Archive for December 2007

CVA accused of vandalism in Hartford church

On Thursday morning, right around the time I was being excoriated for alleged grinchery by some local shock jocks, a custodian at the Central Baptist Church in Hartford discovered the congregation’s indoor nativity scene smashed into pieces, the ceramic faces targeted with the hammer of some unknown vandal.   

 

The Hartford Courant’s website reported this incident on Thursday afternoon.  It took only a few hours for a reader to add a comment accusing CVA of the vandalism.  “It was those athiests [sic]  from Vernon. Imagine no religion,” wrote Mathew from Hartford.  

 

It didn’t matter to me that I was an atheist; I was just as sickened by the vandalism as anyone else.  I don’t know why people do things like this and there is no justification for such an insult to someone’s faith.  But to be accused of the act without any evidence, even when such aggression is contrary to our stated goals and philosophy, was rather insulting as well.   Angry, I posted a reply.  

 

“To Mathew, who accused Connecticut Valley Atheists of vandalizing this display, I wish to defend our organization from your baseless assertion.  We condemn this and all acts of vandalism and discrimination. I can assure you that none of our members were responsible, and none would approve. This kind of hatred fits nowhere into our philosophy.  Furthermore, this display was on church property, which is, as we have consistently stated, exactly where it belongs, and we would have no reason to object to its presence or wish its removal or destruction.  We object to religious images on government property, including the nativity scene five feet from our own display, which, you fail to note, remains unmolested.  Enough with the hate speech.”

 

Nonetheless, other comments were made.  “This HAS to be the work of those psycho atheists from Vernon/Rockville,” railed Jonah from West Hartford. “Block our ‘Imagine No Religion’ sign with a tree, huh? We’ll show those dirty Christians!”  I’m glad we use logic more proficiently than Jonah thinks we do.  It would be an immense waste of time to seek revenge on the Vernon town council by targeting a private church in Hartford.  That would be as silly as, say, invading Iraq in response to an attack by Saudis.  You know, hypothetically.

 

Other posters made similar accusations, and one ridiculed me for calling it a display (I guess I’ve just been in the mindset of referring to ours as one.  I guess it was kind of a weird thing to call it).

 

There is never any excuse for this kind of act.  I hope the vandals are caught and prosecuted for breaking and entering and destruction of property.  They should pay to have the figures replaced on top of whatever sentence the judge deems fit.  

 

Though I don’t respect Christianity, I have respect for it.  There is a major difference.  I respect their right to worship in their church, to believe what they believe, to display their imagery on their own property, to tell me I am wrong and wicked and deserve to burn in Hell.  These are the same rights that I enjoy, and I will always defend them for both sides.  Telling people their religion is illogical and intolerant is an appropriate act of free speech.  Destroying images that they consider sacred is even more illogical and intolerant.  What the vandals truly gained from this I shall never understand.  But this holiday season (yes, I said it), let us not fight intolerance with intolerance, or senseless destruction of property with senseless destruction of reputation.  

 

Merry Christmas to the members of the Central Baptist Church.

 

“Dog” Works in Mysterious Ways

My son is an avid skiier. He can’t wait to start the season. He was supposed to go with his friends from college to Mount Snow this week (12/18 - 12/19), but he can’t wait and decides to go to a SkiMarket Rail Jam in the Buckland Malls parking lot.   As punishment from “dog”, he tore his ACL.  Well, the good news is he now has a lot of time to work on the CVA website.  I’m really happy at how the Homepage turned out, as well as the Forum and Blog etc. The “dog” works in mysterious ways.  Picco

We Have A Blog!

The new website is just about complete. I’m pretty pleased with the way that it turned out. There are flashy buttons, menus, and randomized quotes.

But the most exciting part for me is the interactivity. Anyone can log on and speak their mind in the forums, members can post their thoughts in this blog, and officers will regularly update the news and events. It’s a dynamic, interactive landscape. Have a look around and register in the forums and blogs. We hope you’ll join in, contribute, and have fun.

Dan On Air

Dan, our intrepid Vice Coordinator, will be representing CVA as a guest on two radio programs on Thursday, Dec 20.

WPLR’s Chaz & AJ will have Dan as a call-in guest to at about 7:15 am. Then at 7 pm Dan will be a call-in guest on the internet radio program Answers in Atheism, hosted by Edwin Kagin. The morning interview will last about ten minutes, while the evening’s interview will last 30-45 minutes (and is likely to be much more sympathetic.) The Chaz & AJ show is broadcast on 99.1 FM, WPLR, New Haven, CT from 5:30 to 10 am.

Answers in Atheism can be streamed from answersinatheism.net from 7 to 8 pm.

Please tune in if possible. If you are able to tape the interviews, that would be great. We can replay them at our next meeting.

The Vernon Atheist Display

On December 1, 2007 we erected the Town of Vernon’s first Atheist holiday display. It will eventually be joined by a Christian display and a Jewish one. Traditionally only a Christian display has been erected. We would prefer no displays promoting theological worldviews be displayed at all, but as long as they are we thank the Town of Vernon for permitting Atheists equal access.

Since we erected our holiday display in Vernon we have received several emails suggesting that the World Trade Center design was inappropriate. This is our response:

First, we are equally aghast and disturbed by what happened on Sept. 11th. In fact, many of us atheists decided to become more active because of that incident. Our image was not dramatic — it was a serene pre-9/11 image. If we have opened up any old wounds, it is completely unintentional.

We are also not insinuating that all religious people are to blame. Clearly, 9/11 is the work of fanatics. However, we feel that religion even in moderation provides a foundation for fanatical groups to thrive. In short, we are against the idea of god and religion but not against the people caught in the web of illusion.

Our complaint about religion with regards to 9/11 is not new. Monsignor Lorenzo Albacete, a professor of theology at St. Joseph’s Seminary in New York made this observation in an interview conducted by FRONTLINE producer Helen Whitney in the winter of 2002.

From the first moment I looked into that horror on September 11th, into that fireball, into that explosion of horror, I knew it. I knew it before anything was said about those who did it or why. I recognized an old companion. I recognized religion. — Monsignor Lorenzo Albacete