Telling Children Hell Exists is Child Abuse

Mythology, which is a category that for Dawkins includes all the major religions, is explained as a collection of ancient Just So stories. Enjoyable as the story of the Garden of Eden (or the Tasmanian aboriginal god who forgot to give humans knees) may be, The Magic of Reality insists that science composes stories as thrilling as those found in Homer, as profound as the story of Job, and as entertaining as anything written by Kipling. . . The other one I thought of was telling children about hell – telling them they’ll go to hell if they’re bad. I think that’s child abuse because it’s genuinely frightening. Many adults, especially Catholic adults, never really manage to shake off that fear and guilt they imbibed as children . . . ” “It’s almost as though in America they’ve become a different species. There are the reasonable people who are educated and believe in science education and then there are the know-nothings, who mostly vote Republican, and they’re kind of diverging . . . ” “Sensible Christians don’t try to fight science but evangelicals do and Muslims do.”
Read more. . .

Banking Has Become an Oligopoly Instead of a Competitive Business — And That’s Really Bad News for Us 99%

Banking is not really a competitive industry. In reality, it’s more like an oligopoly — a scenario in which an industry is controlled by a small number of firms . . . Because they aren’t really a competitive industry, they can get away with huge cost v. returns gaps . . . We’re all familiar with the term “Too Big To Fail,” which sums up what happens nowadays to the biggest banks even when they commit fraud against consumers, poison them with toxic products, grossly neglect their duties to shareholders, and blow up the economy. They are rescued with public money . . . The alternative is to find a credit union or small bank, if for no other reason than to give your support to local businesses and to invest in Main Street. Read more . . .

Documentary: “The Canary Effect”

This documentary is a MUST WATCH!

The grim legacy of America’s treatment of its native peoples is explored in detail in this documentary. Filmmakers Robin Davey and Yellow Thunder Woman take the perspective that if one is to define “genocide” as the a deliberate effort by a government to exterminate a people, then the United States is clearly guilty of the crime given their actions against America’s indigenous population over the past 300 years . . .

Quote: George Bernard Shaw

George Bernard Shaw (26 July 1856 – 2 November 1950)
Nobel Prize in Literature (1925),
Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay (1938),
Playwright, Critic, Political Activist, Socialist

The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man.