Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Judging the judge, or lessons in hypocrisy and excuse

Christians (and most theists) do love to make excuses for their god, why we shouldn’t ever dare attempt to judge its actions and excuses on why its so pathetically impotent.  Caroline, a Christian who has been a lovely example for this blog, now continues with her attempts, part 1 and part 2. As promised, and as … Continue reading Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Judging the judge, or lessons in hypocrisy and excuse

Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Miracles

Miracles and the actions of the divine are another source of debate between believers and non-believers.  Most religions depend on them since without magical action, their gods are merely figureheads.  Thus, we have divine interference e.g. miracles, in just about any religion you would care to name.  And this causes some problems since evidence for … Continue reading Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Miracles

Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Judaism and Jainism

As promised, here is the post about the rabbi and the Jain. Since a lot of Christians want to claim that atheists "never ever" talk about other religions, I thought I'd remedy that.   In the same newspaper that had Billy Graham’s question/answer column, there was a God Squad column.  At one point, the Squad was Marc … Continue reading Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Judaism and Jainism

Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Even the professionals have little to work with

In the discussions with various theists that I’ve been having, I’ve seen the argument from authority, which claims if someone is “smart” and believes in “x”, then that makes “x” true.  This is similar to another common claim by theists called “Sophisticated Theologytm” (I think Dr. Coyne over on Why Evolution is True might have … Continue reading Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Even the professionals have little to work with

Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Dear theist, part 4 Suprise!

This post brought to you by the number 4 Caroline, I’m taking this to a full blog post rather than just adding on comments, since the formatting is much better here and I can put in links.  I’m also not worrying about what you might think the “tone” is.  I'm writing if I'm talking to you.  … Continue reading Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Dear theist, part 4 Suprise!

Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Dear Theist, part 3

This will likely be the last of this mini-series of interactions with a Christian, as you will see from Caroline's post.    Her post ends with a typical Christian comment.  This isn't a rare occurence, for a Christian to be rather nasty and then reconsider.  She did apologize, and you may visit her blog to see.  … Continue reading Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Dear Theist, part 3

Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Dear Theist, part 2

Generally, I wouldn't go to the bother of this, but Caroline is a good example of theist that atheist often encounter.  Her posts cover most attitudes and claims the Christian who thinks that they are an excellent defender of the faith.  My first post addressing Caroline's questions to atheists is here. I have been able … Continue reading Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Dear Theist, part 2

Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Dear theist, you need to up your game.

Following some links, I found this: http://areasonablefaithdotme.wordpress.com/2013/01/03/dear-atheist/  I’ve commented on it but since many Christians will not allow comments that address their claims to appear on their blogs (so much for the discussion they claim they want), I figured that I’d reproduce Caroline’s entire post here and my response.  She uses a lot of the … Continue reading Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Dear theist, you need to up your game.

Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Billboards and Fruits

The deacon over on Alethian Worldview has a nice competition.  Come up with a billboard for letting people know being an atheist is fine.  As he has already noted, some boards are fine, some are nothing special and some are pretty atrocious. My entry (the crowd image is something I found on the 'net with … Continue reading Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – Billboards and Fruits

Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – The war on Christmas complete with friendly fire

The Daily Show already used the friendly fire analogy when Bill O'Reilly decided that Christianity wasn't a religion. Here are more self-inflicted wounds. The last few days of Doonesbury have done a great job ridiculing the “war on Christmas” nonsense spread by some Christians.  But I do have to say, there might actually be a war on Christmas … Continue reading Not So Polite Dinner Conversation – The war on Christmas complete with friendly fire