rusmeister wrote:Prebe wrote:Russmeister, I think is IS crappy that two kids who make friends in the same class can't go to the same club whatever after school (without swearing false, i.e. breaking their integrity) because the one kid is an atheist and the other is religious. Apparently you think that's cool.
Don't give me the public service routine. I haven't been talking legislation here; I said I think it's crappy. That's an opinion. You think it isn't crappy, that's yours.
Got it. But the question is, which of the parents are right? The atheists, or the Christians? Obviously, in either event, the worldview they are busy indoctrinating in their children is opposed (witness the cheering that Malik's poor kid got), and so they cannot share a club that espouses one view or the other. They could meet only in a place that says, "it doesn't matter what you believe". Since we (serious atheists and serious Christians) happen to think that what you believe is the most important thing, the first thing that determines our worldview and how we approach everything in life, we wouldn't want our kids to be taught that, either. The one club they COULD share would be one that debates who is right - a "Socratic Club" along the lines of the one at Oxford organized by CS Lewis - one that really did play fair to the two sides (it lasted some 15 years, I think - and was a remarkable testament to top-level thinking and debate). Of course, not knowing or having any depth of understanding of the issues such a club for kids would not get very far - so we're back to the parents and their indoctrination/dogma.
In short, they can meet at a pluralistic school that teaches them that what you believe doesn't matter, but that philosophy does not satisfy either of us. We wouldn't want them to meet at a club that taught that, either. If you think THAT would be cool, then I have misunderstood you all along.
I've been out of this discussion for a while. Sorry for bringing it back to this topic. Honestly, I forgot about this thread with the conventions.
First of all, I want to be clear that I support the Boy Scouts right to have a private organization with their own rules. That's fine. I'm not trying to tell them how to run their group.
However, I agree with Prebe and others that it is indeed
crappy. And I can judge it so without retracting my acknowledgment that this is their right. Sure, you have the right to be a dick. By why would you want to be? Especially to children?
I think it says something really bad about people who don't want you around simply because you believe differently. Notice that neither I nor my son had any problem with
their beliefs. We wouldn't dare think of shunning them simply because of a belief. We uphold freedom and respect so whole-heartedly, that we can comfortably interact with and befriend people with whom we vehemently disagree. But apparently, the Christians can't. Or won't. It's rather pathetic.
Sure, you've got the right to be crappy to other people's children, but why would you want to? Is that what Jesus would do? I thought he hung out with whores and such, and loved everyone. If only his people would follow his example of love.
I do NOT indoctrinate my children. I've told them that if they want to be Christians, they can. (How many Christians give their children that respect and freedom?) There's a reason why you have to force your children to be a Christian and believe in an entity with which they don't know without you telling them about it. Kids don't naturally want to sit in church and be told how evil they are simply from being born. They don't naturally want to be spoonfed guilt. So, Christians force them, and make them declare pledges. And keep them away from "outsiders" who might break the spell of their indoctrination. My parents were the same way. They didn't even want me to go to college because they were scared my teachers would acquaint me with reason. They pulled us out of public schools and taught us at home, with the
explicit rationale that we might be exposed to something that contradicted their religion at public school. They didn't even try to hide their brainwashing attempts, but painted these attempts as "holy."
Let me be clear: I've
never told my son that there is no god. I simply didn't teach him that there
is one. Just like I didn't teach him that there is a Zeus or Apollo. Was that "indoctrinating" him in an anti-Apollo worldview? Of course not. It's a worldview that is Apollo-neutral. Apollo indifferent. I also didn't tell him about sex at 2 or 3. Was I indoctrinating him in an anti-sex worldview? Of course not. Nor does he have a clue what
calculus is (yet) . . . is that indoctrination too?
When children aren't forced to believe in a mythical entity, they become an atheist by default. This is the "natural" state of children who aren't indoctrinated. They naturally view beliefs in God as bizarre and transparently false when they haven't been
forced to believe that. When their critical thinking hasn't been crushed by "believe this, or be punished," they begin thinking for themselves at a
very young age.
When the subject of religious beliefs comes up, I do not ridicule them in front of my children. I explicitly tell my kids to respect others' beliefs, and that it's okay for their friends to be Christians. In fact, my 15-yr-old was dating a Christian girl . . . until her mother found out. Then she forbade her daughter from dating an atheist. I wanted to tell her: your daughter's religion never bothered us, so why did my son's lack bother you? We didn't discriminate--you did. My son's love isn't constrained by beliefs. He recognizes that love applies to a
person, not a worldview.
So I'm getting tired of hearing how atheist discriminate or persecute Christians, when Christians won't even let their children date or play with mine. It's sad that their own indoctrination efforts are so apparently flimsy and threatened that church and home isn't enough. No, they have to extend this indoctrination and insulation even into their play and their friendships.
Do you guys really think you're going to win over any converts this way?
I do NOT think, as you've said Rusmeister, that what you believe is the most important thing. I think the fact that we're all human beings deserving love and respect is the most important thing. What you're failing to realize is that just because atheists don't respect your beliefs, doesn't mean we exclude or discriminate against you. We are able to see the person beneath the layers of propaganda. But, by your admission and the Boy Scouts policy, it's obvious that people are not the most important thing. Perpetuating your meme is.
We don't need a "Socratic Club" where they can debate who is right. What does that have to do with camping and fishing? Why can't they just BE, without being-at-odds? If you didn't teach children to discriminate, they'd never even know what each other believes. They'd play, have fun, and be kids. It's only the adults forcing their view upon them and teaching them to exclude people who are different that they learn this behavior. It's really sad.