Enough with the religion in the schools – NSW secular classes at risk.

14 05 2010

I am often dismayed [nice for 'seriously fucked off] by the righteous belief the religious have that their special creation myths should hold some special sanctified position, above criticism and examination, in the same society in which I live. It mystifies me how in this age where transport, science and technology have made the world a very small place indeed – and where we finally have the means to banish superstition to the dusty tomes of history – there is still so much that influences our daily lives dictated by belief in violent and terrible ancient superstitions and myths.

This is nowhere more apparent than in the fight to remove religion from public schools. Whether embroiled in the Creationist-Darwinian fights of America or the teaching of Christian classes here in our schools the issue is the same. Educators believe themselves above their mandate to educate in facts and take it on as some nobel right to feed impressionable children their own brand of religious Koolaid. Religious indoctrinators are able to enter the classroom with impunity to teach our kids whatever they feel like without our consent.

So it came as no surprise to me that the church is whining and crying fowl as soon as a few schools in New South Wales began trialling a viable alternative to scripture class.

At first, given the vehemence with which they are taking up the matter with fundraisers and officials in the government we might be led to believe that these classes are promoting something sinister and of real detriment to the kids and the entire fabric of society. the reality is that no such thing has happened. Children in ten New South Wales state schools have been given an alternative to scripture class in the form of a secular ethics class. These classes have been funded and endorsed by the Federation of Parents and the Citizens’ Association of New South Wales. The curriculum was put together by Professor Phillip Cam from the University of New South Wales and will introduce children to topics like understanding moral dilemmas, fairness, issues of judgement, children’s rights, lying and telling the truth and compassion towards each other and our environment. [Seriously fundies, what the fuck is wrong with that?]

To date, children have had the right to not attend scripture class, however an insidious form of peer rejection is associated with this. Reports of kids being left sitting in hallways unsupervised or made to sit in isolation in empty classrooms or the library mean that most kids during their impressionable developmental years will attend the scripture class to not be the odd one out in their group of peers.

So what happened when a real viable alternative was offered? [it was embraced as a positive step towards teaching kids values and making them better human beings? ... please let that be the answer.] Accounts of attendance are showing that 47% of kids dropped out of scripture class, estimates are that next year 60%+ will be attending the ethics class and the religious community has erupted in very un-Christian like outrage.

The religious leaders are squealing like stuck pigs, crying foul that their pretentious positions of authority have been undermined. A fundraising website to protect ‘special religious education’ has sprung up stating that the objective of the secular classes is not to teach children ethics without the healthy lashings of guilt and bronze age creation myths but to:

‘remove Jesus Christ from the state school system and from the consciousness and hearts of the next generation.’

[must have been in a secret email by Prof Cam ... let's see if we can kill Jesus in schools ... *sigh*]

They go on to say that:

‘if we lose religious education, we risk losing true, fundamental ‘ethics’ that have underpinned Australia’s moral framework for hundreds of years.’

[because history is chock full of examples of the church leading the way in enlightened ethics that underpin society ... yah right!]

The Anglican Archbishop of Sydney Peter Jensen is pressuring the NSW premier, Kristina Jeneally, to allow the Anglican Church to have input into the ethics classes [because a fraternity of kiddy fiddling old men who know a story book off by heart are far better placed than an internationally recognised professor with experience in child education...] – really?, can’t they handle a little competition, surely their religious classes should be able to stand on the merit of its own teachings and attendance figures without having to medal in a secular class [let me repeat that with emphasis ... SECULAR ... ]

A flurry of protest and demonstration drummed up in opposition to the teaching of values and honest to children without the religious guilt and bumf has forced Verity Firth (education minister) to refuse to guarantee the continuation of these classes – perhaps use the link which follows to let Verity know what you think of the fact that she, as a government elected official there to serve the needs of all the people, is pandering to the unelected heads of tax exempt supernatural charities and organisations http://www.verityfirth.com/contact.aspx
[Dear Verity, when we elected you to stand as an educational representative for our children we had no idea you were such a spineless coward...]

We live in a multicultural society here in Australia, a land made up primarily of immigrants from all over the globe in the not too distant past. When Australia’s Federal Constitution was drafted in 1901, section 116 of the Constitution was penned in a way that attempted to mimic the American separation of Church and state:

The Commonwealth shall not make any law for establishing any religion, or for imposing any religious observance, or for prohibiting the free exercise of any religion, and no religious test shall be required as a qualification for any office or public trust under the Commonwealth.

A number of political decisions and appointments have subverted this message over the last few decades – in the 1950′s Sir Robert Menzies, Australia’s Prime Minister at the time, took it upon himself to grant state aid to Catholic schools; a decision which has almost class ramifications in the education system to this day. In 2001, John Howard appointed the Anglican Archbishop Peter Hollingworth as governor-general of Australia – a decision which was met with much public criticism that fell on deaf ears. He relinquished the office only later when it came out that he had attempted to cover up several instances of child sexual abuse [a decision that would no doubt have met with the approval of our current pope]. In 2002 a civil suit was lodged against Hollingworth by Rosemary Ann Jarmyn when she identified Hollingworth as the man who raped her during a church youth camp. Jarmyn committed suicide in April 2003 and Hollingworth relinquished the reigns of office during the trial.

I don’t believe I am alone in believing that the church has had too much free reign when it comes to matters of state and state run entities like the public schools. I have a say and a vote in the representatives who run the country so why don’t I have a choice over what it taught to my child? Under no circumstances should religious denominations of any form be allowed to enter schools as they see fit to preach their toxic beliefs to a captive and impressionable audience.

I for one am glad to see a valuable life skill like secular ethics offered as a course in schools where children can learn valuable life skills without fear of hell, eternal damnation or the crazy warped moral values of religion. I hope that in a short time the majority of kids will choose these secular classes over their scriptural counterparts and that their success spreads to every school in the land. I hope that their septic spewings from the pulpit dry up in schools like drought addled vines and the indoctrinators retreat to their unattended Sunday sermons to lick their wounds and contemplate the end of their days of any form of influence or power in our education system.

Enough is enough.





The Entire Universe in 6 Minutes

23 12 2009

 

Look again at that dot. That's here, that's home, that's us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives. The aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilization, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every "superstar," every "supreme leader," every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived there – on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.

The Earth is a very small stage in a vast cosmic arena. Think of the rivers of blood spilled by all those generals and emperors so that, in glory and triumph, they could become the momentary masters of a fraction of a dot. Think of the endless cruelties visited by the inhabitants of one corner of this pixel on the scarcely distinguishable inhabitants of some other corner, how frequent their misunderstandings, how eager they are to kill one another, how fervent their hatreds.

Our posturings, our imagined self-importance, the delusion that we have some privileged position in the Universe, are challenged by this point of pale light. Our planet is a lonely speck in the great enveloping cosmic dark. In our obscurity, in all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves.

Carl Sagan, Pale Blue Dot

Posted via email from The Thought Menagerie





Meteorite lights up the Canadian sky

27 11 2008

More info here.





SPACE.com — Merging Man and Machine to Reach the Stars

2 04 2008

 

Robots and humans always seem to end up at odds, whether it’s battling over pieces of NASA’s budget or literally fighting in science fiction stories such as “The Matrix” and “Battlestar Galactica.”

Now a former NASA historian and an American University professor suggest that the future of space exploration could very well depend on a merging of metal and flesh.

Their new book “Robots in Space” (2008, The Johns Hopkins University Press) looks at the competing visions for robotic vs. human space exploration, and concludes that neither will get far beyond the solar system without one another.

SPACE.com — Merging Man and Machine to Reach the Stars





London cops declare war on photography

6 03 2008

 


Thomas Hawk sez, “In what I can only view as troubling and a move surely to invite more backlash against photographers, London’s Metropolitan police has launched a new counter-terrorism PR campaign complete with anti-photography propaganda. The campaign is meant to encourage people to turn in ‘odd’ seeming people that they see taking photographs.”

“Thousands of people take photos every day,” reads their advertisement being run in London’s major newspapers. “What if one of them seems odd?”

Link (Thanks, Thomas!)





Useful Latin Quotes

6 03 2008

http://www.dbooth.net/internerd/latin.cfm

I found a great tag-line for the week:

Nihil curo de ista tua stulta superstitione.


which translates to:  I’m not interested in your dopey religious cult.

The part of my reptilian brain that still appreciates high school humour enjoyed Estne volumen in toga, an solum tibi libet me videre?





The Gruesome Origins of 5 Popular Fairy Tales

29 02 2008

Over at cracked.com they’re discussing the origins of 5 popular fairy tales – weird as hell; the original authors of these tales were not happy people!

The Gruesome Origins of 5 Popular Fairy Tales





New Comments Policy

20 02 2008

In order to avoid having random trolling on this site and promote intelligent discussions and conversation I am implementing initial comment moderation on this blog.  It’s all too easy for unpleasant people to troll around randomly and be abusive for no good reason other than they clearly have issues and they can.

I had a run in with a bunch of real idiots recently who have mastered the art of character assassination and revolting verbal abuse where it really wasn’t called for; I have subsequently deleted their trash. 

Please understand this is not any form of censorship – I find that concept abhorrent so feel free to have your say and leave your differing opinion and let’s debate differing opinions;  abuse and stupidity will no longer be tolerated though, there are chat rooms and places where stupid trolls can congregate and this is not one of them.





R200m statue of King Shaka for KwaZulu-Natal

17 02 2008

R200m statue of King Shaka for KwaZulu-Natal: “A 106m statue of King Shaka Zulu ka Senzangakhona will be built on the banks of Thukela River north of Durban, the Weekender newspaper reported on Saturday. The statue would cost R200-million to build and was expected to be 13m higher than the Statue of Liberty in New York. KwaZulu-Natal premier Sbu Ndebele suggested that the statue would become a tourist destination like the Statue of Liberty.”

(Via Mail & Guardian Online.)

You’d think that in a country with hugely pressing issues – like crushing poverty, social inequality, outrageously low pay for teachers, the police and other basic services and massive looming infrastructure disasters with the supply of clean water and electricity – that the government [any sane person or organisation; ed. 19/02] wouldn’t waste money of stuff like this.





‘Friendly’ Worms Could Spread Software Fixes

15 02 2008

‘Friendly’ Worms Could Spread Software Fixes: “An anonymous reader writes ‘Microsoft researchers are working out the perfect strategies for worms to spread through networks. Their goal is to distribute software patches and other friendly information via virus, reducing load on servers. This raises the prospect of worm races — deploying a whitehat worm to spread a fix faster than a new attacking worm can reach vulnerable machines.’

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Just what we need! As if things like automatic Windows updates weren’t intrusive or inherently unpredictable enough Microsoft thinks friendly viruses are the way to patch systems.





South Park on the Mac vs PC war

13 02 2008




I am Disappointment

10 02 2008

I’ve just finished watching “I am Legend”, a movie which has outstanding moments and great disappointments. Will Smith plays Robert Neville a military doctor who thinks he is the last man on earth after a virus wipes out most of the Earth’s population and turns the other large percentage into mindless killing machines with a high UV problem not even extra-strength sunblock can help.  A large part of the beginning story involves his relationship with his dog and how the edges of a normal human canine interaction have become a little blurred around the edges (after he is the last human as far as he knows) and the isolation is not doing nice things with his mind. That was good, a little contrived in parts, but the slipping edges of sanity was well portrayed.

The other part I thought had great potential was when Neville realised these creatures were not stupid at all and seemed organised and had the ability to do awesome things like try and trap him the way he had trapped on of their own.

Then 3 things happened which flushed the movie down the toilet.

[****** SPOILERS BELOW *********]

1. The dog dies. WTF! Ever since fracking Bambi the animal dies in almost every movie and I think it sucks. It doesn’t add pathos or emotional weight to the movie, it’s a cheap appeal to sentimentality and it really bugs me. That being said it is my personal preference that the dog or pet should be hallowed ground and untouchable by the director – the other 2 items were what actually ruined the movie for me.

2. The end scene sees the zombies once again acting like complete savages and only hint at all the earlier build-up of these creatures having mutated into something more than mindless eating machines.  Why go to the effort of building our expectations that these creatures are something more sinister than run-of-the-mill drooling biting zombies if that’s how you’re going to portray them in the finale anyway?

3. The entire story was about a medical disaster [virus gets out of hand in the human population] and then it’s like someone lets a creationist church group with red crayons run around in the script as a warning against man’s tinkering in God’s playground. It turns into this puerile mess where the lady who saves him at one point in the story is actually on a mission from God [the Christian version] and is being sent by the big-almighty to a safe colony in Vermont.  On the way the celestial-he gets her to pop round to Will’s house for the cure for humanity; then Will gets to die to save them … what a hero! BARF! VOMIT! come on!

One of the best lines I’ve read comes from John Beifuss’ crit of the movie where he says:

In the infantile prioritizing that occurs when Hollywood wants to be ‘inspirational,’ the hero’s Everyman crisis of religious faith is supposed to be as important to audiences as his struggle to save humanity from extinction.

The damn religious stuff only came like a stinky curve-ball in the last few minutes, someone thought ‘this is a story about the trials of a man in an empty apocalyptic  world … jee that sounds like Noah or a case in need of serious religious reflection let’s be sure to throw a sprinkling of God in here somewhere.’

…… blah!





Jesus and Mo – 22 January 2008

25 01 2008





Packing Day

8 01 2008

Today a month’s symphony of chaos culminated in the first of our packing days. Five packers and a supervisor arrived from Magna International and began the chore of putting all our household effects into teeny little cardboard boxes.

The speed at which professional packers work is phenomenal; within a few hours there were weird shaped boxes which looked remarkably like the items whose place they’d taken. There were funny lamp shaped boxes, chair shaped boxes and even an incredible feat of engineering, the rowing-machine shaped box.

The cats are totally freaked; their furniture is now covered with cardboard … so not right!

Packing Day





T Minus 4 days ….

4 01 2008

Right we officially have 4 days left until the movers arrive! The house has exploded in a veritable nova of supercharged chaos. There are boxes everywhere and half packed trunks and a million and one administration chores fighting against a myopia of more urgent items which always manage to jump the queue. Tempers are a little frazzled and I am really looking forward to my 10 hours on an aeroplane to just unwind and have nothing to do but read and watch the latest movies from the box office.

Anyway enough procrastinating, sitting playing on Ipernity, Flickr and your blog seems so important and so much fun when there are boxes to pack ;-)





Happy New Year 2008

2 01 2008



Photos by mugley.

happy new year 2008

How my soon-to-be-new-home saw in the New Year.





And my bonsai are no more

1 01 2008

Now You See Them

I must say I feel rather gutted today; Mike came and took all my trees away with him. Mike is a really nice guy (good) who loves plants (better) and is a specialist in orchids and bonsai (best) but my trees were like pets are to other people – I loved them and tended them, looked after them, fed them and kept them warm in winter and medicated them when they got sick but they can’t come with me. It wasn’t for lack of trying, I contacted the Australian quarantine facilities and other bonsai specialists but the Aussies are paranoid about anything living (bar you) entering the country and the plants would have had to spend months in hydroponics quarantine for astronomical amounts of money and time. So I have packed up all my tools and know I can start all over again but 10 years of growing and tending my own trees is hard to replace.

So I waved good-bye to Mike after wishing him farewell and good luck and watched him drive away with his car bristling with green and the promise of a photo or two in years to come; bravely fighting back a lump in my throat and a strange moisture which had settled over my vision.

Now You Don't





Another Christmas Come and Gone

26 12 2007

Wow, 2007 happened quickly! A busy frenetic year stuffed full of all sorts of things that had me so wholly preoccupied that I never noticed the 25th sneak up behind me with a hard-wood club and smack me soundly on the back of the head. I’ve heard that moving house, irrespective of country, ranks up there with life stresses like death and retrenchment (1) so to have to pack up our house, leave our jobs and desperately try and find a placement for our son in a school in another country has been a humdinger of a time; that is why the brief Yuletide respite and change of pace has been so refreshing.

Santa came as always with a veritable toy avalanche mostly consisting of lego, I’ve spent the last two days now sitting with an aching back on the carpet building a full on lego train set and we haven’t even got to the Star Wars fleet sitting on the table.

I got to take some time out and attend to my bonsai trees which have been sadly in need of a prune and a little TLC since winter. Spent a good few hours with the trees outside under the big yellowwood and stinkwood trees in our garden getting them looking lovely again.

A Gentle Wiring

Merry Christmas to all my readers and have a wonderful new year!

(1) only marginally better than death and taxes





The “Death Star” Galaxy

21 12 2007

The supermassive black hole at the center of a distant galaxy is blasting a smaller neighbor with a violent energy jet—earning it the moniker the “Death Star” galaxy—scientists announced today. The jet has probably fried the atmospheres of any planets in the way, researchers added.

link

One galaxy frying another with jets of lethal radiation; on this scale the mind boggles.





God’s Cure for Leprosy

13 12 2007


I was perusing the skeptic’s annotated bible as I do from time to time when I came across this gem; God’s cure for leprosy from Leviticus.
You can read it in its original form but I prefer the pithy translation as it contains all the good stuff without all the thou’s and thus’s.

God’s law for lepers: Get two birds. Kill one. Dip the live bird in the blood of the dead one. Sprinkle the blood on the leper seven times, and then let the blood-soaked bird fly away. Next find a lamb and kill it. Wipe some of its blood on the patient’s right ear, thumb, and big toe. Sprinkle seven times with oil and wipe some of the oil on his right ear, thumb and big toe. Repeat. Finally find another pair of birds. Kill one and dip the live bird in the dead bird’s blood. Wipe some blood on the patient’s right ear, thumb, and big toe. Sprinkle the house with blood 7 times. That’s all there is to it.

I’m truly at a loss to explain why God just didn’t rid the world of the bacterium Mycobacterium leprae but doubtless the millions of afflicted souls throughout history were deserving sinners and a progressive degenerative neurological disease with deformity was fitting punishment; I mean this is the same God who sends bears to maul rude children. If only this had been more widely published although I can only imagine the SPCA would be up in arms about all the little birds and gambolling lambs but at least it’s clear cut irrefutable word-of-god.

update 19.12.07
2 Kings 15:5
God struck down King Azariah with Leprosy lucky guy!

15:5 And the LORD smote the king, so that he was a leper unto the day of his death, and dwelt in a several house. And Jotham the king’s son was over the house, judging the people of the land.








Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.