OK, catching up...
@Mafi:
"You're not doing this intentionally obiwan, but above all, the one thing you're arguing for is for the atheist movement to declaw itself, pull it's teeth out, and muzzle itself."
That's not what I want at all, I want the movement...
Well first, I'll be honest, and say I DO find it odd for this to be called a movement or that it's become a movement, or I guess I should say "social movement" (obviously something like Existentialism or Utilitarianism can also be called a movement in the philosophy community for the time those ideas were introduced as generally philosophy generates debate, yes, and may divide the intellectual community based on who's with the new philosophic movement and who is not, but rarely does it divide the Joe Blows and Sally Janes on the street. I suppose that's probably due to the Internet and increase to the availability of knowledge, and it is a good thing, I agree, to see philosophy "do" something for a change and be active...
I just wish that act was dividing everyone.
I think there is a middle ground between not taking any action at all and, for example, putting up billboards that speak about the Christmas "myth" at Xmas time
There is NO need for that.
That serves NO intellectual purpose.
It brings NO good will to the cause.
All it does is alienate people and, in turn, make the religious community lash out more...
Fight the IMPORTANT issues--and they do, I recognize and fully support THAT--and not these little petty ones...
WHY do you/they need to take on Xmas at Xmastime and call it a myth--even if it is--just to get a rise out of people when you know that's all you'll get?
I'm not saying everyone in the New Atheist movement does it, but I have noticed enough instances of that, and something rather disturbing, to be honest, as a result:
I don't know how many here have Facebook--yes, I have one, it's a necessity for communication for my generation...and if it's not, it sure seems like it is when everyone else uses it, haha--but I went on there today--well, yesterday, now--and "liked" Hitchens public page.
So I go on there, post on the Wall, "Hello, how are all of you, blah blah blah, never really read Hitchens but I really find him to be a good debater and agree with most of his religious points, not an atheist, mind you, agnostic--"
"What do you mean?"
"Well, I don't think, if we apply reason to it, a God exists, and so should live without one, but I'm open to the idea of some irrational cosmic whatever existing, why not, just as long as people live without the delusion of there being--"
"Pick a side!"
"Huh?"
"You have to choose, it is us vs. them!"
"Well, I don't think it should be, why does this have to be hate-filled, can't you try and win them over without--"
"Just sitting on the fence...pick a side, us vs. them."
It's THAT sort of emntality I don't want in the New Atheist movement, or don't like in it.
Tackle the issues, fine, no problem.
Tackle the big wings, please, go ahead.
But when you make it "Our community vs. Their community," you're going too far.
And finally, one last thought to give on this:
I said earlier that when Dawkins or Hitchens attacks religion as a whole, yes, he's aiming at the big wigs, but because the religious Joe Blows and Sally Janes make up the "infastructure," as it were, of the Church, they're also attacking them , if not only indirectlky and perhaps unavoidably, so I can understand that.
It's incidents like that whole Xmas is a myth billboard that IS an attack on the Joes and Janes.
And then the Christians, in response, end up putting up their billboard bashing atheism, and it jsut escelates and drives the two sects apart without there being that chance to win over the youths or even the elders, and if you doubt that, consider:
If we were debating live right now, which would be a potentitally more persuasive demeanor for me to take up abortion with someone who's hardline against it:
Reasonably-and-still-forcefully give my reasoned argument and points...
Or call the anti-abortion crowd a pack of idiots and shouted and the like.
I understand you need a little push to make your point work--well, there you are, reasoned arguments ARE that push, and it's a pretty decent push because, as has been mentioned here, the Internet has made information more available...
If you make a reasoned argument with facts and logic to support your case, you WILL gain supporters, you DON'T need to resort to the same level of "us vs. them" dogma that the opposition in the religious community has...
I want this movement to be ABOVE that.