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Archive > Volume 42

World in Crisis

February/March 2022
Volume 42, No. 2

Cover Story
What Gives Overpopulation Its Legs?
Karen Shragg

Author’s Note: This essay is dedicated to the loving memory of the ever-wise Tom Flynn, who graciously printed so many of my articles over the years on this topic because he shared my deep concern. What more can be said about the oppression of overpopulation that I and my colleagues have not pontificated on for …

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Cover Story
Greenwashing God: The Danger of Religious Environmentalism
David Mountain

In recent years, environmentalism has received growing support from the leaders of major world religions. Since his election in 2013, Pope Francis has been a vocal advocate of climate action, even suggesting that caring for the environment should rank alongside feeding the hungry and sheltering the homeless as an act of Christian mercy. In 2015, …

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Cover Story
Thinking about Property Violence
Trudy Govier

If a peaceful demonstration ends in smashing, looting, and burning, hard questions arise. Do these actions amount to justifiable violence? Excusable violence? Do they amount to violence at all? A study by Crowd Counting at the University of Connecticut estimated that in the spring and summer of 2020, 98 percent of Black Lives Matter demonstrations …

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On the Freedom to Offend
Omar Belhaj Salah

The freedom to offend is the freedom to criticize, the freedom to ridicule, and the freedom to treat irrational choices with humor—not because a person could not possibly deserve to be offended but because everyone deserves better. Criticism and humor are among the most preferred alternatives to brute physical force for inducing change from a …

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Abortion: What Happens to the Souls?
Patrick Gannon

“They are MURDERING babies!!!,” anti-abortionists scream in the blogs and forums, and we know the debate that follows. It tends to come down to the same points—disagreements over what constitutes life, neurological development, whether the fetus feels pain, and of course moral questions such as whether abortion is murder and how that should be defined. …

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The Soul of the City
Mark Cagnetta

Author’s Note: This article is dedicated to Tom Flynn, for all the time and effort he spent working with me on it. In 1977, I wrote a story for my hometown newspaper, the Haverhill Independent, titled “The Man the Marx Brothers Loved to Hate.” It was about a relatively famous Russian immigrant named Louis B. …

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‘Miracle’ of the Floating Fresco: Inside Its Glass Frame, Witnesses Report, It Defies Gravity!
Joe Nickell

Author’s Note: In memory of Tom Flynn. In my investigative travels through beautiful Italy, I have witnessed many marvels—sometimes accompanied by my great friend and fellow skeptic Massimo Polidoro, who has dubbed me “The Detective of the Impossible.” Alas, among the inviting enigmas that I have only been able to read about is in the …

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Editorial
The Santerias Are Helping Christians to Discriminate. It’s Not Intentional.
Robyn E. Blumner

In 1989, most people had probably never heard of the Santeria Church. I certainly hadn’t. But there I was that year, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Florida, helping to represent this Afro-Cuban religion against a Cuban exile community arrayed against it. Eventually the Santeria case landed in the U.S. Supreme …

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Op-Ed
The Religious Right Death Cult
Gregory Paul

A woman I know who has attended Baltimore secular groups for years is a self-avowed pessimist. In 2016, she warned that Donald Trump might well win the presidency, and I poo-pooed what I thought were her politically naive concerns. She has never let me forget that. She despises Trump and his ilk so much that …

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Op-Ed
Pronoun Follies
S. T. Joshi

Certain advocates of the rights of transgender individuals are becoming increasingly aggressive in demanding that the pronoun they be used in reference to those who wish it; others, who maintain that they do not conform to the “binary” use of the male or female singular pronoun, have also been making such claims. (Some advocates now …

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Looking Back
Looking Back February/March 2022

35 Years Ago “The obvious implication—uncomfortable, no doubt, for rationalists and freethinkers—is that atheism does not at all ensure a free society. Indeed, as I’ve tried to suggest, it seems more comfortable with fundamentalism than with liberation. “Atheism is not the same as naturalism either. It is instead a narrowly drawn mirror-image of its opponent. …

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Letters
Letters February/March 2022

Libertarianism Ophelia Benson is confused about Libertarianism in her article “What We Owe Each Other” (FI, October/November 2021). First, she includes three people and one organization in the Libertarian camp that don’t belong there: Sarah Palin, Lauren Boebert, and the John Birch Society are in no manner Libertarian; they are conservative. And although Ayn Rand …

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Cuno's Corner
Guilt-B-Gone
Steve Cuno

Readers and Free Inquiry’s editorial board will, I hope, forgive my using this space to promote my new consulting business. I’m still toying with names, but as of this writing the leading contenders are Conscience Relievers™ and 21st Century Indulgences™. The concept for the business came to me as I reviewed a religious apologist’s insightful …

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Great Minds
Are We Accidental or Intended? Thornton Wilder and the Antipathy toward Darwin
David Jensen

Thornton Wilder wrote his acclaimed novel The Bridge of San Luis Rey more than sixty years after the world was first dismayed by Charles Darwin’s great discovery. Was Wilder prompted to write his book because the world in 1925 was still disturbed by Darwin? The answer seemed obvious to me at first. However, after a …

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Full Disclosure
On ‘The Affirmations of Humanism’
Dan Davis

Bill Cooke’s article “Must Humanism Be Optimistic?” (Free Inquiry, October/November 2021), reminded me of the reasons I’m reluctant to call myself a humanist. Although my main objection is to the term itself, I’m also uncomfortable with “The Affirmations of Humanism:  A Statement of Principles.” My least favorite principle is the one cited by Cooke: We …

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Humanist Soapbox
Secular Humanism in the Post-Enlightenment Age
Laurence Mailaender

The secular humanist, atheist, and agnostic community places great emphasis on reason—on our ability as humans to reason from assumptions to conclusions, to think critically, and to arrive at the truth. We also believe reasoned argument will allow us to convince others when they are mistaken. We like to think that our superior reason explains …

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The Long View
Immortality: The Ticket to Survival
Edward Tesler

As the joke goes, taxes and death are inevitable, but death at least does not become worse every time the U.S. Congress is in session. Taxes are a separate topic; here, only death will be discussed. The first question is obvious: Is death really inevitable? If this is the case, there is obviously nothing to …

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Humanistically Speaking
The Human Flower
Paul Donohue

“Full many a flower is born to blush unseen and waste it’s sweetness on the desert air.” —Thomas Gray, “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard” How does one like me reconcile the conviction that the human race will be gone in less than a hundred years due to global warming, resource depletion, and population increase? …

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The Faith I Left Behind
The Good Stuff
James R. Turner

When very young, I was threatened with punishment by the devil. When I asked about him, he was described as being in a black outfit with a long tail, horns, and a pitchfork. He had endless ways to punish me, but his specialty was fire, which he was to apply into eternity. I was reminded …

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Humanism at Large
Praying in Hebrew
Steve Mendelsohn

My mother died in April 2020 at theageofninety-six.Since then,I havesaidKaddishonlyahandful of times. Soonafter havinga shivaZoomcallformymom withmyold(and I domeanold)Camp Ramahfriends,onefriend,whoknowsofmycurrent religiousbeliefs,sentmethe followingemailmessage: “So,Mendel,whatdoesadevoutatheistdoaboutKaddish?Askingforafriend,ofcourse.” I responded: “Your ‘friend’ should do like I do: read Kaddish in a language that she/he does not understand so that she/he will not realize how ridiculous it is.” Although Kaddish is recited …

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High Heresy
What Is the Likelihood That the Bible Is True?
Andy Rhodes

I wrote an e-book titled Disagreements I Have with Christianity. It details my gradual move away from the faith and several ethical and philosophical concerns about the central doctrines. Parts of my critique against Christianity essentially come down to plausibility or probability, not possibility. Do I think it is possible that the Bible is true? …

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Review
A Successful Dissection
Steve Cuno

Christianity and the Triumph of Humor: From Dante to David Javerbaum, by Bernard Schweizer. (New York: Routledge, 2020, ISBN 9780367785338). 254 pp. Softcover, $48.95. In 2001, psychologist Richard Wiseman set out to identify the world’s funniest joke. To that end, he created a website where people could submit and rate jokes. He eventually conceded that …

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Review
Trust the Process
Wayne L. Trotta

Why Trust Science?, by Naomi Oreskes (Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2019, ISBN 9780691179001). 360 pp. Hardcover, $24.95. Naomi Oreskes’s new book, Why Trust Science? asks a question that secular humanists should be able to answer. We are often touting the trustworthiness of science, or at least scientific reasoning, over faith. But exactly how …

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Review
Why Hirsi Ali’s Latest Book Jolted Progressives
Mark Kolsen

A Response to Jill Filipovic’s New York Times Review of Prey Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s latest book, Prey: Immigration, Islam, and the Erosion of Women’s Rights (Harper Collins, 2021), has not only altered my perspective on immigration, but it has also—as her epigraph promises—“triggered” me. Her descriptions and documentation of the crimes and sexual abuse by …

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Poem
THE UNIVERSE
Rob Simbeck

I wake & the universe knows itself, carbon, calcium, flesh, bone & brain peering from the bed at its hydrogen burning

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Poem
The Gathering
Glo Jones

Big Mama says when she brings out the food, everybody’s gonna run to the table and grab a plate. And those heavy-handed ones will be first in line. They’ll get so much food till their plates run over and then they’ll come back for a take home plate. And they are always the ones who …

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Poem
Conversation with My Darling Marie
Nicholas S. Molinari

On August 23, 2021, I lost my friend and editor Tom Flynn, a great man among men and women. His death was sudden, unexpected, and far earlier than its due time. Seven days later, I lost my beloved wife, Marie. Her death was not sudden. It was expected, even overdue. Death unhurriedly arrived at our …

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Poem
THE FIRST LETTER
Glo Jones

Two letters came the other day. Mama opened and read the first one with a smile and slipped it back into the envelope. She read the second one out loud: Your rent is long overdue. Either you pay within five business days or vacate the premises, the rent lady wrote. One week later we were …

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