you call yourselves; don’t preach to me that I’m a sinner, or that I shouldn’t be allowed to get married. By the religious tenants that you cling to, not only are you going against god’s will by seeking to “teach” or have “authority” over me as a man, you’re in a position of authority in a church, which is also by your own bible against god’s will.

If you’re prepared to speak without hypocrisy, I’ll listen. Until then, shut up: by your own religion, your opinion is worthless and immoral.

© 2012 unsane Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha