Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Atheismus

"God does not exist; only the agent exists.
This is a very strange business.
Religion is the strangest business of all.
There is no boss, but there are mediators, the priest,
the bishop, the cardinal, the pope, the messiah,
the whole hierarchy - and on top there is nobody."



Religionen glauben also, dass die Menschheit von einem Gott geschaffen wurde. Aber macht uns das nicht zu einem Spielball? Zu einem Wesen, das keinen eigenen Willen verfolgen kann? Wenn wir nun also geschaffen wurden, heißt das, wir könnten jeden Moment wieder von der Bildfläche weggeschafft werden? Die Theorie ließe sich bestätigen, denn tagtäglich sterben Menschen. Aber warum? Weil eine höhere Macht dies beeinflusst? Reichlich unglaubwürdig, hält man sich an die schlichten Fakten. Ich möchte mich nicht von irgendeinem Strippenzieher einschränken lassen. Denn hat Gott tatsächlich diese Welt erschaffen, so muss er ein ziemlicher Tyrann sein, der Krieg, Gewalt und Armut über diese Welt gebracht hat. Wo bleibt da die Nächstenliebe?

Atheismus ist keine Ersatzreligion, wie es viele vielleicht gerne bezeichnen. Dennoch gibt es eine Reihe von Geboten für Atheisten, die teils mit einem Augenzwinkern teils ernst genommen werden.






Atheist Ten Commandments


1 -- Determine what is really moral by trusting your own mind.


2 -- It is time that the discrimination against humanist and atheist is eliminated.


3 -- Don't buy into any authoritarian belief.


4 -- Know that the more educated you are, the more likely you are a non-believer.


5 -- Rely on Studies and readily observable evidence and keep questioning everything.


6 -- Question if religious education improves morality.


7 -- Don't believe in anything that violates the laws of nature.


8 -- Question all books be they Bibles, history or science books!


9 -- Become as moral as possible and be concerned for the welfare of other now and in the future.


10 -- Read and understand the Atheist and Humanist Ten Commandments.

http://keine-angst-vorm-teufel.blogspot.com/

Vom 20 bis zum 24. Mai findet in Bremen der Kirchentag statt. Aus aktuellem Anlass daher
ein paar Gedanken zu der Kirche, Religion und Gott.

Der deutsche Philosoph Rudolf von Delius hat einmal gesagt „Religion ist Feigheit vor dem Schicksal. Nichts weiter.“

Gläubiger aller Religion beten, um das von ihrer höheren Macht besiegelte Schicksal abzuwenden. Doch an wen wenden sie sich, wem Opfern sie sich und wen nehmen sie sich als Alibi? Sie nennen ihn Gott, Atheisten nennen ihn ein Hirngespinst, eine Fiktion oder eine nicht notwendige moralische Stütze.

Warum braucht der Mensch einen Gott, Gottesdienst oder die Kirche? Warum schafft der gläubige Mensch es nicht, an sich selber zu glauben und sich selbst für seine Taten verantwortlich zu machen?


Stattdessen werden unschuldige Kinder in den Vereinigten Staaten in die so genannten Jesus Camps geschickt.

Richard Dawkins, britischer Biologe und Autor von „Der Gotteswahn“ behauptete, dass das religiöse Unterrichten von Kindern, mit seinen Werten und Dogmen eine Form von Kindesmissbrauch darstellt, die die Kinder zu sehr beeinflusst und einschüchtert. Als Beispiel sei die Existenz der Hölle genannt.

Wo Richard Dawkins mit seiner These bei vielen ein empörtes Kopfschütteln hervorruft, erntet er bei vielen Atheisten ein zustimmendes Nicken.
Als Paradebeispiel für die Indoktrination gelten die so genannten Jesus Camps in den Vereinigten Staaten.

Ein Film, der dieses Thema aufgreift ist der im September 2006 veröffentliche Dokumentarfilm Jesus Camp von Rachel Grady und Heidi Ewing

Zu sehen gibt es die Dokumentation hier

http://www.moviesfoundonline.com/jesus_camp.php (englisch)


Weitere Information bietet die offizielle Seite zum Film
http://www.jesuscampthemovie.com/ (englisch)


In Gottes Namen
die Toten Hosen

Auf Kommando wird gejubelt
wenn er winkend vorüber geht.
Er liebt die Menge und den Trubel,
liebt sein Monumental-Schauspiel.
Auch wenn zwei Ecken weiter eine Strassenschlacht tobt,
er wird sein Programm durchziehn.

Hier kommt der Diktator,
wer ihm nicht folgt, der wird verbannt.
Er verlangt absoluten Gehorsam
von seiner kranken Anhängerschaft.

In Gottes Namen
hält er über euch Gericht.
In Gottes Namen
nimmt er sich das Recht,
dass er euch heilig ist.

Er verkündet die ewige Liebe
und lebt auf einem Kreuzzug.
Bei jedem seiner Siege
reicht er euch Wein und Brot.
Auf jeder Seite seiner Bibel
haftet eine Spur von Blut.

Ihr seid seine Schafe
und er ist euer Wolf.
Er sucht nach jedem Opfer,
dass ihm ohne zu zweifeln folgt.

In Gottes Namen
hält er über euch Gericht.
In Gottes Namen
nimmt er sich das Recht,
dass er euch schuldig spricht.

Jede Sünde ist bezahlbar
und Reue nur 'ne Frage von Geld.
Sein Ziel ist, dass du dich ein Leben lang
immer nur schuldig fühlst.

Er verurteilt alle Drogen
und ihr seid im unterworfenen Rausch.
Um euer Leben werdet ihr betrogen
und keinem fällt es auf.

In Gottes Namen
hält er über euch Gericht.
In Gottes Namen
nimmt er sich das Recht,
dass er euch schuldig spricht.



Saturday, May 16, 2009

Culture Jamming

"We consume all kinds of goods, services and entertainment only to find that there's no time left to really savor and enjoy our friends, family and life."

Culture Jamming by Kalle Lasn(book)

"Das Manifest der Anti-Werbung"

Culture Jamming ist eine Kunstform die es sich zu eigen gemacht hat, die Massenmedien mit ihren eigenen Waffen zu schlagen. Bekannte Werbungen werden übernommen, verfremdet oder karikiert. Culture Jamming ist eine Form des öffentlichen Aktivismus, welcher von Kalle Lasn geprägt wurde. Kalle Lasn gilt als Begründer der Adbusters Media Foundation, einer konsumkritischen Organisation, die 1989 ins Leben gerufen wurde. Er ist zudem Autor des Buches Culture Jamming (siehe oben).

Der Sinn des Culture Jam ist es einen Kontrast aufzuzeigen zwischen der dargestellten Welt in den Medien und der Realität außerhalb der Massenhysterie. Aufgezeigt werden sollen die negativen Impulse der Werbung, die Beeinflussung und Verschleierung. Culture jamming will wegführen von einer Markenhysterie, hin zu einem kritischen Umgang mit Marken und Unternehmen, die Ausbeuten, krank machen oder uns die Lebensqualität rauben.


Culture Jamming will den Blick schärfen für das wirklich wichtige im Leben. Nämlich unser Leben, das unserer Familie und Freunde. Culture Jamming will den Sinn für die Natur und das schöne in unserem Umfeld erwecken und uns den Sinn des Seins wieder vor Augen führen.







"The beginning is the most important part of the work."



-Plato

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Culture jam

"We consume all kinds of goods, services and entertainment only to find that there's no time left to really savor and enjoy our friends, family and life."

Culture Jamming by Kalle Lasn(book)

No logo by Naomi Klein(book)

Slow down week clip

Culture Jamming

Culture jamming is the act of transforming existing mass media to produce commentary about itself, using the original medium's communication method. It is a form of public activism which is generally in opposition to commercialism and the vectors of corporate image.

The aim of culture jamming is to create a contrast between corporate or mass media images and the realities or perceived negative side of the corporation or media.

It is based on the idea that advertising is little more than propaganda for established interests, and that there is a lack of an available means for alternative expression in industrialized nations.

Culture jamming is an intriguing form of political communication that has emerged in response to the commercial isolation of public life. Practitioners of culture jamming argue that culture, politics, and social values have been bent by saturated commercial environments, from corporate logos on sports facilities, to television content designed solely to deliver targeted audiences to producers and sponsors.


Did you know that every product pictured here is owned by Phillip Morris, the world's largest cigarette company? Chances are that you've been helping to promote Marlboro cigarettes without even knowing it.


Buy nothing day

Buy nothing day pig clip

Buy Nothing Day is an informal day of protest against consumerism observed by social activists. Participants refrain from purchasing anything for 24 hours in a concentrated display of consumer power. The event is intended to raise awareness of what some see as the wasteful consumption habits of First world countries.

In the United States and Canada supporters demonstrate on the day after American Thanksgiving.

It's a day where you challenge yourself, your family and friends to switch off from shopping and tune into life. Anyone can take part provided they spend a day without spending!

Buy Nothing Day also exposes the environmental and ethical consequences of consumerism. The developed countries - only 20% of the world population are consuming over 80% of the earth's natural resources, causing a disproportionate level of environmental damage and unfair distribution of wealth.

http://www.buynothingday.co.uk/
http://www.rogerwendell.com/buynothingday.html


adbusters

www.adbusters.org

Adbusters Media Foundation is a not-for-profit, anti-consumerist organization founded in 1989 by Kalle Lasn in Canada.

We are a global network of artists, activists, writers, pranksters, students, educators and entrepreneurs who want to advance the new social activist movement of the information age. Our aim is to topple existing power structures and forge a major shift in the way we will live in the 21st century.”

More campaigns

TV Turnoff week
Media Charta
True Cost Economics



“Our mental environment is a common-property resource like the air or the water. We need to protect ourselves from unwanted incursions into it, much the same way we lobbied for nonsmoking areas ten years ago.”
— Kalle Lasn, in Culture Jam

"While 79% of university entrants in 1970 said their goal in life was to develop "a meaningful philosophy of life," by 2005, 75% defined their life's objective as "being very well off financially."

"we kill ourselves slowly, by
eating too much or too little, becoming fat, or anorexic, or diabetic. physically and psychologically we whither away in our culture of collective self-absorption and material sloth. and our boundless, insatiable greed now threatens to drag the entire planet down with us."

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Stupidity (2003)

Albert Nerenberg asks one simple question: What is stupidity? It's much harder to answer than you might think, for, as Einstein theorized, the universe and stupidity are the only things that are infinite--and he had his doubts about the former. Amazingly, there has been no real academic study on stupidity, and there are only a handful of serious books on the topic, but that doesn't stop Nerenberg from blazing forward.
The result is a sometimes funny, sometimes terrifying look at the human race and the stupid things it has done over the course of time. One of the theories Stupidity puts forth is that people prefer the act of "resisting intelligence," as it makes them feel more comfortable. In other words, ignorance is bliss. Which would explain why this country is in so much trouble.
Thankfully, Nerenberg isn't content with simply pointing a finger and saying things like, "Bush is a moron." Instead, he offers some surprising theories, offering much intelligence behind the veneer of idiocy. Along with Super Size Me, Stupidity is one of the most important films to see this year.

Watch it here

http://www.moviesfoundonline.com/stupidity.php

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Impressionen



Smoking causes wasted potential and fatal regret

Smoking kills more Americans than AIDS, drug abuse, car accidents and crime.

Did you know that 390,000 Americans die each year from cigarette smoking? Smoking tobacco causes 1 out of 6 deaths.

Lung cancer has caused more deaths in women than breast cancer. If a pregnant woman smokes, she has a greater chance of medical problems with her baby.


In U.S. alone, figures show that expectant mothers who smoke cause the deaths of over 600 boy babies and 400 baby girls each year

Cigarette smoking is the number one cause of cancer death in men. Male smokers over the age of 35 are more likely to die from smoking-related diseases like lung cancer.

Smoking is the most wide spread addiction. Statistics show that in 90 years there have been 1,1 billion smokers in the world, among them 47% men and 12% women out of the whole population.


Many smoking-related deaths are not 'quick deaths'. You can expect several years of illness and distressing symptoms before you die.

www.adbusters.org

The smoker is sick more often, explaining why he misses an average of 7½ work days per year, usually with a loss of pay, while the non-smoker will miss only 4½ days.

The time to recover from any specific ill, whether caused by smoking or not, is much longer for the smoker. Often, a non-smoker will survive a sickness from which he would have died had he smoked.

A UK survey shows the mean age for young people to try their first cigarette is 11 years old.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Myths of the 21st Century. Today: Death penalty

1. Death Penalty results in reduced rates of murders and serious.

Fact: Many studies show that existence of the death penalty as a punishment is brutalizing society and making it more violent. There are several studies showing that there hasn't been any remarkable change, for example, in murder rates, after abolishing death penalty and also several studies go on to prove that threat of death penalty does not have preventive affect for people committing serious offences.
For example the western countries (USA, EU, Canada, Australia, New Zealand) have all abolished the death penalty, except USA, and still, for example, murder rates are much higher in USA than in any of these other, similar, countries.


2. It is cheaper to sentence a person to death than keep him a lifetime in prison.

Fact: It is established that the actual cost of one death penalty case is usually much higher than the cost incurred on an individual serving life imprisonment. This is because of higher pre-trial costs and costs incurred during the court process. In the death penalty cases, states need to guarantee all the possible requirements of the fair trial, much more investigation, much more time, more defence lawyers to protect accused, more prosecutor and more bureaucracy. This means, both, higher investigative costs and higher extra costs during the trial. Also, many times death penalty is ultimately changed to life imprisonment and this means also extra costs after the more costly trial.


3. Innocent people are not convicted in death penalty trials.

Fact: There is always a possibility of making mistakes and those mistakes have happened several times even during the last few years! Convictions of the people because of wrong or faulty grounds are not fiction. For example, according to some studies, only in the USA, around 100 people been released from a death row because they have afterwards found innocent.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Myths of the 21st Century. Today: Homosexuality

1. Gay men are child molesters and recruit children into their life-style.

Fact: The majority of child molesters are heterosexual. Only 2% of molesters were gay.


2. Homosexuality is abnormal and sick.

Fact: According to the American Psychological Association, "It is no more abnormal or sick to be homosexual than to be left handed."


3. Gay couples cannot maintain long-term relationships.

Fact: The divorce rate is nearly the same. Heterosexuals had a 49 percent divorce rate in 1989, which suggests that there is nothing inherent in heterosexuality that maintains strong, long-term relationships. But Lesbian couples appeared to divorce at a slightly higher rate than gay male couples.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Myths of the 21st Century. Today: Atheism

1. Atheists have no morals, since they don't believe in God.

Fact: Atheists don’t need to fear eternal damnation in order to do good. Atheists do good, not out of fear of reprisal, but because it's the right thing to do. While atheists make up 8-10% of the population at large, they only make up 1% of the population in prison. Just to give one example.


2. Atheists force all people to be atheists.

Fact: Atheists seek only the freedom for people to make their choice on their own. They seek the freedom not to support religion through taxes, forced participation, or special privileges of any kind.


3. Atheists cannot know there is no God, since you cannot prove he doesn't exist

Fact: Atheists don't need to prove the non-existence of God. Can theists prove God over any alternatives?


4. Atheists are so closed-minded, they can't see that miracles happen every day!

Fact: Every moment is a golden one for him who has the vision to recognize it as such.
~ Henry Miller

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Anti-Discrimination Support Network

Established in 1993, ADSN is a committee of the Freethought Society of Greater Philadelphia (FSGP) which is a 501(c) 3 non-profit educational organization. ADSN receives, evaluates, and responds to reports of negative stereotyping of the Atheist/Humanist community.


http://www.fsgp.org/adsn.html

What is a freethinker?
A person who forms opinions about religion on the basis of reason, independently of tradition, authority, or established belief. Freethinkers include atheists, agnostics and rationalists. No one can be a freethinker who demands conformity to a bible, creed, or messiah.

Do freethinkers have a basis for morality?
Most freethinkers are humanists, basing morality on human needs, not imagined "cosmic absolutes." This also embraces a respect for our planet, including the other animals, and principles of equality.
Freethinkers argue that religion promotes a dangerous and inadequate "morality" based on blind obedience and unexplained ultimatums. Freethinkers try to base actions on their consequences to real, living human beings.

Is atheism/humanism a religion?
No. Atheism is not abelief. It is the "lack of belief" in god(s). Lack of faith requires no faith. Atheism is indeed based on a commitment to rationality, but that hardly qualifies it as a religion. Freethinkers apply the term religion to belief systems, which include a supernatural realm, deity, faith in "holy" writings, and conformity to an absolute creed. Secular Humanism has no god, bible or savior. It is based on natural rational principles. It is flexible and relativistic - it is not a religion.


Why especially women need freedom from religion

There are more than 200 bible verses that specifically belittle and demean women. Here are just a few:


Genesis
Woman cursed: maternity a sin, marriage a bondage

Rape virgins instead of male angels

Exodus
Unfair rules for female servants, may be sex slaves

Leviticus
Women who have sons are unclean 7 days

Women who have daughters are unclean 14 days

Menstrual periods are unclean

If master has sex with engaged woman, she shall be scourged

Deuteronomy
Woman raped in city, she & her rapist both stoned to death

Woman must marry her rapist

I Corinthians
Women keep in silence, learn only from husbands

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Wir bringen uns langsam um. Weil wir zu viel oder zu wenig essen. Entweder wir sind fett oder Magersüchtig. Haben Diabetes, Bulimie, leiden am Boreout oder Burnout Syndrom.
Und wir ertrinken im Selbstmitleid.
Alles ist schlecht, den anderen geht es sowieso besser - und ändern? Nee das geht doch sowieso nicht. Da fristen wir lieber unser Dasein mit einer Portion Selbstmitleid und einer Tüte Chips vorm Fernseher.
Dabei können schon eine gesunde Ernährung und ausreichend Bewegung an der frischen Luft
zu einem neuen Lebensgefühl verhelfen. Wer beim Lesen dieser Zeilen schmunzeln sollte, dem sei gesagt: Ausprobieren und selber erleben. Der Körper wird’s einem danken.

75% der Männer und 59% der Frauen in Deutschaland sind mehr oder weniger übergewichtig.
100.000 Menschen leiden an Magersucht 600.000 an Bulimie.
Statistisch leidet eine Person aus rund 82 Millionen an der so genannten Alzheimer-Bulimie.
Es wird für uns Zeit, uns wenigstens körperlich von den Amerikanern zu unterscheiden.



Das was unser Bauch zuviel bekommt, bekommt unser Gehirn zu wenig. – Futter.
In erschreckend vielen Haushalten ist die einzig gedruckte EinBildungsquelle die Bildzeitung.
Unglaublich viele Menschen glauben, sie hätten aus diesem Blatt irgendeinen Nutzen ziehen können.
Einzig haben sie dadurch wieder ihre Naivität aufgezeigt, mit der sie sich durch die Welt bewegen. Manch einer der Nicht-Bild-Leser vermag noch nicht einmal das Datum dieses Boulevardblattes zu glauben.
Wo wir am Ende sind und doch irgendwie wieder am Anfang.
Unter anderem wirkt sich die Bildung direkt auf den Körperumfang aus: Je höher der Schulabschluss desto geringer das Gewichtsproblem. Rund 70 Prozent der Deutschen mit Hauptschulabschluss leiden unter Übergewicht oder Adipositas. Von den Abiturenten sind nur etwa halb so viele betroffen. Und von denen lesen besonders wenig die Bildzeitung.

Und die Moral von der Geschicht? Vielleicht lieber die Bildzeitung essen, als lesen? Das macht nicht dumm, aber auch nicht dicker.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Impressionen

Samstag, 16. Februar 2008 08:15

Ein UFO? Nein - nur der Mond

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Animal Factories

85% of the fur industry’s skins come from animals living captive in fur factory farms.

The most commonly farmed fur-bearing animals are minks, followed by foxes. Chinchillas, lynxes, and even hamsters are also farmed for their fur.

73% of fur farms are in Europe, 12% are in North America, and the rest are dispersed throughout the world, in countries such as Argentina, China, and Russia.

The animals—who are housed in unbearably small cages—live with fear, stress, disease, parasites, and other physical and psychological hardships, all for the sake of an unnecessary global industry that makes billions of dollars annually.

Shearing and Mulesing Equal Sheep Abuse

With approximately 100 million sheep, Australia produces 25 percent of the world’s wool. In Australia, the most commonly raised sheep are merinos, who are specifically bred to have wrinkled skin, which means more wool per animal. This unnatural overload of wool causes animals to die of heat exhaustion during hot months, and the wrinkles also collect urine and moisture. Attracted to the moisture, flies lay eggs in the folds of skin, and the hatched maggots can eat the sheep alive.

Bullfight

Each year, approximately 10,000 bulls die in bullfights, an inaccurate term for events in which there is very little competition between a nimble, sword-wielding matador (Spanish for “killer”) and a confused, maimed, psychologically tormented, and physically debilitated animal.

Circuses

Because circuses are constantly traveling from city to city, access to basic necessities such as food, water, and veterinary care is often inadequate. The animals, most of whom are quite large and naturally active, are forced to spend most of their lives in the small barren cages used to transport them, where they have only enough room to stand and turn around. Most are allowed out of their cages only during the short periods when they must perform. Other animals, like elephants, are kept in leg shackles that only allow them to lift one foot at a time.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Why do we kill people who kill people to show that killing people is wrong?

Countries and territories which retain the death penalty for ordinary crimes

AFGHANISTAN, ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA, BAHAMAS, BAHRAIN, BANGLADESH, BARBADOS, BELARUS, BELIZE, BOTSWANA, BURUNDI, CAMEROON, CHAD, CHINA, COMOROS, CONGO (Democratic Republic), CUBA, DOMINICA, EGYPT, EQUATORIAL GUINEA, ERITREA, ETHIOPIA, GUATEMALA, GUINEA, GUYANA, INDIA, INDONESIA, IRAN, IRAQ, JAMAICA, JAPAN, JORDAN, KAZAKSTAN, KOREA (North), KOREA (South), KUWAIT, LAOS, LEBANON, LESOTHO, LIBYA, MALAYSIA, MONGOLIA, NIGERIA, OMAN, PAKISTAN, PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY, QATAR, SAINT CHRISTOPHER & NEVIS, SAINT LUCIA, SAINT VINCENT & GRENADINES, SAUDI ARABIA, SIERRA LEONE, SINGAPORE, SOMALIA, SUDAN, SYRIA, TAIWAN, TAJIKISTAN, TANZANIA, THAILAND, TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO, UGANDA, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, UZBEKISTAN, VIET NAM, YEMEN, ZIMBABWE

There are currently more than 3,500 people on death row -- more than at any time in U.S. history.

Since 1976, more than 580 people have been executed in the United States. Over 50% of those have been killed since 1992.

Texas Gov. George Bush has personally signed death warrants for 100 executions and counting.

President Clinton's 1994 crime bill added 58 more crimes that are punishable by death. And his "Anti-Terrorism" bill limits the number of federal appeals for death row prisoners to just one within one year of conviction.


Amnesty International's latest information shows that:

  • 90 countries and territories have abolished the death penalty for all crimes;
  • 10 countries have abolished the death penalty for all but exceptional crimes such as wartime crimes;
  • 30 countries can be considered abolitionist in practice: they retain the death penalty in law but have not carried out any executions for the past 10 years or more and are believed to have a policy or established practice of not carrying out executions,
  • making a total of 130 countries which have abolished the death penalty in law or practice.
  • 67 other countries and territories retain and use the death penalty, but the number of countries which actually execute prisoners in any one year is much smaller.

Executions cost more than life in prison.
$2 million per person vs. $500,000 (4x as much!).

The innocent may be wrongly executed.
Since the DP was reinstated in 1976, 82 inmates have been freed from Death Row. That's 1 Death Row inmate found to be wrongfully convicted for every 7 executed.

Is not a deterrent; crime rates have not gone down.
In fact, the murder rate in the US is 6 times that of Britain and 5 times that of Australia. Neither country has the DP. Texas has twice the murder rate of Wisconsin, a state that doesn't have the DP. Texas and Oklahoma have historically executed the most number of DR inmates, yet in 2003 their state murder rates increased, and both have murder rates higher than the national average.

Life in prison also guarantees no future crimes.


Violates international human rights laws.


No longer practiced in most sophisticated societies.

Thursday, February 7, 2008


Kids 8-18 spend 44.5 hours per week watching TV and playing video games. This is more time than they spend with their parents (17 hours) or at school (30 hours).

26% of kids 8-18 use more than one medium at a time.

63% of kids 8-18 live in homes where the TV is on during most meals.

36% of kids six and younger have a TV in their bedroom, compared to 68% of kids 8-18.

80% of the TV commercials that kids see each year are for fast food, candy, cereal and toys.

An average of one food commercial is shown every five minutes during Saturday morning cartoons.

On average, music videos contain 93 sexual situations per hour, including 11 "hard core" scenes depicting behaviour such as intercourse and oral sex.

A preschooler's risk of obesity jumps 6% for every hour of TV watched per day, 31% if the TV is in their bedroom.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Impressionen

Was ist das ?


Der Vollmond, fotografiert mit einer mittelmäßigen Digitalkamera


Sunday, December 30, 2007

There is a reason why god-believing adults rarely become scientists, and almost never become top scientists. Not only does theology and dogmatic religious assertions interfere with correct scientific thought, but, children of religious parents have on average, lower intelligence. This common-sense finding is not a one-off statistic, but part of an entire trend. The stricter the religious beliefs of the parent, the less the average intelligence of the child.


Religiosity, and belief in God, causes parents to have children with lower IQs. These children go on to be less interested in science, and hardly ever become top scientists. If this is true, then it must also be true that religious people in general, during their adult lives, remain less intelligent and less educated than those around them.

Only 3.3% of the Members of the Royal Society in the UK and 7% the National Academy of Sciences in the USA, believe in a personal God.

The children of highly religious parents suffer diminished IQs - averaging 7 to 10 points lower compared to their non-religious counterparts in similar socio-economic groups.



Religion has convinced people that there’s an invisible man…living in the sky, who watches everything you do every minute of every day. And the invisible man has a list of ten specific things he doesn’t want you to do. And if you do any of these things, he will send you to a special place, of burning and fire and smoke and torture and anguish for you to live forever, and suffer and burn and scream until the end of time.
But he loves you.



Friday, December 14, 2007

World mapper

http://www.worldmapper.org/

The land area of each territory is shown here



Child Labour
Territory size shows the proportion of worldwide child work force (aged 10-14) that live there.



GDP Wealth
Territory size shows the proportion of worldwide wealth, that is Gross Domestic Product based on exchange rates with the US$, that is found there.



Underweight Children
Territory size shows the proportion of all underweight children in the world that live there.



War deaths 2002
Territory size shows the proportion of deaths worldwide directly attributed to war or conflict that happened there.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Don’t kill people who killed people to show that killing people is wrong!



A UN resolution cleared by the controversial Human Rights Committee to ban the death penalty could soon go up for a vote in the General Assembly. But a roster of countries that include China, Iran, Syria and the US are opposing it.

It isn't the first time that a majority of the Human Rights Committee of the United Nations has voted against capital punishment, but each time brings renewed promise to opponents of the practice. On Thursday, after two days of heated debate, the committee passed a draft resolution calling for a worldwide end to the death penalty.

Ninety-nine of the committee's member states voted in favor of the resolution, 52 against. Strange bedfellows were made as the United States sided with countries like Syria and Iran in the pro-death penalty camp. Thirty three countries abstained.

The resolution expressed "deep concern" about the death penalty, contended that it violates human dignity and challenged the notion that capital punishment has a preventative impact on crime. It calls on countries practicing capital punishment to "establish a moratorium on executions with a view to abolishing the death penalty."

The draft resolution was co-sponsored by European Union states and 60 other countries. It must now be voted on by the entire 192-member General Assembly, which has rejected similar initiatives twice before, in 1994 and 1999. The first was defeated by eight votes, and the second was withdrawn at the last minute. If the General Assembly votes in favor this time, the resolution would be legally nonbinding, but would carry moral weight.


Robert Hagan, the US representative in the committee stated after the vote, "The United States recognizes that the supporters of this resolution have principled positions on the issue of the death penalty. But nonetheless it is important to recognize that international law does not prohibit capital punishment

Human rights groups celebrated the draft resolution, which Amnesty International called "a clear recognition of the growing international trend toward worldwide abolition of the death penalty." The human rights organization reports that more than 90 percent of all executions last year took place in China, Iran, Iraq, Sudan and the US. The total number of recorded executions, however, has dropped from 2,148 in 2005 to 1,591 in 2006. One hundred and thirty countries have abolished capital punishment, including the 27-member European Union.

Executions have been carried out by the following methods since 2000:

- Beheading (in Saudi Arabia)
- Electrocution (in USA)
- Hanging (in Egypt, Iran, Japan, Jordan, Pakistan, Singapore and other countries)
- Lethal injection (in China, Guatemala, Thailand, USA)
- Shooting (in Belarus, China, Somalia, Taiwan, Uzbekistan, Viet Nam and other countries)
- Stoning (in Afghanistan, Iran)

Executions cost more than life in prison.
$2 million per person vs. $500,000 (4x as much!). Free counsel for defense, for appeals, maximum security on a separate death row wing.

The innocent may be wrongly executed.
Since the DP was reinstated in 1976, 82 inmates have been freed from Death Row. That's 1 Death Row inmate found to be wrongfully convicted for every 7 executed.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

World AIDS day December, 1st


The spread of HIV and Aids in Africa should be tackled through fidelity and abstinence and not by condoms, Pope Benedict XVI has said.

Speaking to African bishops at the Vatican, the Pope described HIV/Aids in Africa as a "cruel epidemic".

But he told them: "The traditional teaching of the church has proven to be the only failsafe way to prevent the spread of HIV/Aids."

More than 60% of the world's 40m people with HIV live in sub-Saharan Africa.

In South Africa alone, 600-1,000 people are thought to die every day because of Aids.

Pope Benedict, who was elected to succeed John Paul II in April, has already signalled that he will maintain a strictly traditional line on issues including abortion and homosexuality.

Before being elected pope, Benedict served as head of the Vatican's doctrinal office.

These were his first public comments on the issue of Aids/HIV and contraception since taking office

He was addressing bishops from South Africa, Botswana, Swaziland, Namibia and Lesotho, who had travelled to the Vatican for a routine papal audience.

Some Catholic clergymen have argued that the use of condoms to stem the spread of the disease would be a "lesser of two evils".

The Pope warned that contraception was one of a host of trends contributing to a "breakdown in sexual morality", and church teachings should not be ignored.

"It is of great concern that the fabric of African life, its very source of hope and stability, is threatened by divorce, abortion, prostitution, human trafficking and a contraception mentality," he added.

The virus "seriously threatens the economic and social stability of the continent," the Pope said.

The UN estimates that without new initiatives and greater access to drugs, more than 80 million Africans may die from Aids by 2025 and HIV infections could reach 90 million, or 10% of the continent's population.

and the Pope still rejects condoms for Africa ?!

thank god I’m an atheist

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Buy nothing day

Buy nothing day

Every November‚ for 24 hours‚ we remember that no one was born to shop.

Saturday November 24th 2007 is Buy Nothing Day, It's a day where you challenge yourself, your family and friends to detox from shopping for 24 hours. The rules are simple, for 24 hours you will detox from consumerism and live without shopping. Anyone can take part provided they spend a day without spending!

Shop less – live more!

Only 20% of the world population are consuming over 80% of the earth's natural resources, causing a disproportionate level of environmental damage and unfair distribution of wealth.


- 100 million children around the world live on streets and you spend your money on luxury

- During Christmas we throw away an extra 270,00 tonnes of packaging

- The US and Canada, with 5.2% of the world’s population, are responsible for 31.5% of
consumption.

- Food in the UK travels 65% further than it did two decades ago

- Heinz ketchup eaten in California is made with California-grown tomatoes shipped to

Canada for processing and returned in bottles

- Europe is leading the way to ending the use of animals in cosmetic testing and banning the

sale of cosmetics and similar products tested on animals. There is no excuse for other

countries, including the United States, not to follow this compassionate example.

- Every year, more than 40 million fur-bearing animals are violently killed in the name of "fashion." Luxury vs necessity

Luxury vs necessity


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E_jpG6kv6Pw
http://www.adbusters.org/home/

Saturday, November 10, 2007

The US spends almost six times more on healthcare than other advanced countries, yet life expectancy is lower than in Europe and almost 47 million people are uninsured. Why do politicians insist on defending a broken system?

The catalog of the most commonly heard apologies for American health care, and the reasons they won't wash.

Excuse No. 1: No insurance, no problem.

"I mean, people have access to health care in America," said President Bush a few months ago. "After all, you just go to an emergency room." He was widely mocked for his cluelessness, yet many apologists for the health care system in the United States seem almost equally clueless.

We're told, for example, that there really aren't that many uninsured American citizens, because some of the uninsured are illegal immigrants, while some of the rest are actually entitled to Medicaid. This misses the point that the 47 million people in this country without insurance are an ever-changing group, so that the experience of being without insurance extends to a much broader group -- in fact, more than one in every three people in America under the age of 65 was uninsured at some point in 2006 or 2007.

Oh, and finding out that you're covered by Medicaid when you show up at an emergency room isn't at all the same thing as receiving regular medical care.

Beyond that, a large fraction of the population -- about one in four nonelderly Americans, according to a Consumer Reports survey -- is underinsured, with "coverage so meager they often postponed medical care because of costs."

So, yes, lack of insurance is a very big problem, a problem that reaches deep into the middle class.

Excuse No. 2: It's the cheeseburgers.

Americans don't have a bad health system, say the apologists, they just have bad habits. Overeating and teenage sex, not the huge overhead of America's private health insurance companies ---the United States spends almost six times as much on health care administration as other advanced countries -- are the source of our problems.

There's a grain of truth to this claim: Bad habits may partially explain America's low life expectancy. But the big question isn't why we have lower life expectancy than Britain, Canada or France, it's why we spend far more on health care without getting better results. And lifestyle isn't the explanation: the most definitive estimates, such as those of the McKinsey Global Institute, say that diseases that are associated with obesity and other lifestyle-related problems play, at most, a minor role in high U.S. health care costs.

Excuse No. 3: 2007 is better than 1950.

This is an argument that baffles me, but you hear it all the time. When you point out that America spends far more on health care than other countries, but gets worse results, the apologists reply: "Sure, we spend a lot of money on health care, but medical care is a lot better than it was in 1950, so it's money well spent." Huh?

It's as if you went to a store to buy a DVD player, and the salesman told you not to worry about the fact that his prices are twice those of his competitors -- after all, the machines on offer at his store are a lot better than they were five years ago. It is, in other words, an argument that makes no sense at all, yet respectable economists make it with a straight face.

Excuse No. 4: Socialized medicine! Socialized medicine!

Rudy Giuliani's fake numbers on prostate cancer -- which, by the way, he still refuses to admit were wrong -- were the latest entry in a long, dishonorable tradition of peddling scare stories about the evils of "government run" health care.

The reality is that the best foreign health care systems, especially those of France and Germany, do as well or better than the U.S. system on every dimension, while costing far less money.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

homosexuality a psychological disorder?

The notion of human sexuality is no doubt as offensive to the Church as the idea that humans might be wired from birth to be straight or gay -- which is the assumption behind an Italian ad campaign protested recently by the Vatican. The regional government of Tuscany has planned to use a photo of a newborn child wearing a hospital bracelet with the word "homosexual" as part of a publicity push to combat homophobia. "Sexual orientation," reads the tag line, which will appear on billboards throughout Tuscany, "is not a choice."

Italy's political right, along with some Catholic groups, want the campaign to be withdrawn. The Church's declared position is that homosexuality is a psychological disorder, not exactly a sin -- although indulging in gay sex is a sin.

"Doing a publicity campaign like this is not a good idea," said Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican's Secretary of State. "This is a bit strange. They shouldn't have gone that far."

The campaign has been alternately praised and condemned by Italian gay-rights activists. One group, Arcigay, said Tuscany was "at the forefront" of the Italian struggle for gay rights, while a prominent philosopher, Gianni Vattimo, who is openly gay, said the initiative was "in bad taste ... Of course for a homosexual it is natural to be gay, but I'm not too sure it is determined by genetics."

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Virtual addiction

If you turn on your television set and look away at a nearby wall, you will discover that the reflections produced by the light from the TV vary constantly in contrast and intensity. It’s obvious that the intensity of visual and audio contrast in our lives has increased through the years.

I am convinced that the passivity of the American public is related to this phenomenon. It is hard to believe, but a poll taken this summer indicated that two thirds of the American public could not name even one of the Democrats then running for president; meanwhile, three times as many Americans believe in Satan than in evolution. We have lost our sense of what is real and replaced it with an addiction to the virtual reality created by television, entertainment and advertising. The constant juxtaposition of images like that of a woman crying over a child lost in a fire and a commercial for Pampers amplifies this sense of meaninglessness and stupor.

One can make the case that we have lost the capacity for abstract thought. When we read, or listen to the radio, the mind forms images in response. The same can be said to occur when an illustration provokes the viewer to consider its symbolic relationship to reality. Abstraction encourages the mind to bridge the distance from suggestion to reality. There are certain tribes in Africa that do not distinguish between dream life and daily life. We find ourselves in a similar condition, but our virtual reality fails to serve our deepest needs.

In our world, reality has been replaced by forms of entertainment that require little mental activity and encourage inertia and apathy. How else can we explain the incredible indifference to their own lives and interests that characterizes the American people at this time? The misrepresentations of government, the outrageous dishonesty of business, the attacks on our civil rights, the collapse of our educational system and the failures of our social safety nets have produced almost no response or indignation from the American public. When Bush orders an aircraft carrier moved at a cost of $1 million so he can land on the deck without San Diego being visible in the background, he is aware that this manipulative misrepresentation will not affect his popularity, even after it is disclosed.

A Greek myth tells us that the first drawing came about as a woman traced her lover’s shadow in the sand as he was about to leave for war, where he might be killed and never seen again. The myth, of course, is not literally true. Tracing shadows, on the other hand, is an elegant way of describing the act of illustration. If illustration suggests illumination, then the shadow is central to its meaning.

All of us who create imagery know that the relationship of dark to light is unavoidable. Although Freud, like all true artists, offered us only one way to view the world, I’ve always been attracted to his notion of the struggle between Eros and Thanatos, the pull towards life versus the pull towards death that seems to occupy the human psyche. Eros is the mother of sex, love, feeling and the desire to make things. Thanatos embraces darkness, obscurity, evil and entropy. Although the dialogue between these two forces predates history, the anxiety of this moment in time convinces us that the balance has gone awry.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Nations controlled by the media

Don't wanna be an American idiot.
One nation controlled by the media.
Information age of hysteria.
It's calling out to idiot America
(and not only America)

There is a massive market for mass media products aimed at the low-attention-span trash culture types. Male-dominated trashy tabloids depict female nudes, fictional short stories of the most banal and stupid kind, advice columns designed to shock rather than educate, and news stories that are widely known to be entertaining rather than true.

In Japan, a report noted that the basic academic abilities of Japanese elementary and junior high school students in science have been declining over the past few years and found a connection between the amount of time spent watching television.

The average American home has the television on for over 8 hours every day

70% of day care centers use TV during a typical day

In the United States, a research study published in the journal Science found that American women would rather watch TV than take care of their children. "Women rated TV-watching high on the list, ahead of shopping and talking on the phone, and ranked taking care of children low, below cooking and not far above housework

The TV, the Gameboy, the Nintendo, the Xbox, the PSP aren't very good babysitters and they sure aren't very good at developing smart brains. Get off your own ass and kick your kids ass outside. Give him a book. Read to her. Play a game with him. Make time for your kids or they'll end up like one of those wise ass kids you see bitching with their parents in public over something stupid.

Monday, October 15, 2007

Futter fürs Gehirn

Versuch einer Visualisierung meinerseits
http://www.youtube.com/billyjoelfan28








Saturday, October 13, 2007

Pics of the Day - October, 13th



6:15 pm



6:30 pm


6:45 pm