Is anyone else an atheist with BC besides me?

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  • magiclight
    magiclight Member Posts: 8,690
    edited August 2020

    This is the link to the report of the catholic church receiving at least a billion and possibly 3 billion dollars from the US govt in ppp loans.

    https://time.com/5865746/catholic-church-billion-ppp-loans/

  • DivineMrsM
    DivineMrsM Member Posts: 9,620
    edited July 2020

    magiclight, that report is so frustrating! All that money yet they still pass around the collection plate. All that covered up abuse and people still give. A religion that oppresses women to the nth degree. Believers brainwashed from birth to blindly follow biblical baloney.


  • DivineMrsM
    DivineMrsM Member Posts: 9,620
    edited July 2020

    I thought this was an insightful article making many good points:


    The Study That Debunks Most Anti-Abortion Arguments

    For five years, a team of researchers asked women about their experience after having—or not having—an abortion. What do their answers tell us?

    By Margaret Talbot

    July 7, 2020

    The Turnaway Study, about the fallout of receiving or being denied an abortion, will be understood, criticized, and used politically, however carefully conceived and painstakingly executed the research was.


    There is a kind of social experiment you might think of as a What if? study. It would start with people who are similar in certain basic demographic ways and who are standing at the same significant fork in the road. Researchers could not assign participants to take one path or another—that would be wildly unethical. But let's say that some more or less arbitrary rule in the world did the assigning for them. In such circumstances, researchers could follow the resulting two groups of people over time, sliding-doors style, to see how their lives panned out differently. It would be like speculative fiction, only true, and with statistical significance.

    A remarkable piece of research called the Turnaway Study, which began in 2007, is essentially that sort of experiment. Over three years, a team of researchers, led by a demographer named Diana Greene Foster, at the University of California, San Francisco, recruited 1,132 women from the waiting rooms of thirty abortion clinics in twenty-one states. Some of the women would go on to have abortions, but others would be turned away, because they had missed the fetal gestational limit set by the clinic. Foster and her colleagues decided to compare the women in the two groups—those who received the abortion they sought and those who were compelled to carry their unwanted pregnancy to term—on a variety of measures over time, interviewing them twice a year for up to five years.

    The study is important, in part, because of its ingenious design. It included only women whose pregnancies were unwanted enough that they were actively seeking an abortion, which meant the researchers were not making the mistake that some previous studies of unplanned conceptions had—"lumping the happy surprises in with the total disasters," as Foster puts it. In terms of age, race, income level, and health status, the two groups of women closely resembled each other, as well as abortion patients nationwide. (Foster refers to the study's participants as women because, to her knowledge, there were no trans men or non-binary people among them.) Seventy per cent of the women who were denied abortions at the first clinic where they sought them carried the unwanted pregnancies to term. Others miscarried or were able to obtain late abortions elsewhere, and Foster and her colleagues followed the trajectories of those in the latter group as well.

    While you might guess that those who were turned away had messier lives—after all, they were getting to the clinic later than the seemingly more proactive women who made the deadline—that did not turn out to be the case. Some of the women who got their abortions (half of the total participants) did so just under the wire; among the women in the study who were denied abortions (a quarter of the total), some had missed the limit by a matter of only a few days. (The remaining quarter terminated their pregnancies in the first trimester, which is when ninety per cent of abortions in the United States occur.) The women who were denied abortions were on average more likely to live below the poverty line than the women who managed to get them. (One of the main reasons that people seek abortions later in pregnancy is the need to raise money to pay for the procedure and for travel expenses.) But, in general, Foster writes, the two groups "were remarkably similar at the first interview. Their lives diverged thereafter in ways that were directly attributable to whether they received an abortion."

    Over the past several years, findings from the Turnaway Study have come out in scholarly journals and, on a few occasions, gotten splashy media coverage. Now Foster has published a patiently expository precis of all the findings in a new book, "The Turnaway Study: Ten Years, a Thousand Women, and the Consequences of Having—or Being Denied—an Abortion." The over-all impression it leaves is that abortion, far from harming most women, helps them in measurable ways. Moreover, when people assess what will happen in their lives if they have to carry an unwanted pregnancy to term, they are quite often proven right. That might seem like an obvious point, but much of contemporary anti-abortion legislation is predicated on the idea that competent adults can't really know what's at stake in deciding whether to bear a child or not. Instead, they must be subjected to waiting periods to think it over (as though they can't be trusted to have done so already), presented with (often misleading) information about the supposed medical risks and emotional fallout of the procedure, and obliged to look at ultrasounds of the embryo or fetus. And such scans are often framed, with breathtaking disingenuousness, as a right extended to people—what the legal scholar Carol Sanger calls "the right to be persuaded against exercising the right you came in with."

    Maybe the first and most fundamental question for a study like this to consider is how women feel afterward about their decisions to have an abortion. In the Turnaway Study, over ninety-five per cent of the women who received an abortion and did an interview five years out said that it had been the right choice for them. It's possible that the women who remained in the study that long were disproportionately inclined to see things that way—maybe if you were feeling shame or remorse about an abortion you'd be less up for talking about it every six months in a phone interview with a researcher. (Foster suggests that people experiencing regrets might actually be more inclined to participate, but, to me, the first scenario makes more psychological sense.) Still, ninety-five per cent is a striking figure. And it's especially salient, again, in light of anti-choice arguments, which often stress the notion that many of the quarter to third of all American women who have an abortion will be wracked with guilt about their decision. (That's an awful lot of abject contrition.) You can pick at the study for its retention rate—and some critics, particularly on the anti-abortion side, have. Nine hundred and fifty-six of the original thousand-plus women who were recruited did the first interview. Fifty-eight per cent of them did the final interview. But, as Foster pointed out in an e-mail to me, on average, the women in the study completed an impressive 8.4 of the eleven interviews, and some of the data in the study—death records and credit reports—cover all 1,132 women who were originally enrolled.

    To the former Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, among others, it seemed "unexceptionable to conclude some women come to regret their choice to abort the infant life they once created and sustained." In a 2007 abortion-case ruling, he wrote that "severe depression and loss of esteem can follow." It can, but the epidemiologists, psychologists, statisticians, and other researchers who evaluated the Turnaway Study found it was not likely. "Some events do cause lifetime damage"—childhood abuse is one of them—"but abortion is not common among these," Foster writes. In the short term, the women who were denied abortions had worse mental health—higher anxiety and lower self-esteem. In the longer run, the researchers found "no long-term differences between women who receive and women who are denied an abortion in depression, anxiety, PTSD, self-esteem, life satisfaction, drug abuse, or alcohol abuse." Abortion didn't weigh heavily in determining mental health one way or the other. Foster and her co-authors note, in an earlier article, that "relief remained the most commonly felt emotion" among women who got the abortions they sought. That relief persisted, but its intensity dissipated over time.

    Other positive impacts were more lasting. Women in the study who received the abortion they sought were more likely to be in a relationship they described as "very good." (After two years, the figure was forty-seven per cent, vs. twenty-eight per cent for the women turned away.) If they had been involved with a physically abusive man at the time of the unwanted pregnancy, they were less likely to still be experiencing violence, for the simple reason that they were less likely to be in contact with him. (Several of the participants interviewed for the book talk about not wanting to be tethered to a terrible partner by having a child together.) Women who got the abortion were more likely to become pregnant intentionally in the next five years than women who did not. They were less likely to be on public assistance and to report that they did not have enough money to pay for food, housing, and transportation. When they had children at home already, those children were less likely to be living in poverty. Based on self-reports, their physical health was somewhat better. Two of the women in the study who were denied abortions died from childbirth-related complications; none of the women who received abortions died as a result. That is in keeping with other data attesting to the general safety of abortion. One of Foster's colleagues, Ushma Upadhyay, analyzed complications after abortions in California's state Medicaid program, for example, and found that they occurred in two per cent of the cases—a lower percentage than for wisdom-tooth extraction (seven per cent) and certainly for childbirth (twenty-nine per cent). Indeed, maternal mortality has been rising in the U.S.—it's now more than twice as high as it was in 1987, and has risen even more steeply for Black women, due, in part, to racial disparities in prenatal care and the quality of hospitals where women deliver.

    Yet, as Foster points out, many of the new state laws restricting abortion suggest that it is a uniquely dangerous procedure, one for which layers of regulation must be concocted, allegedly to protect women. The Louisiana law that the Supreme Court struck down last Monday imposed just such a rule—namely, a requirement that doctors performing abortions hold admitting privileges at a hospital no more than thirty miles away. As Justice Stephen Breyer's majority opinion noted, "The evidence shows, among other things, that the fact that hospital admissions for abortion are vanishingly rare means that, unless they also maintain active OB/GYN practices, abortion providers in Louisiana are unlikely to have any recent in-hospital experience." Since hospitals often require such experience in order to issue admitting privileges, abortion providers would be caught in a Catch-22, unable to obtain the privileges because, on actual medical grounds, they didn't need them. The result of such a law, had it gone into effect, would have been exactly what was intended: a drastic reduction in the number of doctors legally offering abortions in the state.

    The Turnaway Study's findings are welcome ones for anyone who supports reproductive justice. But they shouldn't be necessary for it. The overwhelming majority of women who received abortions and stayed in the study for the full five years did not regret their decision. But the vast majority of women who'd been denied abortions reported that they no longer wished that they'd been able to end the pregnancy, after an actual child of four or five was in the world. And that's good, too—you'd hope they would love that child wholeheartedly, and you'd root for their resilience and happiness.

    None of that changes the fundamental principle of human autonomy: people have to be able to make their own decisions in matters that profoundly and intimately affect their own bodies and the course of their lives. Regret and ambivalence, the ways that one decision necessarily precludes others, are inextricable facts of life, and they are also fluid and personal. Guessing the extent to which individuals may feel such emotions, hypothetically, in the future, is not a basis for legislative bans and restrictions.

    The Turnaway Study will be understood, criticized, and used politically, however carefully conceived and painstakingly executed the research was. Given that inevitability, it's worth underlining the most helpful political work that the study does. In light of its findings, the rationale for so many recent abortion restrictions—namely, that abortion is uniquely harmful to the people who choose it—simply topples

  • magiclight
    magiclight Member Posts: 8,690
    edited August 2020

    Maybe a bit off topic for this thread, but I found these Buddhist nuns live a very different life than most religious communities The kung fu nuns of Kathmandu take the empowering of girls very seriously.

    https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2020/07/05/886043783/the-kung-fu-nuns-of-kathmandu


    image


    Each summer since 2010, the nuns have held week-long self-defense workshops in Ladkh, India to teach young women the basics of kung fu. Jigme Migyur Palmo, who became a nun at the age of 13, is one of the instructors.

    "We need to help as many young girls as possible. They don't know that rape or sexual assault is wrong so we work to educate them and [teach them] how to handle difficult situations," Palmo says.

    The workshops teach young girls various kung fu techniques, including take-downs and strikes. They also act out potential sexual assault scenarios — like being attacked from behind — and how to handle themselves in everyday settings, such as problems that might arise traveling to school on buses as well as dealing with cat-calling at outdoor markets and shopping malls.

    image

  • ananda8
    ananda8 Member Posts: 2,755
    edited July 2020

    Kung Fu was originally developed by an order of Chinese monks and also taught to nuns of the same order. It was developed as a means of self defense during a time of the waring states so they could defend themselves without killing.


  • DogMomRunner
    DogMomRunner Member Posts: 616
    edited July 2020
  • DivineMrsM
    DivineMrsM Member Posts: 9,620
    edited July 2020

    magiclight, I loved the Kung Fu nuns article. It brings up a range of emotions in me. Frustration and anger of the patriarchal practice of not allowing women to partake in some of the traditions, yet inspired by the nuns who choose to disregard these societal norms and forge ahead to learn kung fu and then spread these lessons to women and empower them. I just get so angry that cultures insist on keeping women oppressed, at how they devalue us. But read the stories of how Buddhist practices help women gain strength, focus and confidence, why wouldn’t anyone want that?

    Thanks for sharing this story.


  • MinusTwo
    MinusTwo Member Posts: 16,634
    edited July 2020

    Heard this recently - If you believe in predestination, why bother to look both ways before you cross the street.

  • Trishyla
    Trishyla Member Posts: 1,005
    edited July 2020

    I like that one, Minus Two. Though I have to say, intellectual consistency is not a hallmark of most religions.

  • magiclight
    magiclight Member Posts: 8,690
    edited August 2020

    Time to repeal the Hyde amendment

    In U.S. politics, the Hyde Amendment is a legislative provision barring the use of federal funds to pay for abortion except to save the life of the woman, or if the pregnancy arises from incest or rape. Before the Hyde Amendment took effect, an estimated 300,000 abortions were performed annually using taxpayer funds.

    Taxpayer funds are also used to fund executions. Hmmm? How is that for cognitive dissonance among religious right?

  • magiclight
    magiclight Member Posts: 8,690
    edited August 2020
  • ananda8
    ananda8 Member Posts: 2,755
    edited July 2020

    I think there may be two reasons Churches are demanding to completely reopen. People give more when they are being watched by their neighbors. Donations are down since the virus. The longer people stay away from church, the more likely they will be to skip church altogether and donations will not recover.

    I wonder if I will be proven correct.

  • Spookiesmom
    Spookiesmom Member Posts: 9,568
    edited July 2020

    I think so. BIG Catholic Church up the street from me. During winter, I can’t get out of my driveway after Mass lets out. Now with Covid, no mass. They depend on collecting$$ to help fund the school. They have signs around town for enrollment. Will be interesting to see what happens

  • Betrayal
    Betrayal Member Posts: 1,374
    edited July 2020

    The sad thing is those megachurches ask their attendees to tithe so their ministers can live like that and drive expensive cars. Remember Jim and Tammy? Meanwhile they are counting every penny to be able to feed and clothe their families.

  • illimae
    illimae Member Posts: 5,710
    edited August 2020

    Betrayal, so true. Here in Houston we’ve got the Olsteens, ugh that Joel is one creepy dude.

  • pingpong1953
    pingpong1953 Member Posts: 362
    edited August 2020

    I agree with you about Joel Olsteen. He's always made my skin crawl. How do these charlatans sucker in these people???

  • illimae
    illimae Member Posts: 5,710
    edited August 2020

    Pingpong, one way is by using “gods will” as a means of dismissing personal responsibility. Some people are content to wait for things to happen and praying for it is much easier that putting in the physical effort.

  • MinusTwo
    MinusTwo Member Posts: 16,634
    edited August 2020

    And Olsteen's wife is just as creepy. You should see their mansion. It's a great paying job. Anybody remember Jim & Tammy Faye Baker?

  • magiclight
    magiclight Member Posts: 8,690
    edited August 2020

    Robert P. Jones in his book White too long, writes: The more racist attitudes a person holds, the more likely he or she is to identify as a white Christian." The results hold true for regular and infrequent churchgoers, across geographical regions and for white evangelicals, mainline Protestants and Roman Catholics. It's hard to argue with his conclusion that white supremacy is somehow genetically encoded into white Christianity in the United States. Sadly, white Christians are about 30 percentage points more likely to say monuments to Confederate soldiers are symbols of Southern pride rather than symbols of racism.

  • Betrayal
    Betrayal Member Posts: 1,374
    edited August 2020

    Joel Olsteen reminds me of Howdy Dowdy except he's not funny, just pathetic.

  • ananda8
    ananda8 Member Posts: 2,755
    edited August 2020

    It's not surprising that white Christians have a large component of racism, although the Abrahamic religions all have a large component. Their religion emphasizes purity, mental purity and physical purity. Evangelicals and Catholics especially emphasize purity telling young girls that if they have sex they will be like used chewing gum or stained. This is how the custom of fathers giving daughters purity rings comes about. It is but a step to take this purity fixation and adapt it to race, nationality or politics.



  • magiclight
    magiclight Member Posts: 8,690
    edited August 2020

    ananda,I had not thought about the purity ring thing. Wilkerson in her book Caste, writes that 'purity' is one of the pillars of caste. Thus, the need for segregation in order to prevent the black caste (know in India as untouchables) from polluting the white caste.

  • ananda8
    ananda8 Member Posts: 2,755
    edited August 2020

    Buddhists, Jains, and Sikhs of India don't recognize caste but they are in the minority of India. The untouchables may be of darker skin color but they are still Indian.


  • magiclight
    magiclight Member Posts: 8,690
    edited August 2020

    Cissie Graham Lynch, the granddaughter of late evangelical pastor Billy Graham referred to transgender girls as boys. The Human Rights Campaign, the country's largest LGBTQ rights group, called Lynch's remarks "dehumanizing and demeaning". Why do christians like Cissie and her followers have such disregard and distain for some human beings who come under their notion 'god's children'?

  • moth
    moth Member Posts: 4,800
    edited August 2020

    oh but trans stuff is messy outside of religion too. There are plenty of atheist or secular left wing people, including LGBQ who have issues with trans dogma & think the T doesn't go under their umbrella.

  • illimae
    illimae Member Posts: 5,710
    edited August 2020

    I have a hard time understanding why anyone has issues with groups of people unlike themselves, except for those who hurt children or animals, I can’t think of any redeeming qualities there. Don’t get me wrong, I dislike plenty of people but it’s personal, lol

  • moth
    moth Member Posts: 4,800
    edited August 2020

    I agree with disliking people hurting animals and children & add people who hurt women.

    ultimately for me, religion or no religion, humans are complicated

  • magiclight
    magiclight Member Posts: 8,690
    edited September 2020

    Trump administration says Catholic church is entitled to fire gay teachers because it is allowed "to employ in key roles ONLY persons whose beliefs and CONDUCT are consistent" with its "religious precepts. HMMM! Surprising, the Catholic church did not fire all the sexual predator priests. So, the man who was legally married gets fired, but if the men i.e. priests, have sex with children they can stay in their parishes or get moved to other parishes. The hypocrisy of Catholics is mind bending. Another reason, among countless others I am on this site.

  • Trishyla
    Trishyla Member Posts: 1,005
    edited September 2020

    You and me both, magiclight. You and me both. The hypocrisy of most religions has always angered me. How dare they presume to tell me how to live my life when they live theirs in such a sanctimonious and destructive way? If they keep their religion out of our government, then I'm okay with keeping our government out of their religion. Otherwise they need to pay taxes just like any other entity.

  • AliceBastable
    AliceBastable Member Posts: 3,461
    edited September 2020

    I have to post the image separately because the "new and improved" site makes me switch to plain text or it jerks me off the page after one letter. So for the meme image, besides "racists", add misogynists, homophobes, transphobics, and many other hate groups.

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