Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Another Report, you best read (follow link)

found at Huffington Post .... Of the 1,714 Americans nationwide surveyed by the Waco, Texas-based Baptist university, 40.9 percent said they "strongly agree" that "God has a plan for me," while 32.2 percent "agree," 12.3 percent "disagree" and 14.6 percent "strongly disagree." Those who strongly agree that God has a plan were more than twice as likely as those who strongly disagree that God has a plan to say that "the government does too much" -- 52.6 percent to 21 percent.

Similarly, the strong believers in God's plan were more than twice as likely as the strong disbelievers to say that healthy people should not receive unemployment benefits -- 52.6 percent to 21.1 percent.

Generally, "people who believe in government deregulation believe in God's plan," said Baylor researcher Paul Froese. "Economic perspectives are intricately linked with different cosmologies."

The survey also showed a relation between income and belief in God's plan, with the strong disbelievers being more than twice as likely as the strong believers to make $100,000 or more a year. A similar, albeit somewhat weaker, connection was found between education level and religious belief. While 42.6 percent of the strong disbelievers had earned a college degree, just 32.8 percent of the strong believers had.

The Baylor survey appears amidst a debate on what lessons politicians should draw from religion to address issues such as the nation's deficit. On the one hand, religious voices such as Sojourners, a Washington, D.C.-based evangelical organization, have called for "shared sacrifice" among Americans to help the "least of these," a phrase drawn from Matthew 25:45. At the same time, others have advocated what's called the "prosperity gospel," which includes the belief that God will provide and financially bless those who believe.



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Friday, February 25, 2011

Document

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Sunday, February 13, 2011

Missionaries of Hate

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Carl Sagan still speaks today

Like all children, we all eventually grow up and make our own freedom. In the mean time, while we are still children asking those child like questions and answered by towering moral mature figures who we should be learning life from but discourages thought, imaginations boundaries are narrowed and there leaves little more to learn to know.

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Thursday, September 23, 2010

US super power

Took a whole lot more devastation on the American family to prove to the world, who's super power, to take on that challenge is to invite the challenge. Just monkey sense. watch

Well, the influence



playlist

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Sunday, August 15, 2010

Tell it Tillman!

Seems Christian tensions are wide spectrum about now, gay marrige, the mosque and the Playing the Atheism Card Against Pat Tillman’s Family, and:

Posted by InfoWarrior on Tue, Aug 10, 2010, at 12:43 AM:


From Abby's way

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Sunday, January 03, 2010

Happy New Year

WoWonder has been added to The Atheist Blogroll. You can see the blogroll in my sidebar. The Atheist blogroll is a community building service provided free of charge to Atheist bloggers from around the world. If you would like to join, visit Mojoey at Deep Thoughts for more information.

This is my latest effort to divert you from the Google's impression of subject matter for WoWonder, as you can see for yourself when viewing 'next blog' on the blogger search item it takes you to an endless, mindless sloth of Christian postings, I thought it might be a wide spread conspiracy directed against me for a moment. But taking into account the word Atheist and how many times you find it on my blog, well this hopefully will lead to more freethinking, humanistic, science orientated minds. So here is to reason, mindfulness, good health and prosperity for some of us this year. Hope for the rest of ya! I don't give up without reason and I did miss the fireworks this year but got my update and live coverage, ty, jily.

After a few revisionist moments I find it is an all out conspiracy, by the usual suspects. It is a conspiracy I tell you!





Wonder declaring culture cyber war, peacefully. The purps leave footprints these cyber crusaders remind me of the phone banks in Colorado Springs calling other state representatives and fake news illuminating of a very few to appear very many
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Friday, May 04, 2007

The Greenbelt has Huxley Today

Borrowed text:

He also coined the word "agnostic," to describe his own religious idea that the only things worth believing in were things that could be directly observed in the world. His definition:
Positively the principle may be expressed: In matters of your intellect, follow you reason as far as it will take you, without regard to any other consideration. And negatively: In matters of the intellect, do not pretend that conclusions are certain which are not demonstrated or demonstrable. That I take to be the agnostic faith, which if a man keep whole and undefiled, he shall not be ashamed to look the universe in the face, whatever the future may have in store for him.


Wonder FCD; FTH

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Bill Moyers Journal: A Brief History of Disblief

". . . Bill Moyers talks with Jonathan Miller about his upcoming series and his views on religion in the modern world. Jonathan Miller's series "A Brief History of Disbelief" will air on many PBS stations across the country starting May 4."


A little understanding goes a long way to recourse the discourse. This will help those with little understanding of what it means to be an Atheist.

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Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Seeds for the Birds

Feed the rest beans.

A few AlterNet articles, for the curious cats while the birds dine.


Rethinking Terrorism: A Jewish American Crosses into Hezbollah Territory

By Nathaniel Hoffman, AlterNet. Posted December 5, 2006.

One journalist spends 10 days in Lebanon, sipping coffee and talking politics with
members of Hezbollah, the Islamic militant group Americans have branded as
terrorists.



Why So Many Black Women Are Behind Bars

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, AlterNet. Posted December 5, 2006.

Black female inmates outnumber white female inmates three to one, and their punishments don't always fit their crimes.



A Roanoke Times article 'bout you know, what it's all about ....

Atheists are the new outcast minority

Robert F. Boyd

Boyd, of Daleville, was a professor and science writer at Marquette University before his retirement.


History reveals that, in whatever society we are talking about, minorities are frequently the scapegoats for whatever are the prevailing ills of the day.

Depending upon the society, the minority blame-game may be related to skin color, religious affiliation, ethnicity, sexual preferences, etc. Take your pick: Chinese, Irish, Germans, Hungarians, Asians, Catholics, Jews or Africans. All of them at one time or another were regarded as second-class citizens.

African-Americans continued to bear the brunt of the minority label until segregation gasped its last breaths in the 1960s.

Another minority, homosexuals, were for years regarded as the scum of
the Earth, as witnessed by the brutal ways in which they were routinely
harassed. Today, many homosexuals have come "out of the closet" even though they
have not yet been allowed to enter the rest of the house to enjoy their
so-called guaranteed civil liberties.

The most recent bogeyman is the atheist. You know who he is -- the secularist who wants a wall of separation between church and state, the elitist scientist who believes in evolution and not creationism, and the pagan who not only promotes pornography and abortion but also has created a social climate reprehensible to all Christian values.

And if you're a born-again atheist all those labels may apply to you.

Christians in this country believe that unless God is at the center of
national life we will be forever exposed to crime, poverty, warfare and disease.
Although science cannot prove the existence or absence of God, it has been able
to provide some interesting statistics that make one think twice about the
existence and importance of God in a society.

Countries regarded as secular or whose populations have by choice abandoned religion have been compared with those who are considered religious. Studies have demonstrated that when one measures life expectancy, literacy, income and education, nations whose populations are religious do poorly as compared to the more nonreligious ones. In addition, studies of non-African countries reveal that nations with the highest rate of homicide are religious.

If you read the newspapers and other communication outlets, evangelicals and fundamentalists are the hot topic, especially with regard to their welcoming of Armageddon. They are coming out of the woodwork like cockroaches and their pied-pipers are numerous.

This was to be expected since their pied-piper figurehead is President Bush.

You can't swing a dead cat without hitting one of them. Thanks to Bush,
with help from the religious right and its ilk, the United States for the past
six years has been ruled by a faith-based government.

Seizing upon their power in government, the Christian right is attempting to rewrite history as it relates to our Founding Fathers. They claim that America was founded as a Christian nation and that Thomas Jefferson was a decent Christian who really
didn't mean what he said about the separation of church and state. Of course
this attempt at revisionism is totally false.

Jefferson stated in 1802 in front of the Danbury Baptist Association: "The legislature should 'make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,' thus building a wall of separation between church and state."

As regards Jefferson's Christianity, he clearly respected Christ as a
philosopher and moral leader but described Christianity as "our particular
superstition." Perhaps Tom DeLay, the evangelical hammer in his day,
inadvertently spoke the truth when Congress rebuffed one of his proposals. He
said, "They treat Christianity like a second-rate superstition."

Perhaps someday the atheist may be able to come out of the closet. Maybe, but if he is a male who is an atheist and a homosexual, don't hold your breath. And if she's a
woman, forget it.

And,

December 07, 2006

Mary Cheney pregnant

Mary Cheney, the gay daughter of Vice President Dick Cheney and wife Lynne, is pregnant, according to a published report. Mary Cheney, 37, and her partner of 15 years, Heather Poe, 45, are ''ecstatic'' about the baby, due in late spring, The Washington Post reported in Wednesday's editions, quoting an unnamed source close to the couple.


whatever .... Wonder

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Thursday, October 05, 2006

The Cover Story

covering what should be uncovered the fascist of America, indeed PZ, read Leiter.

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Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Skulls and Bones

9500-year-old skulls found in Syria




Maybe one day there will be peace, to find more, 9500 years sorta blows the whole plan now don't it.

Like the sound of heart beat soothes the soul, the truth soothes the mind.


Maybe 'they' would like to stifle the truth. If this is true which it very well maybe, alone with other archaeological finds, it adds to life another question. A life full of hidden, lost, buried knowledge over time. Society rise to civility in trusted hands, time after time the trust has been given to the emotional and not the reasonable. Of whom it is safe to give that of trust.

Most Americans want people living in fear of bombs to know, we did not elect this elite sob x-drunk frat boy and we do not agree with their actions. America has done wrong to this world, in a very bad way. Up to 200,000 innocent civilians dead in Iraq through the invasion. Up to 100 a day now die, most found gagged and bound with wounds from torture. Maybe they do not do it behind prison walls anymore. Our evangelistic leaders have profited from Iraqi blood and organ sales. The military train soldiers to believe they are blessed to do this, almost as your suicide bombers are blessed with heavenly rewards. It is as if they wash their minds of conscience, and fill their heart with hate. In George's name they go, to kill, to torture, to rape and pilfer, what a shame.

A collective unreasonable bunch they are. Capitalist bedding the righteous, filtering monies, using phone banks to charge like multitudes when that just be a few. They fool not only you, when for years built their imagined grandiose selves as gods each day a little grander so as most do not even notice.

We grow from seed, and swear we are made of goldsmiths best so as to sparkle in the sunshine just to weather, dry and die.


Woe Wonder

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Friday, August 25, 2006

Things I am in the dark about

Something I am not in the dark about, very aware of, extremely anxious about the people lost through the enormous cracks in this social endeavor of the Bush, the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives. Aware also of how directly unlawful this government program is, more destructive than constructive where as the intentions are never clear, discrimination gone wild and bound to happen. Having a hand in helping multitudes is honorable, but when at the same time your hand lends to bigotry, discrimination of even one it sorta nullifies the purpose and principals and ethics that were meant to maintain freedoms through human rights, and there is where it limits those rights. Appointing a new chief whom oversees the grand oils party binding contract with the 'religious right' yet neglected and put on a back burner to war and is referred to as neglected, 'poor track record' and 'wrecked'. Leaving possibly the godless, agnostic, or even those not of such faith turn for social services if this were the only option, danger is one day it could be the only option. How for example do the participants determine eligibility, worthy Christian maybe, done your deeds, prayed to the USofA church of faith incentives. I notice some of you reading here have came from religious theme blogs and web sites, who may support government funding of church activities in communities. I say go community wild, just not with tax dollars, you can't no way in heaven or hell be fair and just when you fight over who is approved to issue the help without denying your own religious values.

New Chief Oversees a Less Visible Faith Office

The White House announced Jay F. Hein's appointment at 6:30 p.m. on a Thursday three weeks ago, the kind of timing usually reserved for news the administration wants to bury.

Hein is the new director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, the third person since 2000 who has headed President Bush's effort to help religious groups win public funding to counsel addicts, mentor prisoners' children and provide other social services. Before he took up his duties this week, the position had been vacant for more than two months.


Wonder when some peoples religion becomes criminal, however slim the chances of such a 'cult' to receive funding, possible without over sight and the door has been left open. As this sick to the extreme example, Preparing your body for God would not pass as a fundable interest, how is religious organizations that cover and protect criminals still receiving funding. You have to read the link, to get the jist.

Allot I am in the dark about. You. And when it comes to places people frequent, and I do not (and will not for more reasons than this), like wal-marts, sams. Doggie chews, big bone type synthetic maybe bio-synthetic dono. Labeled not for consumption, or intake, the dog must chew but not swallow it isn't intended or safe or something for consumption of the animal that puts this in mouth. Hum. Dogs should not ingest the preservatives, nitrates in smoked, cured animal by-products because of carcinogens. Chew bones for dummies with dogs, better get em' greenies good for your dog. I do not know or care if wal-mart stocks greenies.



Some things (see below) you may be in the dark about. I have no idea if it is censored from mainstream tv as no time to sit and watch, I sit to read. Daylight is getting shorter and the evenings with warm dry weather have me landscaping and weeding, in short spans in the heat. Good food takes effort, my cornucopia floweth over bursting in bright colors. Red tomatoes, Orange, green, yellow, red peppers of several varieties. Green (fried) tomatoes, veggy stuffed green peppers tomato slice melted cheese top and steamed green beans with sesame and flax seed flame melted butter top of onions. worth the work



Mexico's "enormous civil protest"

Violent Civil Unrest Tightens Hold on a Mexican City
By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr.

OAXACA, Mexico, Aug. 23

[GX: The APPO protests are non-violent. Police and thugs have beaten and killed protestors. The headline implicates the APPO protests inflicting personal injuries.]

For three months, civil unrest has gripped this lovely colonial city like a hound with a rabbit, leaving two people dead, crippling the tourist industry and shuttering schools.

[GX: The logic here is that "civil unrest" has left "two people dead" again implicating the APPO in the deaths. Armed gunmen and police twice fired on non-violent protests killing the two men.]

The original cause of the strife Â? a teachers' strike for better pay Â? has become lost in the escalating violence and the revolutionary demands of the protesters, who now demand that Gov. Ulises Ruiz step down.

[GX: The teachers' demands have not been "lost." Section 22 of the National Union of Education Workers purposefully suspended the demands until the Governor, Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, resigns or is ousted by the Senate.]

The teachers' union has been joined by scores of social organizations, some of them with leftist philosophies.

[GX: There are hundreds of organizations involved in the APPO.]

They have shut down highways, taken over five radio stations, burned more than a dozen buses, blocked off the city's historic square, seized government offices, destroyed the stage for an annual cultural fair and barricaded tourists in their hotels.

[GX: There have been a few protests in front of hotels, but I know of no case where the APPO targeted tourists or barricaded them in hotel.]

The state government has lost control of the center of the city, including its own offices, and is working out of improvised quarters with cellphones. Though each side has asked for federal intervention, President Vicente Fox has refused to send in troops. He has dispatched negotiators from the Interior and Labor Ministries, who have been unsuccessful in resolving the conflict.

[GX: President Fox refused to answer the APPO's call for a direct dialogue with Carlos Abascal, Minister of the Interior.]

On the national level, Mexico has been engulfed in a political crisis since the leftist presidential candidate, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, narrowly lost the July 2 election, according to an official tally. He has accused his conservative rival, Felipe Calderón, of fraud and mounted similar protests in Mexico City, taking over the central square.

[GX: The "official tally" is currently the subject of scrutiny by the Federal Electoral Tribunal after a legal challenge made by Lopez Obrador's coalition party.]

Though the conflict here started well before the election, it has added to the country's overall angst, feeding fears that left-wing groups will use Mr. López Obrador's movement to foment unrest, with heavy-handed counterattacks by people in power.

[GX: I do not know whose "fears" these are. In scores of interviews in Mexico City and Oaxaca, I have not heard any such fears of "left-wing groups [using] Mr. López Obrador's movement to foment unrest".]

Governor Ruiz, of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, which long ruled this state with a iron hand, has accused local leaders of Mr. López Obrador's party, the Party of the Democratic Revolution, of taking part in the protests, adding yet another layer of politics to the conflict.

Early on Tuesday, police officers in a convoy that had been sent to clear blocked streets opened fire on a radio station that the protesters had seized. In the gunfire, Lorenzo San Pablo Cervantes, 52, an architect who worked for the state, was killed, the police said. It is unclear whether he was a bystander or was supporting the strikers.

[GX: "In the gunfire" makes it sound like the protesters also had and used guns. This was not the case. The police fired upon unarmed protesters, killing San Pablo Cervantes.]

The protesters seized about a dozen radio stations on Monday afternoon after unidentified gunmen destroyed the broadcasting equipment of Channel 9, a public television and radio station the strikers and their allies commandeered early this month to spread their version of
events, the authorities said.

The state attorney general, Lizbeth Caña, said someone had fired at the officers from roofs near the station, starting the gunfight. But witnesses said the police had opened fire twice without provocation.

"They are the ones who brought arms, and we had nothing but rocks," said Manuel Díaz, 40, a teacher, who was keeping a tense guard on Wednesday with an ax handle outside the radio station where the shooting had occurred. "Ruiz talks out of both sides of his mouth. On
the television he calls on us to negotiate. But in the streets at night, he tries to kill us."

[GX: This quote is, in fact, representative of the sentiments I have found amongst protesters.]

On Aug. 10, Eleuterio José Jiménez Colmenares, 50, an auto mechanic and the husband of a teacher, was shot and killed during a march to support the strike as he chased youths who had thrown rocks at marchers.

Enrique Rueda Pacheco, the leader of the 70,000-member teachers' union, said the deaths, and Mr. Ruiz's use of tear gas and riot police in an attempt to dislodge the protesters from the city center on June 14, had made it impossible for the teachers to accept anything less than his resignation. Their demands for more pay are no longer the primary issue, Mr. Rueda Pacheco said.

"The fundamental problem has been the lack of interest of the state and federal governments," he said in an interview. "They bet the teachers would just go away."

Miguel Ã?ngel Concha, a spokesman for Governor Ruiz, said the state lacks the money to meet the teachers' salary demands. The teachers had asked for a pay package that would have cost $150 million, while the state's final offer in June was about $8.5 million. The teachers also
have asked for about a dozen improvements, including new books and more classrooms, for a state school system that serves hundreds of thousands of students.

Mr. Ruiz's aides acknowledged that the government made an enormous error on June 14 when it used force, angering many teachers who were used to an annual strike and a resulting pay increase. An unconfirmed rumor that a woman and two children had died in the attack because of
tear gas has become gospel among the protesters, though no bodies have been found.

Beyond the salary dispute, however, are old political rivalries. Mr. Ruiz narrowly won election over a leftist candidate in 2004, and many of the teachers and other protesters view his victory as illegitimate. They also accuse his police force of at least 35 political killings of civilians, which the government strongly denies. Finally, Mr. Ruiz vowed to end the yearly teachers' strikes that previous governors had routinely settled by granting raises.

Ms. Caña, the attorney general, charges that groups seeking to overthrow the government have infiltrated the union. "These people are saying 'Hit me, so I can denounce you for hitting me,' " she said. "They are generating instability and chaos."

On Tuesday night, demonstrators gathered in the Zócalo, the central square, to watch a documentary made by protesters on televisions they had set up. The film accuses Mr. Ruiz not only of killing scores of his political enemies, but of being a pawn for global capitalism.

Now, the once jewel-like center of Oaxaca is a mess. Protesters have stolen buses and used pickup trucks to block streets, along with rocks, barbed wire and ropes. Graffiti declaring Mr. Ruiz an assassin defaces most of the buildings. Tents and tarps shelter protesters, who burn tires and garbage at night, keeping an eye out for the police. The city's once-prosperous tourism industry is gasping for air. More than 1,000 hotel workers have been laid off, and tourists have canceled reservations well into 2007. The hotel and motel association estimates that the industry has lost $150 million in the last three months, not to mention the embarrassing cancellation of the
Guelaguetza cultural festival here.

"No one has won anything here," said Fredy Alcántara, the president of the association. "No one has come out ahead." The federal government must intervene, he said, adding, "We are desperate."

Wonder

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Wednesday, July 12, 2006

New Links

Rational thought, logic and real are other words that might describe why real, logical rational people like me really would rather not have a label of Atheist. It is no more than saying to us we are real logical and rational people.

An Atheist Manifesto

and

Why Religious Law is Not the Law of the Land



Not touching Rove Novak or this Harlow but plenty if you search the blogs, both left and right side of the political sphere, yet.

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