Last week, there was a front page article in the Chicago Tribune on Camp Quest, the summer camp for non-religious families.
Christianity Today’s blog features a post by Stan Guthrie regarding that article.
The Tribune interviewed several young campers in Ohio about their beliefs, or lack thereof. I don’t think Christians have a lot to worry about. Here is a sampling:
“[Sophia] Riehemann notes that a secular perspective takes away childhood joys other kids have, such as Christmas. But that doesn’t bother her. ‘They have Santa Claus,’ she said, ‘and we have Isaac Newton.’”
Actually, Sophia, I hate to break this to you, but you have Santa Claus, and we have Isaac Newton.
Then there is Allison Page, who is described as a 9-year-old only child. Reflecting on the biblical story of Cain and Abel, Allison opines, “It just doesn’t make sense. A brother wouldn’t kill his brother.”
Ah, the innocence of children. Just wait until you have siblings, Allison.
Ouch. He’s picking on the children. That’s good journalism.
No doubt Newton believed in God (though it’s wasn’t exactly Protestant Christianity), but I wonder how Guthrie would have responded had she used the examples of, say, James Watson and Francis Crick. Both great scientists. Both atheists.
Not to mention there are plenty of Christian children who believe in Santa. It’s not an “atheist thing.”
As for the other girl, Guthrie turns her perfectly valid comment into a joke.
And I’m not sure Christians had much to “worry about” in the first place, as there are hundreds (thousands?) of Christian summer camps/Bible camps, and there is just a small handful of Camp Quests.
Notice also that the subtitle to the blog posting.
Does Guthrie actually imply Camp Quest is worse than Jesus Camp? Has he seen the movie?!
Helen made a post about how this article is poking fun at people (children) in a poor attempt at humor. Guthrie even commented on the posting:
Any atheist who is offended by my little post poking a bit of fun at a summer atheist camp that supposedly teaches children how to think for themselves needs to lighten up and enjoy the irony. The really funny parts were what the campers said, not what I said.
It’s not a “bit of fun.” It’s this exact type of message that makes it difficult for atheists to be accepted and treated as equals in society.
Unfortunate, many Christians will read this article and take it seriously, not as a joke. And Guthrie, of all people, should know that.
[tags]atheist, atheism, Camp Quest, Christianity Today, Stan Guthrie, Chicago Tribune, Christian, Sophia Riehemann, Christmas, Santa Claus, Isaac Newton, Allison Page, Cain and Abel, God, James Watson, Francis Crick, Jesus Camp[/tags]
What a jackass. “Children don’t have the life experience I do, let’s laugh at their stupidty.” I think as many atheists as possible need to go over there and mention that.
Yes, but will it magically “disappear” like their poll on atheism?
Journalism much?
I just think its funny that adult atheists on the one hand will get angry about Christians “indoctrinating” kids and on the other hand send their kids to camps that “teach” them to say things like what those kids said.
“Any atheist who is offended by my little post poking a bit of fun at a summer atheist camp that supposedly teaches children how to think for themselves needs to lighten up and enjoy the irony.”
Classic abdication of responsibility. “Hey, lighten up, it’s just a joke!” What this misses, what it always misses, is the power behind comedy (not to mention the insult implicit: “you have no sense of humor!”)
The power behind comedy is joking at the expense of the powerful, not the weak. The comic is funny because the jokes hit home in the belly of those in power. Jokes at the expense of the weak aren’t born in the impulse of humor, they’re born in the impulse of cruelty.
Hey, Stan, pick on someone your own size, huh? Disagree with what they’re learning at camp? Fine, take it up with their parents, guardians, and teachers. It’s hard enough being a kid and trying to sort through all the data that assaults people on a daily basis, much of it hostile. There’s a word for those who make fun at the expense of the weak, and children. They’re called bullies.
No kings,
Robert
I’ll send my kid to science camp, not atheist camp.
When she’s a surgeon or discovers the cure for cancer, she’ll be saving the lives of all those flat-earth, young-earth, humans-are-the-center-of-the-universe Jesus Campers who are still babbling in tongues and worshiping their cardboard figures of Bush.
macht- I think the difference between Christian camps and Camp Quest is that Camp Quest teaches one HOW to think, while Christian camps teach WHAT to think. I went to a Christian camp 7 years ago. They taught us no critical thinking skills; they merely indoctrinated us. It was scare tactics, releasing only certain bits of information, and telling us, rather than allowing for discovery, discussing, or debating. And this was a fairly laid back camp, not a Jesus Cam by any means.
Yeah, take that macht!!!
“a brother wouldn’t kill a brother”, said like an only child could say it.
These theme camps aren’t likely to produce free thought, did any of them come away thinking that their parents and the camp staff might be wrong about the supernatural?
“and we have Isaac Newton”, apparently they’re not teaching them about the virutes of sharing. No, young materialist, “you” do not have Isaac Newton, Isaac Newton had Isaac Newton, whoever masters his calculus and physics has those. Didn’t they tell these children the shocking truth that Isaac Newton was religious to a degree that even many other religious people can find overwhelming? Or was that truth too much to burden them with?
Ummm, that’s quite a big generalization about Christian camps, don’t you think? And how can you possibly think that a kid who says, “They have Santa Claus and we have Isaac Newton” is learning HOW to think and not WHAT to think.
I don’t want to go anywhere near that woman.
If she thinks about killing her siblings, none of us is safe.
I don’t pretend to know what the girl is thinking, but you seem to be taking the statement as literally as Stan Guthrie.
I think I understand what she means. It’s a simple statement. She means we have science and Christians have myth.
That you don’t understand it, and merely look for “Was Newton a member of their clan or ours?” is the kind of tribalist thinking I sadly have come to expect of folks.
That you are blind, apparantly, to any other possibility, including my simple statement above, causes me to wonder if literalism has you blinkered.
Ok, you caught me! Secretly, I have not been to every Christian camp in the nation. Because of that, I have to generalize based on my experience, my friends’ experience, and the nature of religion in general. I think that there can be a religion that involves logic and thought and debate, even for children, but that was not my experience growing up.
Also, a 9 year old named a scientist who was religious. What if she had said “Darwin” or “Dawkins” or “Rebecca of Skepchick”? The point would still stand. And the fact that Newton wrote a bunch on religion but is remembered for his science was probably her point. We, the atheists, have scientists and the scientific method, you, the religious, have myths, legends, and Santa.
And again, the kid could leave believing in the supernatural, assuming the supernatural is something that can be reasoned using logic, rational thought, and science. The kids will leave the camp able to think for themselves, and evaulate on their own the claims of any and all adults that offer them opinions on the world..
My point about Newton had NOTHING to do with the fact that he was religious. It doesn’t matter if it was Newton or Dawkins or any other scientist. She said “They have Santa Claus and we have Isaac Newton.” (my emphasis, obviously) The people who are indoctrinating this kid at this camp are the ones who are establishing “clan”-like thought into her.
Macht,
How do you know they taught her to think that?
How do you know that they didn’t teach her how to think and she came up with that on her own?
Is she supposed to come up with nothing but unassailable thoughts at age 9?
How old are you? You haven’t figured out how to do that yet, either.
Jen, you like arrogant atheists always do, don’t seem to realize that science, evolution, math, reasoning, etc. don’t belong to atheists. If the poll figures of between 3 and 14% of the American population are atheists then there are far more religious believers who accept science than there are atheists. “Atheists” do not have these things anymore than religious people do, they belong to whoever masters the essential information and techniques required to possess them. If there is one thing that shows the cultist aspects of some atheism it is that kind of statement.
I haven’t found atheists on the blogs to be particularly good at reasoning, I’ve found religious liberals generally are better at both reasoning and in knowing what they’re talking about. Some atheists are pretty much on the level of religious fundamentalists, when it comes right down to it. Or members of AmWay.
My mommy said I shouldn’t talk to you anymore.
Make that If the poll figures of between 3 and 14% of the American population are atheists are accurate then there …
olvlzl, no ism, no ist, Learn to read. I was trying to reason out what the little kid’s point was, not what my point was.
Jen, I can read. Learn to write.
This is a stupid statement.
Is there a phrase that means the opposite of “touché”?
Cause you earned it there.
I wrote earlier
And then wrote
So clearly I was talking about the child, not my personal belief. This was not a failure in writing.
Well, if you want to go the numbers route, statistically, the more educated person is, the more likely they are to be an Atheist.
But all of that misses the point.
I’ve gone to christian run camps before. They really shove it down your throat.
I went to a science camp, and it was a heck of a lot more fun.
There was a bog on the camp grounds. We caught bugs, and took water samples to look at under the microscopes.
I learned critical thinking and obversation skills I still use today.
By and far, much more useful than learning how to recite bible verses.
“Learn to read.” “Learn to write.” “I’m rubber, you’re glue.”
And the atheists and Christians argue like children…
Amen globalizati. Oops. I said Amen.
Seriously, isn’t this camp thing more about parenting? Raise your kids how you want to raise them. In church or not. Just because its a bible camp doesn’t mean its a good one. Just because its not a bible camp doesn’t mean its a bad one. Geez, there are yodels on each “side”.
I view one of my jobs as a parent is to teach my kids about making choices and how to reach a conclusion. I don’t want to leave that entirely to people I don’t know. Kids spend exponentially more time with their parents(hopefully) than they do in Sunday school or non-Sunday school(sorry, didn’t know what the opposite was). So who do you suppose SHOULD have the larger influence?
Olvlzl, and macht are a bit over the top in regard to what comes out of the mouths of babes, and the playground antics, I think. The treatment of children can evoke rather emotional responses, I suppose.
I agree with Siamang’s 1:51 comment. We don’t know if the child quoted was taught the Sir Isaac Newton line or not, and have to take the maturity of her age into consideration when judging what she said. Also, I wonder what other quotes were available to the author of the article, but weren’t used since they didn’t aid his purpose of poking fun?
I’ve been to Christian camp before. I was seven or eight, I think. I asked what hell was like one night. The wide-eyed, young camp counselor fearfully told me, and a couple of my cohorts, about the excruciating horrors of eternally burning flesh that was continually renewed, only to be burned again and again. Then we put a bunch of fruit salad in the bottom of his sleeping bag when he wasn’t looking. Bastard.
Olvlzl, I appreciate the call for balance in your 1:11 post. It makes me wonder how accepting the Camp Quest counselors would be of a child’s notions of the supernatural? How would the evolution discussion go if little Jimmy said he thought there might be a God who invented the laws of physics and natural selection? I’m hoping the reaction would be much more tolerant than if that same child piped up that he thought there might not be a God, during that same discussion at Creation Camp.
Such irony. I read your post immediately after I read this one from Atheist Revolution. I feel compelled to call those of you who do not believe in God on what seems to be your freedom to be bitterly sarcastic and cutting towards those of us who do, while brooking no criticism towards yourselves. I make no claim to such freedom, and don’t wish to reciprocate, yet I cannot resist pointing out the irony. It’s hard to see that graceless rationalism could be any better, or more attractive, than the graceless extremist religious views so often derided in the atheist world.
Please tell me just how it is that you know the mind of “those of [us] who do not believe in God”? “Graceless rationalism.” Interesting formulation. Please expand on your view of rationalism and how you know that all those who do not believe in God hold such rationalism. I’m disposed to think that their might be more than just two villainous groups beside the graceless rationalists and the graceless fundamentalists. Get some imagination going.
Mark,
Thanks for stopping by to condemn us for our narrow, bitter and graceless ways.
We usually are quite welcoming people, especially to new posters. It’s difficult, however, to get a proper friendly greeting when your post starts off with such condemnation. I hope you’ll accept my apologies for whatever offenses intended or unintended you’ve recieved in the past from nonbelievers. May I extend an olive-branch to you.
I do hope you continue to post here, because we welcome a friendly dialogue. Please tell us about yourself.
We here don’t pretend to know all the answers. None of us claims to. But we do find the questions, and the process of questioning worthwhile. We are but humble travellers upon this earth, and we seek to understand others, particularly people with different beliefs. At the same time, we seek the understanding of people who similarly believe differently, and we feel caught sometimes in a society that has little respect for people who think differently. I think your Jesus Christ himself had a little experience with that predicament, eh?
As I said to other theists… don’t judge us until you know our stories.
Here’s mine.
And welcome!
Darryl,
I do not know that all who don’t believe in God hold to “graceless rationalism”, nor did I say such a thing. I’m certain there are those who are atheists who are quite capable of expressing kindness and grace toward those who disagree with them, just as there are multitudes of Christians whose everyday lives bear no resemblance to the extremist caricatures who seem often to be portrayed on atheist blogs and websites. Nothing is so simple as the black and white world you seem to be think I meant.
In fact, my comment was in response to the juxtaposition of one atheist blog post rife with bitter sarcasm towards Christians at its heart, and another (this one) lambasting a Christian post where the author is criticizing the atheist summer camp. I am not defending the Guthrie post, either; I think it’s tone was inappropriate. I simply was captured by the irony of jumping from one post to the other.
The degree to which I “know the mind of those who do not believe in God”, as you express it, is very simply the degree to which I have read certain blogs. It is, to be sure, a very limited view. But it is the view I am getting at this time. I would more than welcome a different view, if you can point me in that direction.
Steelman, of course I was over the top. As the scare quotes in my first comment suggest, I think the line between “indoctrination” and “teaching” is thin and it largely depends on one’s perspective. (I’m not talking about the extreme’s here.) Some of the earlier comments by others were being WAY over the top by suggesting sending kids to a bible camp is like sending them to a North Korean prison camp to be brainwashed while sending them to Camp Quest is the epitome of Enlightenment thought. I’m exaggerating of course. Quite obviously, the truth lies somewhere in between. When I called somebody on this type of generalization, the reply was “You’re right.” But then she continued with “We, the atheists, have scientists and the scientific method, you, the religious, have myths, legends, and Santa.” At that point I just decided to play the game that she was playing and make wild generalizations based on limited information. Then my mommy said I couldn’t talk to you any more (she’s outside right now - don’t tell on me).
In any case, you are absolutely right that we have no idea whether this kid was indoctrinated with this crap or not. I honestly hope she did come up with it on her own, although judging by some of stuff said in the comments here, I doubt it.
Siamang,
Thanks for the welcome! I apologize for sounding condemning; that was not my intent. The peril of this sort of communication is that it’s difficult to capture nuance in brief and often hurried writing.
I hope my previous response to Darryl above helps clarify what I meant to say. In a weird sort of way, I guess I meant my criticism to be constructive. A dialog between people who are asking the same questions, even if they come from radically different starting points, is always of value, but it can only happen in an atmosphere of mutual respect. The majority of what I have read from the atheist blog world thus far, however, limited as it is, has not seemed to indicate a lot of respect for opposing views and probably serves only to harden the opposition. I would welcome a conversation in that sort of atmosphere, and I will definitely take time to read your story. If you are interested, you can see at least a portion of mine on my web site at mjlacore.net.
Thanks much,
Mark
Macht,
Jen has already said that she was explaining the child’s quote, not saying that she, Jen, thinks that.
Yeah, and I was writing about what I was thinking at the time, not what I think now.
Hi Mark,
I already looked at your site (congratulations, gramps!), and it’s what caused me to try and reach out better to you than what interaction with atheists you may have had in the past.
The sad truth of the matter is that there are precious, precious few places in this big wide internet where positive communication between atheists and Christians is valued.
If you’re surfing atheist sites where Christians post, or if you’re surfing Christian sites where atheists post (without getting deleted or banned), I have yet to find a place where people rise above playing to “their own,” while diminishing “the other”.
But this site is an attempt at better. I recommend reading Hemant’s book, which was published by a Christian imprint of Random House… it’s an honest, open, respectful beginning of a dialogue with Christians by an atheist.
Is this site perfect? No. Does Hemant sometimes post things that don’t always please the Christian posters here? Yes. Are people sometimes rude? Yes, but the rudeness that sometimes crops up comes from both camps. But to take the opposite tack, some wonderful posters here are Christians. Hemant had a Christian Pastor guest blog here for a number of posts a week or so ago… so it’s pretty open around here.
I blog on a related subject matter, and it’s a blog co-hosted by Christians, and atheists for a Christian ministry. It may be unique in the world…. that commitment toward such an open dialogue.
Beyond the peskyness of human behavior…. sometimes people don’t behave well…. But a certain type of atheist posts here. It’s the kind that seeks a better conversation than you can find elsewhere.
I myself rarely venture to the wild and woolyier parts of the atheist net… I have no desire for knock-down-drag-out internet brawls. I never venture into deepest darkest Christian webland either, where my beliefs would be linked with the word “satanic”. Those people are forever lost to me, and I’d just be beating my head against the wall with that lot.
Anyway, I apologize if you’ve found the conversations here lacking as well. Please add your voice to them, and improve them by example and participation.
This community is only as good as its members. Welcome!
Siamang,
I’ve looked at your blog at Off-The-Map and very much look forward to reading it regularly. It seems to be exactly what I’m looking for. I will continue to read here as well, but will probably stay away from what you call the “wild and woolyier parts of the atheist net”. Like you, I’m not in the least bit interested in a brawl.
I’m concerned, though, that our little conversation here is getting way off the track of this thread and perhaps we need to move it elsewhere. If you are interested at all in doing so, please drop me an e-mail using the contact form on my blog.
I would also like to put a link to your blog on my site, if that’s OK with you. My blog as it stands now is pretty new and there aren’t a lot of readers yet, but I would like to point people to you when I can in hope of furthering respectful dialog.
Thanks,
Mark
I posted at the Christianity Today blog about my kids’ experiences at Camp Quest last year and that they are going again this year. (Note: There are five Camp Quests this year, and the one in Ohio is over. Each site only holds camp for one week each summer.)
If a reporter was to ask my kids questions about how they’ve been raised by their atheist parents or what they thought about Camp Quest, I would be shocked if they could offer a one sentence sound bite. Instead, they would provide some long winded story, full of tangents. Debaters and public speakers, they’re not, let alone understanding nuance and people taking what they say the wrong way. Most kids don’t understand sub-text.
Cut the kids in the Camp Quest article some slack.
Mark, you will find a great diversity of opinion and biography among the usual bloggers on this site. What impressed me with this blog from the beginning was the elevated level of most of the discourse. There is plenty of good humor and self-deprecation here as well as intellectual depth. The regulars are quite knowledgeable in a wide range of topics, and some have an authoritative knowledge in some of the areas into which this blog dwells. You are welcome here. I consider this a place where people are taken seriously and treated fairly, and yet we are not shy about a good smack down for uppity bloggers. We are Friendly Atheists.
Thanks mark. I’ve bookmarked your site, and I’ll read it and interact there. You are welcome to respond on the Off The Map site and I’m glad to have you here as well.
Thanks, Darryl!
I have already subscribed to this site’s feed and check it regularly, and will most certainly continue to do so. And I echo my previous reply to Siamang about getting in touch off the track of this thread if you are interested.
It’s off to a birthday dinner with some friends. I’ll check back here later.
Mark
I agree with everything you said Siamang. And a big kudos to you for reaching out to people.
Yep. That’s pretty much what I wanted to say too.
I don’t find that little girl’s comment funny. I just find it sad - sad that at age 9 she’s already been exposed to the “us vs. them” Culture Wars mentality that infects so much of American discourse both in religious and secularist spheres. Somehow she has already come to think in the oft-debunked yet still pervasive Enlightenment terms of “religion=myth” (and the corollary “myth=false”), and then to assume that somehow atheists have a corner on science.
And yet, as others have already pointed out, truth belongs to no one’s camp. If you believe in God, then (as many Christian intellectuals have said) all truth is God’s truth - we affirm it wherever we find it, no matter the personal religious beliefs of the person that said it. And if you don’t believe in God, I still wouldn’t expect you to reject truth just because a religious person said it either.
I don’t know what is taught at Camp Quest, or whether this little girl picked up these attitudes there, but I would have thought that a “freethought” camp would be big on teaching kids to explore truth wherever it is found and to entertain many differing ideas in hopes of discovering that truth. But then again, maybe I’m unclear on what “freethinking” is really all about these days. If these are the results it produces, it doesn’t seem very free at all.
BTW, just to offer an alternative perspective: I grew up at Christian camps - I mean literally. My dad was a Christian camp director for half of my childhood. I’ve lived and worked at four different evangelical Christian camps during my pre-teen and teen years. And I can attest that none of them were anywhere near as bad as “Jesus Camp”. We didn’t indoctrinate kids with conservative politics or rail against evolution. We didn’t force feed them the Bible or condemn them to hell. Mainly we just told them that Jesus loved them and played lots of fun games in the woods and lakes of northern Michigan. We took them on nature hikes where they learned a lot of the same stuff you’d probably learn at science camp, and yes we taught them about the Bible too. There wasn’t any contradiction between the two and we didn’t see the need to act as if there were one.
When I was in Junior high I heard other students talking about a Christian Camp they went to where the children were given swats with a paddle for failing to memorize assigned bible verses. Now I know that not all Christian Camps are like that (and this was the deep south), but I doubt you would see any kids at camp quest getting spankings for failing to read Richard Dawkins.
In high school I went on several catholic retreats (that were optional) that were like this as well, with some minor differences. They were run by very liberal people. Evolution wasn’t an issue b/c they taught it at that school (yes it was a religious school, but obviously not a conservative one-my school was run by very liberal people, not all of them even religious). If someone asked about religion in science class, they were told to ask it in their religion class. If someone asked about science in a retreat or religion class, they would usually get the answer of “I’m not a science teacher, so I honestly don’t know and I don’t want to mislead you. Ask your science teacher. If you need to talk to both of us together we can set something up for the three of us to talk outside of class”. The two were separate most of the time, period. And it worked quite well. I actually knew more about evolution at the time then some of my public school friends, which was surprising. I know it’s surprising, but remember I’m from a pretty liberal part of the country. I wish stuff like this was the norm, not the exception. I admit I grew up pretty sheltered geography wise-my first trip to the deep south was a huge culture shock.
Mike C wrote: I don’t find that little girl’s comment funny. I just find it sad - sad that at age 9 she’s already been exposed to the “us vs. them” Culture Wars mentality that infects so much of American discourse both in religious and secularist spheres. Somehow she has already come to think in the oft-debunked yet still pervasive Enlightenment terms of “religion=myth” (and the corollary “myth=false”), and then to assume that somehow atheists have a corner on science.
I agree - but if that is disturbing, how much more disturbing is it that many Christian kids are exposed to the ‘us vs. them’ at a much earlier age? Did you see my Friday Video on CatE last week - ‘refuting evolution’. Apparently that’s from the Camp Quest movie. There’s plenty of indoctrination of children in there.
Helen –
The “refuting evolution” footage is amazing.
I just want to clarify one thing quickly. That footage is from a HBO film called “Friends of God,” about Answers in Genesis. It’s not from a movie about Camp Quest.
Thanks for the link!
In other words, “If you think that’s bad, you Christians are are even worse at the ‘us vs. them’ than us atheists!” Way to make your point there, Helen.
To start with, I’m not crazy about the idea of summer camp, at least not sleep over camp. Children should be with their family, if there isn’t something wrong with their family.
Camps like the one under discussion here or the “christian” camps that are being brought up seem to have indoctrination as their goal, that I’m especially against. Summer for children should be about reading lots of library books (chosen by the children themselves, not by some adult) playing outside in unorganized activities, exploring nature, learning worthless or even worthwhile crafts…. any camp that deviates from these is a form of child abuse.
I too found the 9 year old’s comments disturbing. It does echo the rhetoric from the Culture Wars, but it dould also be due to a child’s concrete way of thinking and expressing herself. Nuance is not something we really expect from 9 year olds. And the response of the author of the article was not any more elevated.
That said, I went to a religious summer camp that was run by Wheaton College, which is a pretty conservative religious school. I mostly went on the backpacking and canoeing trips for girls only, and I found them very empowering. The leaders would give us a destination for the day, and it was up to us to pick a route and figure out how to cooperate to get the necessary tasks done. The leaders gave us Bible verses to meditate on and discuss, but no indocrination.
I remember one time when we had a rest day on a particularly remote lake, we all spontaneously decided not to get dressed, and thus became “canudists”. Not exactly what you would expect from a conservative religious camp!
You know, olvlzl, no ism, no ist , I kind of agree. I liked the camp I went to as a kid–it was only a week long and there really wasn’t any agenda. Just learning to ride and care for a horse, swimming lessons, crafts, all the biggies! But it wasn’t all summer long and the rest of the summer we kind of did our own thing. Don’t know if that drove mom and dad crazy or not but I loved my unorganized, figure it out yourself, hang with your friends Summers.
What’s wrong with camps? I disagree that kids need to be with their families all the time. I am not saying people should de facto send their children to boarding school and never see them again after the age of 5, but why not let them experience a world away from their normal life for a week or two a summer? I agree kids should also have some unstructured fun- but activities, especially optional ones, never hurt anyone. For instance, my sister is ADHD, and structure is an important part of her day. Its also better if she has things specifically for her to do, rather than whatever she wants- because that will be to chase after boys, talk on her cell phone all day, or watch another dozen episodes of Smallville (she is 14). I think camp would be a blast for her.
In other words, “If you think that’s bad, you Christians are are even worse at the ‘us vs. them’ than us atheists!” Way to make your point there, Helen.
macht, if you are really spoiling for a fight why don’t you go over to http://www.infidels.org. Things have been peaceful here for some time, and we would like to keep it that way!
For that to be justified, you’d also have to determine what percentage of the population accepts science and also show that it was distributed evenly among the population.
The basic poll numbers I’ve heard (rounded slightly) are:
General Population: 15% atheist
Have a B.S.: 30% atheist
Working mathematician (M.S. or above): 40% atheist
Working physicist (M.S. or above): 60% atheist
Working biologist (M.S. or above): 80% atheist
‘Elite’ scientist (NAS, etc.): 95% atheist
I don’t have numbers on how large each of these groups is or on what percentage of the public ‘accepts science’ (whatever that means), but your claim is in no way justified simply because atheists aren’t the majority of the overall public, since the above stats clearly show that accepting science and rejecting religion are correlated (although I doubt causal).
Er… what?
Mike C wrote: I don’t find that little girl’s comment funny. I just find it sad - sad that at age 9 she’s already been exposed to the “us vs. them” Culture Wars mentality that infects so much of American discourse both in religious and secularist spheres.
Unless they’re home-schooled, I’ll bet that by 9 all kids have been hit with that us-vs-them stuff.
Do we know where this girl lives? If it’s a red state, I’m sure she’s been told by her “friends” at school what a toasty fate awaits her post-mortem.
Just because I’m being sarcastic doesn’t mean I’m “spoiling for a fight.” If you prefer, I can rephrase my point,
Complaining about how Christians are worse than the atheists at promoting an “us vs them” attitude while at the same time having that kind of attitude doesn’t do any of us any good. There are plenty of Christians who have that kind of attitude and there are plenty of atheists who have that attitude and it is pointless to talk about which is more “disturbing” because, as I said, it displays the same kind of attitude you think is bad. It would be like Paris Hilton calling Lindsey Lohan “messed up.” Sure it’s true, but nobody’s going to listen to what one messed up girl has to say about another messed up girl.
A much better approach than making generalizations about different groups (a symptom of “us vs. them” attitudes, BTW) would be to point out the attitude when you see it. There are several ways to do this. I prefer a nice, short, sarcastic comment. Others prefer long, point-by-point explanations. In any case, however, the point is to just point out that attitude when you see it, in the hopes that the person will realize his or her mistake.
Is that better, Logos?
I still think you would be better off at http://www.infidels.org. There are people of all different backgrounds there who love the kind of discussions you seem to prefer
If you think that’s true, I don’t think you know me well enough.
macht said: “It would be like Paris Hilton calling Lindsey Lohan “messed up.” Sure it’s true, but nobody’s going to listen to what one messed up girl has to say about another messed up girl.”
Bad analogy. It seems everyone is hanging on her every word. At least that’s what TV news would have us believe.
Actually I think a bunch of people would listen to it, expeciallty if she was on Larry King. Have you seen the “news” recently?
Good point. I guess I shouldn’t assume that because I wouldn’t listen to Paris, that others also wouldn’t.
macht said,
July 5, 2007 at 12:38 pm
If you think that’s true, I don’t think you know me well enough.
Have you been to the site? You might like it!
As I said, you don’t know me very well.
So you have been there? Did you like it?
Ah, you’ve been to Honey Rock I see!
A lot of my friends at college did the “High Road” trip before Freshman year. (At least, that’s what they called that wilderness experience you described back then. I don’t know what it was called when you did it.)
I do hope you’re being sarcastic… Summer camps are great my friend! I was going to them every summer and loving it even before my family lived and worked at one.
In all fairness Mike C you were with your family while you were at it. To be shipped off someplace with a bunch of strangers for several weeks can be pretty traumatic for some kids.
This thread is by far one of my favourites, I’d like to thank everyone for their input. Impassioned dialogue is still dialogue, and I think that dialogue is important. Humour that involves (even lightly) prodding the sensibilities of anyone is bound to piss off someone, so a bit of temper flaring is a somewhat rational response.
Heck, to throw in my opinion on things, as a non-parent, I don’t really care where children get thrown to summer camp. Don’t like the idea of sending kids to (insert non-preferred camp name here)? Then don’t. As long as the camp isn’t teaching hatred of others, then it’s probably not causing any harm. If summer camp is the only reason you have a faith (or don’t), then…your cognitive skills probably aren’t very high.
A camp that tells kids what to think is scary regardless of whether there is a religious or irreligious component to it. From what little I know of Camp Quest, I don’t think Camp Quest is indoctrinational. Teaching kids that it’s ok to not be a theist is not a bad thing; although society is getting better at accepting atheism, households of atheists are in no way the majority.* Being a kid who is different than everyone else can be difficult. Learning that there are other children who don’t go to church could be a very positive and useful experience for these kids.
Oh, and as my closing statement, I would like to say that the whole Santa v. Newton “us v. them” exchange is pretty weird. Why are a kid and a Christianity Today article writer fighting over the bones of two dead white guys?
*Hey, there’s a social experiment lying in wait for any would-be social scientists in the crowd: pick a random block and ask what the religious preference of every household is. See if there are clusters of people with similar opinions or not. Note: do not blame me if you get yelled at or worse.
Just FYI, each of the Camp Quest sessions is only one week long. We don’t keep kids all summer, just for a week. I think there is a lot to be said for both summer camp and for unstructured time in the summer. When camp is only a week long, there is no reason you can’t have both.
(I could say more in response to some of the posts here, but I’m trying to avoid weighing in too much on your discussion since I’m one of the organizers of Camp Quest. I just wanted to clear up that point, and the point about the YouTube video made above.)
Umm, no I wasn’t. I was going off by myself for whole weeks of summer camp since the 2nd Grade.
There were always a few kids at camp that were terribly homesick and hated it, but most, by and large, loved it.
Sorry, I thought you said your family ran the camps.Well I guess it all boils down to individual differences. I only went to day camps and they were some of the worst experiences of my life
The younger kids are the more likely it is they will spout their parents’ ideas. Unless you’re a Bertrand Russell, if you’re 9 years old, you got the ‘us-vs.-them’ mentality from your parents. This is one of the reasons why kids are not considered capable of making independent legal decisions and why we don’t hold them responsible for their actions until after the age of accountability. I generalize, of course.
Some degree of child indoctrination is unavoidable; what needs to be known is the kind of indoctrination, and it’s value. Macht, comparing Paris Hilton with Ms. Lohan is a matter of apples and apples; and they’re both rotten, by the way. Comparing atheist indoctrination with religious indoctrination involves differing fruit.
I wasn’t comparing Paris and Lindsey to atheist indoctrination and religious indoctrination. I comparing them to complaining about an us vs. them attitude while at the same time displaying that attitude.
One is an extension of the other, isn’t it? Not all indoctrination is equal; not all us-vs.-them attitudes are equal. It’s content that counts–that was my point.
They did, but that was later. I went to camp by myself all through elementary school. My parents moved to the camp when I was in middle school.
Let me guess. Atheist indoctrination is A-OK. And when atheists promote an us vs them it’s just fine and dandy.
Didn’t you know macht? It’s not indoctrination if you’re right…
Oh man, I wish I had known there was a eye-rolling smilie about half a dozen comments ago.
Darryl:
Askoxford.com defines indoctrination as:
• verb cause to accept a set of beliefs uncritically through repeated instruction.
Can you give more details on how “atheist” brand indoctrination is superior to “religious” brand indoctrination?
Darryl:
Askoxford.com defines indoctrination as:
verb cause to accept a set of beliefs uncritically through repeated instruction.
Can you give more details on how “atheist” brand indoctrination is superior to “religious” brand indoctrination?
So we’re automatically assuming that Camp Quest constitutes indoctrination, then?
No, I’m not assuming anything about camp Quest, but Darryl made mention of “atheist indoctrination” and I am curious as to what he meant.
Ah. Sorry.
Isn’t rote learning of any kind indoctrination of a sort? There was a long conversation on this kind of subject (actually on what constitutes brainwashing) awhile ago over on Talking Philosophy:
http://blog.talkingphilosophy.com/?p=39
(and a followup on page 41).
Re. Good and bad indoctrination, and us vs. them thinking:
I’m “guilty” of perpetuating the us vs. them dichotomy myself; I indoctrinate my children to always trust me, but never strangers. I don’t engage my 6 year old in philosophical argument, or encourage him to make empirical observations, to help him decide whether or not what I’m telling him is true in the case above. “Us” is your loving family who will keep you safe, and “them” are dangerous strangers who may harm you (that’s why only mommy or daddy are allowed to answer the front door). It’s presented a priori. It’s a simplistic generalization, which I’ve purposely used to instill prejudice. But I’m not going to stop repeating it for the moment. We can talk about how it’s not really true that all strangers are dangerous as his maturity, and ability to engage in critical thinking, increases. The prejudice will eventually be lifted, or at least modified enough to allow for independent decision making.
Now, on the other hand, if I teach my child that “us” consists of intelligent, right thinking, atheists, and “them” are all stupid, deluded, Christians…