 |

The Church of Reality
"If it's real, we believe in it!"
|
Ms Pacman
 High Score set by
Pharaoh with 227900 |
|  |
Welcome to the Official Infidel Guy Show Website
Since 1999, The Infidel Guy show has brought you uninterrupted freethought and science-minded guests such as Michio Kaku, Dan Barker, Ken Miller, Michael Shermer, Asia Carrera, Richard Dawkins, Massimo Pigliucci, James Randi and many others. At our site and on our show we take a truthful and investigative look at religious beliefs, political systems, social issues, economic systems, the paranormal, pseudo-science and scientific claims.
The Infidel Guy Show is on hiatus while we work on some restructuring.
NEXT Show - To Be announced. 
Standby while we work on some new content and unveiling some new guest-hosts.
-------------------------------------
|
|
Most Recent IG Shows
Debate: Is Jesus The Risen Lord? - Price vs Fernandez
Added On: Nov 17, 2008
Dr. Phil Fernandes is president of the Biblical Defense Institute and author of "The God Who Sits Enthroned--Evidence for God's Existence," "No Other Gods--A Defense of Biblical Christianity," and "God, Government, & the Road to Tyranny--A Christian View of Government & Morality."
Dr. Bob Price is the author of numerous books on Christianity and fundamentalism including "The Incredible Shrinking Son of Man," "Deconstructing Jesus," and the forthcoming "A Crock of Christ," a refutation of Lee Strobel.
|
Why I Became An Atheist? - John Loftus
Added On: Nov 13, 2008
John W. Loftus, a former preacher, returns to the show to discuss his latest book, Why I Became an Atheist. Loftus is also active in the blogosphere and is a contributor at Debunking Christianity, Debunking the Christian Right, and Debunking Creationism.
|
Top Secret: The Truth Behind Today's Top Mysticisms
Added On: Nov 13, 2008
Dr. Robert Price returns to the show to discuss his book Top Secret: The Truth Behind Today's Top Mysticisms. Dr. Price will be discussing his critique and taking questions on popular works in the area of New Age/New Thought, including Rhonda Byrne's The Secret and Joel Osteen's Your Best Life Now.
|
Ed Brayton - The Presential Election and The ACLU
Added On: Nov 13, 2008
Ed Brayton, the co-founder and president of Michigan Citizens for Science, will be our guest to discuss how the results of the 2008 presidential election could have an affect on religion and science. He will also discuss the ACLU and the stigma that it is an anti-Christian organization.presidential election could have an affect on religion and science. He will also discuss the ACLU and the stigma that it is an anti-Christian organization.
|
An IG Rant and Has Religion Ruined Your Sex Life
Added On: Nov 13, 2008
In this unplanned and unscheduled recording, IG talks about needing your help to keep the show going. But much of the remainder of the hour, we discuss "Has Religion Ruined Your Sex Life". We take a few calls.
|
Imagine No Superstition - Dr. Stephen Uhl
Added On: Nov 13, 2008
Dr. Stephen Uhl will be our guest to discuss his book "Imagine No Superstition," a chronicle of his journey from faithful Roman Catholic priest to atheist psychologist, how it has affected his life and what he has learned along the way.
|
On The Resurrection with Gary Habermas
Added On: Nov 13, 2008
Famed Christian apologist, author, and chairman of the philosophy department at Liberty University, Dr. Gary Habermas will be our guest for the whole hour. Dr. Habermas will take questions from listeners on the resurrection of Christ and other related issues. A special thanks to Jim Lazarus and Chris J. for arranging this.
|
50 Reasons People Give for Believing in God
Added On: Nov 13, 2008
If you've ever challenged someone about why they believe in a God you've likely encountered at least one of the answers tonight's guest has written about. Journalist and travel writer Guy Harrison's new book, "50 Reasons People Give for Believing in God" is a witty and non-judgmental look at what people commonly believe is evidence for a Divinity. Harrison draws on his education as an anthropologist and his experiences with cultures worldwide to examine the faulty reasoning that goes into these beliefs and also offers hopeful alternatives to the destructive and divisive reasoning of religion.
|
Building Atheist Communities
Added On: Nov 13, 2008
"Brother" Richard and Kym Membe are the founders of AtheistNexus.org. It's one the latest and hottest atheist communities on the web. They are appearing tonight to discuss whether or not we even need atheist community sites as well as providing us an awesome treat in hearing their own personal paths to freethought.
|
Keith Jensen - Atheist Comic
Added On: Nov 13, 2008
Our guest tonight is atheist comedian and filmmaker Keith Lowell Jensen. Keith is currently on the COEXIST comedy tour with heretics and infidels from a variety of religious traditions. Keith will also be discussing his recent film, "Why lie, I need a drink?" a documentary on the myth of the 'rich homeless guy'.
|
How to Get Rich as a Televangelist - Bill Wilson
Added On: Nov 13, 2008
Bill Wilson is the author of a new book called "How to Get Rich as a Televangelist or Faith Healer." A former student at Toccoa Falls Bible College, Bill will expose the secrets and techniques of how these popular TV preachers become wealthy. Want to be the next Joel Osteen? Listen to find out how.
|
Thank God for Atheism - Michael Dowd
Added On: Nov 13, 2008
"Michael Dowd is a Pentecostal preacher and "evolutionary evangelist". He is an advocate of what he terms Evolution Theology, the position that science and religious faith are not mutually exclusive, but that instead the scientific process is a tool for understanding reality, and at the heart of that reality is evolution."
|
|
|
Forum Posts
| Topic |
Forum |
Last Post |
|
Apparently, I'm narrow-minded...
Apparently, I'm narrow-minded...
There is no need to pay lip service to a belief that is obviously false. Belief that denies all the evidence we have, is called delusion, and does not need to be respected. Do we need to respect the belief of the Nazi party that the Jews were not human? Of course not. Does it make anyone who disagrees with them narrow minded? Of course not. We all have world views. Some accept the evidence we have about the world around us, some ignore it all all cost. Which one is narrow minded? Assuming that relatively primitive peoples living in the desert 2 to 3 thousand years ago were somehow privy to the secrets of the universe is a rather extraordinary claim, indeed. Especially since it didn't seem to help them any when it comes to living good moral lives or surviving attack and assimilation by other peoples.
And the friend with the grandmother was obviously prepared to lie to win an argument. Not a respectful tactic.
|
General Discussion
|
12/04/2008 09:36 am
By Vic333
|
|
Purpose Driven life class for offenders???!!!
Purpose Driven life class for offenders???!!!
Thank you SvZurich!. No it doesn't say what punishment is just for offenders but I remember when that going to church thing was brought to trial and was deemed constitutional because the judge let you pick your own church/temple/building or whatever. To me putting someone in a Christian themed class is not exactly freedom of religion.
|
General Discussions
|
12/03/2008 07:01 pm
By iona_yanira
|
|
A Thought about Truth
A Thought about Truth
I have to wonder why so many people make truth out to be something so complicated when it's just anything that conforms with fact and reality.
It also doesn't require a capitol " T " either.
|
General Discussion
|
12/03/2008 01:13 pm
By notsaved
|
|
Atheist vs. Agnostic
Atheist vs. Agnostic
| Cygnus wrote: |
| Quote: |
Isn't that like asking, how do we know there is no Santa Claus for sure?
|
Same reason why many are both agnostic and atheist, including me. From an epistemological standpoint, we can't know anything. Agnostics are agnostics because it is possible, but unlikely, for Santa Clause or god to exist. However, since it is unlikely, and there is no reason to believe that Santa or god exist, these same agnostics also call themselves atheists. |
I'm just an atheist. I don't bother with agnostic at all. Are you agnostic about the existence of an invisible unicorn. I think we have enough intelligence to know that there is no such things as those and that includes Gods. Therefore, there is no God period and zero possibility of one. Or two or three. To say there is a possibilty of a god is to argue from ignorance. IF there is a God, just how would it be rationally defined? How much of the universe must one search before concluding there is no such thing as a God?
Therefore, there is no God anywhere in the universe. No possibility for one either.
|
General Discussion
|
12/03/2008 01:07 pm
By notsaved
|
|
What I hate about christianity
What I hate about christianity
| mcrosser wrote: |
| well most of us christians give testimony to what IS happening in our lives, are we worried in proving cientifically that God exists? no, not even Jesus was worried. He lived a more or less normal mans life, he had friends, went to celebrations, laughed, cryed, etc. and praised God, THAT is the best part of christianity. Don't think Jesus had it easy. |
All this sounds like is a cop out simply because you can't prove one single part of Xtianity at all. Anything that demands belief should be questioned at all costs. And if more Christians did that, there would be less Christians.
|
Christianity
|
12/03/2008 10:57 am
By notsaved
|
|
Post What You'd Like To Hear
Post What You'd Like To Hear
I think Miller definitely has.
|
The Program
|
12/03/2008 08:21 am
By Eon
|
|
An Anarchist Revolution Or Nothing
An Anarchist Revolution Or Nothing
| Quote: |
| 6) State dictatorship. |
Dictators only come to power and stay in power because of the people. Therefore, state dictatorship is not a real cause. It is the people. If enough people want something, then the matter of dictatorship is irrelevant.
|
Governmental Systems
|
12/02/2008 04:10 pm
By Cygnus
|
|
Imagine no religion.
Imagine no religion.
It would be a better world for sure.
Christianity is a disastrous failure,
now for TWO THOUSAND YEARS.
The BAD FRUIT it has produced
is enough evidence of its corrupt status.
Christianity has being in the
RED
of offence
ever since it started on the road
to improve the world morally.
Therefore, the sooner it goes the better.
|
Christianity
|
12/02/2008 03:24 am
By Julio
|
|
Dozens blinded in India looking for Virgin Mary
Dozens blinded in India looking for Virgin Mary
They weren't blinded by the sun, Alah blinded them for looking with LUST!
|
General Discussions
|
12/01/2008 04:25 pm
By baddogma
|
|
That Loving Feeling
That Loving Feeling
| BornAgainAthiest wrote: |
| There's too much inner certainty on the part of the individual, who just "knows" that these things are real. |
I've no doubt these feelings are real, my doubt lies in how the religious define what they point to. My argument is they represent a real internal-only experience, they say however it points to an external, invisible, undetectable being, which they call God.
|
General Discussion
|
12/01/2008 01:50 pm
By MockingGods
|
|
|
Under God mourns the loss of the minister who persuaded President Eisenhower and Congress in 1954 to insert into the Pledge of Allegiance the phrase "under God" -- an idea whose time was then.
Now, with the passing of the Rev. George M. Docherty, who died Thanksgiving Day at the age of 97, let us review why the phrase was added in the first place and why we should consider updating the pledge.
Docherty's contribution to American civil religion came during a sermon he preached at Washington's New York Avenue Presbyterian Church in honor of Lincoln's birthday in 1954, the height of the Second Red Scare. As Post reporter Matt Shudel notes in Sunday's obituary, Docherty, a native of Scotland, argued that the then-godless American pledge could just as easily apply to the communist Soviet Union.
"I could hear little Muscovites recite a similar pledge to their hammer-and-sickle flag with equal solemnity," said Docherty. He suggested adding Lincoln's phrase "under God" from the Gettysburg Address to the pledge. "To omit the words 'Under God' in the Pledge of Allegiance is to omit the definitive character of the American Way of Life."
Maybe then. Not now.
-Complete article off site, courtesy On Faith
|
Under state law, God is Kentucky's first line of defense against terrorism.
The 2006 law organizing the state Office of Homeland Security lists its initial duty as "stressing the dependence on Almighty God as being vital to the security of the Commonwealth."
Specifically, Homeland Security is ordered to publicize God's benevolent protection in its reports, and it must post a plaque at the entrance to the state Emergency Operations Center with an 88-word statement that begins, "The safety and security of the Commonwealth cannot be achieved apart from reliance upon Almighty God."
State Rep. Tom Riner, a Southern Baptist minister, tucked the God provision into Homeland Security legislation as a floor amendment that lawmakers overwhelmingly approved two years ago.
-Article continues off site, courtesy the Lexington Herald Leader.
|
The first 700 million years of Earth’s 4.5-billion-year existence are known as the Hadean period, after Hades, or, to shed the ancient Greek name, Hell.
That name seemed to fit with the common perception that the young Earth was a hot, dry, desolate landscape interspersed with seas of magma and inhospitable for life. Even if some organism had somehow popped into existence, the old story went, surely it would soon have been extinguished in the firestorm of one of the giant meteorites that slammed into the Earth when the young solar system was still crowded with debris.
Scars on the surface of the Moon record a hail of impacts during what is called the Late Heavy Bombardment. The Earth would have received an even more intense bombardment, and the common thinking until recently was that life could not have emerged on Earth until the bombardment eased about 3.85 billion years ago.
Norman H. Sleep, a professor of geophysics at Stanford, recalled that in 1986 he submitted a paper that calculated the probability of life surviving one of the giant, early impacts. It was summarily rejected because a reviewer said that obviously nothing could have lived then.
That is no longer thought to be true.
“We thought we knew something we didn’t,” said T. Mark Harrison, a professor of geochemistry at the University of California, Los Angeles. In hindsight the evidence was just not there. And new evidence has suggested a new view of the early Earth. -Article continues Off Site, courtesy The NYTimes.
|
Officials were counting the dead in a central Nigerian city yesterday after two days of violent clashes between Christian and Muslim gangs.
Nearly 400 bodies are reported to have been received at the main mosque in Jos, while there are also expected to be a significant number of Christian casualties. Thousands of people fled their homes in the city after rival mobs burned houses, shops, and several churches and mosques in the worst sectarian violence in the country since 2004.
Witnesses said sporadic gunfire could still be heard yesterday morning, as the army patrolled the city following a 24-hour curfew, during which soldiers had orders to shoot on sight.
"The situation ... is gradually returning to normal," Brigadier Emeka Onwuamaegbu told Agence France-Presse. "There've not been any cases this morning of any destruction or violence." -Article continues Off Site, courtesy the Guardian (UK)
|
..In the last few months, there have been news reports of a Jordanian man murdering his daughter "to cleanse the family's honor" after she kept leaving home without permission; another Jordanian, 22 years old, who gave the same reason - "family honor" - for killing his pregnant sister; a Saudi woman beaten and shot by her father after he discovered her having an online correspondence with a man on Facebook; and two Arab brothers in Israel, who strangled their sister after learning that she was involved in a romantic relationship.
But while honor killings may be more prevalent in the Middle East, no longer are they unknown in the West.<.p>
In the Atlanta suburb of Jonesboro last month, a Pakistani immigrant allegedly strangled his 25-year-old daughter with a bungee cord because she was determined to end her arranged marriage and had gotten involved with a new man. According to the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Sandeela Kanwal's father, Chaudhry Rashid, "told police he is Muslim and that extramarital affairs and divorce are against his religion [and] that's why he killed her." In court last week, a detective quoted Rashid: "God will protect me. God is watching me. I strangled my daughter."
In Upstate New York a few weeks earlier, Waheed Allah Mohammad, an immigrant from Afghanistan, was charged with attempted murder after repeatedly stabbing his 19-year-old sister. The Rochester Democrat and Chronicle reported that Mohammad was "infuriated because his younger sister was going to clubs, wearing immodest clothing, and planning to leave her family for a new life in New York City" - she was a "bad Muslim girl," he told sheriff's investigators. -Complete article Off Site, courtesy The Boston Globe.
|
UN Watch Geneva, November 24, 2008 — By a vote of 85 to 50, with 42 abstaining, the UN General Assembly today adopted a draft resolution calling on all countries to alter their legal and constitutional systems to prevent "defamation of religions," asserting that "Islam is frequently and wrongly associated with human rights violations and terrorism."
The decision, sponsored by Islamic states with the support of Venezuela and Belarus, drew immediate protests from human rights activists and legal experts.
"This is just the latest shot in an intensifying campaign of UN resolutions that dangerously seek to import Islamic anti-blasphemy prohibitions into the discourse of international human rights law," said Hillel Neuer, executive director of UN Watch, an indpendent human rights monitoring group in Geneva.
"Human rights were designed to protect individuals — to guarantee every person free speech and free exercise of religion — but most certainly not to shield any set of beliefs, religion included." -Article continues Off Site
|
The president of the nation's largest general science organization yesterday sharply criticized recent cases of Bush administration political appointees gaining permanent federal jobs with responsibility for making or administering scientific policies, saying the result would be "to leave wreckage behind."
"It's ludicrous to have people who do not have a scientific background, who are not trained and skilled in the ways of science, make decisions that involve resources, that involve facilities in the scientific infrastructure," said James McCarthy, a Harvard University oceanographer who is president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. "You'd just like to think people have more respect for the institution of government than to leave wreckage behind with these appointments."
His comments came as several new examples surfaced of political appointees gaining coveted, high-level civil service positions as the administration winds down. The White House has said repeatedly that all gained their new posts in an open, competitive process, but congressional Democrats and others questioned why political appointees had won out over qualified federal career employees. -Article continues with links Off Site, courtesy The Washington Post.
|
In spring 2004, at the meeting of the Scientific Council of the Frombork-based Baltic Research Centre, Jerzy Gąssowski received an interesting challenge - find the remains of Nicolas Copernicus.
To be sure, something was known of his death. He had died in Poland at age 70, and he was buried at his church somewhere, but he died while his work was being printed so the man who theorized that the sun, rather than the Earth, is at the center of the universe, was not yet famous enough to merit a monument. But the provost of the Frombork metropolitan church, bishop Doctor Jacek Jezierski, did not think the job impossible.
He believed they could at least narrow down the location and, once that was done, use modern forensics techniques to get a match. Using 'georadar' Gąssowski and his team were able to narrow down the location, the Holy Cross altar of the Gothic Roman Catholic cathedral in Frombork and, since few people lived to be 70, hone in on what they believed was a match. -Article continues Off Site, courtesy USA Today.
|
MÜNSTER, Germany -- Muhammad Sven Kalisch, a Muslim convert and Germany's first professor of Islamic theology, fasts during the Muslim holy month, doesn't like to shake hands with Muslim women and has spent years studying Islamic scripture. Islam, he says, guides his life.
So it came as something of a surprise when Prof. Kalisch announced the fruit of his theological research. His conclusion: The Prophet Muhammad probably never existed.
Muslims, not surprisingly, are outraged. Even Danish cartoonists who triggered global protests a couple of years ago didn't portray the Prophet as fictional. German police, worried about a violent backlash, told the professor to move his religious-studies center to more-secure premises.
"We had no idea he would have ideas like this," says Thomas Bauer, a fellow academic at Münster University who sat on a committee that appointed Prof. Kalisch. "I'm a more orthodox Muslim than he is, and I'm not a Muslim." -Article Continues Off Site, courtesy The Wall Street Journal Online.
|
A team of Princeton University scientists has discovered that chains of proteins found in most living organisms act like adaptive machines, possessing the ability to control their own evolution.
The research, which appears to offer evidence of a hidden mechanism guiding the way biological organisms respond to the forces of natural selection, provides a new perspective on evolution, the scientists said.
The researchers -- Raj Chakrabarti, Herschel Rabitz, Stacey Springs and George McLendon -- made the discovery while carrying out experiments on proteins constituting the electron transport chain (ETC), a biochemical network essential for metabolism. A mathematical analysis of the experiments showed that the proteins themselves acted to correct any imbalance imposed on them through artificial mutations and restored the chain to working order.
"The discovery answers an age-old question that has puzzled biologists since the time of Darwin: How can organisms be so exquisitely complex, if evolution is completely random, operating like a ''''blind watchmaker''''?" said Chakrabarti, an associate research scholar in the Department of Chemistry at Princeton. "Our new theory extends Darwin''''s model, demonstrating how organisms can subtly direct aspects of their own evolution to create order out of randomness." -Article with links, continued Off Site, courtesy News At Princeton.
|
|  |
| Wednesday, November 12, 2008 | | · | US high court weighs freedom of speech, religion in Utah case | | Tuesday, November 11, 2008 | | · | Saudi Arabia to lead UN talks on religious tolerance | | Monday, November 10, 2008 | | · | Monks brawl at Jerusalem shrine | | Saturday, November 08, 2008 | | · | 'No More Mr Nice Gay' as Mormons face vote backlash | | Wednesday, November 05, 2008 | | · | Blasphemy law ditched by the Dutch | | · | Obama promises new era of scientific innovation | | Tuesday, November 04, 2008 | | · | The Man Behind Proposition 8 | | · | Sharia law incompatible with human rights legislation, Lords say | | Thursday, October 30, 2008 | | · | Archaeologists report finding oldest Hebrew text | | · | As abortion foes grow more intense, a new view surfaces | | · | Domestic violence fatwa stirs outrage | | Wednesday, October 29, 2008 | | · | Islamists stone Somali woman to death for adultery | | Tuesday, October 28, 2008 | | · | Sarah Palin's War on Science | | Monday, October 27, 2008 | | · | Outrage as cleric weds girl, 12 | | · | Emory workshop teaches teachers how to teach evolution | | Saturday, October 25, 2008 | | · | Islamic protests over female preacher | | · | Stephen Hawking to retire from prestigious post | | Thursday, October 23, 2008 | | · | Creationists declare war over the brain | | Tuesday, October 21, 2008 | | · | Afghan student gets 20 years instead of death for blasphemy | | Saturday, October 18, 2008 | | · | Evolutionists Flock To Darwin-Shaped Wall Stain | | Friday, October 17, 2008 | | · | Rivals’ Visions Differ on Unleashing Innovation | | · | Forgotten Experiment May Explain Origins of Life | | Wednesday, October 15, 2008 | | · | Religious peace threatened in South Korea | | Tuesday, October 14, 2008 | | · | Hindu Threat to Christians: Convert or Flee | | Wednesday, October 08, 2008 | | · | New Bibles Alter Form _ Not Word _ to Draw Readers | | · | Parents Charged in Faith Healing Case | | Tuesday, October 07, 2008 | | · | The Supreme Court’s New Term | | Sunday, October 05, 2008 | | · | Opiate of the masses - and evolutionary aid | | · | Pittsburgh Episcopalians Vote to Leave US Church | | Saturday, October 04, 2008 | | · | Did Muhammad Ever Really Live? |
Older Articles |
| Currently there is a problem with headlines from this site |
|
|