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Freethought News:
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Four New CFA Affiliate Groups in October 2002
The Campus Freethought Alliance
is pleased to announce that four campus groups have recently been
founded by or have affiliated with CFA. These include CFA affiliate
groups at Western Oregon University, Denison University, Mount Holyoke
College, and Monte Vista High School. Other campuses are in the process
of forming CFA affiliate groups. This is in addition to the
members-at-large who join CFA without a group yet on their campus.
Check out CFA's resources for campus organizing.
CFA Staff to visit numerous campuses during
Fall 2002
November 14-19
CFA representatives visit North Carolina, including campuses such as UNC-Chapel
Hill, Duke and others, with a presentation entitled New Religious
Threats to Academic Freedom.
December 8-11
CFA representatives visit Chicago, IL campuses,
including University of Illinois at Chicago, University of Chicago, and
College of DuPage, presenting New Religious Threats to Academic Freedom
and Voltaire and the Challenge of the New Enlightenment.
December 12-15
CFA representatives visit Milwaukee, WI campuses,
including schools such as University of Wisconsin and Marquette
University, presenting New Religious Threats to Academic Freedom
and Voltaire and the Challenge of the New Enlightenment.
Representatives of the Campus Freethought Alliance are meeting with
activists and supporters on and off campus in the above locations. If
you would like to arrange or attend a presentation,
let us know.
To schedule a talk or debate in your area, click here.
New TV Series Produced by CSICOP and Skeptical
Inquirer on The Discovery Channel
"Critical Eye," a new series hosted by William B. Davis (The
X-Files-smoking man), looks into the science behind the paranormal, new
age philosophies, and the unexplained. Produced by the
Committee
for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP)
and
Skeptical Inquirer Magazine, the series will investigate 34
topics including: subliminal messaging, alien abduction, acupuncture,
ghosts, astrology, exorcism, Stonehenge, near-death experiences, and the
lost city of Atlantis. Each topic will be addressed by leading experts
and scientists. These subjects will be brought to life through lively
debate and extraordinary visuals in order to shed light on its
scientific relevance. The show airs on Mondays at 8:00 p.m. ET/PT.
For more information about the show, click here.
New CFA Resources Online
CFA is pleased to announce the addition of clips of selected videos on
freethought topics, produced at the Center for Inquiry. Featured guests
include Richard Dawkins, Massimo Pigliucci, Paul Kurtz, and Susan
Blackmore. Check back in the coming weeks for additional videos. See the
videos by going to the "student resources" section of our website.
CFA's new online forum is quickly becoming a home for discussion and
debate among high school and college students and faculty. Forum
categories include College and High School Freethought Activism, where
students share their strategies for promoting critical inquiry on
campus, lively debates such as "Are Psychics Real?" and "Can you be Good
Without God?" and many other threads of discussion of interest to
freethinkers.
To participate in the forum, click here.
Events Calendar
11/13 - UFO Sightings. A presentation by skeptic Robert
Scheaffer, University of California at Irvine, CA
Students for Science & Skepticism at UCI are pleased to announce that
noted UFO Skeptic Robert Sheaffer will give the talk "UFO Sightings."
Sheaffer, a CSICOP fellow since 1977 and a regular contributor to
Skeptical Inquirer, is an author, a free-lance writer, and skeptical
investigator of all manner of bogus claims. The talk will be given at
7:00 p.m. in the Social Science Hall.
For more information, click here.
11/15 - Stem Cells and Clones: Theological Perspectives on
Biomedical Research. A forum at University of Chicago Divinity
School, Chicago, IL
The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life is hosting this public
exchange featuring Gilbert Meilaender (Professor of Christian Ethics at
Valparaiso University, and member of the President's Council on
Bioethics) and Richard Miller (Professor of Religious Studies at Indiana
University, Bloomington). Free and open to the public; advanced
registration is required. 9:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. in Swift Hall, 3rd
Floor Lecture Hall at University of Chicago Divinity School, 1025 East
58th Street, Chicago, IL.
For more information or to RSVP, click here.
11/24-11/30 - Church and State Separation Week
Celebrated during the week of the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday, this annual
commemoration provides activists with an opportunity to celebrate one of
Thomas Jefferson's highest ideals, the separation of religion from
government.
For more information, click here.
12/10 - International Human Rights Day
A way to promote, defend, and remember the basic human rights every
person in every country. The basic document that outlines these rights
is known as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, as adopted by the
United Nations.
For more information on celebrating International Human Rights Day,
click here.
12/23 - HumanLight Celebration
A celebration of humanist values: tolerance, compassion, empathy,
honesty, free inquiry, reason and rationality, and more. The event began
in New Jersey by the New Jersey Humanist Network in 2001. The event
provides an excellent alternative to Christmas celebrations. HumanLight
falls on December 23, but celebrations can be held on any nearby date.
Celebrations have already been planned in the New York/New Jersey area,
Los Angeles, and Long Island.
Click here to visit the HumanLight website.
Freethought News
Secular America Defended at March on Washington
Washington, D.C. - The numbers were more than most had expected. The
Washington Post estimated somewhere between 2,000 and 3,000. And they
came from all over the nation - from Florida, Nevada, California,
Oregon, Missouri, New York, New Jersey and Illinois. The Bible Belt was
especially well represented with folks from Alabama, Texas, Tennessee,
North & South Carolina, Virginia and Utah.
They held signs that read "Reason is not Treason" and "There was a time
when religion ruled. It was known as the Dark Ages." The Council for
Secular Humanism's sign "Secular Humanists for a Secular America" was
carried by many in the crowd and showed up frequently as C-SPAN's camera
projected pictures on the Jumbotron screen.
Ed Buckner, executive director of the Council, was invited to carry the
lead banner of the march and his picture along with Council Board
Member, Eddie Tabash, and CFI-West Executive Director, Jim Underdown,
appeared in the Washington Post. Jan Eisler, Chair of CFI Florida, Toni
Van Pelt, executive director of CFI Florida, Debbie Goddard, president
of the Campus Freethought Alliance and CFI-MetroNY's Barry Seidman
carried the Council's banner. CFA members from all around the country
also joined to march with the Council's contingent, organized by DJ Grothe, CFA
Coordinator and Field Director of the Council for Secular Humanism.
To look at photos of the March and read more, click here.
Ohio School Board Allows Intelligent Design in Science Classrooms
Columbus, OH - Early last month, the Ohio State Board of Education voted
to adopt science curriculum guidelines that that allow individual school
districts to decide whether to teach intelligent design, reported the
Associated Press. Specifically, the standards recommend that students
learn "how scientists continue to investigate and critically analyze
aspects of evolutionary theory.''
Intelligent Design is the belief that certain life forms are too complex
to be explained through evolutionary processes alone, so some greater
intelligence must have played a role. Proponents usually insist that
evolution is just a theory, so alternatives should be taught. Critics
say there is no scientific evidence supporting intelligent design, and
those who try to teach it are trying to sneak creationism back into the
classroom.
The debate in Ohio began in January when the science standards first
came up for review. The Board was heavily pressured by several board
members and outside interest groups to include intelligent design in the
new standards. As the issue became public, it sparked criticisms from
organizations such as the National Science Teachers Association, which
dismisses intelligent design as unscientific. A public hearing in front
of the Ohio Board of Education with representatives from the different
sides was held in March this year, and drew a crowd of over 1500 people.
A survey performed by Case Western Reserve University recently of 460
natural science professors in Ohio showed that 90% of the professors
think that intelligent design is not supported by scientific evidence,
while 92% say that it shouldn't be taught in schools. "Intelligent
design circumvents the whole process of hypothesis testing," said
Christopher Mihos, CWRU associate professor of astronomy, according to
the Associated Press.
For the full story, click here.
Eagle Scout Kicked Out of Boy Scouts for Being an Atheist
Seattle, WA - 19-year-old Darrell Lambert was kicked out of the Boy
Scouts last week for not affirming a belief in a higher power, reported
the Associated Press. Lambert, who has been a Scout since the age of
nine and had been commended many times over the years as both a Scout
and an Assistant Leader, had gotten in an argument with another leader
at a leadership training seminar on whether the organization should
expel atheists. Lambert said he has been an atheist since ninth grade,
when he concluded that science disproved the Biblical creation stories.
Lambert was later contacted by the Chief Seattle Council of the Boy
Scouts and given approximately one week to say he recognized a higher
power; otherwise, he would be kicked out of the organization. He did not
give such a statement.
Glen Schmidt, District Committee Chair, was quoted in an Associated
Press article as telling Lambert, "Anybody that doesn't believe in god
isn't a good citizen, and that if an atheist found a wallet on the
ground they would pick it up plunder the money and throw the wallet back
on the ground."
The Boy Scouts of America claims to have the right to discriminate
because it is a private organization that does not receive federal
funding. The organization excludes gays and atheists, saying that they
do not meet the requirements for membership.
Lambert intends to appeal the ruling within the next sixty days.
To read an article about the story, click here.
Dopamine Levels in Brain Influence Belief in Paranormal
People with higher levels of the chemical dopamine are more likely to
believe in the significance of coincidences and in the paranormal,
suggests a recent study reported in the News Scientist.
Peter Brugger, a neurologist from the University Hospital in Zurich,
Switzerland, performed an experiment with 20 self-identified believers
and 20 skeptics. Brugger and his colleagues asked each group to
distinguish between real and scrambled words and faces that were flashed
upon a screen. The believers were much more likely to report real faces
and words where there were none, while the skeptics were likely to miss
real faces, he stated at a meeting of the Federation of European
Neuroscience Societies.
The experimenters then administered a drug that increased the levels of
dopamine in the brain and performed the experiments again. Mistakes
increased in both groups, but the skeptics became more likely to
misinterpret the scrambled words and faces as real.
The findings point to the conclusion that dopamine helps in pattern
recognition, even where there are no patterns. They also suggest that
higher levels of dopamine are associated with paranormal beliefs.
To read the article in New Scientist, click here.
Religious Discrimination at Faith-Based Government-Funded
Institutions
Atlanta, GA - A man who applied for a job at a religious-affiliated
institution that receives government funds was turned down because of
his religion, reported the New York Times.
Alan M. Yorker, applied to be a psychological therapist at the United
Methodist Children's Home, which receives about 40% of its financing from
the government. As part of the application he had to list religion,
church and four references, including a minister. Yorker, who is Jewish,
provided the information for his synagogue an rabbi.
A supervisor at the home admitted that Yorker had been one of the top
candidates for the position, but concluded the interview when she
learned he was Jewish. "We don't hire people of your faith," Yorker said
he was told, according to the New York Times.
Court papers show the home saying it had the right to reject Yorker
"because he is not a Christian."
A woman, who was fired by the home when they learned she is a lesbian,
is also suing the home on the grounds of religious discrimination. She
had been fired because the home's religious doctrines do not "condone
the practice of homosexuality."
President Bush's faith-based initiative, a plan to provide more
government funding to faith-based organizations, led to concerns from
many about federally-funded religious discrimination. In recent cases,
some courts have ruled that religious organizations accepting government
funds must follow federal and state nondiscrimination policies, while
other rulings suggest that government financing does not prohibit
discrimination by religious organizations.
Legislative Director of the American Jewish Committee Richard T. Foltin
said that such cases highlight the dangers inherent in government
financing of faith-based institutions that provide secular services.
"Organizations that are pervasively religious ought not to be receiving
government funds," he said, according to the Dominion Post Newspaper.
To read the full article, click here.
Girls' Schools in Afghanistan Still Attacked by
Taliban
Arim Dad, Afghanistan - Schools for girls in Afghanistan, which have
sprung up again recently after being forbidden under the rule of the
Taliban, are still being attacked by ultra-conservative Islamic forces
in Afghanistan, reported the New York Times.
Since dominating Afghanistan in the mid-1990s, the Taliban had forbidden
education of women and girls, although some small schools for girls did
exist in secret. [The Spring 2001 issue of the Campus Freethinker, a
newsletter of the Campus Freethought Alliance, highlighted the Taliban's
suppression of women and prohibition of the education of girls. The CFA
also conducted a campaign to adopt schools for Afghani refugee women and
girls. -Editors.]
Since coming into power, the new Afghan president Hamid Karzai has
reversed the education policy, opening hundreds of schools for girls
with the help of Western aid organizations. The schools have been met
with resistance from some, however. Opposition to these schools has
consisted of acts ranging from flyers urging students not to follow
Western customs, to rocket attacks, explosives set off in classrooms,
and schools set on fire. Letters left behind from the recent attacks
accused the schools of secretly preaching Christianity and exposing the
girls to sinful Western customs. "If anyone doesn't respect this," said
one recent letter, according to the New York Times, "he or she will be
sent to hell by the Mujahadeen."
The attacks seem not to deter the students or teachers, however, who are
determined to continue attending the schools.
For the full text of the story, click here.
Fatwa Issued Against Feminist Author Kola Boof
On Sept. 26th members of the Arab Muslim fundamentalist government of
Sudan issued fatwa on Kola Boof, a bestselling author who was born in
Sudan but currently lives in California. Boof, who released a collection
of poetry in 1997 which included feminist rantings, was found guilty of
blasphemy and treason for "deliberately and maliciously bearing false
witness against religious sentiment and of willing treason against her
Arab Muslim father's people and against her nation, the Sudan," read the
official death warrant. According to the fatwa, she is to be beheaded.
Salman Rushdie, who authored the book The Satanic Verses, also is a
target of fatwa issued by Ayatollah Khomeini. The book was seen by some
to make a mockery of Mohammed and Islam.
Women's author and physician Taslima Nasrin has also had fatwa issued
against her and had to flee her native Bangladesh for writing about
Muslim persecution of Bangladesh's Hindu minority and speaking out about
the rights of women in India.
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