Okay so at the enormous peril of going too far with this subject..... I agreed with Apex and Kathryn with some nagging doubts/reservations in the back of my mind. By hesitating to post specific examples.... and then when pressed, by posting Dawkins' "militant rant".... those doubts have become a little stronger.
Hear me out.
This is a pattern I've noticed in the past: "militant atheists" really means one guy: Richard Dawkins. Let's be frank, theists can't stand him the same reason liberals can't stand the most passionate and eloquent arch-conservatives. "Militant" doesn't really mean militant, it means he is not sufficiently polite to religious sensibilities. Conservative and liberal critics tear each other apart in the press (I'm not talking about the O'Reilly / Olberman types), they call each others' arguments "nonsense" and so forth all the time. No one cries militant. That's what happens in public debate, we're all grown-ups.
In my experience, the people who call Dawkins militant have rarely read much of what he has written or watched him debate his religious colleagues.
I don't know if that's what's happening here, but let me say this about Dawkins' response to the F on F ad .... just hear me out.
The Washington Post asked Dawkins the following question:
The Great Tim Tebow Fallacy
Q: The conservative Christian group Focus on the Family is sponsoring a pro-life ad, featuring football star Tim Tebow, during Sunday's Super Bowl. Should CBS show the ad? Should CBS allow other faith-based groups to buy Super Bowl ads promoting their beliefs on social issues? Is a major sporting event, or a TV ad campaign, an appropriate venue for discussing such vital and divisive culture-war issues like abortion?
For starters, let's establish that Dawkins is not being militant or hysterical by writing a 700-word response to the question he was asked by the Post.
Now read what he wrote. To his credit,
he did not react to the ad per se. Read what he wrote. He wasn't saying it would be wrong to run the ad or that it was too offensive. Instead, he answered the question constructively: by critiquing the abortion argument. He didn't assume or criticize anything about the ad itself except that (1) it was making an argument about abortion which in his opinion is fallacious, and (2) Tim Tebow was promoting this argument. These were perfectly unhysterical assumptions and they turned out to be true. The argument in the watered-down ad was subtle but clearly Focus on the Family was trying to say something about abortion. Dawkins has every right to take up that argument and explain why he disagrees.
What did *not* turn out to be correct is the idea that the ad itself was going to be *offensive* or should have been banned .... and that is precisely what Dawkins *did not* say. He concluded:
The fact that the Tim Tebow advertisement is a load of unthought-through nonsense is no reason to ban it. That would infringe our valued principle of free speech. The best that the rest of us can do is point out, to anyone that will listen despite our lack of money to pay for such advertisements, that it is nonsense. As I have just done.
This is not a "militant rant" at all, it is a relatively brief but very frank response to a question about abortion, a controversial issue. I'm seriously trying to do the thought-experiment in my head right now ... if a pro-life person called the pro-choice argument "nonsense" and said a celebrity promoting pro-choice in a commercial was "not good at thinking", would I call that a militant rant? I don't think I would.
The only sort-of plausible criticism is that Dawkins should have left Tebow out of it. We all admire Tebow, and no argument was explicitly made in the ad that aired. OTOH if you take advantage of your celebrity to promote your opinion, however subtly, you have every right. But critics have the right to call it nonsense.
If you don't like Dawkins' arguments you should call them nonsense in return and be prepared to back it up. Instead, the impression I'm getting is that you aren't disagreeing with Dawkins' argument about the Beethoven fallacy, but rather
the fact that he made a case at all ..... IOW Tebow is a nice guy, therefore don't make a point about the abortion issue while Tebow is appearing in an ad about the abortion issue. Ironically, that misdirected reaction seems to be precisely the error of the "militants" (whoever they were) who were angry the Tebow ad would be aired at all, the ones Apex and Kathryn are referring to but can't be bothered to name.