"Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve!"
The recent news about the Church of Sweden now allows gay couples to marry in church, has started a world wide debate. A debate that establishes my idea of Christians as narrow-minded, blue-eyed and ignorant. I don't know how many times I have read people saying "God made Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve", and as far as I am concerned, using this as some kind of argument reveals pure ignorance and a great deal of stupidity. This saying makes me laugh hysterically. Especially since this god actually did create both Adam, Eve and Steve according to the bible. And not to mention all the rapists, racists, nazis and fascists he also created. Argument fail.
Posted 4 months ago
by Jazzper Isaksson
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Atheist quotes
"If atheism is a religion, then health is a disease!" (Clark Adams)"The Bible is one of the most genocidal books in history." (Noam Chomsky)"No man ever believes that the Bible means what it says; he is always convinced that it says what he means." (George Bernard Shaw)"When I think of all the harm the Bible has done, I despair of ever writing anything to equal it." (Oscar Wilde)"Science with religion is lame; religion without science is blind. Science without religion is useful; religion with science is useless." (Albert Einstein)"If there is a God, atheism must seem to Him as less of an insult than religion." (Edmond & Jules de Goncourt)"The real oppressor, enslaver, and corrupter of the people is the Bible. [...] If a man would follow, today, the teachings of the Old Testament, he would be a criminal. If he would follow strictly the teachings of the New, he would be insane." (Robert Green Ingersoll)"All Bibles are man-made. [...] I have never seen the slightest scientific proof of the religious theories of heaven and hell, of future life for individuals, or of a personal God." (Thomas Edison)"The prayer of the agnostic: "O God, if there is a God, save my soul if I have a soul." (Ernest Renan)"I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours." (Stephen Roberts)"The fact that a believer is happier than a skeptic is no more to the point than that a drunken man is happier than a sober one. The happiness of credulity is a cheap and dangerous quality." (George Bernard Shaw)"I'm a born-again atheist." (Gore Vidal)"All the biblical miracles will at last disappear with the progress of science." (Matthew Arnold)"Not by accident, you may be sure, do the Christian Scriptures make the father of knowledge a serpent - slimy, sneaking and abominable." (Henry Louis Mencken)"What was it that Adam ate that he wasn't supposed to eat? It wasn't just an apple. It was the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. The subtle message? 'Get smart and I'll fuck you over' sayeth the Lord. God is the smartest, and he doesn't want any Competition. Is this not an absolutely anti-intellectual religion?" (Frank Zappa)"Your Highness, I have no need of this hypothesis." [To Napoleon on why his works on celestial mechanics make no mention of God] (Pierre Laplace)"I find the whole business of religion profoundly interesting. But it does mystify me that otherwise intelligent people take it seriously." (Douglas Adams)"Religion is an insult to human dignity. With or without it, you'd have good people doing good things and evil people doing bad things, but for good people to do bad things, it takes religion." (Steven Weinberg)
via exchristian.net
Posted 4 months ago
by Jazzper Isaksson
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Posted 4 months ago
by Jazzper Isaksson
0 Comments
We don't need marriage in present form

I am well aware of the very delicate issue this is, having a somewhat "churchy" background and being raised after somewhat Christian values. But I am happy today and I celebrate the outcome of the voting. Despite me calling myself an atheist, I am still very interested in what's happning inside the thick walls of what's supposed to be a jolly and lovable family, the church (my ass...).
I have met a couple of Christian gays and talking to and meeting them is very sad and tragic in every way. They keep hanging on to a religion and a god who discriminate people and forgetting about the very foundation of Christianity itself: love. I wonder how they do it. Why they do it. Why praise and worship a god that sees their love as something bad? If you ask me, that kind of god is not worthy any attention at all. Also, this is where the problem is: the church is based on the Bible and a belief in god.
I haven't read the Bible that many times and I haven't been searching for signs that the situation is different, but according to the Christian mass, gay marriage in church would be wrong. I respect that frakking old-fashioned, awful and inhuman idea; after all, that is what Christianity ultimately is: frakking old-fashioned, awful and inhuman idea. I respect it and I hate it.
Instead I wish that marriage itself could be revised and thought upon differently. Marriage as we know it today, is a religious ritual, but who says we can't lift it out of the religious context and make it all-avaliable? The problem today is that marriage isn't only about religion and love - it's also about legal rights. A not married couple doesn't have the same rights and isn't equal in front of the law as married couples. This is what needs to be changed. In a secular country like Sweden, few couples get married "religiously" anyway even if they marry in church and by a priest. It's tradition and a romantic goal for many of us to achieve. It is time to leave the idea of marriage being a religous ritual behind and instead let it be what it is to many of us anyway: an act of love and law. The church doesn't have copyright of love and the sincere wish to publicly announce it!
The Bible and god has no place in a modern world and old rituals from the past shouldn't be a part of our tradition. Leave the Christian marriage to the blue-eyed Christians and let them sit inside their thick walls and let them live in their fantasty world. We don't need them, the church or their inhuman views on love.
Posted 4 months ago
by Jazzper Isaksson
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My sudden criticism towards religion - explanation
Those of you who follow me on Facebook, Twitter and my blog, probably notice a sudden change of activity. For the last couple of weeks I have put my focus and interest on religion criticism and perhaps even more on Christianity. While you could think I don't know anything about Christianity I can only say that I do. Quite a lot, actually. There was a time in my life when I was planning to study theology to become a pastor in a Pentacostal church branch. It failed. Or I failed.I have grown up in a Christian family with two parents who both were brought up in an even more Christian environment. My parents have never been active Christians though while the rest of the greater family, aunts and grandparents and cousins, have. But we have always had this close connection with the local church and I started early to attend activities such as boy scouting, orchestras and choir singing. At the age of 19 I was finally "saved by Jesus" as it were. I was a soul on fire and preached the gospel as soon as I could. This phase of my life last for three four years or so. Today I look back on these years as very dark years of my life and I regret every single day I called myself a Christian. Why? Let me tell you...
1. I fooled myself
For all those years I ran around in church with my Christian friends I was quite jealous of them. They were always happy and that happiness was something I wanted. I was also working hard to fit in; not only in church, but everywhere. One answer to this might be found in the fact that I am adopted and at the time I grew up, was one of few adopted children in the neighborhood. It wasn't easy, at times it could be a living hell. In church I felt that I was loved and that people around me enjoyed my company. I played my saxophone at services and people came up to me afterwards telling me how good I was (nowadays I think that I could have been standing in church farting and people would have enjoyed it...). Of course I felt "at home" here.
Perhaps I wanted it so badly I lied to myself. I had listened so many times to people saying that Jesus loved me, that he was alive and that I was a sinner, and perhaps I finally bought it. And I believed it for a couple of years. At the same time, my parents and especially my dad, started to turn away from church and his religious past. My dad and I used to watch the night sky together watching stars and planets. He used to share his knowledge as a physics teacher on evolution and big bang. Deep inside I still believed in the evolution theory even when calling myself a Christian.
I didn't want Jesus, I didn't want God. I wanted something else and that was only the social aspect of the church. They made me feel that I was loved and at the time, that what was I needed. Perhaps you could say that this was one of my greatest parts I have done as an actor. I fooled everyone and I fooled myself.
I worked as a youth pastor for a year and I preached to kids and youngsters about love, Jesus and God. I said to them that "Jesus loves you" but each time I said that, I doubted it even more. I felt bad for preaching kids this when I knew that if there was a God he didn't give a shit about them. Their parents could still die in a car crash, they could still catch cancer and there was no plan what so ever with their lives, as I told them there would be. I fooled them too.
2. I never saw that burning bush
I needed proof, I needed visual proof. I needed to see a burning bush. I think that most of my friends that I have left from those days, can agree on that I had my doubts and I always asked questions and had debates going with them. I wasn't happy with the answer that "Believing that God exists is enough". I had to see it. I couldn't care less about all the stories, made up examples of how complex our body is that there simply must be something divine behind the construction. To me it was all the easy way of explaining things we can't understand. And that wasn't enough for me.
3. God is a douchbag and I don't want anything to do with him
At the end of my Christian career I started to question the fast that God is love. I couldn't believe that Christians said that "greatest of all is love" and at the same time pointed their hands towards people who weren't allowed to be or experience love. Who were we to judge what is love and what is not? Why is God interested in who we sleep with at night? The God that the Christians around me believed in was a God who said that love is great as long as it isn't love between two men or two women. I started to rebellion this theory that homosexuality wasn't love and this is still something I am greatly upset about. If God won't allow two men or two women to fall in love with each other, he is, if he exists, not a God that I want anything to do with. It is as simple as that. Not to mention the douchbag he was according to the old testament...
These are the main reasons why I left the church, the bible, Jesus and God behind me. For long time I didn't even care if there was a God or not. So what? That doesn't mean I have to agree on that I am a sinner and that I want to abandon my life as I live it today where I am convinced that the only person who can change or improve it, is no other person than myself. So what if there is a God, I am not interested in having anything to do with him. Period.
But today I am happy to say that I don't believe there is a God at all. To me it's a mind-game, brainwash, a wish rather than reality. All my Christian friends are brought up in Christian families and therefor also brought up in the Christian religion. I forgive them, they don't know better, they never had the chance to decide for themselves whether they wanted to be Christians or not. They will continue live their lives with their eyes shadowed by the fine words and stories of something better than we have today. They will continue lack the empathy and the ability to see things in different way than their own. They will continue believing and not seeing.
In this blog post I am not giving an answers or debating anything. I am just telling what I believe and what I have believed. Oh, it's not about believing anymore - it's about conviction. And this is mine.
Posted 4 months ago
by Jazzper Isaksson
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Social medians and Internet gurus - all a bunch of pirates?

Posted 5 months ago
by Jazzper Isaksson
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Social Networks and deceased members

Today in one of the biggest and most respected Swedish newspapers, Dagens Nyheter (DN), brings forward the question of social networks and how they deal with members who are deceased. I recall news a year ago or so about Facebook refusing to remove a profile page of a deceased person and I remember being quite upset about that. Voices were raised talking about profile pages being used as a form of condolence books, which might be the case sometimes. Still I think it is very disrespectful of Facebook to not even wanting to discuss the matter (which happened that time). A couple of months ago a young teenage girl was brutally murdered in Sweden by two other teenagers in a complex love drama. Young people deal with deaths differently than adults and the presence of a deceased friend on the Internet can be both devastating and even comforting in times of grieving. But at the end of the day parents and family should have the last say and social networks should respect their wishes. Acting differently as a big social network is disrespectful and very sad. What it also does is indeed to emphasise the fact that Facebook and other social networks do own the lives of their members and when thinking about deceased members, it turns really ugly. The fact that respect for life isn't something Facebook wants to deal with is disturbing. Respect for life must in all situations stand above a silly Terms of Service.
Posted 5 months ago
by Jazzper Isaksson
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