Mar 08, 2013
ssc
Read on (unread)

Hitting Below The (Bible) Belt

Scott shares a comedic video about people praising a non-existent Pope, using it to humorously critique Catholic tendency to believe in nonexistent father figures. Longer summary
Scott humorously reflects on his inability to consistently produce clever but slightly unfair zingers about religious people, a skill needed for atheism blogging. He shares a video where comedians ask people on the street about a non-existent new Pope, noting how quickly Catholics praise this nonexistent father figure under mild social pressure. Scott's reaction draws a parallel between this behavior and broader Catholic beliefs, demonstrating his improving ability to create the kind of zingers common in atheist blogging. Shorter summary

Every so often I flirt with joining the prestigious, lucrative world of atheism blogging, but the fact is I’m just not cut out for it. I can’t consistently come up with marginally-clever-but-slightly-unfair zingers demeaning religious people on a daily basis.

But I do seem to be gradually getting better at this important skill.

For example, today I saw a hilarious video on the Patheos blog Why I Am Catholic. It was one of those shows where some comedians pretending to be a news team go out and ask the “man on the street” for opinions on increasingly ridiculous news items. In this case, they were asking for opinions on how the new Pope is doing – a new Pope, remember, who has not yet been elected. Watch it. It’s pretty good.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iz-LxZnPjJA

Anyway, my immediate reaction was “Man, who could possibly have guessed that Catholics would be so quick to praise a nonexistent father figure just because someone exerted mild social pressure on them to do so?”

If you enjoy this fan website, you can support us over here. Thanks a lot!
Send this article to your Kindle or e-reader

We'll email you this article as an EPUB attachment, ready to open on your Kindle, Kobo, or any other e-reader.

Enter your Send-to-Kindle email (it looks like [email protected]) below. For Amazon to accept the file, you first need to add our sender address to your approved list:

[email protected]

Open Amazon approved emails settings

On that page, open "Personal Document Settings", then add the address above under "Approved Personal Document E-mail List".

If your Kindle is linked to a non-US Amazon account, change the link's domain to match your country (for example amazon.fr or amazon.co.uk instead of amazon.com).

Email address
Enjoying this website? You can donate to support it! You can also check out my Book Translator tool.