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Welcome readers to our next semi-regular feature here at DWR.  The last Sunday Featurette was called the Sunday Creationist Smackdown and was geared toward providing a basis for succinctly arguing down the creationist god-babble one encounters on the Internet.  The focus of this feature will be different.

The authors of  this blog are in agreement that all religions are primarily an authoritarian, misogynistic,dehumanizing , regressive (really too many adjectives to list, but you get the idea) feature of societies.  In a better world, religion and magical belief would be marginalized and placed in the dustbin of history to be used as a learning opportunity on how not to structure human society.

The Internet has allowed for a great deal of critical examination and refutation of religious dogma.  The more rational inquiry there is into the rotten edifice of religion, the sooner it can be brought down and brought to heel allowing humanity to further progress into the 21st century without the delusional impediments religion brings to the table.

This video is the story of one woman’s trek into hell, sponsored by Allah and Islam.  Her offence, being a woman for one, and secondly having the audacity not to wear a veil in public.   Apologists say that Islam is a religion of peace, to which I say, where is this woman’s peace?  Where is her dignity?  Islam, like christianity is misogynistic, totalitarian and filled with xenophobia and hate.  When it spills into the light we can see exactly how ugly “keeping the faith” is…

Let the first DWR Religious Disservice begin now!

Trigger warning for violence and rape.

Mother Jones has an article and photo essay about the women self-immolating in Afghanistan reaffirming the utter lack of misogyny (funny how that correlates with religious belief) present in religiously deluded societies.

Well okay, maybe a little.

One of the more brilliant minds of youtube, Thunderfoot dispels the notion that Atheism and Atheists are a depressed, hopeless cause. I share many of his insights about living without a sky-daddy and thought it would be nice to share his thoughts with you.

 

I highly recommend you take an hour of your time and arm yourself with the facts about cosmology and physics.  Lawrence Krauss does a masterful job of describing how the Universe works and why no creator is necessary for our existence in the here and now.

 

Is it the supernatural or just a mere coincidence?

Rick Salutin should not have been dismissed as an op-ed writer at the Canada’s ‘national’ newspaper the Globe and Mail. His spot taken by religious apologist Irshad Manji has left a gaping hole in coverage of news and events from the perspective of the working class. However, one and awhile they allow Jim Standford to add a bit of reality to the generally rightward op-eds that are par for the course in the Globe and Mail.

Jim lays the smack down in an article that tells about how our society is being (has been) structured to benefit the wealthy and their interests and how new movements such as the Tea Party seemed to have missed the target when it comes to where they lay their righteous anger. This post will be quote heavy as I intend to reference it as a basis for economic discussions in the future, so please bear with the meticulous quoting as to what Mr. Standford had to say.

“American economist Emmanuel Saez has painstakingly assembled a century-long statistical series on U.S. income distribution. On two occasions, the share of income captured by the richest 1 per cent reached about a quarter of the national total. The first time was in 1928, the second in 2007. As we all know, both peaks in wealth concentration were followed by financial catastrophe and depression. Indeed, maldistribution clearly contributed to both meltdowns.”

Not to harp on a point but progressive taxation addresses this problem well and at one point in time was actually in the tax code of the US.

“But there’s a startling difference in the political reverberations that followed the two conflagrations. In the 1930s, outrage at the pre-Depression extravagance of the rich, contrasting with the dislocation experienced by masses of Americans, sparked a decade of left-leaning foment. Government expanded income security, directly hired millions of unemployed, and actively supported a new generation of unions to fight for the common folk. Meantime, it reined in business excess through tough financial rules, anti-trust policies, and high taxes on the rich.”

So what is different this time around?  Why are we not getting the limitations put back on the business class?

“This time around, there’s been plenty of populist anger – but (so far) it’s been steered in exactly the opposite direction. Social supports and public employment are being cut dramatically (especially by U.S. state and local governments). Barack Obama’s election promise to modernize labour laws and rebuild unions was dead – even before he lost Congress. And several state governments are now preparing a full assault on union rights: Recent proposals in Ohio and Wisconsin would virtually outlaw collective bargaining across broad swaths of the public sector.”

It seems like this is the road that has brought us to ruin, let’s go faster! The important questions to keep in mind is economic disaster and ruin for whom and which segments of society are not being as dramatically effected.

“The richest 1 per cent almost tripled their share of U.S. national income since 1978, gobbling two-thirds of the income gains generated in the whole economy over the past decade. With numbers like these, highlighting the incomes of the ultra-rich is no longer an idle, envious pastime. The concentration of wealth at the top has become macroeconomically significant.”

Two thirds of all the income gains, to the top 1%.  This is not equitable, rational or even reasonable.  Why does emergent political policy look the way it does?  Political influence of this nascent oligarchy is the answer.

‘Recession or no recession, the gravy train at the top hasn’t paused for breath: Executive bonuses keep rising, and the top 25 hedge-fund managers made a staggering $1-billion each in 2009. Nevertheless, the trend in U.S. politics is not to challenge the contrast between the top and the bottom, but to reinforce it. The Tea Party portrays government itself as the problem. And rather than empowering average workers to improve their lot (like the Wagner Act did in 1935), America’s rightward lurch in labour relations will reinforce the stagnation at the bottom.”

I would speculate that measures that increase social and economic equality such as Universal Healthcare were derailed precisely because of this misplaced furor of the Tea party and other people, who wrongly blame the government rather than elites for their current economic situation.  It certainly was not the government that took 2/3 of all the economic income gains from 1978.   Indeed it is pretty bad in the US, but does Canada fare any better?

“Canada is a kinder, gentler, fairer place. So the numbers aren’t as extreme. Or are they? Here, the richest 1 per cent (less than 250,000 tax filers) capture 17 per cent of total income, and that share has merely doubled (not trebled) since the egalitarian 1970s. A full third of all income gains across Canada since 1987 have gone to that lucky group. For the ultra-ultra-rich (the top 0.1 per cent of families, 25,000 in total, with average income of $1.5-million), their share of national income has trebled to 6.5 per cent.”

Erm. Well…  Yeah, we are a little better of as the egalitarian principles in Canada are eroding at a slower rate than those of the US.

“Despite this largesse, in Canada, too, the political bandwagon lurches to the right. There’s been infinitely more hot air expended since the financial meltdown over the salaries of unionized garbage collectors than those of high-flying financiers. Our home-grown plutocracy, meanwhile, keeps raking it in. Bonuses at the Big Six banks alone reached $8.9-billion in 2010, the highest ever. The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives recently documented that the typical Canadian CEO made as much by 2:30 p.m. on Jan. 3 as the average worker makes all year long.

It is not rational for this sort of imbalance to exist in an economy.  This is not the market determining a fair price for work done, this is naked avarice strutting though Canadian society as if nothing was wrong.

“Imagine a city the size of Saskatoon hogging a third of all the new income generated by the entire country. Imagine folks who earn as much in a few hours as the rest of us do in a year – yet still lecture us on the need to tighten our belts. Imagine 25,000 families earning as much as the bottom seven million tax filers put together. How long will these excesses fly under the public’s radar, while we bicker over wage gaps between unionized garbage collectors and non-union fast-food workers?   Not long, I hope.”

The belt tightening needs to start at the top, competent leaders, lead by example and from the front.  Did we see during this latest recession the business classes calling for more social programs and higher taxes on their cohort?  Not even a faint whisper.  Why?  Because when rapacious avarice is the name of the game, sharing the pain and helping others is not even in the playbook.

Feathering the nests and nest eggs on the backs of the rest of society is par for the course of North American elites.  Witness the wage stagnation that is still with us since the 1970’s.  And who (are we told to) do we blame for this?  The penuriousness of the burgeoning plutocracy?  Of course not.  The blame goes to the Government and the Unions, two public institutions that have mandates to actually protect, rather than exploit,  people.   A tip of the hat for the propaganda program that has set the people against themselves rather than those who are actually running the show.

There are really quite a few gems to be found at Subnormality.  Here is another. Do we have the courage to make the right choice in our lives.  Certain people do, even at great cost.   This is a story of two people and two choices.

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