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AlecsDeLarge
Joined: January 09, 2008
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Name: Alecs
I am a scientist, citizen, and polemicist engaged in an indirect dismembering of errors found in religious discourse. As Sam Harris points out in "The End of Faith," on September 11, 2001 our pious nation realized what kind of power and manifestations of violence religious certainty has on the health and well being of humans. Verily Ayaan Hirsi Ali lives a life of fear because of religious dogmatists engaged in the fulfillment of scripture. The idea of "confidence without reason" has the deleterious effect of suppressing intelligent discourse by placing stigma on its critics. Dennett claims this "effect" is not so much a passive artifact as it is the developed need for religion to survive, acquired through some hemi-evolutionary pathways. We realize today that religion without this speciation would not survive the torments of scientific revelations given how much we know today about disease, weather, and quantum physics. I am uneasy about suppression of conversation. Western morality is always improving simply by virtue of open speech. Children of the enlightenment found this one element so critical in government that they made it their first amendment.

An open discussion is necessary to better my understanding of the claims of atheists just mentioned and of their opposing theists like Baba, Shirley Phelps, Sir Ratzinger, or Hito. I don't intend to prevent discussion on any material of mine given the participant is willing to defend her position. In order to passively convince my viewers, I think my fellow students ought to "witness in truth" the words of apology or justification as they appear in these forums. It is my personal belief that given these circumstances any honest person seeking truth, holding it more valuable than social connection and even comfort, will join me and my friends who say: the extraordinary claims made by the pious are not supported by necessary extraordinary evidence.

To my Christian viewers: You perhaps claim that violence and barbarity are products of extremity while the norm is much more grounded on a tradition of morality and rationality. In deed you likely will claim, as Dinesh D'Souza, that most of history's rational thinkers were in deed Christian. I don't judge religions by their radical memberships. I don't have to. I do however, judge them on their foundational texts and the sayings of their leaders. Take the example of Hurricane Katrina. The pastor John Hagee, along with the Archbishop of Canterbury, has made claims that these events took place because of how consenting adults conduct themselves with their same-sex partners in that area. Linking meteorology to morality is bronze age and worth no attention whichever way. Can you imagine anyone nowadays arguing that to bring rain to crops or ward off demonic storm one must act morally? Aside from the absence of truth, a moral dilemma in its own right, avowals such as these represent two fundamental deficiencies. First the retardation of progress. Second the totalitarian mentality: setting regulations that are circular and binding. The obvious genetic component of homosexuality, attested by monozygotic twin studies, is sinful, as with other innumerable desires common to humanity. Oddly scripture is full of God's desire for man to overcome these "weaknesses" while telling him it will never happen without submission to a human sacrifice. A god that watches you day and night, that can convict you of "thought crime," as Hitchens terms it, and that is authorized to command you to conduct yourself under literally impossible regulations is a god that derives its doctrine from ideas dwelling, not on the edge but, well in the middle of totalitarianism. This is the Christian postulation.

As for Muslims, most of you claim that radicals have, in the words of President Bush, "hijacked a great religion." Muslim moderates assert that these parties are not licensed to issue fatwa and institute sharia. I would like to know on what religious grounds they make either assertion. The Koran is brimming with descriptions of the abhorrent status of the infidel in the eyes of Allah. In deed Allah not only hates his creation, "the unbeliever... the hypocrite... the friend of Satan," should man use his divinely instated free will to choose dissociation, but also he instructs man's death as "the inveterate enemy."

To all believers, Carl Sagan once said that "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." If there were ever a statement that challenges piety and charlatanry, this is it. How does evidence justify one's actions? It is my opinion that the rare evidence for miracles and truth in the religious domain amount to very little, in fact to pure random chance (consider the interesting mathematics of "official" miracles in Lourdes, France; # of miracles (2000 "unexplained cures"+66 declared miracles) / # of sick visitors seeking a miracle (80,000/yr x 150 years) = 2066/12,000,000 = .0001722 pure, random chance).

-Alecs
Country: United States
Website: http://alecsdelarge.blogspot.com/
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Playlists
Hitchens v. Turek - VCU
15 videos
One of the many problems with the religious, and indeed of the religious, has been its image and self-image as something rather solemn, manly, polychrome, and righteous. How many times have we heard the descriptions of our current situation wrought with end of days language as though the dominant deserve salvation and the weak things of the earth deserve the least of these?

In my studies of the deleteriously religious, I have come across many people like Frank Turek. They gargle out of their arguments something that sounds like science. Their words feel like a publication of some sort. Yet there is something missing... awe, I know what it is: correspondence. When I hear the words of an apologist, my mortal flesh wants to agree. I want to know that there will be a god, somewhere, stopping the results he/she/it set in motion some 20 billion years ago. I want to know that the entropy he/she/it instilled in nature when he/she/it decided to bang the Big Bang will be stopped and made to not destroy my planet in the end.

Did you hear Turek in response to Hitchens demand for an explanation on the destruction of cosmos? In simple terms, this is how the argument went down: Turek said that though destruction and desolation can be found throughout the universe both by entropy and by collision, there will be an exception in our case, in the end of days. Hitchens quotes Omar Khayyam not in this instance, but does so later to try to show the ridiculousness of the arguments held in the religious arena:

And do you think that unto such as you,
A maggot-minded, starved, fanatic crew,
 God gave the secret, and denied it me?—
Well, well, what matters it! believe that too.

Khayyam gives us good reason to question the origin of the fundamental beleifs of the religious. Like fossils, like carbon-dating, like germ theory of disease, and like the Big Bang, most ideas hardly ever enter the religious domain without a large degree of sacrifice of previous belief or of authority by way of apology. By these means any truth that will ever be brought forth from the scientific domain will also be highjacked and unfalsifiable. God decided to commence the Big Bang? God no longer walks like a material maniac in the case of Job, he is an immaterial being... and thus the religious cloud anything clear. They destroy simplicity and beg to bring their parishioners into obscurity.
Hitchens v Wilson - WTS
12 videos
In my conversations with believers, the first issue, discussed at great length in this presentation, they often have with the atheists position is the origin of statements of beauty and value (etc). They make the claim that because an omniscient deity sits in yonder heavens telling man what is beautiful and moral, man is licensed to agree. Wilson in this debate claims the same and also asks for the source of value judgements in the nonreligious realm.

Arguments like these, you will have to notice, say nothing about the validity of the religious claim. In deed, where the authority in this scenario is a real being with deity status or a powerful alien convincing humans of moral precepts congruent with their nature is wholly independent of the statements made in the first place. What is at stake here is not the statement: God exists and his statements justify our actions. It is that whatever god is or isnt, his statements justify our actions.

The best way of approaching this questions, for me, has always been to undermine the critical assumptions made in the process of making these claims. This can be done, as Hitchens does, by pointing out both the moral and chronological inconsistencies in moral maxims as the Christians propose. They say the golden rule originated in Jesus, it did not. They say that it has been from God alone and his oracles from which moral statements flow, it has not.

Whats more important to me is the wholly evil indifference this mild mannered Wilson makes about the killing of Amalekites, to take his example. What was so wrong with obeying the thou shalt not kill principle in the first place? The faithful must answer the question of how God, the source of moral precept, can show that the rape and torture of innocent humans from other tribes was a justifiable act by Gods own standards. The irony is they are constrained to an iron age conversation while making 21st century moral statements. I find this situation both sad and honorable at least that they will contort and twist their holy texts to justify what you and I might consider a moral cause. Nevertheless, as Hitchens points out, there is no need for additional questioning. In point of fact, Laplace said it best when he said, I have no need of that assumption.
Christopher Hitchens - Q/A
6 videos
My posting this video is not intended to give dedicated attention to one man over another, like some worshiping acolyte. I think Hitchens, being one of the four horsemen, is interesting enough of a person in the so called atheist community to be reviewed in this forum.
Christopher Hitchens - Q&A 6 of 6
7:09
My posting this video is not intended to give dedicated attention to one man over ...
5 days ago 769 views AlecsDeLarge
Christopher Hitchens - Q&A 5 of 6
9:23
My posting this video is not intended to give dedicated attention to one man over ...
5 days ago 586 views AlecsDeLarge
Christopher Hitchens - Q&A 4 of 6
10:01
My posting this video is not intended to give dedicated attention to one man over ...
5 days ago 580 views AlecsDeLarge
Fires of Kuwait (part 4/5)
6:18
The Kuwaiti oil fires were a result of the scorched earth policy of Iraqi military...
11 months ago 2,557 views ThePissedOffAtheist
The Chaser's War on Everything - The Secret
7:15
The Chaser take a look at "The Secret" in their new segment: Nut job of the week. ...
1 year ago 298,847 views Carbito
Steven Levitt: Why do crack dealers still live with their moms?
22:00
http://www.ted.com Freakonomics author Steven Levitt presents new data on the fina...
2 years ago 80,930 views TEDtalksDirector
Channel Comments (234)
alparcker5 (2 days ago)
hi there how are you ...doing i just whant too say how much i appreciate your work on your channel..
i hop you had agreat weekend .take care
jpsithlord (1 week ago)
Great videos, thanks!
ContinuumXT (2 weeks ago)
Thanks for the upload and your thoughts.
AlecsDeLarge (3 weeks ago)
zacideamus-
When have I ever said that? If anything, I defend Mormonism against false accusation (this being one of them), however I do not defend those parts of their theology that distract from moral thinking. If you would like, I can enumerate those.
pixiesaredeadly (1 month ago)
Great collection of Hitchens videos, thanks for putting them up.
tanyasbigbrowneyes (1 month ago)
stopping by to say hello and see how you are. going to watch some of yr vids too. Hope life is being kind too you.(smile)
RENEE25e (1 month ago)
what a pathetic loser..
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mig1983s (1 month ago)
FAGS GO TO HELL
alparcker5 (1 month ago)
love your channel thank you.
khillinmillin (1 month ago)
you suck balls
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