There was an old saying: "There are no atheists in foxholes." Now this may not strictly be true, but it is kind of absurd to expect that people in a profession where one has a rather high probability of being faced with death to not think about the meaning of life and death, and to not be able to access the answers that have been offered for millenia. IOW, if you are an atheist in the military, you should not be surprised at the presence of chaplains or even the leading of prayer. Were I in that position, I would stand respectfully silent. But complain about it? Doesn't seem to take the rest of humanity into account.Syl wrote:Military atheists want new rules on prayerI definitely know where they're coming from, but I'm not sure I totally agree. I myself never had much of an adverse experience, but then, I didn't ever make an issue of it (my dog tags said "NORELPREF"). About the worst I ever got were a couple funny looks from the chaplain when I didn't bow my head with everyone else or the officer who literally did a doubletake when I said "do affirm" instead of "do solemnly swear" during an ad hoc enlistment ceremony (they usually offer you the choice when they're reading the stuff you're supposed to repeat, but this was just some LT we roped into doing the formality (he was standing in line at the post office counter) for my reserves enlistment).Coalition complains of religious discrimination in the services
By Leo Shane III, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Wednesday, November 12, 2008
WASHINGTON — A coalition of atheists and agnostics wants the new White House to protect young military members from what they see as rampant religious discrimination in the services.
That said, religion really is everywhere in the military. In boot camp, the only real break you get is when you go to services on Sunday (I rotated denominations each Sunday. the Catholic one was a trip. one of my buddies almost flipped when we sat back down and I asked what I was supposed to do with this wafer). Every ceremony opens and closes with a prayer, and the chaplain's almost always slotted to speak. And on the ship, the chaplain always gives a little sermon over the 1MC before taps. About the only time it ever annoyed me was standing in formation, and it wouldn't have really made a difference who it was or what they were talking about, just that it was more time standing there.
So, I guess I support them, but when the evangelical population of the military is over 60 percent, I have to wonder how much of a difference any presidential directive will make.
However, I served (active, 5 years, honorable) and only met a chaplain once, in boot camp. I got no special exposure to religion at all.
A comment on "affirm" vs "solemnly swear". When you do your own, individual thing, you are doing it on your own terms - terms that may not be universally understood or accepted. IOW, how do they know they can trust you - with a gun, a tank or whatever? A knight never got knighted on his own terms. The formula they used is based on religion or tradition - your formula is based only on your own word without reference to that. Maybe you don't hold your word to be of much value, as far as they know (they can't read your mind and know all about you). By using the traditional formula, you are accepting conventional understandings shared by all over space and time.
(Edit) An additional thought - Chesterton calls tradition "the democracy of the dead", and he is really right, because by allowing our ancestors to 'vote' (participate in our decision making processes) we become more democratic in the true sense of the word - taking the opinions of people into account and not excluding them merely because they no longer "happen to be walking around". Thus, in a very real sense, tradition is more democratic than mere individualism.