Archive for the 'Religion' Category
Tuesday, January 8th, 2008
Dr Evan Harris MP (Lib Dem), Frank Dobson MP (Lab) and David Wilshire MP (Con) have tabled an amendment that would effectively abolish Britain’s archaic blasphemy law. The vote is tomorrow.
From New Humanist:
A letter published in today’s Daily Telegraph makes the case for repealing the law: “As the Law Commission acknowledged in 1985, when it recommended repeal, it is uncertain in scope, but lack of intention is no defence, and the law is unlimited in penalty.
This, together with its chilling effect on free expression and its discriminatory impact, leaves it in clear breach of human rights law. In the end, no one is likely to be convicted under it.”
The letter is signed by a host of honorary associates and distinguished supporters of the Rationalist Association, the BHA and the NSS, including Richard Dawkins, RA President Jonathan Miller, philosopher and regular New Humanist contributor AC Grayling, historian David Starkey and author Philip Pullman. It’s even been signed by former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey, with the letter pointing out that “the Church of England no longer opposes its abolition on principle”.
The NSS point their members and subscribers to www.theyworkforyou.com where you can write to your MP in support of the amendment. The BHA have a specific “Write to your MP” page with a pre-set message about the law. Don’t delay! MPs will vote on the amendment as early as tomorrow.
Posted in Christianity, Civic parity, Law, UK, Politics, Humanists, Free speech, Protestantism, Magazines, Church-state separation, Secularism | No Comments »
Friday, December 21st, 2007
As a special Christmas treat the Brights News Feed has, with ironically Easter-like symbolism, spontaneously risen from the dead.
Despite for a while receiving a growing amount of traffic, the editor withdrew from regular posting almost by accident, and other contributors with similarly busy lives have also failed to satiate your news hunger.
BrightsOnline.net will be undergoing an overhaul in the next few months aimed at making regular management easier for editors, as well as providing more routes for collaboration and contribution from all visitors.
In the meantime, in lieu of a season greet from BrightsOnline.net, here are two thoughtful mid-winter messages, both aimed at the widespread “demonology” which regards secularists as rabidly anti-Christmas, a major theme in the British press this year.
Links to “mid-winter” messages from other secularist figures from anywhere in the world would be welcome (use the comments below).
Posted in Christianity, Brights umbrella, Linkage, Society, Humanists, Online media | No Comments »
Monday, September 10th, 2007
The British government today released a “joint statement” (PDF) with a number of religious groups, essentially touting the view that “faith schools” are a social good and heralding yet further expansion of their presence in state-funded schooling.
This is despite a two-thirds public majority who think that no religiously-affiliated schools should receive any state funding (BBC), and despite last year’s DfES-commissioned report — “Faith Primary Schools: Better Schools or Better Pupils?” (LSE) — which concluded that there was “clear positive selection of pupils into faith schools on the basis of observable characteristics that are favourable to education”. These “observable characteristics” account for the results disparity which the government still continues to use as an excuse for furthering the faith school agenda, even though their own DfES-commissioned report shows that these successes are down to nothing but social selection, so effectively the better results of faith schools are just a measure of how much the local population is skewed in its favour by covert selection and so-called “pushy” parents.
The British Humanist Association condemned today’s report as a “disgrace” (press release).
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Religion, UK, Humanists, Education, Church-state separation | No Comments »
Wednesday, September 5th, 2007
A Belgian prosecutor has secured a hearing to bring charges against the Church of Scientology — in particular 12 as yet unnamed individuals — under laws against the unlawful practice of medicine, and fraud. The church has responded that they are being “hounded”. The hearing will take place in the next two to three months and the Church had indicated that it will, of course, contest.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Law, Scientology, Belgium | No Comments »
Tuesday, August 28th, 2007
Abdullah Gul has been elected to the Turkish presidency by parliament today.
His candidacy provoked military threats and mass secular protest back in April. He has said that he will not contravene the country’s secular constitution, and he has won kudos in Europe during negotiations for Turkey’s EU membership, but secular opposition and many secularist campaigners remain unconvinced that the new President Gul will not use his powers of veto in the direction of an Islamist agenda.
Only time will tell…
(See Guardian, Al Jazeera.)
Posted in Islamism, Islam, European Union, Church-state separation, Turkey, Democracy, Secularism | No Comments »
Friday, July 27th, 2007
In October 2000 a Pakistani, Dr Younus Sheikh, was arrested on the charge of “blasphemy” and he was later found guilty and sentenced to death. He had been an active humanist and campaigner, and only after a concerted effort on behalf of humanist and other NGOs and rights groups was he finally freed in 2004, after three years spent mostly in solitary confinement.
This week, another man who by coincidence is also named Younus Sheikh — a writer who has criticized Islam — has been found guilty of “blasphemy” and sentenced to life in prison. And once again, the media outrage is limited — at this moment there are just two related news stories on Google, one from Pakistani newspaper The News, and the other from the UK’s National Secular Society.
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Posted in Ethics, Law, Islamism, Islam, Humanists, Human rights, Free speech, Literature, Church-state separation, Pakistan, Academia | No Comments »
Monday, July 23rd, 2007
Via FaithInSociety, the blog of Ekklesia thinker Simon Barrow, comes this interesting segment on what the man almost always referred to as “gay bishop Gene Robinson” said to the Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams recently, in a challenge to Lambeth Palace’s equivocating position in the middle of the gay rights debate which is dividing the Anglican Communion.
A little while ago, in the only time that the Archbishop of Canterbury ever deigned to see me, we were having a little “chat”, and at one point in our conversation, he was explaining to me that, actually what The Episcopal Church should have done prior to electing and consecrating me, was that we should have figured all this out theologically and intellectually… We should have come to a common mind, and then passed canons and and then done this thing. And I said to him with as much respect as I could, “Your Grace, it seems to me that all of the great steps that has taken, have been as a result of our doing the right thing, and only then, “thinking” our way to what we did. It’s not the other way around. I mean, if we had waited for instance in this country for everyone to have been on the same page about civil rights, there would still be separate drinking fountains, wouldn’t there? And if we had waited until women were valued as equal and full members of society and the human race, for goodness sakes, all of that discrimination would still exist.”
Posted in Sexuality, Protestantism | No Comments »
Friday, July 20th, 2007
The Anglican Bishop of Carlisle, recently maligned in the media for comments to the effect that the UK’s current bout of flooding was God’s punishment for society tolerating homosexuality, attempted to deny that he had said any such thing today.
But judge for yourself…
He [Bishop of Carlisle, Graham Dow] said: “I did not say that the Yorkshire floods were God’s action or because of recent legislation.
“Sadly, that was what was written. The way I see it is that all through Scripture - from Genesis 3, through Noah’s flood, the period of Old Testament kingship, right through to Revelation - God views life as a whole; that is, our morality and the health of the land are all one piece.
“The land is not neutral to us; it is God’s, and for us to steward. If we want to enjoy its fruits then we must live God’s way. That is the message all through Scripture.”
The Bishop said: “Of course we know that disasters have physical causes; but I believe that at such times we also do well to ask questions about our morality, as the book of Revelation does.”
(From the Bishop’s local newspaper.)
Posted in Nature, UK, Protestantism | No Comments »
Wednesday, July 11th, 2007
With one eye on trigger-happy western nations, a Lebanese group of intellectuals have questioned the uniquely confessionalist Lebanese political system — in which power is proportionally distributed amongst representatives of different religious groups — in favor of a secular, humanist code.
The Lebanese Daily Star carries the following (via).
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Posted in Religion, Civic parity, Humanists, Lebanon, Church-state separation, Democracy | No Comments »
Monday, July 2nd, 2007
Amid heightened, “critical” level terror alerts across the UK, the Daily Mail (which the Brights News Feed does not necessarily condone as a good source of objective news) today carries an article (“I was a fanatic, I know their thinking”) with a self-proclaimed “former extremist recruiter”, Hassan Butt.
I remember how we used to laugh in celebration whenever people on TV proclaimed that the sole cause for Islamic acts of terror like 9/11, the Madrid bombings and 7/7 was Western foreign policy.
By blaming the Government for our actions, those who pushed this “Blair’s bombs” line did our propaganda work for us.
More important, they also helped to draw away any critical examination from the real engine of our violence: Islamic theology.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Newspapers, UK, Islamism, Islam, Terrorism | No Comments »