This is a compilation of information from some of Margaret Downeys' appearances in the media.
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Humanist Network News #10
HumanistNetworkNews.org
Aug. 30, 2006
Segment 4: An Atheist Cold War Thaws?
Matt Cherry, executive director of the Institute for Humanist Studies, speaks in the studio with Margaret Downey, new president of the Atheist Alliance International. Downey explains why Atheist Alliance International and American Atheists, the two largest U.S.-based atheist organizations, hold their annual conferences on the same day. Downey says she favors moving the AAI conference date to foster more opportunities for the two groups to collaborate.
The audio is from show #10 of Humanist Network News
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Margaret is trying to unify the atheist groups and we should follow her lead. There are still some holdouts! Who knows what opportunities have been missed as a result of core atheist groups not working together? Unification of atheist groups could make everything we are trying to do much easier. Instead of working against each other, we could accomplish much more by working together. It is time to stop being "old school". The groups that have not yet unified could be holding us all back...let us work together and form one strong, unified group.
If you have yet to come on board please understand, Downey's Rottweilers hope to see all atheist orgs take a meaningful step towards unity within one year.
The audio discussion above is now of historical significance as we look at Margaret Downey's feelings and opinions before she was successful at achieving her goals. Unfortunately, the venue for the convention wasn't big enough. She wanted a venue that could accommodate 700+ speakers and attendees, but had to settle for a venue that could accomodate about 450 people. Margaret was outnumbered by other members of the board who voted for a smaller venue. And she was right, as the venue sold out and had a waiting list of 600 people. Only 600 were on the waiting list because many had heard that the list was already so long and didn't bother to add their names to the list.
- Downey's Rotweilers
(As of posting, this was not read by Margaret Downey. Commentary in this post is solely that of the biggest, baddest atheist activist machine in the country, of which you would never want to be on its bad side because...we ain't Margaret.)
This is a list of various audio files and podcasts that have Margaret Downey in them.
T.J. Walker talks to Lowder about the history and purpose of Internet Infidels, Inc.; the meanings of terms 'atheism' and 'agnosticism'; Pat Robertson; whether we should ignore the Radical Religious Right; Margaret Downey's battle against discrimination by the Boy Scouts of America; whether having "In God We Trust" printed on all U.S. currency really matters; what the Secular Web has to offer; how the Internet offers freethinkers a level playing field in the marketplace of ideas; the fact that nontheists are the last minority in the USA which it is politically correct to hate; how freethinkers can support the Secular Web.
N.B. The parts of this audio file with Margeret are in bold text.
Summary: In this month's podcast we speak to a member of the New Orleans Secular Humanist Association about the one year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. We interview Brenda Frei, the atheist who spent one month living with an evangelical Christian family for the reality tv show 30 Days.
Margaret Downey, the new president of Atheist Alliance International, makes an historic announcement about her organizations annual conference (which falls on the same day as the annual conference of American Atheists).
And the International Humanist and Ethical Youth Organization interviews international student humanist youth workers about a variety of topics regarding humanism, religious extremism and America's human rights record.
Segment 1: After Katrina Host Duncan Crary speaks in the studio with Michael Malec, a board member of the New Orleans Secular Humanist Association. Ends 9:18
Segment 2: 30 Days Host Jes Constantine and Matt Cherry, executive director of the Institute for Humanist Studies, speak by phone with Brenda Frei, an atheist homemaker who lived with evangelical Christians Michael and Tracey Shores for one month for the reality television show 30 Days. Ends 32:52
Segment 3: Listener Comments Two listeners call in response to the HNN story about comic book superheroes and religion. Ends: 37:30
Segment 4: An Atheist Cold War Thaws? Matt Cherry, executive director of the Institute for Humanist Studies, speaks in the studio with Margaret Downey, new president of the Atheist Alliance International. Downey explains why Atheist Alliance International, and American Atheists, the two largest U.S.-based atheist organizations, hold their annual conferences on the same day. Downey says she favors moving the AAI conference date to foster more opportunities for the two groups to collaborate. Ends 46:00
Segment 5: IHEYO The Institute for Humanist Studies, through it's IHS Grant Fund is a major financial supporter of the International Humanist and Ethical Youth Organization. (IHEYO). Host Duncan Crary provided some questions to the members of IHEYO to ask international humanist youth workers. This is a special presentation including several interviews with youth representatives of humanist and freethought organizations from four different European countries. Find out how these young activists found humanism, their ideas on reaching out to youth and their thoughts on the United States and religious extremism.
*This segment by IHEYO was edited for length. To hear a longer version of this audio production, click here. Ends 1:05 Songs: Earth by Anji Bee Feels like a Sunday by Circle in a Square Christians by Dar Williams Sunday Moring by Markovich/
N.B. The parts of this audio file with Margeret are in bold text.
Summary: The theme of this month's podcast is civil liberties and religious discrimination. We hear from a United Nations representative, an attorney, a lobbyist and an activist. Segment 1: Humanist Defends Pope As executive director of the Institute for Humanist Studies, Matt Cherry isn't accustomed to defending the Pope. But that's the position he found himself in last week on the Garry Doyle show, a talk radio program broadcast on 570 News in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada. Cherry defended the Pope's comment that inspired violent reactions from Muslim extremists. Free speech means allowing others to say things you don't agree with, Cherry explained. End 12:55 Segment 2: Atheism and Civil Rights Derek Araujo, a New York City-based attorney, speaks about the future of church/state separation in the United States. A graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School, Araujo founded the Campus Freethought Alliance was a senior editor of the Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review. End 26:01 Musical Interlude: God Thinks, Voltaire End 31:21 Segment 4: Anti Atheist Discrimination in the Boy Scouts Margaret Downey, president of the Atheist Alliance International and founder of the Freethought Society of Greater Philadelphia, speaks about her efforts to stop discrimination against atheists and gays in the Boy Scouts of America. End 49:33 Segment 4: The ACLU in Louisiana Michael Malec, board member of the New Orleans Secular Humanist Association, speaks about lobbying for the American Civil Liberties Union in Louisiana. End 56:30 Songs: Sound Scientist by Bill Office Suite, Part I by The Matthew Show God Thinks by Voltaire I Believe by Heather Sullivan Annie Mae by KlassicK Productions Real Life Fairytale by Sara
Margaret Downey of the Freethought Society of Greater Philadelphia updates us on her seven-year battle against discrimination by the Boy Scouts of America. This interview is from 1999.
Taking the Christ out of Christmas
YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE RELIGIOUS TO ENJOY THE HOLIDAYS. JUST ASK YOUR FRIENDLY NEIGHBORHOOD ATHEISTS.
Santa is pissed. He's roaring abuse at the Christmas-stealing atheist grinches who've erected a “tree of knowledge” between the nativity scene and the Old Glory statue on the Chester County Courthouse lawn.
It's a comical sight. Pissed Santas always are. But it's more than that. It's symbolic. It's about Lyra from The Golden Compass with her gypsy and polar bear chums fighting against those God tells to bomb abortion clinics and fly planes into skyscrapers.
Unless you sympathize with those folks, of course. In which case it's about the ongoing campaign to rip America from God's bosom.
| Courting controversy: The Freethought Society's tree of knowledge accompanies a nativity scene and an actual fake Christmas tree at the Chester County seat. |
You might have noticed that America's atheists have suddenly gone from being a despised, cowed and all but silent minority to a being royal pain in the ass. How exactly did that happen?
Something has changed. In the last few years American atheism has grown from a furtive, eccentric fringe phenomenon into a civil rights movement with teeth. Perhaps unsurprisingly Philadelphia—birthplace of freedom (and the First Amendment), home of that first great American Christian-baiter Thomas Paine, and a city that prides itself on free thinking, bullshit detecting and straight talking—is at the center of the gathering atheist storm.
Philadelphia's atheist story has a cast of characters that wouldn't look out of place in a Robert Rodriguez movie scripted by a resurrected Tennessee Williams. We will meet a large-breasted exotic dancer and atheist intellectual who loves watching the Christians she debates try to maintain eye contact. And a little girl who, while the adults upstairs are holding a seance, bangs on the basement ceiling with a broom and flashes the lights on and off by removing and replacing the fuses. We'll meet right-wing libertarians and left-wing liberals, woolly agnostics and hardcore “nontheists,” students, professors of philosophy, moms and dads and YouTubing, blasphemous T-shirt-wearing punk rock troublemakers. The only things they've all got in common are: a) they don't believe in God (or Santa or the Flying Spaghetti Monster) and b) they're your neighbors.
Motorists driving by as Philadelphia's atheists erect their tree in West Chester are beeping their horns and giving the thumbs up. One woman shouts: “Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!” But pissed Santa is having none of it.
“You people are being hypocritical!” he snarls through his gray beard, the white bobble on his red hat bobbing up and down in anger.
We're at the Chester County Courthouse, scene of a recent ding-dong battle between the Freethought Society of Greater Philadelphia and Pennsylvania Christians over the Ten Commandments posted on the outside wall right alongside the front door. The plaque went up in 1920, back when Chester County boasted hundreds of Ku Klux Klan members, and packed revival meetings met under banners proclaiming: “Christ for West Chester: West Chester for Christ.”
Though it was covered up for 14months after a 2002 ruling that it violated the separation of church and state, the plaque is back in full view. But now it has the tree of knowledge—festooned with gold-sprayed pinecones and laminated color copies of book covers—for company. Some of the authors and titles are predictable: Richard Dawkins, Thomas Paine, Mark Twain, Christopher Hitchens. Others not so much, like the Bible and the Koran—both essential reading for anyone who wants to see how daft religion is, says Freethought Society president Margaret Downey.
If all goes according to plan, next year's tree will go up in the free-speech zone on Philadelphia's Market Street, next to the nativity scene, where it would've been this year if not for the fact it would've been dwarfed by a giant menorah, says Downey. Next year she'll leave the Freethought Society to head up a national organization, the Atheist Alliance International.
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| Branching out: Atheists feel freer to promote their beliefs these days. |
Downey's the go-to atheist when Fox News, sick of seeing intellectually challenged God-botherers like Sean Hannity and Bill O'Reilly get chewed to shreds by the combative cigarette- and whiskey-breathed Brit Christopher Hitchens (author of 2007's atheist bestseller God Is Not Great), decide they need a well-spoken American lady to represent the forces of godless evil instead.
After the erection of the West Chester tree, Fox paired Downey with an eager young priest. Glammed up to the nines, the politely smiling Downey ran rings round the boy.
“I regularly lecture students at Penn,” she says. “One student told me, ‘When we heard you were an atheist, I thought you were going to look like a gypsy or something—and then in walks Mary Tyler Moore.'”
Don't be fooled. Downey is hardcore. The battle-scarred veteran of a thousand fights against intolerance, she flat out told her own kids that the story most central to the American Christmas experience is almost certainly bunkum. Which was cool … until her kid went to school and told other kids.
“The other parents went crazy—‘My kids are asking me if it's true that Santa isn't real. Will you shut your child up?'
“Christians don't own Christmas,” says Downey. “If they did, you'd have Jesus grottos in department stores. You'd have kids sitting in the Virgin Mary's lap.”
Back in West Chester, such subtleties are lost on Santa. “You're being hypocritical!” he shouts. “That's a Christmas tree. I'm a Christian. Jesus is the reason for the season!”
Santa storms off angrily before the startled atheists can point out that dressing as an old pagan fertility god (who was co-opted by the churches and was then co-opted again by the retail industry), and then heckling others for “stealing” Christmas, verges on the surreal.
Downey, 57, was brought up by her Puerto Rican mom in a dirt-poor quarter of Baton Rouge, La., and later Los Angeles. Her Irish dad left home when she was 3. She got angry about injustice and intolerance early on—“I could never figure out why my mother was belittled for her accent and why my half-sister Martha, a person of color, had to sit at the back of the bus.” And she stayed angry.
Downey developed a contempt for superstition at an early age. She watched her relatives endlessly pray for divine intervention while she worked her 9-year-old ass off sewing “so the kids at school wouldn't recognize the hand-me-down Goodwill clothes I wore,” and so her mom wouldn't have to again beg neighbors for handouts.
The precocious young Downey questioned everything. When given a talking doll, she immediately broke it open to find out how it worked. And yes, she's the little girl providing the upstairs seance with the banging and the flashing lights.
She adopted Uncle Floyd, a Japanese-American friend, as a father figure, and bombarded him with questions. He told her to look the answers up, and gave her a set of encyclopedias, which proved great for Downey's education but bad news for her immortal soul.
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| An imperfect 10: Freethought Society president Margaret Downey isn't big on the Commandments, which still dominate the Chester County Courthouse facade. |
“I came across the religious stuff, and I just thought, ‘This is silly!' I told Floyd, and he said, ‘Margaret, I think you must be an atheist, just like I am.' I said, ‘Atheist, what's that? He told me to look it up.”
Uncle Floyd died when Downey was 15. Years later, as Downey herself lay nearly choking to death in a hospital recovery room, she says she saw Uncle Floyd again.
“It was the full near-death experience,” she says. “The white light, the tunnel—and there at the end of the tunnel was Uncle Floyd, smiling and holding a book.”
So did Downey take this as definitive proof of an afterlife, repent her ungodly, blasphemous and sinful ways, and accept Jesus Christ as her personal savior?
No. She went and found out all she could about near-death experiences. From books.
“Turns out it's pretty common,” she says over breakfast at the Center City Ritz-Carlton, “probably caused by a chemical released by the brain.”
Over the years Downey has thrown herself into various causes—antismoking, antiracism, feminism. And then in 1990 the Boy Scouts of Pennsylvania made a big mistake. They rejected Downey's son Matt—a scout in good standing for seven years in New Jersey—for being an atheist.
The Scouts didn't know it at the time, but they'd just pissed off the atheist equivalent of a mama grizzly bear. The ongoing battle to get the Scouts to accept nonbelievers (and gays) turned Downey into a world-renowned fighter for atheist rights.
The Boy Scouts in Philadelphia have lost their lease after failing to amend their nondiscrimination policy. They refused to pay up to $200,000 a year “fair market value” rent for the city property for which they formerly paid $1 a year.
Back in West Chester, the erection of the tree of knowledge has turned this patch of grass into a sort of symbolist theme park. Old Testament morality jostles patriotism, piety and the Teutonic/Victorian reinvention of the pagan yule symbol that is the “traditional” Christmas tree.
There's one around the corner. Unlike the tree of knowledge, it's artificial, festooned in all manner of glitter and tinsel and other seasonal tat. And—again unlike the tree of knowledge—it makes no mention of Jesus.
Later in the evening—as the temperature drops savagely—there's a ceremony. A middle-class couple lead their pretty, expensively dressed and well-behaved daughter to the nativity scene and talk in loud voices about its significance, ignoring the speech-making atheists not 2 yards away.
Rudolph Bär, an immigrant from Amsterdam, turns up to show his support. Rudolph's too late for Santa, which is a pity. But he's just in time for self-described “redneck American patriot” and grandmother-of-11 Audrey Van Loan from nearby Malvern. She stands across the busy street, holding up a Bible.
The tree of knowledge is “a travesty and a sin” and “one more step down the slippery slope,” says Van Loan, who recently stopped attending the Good Samaritan Episcopal church in Malvern “because it got too liberal.”
Van Loan sees America's atheists, war protesters and liberals as symptoms of a decadent “multicultural and diverse” society that's moving away from “Judeo-Christian values.”
“You know that story of the frog that's boiled slowly so it won't hop out of the pan? Well the majority of Judeo-Christians in America are asleep. They're like that frog. Being boiled alive slowly.”
“God will take his hand off America,” she warns. “We will suffer violence and sickness and death.”
Over the road Margaret Downey looks at Van Loan's Bible and thinks about shouting: “Have you actually read that?” But she bites her tongue.
In the coming weeks the tree of knowledge will be repeatedly vandalized. One creative soul will remove all the restraining ropes on one side, presumably so the tree will topple into the nativity scene in the first high wind.
That America is undergoing an atheist … “revival” is misleading. And it's not quite an “explosion” yet. “Awakening” sounds about right. Or is that too religious?
Books like Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion and Christopher Hitchens' God Is Not Great are bestsellers. The religion-bashing kids' flick The Golden Compass is showing in mainstream theaters. Atheist meetings, lectures and book readings are packed. Atheist organizations are popping up like mushrooms after the rain.
And then there are the nonjoiners, like 33-year-old Mathilda, a Philadelphian who won't give her real name. She sees no reason to leave Christmas to the Christians.
“To me Christmas means eggnog lattes and gingerbread cake at Starbucks and hanging out with my Jewish family at the movies,” she says. “I also just got an awesome winter wonderland snow globe at Target. Sure, it plays that sucky ‘Santa's coming to town' song, but it's cool.”
Mathilda says she's “a reasonable and tolerant person.”
“My problem is that sentiment isn't returned—like the boycott of The Golden Compass. That pisses me off. Pledging allegiance to one nation ‘under God' pisses me off. That my right to choose an abortion is constantly being questioned and threatened pisses me off. That when I travel outside of the country, everyone I meet assumes I'm a fucking moron God-fearing, self-righteous American pig pisses me off. Nancy Grace, Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh and Arlen Specter piss me off. Christian bumper stickers piss me off. I could go on.”
There have probably always been thousands of Mathildas in Philadelphia, and for generations most of them have suffered in silence. All that's really changed, thanks to the rise of the new atheism, is that now they can speak out without fear of losing their job or being shouted down. Or murdered.
All those things still happen, though. Margaret Downey has files full of discrimination stories. Sometimes it's an executive sidelined for having a nonreligious relative. And sometimes it's more serious.Like the atheist soldiers in Iraq who've received death threats and were told they were a disgrace to America by a senior officer. Like in June 2004 when Christian Eagle Scout Arthur Shelton killed his roommate Larry Hooper because he didn't believe in God.
In Margaret Downey's Chester County home two Freethought Society veterans with awesomely biblical names—Bill Wisdom and Mike Judge—help make decorations for the tree of knowledge.
The ground is shaking, says the 55-year-old Judge: “A few years ago the Atheists Alliance International conference in Tampa was attended by 250 people. This year in Washington we got 500—with 600 on the waiting list.”
Seventy-three-year-old retired Temple philosophy professor Bill Wisdom—a former born-again Christian who's been an atheist for 50 years—says he's never seen anything like it.
“We've had one author with the public's ear before. Two or three even. But four or five like now? Is it a blip? No. I think we've reached critical mass.”
In Philadelphia alone there's the Freethought Society, the Humanist Association of Greater Philadelphia, the Ethical Society, the Philadelphia Association for Critical Thinking, the 100-member First Church of Atheism and a bunch of internationally known troublemakers who call themselves the Rational Response Squad (RRS).
Just don't assume they all get along. Hang out with atheists long enough, and you'll hear agnostics referred to as “idiot atheists” and “chickenshit fence-sitters.”
Last year when Richard Dawkins spoke to an enormous spillover crowd at the Free Library, T-shirts with right-wing libertarian slogans were abundant. At other Philly area atheist events, most of the cars in the parking lots seem to sport Kerry/Edwards stickers.
It was Dawkins who wrote that organizing atheists is “like herding cats.” (“I wish people would stop saying that,” tuts Downey, atheist cat-wrangler extraordinaire.)
The atheists of the Philadelphia Atheists Meetup Group, meeting in the Cosí on 12th and Walnut in late November, might be mistaken at first glance for anarchists or some other species of modern urban troublemaker. They have a look of healthily dissatisfied, computer-savvy malevolence about them. They look like they probably don't spend too long coordinating their wardrobes.
One woman stands out. She has short red hair, elfin features, a tight low-cut top and large breasts. This is Kelly O'Connor. She works as a dancer when she's not bashing out passionate and witty articles about the pope for the hugely popular website of Philadelphia's notorious Rational Response Squad.
Last December the RRS issued its Blasphemy Challenge. Claiming that the one absolutely unforgivable sin in Christian theology is to deny the Holy Ghost, they challenged the world's atheists to do just that by posting their denials on YouTube.
Thousands did, provoking a backlash from angry and disgusted Christians—and a perfect storm of publicity.
“We got a lot of death threats,” says Brian Sapient, O'Connor's intense, energetic companion. “We called in the FBI.”
Sapient, impatient with listeners who can't keep up, hammers out statistics, statements and questions. He describes himself as “a self-educated socratic philosopher” and “OCD/ADHD.” You'd never mistake him for the always smiling, always polite Margaret Downey.
The RRS is something new. Some of the urgent, angry youthful energy that in the '60s and '70s might have found expression in the antiwar movement, civil rights or punk seems to be finding voice in the spikier end of the new atheism, alarming grownups and moderates on both sides of the religious divide.
But Downey doesn't have a bad word to say about the RRS, nor they about her. Both are too aware just how powerful and capable of real harm their mutual enemy still is to waste time squabbling over turf or tactics.
Throughout American history atheists have been discriminated against and persecuted. It's been that way since the beginning. The hardcore of the founding fathers were deists. They believed in a creator God, but thought the Bible and other holy texts were childish nonsense.
George Washington—first president of a republic swarming with followers of every bickering, bigoted, nit-picking sect the Christian mind could come up with—wisely kept his antireligious opinions quiet, and ended up being worshipped as something of a god himself.
Philadelphia's Thomas Paine—the revolution's great propagandist—wrote Common Sense, a blistering attack on the absurdity of regarding the Bible as anything other than bad history on great drugs. For this sin of intellectual honesty he was physically and verbally assaulted, libeled, slandered and, but for the efforts of America's atheists and freethinkers, would've been written out of American history entirely. To this day, thanks to Christian opposition, there's no statue of Paine in Philadelphia.
Last March Congressman Pete Stark from California came out as an “nontheist,” stating he had no “God belief.” He's the first open atheist member of Congress. The Secular Coalition for America estimates there are at least 50 other congresspeople still in the closet.
That could change.
“At the moment the Republicans and the Democrats are mired in the fight for the religious vote and ignoring the secular vote,” says Barry Greenstein, a 22-year-old bioanthropology major and the interim vice president of the 35-member Temple University Secular Society.
“And there are a lot of us, a lot more than people think. A lot more. Most of us are still keeping quiet about it.”
And that could change too.
“We've got a lot to offer, and we've been banging on the door for too long,” says Margaret Downey. “All we're asking for is a place at the table.”
Steven Wells (swells@philadelphiaweekly.com) is PW's arts and entertainment editor.
Photographs by Albert Yee
STORY ORIGINALLY POSTED ON THIS PAGE OF PHILADELPHIA WEEKLY.
I'm the editor of Secular Nation magazine. In our Vol 11, Number 4 edition, I included a nice reprinted article written by the Editorial Staff. I obtained their permission to reprint the article, originally published in the February 7, 2007 edition of Philadelphia Weekly. I didn't think about posting the article online, thus I only obtained permission for a print reprint. They asked for, and I paid $30.
Here is the text of the article:
Margaret Downey, Wonder Woman
by Philadelphia Weekly Editorial Staff
(reprinted by permission of the Philadelphia Weekly)
Who's that woman dressed in Colonial clobber clattering around City Hall? It's godless she-devil Margaret Downey, the woman who once sued the Boy Scouts of America for discriminating against atheists during her crusade to win rabble-rousing Philadelphian revolutionary Thomas Paine the recognition he deserves. Wait, crusade is totally the wrong word. When Downey was four, she tore the head off her talking doll to learn how it worked.
Nowadays she regularly but (alas) only metaphorically tears the head off the freedom-hating, truth-despising, woman-loathing Christian and Taliban scumbags who want to turn this country into Afghanistan with strip malls. Flirtatious, saucy and never less than impeccably dressed, Downey is an atheist/feminist/anti-racist/author/publisher/writer and all-around super righteous wonder woman.
Visit any culture-war battlefield, and you'll find her on the right side of the barricades, glammed up to the nines, taking chauvinist names and kicking bigot ass. Atheist; freethinker; defender of the Constitution; free-speech activist; president of Atheists Alliance International; founder of the Freethought Society of Greater Philadelphia, the Anti-Discrimination Support Network and the Thomas Paine Memorial Committee; board member of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, the Humanist Institute and the Thomas Paine National Historical Association; and advisory board member of the Robert Green Ingersoll Museum. Phew. Is that enough?
Are you in love with Margaret Downey as much as I am? You should be. She's the best of us. (Steven Wells)
Dwain Deets
By DowneyRottweiler - Posted on October 16th, 2007

This photo/drawing of Margaret was done for an article in the newsletter by Atheists For Human Rights.
Margaret Downey at the Amazing Meeting 2005. With an introduction by Phil Plait, the Bad Astronomer.
Originally posted on YouTube by Ryokibin, who has a very nice write-up of Margaret's appearance on Fox news.
Atheist Margaret Downey verse Father Johnathan Morris. Of course this being on Fox with Morris, it is a one sided fight. The whole theme is "Atheist bad, Christan good"
Just because someone is not religious does not mean they do not have the same rights as you. I believe Father Morris misses that point a few times. He keeps trying to argue the point, this is Christmas time this is our time not yours, in going so far as to say, that all religions that celebrate any festivity during this time are celebrating the birth of Christ.
Now I am pretty sure the Father is not that misguided, or uneducated in the fact that other religions are not celebrating the birth of Christ. The Winter Solstice dates back as far as the Neolithic period, some 11,000 to 8,500 years before the birth of Christ.
To try to claim The Winter Solstice for just Christianity, well the good Father might want to brush up on his Theology, it is quite rusty it would seem.
But faux in their infinite wisdom not only showed how far from "Fair and Balanced" they are. They actually give the last word to Father Morris, while they sit their and praise his great argument against the atheist.
Ah, you would think that would have been enough for faux, but no! When answer emails at the end of the show in responce to the exchange, they bring Father Morris back, alone! From this point on they refer to Margaret Downey as "The Atheist"
The Tree of Knowledge actually finds it's place in most all religions in some fashion or another. In Judaism, Tree of Conscience, In Buddhism, The Bodhi tree. In Hinduism, The Tree of Jiva and Atman. Basically in every religion there is a Tree of knowledge in some form, hence why the atheist would choose such a symbol. One that all religions see as the same, on a time all religions celebrate.
It makes a lot more sense then Fauxs' war on Christmas view. Then again the leader of the war on Christmas is Bill'O who seems to think Christ was born 5000 years ago...
The Father rants at the end that atheist don't have the gift of faith. To the tune of Atheist need saved, and then they can worry about celebrating Christmas. Urgh who knows if thats what he said, my brain was too fried at that point to grasp what the heck he was talking about.
LN: The controversy over President Clinton's involvement with former White House intern Monica Lewinsky and the deception surrounding the affair has led to a lot of talk about morality on Sunday morning TV. Not so much on the televised prayer services and sermons that have long been part of Sunday fare, but on the weekly talk shows; and the moral musings are not confined to Sunday morning. Words like sin and repentance have become part of the journalistic and political lexicon of the nation. President Clinton has fed into all this by attending church services with his wife, Hillary, asking forgiveness from a group of clergy at the National Prayer Breakfast and meeting regularly with spiritual advisors at the White House.
Regardless of where they stand politically, all this must be off-putting to at least one group of Americans-atheists. For atheists this is certainly a high-profile, but by no means singular, example of the way our society frequently adopts the language and symbolism of religion in debates that they view as strictly secular. How do atheists react when a national debate on morality takes on religious overtones? How would atheists frame the moral issues involved? Is it ever appropriate to hear religious views in public debates? Atheism is the topic today on talk of the nation. Joining me this hour are: Dr. Timothy Gorski, he's pastor of the North Texas Church of Freethought; Margaret Downey, President of the Anti-Discrimination Support Network and President of the Freethought Society of Greater Pennsylvania; and David Silverman, director of the New Jersey State office of the American Atheists. Welcome to all of you.
All: Thank you
LN: Our number here in Washington is 1-800-989-8255, that's 1-800-989-TALK. I'd like to start out-I know that as with all groups of people it is dangerous to assume that all atheists think alike. In fact I think they probably all more than any group think individually. So, let me start out by asking each of you what is your take on the discussion that's currently surrounding the White House scandal? Does it seem to you that the tone of the debate has at times been too religious? And let me start out by asking you, Margaret, what's your take on that?
MD: Well I feel that the human animal, human beings, has a basis for morality, not because religion dictates it, but because human beings need to interact with other human beings and form an ethical paradigm where we know what's right and wrong. We understand ethics through not a biblical knowledge, but through common sense.
LN: OK and with regard to what's going on right now in terms of the Clinton scandal and sort of the religious language which has accompanied that, do you have any take on that at all?
MD: Well people tend to use religious language simply because they are used to using religious language. I feel that morality and ethical behavior actually comes from your conscience and when you act in the duty to be ethically conscientious you don't tend to have a moral problem, your moral compass is really within you and the English language is inundated with religious terminology.
LN: Dr. Gorski, do you think that this is particularly true in our American society, that religious language, religious symbols are very dominant? And specifically in what we're going through now as a nation?
TG: Well I think the theological underpinnings of morality that are claimed by many really serve as a proxy for what really ought to be discussed and that is what the basis of morality is in terms of our responsibility to ourselves and to each other, not only in situations where people are married and have certain expectations of each other but in government where people have expectations of our leaders and these kinds of issues. In other words, I am agreeing with Margaret, you know it arrives out of common sense and it arrives out of a process of thinking. Human beings are, yes we're human animals, but at the same time, we're not fish that swim or birds that fly. We are human beings which means we think and we choose, and they are the most important things that we can do.
LN: I guess I'm wondering what-you know-what-how does an atheist feel when they hear their president talking about the need to atone for his sins when he is talking about what seems to be a situation that is purely secular. I mean what is your reaction when you hear the president using that kind of language?
TG: Well my take on this particular item is just that I hear the president talking all in terms of it being him, him, him, him, and me, me, me, instead of looking at his responsibilities to others. It's not just one thing to be forgiven, it's a matter of looking at what's been done and now how can we repair or try to restore people's expectations that we can continue to deal with him?
LN: David Silverman, what's your take on this?
DS: Well, I see that there's a sad link between morality and religion in this country and I see it as a obviously as a false link, and I see it when the president has done this and he has committed this act of falsehood to his wife he goes and he takes the ministers into his, into the White House in a very, very public forum, and he does that not in an attempt to get religious guidance but really to play along with the falsehood that religion and morality are linked. Now I don't have any problem with the president seeing his ministers whenever he wants to. The man is an American citizen. He has the right to see whatever preacher he wants. But, he is doing it specifically because he wants to look moral, which is wrong. If he wants to look moral, he can admit to his problems and move on from there.
LN: So in terms of the sort of the trappings, that is this idea that he is going to be meeting with spiritual advisors, that's not something in and of itself that-or that he appear before a group of clergy at the National Prayer Breakfast and spoke about this-that in itself doesn't bother you, you are saying?
DS: Well, I ëm not exactly fond of the fact that he is appearing before a National Prayer Breakfast on American time. I'm just saying that as an American citizen he has the right to see his own clergy. The problem is when he is seeing his own clergy in public in a very, very big and obvious attempt to say hey look at me. I'm really a moral guy. That's what he is doing. This is not an attempt by the president to atone for his sins so much as it for him to save his butt and he's doing so by playing along with the religious right's assertion that morality and religion are linked, and that is not the case.
LN: For many people, though, many people base their ideas about morality in their religious beliefs. This just happens to be the case. You don't, but in many people's minds religion and morality is linked.
DS: And it's a false linkage. You'd be surprised how often people say ëOh you're an atheist, therefore you have no morals, because you don't have some supreme being watching over you ready to zap you down with a lightening bolt the second that you sin.' This is a fallacy-you know it's been perpetrated by the religious right in order to make religion more palatable. And to make atheism less palatable. But that is an individual's choice.
MD: The atheist...
TG: I agree with that. I agree completely with that
MD: The atheist community
LN: Go ahead Margaret.
MD: The atheist community has many, many heros that we can hold up for our children as good examples... All the women who were involved in the women's suffrage. All of the people, the heros involved in desegregation efforts. We have many heros that are not necessarily attached to a Bible. They are not religious figures. That we can find moral guidance by telling true stories and it serves as a good example to our children and the ethical choices that we have in our own lives.
LN: All this raises in my own mind the question of what it's like to be an atheist in this country. And before we go to the phones I would like to talk to each of you about that a little bit. I mean, Margaret, were you raised in a religious household and then you became an atheist, or you chose this for yourself, or were you raised in an atheist household. I mean how did you come to atheism?
MD: Well, everyone is born an atheist. They are indoctrinated by their family who they live with, what they are involved in, and I have always rejected any type of story that doesn't carry weight. I've always asked a lot of questions. Tradition has always been something I question. Authority has always been something I question. Revelation, of course, I want scientific evidence rather than someone just telling me that something is so. And this critical thinking I think is just a part of me. I think many, many people have critical thinking skills, but they are afraid to apply them. They are in a safe little cocoon by not asking too many questions about tradition, authority or revelation.
LN: Does being an atheist, do you feel, frequently put you in the role of being an outsider in your own society?
MD: Oh, definitely. Whenever there is public prayer and I feel like I'm being pushed to identify myself as a religious person and be part of the majority, it makes a person feel very inadequate and very lonely. I always think that neutrality is the best policy because you don't insult anyone in that way. You don't insult the Muslim community by having a Christian prayer. You don't insult the Jewish community, and of course you don't insult the non-theist community when you adopt a form of neutrality.
LN: Dr. Gorski, I'm interested-Margaret just mentioned, it sounds like she's saying it can be lonely out there being an atheist, and you call yourself a pastor of a Church of Freethought and I'm just curious, first of all, why you use those terms which are thought to be religious: pastor and church, and why you felt the need to bring together a congregation of people who think alike?
TG: Well primarily for the reasons that Margaret just pointed out. There's no reason why just because someone is an atheist which is merely an adjective which means you don't believe in god. It doesn't say what other things you don't believe in and it doesn't say what you do believe in. And so, there's no reason atheists have to do without the community, the mutual support, the discussion and help from others in terms of sorting through some of these big questions about life. How to meet its challenges and opportunities, how to raise our children, how to be happy at work. All of these kinds of things. The North Texas Church of Freethought is a church in every sense of the word, except instead of the religion of belief, this is a religion of thinking.
LN: Has the scandal at the White House come up at your church? Do you give sermons. Do you talk about it? How does it work?
TG: Well actually I wrote about this in the church bulletin the month before last and my main point was just to point out that there are many issues involved here concerning Mr. Clinton's responsibilities to his wife, to the due process of law, the Paula Jones lawsuit, and to his constituents and so forth. It's really not something you can sum up and the other thing is we don't at our church try to tell people what to believe or how to vote politically. We feel that they are smart enough to figure all of that out on their own and what we're really after is to talk about these larger issues. And parenthetically I'm just going to agree with my colleague from American Atheists and Margaret, too, that many times all of this religious-And let's be clear of what we're talking about. We're talking about theology. It serves as a way to distract attention from the real moral issues. The problem with someone saying ëOh I've sinned and I'm talking to my god' is it goes completely around anything that anybody has any reference to in real life. We're talking about spirits and immaterial essences and what does that have to do with hurting people or lying and really being not true to yourself and others?
LN: All right, we're discussing atheism today on talk of the nation. My guests today are Timothy Gorski. He's the pastor of the North Texas Church of Freethought. Margaret Downey is president of the Anti-Discrimination Support Network; and David Silverman is the director of the New Jersey State Office of American Atheists, Inc. The number here at talk of the Nation is 1-800-989-TALK. And we are going to go to the phones now. Jim, in Phoenix, Arizona. Hello.
Jim: Yes, one of the things that most theologians perpetrate on society is the concept that American was founded on the freedom of religion. And I wonder if maybe we should be moving towards freedom from religion. And I'd be curious as to your guests' thoughts on that.
MD: I have a thought on that.
LN: I would guess they would agree with you, if I were a guessing person. [chuckles]
MD: Well, freedom from religion is actually freedom to choose your own religion, so you're opening up an avenue where when you are not dictated to what is the popular or the majority religion you have rights, you have freedom to choose, and there's nothing more beautiful in life than having freedom to choose.
DS: I think if I can jump in, freedom from religion is a subset of freedom of religion. It's already included in the Constitution, and it is already included in that which our forefathers originally meant. What the problem is, is that freedom of religion is now becoming freedom to belong to the majority religion. And, that's the problem, where atheism is being subjugated as a non-choice in today's society. If you're asking me whether we should be moving toward an atheistic mandated society, I would say no. We should not be in a situation where people are forced to be atheists or forced to be anything. What we are advocating at American Atheists is that people should be allowed to make their choice completely by themselves without any pressure from society, without any pressure from government, and without the government telling them which way is right and which way is wrong.
LN: Now it's interesting. Because I think that if you're going to look at the majority opinion out there, a lot of people would view atheists as sometimes, might view them as trouble makers, might say they're making mountains out of molehills, they take on what are sort of sacred cows, I mean they take on some issues, let's say like nativity scenes and the reaction among many people is ëWhat is the big deal with a nativity scene?' ëWhy do they go to court over these kinds of things?' ëWhy do they make so much trouble?' And ëThey are trying to impose their beliefs on us.'
TG: Well I think as any religious minority though, if I may interrupt, is going to be concerned with the co-opting of government, the organs of government, in the service of one particular religion. The whole point of freedom of religion is that freedom of religion is freedom from everyone else's religion. Now, I don't agree that we should be able to be out in society and never see the religious symbols of other people and other beliefs or ways of looking at things. But certainly the government, the organs of government, ought to take no part in either encouraging or discouraging or in any way taking sides on religious questions.
MD: Well then, out of chaos comes harmony, so perhaps what we can add to society is a dialog, a conversation, a communication that enables society to establish respect for every human being, rather than just without thinking pushing religion onto anybody in every place.
DS: Lynne, if I could just make one more comment.
LN: That is David Silverman, is that right?
DS: Yeah, David Silverman. We're not out to get nativity scenes and things like that. We're out to get them off public land. There's a big difference between American Atheists being against nativity scenes and against nativity scenes on public land funded by public property, maintained by public workers and no other religious or non-religious displays available. We have no problems whatsoever, with an individual displaying his religious convictions on his own private property, with his own private funds. It's a Constitutional right and we will never fight that.
LN: But I wonder if you-you do know and you do understand at all why it is people react so strongly to those kinds of battles that take place.
Yeah, go ahead
DS: It's a tough situation because, the religious right is really afraid of atheism, in my opinion. The religious right are afraid of people who can say who can you know really turn people off of religion with just more than a conversation. And, they will do anything that they can to discredit us and one of the things they do is exaggerate the truth. We fight to say, ëHey, this town can't support Christianity by putting this big creche on the public land and they say we are against nativity scenes. We say ëHey, you can't force children to pray in school.' And they say ëWe have teams out to outlaw anyone who prays in school or even reads a Bible on the bus.' It's all legal. So basically what they are doing is they're mounting an attack on us and the people do react. The people do listen to them. And, that makes atheists the victim.
LN: I just want to ask you also a little bit about using the religious right sort of equating all religious people with the religious right, which it seems to be you're almost doing when you refer to .....
DS: No, it's actually, it's something that I go out of my way not to do. I think that the religious majority is not the religious right and that's why I specify the religious right out there. The religious majority are believing Christians and Jews and Moslems who really don't want to bother with how I believe and really don't want to bother with forcing anybody to do anything that's against their will. It is a very, very vocal minority with a lot of money that's doing most of the unconstitutional stuff out there and making regular Christians and Jews and Moslems look bad.
LN: OK. Martha, you're on Talk of the Nation. Hello.
Martha: Hello
LN: Hi Martha?
Martha: Yeah
LN: You're on talk of the Nation.
Martha: OK My question is why is it offensive to atheists to have a conversation modeled around religion. I have no doubt that Clinton used the prayer breakfast as a ploy to make himself look good. I have my doubts about you know, his sincerity, but he is a citizen. Why does he not have the right to express his beliefs. I don't see how that he's forcing someone to believe against his will.
DS: I would agree with that. I've already stated that the president has the right to believe as he wishes. We only object-I personally only object-when he uses his religion as an ëOh, look at me, I'm such a nice moral guy.' When in fact it doesn't really say anything about his morals at all. I don't care what he practices. It's none of my business.
LN: Margaret Downey or Timothy Gorski, either one of you? Would you like to say ...
TG: Well, I want to jump in here to say that I think it needs to be appreciated that a Prayer Breakfast in and of itself promotes a certain theological kind of a framework. Not everyone thinks that you go and pray to god to solve all of your little problems. You know, some atheists who are still believers in the supernatural-Buddhists for instance-don't pray to god. Buddhists do not worship Buddha, contrary to what Christians often say. So, the very idea of a prayer breakfast is really an unconstitutional endorsement of a certain religious point of view.
MD: I wouldn't feel so bad about the prayer breakfast if we had a
national day of Freethought that would counter balance the National Day
of Prayer, but
DS: That would be a great idea.
MD: Thank you.
DS: I love that idea.
TG: It's October 12th, folks, October 12 is Freethought Day.
LN: Oh wait. Who designated that? [chuckles]
MD: Well, we've been... It's sort of an ongoing campaign.
LN: Oh I see, OK
TG: Well amongst ourselves, that is one of the days that we really attach a special importance to because on October 12, 1692 Governor William Phipps of Massachusetts barred the introduction or use of spectral evidence in court, and that's what put an end to the Salem Witch Trials. Now of course Governor Phipps was not a Christian-was not an atheist. None of the people involved were atheists or freethinkers, but we celebrate that day as one of the watersheds of human history because people acted rationally, because they had to.
MD: Yes, they placed reason over superstition and myth.
LN: Margaret did you want to finish your point, the point you were making about the idea of a prayer breakfast? You were starting to say something here?
MD: Oh, the national day of prayer. You know I just see that there are too many situations where atheists do not have a place at the table. We have a voice. We have a voice of reason. We do not have the opportunity to deliver that voice on a national basis or even to the government. We are really starving for a place to interact and communicate with out theistic friends, so I would hope that out of all of this that there would be some type of dialogue beginning that could include the atheist community.
LN: Margaret Downey is the president of the Freethought Society of Greater Pennsylvania. I'm Lynn Neery and you're listening to Talk of the Nation on NPR News. We're discussing atheism today on Talk of the Nation and the number here is 1-800-989-TALK if your would like to join us give us a call. Dan, in Madison, Wisconsin. Hello, Dan. Welcome to Talk of the Nation.
Dan [Barker]: Hey, I'm glad I caught this show. What a great opportunity to hear a show about freethinkers. I'm an ordained minister, an evangelical minister, but I don't practice anymore because after studying I gave it up. I became an atheist, and it's quite a story. In fact I know a lot of others like that who realized like some of your guests have said that morality and religion are not connected. And it's also interesting that you mentioned freedom from religion, because I work with a national Freedom From Religion Foundation here in Madison, Wisconsin, and we do take law suits against nativity scenes and religion in government and all that. But this whole topic about sin and atonement and redemption that I used to preach and that our president and many others are using as sort of an image, I realized a long time ago that sin really doesn't really mean anything. Sin is supposedly offending some deity, some ghost, somebody outside whose got his feelings hurt. What really matters in the real world, in the natural world, is harm. What actions cause harm to others and ourselves and what actions don't? And that's the essence of morality. It doesn't matter what god you are offending or what religious rules your are breaking. If your actions cause unnecessary harm and they can be avoided, then that is wrong, by definition. It's not cosmic. It's not some big moral precept. A moral person strives to live in a way that minimizes that harm and for many of us atheists and agnostics we also live in a way to enhance beauty and enhance life and we call that compassion and positive ethics. In fact we notice that a lot of people tend to hide behind religion. Religion has been a source of much evil. Most Christians are good people in this country, but you can see historically that religion has been a cloak for evil. So, I'm really glad you had a show like this to bring up some of these issues that really get talked about.
LN: Let me ask you something, Dan, because what you are talking about that harm as opposed to sin-don't harm another person-compassion. These are ideas that are encompassed in many religious beliefs and promoted by many religions. What's wrong with finding those values through religion?
Dan: Well, if you need that. If you're the kind of person who needs that, then fine. I'm all for it. If your religion makes you a better person, then who am I to criticize that? In the end result it's not what you think, it's what you do that makes the difference. It doesn't matter if I think there's a god or not if my life is good. But we have noticed that, historically, for example, people who base their morality on the Bible-harm-gets twisted. Suddenly it becomes OK to kill in the name of a god. And we've seen through religions-through history-that people have done horrible things because by definition it becomes good in the name of the god. For example the old testament.
LN: OK Dan, I think we unfortunately we are going to have to interrupt you because we are running out of time.
[station break] [stuff about Ray Suarez in Norfolk, Virginia Thursday deleted]
LN: Today we are talking with a group of atheists for their take on the recent national discussion on morality, forgiveness and redemption. My guests are Timothy Gorski, pastor of the North Texas Church of Freethought, Margaret Downey, president of the Anti-Discrimination Support Network and president of the Freethought Society of Greater Pennsylvania; and David Silver, director of the New Jersey State Office of American Atheists, Inc. If you would like to join us our number here in Washington is 1-800-989-8255. That's 1800-989-TALK. And we'll go to the phones now again. Adam in Collegedale, Tennessee. Hello.
Adam: I'm sort of on both sides of the fence here. I agree with your panel on many points, specifically because I am a believer of God and I do agree that some of the greatest threats to a relationship with god are our religious traditions. Thank you. And I think that the Bible, for example, warns against that specifically. If we at least take the definition of Satan being a deceiver being good and love, the warding is that there are those who say they are of god but they are actually of the deceiver, and I really advocate a strong separation between church and state. There are other prophesies, for example, that warn of really the end of all things, the end of opportunity to see god because of the encroachment of church and state. Does that ring true with any of your panel? Does it sound familiar.
LN: One thing I am curious about just to add on to Adam's question is, is how often you do in fact get support from religious people in many of your views, particularly on issues relating to the separation of church and state?
DS: Well, significantly often, frankly. I think Dan goes to show you that what I said before is true that the religious right, those who would see the church and state melded, are a minority, and the majority of believers, like the caller, are... they can believe what they want, but they are not going to sit here and force us to do it. So, basically, we get a lot of support from believers who say, ëWell, you know I completely disagree with you but I will stand up for your right to say or think what you wish. I mean it's your brain, you can think what you wish.'
MD: I would refer Adam to a Bible passage, actually, it is Matthew 22 [Matthew 6:6 ëBut thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet ... '] Jesus actually recommends that you pray in your closet as a true believer and only hypocrites pray in the streets. So, this is exactly the type of philosophy that most Christians adopt but it's the religious right that tend to go on the rampage in the public forum to demand not only their religion is pushed along and endorsed, but also to enforce that on other people and to push them.
LN: Well, Margaret, it is not only religious conservatives who make their views known on policy issues and in the public forum. I mean, many times-I cover religion for NPR-and many times I am talking with people who are very liberal, politically and theologically, and who feel that they have the right to weigh in on any number of issues.
MD: It almost becomes reactionary.
TG: Let me add here, let me throw in that this whole Bible business is what really gets people confused, I think, because if somebody wants to take one book and say all of what I'm about comes from this and I am going to read this and that into this and that passage, again, that's fine, But to come into the public square where policy decisions are being made that affect everyone and say well this says this in this book and so you all have to do this, to me is ridiculous. It would be like my coming in with Moby Dick and saying well it says this and that, that Captain Ahab went and did this so therefore we have to follow this certain public policy. That's what I think atheism objects to, and other believers, believers of others stripes as well. Believers can't even agree among themselves as to what the Bible means.
LN: Well do you think... do you think any of you that it is ever appropriate for religious views to be part of a public policy discussion, whether they are liberal or conservative?
TG: Let's distinguish between theological and religious, also, because
DS: Right
TG: Because there .. Many atheists harbor very strong moral views and ideas that would otherwise be characterized as religious or spiritual except that we tend to be wary of those terms because they often imply a belief in the supernatural and these kinds of things.
DS: If we are talking about a religious discussion on the part of well we are here to decide the law and we're going to decide the law and one of the factors in that decision is going to be what it says in the Bible, no, that is not appropriate because the Bible does not apply to everybody. If we are talking about your getting in the way of my religious expression by passing a law outlawing Christmas trees, well, then, yeah, I guess that would at least become a factor. But, if we are talking about a moral issue; if we are talking about a law that's going to affect everybody in a locality or a city or a state or a nation, then no. Religion should not be a factor in that decision.
LN: What about if somebody's moral values that are religiously based lead them to oppose an act of war, for instance. I can think of two great movements in the 1960's that had a great deal of religious people involved. One was the civil rights movement. The other was the anti-war movement. I am sure many atheists also were involved. But many religious people were, and it was an expression of their religious beliefs.
TG: Well, the slavery issue is a good an example of that. You had people on both sides of that issue citing the Bible for evidence that they were right. And, that's really the problem. You can pull just about anything you like, just as President Clinton is doing now with semantical kinds of arguments and twisting around. Let's stop referring to these kinds of things that can be misinterpreted. Let's talk about reality. Let's talk about the world we all share. That's the kind of world we ought to be able to agree on. We shouldn't be arguing over whether vanilla or chocolate tastes the best. We certainly can talk about the content of butter fat and whether or not that may be a risk for atherosclerosis, and things of that nature.
LN: You know...
DS: I'm getting hungry.
[chuckles}
TG: There you go.
MD: Lynne, the fact is that atheists always have had to work very hard to have their beliefs recognized and respected. In the 70's we had an atheists who had to actually go to the supreme court as a conscientious objector and he valued life and could not take life away not because it was his religion, but because he was an atheist. And, having to take your claim that you value life not on a religious tenet needed to be settled at the U.S. Supreme Court.
LN: OK Let's go to another caller. Lynne in Limonia, I believe it is, Iowa? Hello Lynne? [There's static on the line with this caller.]
Lynne: The [static] that I can a specific thing on that last point is that the Supreme Court actually ruled that if a person had a strong moral conviction equivalent to religious in the traditional belief and objected to all war then they could get the C.O. status. But, a person of religious belief or strong moral views who objected to a specific war would not get the C.O. status. I recall that was the decision. I agree with some things and disagree with others. I don't agree that Clinton is trying to say he is a good moral person. I think he is trying to cue [key? Static] on the views of atonement and forgiveness and to take advantage of that. I don't think a prayer breakfast itself is unconstitutional, but oh my it certainly is favoritism. A day of prayer, I think, is unconstitutional.
TG: Wouldn't you think that favoritism by itself is unconstitutional by definition?
Lynne: I think that it is not .. I think it is a personal favoritism rather than making it a law and making it a law and I don't like the big display of it but I don't think you could get a court case to rule it out. But, I do think that the courts are making a bit of a mistake in allowing prayers at the public state legislature.
MD: Lynne, how would you feel if your tax dollars were going to endorse and support and favor atheism?
Lynne: I am an ecumenical agnostic. That's my general view and I would not want my tax dollars to go for vouchers to send children to private schools or to pay for buses to take them there, things of that sort.
But, if it is a privately financed breakfast, rather than a publicly paid
for chaplain,
MD: Well, we have publicly paid for chaplains opening Congress every single day.
Lynne: I don't like that. I disagree with that. In fact I think that a voluntary prayer breakfast somewhere off campus, so to speak, is a much, is a much ...
LN: Well let me ask you
Lynne: It's about the first amendment. There should be no establishment. That means tax money paying for it.
LN: What do you think of using that forum... the president using that
forum to
Lynne: I think it's just old politics because the vast majority of people have sentiments that are pro-Christian or pro-religious and it is a way of mobilizing and it's been done by people for so long that there going to do it. I don't see it as being an issue that one could go to court on. I think it is something that one can be uncomfortable with, but not specifically a violation of the First Amendment, but if it were paid for by tax payers' money, I would agree with you entirely that it would be unconstitutional.
DS: That's the line. That's the line that has to be drawing. Whether or not it is paid for by tax payer dollars.
Lynne: Yes indeed. In fact, maybe Clinton should pay for all their breakfasts and it shouldn't be funded by the tax payers [ ] . I'll go that far with you. OK?
LN: I think we're going to move on to another
Lynne: I want to say that there is not always the belief in choice. That a person like myself is a determinist and an agnostic and does not believe that even the people who believe necessarily have the choice. They're brought up to believe this way by their parents. They're brought up to believe by their society. Some people are brought up to have rational minds because they have good education. Some people have rational minds because they have brilliant genetic backgrounds and other people do not have and cannot reason well. So, even the question of choice is a debatable one, I think, between people of different views.
LN: Thank you very much.
DS [?]: Interesting theory
LN: That is an interesting point. I wonder how you react to that?
TG: Well one thing I will throw in here about this whole forgiveness and choices business is that you know if you were emotionally invested in some act like President Clinton has been engaged in and you bear him some ill will-you're mad at him-you are angry-that forgiveness means setting aside those kinds of things. Now I think the vast majority of Americans were never very emotionally invested in all of this anyway, so that's why there's not been some huge call to punish the man. But, I think the same is true of Jeff Dahmer and gee, anyone who does any kind of wrong doing. We should be past all of this forgiveness thing. Granted, if you are married to someone and they cheat on you, how can you control those emotions? You need to have some forgiveness. But, the real question is what can we do in order to perpetuate a system and maintain its viability. How can we keep ourselves safe from Jeff Dahmer? How can we have leadership that we can look up to and believe in again? That's really the real question.
MD: In other words, we need to overcome evil or sin. We must first understand it, from which it came. Psychological? Evolution? Genes. Whatever it is we can build to find the answers.
TG: Let's just take rational steps to deal with it.
LN: I have an email here from a listener I believe in Buffalo, New York. It is fairly long so I am going to try and just real a little bit of it and get the gist of it. It says: ëI was in court recently and was asked to swear to god that I would tell the truth. In New York no one is permitted to swear or affirm without invoking god. I asked to be permitted to do that. Permission was granted but, the judge first remonstrated with me that I still had to tell the truth. He made it clear that he did not trust a person who chose not to swear to god. Um. That's an interesting story and it sort of raises again the question I raised earlier.
DS: By definition that judge has committed an act of discrimination and should be removed from the bench. Period.
TG: I agree. I agree.
LN: Mmm hmm.
MD: We have all kinds of things happening to us as atheists on an every day basis. We are forced as atheists to pass religious tracts. Our money ëIn god we trust' we have to do business with currency and here we are passing on a religious tract. We are expected ...
DS: And isn't it a sad .. OK .. Sorry
MD: Go ahead
DS: I was just about to say ... oh please call me Dave. My father is Mr. Silverman. Isn't it a sad statement to say that in this society we have to have a threat of recrimination in order to believe that somebody is telling the truth? Isn't it a sad statement to say that ëif you don't believe that god is going to believe you to permanent hell or strike you down with a lightning bolt, that I can't trust you to tell the truth or even be a nice person?' I think the fact that the emailer went through this... the fact that you have to swear to god in public courts is by definition a violation of the separation of church and state. The fact that he had to get a special request by signifying himself out as an atheist is by definition a violation of the separation of church and state and I think that any sort of extra warning given by the judge is a grotesque violation of separation of church and state. I think it is a crime and I think that this happens way too often. And I think the result is and this is the saddest result of all: that most atheists will not put themselves through that. Most atheists will say: ëyeah, yeah, yeah, I swear to god.' And first of all they don't mean it, and second of all they are closeted. They count themselves in the one of the many religious people simply for the fact that they don't want to go through what the email sender said. I think it's disgraceful. That's one of the things that American Atheists is fighting with all of our energy.
LN: David Silverman is the director of the New Jersey State Office of American Atheists, Inc. I'm Lynne Neery and you are listening to talk of the nation from NPR News. You've just raised a question that I have in the back of my mind which is: Are a lot of atheists in the closet? Do a lot of people not want to talk publicly about the fact that they are atheists because they are concerned about the effect it would have?
DS: Tons
MD: Lynne, First of all I would like to qualify something. Freethinkers are filling the pews on religious holidays and it's because society demands of them to fit into a certain type of morally conscious person and the only way that they can exhibit it is to go to church. And actually, freethinkers are people who would question tradition and revelation and question authority. What I would like to put forth is that if you are a freethinker there are many, many organizations that you can turn to rather than the church. American Humanist Association, you have the Council for Secular Humanism. There's African Americans for Humanism. And so many times people feel lonely, alone, they don't want to speak out and question. But, I am here to tell you that there are people like me, like Mr. Gorski, like David Silverman, and we are here to support you.
LN: We are discussing atheism on Talk of the Nation. Michael in Fort Lauderdale, Hello. Welcome to Talk of the Nation.
Michael: Yes, you had an earlier caller who talked about freedom from religion versus freedom of religion. And it's freedom of religion. And, I get annoyed with the religious right that wraps itself in our founding fathers, you know, belief in god and if they really looked at history, our founding fathers were the greatest liberal minds of their time. If they were conservatives, we would all be British. We would have a king. We'd belong to the Church of England. The difference was that they realized it doesn't matter-atheist, Buddhist, Christian, when we all die, we are going to wind up in the same spot, and they trusted their got, whoever it happened to be, to put them there, and they were adamant about freedom of religion. The lady was just talking about the freethinkers. Thomas Jefferson is one of the original freethinkers in this country.
LN: Alright Michael. Let me see if any of our guests would like to respond to that comment.
DS: Well, my co-panelists were talking a little bit about the national day of freethinkers. One of the things that American Atheists is doing in November is called the Proof Positive Party and it is celebrating the signing of the treaty of Tripoli. Now the Treat of Tripoli is-check my dates, but I believe it was 1779, or 1789 rather, and it states under no uncertain terms that America is not founded in Christianity and it is signed by the President John Adams and it was ratified unanimously by the Senate. It think he points at a very good point that the founding fathers, some of them were Christians, some of them were Deists, and some of them were atheists. Thomas Jefferson being a staunch, main supporter of the separation of church and state. And, I think if they had done anything except go way out of their way to separate church and state we would have a religious society.
LN: Tom in Salt Lake City. Hello, welcome to Talk of the Nation.
Tom: I guess I have a comment. It's very difficult to have any kind of discussion right now about President Clinton and all this impeachment stuff with religious or slash or morality type people. And discuss Clinton's record down to the budget or whatever. They're possessed with morality, religion. Of course, I am in Salt Lake City, Utah, maybe that's the problem. But, it seems to be fanatical. Whether I'm an atheist or not is not the issue, but I don't want to discuss the religious issues, the morality issues, in terms of Clinton as a president; I want to discuss him as a governor, and there seems to be no room for that. And, I feel like this is an extreme movement right now that's going on, that's been set up for a decade or so, that we're not seeing.
TG: Can I respond to that?
LN: So you think .. Yes go ahead. Just briefly.
TG: Well what I want to say is that again this goes back to something we said earlier in the hour, and that is there has been this identification of morality with theology to the point where the theological stuff drags down the morality questions. And this is a real problem because all the people have to do is talk theology and it is assumed that they are moral people, and by the same token atheists are often accused of being immoral because they reject theology. And that's simply not true. There are a lot of ways you can get morality besides from some god saying you're going to hell if you don't do what I say. That's not morality. That's just the law of the jungle. That's might makes right. Let's talk about why things are right and why things are wrong.
LN: OK Thanks very much. That's all we have time to talk about today. I want to thank all of you who called and my guests: Timothy Gorski, pastor of the North Texas Church of Freethought. He joined us from member station KERA in Dallas. Margaret Downey is president of the Anti-Discrimination Support Network and president of the Freethought Society of Greater Pennsylvania. She joined us from NPR's New York Bureau. And David Silverman, director of the New Jersey State Office of American Atheists. He joined us from the commercial station WCTC in Somerset, New Jersey.
This is Margaret's personal assistant Christopher. She was on the Lars Larson on October 3rd and did a great job debating with him about atheism. We will be uploading some content from this interview later this week.
03/01/2007
Margaret Downey and Sally Flynn, president and vice president of the Freethought Society of Greater Philadelphia, rebuked the Coatesville city council Monday night. The Society's response came in the wake of the controversial ending to the Feb. 12 meeting. At that session, Schenk delivered a closing prayer at the behest of council president Patsy Ray. Both are ordained ministers.
In prepared remarks, Downey said she was contacted by a Coatesville member of the Society who was offended by the meeting ending in prayer. In addition, the council routinely offers a prayer as part of opening their regular sessions. The Society has 10 members residing in the city. Downey said, "On behalf of that un-named citizen, I wrote a letter to city council president Patsy Ray who called for the prayer, and a letter to councilman Kurt Schenk who delivered the prayer on Feb. 12. In those letters, I asked that Ray and Schenk publicly apologize for their inappropriate activity. I also asked that the city of Coatesville council members adopt a policy of neutrality and secularism when they conduct government business in a public forum."
Downey was attending for two reasons. One to see if an apology was forthcoming. And the second to witness any action that might take place in regards to the adoption of a no-prayer policy. Downey said, "A no-prayer policy would be prudent to guarantee that church and state remain separate, and that you, as city officials, will insure that public meetings will have a secular purpose; will not advance religion; and will not foster excessive entanglement with religion." She added, "Furthermore, I am distressed that Coatesville city council meetings begin with prayer." Continuing, Downey said, "Government meetings without religious references are a show of respect for the beliefs of both the majority and the minority. Invocations, no matter how comforting or traditional, no matter how generic or nondenominational, always exclude someone. "It is very rude to show a blatant disrespect to those who may, in all good conscience, practice a different form of religion or none at all." Downey also quoted Thomas Jefferson, "the clause against establishment of religion by law was intended to erect 'a wall of separation between church and state'."She concluded, "Please adopt a secular neutrality policy as soon as possible."
In her letter to Ray, Downey wrote, "It is not your responsibility to provide spiritual guidance or religious activities to anyone in the council or at meetings."
In the letter sent to Schenk, Downey wrote, "Not only was it inappropriate for city council president Patsy Ray to enlist you to deliver a prayer, it was highly inappropriate for you to deliver it." If Downey was expecting a positive response to her comments, expections fell short. During the comment session, Linda Lavender said, "Ray and Schenk do not change your stance on prayer. Government was ordained by God. I have my thoughts and you have yours. Coatesville needs prayer." Lavender concluded, proclaiming, "I am a Christian." Felicia Seamon noted, "I want to touch base on the topic of prayer. I would pray that the residents of the city don't allow 10 residents to rule us. We need prayer before, during and after meetings." Seamon said she would lead the prayers if council couldn't. For their part, Schenk and Ray were both adamant.
Schenk said, "I will address Miss Downey though I've been advised not to." Schenk then read from the state constitution. He concluded, "My intention was not to offend anyone but I will die to defend my Saviour."Ray said, "I will not apologize. God is the head of my house." At the conclusion of the meeting Downey and Flynn asked Acting Police Chief Julius Canale to escort them to their car.
How does one describe Margaret Downey and do her justice?
The new president of Atheist Alliance International as well as the founder of the Freethought Society of Greater Philadelphia, the Anti-Discrimination Support Network and the Thomas Paine Foundation, Downey is best known for her U.S. Supreme Court case James Dale v. Boy Scouts of America. Protesting the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) requirement of an avowal of a belief in God in order to participate in its programs, Downey filed a lawsuit against the organization in 1991.
While she ultimately lost after nine years of struggle, Downey brought unprecedented attention to the discriminatory practices of the BSA and provided the impetus for others to continue the struggle.
Having withstood such a test of her beliefs (or lack thereof), Downey is uniquely situated to provide fellow freethinking parents with the advice and inspiration necessary to overcome the pressure and prejudice they often face. She (along with Institute for Humanist Studies' Executive Director Matt Cherry) has contributed a chapter to the soon-to-be-released anthology Secular Parenting. In anticipation of the book, she provided Humanist Network News readers with her advice on raising children without religion in an interview I was privileged to conduct with her.
One of the most important aspects Downey stressed was the need for parents to be open to all inquiries from their children. Parents who often consider themselves to be freethinkers on all the "hot" topics –- sex, politics, etc. –- often clam up when asked about a specific aspect of a religious issue or practice. It is understandable that parents may be afraid of making a religion attractive by discussing it and therefore try to avoid doing so; what they must realize is that such silence creates the same phenomenon as that of religion itself –- the forbidden fruit!
Keeping this phenomenon in mind, when the topic of religion is broached, Downey stresses "Never be critical [of the child's interest], and always be supportive of further learning." It is also important for parents to admit when they do not know the answer to a child's question; just because parents do not believe in an omniscient being does not mean they should feel the need to be omniscient themselves! Parents should simply admit that they do not know the answer and either tell the child they will get back to him/her or refer the child to an appropriate learning resource.
Indeed, learning and education are always at the forefront of Downey's mind. She urges parents to provide a library of specially-chosen books that children can peruse when they are ready to explore new ideas. "Children want to learn about new things, not hear them from their parents," she stresses. "Parents should never push an issue or idea upon their children but provide them with the means to do so on their own at their own pace when they feel ready."
When I asked her about the common misperception that religious indoctrination is necessary to inculcate morals in children, Downey countered "Morality is taught by example.... [augmented] by rational discussion of moral and ethical issues." She particularly stressed the need to teach children problem-solving techniques that will allow them to make wise decisions without having to fall back on untested "authorities," religious or otherwise. Parents need to provide the tools that will allow their children to navigate an often ethically-unstable world with the beliefs and values they developed from study and reflection, not from a "revealed" source.
"The claim that religion is necessary for moral development is so alien to me: it reveals an infantile view of morality as just following rules in order to receive rewards and avoid punishments, which is neither moral nor developed in my view!" said Matt Cherry, executive director of the Institute for Humanist Studies.
"I think the Golden Rule is actually very strong in children from a young age: that is why kids so often have the complaint 'it's not fair' when they feel they are not receiving the same treatment as someone else," Cherry said. "Connected to this, I think it also easy to arouse empathy in kids by putting them in the shoes of another person: how would you like it if Hannah pulled your hair like that?"
Like Downey, Cherry and his wife plan to inculcate moral values into their seven-month-old twin daughters by modeling their values as well as by teaching them. "We will give our twins clear rules and show our approval when they follow the rules and correct them when they don't. Wherever possible we will give reasons for the rules, so that the girls will understand the principles underlying the rules. We will use art, storytelling and day-to-day experiences to develop empathy and moral understanding. We also plan to give the girls plenty of opportunities to develop self-confidence and internalize moral principles, rather than just following our rules when they know we are looking."
To teach values, problem-solving techniques and hold rational discussions –- as well as take advantage of Sundays unencumbered by church services –- Downey has a novel approach: instead of worshipping a god at a church, the family can worship each other right at home. While her children lived at home, Downey's Sundays were punctuated by good food, planning for the upcoming week, and of course, a rational and open discussion of whatever was on her children's minds.
What was the result of such a godless upbringing? Appreciative children who have made their own decisions while equipped with the decision-making tools provided by their parents. Downey's daughter, through her own unencumbered research and experiences, decided to embrace religion, while her son remains a freethinker. One of Downey's proudest moments as a mother was when her son, despite being "outed" by the Boy Scouts as the "atheist scout" two weeks before his high school graduation, told her how proud he was of her for her integrity and perseverance, qualities he is sure to carry on into the next generation. As Downey so touchingly stated, "The atheist afterlife isn't 'heaven' but the legacy you leave in the hearts and minds of those you've touched."
Elaine Friedman is the editor of Humanist Network News, the weekly e-zine of the Institute for Humanist Studies.
BALTIMORE- Margaret Downey is president of the Atheist Alliance International, a Web-based group dedicated to defending atheists from what they consider clerical bullying.
Downey convened a conference of atheists in D.C. this weekend, drawing such heavy-hitters as Christopher Hitchens, Richard Dawkins, Samuel Harris and Ayaan Hirsi Ali.
Why do we need an atheist conference?
We bring people together to meet, socialize and exchange ideas. And we also have the goal of educating future leaders of atheism by bringing in student representatives from college campuses and we educate the public at large in an attempt to dispel myths about atheists. It is extremely difficult in the United States and in some parts of the world to dismiss the notion of believing in a supernatural god.
Some people would say that thesecular, if not atheist, mindset, is already too dominant in American culture. How do you respond?
I don’t see that. From the perspective of the Christian community, it looks like sure, it looks like we’re a dominant force. But when you look around the world at the overtly religious countries and the problems they have, it’s obvious that secularism should be dominant. We’re looking at world problems such as fundamentalists who think nothing of flying airplanes into buildings.
Some prominent conservatives — like Leo Strauss and Ayn Rand — have been atheists. So why do so many people associate atheism with liberalism?
It is a liberal mindset. We have conservative as well as liberal secularists. But the entire philosophy is a live-and-let-live mindset.
source: The 3 minute interview Margaret_Downey