251. A Tribute to Douglas Adams: Towel Day May 25th
Comment #184357 by Layla Nasreddin on May 24, 2008 at 6:59 pm
And if all else fails, you (female) can use the towel as a hijab, in case you want to nip over to the masjid (mosque) for some reason.
Or not. ;)
Come to think of it, is it allowed to carry an unworn hijab as a towel on Towel Day? Many of them, unwrapped, are as large or even larger than a typical towel.
252. Tribute to a Beloved Mentor
Comment #184309 by Layla Nasreddin on May 24, 2008 at 1:40 pm
Teranornis wrote:
There is something rather frightening about the remarkably common human tendency to surrender our emotions to symbols on a computer display.
253. Tribute to a Beloved Mentor
Comment #184135 by Layla Nasreddin on May 23, 2008 at 6:38 pm
I was almost in tears just from reading this, even though I never knew the man! I desperately wish I could have had a teacher/professor so knowledgeable about and devoted to his/her subject, yet so completely accessible and approachable.
254. Richard Dawkins lecture at ASU's Tempe Campus
Comment #183824 by Layla Nasreddin on May 22, 2008 at 11:53 pm
Goldy wrote:
Layla, if I remember right you are a convert to Islam, eh? Losing your faith? Why?
That's a remarkable story. I'm glad you have found your place finally. I'm sure it must have taken a lot of courage. How long were you wearing hijab for? Were you brought up practicing islam?
By the way Layla, Im a convert away from Islam as well, under Sharia Law we should both be killed! lol, sadly enough though that's the case for many rational thinkers in the Islamic theocracies around the world
255. Richard Dawkins lecture at ASU's Tempe Campus
Comment #183756 by Layla Nasreddin on May 22, 2008 at 6:02 pm
RamziD wrote:
Are you from the Phoenix/Tempe area? I was unable to make it to Dawkins' lecture at ASU, but I heard it was very well received.
256. Richard Dawkins lecture at ASU's Tempe Campus
Comment #183484 by Layla Nasreddin on May 22, 2008 at 7:14 am
Yay! Thank you.
Incidentally, from the Beyond website: Lawrence Krauss to join ASU
http://asunews.asu.edu/20080520_krauss
Oh, really? Maybe I can see him sometime!
257. In God's Name
Comment #183480 by Layla Nasreddin on May 22, 2008 at 7:08 am
al-rawandi wrote:
It is sweeping. There is always a point were rationalism breaks down. I know of only a couple of rational Muslims.... Hirsi Ali, and Ibn Warraq. So when you discuss something with a Muslim it quickly devolves into trenchant positioning.
"Asked and answered, those are Orientalist questions, and they have been asked and answered."
258. Richard Dawkins Responds to Rabbi Shmuley Boteach
Comment #182969 by Layla Nasreddin on May 21, 2008 at 6:59 am
Layla are you a pretender? How come you write so well while you are not a native spaker? any mutation, evolution?
259. Richard Dawkins Responds to Rabbi Shmuley Boteach
Comment #182747 by Layla Nasreddin on May 20, 2008 at 11:34 pm
al-rawandi wrote:
Ohhhh cleaaaarminddd, does this ring a bell:
Amana billah, wa rasulihi, kutubihi, wa'l yawm al-akhar?
260. In God's Name
Comment #182741 by Layla Nasreddin on May 20, 2008 at 11:22 pm
This is taking place in Britain?! Just goes to show that you can't be complacent about this stuff; you always have to be on your guard against superstitious nonsense!
261. Gimme that Old-Time Irreligion
Comment #181895 by Layla Nasreddin on May 18, 2008 at 4:26 pm
I live in Britain and it undoubtedly true that religion is dying away. Even in places like Spain, Brasil, France and Italy, the Catholic church has problems in holding onto its adherents.
262. Gimme that Old-Time Irreligion
Comment #181648 by Layla Nasreddin on May 17, 2008 at 7:26 pm
Of course there is something to it! They are implying that the sort of cultural war against religion Richard is engaged in - which was quite typical of the 19th-century cultural clashes - should be considered obsolete by now.
Well, it should indeed be obsolete by now! But in view of the persisting influence (or even revival?) of religion it's about time that we secularists/atheists return to be more 19th-century, i.e. intellectually militant! As Richard said: "Let's all stop being so damned respectful!" This is what makes him "19th-century" - and it is more of a positive than a negative indeed.
263. Gimme that Old-Time Irreligion
Comment #181615 by Layla Nasreddin on May 17, 2008 at 4:55 pm
The new boldness of atheists and nonbelievers is not so much a novel development as an unconscious return to the mindset of an earlier century. Contrary to the standard myth of progress, America spent many years going backwards in point of publicly-acceptable attitudes toward religion, even as Western Europe eagerly abandoned its historical obedience to Christianity, and turned itself into a society where atheism is pretty much the norm, the persistence of officially-established churches and similar vestigial institutions notwithstanding. I don't expect America to move that far that fast. Religion still has its claws into too many people and communities; one doubts that the airwaves will soon be full of clear-channel radio stations proclaiming the indispensability of skepticism and the savage wrongheadedness of biblical literalism.
264. The Oxford Book of Modern Science Writing, ed. Richard Dawkins
Comment #181582 by Layla Nasreddin on May 17, 2008 at 3:01 pm
...and the long-time games columnist from Scientific American, Martin Gardner.
265. Texas Megachurch Minister Busted in Internet Sex Sting
Comment #181558 by Layla Nasreddin on May 17, 2008 at 12:48 pm
This is so not-surprising; it has an air of inevitibility about it, as if one expected somebody like this to get busted for something like that. Interesting what that says about megachurch ministers, isn't it?
As for closing down the church--iffy. New Life Church, Ted Haggard's old stomping grounds, is still around and, by the looks of it, doing good business, even if attendance dropped a bit after the scandal broke.
http://www.newlifechurch.org/
266. Richard Dawkins Responds to Rabbi Shmuley Boteach
Comment #181545 by Layla Nasreddin on May 17, 2008 at 12:09 pm
Due to some kind of oversight, this sentence was mistakenly omitted from the version of my reply which is published at Beliefnet.com (site of Shmuley's attack).
267. Malaysia woman scores rare legal win to quit Islam
Comment #181056 by Layla Nasreddin on May 16, 2008 at 11:14 am
Darn, I had a whole thread about this last week in the Forum...though it was in the backwaters of the "Faith & Religion" board ("Islamic court says Muslim convert can return to Buddhism" http://richarddawkins.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=44105 ).
I'll say what I said there: after the infamous Lina Joy case, where a woman was prevented from changing her religion from Islam to Christianity by the religious courts, perhaps Malaysia realized that, far from presenting an image of itself as ultra-modern and tolerant, such decisions put them in the august company of countries like Iran and Saudi Arabia. So I think it's a (slight) step forward!
268. Richard Dawkins discusses Einstein's new letters
Comment #180803 by Layla Nasreddin on May 15, 2008 at 8:48 pm
Now I just looked at the Guardian and found that the letter sold for 170,000 pounds! That's VASTLY more than the auctioneers' upper estimate.
269. 'Framing Science' and The Dawkins Effect
Comment #180389 by Layla Nasreddin on May 14, 2008 at 7:12 pm
I, for one, can testify (ha! love that word in this context!) to the effectiveness of the "Dawkins approach" to the science/religion "war." I suspect that the mere fact that such a "ruckus" is caused means that more people become aware of the issues involved, which means that more people may become open to new ideas, or perhaps simply allow the unconscious doubts or problems that they've always had rise to the surface. Who knows?
270. The Dissent Of Darwin - The World Of Richard Dawkins
Comment #180378 by Layla Nasreddin on May 14, 2008 at 5:44 pm
What's up with guys and their obsession with their, uh, testicles? ;)
This must be from 1996 or thereabouts, but very interesting nevertheless.
271. Americans pray at the pump for cheaper petrol
Comment #179774 by Layla Nasreddin on May 13, 2008 at 5:53 pm
Damn, I suppose I should be praising God (or Allah) since my town has the cheapest gas in the entire country at $3.457/gallon ($0.9135/litre) on average--and I've just seen it at $3.35/gallon ($0.885/litre). (That last is 0.4549 British pounds/litre, for you Brits.) They should move here!
Well, maybe not.
Anyway, I could say something about the Saudis and their export of Wahhabism, but I'm sure it's all been said before. Just open up a Saudi-translated Qur'an and start reading!
272. Americans pray at the pump for cheaper petrol
Comment #179149 by Layla Nasreddin on May 12, 2008 at 7:31 pm
Holy crap, is this how America looks to the rest of the world? *hangs head in shame*
273. 3QD interviews Richard Dawkins
Comment #179036 by Layla Nasreddin on May 12, 2008 at 12:24 pm
This is a very interesting interview; not just the same stupid questions for the 6,868th time. Real science for a change!
But what thrills me a LOT more than it should is the fact that Dawkins' interlocutor is a descendent of the Prophet Muhammad--his full name is Syed Abbas Raza. "Syed" is a title given to (alleged, I should say) descendants of the Prophet (also spelled "sayyid," "seyed," etc.)--though that might prove a bit difficult to prove. Start the DNA testing! Not that anybody else will care; I just think it's an interesting factoid.
(By the way, I wonder what that trip to Africa RD mentioned where he was interviewing the prostitute portends...)
274. Scientists Know Better Than You--Even When They're Wrong
Comment #178190 by Layla Nasreddin on May 10, 2008 at 7:41 pm
Thank you, Layla -- of course you are quite right and I suspected such. I should have more appropriately asked, how come these schools still exist in the "21st century"? I suppose your answer still applies even if I was hoping for a different one.
275. Scientists Know Better Than You--Even When They're Wrong
Comment #178184 by Layla Nasreddin on May 10, 2008 at 6:31 pm
Would someone please help me out? Don't prestigious universities like Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Oxford, and so on have divinity schools or theology departments? What gives there? I can see, as Richard Dawkins proposes, that comparative religion be taught, but don't these schools graduate doctors of divinity? What a joke. How come this happens?
276. Richard Dawkins interviewed by John Humphrys on Cardinal Murphy O'Connor
Comment #178149 by Layla Nasreddin on May 10, 2008 at 3:34 pm
Danger because, if you go just by reason, I think, without faith, without belief in God, you can imagine, for instance in the last century, some of the faith(less), or supposedly faithless societies - people, whether it's like Hitler or Stalin, bringing up - having a country in which, if you like, a God free zone, a dictatorship ruled by reason, and where does it lead? To terror and oppression.
277. Atheists are nice people who will roast in hell, says Cardinal
Comment #178098 by Layla Nasreddin on May 10, 2008 at 1:34 pm
Satire...it's what's for dinner! ;)
Would a "real Catholic" say something like that? Very unlikely...the "nipping off to the shops" bit might have tipped one off!
No modern Catholic would actually SAY anything so outrageous.
Comment #177342 by Layla Nasreddin on May 9, 2008 at 12:21 am
I am pleased that the BBC makes use of the tax revenue it receives from Britons to make its fine, commercial-free radio programmes available free of charge to...foreigners like me. Thanks, guys! ;)
A quick, pungent, hard-hitting interview. We'll see how the good Cardinal responds.
279. Churchgoing on its knees as Christianity falls out of favour
Comment #177340 by Layla Nasreddin on May 9, 2008 at 12:09 am
If ever the Kaaba should be physically destroyed, I bet their theology will just shift to say that what the angels are protecting is still there... it's in fact the non-physical, spiritual Kaaba.
Comment #177114 by Layla Nasreddin on May 8, 2008 at 3:25 pm
robotaholic wrote:
tell the truth- did any of you ppl actually read the WHOLE thing? *waggs finger* - I can't possibly make myself.- it's agony!!!
Comment #177065 by Layla Nasreddin on May 8, 2008 at 2:06 pm
Richard Dawkins wrote:
Do people think it is worth bothering to go on the radio to talk about it?
As always, the interesting question about atheism is 'what is the theism that is being denied?' Have you ever met anyone who believes what Richard Dawkins doesn't believe in? I usually find that the God that is being rejected by such people is a God I don't believe in either. I simply don't recognise my faith in what is presented by these critics as Christian faith.
282. Is Liberal Catholicism Dead?
Comment #175857 by Layla Nasreddin on May 6, 2008 at 6:53 am
"Liberal" Catholicism? Define "liberal"...
On a related point,this has long been an interesting issue to me: why do "liberal" mainstream Protestant churches in America hemorrhage members, while hardcore conservative ones grow by leaps and bounds? My answer to that (from my own experience) is that a lot of people LIKE their religion to adamantly stand for "The Truth," which it insists that it and it alone has, and then, armed with this "knowledge," tell its members what God (or Allah) wants them to do.
Also, you know, if neither you nor the preachers actually believe in what they're preaching, why not just sleep in? Seems like a much better use of one's time to me! ;)
283. Muslim Rebel Sisters: At Odds With Islam and Each Other
Comment #175624 by Layla Nasreddin on May 5, 2008 at 6:17 pm
al-rawandi wrote:
Sabaeans are a pre-Islamic religion that existed in the Hijaz region. They are a form of monotheistic creed that seems somewhat similar to Christianity.
The Hanifites also had representation in Mecca. It was a monotheistic following of Abraham, and predated Islam. No doubt Muhammad received influence from their thought.
284. Dumb and Dumber: A discussion between Ben Stein and Glenn Beck
Comment #175446 by Layla Nasreddin on May 5, 2008 at 12:40 pm
I could say something, but it would be grossly uncharitable.
285. Shaw TV Interview with Richard Dawkins
Comment #175203 by Layla Nasreddin on May 4, 2008 at 9:02 pm
"No, no, I've never had a letter from a Muslim...I don't think they read my books. I mean...I've never really had one."
Hey! Don't I count? ;)
Seriously, though, from the context he doubtless means hate mail from Muslim fundamentalists. And all I have to say about that is alhamdulillah (Praise be to Allah)--meant ironically, of course! You definitely don't want those guys after you, as the examples of outspoken ex-Muslims or Muslim reformers forced into hiding with 24-hour police protection show. (I wonder how many letters/emails he gets from Muslims, anyway?)
Good interview...I have to say I sort of identified with the "cult indoctrination" bit!
286. Muslim Rebel Sisters: At Odds With Islam and Each Other
Comment #175066 by Layla Nasreddin on May 4, 2008 at 10:17 am
72 - Barry Pearson wrote:
Note that this puts Sura 9 last, giving priority to its crusade-nature over more peaceful earlier parts. (Is there any dispute about this?)
287. A New Jack Chick Tract: Moving On Up!
Comment #174774 by Layla Nasreddin on May 3, 2008 at 12:52 pm
"Well we're movin'on up, to the east side, to a dee-luxe apartment in the sky..." (Sorry, couldn't resist!)
Seriously, if "evolution does away with morals," so that "anything goes" and you can "lie" and "cheat"...
...what excuse do the oh-so-holy Chickies have for lying so brazenly about, well, everything--evolution, Catholicism, any religion other than the most warped, fundie Christianity, etc.?
288. Evolution's Critics Shift Tactics With Schools
Comment #174758 by Layla Nasreddin on May 3, 2008 at 12:25 pm
Doug Cowan, a public-school biology teacher, said his colleagues are often afraid to speak out.
Mr. Cowan said he tells students: "I'm going to give you the evidence for evolution and the evidence against, and let you decide." For instance, he'll mention Darwin's observation that finches evolve different-shaped beaks to suit different ecosystems. Then he'll add that you don't see a finch changing into another species.
289. Muslim Rebel Sisters: At Odds With Islam and Each Other
Comment #174683 by Layla Nasreddin on May 3, 2008 at 8:32 am
Fanusi Khiyal wrote:
Layla could you give the name of the Hadith that say that about women?
And even if it is one of the strong ones - which I seriously doubt - like Bukhari or Muslim, care to explain how they can possibly override the Quranic injunction to the contrary?
290. Muslim Rebel Sisters: At Odds With Islam and Each Other
Comment #174575 by Layla Nasreddin on May 2, 2008 at 7:15 pm
Vinelectric wrote:
Learn the language, subscribe to any Arabic satellite channel and you're guaranteed to hear a preacher talk about Muhammad helping his wives clean the house, saying "take good care of your wives" in his deathbed etc etc. Unfortunately he never abrogated the verse in the Quran that invites men to flog their wives. Truth is he was never reported to be mean to his many wives.
291. Muslim Rebel Sisters: At Odds With Islam and Each Other
Comment #174571 by Layla Nasreddin on May 2, 2008 at 6:45 pm
Hmmm. I was very interested in "Islamic feminism." Women such as Fatima Mernissi, Shirin Ebadi, Amina Wadud and others who managed to combine Islam with modernity and human rights gave me some measure of faith that it wasn't true that Islam was a misogynistic religion, that it could change, that there was nothing contradictory about being a Muslim and a feminist.
However...(and here comes the problem!)...it seemed to me, from studying the sources, that the traditionalists almost always had the better of the argument. For example, a feminist might write a book about how women are really presented as being equal believers in the Qur'an...but not have a thing to say about any of the hadith, where so much of the problem comes from. Somebody like Irshad Manji or Asma Gull Hasan would write about how Islam is "really" a feminist religion...but be seriously lacking in quotes from Qur'an and hadith. By contrast, a Saudi book about women and their role is bound to contain multiple Qur'anic verses, several hadith, and other stories from the lives of the sahaba (companions of the Prophet) on nearly every page in order to back up their ideas that women need "protection" and all that kind of stuff. And of course the traditional books of fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence) backs them up on this. So the disconnect between what I knew of the sources and what Islamic feminists were saying bothered me, not least because I wanted the latter to "win"!
And, of course, add to that the fact that most Islamic feminists have a very hard time in much of the Islamic world, since "feminism" is more or less a dirty word there. No, it seems that you're more likely to hear things like, "Islam is the true women's liberation!" It's astonishing how many women totally buy into the whole fundamentalist thing, voluntarily wearing the niqab and so on...but maybe not, seeing as how women tend to be more religious than men.
292. Science leads to killing people
Comment #170662 by Layla Nasreddin on April 27, 2008 at 9:58 pm
I think I'm going to vomit now. I swear I felt my IQ drop several points just from listening to Stein's remarks.
(Here's another vomit-worthy link, by the way: http://powercut.blogspot.com/2007/09/richard-dawkins-diary-entry.html I stumbled on it by accident and can't think of a thing to say, it's so vile.)
293. Does science make belief in God obsolete?
Comment #170076 by Layla Nasreddin on April 27, 2008 at 10:41 am
Wow, major props to Pervez Amirali Hoodbhoy for saying this kind of thing in Pakistan!
Not necessarily.
But you must find a science-friendly, science-compatible God. First, try the pantheon of available Creators. Inspect thoroughly. If none fits the bill, invent one.
Comment #169570 by Layla Nasreddin on April 26, 2008 at 10:17 am
mixmastergaz wrote (109):
Completely off-topic post alert but...
I haven't seen this mentioned anywhere else on this site so here's a plug for Richard's lecture here in Liverpool earlier this week. It's available to watch online @:-
http://www.liv.ac.uk/08/webcast/dawkins_webcast.html
I imagine there's not much in it that will be new to regulars on this site, but for those who've never seen Richard lecture it's more than worth a watch.
From the length of the video I'd guess that the Q and A session isn't included which is a shame. Some crank from the local Christian Union was foolish enough to argue that "evolution can't possibly be true" because "chimpanzees eat their own young". Richard's response was most amusing. I mean, where does one begin with that sort of question?
Another challenger accused Richard of arrogance for claiming to know what happens after death, before claiming privileged knowledge of the "afterlife" herself! She refused to elaborate on her insights but offered to write to Richard with more details. He graciously thanked her for this, but didn't quite manage to conceal the irony in his tone of voice. The last challenger seemed to think that the growth of Christianity in China somehow proved the existence of God (although he was rather sketchy on the details). I was disappointed by the poverty of counter-arguments put to Richard. If they were representative of the best that Christians in Liverpool can come up with then Hope Street (the road connecting Liverpool's Anglican and Catholic cathedrals) must be simply teeming with halfwits on Sundays.
295. Yoko Ono sues over use of John Lennon videos
Comment #169486 by Layla Nasreddin on April 26, 2008 at 7:33 am
"I'm sick to death of hearing things
From uptight, short-sighted, narrow-minded hypocrites
All I want is the truth now
Just gimme some truth now."
--John Lennon, "Gimme Some Truth"
A more perfect description of the Expelled people could hardly be written...well, unless several intensifying profanities were inserted. ;)
296. Interviews with Richard Dawkins and Michael Shermer
Comment #168206 by Layla Nasreddin on April 24, 2008 at 6:32 pm
clearmind (sic!) wrote:
As for you, Layla, I just asked some muslims guys that whether whether Muslims quit their religion or not. I was told that this is a very rare situation in Islam religion.
Why are you here? (Who are these people?" I wondered, "...and why do I keep coming back to their site?")
a. You quit your religion.
b. You are atheist and you are trying to prove that Evolution is true because you are giving a helping hand to Dawkins after the battle of intelligence with Ben Stein
c. You are an attention seeker?
Now If I would say, I would not be surprised if some more believers popping out of nowhere claming that they became atheists to try to save evolution and atheists face along with Dawkins, " Nah, but I wouldn't. I do not think that evolution is so hurt by Stein's Movie? Then question is boggling my mind; why is Dawkins overreacting?
Comment #166857 by Layla Nasreddin on April 23, 2008 at 1:07 pm
Cambridge? Hey, wait a minute...don't Cambridge and Oxford have this bitter rivalry going, with Oxonians poking fun at "North Fens Polytechnic," while Cambrige students in turn laughing at "Cowley Polytechnic"? I mean, if this was put out by "that other school"... ;) *stifles a giggle*
298. Ben Stein Vs. Sputtering Atheists
Comment #164978 by Layla Nasreddin on April 20, 2008 at 10:50 pm
This line tells me everything I need to know:
L. Brent Bozell III is the president of the Media Research Center.
299. Open Letter to a victim of Ben Stein's lying propaganda
Comment #164913 by Layla Nasreddin on April 20, 2008 at 8:51 pm
Damn, Quine, how can you continue reading that crap? ;) (Yes, I know, it's important to be open to all points of view, but still...there have got to be limits!)
300. Religion is 'the new social evil'
Comment #164890 by Layla Nasreddin on April 20, 2008 at 7:58 pm
Goldy wrote:
Given the Polish Catholics haven't had the same effect, I'd guess no. Maybe as a reaction to what Islam is asking for, yes. You have to admit, it has been a bit forceful...