Confused.hadespussercats wrote:I knew a family called Gozzo once. The mother had the clap.

Confused.hadespussercats wrote:I knew a family called Gozzo once. The mother had the clap.
Tray bong. Tray Tray Tray bong.Gallstones wrote:Confused.hadespussercats wrote:I knew a family called Gozzo once. The mother had the clap.
Not any less confused.hadespussercats wrote:Tray bong. Tray Tray Tray bong.Gallstones wrote:Confused.hadespussercats wrote:I knew a family called Gozzo once. The mother had the clap.
Sorry. Just having fun with that idea.That's the beauty of irrelevancy.
I like being teased...Gallstones wrote:I am beginning to suspect that men do not like to be teased, or they don't get it when they are being teased.
Either I get a lecture on the very seriousness of what I just joked about or I get an angry response or feelings are hurt.
.Gallstones wrote:I am beginning to suspect that some men do not like to be teased, or they don't get it when they are being teased.
Either I get a lecture on the very seriousness of what I just joked about or I get an angry response or feelings are hurt.
*poke* *tickle*JimC wrote:I like being teased...
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Yes, of course some. Although it seems like most of them.Ronja wrote:.Gallstones wrote:I am beginning to suspect that some men do not like to be teased, or they don't get it when they are being teased.
Either I get a lecture on the very seriousness of what I just joked about or I get an angry response or feelings are hurt.![]()
charlou wrote:For those who haven't watched Paula Kirby's thoughts on women in atheism, to which Rebecca Watson responded, a response which has led to this whole debate ... watch this.
Hearing Paula Kirby's thoughts on the women in atheism issue again, I just want to applaud her views here, and say that I agree on all her points.
I've just picked up on a possible relationship between her comments and Richard Dawkins' response to Rebecca Watson's petty retorts ...
Paula Kirby raises two key points of concern regarding women and atheism ...
1. the possible failure to get the atheist message across to women ... (promoting atheism is important to Richard Dawkins too)
2. why women are not more visible in fighting religion, given the way in which the lives of women particular are made miserable by religion ... and she goes on to point out that she doesn't consider the atheist movement to be one of the places where we'll find womens rights are being ignored and women oppressed.
That second one is a very astute point, and I'm thinking it makes even more sense of Richard Dawkins's response to Rebecca Watson's complete dismissal of Paula Kirby's arguments with petty agenda driven shite (to put it bluntly).
Good point, hades. All four, for example, have been very actively promoting and supporting Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who is most definitely in none of those categories.hadespussercats wrote:Another thought-- maybe a bit of a derail--
a comment about why four white dudes have been "allowed" to be the face of atheism...
What a strange way of looking at it. Four scholarly writers who have each gained eminence in their respective fields have made huge strikes for atheism in the public consciousness. Certainly, they were each well-positioned to do so, because of their past successes (and yes, the world being what it is, and given their generation(s), the fact that they are white and male probably helped them somewhat on their paths to recognition.) Seems to me the rest of us should be glad that they were able to do this. No one is stopping anyone else from shooting for similar recognition. I don't get the sense any of them have slammed the door shut behind them now they're in the atheist penthouse. In fact, many of them seem invested in promoting other voices to prominence.
And who exactly would have been in charge of "allowing" them to be the faces of atheism, anyway? Yes, we need more diversity. But that doesn't make the achievements of this group any less, just because they're old white men.
"...anyone who says it’s “just the Internet” can. And then when they come back, they can
again." - Tigger
I would add that it's not the achievement of a group. Dawkins, Hitchens, Harris and Dennett succeeded through individual achievement, not the achievement of whites and males in general. They each labored for decades in relative anonymity before they achieved widespread notoriety, and achieved remarkable success and groundbreaking breakthroughs in their fields before they became the faces of atheism. Anyone here can become a biologist, and labor for decades making advancements in that science and producing great works of non-fiction. Anyone here can devote decades of their lives to traveling the world, getting shot at, and writing about the events of the day and writing books and perfecting one's literary craft. Etc. It takes effort, work, sweat, imagination, and dedication - as Einstein said, genius is 10% imagination and 90% perspiration (at least I think that's what he said). All that doesn't guarantee success, of course. Plenty of geniuses and non-geniuses alike have toiled in obscurity and died in obscurity, poor and unappreciated. That's the way it is.hadespussercats wrote:Another thought-- maybe a bit of a derail--
a comment about why four white dudes have been "allowed" to be the face of atheism...
What a strange way of looking at it. Four scholarly writers who have each gained eminence in their respective fields have made huge strikes for atheism in the public consciousness. Certainly, they were each well-positioned to do so, because of their past successes (and yes, the world being what it is, and given their generation(s), the fact that they are white and male probably helped them somewhat on their paths to recognition.) Seems to me the rest of us should be glad that they were able to do this. No one is stopping anyone else from shooting for similar recognition. I don't get the sense any of them have slammed the door shut behind them now they're in the atheist penthouse. In fact, many of them seem invested in promoting other voices to prominence.
And who exactly would have been in charge of "allowing" them to be the faces of atheism, anyway? Yes, we need more diversity. But that doesn't make the achievements of this group any less, just because they're old white men.
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