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Eddie Tabash: Speech and Q&A at AAI 07

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Uploaded by on Oct 26, 2007

http://www.rationalresponders.com
Eddie Tabash's talk at AAI 07 titled "The Present Threat of the Religious Right to Our Modern Freedoms."

Margaret Downey at:
http://www.Margaretdowney.com

Visit the AAI website at:
http://atheistalliance.org

See more videos like this at http://richarddawkins.net
and http://video.rationalresponders.com

Video by
The Richard Dawkins Foundation

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Wayne Marsala
Josh Timonen

Edited by
Josh Timonen

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News & Politics

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Top Comments

  • Everything in America pretty much went to hell when the Republican party allied itself with fundamentalist Christian fascists. It'll take more than a few decades before we can undo all of the havoc they have wrought since the seventies.

  • I'm not American and even I know that's B.S. To quote Thomas Jefferson: "Christianity is the most perverted system that ever shone on man."

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  • Are atheists "really" that despised in America (I'm not talking about the deepest south here, btw), especially more than homosexuals or whoever else, or is it just persecution complex / exaggeration?

    I mean, I know about the political elections and stuff, but in everyday life? In business? In pop culture (how many movies, shows and internet satires make fun of religion??)?

    Somehow wouldn't think so...

  • "If one is a true conservative....one should oppose the religious right because if you are a true conservative you believe in limited government, and the religious right are state totalitarians"

    I couldn't agree more. As a fiscal conservative it is very distressing to see the Republican party becoming so intertwined with the religious right.

  • @dlc208

    When it comes to attitudes about religion, John Jay was clearly in the minority among the Founders. That's a very good thing. Jay believed that Catholics should be denied the right to vote and right to own property - a view clearly at odds with our First Amendment and secular Constitution. So yes, we are and were a nation with a Christian majority, but not "Christian" in any legal our foundational sense.

    Incidentally, abortion wasn't prohibitted in the U.S. until the late 1800s.

  • I think these people are going a little overboard. The founders were not against religion they were against a state-sponsored church. In fact, if you read the federalist papers John Jay refers to the US as a nation of people being of the same religion - I'm pretty sure he meant Christianity. Was abortion legal in the time of the founders? I think not. So I think the truth is that America was supposed to be a Christian nation, but without a state church.

  • Have you been out of the country for the past eight years? You do not appear well informed about the conservative christian political agenda. Your lack of concern is not a good sign for the future health of our county.

    You are taking for granted the strength of our democracy. It's foundation and the protection of the individual has truly been under threat since the religious have pushed their agenda.

  • I'm an atheist, but I find alot of his comments off the mark. Simply because some religious conservatives desire some policy is no guarantee that they could get a majority and get the policy through the legislature - birth control, for instance, is probably far too popular to ever be outlawed again in any state. Likewise, many of the more extreme religious positions would find little popular support and have no chance of being put into law.

  • Excellent point on 24:21 GBanville. I grimaced at that point too.

  • As an American, I find it VERY scary.

  • Weirdly, why aren't more religionists pushing for Tabash's agenda? Logically speaking, the death toll for dissenting against theocracy would be higher for the believers that disagree since they outnumber all the freethinkers in the country.

  • Chilling. He's a little dry, but spot on.

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