Tuesday, May 09, 2006

DBJP


Join the Death Bed Joke Project over at the Liberal Avenger.




Thursday, June 23, 2005

And God told you to what?


Will work for freedom posts about

A Crucified Nun




Sunday, August 29, 2004

Epicurus, Letter to Menoeceus


"Get used to believing that death is nothing to us. For all good and bad consists in sense experience, and death is the privation of sense experience. Hence a correct knowledge of the fact that death is nothing to us makes the mortality of life a matter for contentment, not by adding a limitless time [to life] but by removing the longing for immortality. For there is nothing fearful in life for one who has grasped that there is nothing fearful in the absence of life. Thus, he is a fool who says that he fears death not because it will be painful when present but because it is painful when it is still to come. For that which while present causes no distress causes unnecessary pain when merely anticipated. So death, the most frightening of bad things, is nothing to us; since when we exist death is not yet present, and when death is present, we do not exist. Therefore it is relevant neither to the living nor the dead, since it does not affect the former, and the latter do not exist. But [most people] flee death as the greatest of bad things and sometimes choose it as a relief from the bad things of life. But the wise man neither rejects life nor fears death. For living does not offend him, nor does he believe not living to be something bad. And just as he does not unconditionally choose the largest amount of food but the most pleasant food, so he savours not the longest time but the most pleasant. He who advises the young man to live well and the old man to die well is simpleminded, not just because of the pleasing aspects of life, but because the same kind of practice produces a good life and a good death." [Epicurus, Letter to Menoeceus, ]




Saturday, August 28, 2004

I believe so you must follow or Religion is dangerous


“I believe so you must follow”

We see this creeping farther into women’s rights to make their own choices for their own bodies.

The recent issue of pharmacists refusing to sell contraceptives to consumers because of “moral reasons” takes the issue to a lower level of high idiocy.

Escondido obstetrician and gynecologist Dr. Arthur Stehly stopped prescribing birth-control pills in 1988. He actually said:

"I rationalized myself into thinking I should be God in my office, judging who gets the pill or not," Stehly said recently. "I knew at home I could not use the pill. I had to do what the natural law says."
He rationalized that he was God? That is blasphemous if you are religious I think. But it’s even more frightening than that. I’m assuming that if it doesn’t conform to His “natural Law” then he can’t be counted on to do his job. Could this even go as far as changing prescriptions for certain drugs if they don’t fit his morals and other drugs do?

Religion is dangerous once you try and bring it out from it’s true place – which is clearly inside ourselves for each of us individually.