Reason Riders Are Really Real

You know about my horseback career, I’m sure. But way back when (and still more in the future, I hope!)  I also used to ride motorcycles. Had three of them and rode year-round, as my sole transportation, for several years.

Remember this post? Hey, Where’s OUR Motorcycle Gang?

I posted my mockup of a possible back-patch for atheist riders, and demanded that I be given a charter membership if anyone ran with it.

Someone did!

Pierino Walker sent me an email a while back (I’ve been a while getting to it; sorry Pierino):

It all started with the concept that you came up with initially and I count you as one of the founders. If you would still like some patches let me know where to send them. I just want show the world that we, as atheists, agnostics and non-believers of all types occupy all facets of life. I am starting this club to show that we enjoy fun, the outdoors, adventure and riding just like other people do, but without Hell or Angels or skulls blazing across our backs.

I just want fellow non-believers to come together as a group and ride down the coastline or ride out to Reno or wherever we as a collective decide to go. I feel it’s necessary to show that freethinkers aren’t just a bunch of angry people sitting around plotting to somehow overthrow religion. I look forward to riding with my fellow like-minded bikers.

If anyone outside of my general area would like to be a part of Reason Riders in their own location, they are free to use the Reason Riders emblem. Anyone can get the patches through me, and if you ride with us, all the better! We’ll keep track of the numbers wearing the patch, wherever they ride. There are only five of us right now but that’s enough to get things started and I hope it grows beyond that.

As Pierino notes, my original design with the Darwin inset would have been too expense and complex. His design is a great improvement.

These are small, 4 inches across, more suitable to an arm or front patch than a big back patch. I sort of wish the name line  was a bit bolder, readable from a greater distance. But still, pretty sweet, yes?

If you want one, or want to contact him for more information, email Pierino, who lives in northern California — really GOOD riding country — at:

ktown1213 [at] gmail [dot] com

On my end:

Patches – check. Pierino sent me TWO.

Motorcycle … still working on that little detail. (But then, I have the entire winter to get it worked out.)

Wouldn’t it be nice to get a spring ride together in your area? Cruising down the highway, proudly displaying your colors? Oh yeah, count me in.

Beta Culture: The Stench of Royalty

I’m convinced there are two major classes of people on Planet Earth, with a very sharp dividing line — almost a species division — between them.

The two classes are:

1) Real People.

2) Cattle.

If you’re reading this, you’re probably one of the second category. Just as I am.

Writing the most recent post Beta Culture: To Not Be Owned, I came across this rather annoying article from the 2011 Business Insider, The World’s 15 Biggest Landowners.

Here they are in reverse order, the owners and their total owned area (If it helps, one square mile equals 640 acres, or 2.59 square kilometers.):

15) Ted Turner, 3,124 square miles
14) Sheik Hamad Bin Khalifa of Qatar, 4,375 square miles
13) James, Arthur and John Irving, 5,625 square miles
12) King Mswati of Swaziland, 6,704 square miles
11) Emir of Kuwait, 6,875 square miles
10) King Letsie 111 of Lesotho, 11,718 square miles
9) King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck of Bhutan, 15,000 square miles
8) King Abdullah II of Jordan, 35,637 square miles
7) King Gyanendra of Nepal, 57,000 square miles
6) Sultan Qaboos of Oman, 119,498 square miles
5) King Bhumibhol of Thailand, 200,000 square miles
4) King Mohammed VI of Morocco, 274,375 square miles
3) Pope Benedict/Catholic Church, 276,562.5 square miles
2) King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, 830,000 square miles
1) Queen Elizabeth II, 10.3 million square miles

Granted a few of these seem largely ceremonial, and not all the “owners” are hand-rubbing, cackling Mr. Burns-type evil landlords, but … Holy Skettymon(*)! Really? REALLY??

The area of Texas is only 270,000 square miles, which means the top four on this list, royalty every one, each own areas larger than Texas.

Two of these are U.S. billionaires, one is a church, the remaining dozen are royalty.  Between the lot of them, they own 12,146,493 square miles of the surface of the Earth. As the total land surface area of this planet is only 57,308,738 square miles, these FIFTEEN rich bastards own 21 percent of our planet.

To which I say: Well … CRAP.

And here I thought royalty was an amusing relic of the past.

As to Beta Culture: This business spotlights a continuing problem with where and when we live — that we are classed and outclassed by certain social forces, and that it might be appropriate to become a bit more assertive about that.

———————————–

(*) In case you wonder, I love the Flying Spaghetti Monster, but I’ve often wanted some easier way to speak His Holy Name in informal usage.  I’ve decided that for me, at least, “Skettymon” is that easier way. It’s short, has a nice punchy sound, and in its final syllable even lightly graces the Pasta with Rasta.

It came to me in a vision, I swear.

Beta Culture: To Not Be Owned

One of the prime motivations of my life has been independence. I have a deep, passionate sense that my life is my own. Mine, and nobody else’s.

I want nothing to be able to claim any part of me, not by force, not by lies, not by clever manipulation. I want to be owned not by churches, not by corporations, not by the government or the military, not by television, not by addictions, not by sports, not by drugs, not by bullies, not by fads or fame or glorious leaders.

On the other hand, I do like giving of myself. I’ve donated blood, money, sweat and time to others. I’ve cooked for sick friends. I’ve given lengthy rides to hitchhikers. I’ve helped people move, watched their pets or house-sat while they were on vacation. In my cowboy life, I’ve helped at brandings, feeding, and hay-hauling without pay. For a long time, I really enjoyed taking food to work — crock pot dishes, or things I had baked. Just as a gift to the granddaughter of some good friends, I wrote what started as a short adventure story with her as the heroine … but which ended being a 50,000-word novel. I’ve visited with people in the hospital. On more than one occasion, I’ve stopped on the side of the highway and helped change a tire, or called a tow truck. Hell, I get a good feeling when I open doors for people, which I do every day. Also every day, I give people sincere compliments.

So I enjoy giving. Giving to others, helping others make their lives work, sometimes helping them just to get through their day, may be one of the chief pleasures of life.

It has to be me making the decision, though. The second I’m ordered to give, controlled to give, manipulated to give – like in one of those “everybody in the office must donate to this worthy cause” campaigns – the lid of my generosity snaps shut.

Examples of the type of unpleasant “ownership” I’m talking about?

A few days back, as I returned to my work van at a highway rest stop, I saw four young women, early-to-mid 20s, standing about 8 feet away. As far as our society is concerned, all four were genetic lottery winners — slender, blonde, beautiful of face. Grouped in a cozy circle and chatting, all four were standing right elbow on left hand in that ancient posture: Woman Smoking.

Key in the ignition and ready to go, I grappled briefly with the impulse to say something to them about it: “For the time you spend smoking, you’re giving up your Self. You’re owned by a tobacco company.” Decided, no, it would probably only irritate or embarrass them. I drove away and left them to their lives.

But smoking is definitely an issue of ownership. Over the years I’ve watched too many friends and family wrestle with the habit not to know this. Considering the cost, impacts to your health, the fact that it produces a lingering distasteful odor on your clothes and hair and possessions, for the time you spend at it … you are OWNED. You’re not yours, you’re theirs.

It’s pricelessly perverse that tobacco companies have managed to convince generations of victims that smoking is a way to express one’s INDEPENDENCE.

Another example I’ve written about in the past:

Years back, I came across a book titled “Ask the Coupon Queen!” that showed a smiling woman holding up a fan of coupons. The author apparently spent hours each day poring through newspapers and newspaper inserts to find coupons for groceries and such, more hours traveling to the stores that doubled coupons or offered daily specials. For her, coupons were a CAREER. So much so that she was able to write a book about it. Gah. Creepy.

And just imagine the happy day you get to MEET the Coupon Queen: You’re standing behind her in line at the supermarket, as she sorts and searches and fiddles with an inch-thick stack of coupons. Yeah. That lady.

And again, there’s that paradox: By using the coupons you can “save money” on your groceries … but you wouldn’t need to do that if the stores charged less for what they sell.

It may be that you won’t get the distinction. I’ve said this to a number of people and gotten blank looks. “But you’re really saving money!” they chirp.

But follow me on this: THEY set the coupon-savings price of the product, but THEY also set the original price. So YOU are not “saving” anything.

They set the price both times. Where’s the savings? They could simply set a lower price, and you wouldn’t need a coupon. But they don’t. This is pure manipulation – by the supposed savings of a few cents or a few dollars – to get you to come into their store, buy their brand. Worse, they rotate the “savings” week by week, forcing you – if you want to “save money” – to look for the newspaper ads, forcing you to spend time on them, reading, clipping, calculating, figuring out your route from one store to the next to get the best “bargains.”

They compete to keep you hooked on their store, or their products. They CONSUME some of your limited, precious life time, and they do it with the lure of pennies.

Speaking just for myself: Hey, I might be a whore, but I’m not a cheap one. If you want ME to spend all that time and effort digging around in the newspaper, and then shuffling those damned coupons every time I go shopping – if you want several hours a week of my all-too-limited life – you better at least give me a car.

I don’t use coupons. At all, ever. I don’t get the “savings” my friends get when I go into the supermarket. But I also don’t have to spend two seconds of my time – MY time – thinking about coupons. At least in this way, I’m not owned.

So why is it that I, Mr. Independence, keep talking about Beta Culture? Something people would have to join, to give up something of themselves in order to become a part of?

Ha. Glad you asked that. Here it is:

My view of culture, from my own experience of my native East Texas Cowboy culture, is that it both TAKES something from you and GIVES something to you. Your culture owns you, a little bit or a lot, but hopefully it also empowers you in some measure.

Of course, the home culture you grow up in, you barely notice what it takes from you. However uncomfortable you might be in your home culture at any one moment, you think that’s the way things are supposed to be, and you just accept it and make the effort. Witness various Earth cultures’ continued devotion to un-anesthetized surgery, poking, burning, slitting, shaving, braiding, scarring, dyeing, tattooing, binding, beating, shrouding, cloistering and all sorts of other physical and behavioral control. (Not to mention forcing you to show up for Thanksgiving dinner so you can be grilled by your aunts about why you’re not married yet, or if you’re still dating That Loser.)

It’s only when you view it from the outside that you can see how painful and unnecessary – and SILLY – most of this stuff is.

What your culture gives you is a place to belong. Friends and family, and familiar ways of doing things. Traditional stories and myths. A roster of acceptable career aspirations, and – sheepskin or lion skin – the clearly delineated pathways into them. Home. Favorite foods. Acceptable clothing, hats, footwear.

The question is: Is it worth it?

At some of those same highway rest stops as the one where I saw the young women smoking, not far from New York City, I also frequently see Hasidic Jews. You may know who I’m talking about – the guys with the long side curls. Not long back, I saw a couple of young men sporting side locks that hung almost down to their shoulders. Both of them also had short-cropped, almost shaved heads, with little islands of foot-long hair on each side of their heads, like a limp, curly version of Pippi Longstocking pigtails. Even to my eyes, they looked faintly ridiculous.

I admit, not being from New York, the first time I saw these Jewish ultra-conservatives, I thought they look funny – straggle-bearded men in black coats and odd little flat-brimmed hats, accompanied by mousy women herding wide-eyed waifs peering at strangers as if every one might be a melodramatically nefarious child snatcher. The nearest match in my head was a comically-costumed Woody Allen in the movie Annie Hall.

But it took me all of 30 seconds to see it in terms I could understand: “Oh! This is their version of cowboy hats!”

My cowboy hat might look funny to others – from the number of times people have joked about it, I know it does – but I could wear it to the White House and feel perfectly at ease. To you, it’s a funny costume; to me, it’s a wearable piece of Home. Cowboy is what I am. It’s what MY people do and say and wear.

Ditto for Hasidic Jews. To them, their clothing and manners are not funny. They’re homey. Comfortable. Safe.

And yet I differ from them in this way: I can take off the hat, I can leave the boots and big buckle at home, I can remove every visible evidence of my western persona, and just be Joe Anybody.

In fact, in my everyday life (in New York State, remember), I seldom do wear any of that stuff. Oh, I’ll put it on for visits out West. I’ll proudly wear my gear to rodeos, or just for the hell of it when I’m out socializing. But mostly, you’d never know I was a cowboy.

And when I’m not wearing that stuff, I don’t miss it. I don’t feel lost, or uncomfortable, or somehow less ME. I’m comfortable being who and what I am, no matter what I wear.

So: For each individual within it, culture pays off. But it also carries a cost which can vary from middling expensive to the cost of life itself.  (Families in the U.S. pro-military subculture sometimes pay this highest of prices.)

A foundational goal in designing Beta Culture, first as a way to create something new, but second, to make it more likely that people will actually buy into it, see the possibilities, is to make sure it gives more than it takes.

How might one do that? I have some ideas.

Education:

First, I’d expect Beta Culture to place a very high value on education, both the college-degree kind and the continuing-life kind. Betas learn things, all their lives, and it pays off.

It’s not that other people – even other cultures – don’t place a high value on education, it’s that we very specifically DO. Not just as random individuals embedded in a larger culture that doesn’t value education very much (cough*Texas*cough), but as a full-on culture of education, every person of which values it immensely. Every person within Beta understands that education is something you MUST get, MUST continue. If you don’t continue to learn, there’s something a little bit wrong with you, and this place is not a good fit for you.

Does that sound a little bit off-putting? Maybe it is, but as I’ve said before, this isn’t going to be for everybody. There’s already one hard edge in Beta, one absolute gateway, and that’s atheism. As I’ve said elsewhere, if you’re not able to free yourself from the fetters of religion, Beta is the exact wrong place for you.

Likewise, as I imagine it, if you don’t read books, don’t maintain an interest in the workings of your world, don’t understand science, don’t develop new skills or hone existing skills throughout your lifetime … you’re probably better off somewhere else. There’s an entire world out there where you’ll fit right in, and be none the worse for it.

However! What downside is there to education? I can’t imagine any. Education empowers you, empowers the people around you. Empowers the entire culture in which you live … far beyond those which think reading your last book as a senior in high school is an acceptable way to laze your way through the world.

Being encouraged to educate yourself throughout your life, considering the returns to you and yours, seems a very small price to pay.

Further, if Beta Culture grew big enough to swing it, I’d hope it would aspire to even grander goals, such as a FREE education to its young people. Every graduating senior would get a full-ride scholarship to the college of his choice. I can imagine several scenarios that might make this affordable – one would involve a large endowment by generous existing members, another would include some sort of agreement with grads that they would eventually donate some percentage of their adult income back into the program.

Safety:

I see Betas as anything but pacifists. I don’t mean they’d be war-mongers; decidedly the opposite. But I don’t think they’d shy away from protecting themselves – or their loved ones – against threats. Whether receiving training in self-defense or the handling of weapons, or just the willingness to file a lawsuit against transgressors, I envision a culture-wide air of assertiveness that doesn’t ask or beg for, but DEMANDS respect from the larger cultural surround.

Community Center and Beyond:

I’ve referred several times to the Beta Nexus, a meeting place and house-of-all-purposes in each sizable city. Every time I think of that place, I imagine more that could be done with it. Meetings, classes, temporary lodging for speakers, child care and kindergarten, a place for non-religious weddings and memorial ceremonies, so much more. Hell, it could even house its own coffee house, a nice place that welcomed – and gently proselytized to – local college students. (Free coffee to hard-science majors!)

Eventually, I see no reason why the Beta community shouldn’t own hospitals, publishing houses, web servers, resorts, real estate, all sorts of mainstream businesses just as existing churches and religious organizations currently own. (Did you know the Mormon Church is now – pending certain approvals – the largest private landowner in Florida? Or that the Catholic Church is the third-largest land owner on Earth? Whoa. We’re starting damned late, people.) All of this aimed not solely at profit, but at enlarging the lives of the people within Beta. As well as – and this is important – the surrounding natural world.

With some serious forethought, there are endless possibilities to build huge empowerment into the culture, at the cost of small amounts of personal dedication on the part of those opting – and this is all very much optional, I stress – to become part of it.

Beta Culture: Signs in the Heav … uh, News

I keep seeing news stories — a LOT of them — that spark this thought: Hey, that fits right in with the Beta Culture idea!

By which I mean it makes me think the time is ripe for creating a novel, independent, reason-based culture.

Here: Majority of Americans want a third party

Self-identified Democrats and Republicans were equally likely to see the need for a third party—49% of Democrats and 52% of Republicans said they saw the need for a third party—but a full 71% of Independents supported the idea of a third party.

Without knowing it, a lot of us want something new. But faced with either Option A or Option B, we either hold our noses and pick the one LEAST annoying, or we hold back and grumble at both.

Isn’t it time for Option C, the new direction, the new option that WE create?

Start with something. Anything. And then begin to build into it all the things we’d like to see. Maybe not everything is possible. And maybe after living in THIS culture, the one that’s killing us but that we are so familiar with, maybe we’ll have a hard time imagining better solutions.

But really, think about how utterly crazy some of the shit going on now is, and try to imagine the existing system — politics, government, religion, corporate business, social order, entertainment (hell, the news media!) — presenting us with any of the things we dream about in any near-term future.

When you keep getting the same result, you don’t continue with the same actions. You try something new, don’t you?

Time for some experimenting, seems to me.

 

Beta Culture: Listing of Posts

I’m due at a meeting of a new social group here in Schenectady, “The Sunday Alternative,” a Freethinkers Meetup group.

At a casual glance, it’s something along the lines of the “atheist churches” that seem to be springing up, with the reservation that the people involved here are not necessarily all atheists, and probably nobody involved likes to think what we’re doing is “church.”

But it’s something new, it’s somebody actually doing something, it’s practically within walking distance of my apartment, and it fits within my so-far-loose conception of Beta Culture.

My bit of Show and Tell for the group is this listing of posts on Beta. I know it’s ugly — I’ll come back and clean it up later. I just wanted to have something to show.

These are in chronological order rather than conceptual order, mostly because I haven’t worked out any sort of conceptual order just yet. I shotgun out a post at irregular intervals, and it’s whatever is in my mind at the time — maybe something basic and preliminary, maybe something a dozen steps down the road after the thing is well established.

This is not everything I’ve ever written on the subject. I’ve been writing about it since late 2010, and I also have several hundred pages of notes to turn into finished posts.

Anyway:

Feb 1, 2012
The Book of Good Living – Preface

Aug 2, 2012
First Person Revolutionary — Part 1

Aug 31, 2012
A Basic Motivation for Atheism+ … and for Beta Culture

Sept 2, 2012
Beta Culture: The Heart and Soul of American Ideals

Sept 18, 2012
Beta Culture: A Place to Stand, and People to Stand With

Sept 19, 2012
Beta Culture: Preliminary Musings

Oct 30, 2012
Beta Culture: Drowning Puppies So You Don’t Get Dogs

Dec 17, 2012
Connecticut Shooting: Warm Lies, Cold Truth, Free Minds

April 15, 2013
Beta Culture: A Community Nexus

April 21, 2013
Beta Culture: Bonsai Civilization and the Future of Humanity

April 22, 2013
Shoving Orphans Away From the Table

March 10, 2013
Beta Culture: Adrift in an Ocean of Lies

April 7, 2013
Beta Culture: Patheos Intro, Part 1
Beta Culture: Patheos Intro, Part 2
Beta Culture: Patheos Intro, Part 3

May 4, 2013
Beta Culture: 13 Early Questions

May 6, 2013
Beta Culture: Replies to Comments 1

May 8, 2013
Beta Culture: Big Funny Hats

April 23, 2013
Beta Culture: Earthman’s Journey – Part 1 of 8

May 9, 2013
Beta Culture: Never Doubt the Power of Religion

May 25, 2013
Beta Culture: Bridges and War and All Things Daft

Sept 1, 2013
Beta Culture: Self Defense in the Age of Fuck You

Sept 23, 2013 from Sept 3, 2012
Beta Culture: Don’t Teach the Controversy (repost)

Beta Culture: Don’t Teach the Controversy (repost)

Thinking about some of the things Beta Culture will entail, I know education has to be an early and definite part of it.

I’ll talk about one aspect of that. We secularists have been almost frantically hands-off when it comes to the intersection of religion and children. Something you hear extremely often is the bit about “Well, let’s give them both sides and let them make up their own minds.”

I’ll tell you where I think that comes from. It comes from fear of being wrong. Of telling kids wrong things.

(And, well, fear of blowback from the godders. But if we are ever going to get over that, this is the time. There’s too much riding on this to be faint-hearted.)

Even most full-on atheists will back away from telling young people explicitly that there are no such things as gods. But we should be including that statement in every course that deals with real-world matters. It should be stated on Day One of every class.

“Everything we’ll be doing here this semester is based on this bedrock principle – that the real world exists, and that all the supernatural, goddy, mystical, fantastical stuff doesn’t. There really are no such things as gods. There are no ghosts, no demons or angels. There is no afterlife, no Heaven or Hell. No spirit mediums or psychic powers, no flying saucers or free lunch. Physics works, chemistry works, geology works, astronomy works, and it all works because reality is reality. What we know of reality, the principles and specifics of it, has been discovered by hard-headed realists who worked their asses off to figure things out.”

But we don’t do that. Because most of us don’t know that we can, or that we should. Instead we say “Well, maybe you and I don’t believe in God, but you can’t KNOW, with 100 percent certainty, that a god doesn’t exist somewhere.”

That statement right there leaves open the door to a HUGE wash of nonsense.

What we’re faced with is our own striving for perfection being used against us. We don’t want to say no gods exist because we’re not sure we can justify the statement … by OUR standards. We don’t want to slide down the slippery slope and get to where we’re as sloppy and false as the people on the goddy side of the claim.

But meanwhile, we act as if the question is wide open. We leave kids with the impression that we’re not SURE whether or not a supernatural superbeing exists. That it may exist.

Of course we’re sure. Every confident realist is totally comfortable with the idea that nothing of the sort – nothing that’s ever been described by humans, anyway – is even possible.

After all, do we think there’s a giant man with a white beard sitting on a 50-ton throne of gold somewhere in the sky? No.

Do we think there’s an actual red-skinned Devil, all horns and pitchfork and evil laugh, capering around underneath us in caverns of fire? No.

Do we think two naked people, a man and a woman, lived in a luxurious garden 6,000 years ago and spent their time having conversations with a snake? And they were the only two people alive, the first two people to ever exist on Earth? Hell, no we don’t.

Just as we KNOW there are no magic beans that will grow a stalk up into the sky and open onto the cloud-foundation of a giant’s castle, we know all of these religious fantasies are absolutely false.

We’re just afraid to say so, directly and emphatically, because we think it goes against our basic principles of absolutely accurate judgments of reality.

But look, there’s this line we’re asked to take sides on.

If we think there’s a 0.00000001 percent chance one of these supernatural suberbeings thing might exist, we can’t bring ourselves to stand on the side of the line that says “Nope, no way, doesn’t exist.”

Instead, we feel obligated to stand there saying “Okay, yes, it MIGHT exist.” Hell, we’ll even argue for its existence among ourselves, not only allowing ourselves to leave the door open, but insisting others leave the door open too. “But if you say you’re  absolutely convinced there are no such things as gods, aren’t you being just as irrational as the ones claiming they do exist?”

No, you’re not. Because there’s another position regarding that supposed dividing line, a third choice that says …

“Hell, there’s no way these things exist. No rational person would spend two minutes evaluating the non-evidence for them. You’d have to be crazy to hang there in indecision, when there are so many more important issues to deal with.”

… But that also leaves the door open, as any rational person would, for the believers to offer more evidence.

I’m not saying wait around for that evidence. Just as none of us is holding off on judging the existence of magic beans, patiently waiting for more evidence, and meanwhile saying “Well, they MIGHT exist …”

I’m saying, make the bald, emphatic statement “There are no such things as fucking magic beans, and no sane person believes there are.”

And THEN, if by some remote chance the magic bean people want to actually show up with beans, we yell out “Plant those suckers! When we can see the stalks from 50 miles away, we’ll be over here like a shot. Count on it!”

We really can say there are no gods. We can say it out loud, we can say it in public, we can say it confidently, without waffling or qualifying.

No God. No gods. Not now, not ever, not anywhere. Period. The question is closed.

What we face is a double standard. And we let it be used against us.

The double standard is that the one side can make any claim at all, with no evidence, like a teenaged writer making up elves or dragons to populate a second-rate fantasy.

But that WE, the rational side, are then expected to operate by ten-decimal-place certainty before we turn down the possibility.

Get it? There’s this fluffy, indeterminate, marshmallow domain of fantastic supernatural claims, and there’s this diamond-hard domain of physics and decimals.

An argument advanced in the marshmallow domain does not require an answer in the domain of diamonds.

They can’t expect us to hold off on deciding until THEY produce more evidence. On the other hand, we CAN expect them to deliver more evidence before we spend one more second on the thing.

If they want to argue it with us, let THEM cross over into the domain of diamonds, and produce some diamond-hard, diamond-durable evidence.

On the question of a supernatural superbeing, we should always say “There’s nothing there. The thing does not exist, and we won’t spend two seconds thinking about it. If someone says it does, if they say we’re wrong, they must damned well PROVE IT.”

And that’s what we teach kids. We don’t hold off, giving them “both sides” and then “letting them decide.” We teach it to them the same way we teach math, or physics. We teach them the facts. We teach them to CARE about facts and to laugh at silly fantasies. And we teach them starting in kindergarten.

Anything less and we become accomplices to the spreading of the lie. And damn, NOW is the time we stopped doing that.

As I see it, Beta Culture would call on all educators everywhere to begin simply telling kids the bald facts. No sugar-coating, no waffling.

“To the best of all human knowledge, this is how it is: No gods, no ghosts, no souls, no magic, no luck, no psychic powers, no supernatural, not anywhere, not anywhen. The universe just doesn’t work like that. Anyone who tells you different is lying to you.”

Beta Culture: Self Defense in the Age of Fuck You

Say there was this place you could live. Call it FairWorld. It would be a place where businesses and government officials dealt with you honestly and fairly. Where nobody would think of lying to you, and where every deal was transparent and open, with no unpleasant surprises built into it, so you’d know exactly what you were getting, what you were paying for, what you were agreeing to. Where you were neither lied to nor manipulated by business, but dealt with as a partner and an equal.

Wouldn’t you like to live there? I know I would.

Because say there was this other place you could live. A place where every deal was suspect, where there were nasty little surprises hidden in every purchase, every business transaction. Where you were lied to and manipulated as a matter of course, a place where the lies and manipulation were so constant and so expert that most of the time you didn’t even know it was happening. Where unfair, predatory treatment was so much the norm that when you did notice it, you expected to have to wage a prolonged fight to get fair treatment, a fight you knew you’d often lose. A place where nothing was exactly illegal (usually, anyway), but where you’d feel cheated on an almost daily basis by the dishonesty, the trickery, the chicanery that regularly came your way.

Call this place FuckYouWorld. Would you like to live there? I know I wouldn’t.

But we sort of do.

Here’s a little slice of FuckYouWorld:

I flew into Las Vegas a few weeks back. The trip was partly vacation, but largely devoted to arranging and conducting a long-delayed memorial service for my Cowboy Dad. I rented a car so I could drive into California’s Eastern Sierra for the main event.

Let me introduce you to one of FuckYouWorld’s rental car agencies, Payless Car Rental of Las Vegas, Nevada.

If you’ve ever dealt with a car rental agency, you already know you have to be on your guard. In the first few minutes at the rental counter, you will be offered a half dozen things you don’t actually need, things that sound good but come at a whale of a price.

For instance, this time I needed a GPS. Oh, they’ll rent you one. For the 13 days of my vacation, I figured a GPS would be, say, $5 a day, for a total of $65. Pricey, but what the hell, I was willing to pay it.

But no. The GPS units Payless rents are quoted at close to $12 a day.

Wait, $156 for a gadget you can BUY for less than $100? I needed the damned thing, so I agreed to it, but I wasn’t about to let things stay that way. I set the rental GPS for the nearest Wal-Mart, about two miles away, went in and bought a brand new GPS for $90, and took the rental back.

Props to Payless for giving me a refund, but listen to this bit: The refund they gave me was for $218. So the REAL cost of the GPS rental was a few coins shy of $17 a day.

Payless policy is a very expensive Fuck You for the GPS, and Fuck You a second time by not telling you the true cost of the thing when you sign for it.

Yes, yes, yes, I get it that they’re in business to make a profit. And I get it that I could have asked and maybe gotten the true cost of the thing. BUT … they also could have charged a reasonable price, or told me that the things were so expensive it would be cheaper to just drive a few miles and buy one.

Here’s more Fuck You from Payless: The place you pick up the car is in a surprisingly dark garage. You get a little form you’re expected to mark showing visible damage to the car at the time of rental. With past experience well in mind, I went over the exterior of the car, the interior, and even the trunk (to verify the spare was there). I marked every tiny scratch and ding, on a form which is designed for nothing so detailed.

The deal is, if you bring back the car with a dented fender, you get charged a hefty repair fee for it. But if the dented fender was there when you rented it, and you failed to notice or mark it down, I’ll bet you would still get charged for the repair … even if the rental agency knew it was there.

In fact, I’d bet money there’s someone who WANTS you not to notice damage, and to drive away with it, so it will be your costly fault when you come back. In a business which carefully inspects and cleans returned cars, so that they would KNOW of each new ding and dent, I’d bet that form was created to Fuck You renters. When the possibility exists for them to get paid twice for the same repair, good luck getting them to check the records of previous renters, or of the car itself, to find out if the damage had already been reported and paid for.

[ Payless people, if you happen to read this, don’t get distracted by this supposition about your damage policy. DO pay attention to the real Fuck You of the GPS. And by the way, the reason I’m using your name here is because I’ve called three times and left messages about my final bill, which was $50 more than I was quoted – what looks like yet another Fuck You – but nobody has bothered to call me back. ]

I probably barely need to mention banks as an example of Fuck You. Those “cascading overdraft fees,” you’ve either had it happen to you, or you know someone who’s had it happen. One large check written two days before payday will bounce, and cause smaller checks written several days before – checks which would have cleared if they’d “come through” ahead of the big one – to bounce, all at a $35-a-whack overdraft fee.

I’ve paid as much as $140 for one bad day at the bank – at a time when I was already squeezed. And yes, of course it was my fault. That’s sort of the point – that one small miscalculation on your part can open the gate to the bank giving you a Fuck You that you can’t even justifiably complain about. Even you will feel they were right to gouge you. You’ll pay, and walk away feeling that it really was your fault.

The entire field of marketing is based on the Fuck You business model. If you’re a marketer, you exist to get people to buy things they wouldn’t want, don’t need, and might be better off without.

Put the candy next to the register, and Fuck You mom on getting through that line without your kids pestering the hell out of you to buy them something. Make diamonds seem like the definition of true love, and Fuck You young men for needing to spend thousands to prove your love, but also Fuck You young women for allowing yourselves to be brainwashed with the same idea.

Fuck You from the auto industry (among the MANY Fuck You’s of the auto industry) by selling you an all wheel drive car that you might – MIGHT! – need once or twice a year. You not only pay the Fuck You price of the car, you get the Fuck You of the extra mechanical weight on the drive train that will suck down your gas mileage every day you drive the car, and not just the one or two days when you actually need it.

How about this one: You’re probably too young to remember the age of S&H Green Stamps

S&H Green Stamps (also called Green Shield Stamps) were trading stamps popular in the United States from the 1930s until the late 1980s. They were distributed as part of a rewards program operated by the Sperry & Hutchinson company (S&H), founded in 1896 by Thomas Sperry and Shelley Byron Hutchinson. During the 1960s, the rewards catalog printed by the company was the largest publication in the United States and the company issued three times as many stamps as the U.S. Postal Service. Customers would receive stamps at the checkout counter of supermarkets or department stores, and gasoline stations among other retailers, which could be redeemed for products in the catalog.

… but I vividly recall my mother and all the local housewives fanatically collecting the things – planning shopping expeditions based on how many Green Stamps they’d get for purchases, so they could fill out those books as quickly as possible and get a new iron, a bicycle or skates for a beloved child, or a complete set of cast iron cookware.

Green Stamps were one of the first retail loyalty programs.

Which means they were engineered to manipulate shoppers into buying certain products, or shopping at certain stores, without adding any really certain value to the picture (where did the money for the catalog items come from, after all? It was added into the prices of the store products). How many women never redeemed those books of stamps, faithfully collected and pasted into the stamp books, or never got anything whose value matched the amount of effort they put into the game? Thousands. Millions. Carefully ensheeped, they shopped and collected and pasted anyway, as they were bidden to do by the shepherds holding out the hope of those wonderful “free” gifts pictured in the catalogs.

Which brings me to the Lottery, one of the most transparent Fuck Yous of the modern age. Millions and millions of people will give money – GIVE money, hundreds or thousands of dollars a year – for nothing but the carefully engineered and entirely illusory hope that their miserable lives will be bettered by some fantastic stroke of blind chance.

The ugly hidden truth of the Lottery – the same truth that holds sway in the casino industry – is that even IF you win, you don’t win the casino’s money, or the state’s money, you win the money of those legions of other poor suckers, the losers whom you are now helping to Fuck You by crowing about your “win.”

But even aside from that, Fuck You, you poor sap, every time you say “If I won the Lottery, I would …” or “When I win the Lottery, I will …” As long as you think someone other than you is going to reach down and save you, pull you out of the neck-deep shit, neither you nor your entire gullible class has a chance in hell of ever getting out of the tragic sump of your life. But it doesn’t even matter how bad things are for you. In FuckYou World, as long as someone can make money off you and people like you, and as long as it’s LEGAL, it’s all good. That idea of that one saving Lottery ticket was SOLD to you, and nobody involved thought this was a bad thing.

Fuck You in the job market. I worked for a local supermarket for a couple of years. For more than two years there, I did a bang-up job, but I was a part-timer the whole time. Which means no benefits, no vacation for more than two years, nothing but that low hourly wage. I’d wager that more than half the store was staffed by part-timers. A few full-time department heads to keep things together, and a lot of low-paid fill-ins to actually do the work. Why? For good economic reasons, obviously, but also because Fuck You.

Fuck You isn’t just the philosophy of business. It’s often government philosophy too. The strategy of today’s GOP, for instance — whether gerrymandering voting districts, eliminating reproductive rights of women, or disenfranchising voting rights of minority voters, not to mention wasting time in Congress voting for bills that have no chance of passage while important business goes wanting — is pure Fuck You. Not just to every voter who doesn’t happen to be a rich white male Republican, but to every American.

Once you start thinking about it, Fuck You is everywhere. Banks. Advertising. Insurance. Cars. Mortgages. School loans. Software. Computers. Phones. Cops and courts, judges and laws. Fox News. The History Channel (Ancient Aliens? Ice Road Truckers? Really??).

Life is not all Fuck You, of course. My own social universe is made up of a great deal of kindness and generosity. As to business, oh boy, I do appreciate being able to go into a supermarket and buy foods from all over the world. I love being able to use my charge card. I like my phone. I love the Internet. Hell, I even like government — the part that holds things together, and paves the streets and so forth.

But even these indispensable services and conveniences are often designed to contain just enough useful features that the Fuck You can be slipped in quietly so as to appear to be just part of daily life.

After all, you NEED insurance, right? So what if the damned stuff is so complex you can hardly tease out the Fuck You part of it from the good bit? And computers … who cares if it’s all so complicated nobody can really understand it? The parts that you can understand are fantastic! As to software, so what if you can never get a real human being on the phone for help when you have a problem? You can always Google support groups, and maybe get an answer after a few weeks of quizzing semi-literate others who’ve suffered the same problem.

Off the top of my head, the only thing I can think of, right this minute, that ISN’T at least partly based on Fuck You is libraries. But that may only be because I’m sitting in a public library as I type this, thinking about how wonderful it is that all these books, all this knowledge, is here for the borrowing, with only a library card as the price of it. It’s possible that the non-Fuck-You model is everywhere around me, and it’s only cynicism that makes me see its opposite so clearly.

I’d have to say the level of Fuck You is down in many ways over previous eras. After all, churches can’t burn you to death for being a witch or an apostate, cotton farmers can’t buy and sell you, children aren’t forced to work in factories at the age of 8, and the government can no longer conscript you into the military to die in some useless foreign war. Certainly we’re not FORCED to buy Lottery tickets.

But in some ways the Fuck You level is way up … because the techniques of Fuck You are so much more sophisticated now that most of us feel confident that we’re free and in control of our lives. That being Fuck You’d by the bank, or by student loans, or software companies, or a televangelist, or the Lottery, is all voluntary, and by our own choice.

But the truth is, we all know Fuck You is out there. And given a chance to think about it, we hate it. A lot. We just think we have no choice.

Sadly, that belief, that grim conviction that we have no choice, no power, is yet another Fuck You, but it’s a Fuck You we do to ourselves.

I suggest there’s a solution staring us in the face. Something like, but more than, a union.

Most of my early life, I never cared much for unions. Healthy and male, young and bright and adventurous, I had no need for them. If something in my work environment made me unhappy, I could just leave. And so I did. I switched careers like some people change outfits, happily digging into new endeavors or moving to new places at will.

If I had a job that required me to belong to a union, I grudgingly accepted the dues taken out of my paycheck, but I never attended a meeting, or voted in union elections. Eventually I always moved on to something freer, something – as I saw it – less forced.

Even better, I was self-employed more than once. The boss that made the rules, that bastard slave-driver I worked for, was ME. I had to work damned hard at times, but I also got to enjoy the profits. It gave me one more way to whack at unions: If a complete idiot like me could start a business, anybody could. (I still strongly favor the idea that anybody can start a business. Also, come to think of it, that I’m a complete idiot.)

But as life goes on, I’m seeing more and better reasons to favor unions.

The basic reason is this: A wolf can eat a mouse and there’s not a damned thing the mouse can do about it. But a wolf faces another wolf only with great caution.

Likewise, a corporation can screw you over – legally, financially, physically, medically, emotionally – and eat you alive, little mouse, when you try to get fair treatment.

But if you band together with others of your same small stature, you can become big enough together to present a counter-force to large-scale organizations. Thousands or millions of individuals combining their small allotment of personal power into a wall of determination can approach the status of equal with the corporation. As one wolf to another, such organization can pose a threat to the corporation, a threat that has to be carefully and diplomatically dealt with.

This is not to say that individuals can’t make big differences. It is to say that it’s never a bad idea to have a supportive team around you. Hey, corporations have their team. Why shouldn’t you have one too? Why should it be the rule that individuals-only can treat with large corporations? Or with government? Or with other powerful forces in society?

After all, every organization people create is just PEOPLE. Get enough other people together, with the same organizational model, and your people can do anything those other people can do. Anything one large collection of people can do, another large collection of people can do, or resist, or change.

Being atheists, we’re already doing some (nowhere near all) of that in the field of religion. But we lack greater heft in the larger social sphere, mostly because we see ourselves in this one way: We’re ATHEISTS.

The very idea of Beta Culture is that we’re more than that. We’re a People, with a great mass of shared values. What we don’t have, because we’ve never grasped it, is this great mass of shared power.

As LGBT supporters, we’ve held rallies, pushed for legislation, and made strides toward acceptance and equal rights. As feminists, on the other hand, we’ve fought on the Internet and in our own atheist conferences – raising consciousness, hopefully changing things, in the field of women’s equality and rights – but we’ve also lost ground. Abortion, or just women’s health counseling, is in many ways harder to get than it was 20 years ago.

Worse yet: Fighting as the Occupy movement, even though we’ve marched and held up our signs, raising consciousness in the field of economic justice, we still face an apparently unstoppable juggernaut of banks and corporations. The U.S. government bailed out banks and bankers and left debtors hanging, with rampant foreclosures and forced bankruptcies. Profits are higher than ever, and CEO salaries still soar into a stratosphere over those of we wage slaves at the bottom.

Half of our government is in the grip of vicious clowns who will stop at nothing to eliminate Obamacare, and to block economic recovery for all but bankers and the superrich. Also, long after Woodward and Bernstein, today’s whistleblowers are called traitors.

As a culture, a group of people who hold not only these values but many others, we could have greater social power. Far from just resisting the power of religion, for instance, Beta Culture could resist or reverse the Fuck You policies of business and government, simply by refusing to tolerate them.

We could have our own non-Fuck-You member-owned bank, our own non-Fuck-You insurance company, our own non-Fuck-You software companies (we sort of do, already, we’re just settling for the Fuck You software giants), our own non-Fuck-You phone company.

If 30 million people suddenly decide not to deal with any bank but their own, or phone company but their own, or software company but their own, things will change. Fast.

The power of nations is in our hands, if we only first realize we ARE a nation.

Beta Culture is that nation, the nation – the only nation – that ends Fuck You.

If we want it.

Beta Culture: Videoactive! Eschaton 2012 in Ottawa

I got invited to Eschaton 2012 in Ottawa last year, and the video of my talk — on Beta Culture and the “end of the world” — has just been released.

Be gentle. It was my first time before an audience since the early 1990s, and I was a bit nervous.

 

Atheist Grief Panel Discussion: FTBConscience

Thanks to the kind invitation from Rebecca Hensler, founder of Grief Beyond Belief, I was on the Atheist Grief panel of FTBConscience, and that took place today at 5 p.m., East Coast time. Other panelists were Greta Christina and Nicome Taylor.

And here it is, already on YouTube!

 

No, I don’t believe in God. I thought YOU did. Well, heck. Now what?

We’re born to sanity. We instinctively feel that things should be reasonable. That it should all MAKE SENSE.

Most of us, as we grow to adulthood, at least TRY to be sane and sensible. But we all know we share the world with some crazy-ass others.

In my view, the biggest reason for rampant craziness in the world is religion. Religion is not only mistaken about basic facts of reality, it sets up a social field of acceptance to casual lies, deliberate falsehoods, even malicious acts, by both the priestly and the pious.

Churches TEACH falsehoods, and they garb themselves in the appearance of the highest good as they do it.

Deliberately denied the tools that would help them critique church claims, credulous followers are set up to become victims of all the other liars and con men … who often don the same mantle of goodness. It creates an entire society where lies are easy, even expected, and where all manner of inglorious acts can be defended, because nobody really knows what’s right, what’s just, what’s good.

But even deeply immersed in the inner workings of churches, there are those who find they want sanity. Discovering eventually that they are too reasonable to believe, they reach the point where they either sacrifice honesty as the price of keeping their jobs and positions, or they quietly leave the career.

More than a decade into the new atheist movement, though, outspoken atheists have created a field of acceptance to non-belief great enough that it has lowered the barrier to admitting loss of faith, even to those IN the faith.

Church Pastors Become Atheists

More than 200 church leaders across the country now say they no longer believe in God, including a Houston-area pastor who was one of the first to publicly announce his decision.

Mike Aus, who was pastor at Theophilus church in Katy, Texas, went so far as to make an announcement on TV about his loss of faith, during an appearance on MSNBC’s Up With Chris Hayes Sunday morning show.

Aus was a long-time Lutheran pastor at churches in the Houston area, but now he said he no longer believes in the message he had been preaching for almost 20 years.

“As I started to jettison the beliefs, I came to realize fairly recently there wasn’t a whole lot left,” Aus said.

The effect was immediate on his church with about 80 members. Weeks after his announcement, the church dissolved. Members […] said their pastor’s complete change in faith was devastating.

I’m just wondering what happens when hundreds of millions of church members realize they’re not alone in wondering what the heck it is they’re doing, and why. Why they never “felt the presence of God,” or why prayer never felt real to them.

It starts to look like we’re building up to that point.