Case in point. Thank you. "Ridiculous" is dismissive and absolutist. Which, in itself, given the social climate, is ridiculous. What's so ridiculous about the myth of the Incarnation? (This ought to be good).
Arrgh. It's not responding to the
myth; it's responding to the claim that it's literally, factually true. It's not dismissing the myth; in fact, it proclaims the story
as a myth.
The Nativity Story can be taken two main ways:
- as a description of actual events
- as a mythic account (which is
not the same thing as declaring it to be worthless or invalid)
All this billboard does is to declare that the first interpretation - that the events of the Christmas story really, literally did happen - isn't the way to go. And I think there's a good chance that this is something that you might agree with yourself, so I don't see why you're getting yourself so worked up about it.
I've seen you complain about Biblical literalists too, so why is it such a big deal when an atheist does the exact same thing?
No, it doesn't explicitly say that. I've already alluded to that fact, I believe. Let's not rehash it. What I said was that through its dismissive color, it serves to silence what it calls "ridiculous." Don't twist what I said.
So... if one person speaks negatively about another person's ideas, this implies that the first person is "silencing" the second.
At the risk of making you think I'm trying to silence you, that's ridiculous.
Yeah, but let's be honest. The "atheist agenda" seeks to dismiss all religious belief as ridiculous.
No, it's not.
I think that's the agenda behind this billboard. Atheism, to be honest, doesn't seek merely to coexist beside religion. It seeks to undermine religion by abusing reason. What I'm saying is: That absolutist agenda is no better than the absolutist agenda of fundigelicalism. Don't soft-pedal this by claiming that "atheism just wants its own voice." If that were the case, it wouldn't be using the tactic of ridicule.
No, here's what I think is the message behind the billboard:
"All of us are joint participants in our common culture. If you want to impose ideas on me by making them part of the culture we share, fine, but this makes them fair game for my comment, positive or negative."
And I think the billboard uses an aggressive tone because this message just hasn't been getting through to many people.
You've got your head in the sand.
There are plenty of examples of businesses telling employees that they can't hang religious symbols on their office walls, when they allow other personal items to be hung there.
... all being perpetrated by some big, mean atheist conspiracy?
I'm fairly certain that to the extent that this happens, it's generally being done by other theists.
And examples of students being penalized for free speech during commencement exercises. And etc.
I have a feeling that you're trying to spin things here. Can you give an example? One that's not a case where a student was speaking in an official capacity for the school?
If that's your stance, then all that's ever going to be accomplished is more tit-for-tat. a useless waste of time and energy, when we ought to be listening to each other.
That all sounds fine and good, but the problem is that, IMO, the Christian community simply doesn't listen to atheists. And I don't see this changing until it feels a need to listen to atheists, which, IMO, won't happen until we're a loud enough voice that they can't ignore us.
If that were the case, then why add the "celebrate the season with reason?" It pits reason against myth, which, in essence, dismisses myth, especially given the slogan at the bottom of the billboard. you're twisting the implication of the message.
Actually, it doesn't "pit reason against myth". It pits reason against
literalism, and implies that recognizing myth for what it is is compatible with reason.
But as for the "celebrate the season..." line, the fact of the matter is that anyone living in North America is going to have Christmas imposed upon them in many ways whether they like it or not, and we can respond to this in many ways. The billboard suggests one way to do this.
There's a difference between "challenge" and "dismissal." The message is obviously the latter.
Because society can no longer afford to be a paradigm of "us vs. them." We have to foster a paradigm of "all of us together." Atheists should attach their ideas of virtue to Xian thought, because we're all in this mess together, and together fosters better life for all.
I completely reject this. I see way too much objectionable baggage in Christian thought to want to attach my ideas to it any more than I have to.
When we attach our ideas of virtue to things that are decidedly unvirtuous, we end up with just a muddled mess.
So's the billboard renter. You won't solve anything spouting useless platitudes.
It's not a useless platitude; it's a letigimate point.
I agree. If the intent was to foster greater understanding and tolerance, why resort to such pandering? If, however, as I believe, the intent was to push an agenda, a billboard is the perfect venue -- which is what we have here.
So atheists shouldn't put up billboards at all, then?
Again: it seems to me that the only person trying to silence anyone here is you.
What I'm saying in response to the OP question is this: Throwing cheap shots isn't going to get us anywhere, so why bother? And that goes for both sides!
I've said before that I personally prefer the "nicer" campaigns (e.g. the "I'm good without God" billboards with a smiling atheist who - shockingly - looks like a normal person), and I do think the execution here fell short of the mark a bit, but I do agree with the underlying thought behind the billboard: religious ideas aren't on some special pedestal; it's as valid to question and challenge them as it is
any idea.