November 29, 2006

an alternative ten commandments

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For all you non-religious folk out there, Ian Green [whose blog I read regu­larly] kindly sent in this mani­festo:

Ten Com­mand­ments Mani­festo
I like the Bible – it’s a great piece of lite­ra­ture – but needs some con­text. So here’s my mani­festo based on Exo­dus 20:1 – 17

1. God may, or may not exist – you decide. Does it mat­ter if you believe in God? No, but if you do believe, believe in a good one.
2. Don’t mess about with sym­bols – Swas­ti­kas, Cru­ci­fix, Cres­cents, it all ends bad. Avoid them
3. If you mess with any of the above – you’re fuc­ked.
4. Best to for­get a Supreme Being, chill out, have a beer, scotch or cla­ret, and treat ever­yone the way you would like to be trea­ted.
5. Get a life and con­cen­trate on being nice to others even if other peo­ple are assho­les.
6. Stop being stu­pid – you’re not as smart as you think you are. But remem­ber neither is your boss nor are all the other peo­ple who tell you they are smar­ter than you.
7. Put one day aside a week for your self – your deserve it.
8. Don’t be a slave and don’t make sla­ves of others.
9. If your mum and dad love you – give it back in spa­des.
10. Don’t do any bad stuff like mur­der, adul­tery, theft, lying, or fuc­king a donkey.

By and large life is good, peo­ple are good. Keep a song in your heart and the truth on your tongue.

[gaping­void mani­festo sub­mis­sion gui­de­li­nes are here.][Mani­festo archive is here.]
PS. I am not an atheist myself [or at least if I am, I’m very bad at it], but hey, I can also appre­ciate other people’s pers­pec­ti­ves etc.

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11 Responses to “an alternative ten commandments”

  1. Oh boy. Where to start with this one. I hate dow­ning peo­ple who make an effort, but there’s stuff here that just gra­tes with me even though I agree in prin­ci­ple with what he’s trying to say:
    1. The theo­lo­gi­cal posi­tion that “it doesn’t mat­ter” is fla­wed. I refer you to Pas­cal.
    2 & 3. Aym­bols are an impor­tant part of mani­fes­ting a faith. c.f. Bri­tish Air­ways ban­ning cru­ci­fi­xes around necks of ste­war­des­ses, women wan­ting to cover their faces, etc. (please don’t res­pond like you have a right to an opi­nion on either). That said, any faith that doesn’t allow you to take some ownership of those sym­bols, is not a faith but more of a dic­ta­torship.
    4. Advo­ca­ting taking a toxin that ine­bria­tes and dama­ges your body to “chill out” doesn’t sound too sen­si­ble. Don’t get me wrong, I used to drink *a lot*, but I would never, ever, EVER encou­rage any­body to drink to “chill out”. If you have a pro­blem with your life, deal with it. Num­bing it through alcohol is like dea­ling with a fire by taking the bat­te­ries out of the alarm to stop it making that anno­ying noise.
    5. If any­body learns how to do this, please tell us all.
    6. The truly most stu­pid peo­ple on the pla­net are those who think they know everything. I was asto­nished to dis­co­ver PhD Phy­sics types who have an ans­wer for everything, and refuse to believe that the theo­ries might be wrong, des­pite con­ti­nuously being wrong over the last few hun­dred cen­tu­ries. FFS, when their maths didn’t work any more, they inven­ted dark mat­ter: no evi­dence, they just insis­ted their maths must be right, and added ten times more mass to the Uni­verse to prop them up. The best scien­ti­fic jour­nal around right now is the highly cyni­cal and argu­men­ta­tive For­tean Times. Some­body should do something about that.
    7. A day of rest is out­da­ted in modern society, unfor­tu­na­tely. I’d love to be able to spend a day lazing around the house with a paper kno­wing there was no other choice — no TV, no radio, no shops open, no pubs, no spor­ting events, nothing. Howe­ver, to most peo­ple that is hell. For some peo­ple the most rela­xing fee­ling in the World is to ignore them­sel­ves and work like mad. They’ll die young, but pro­bably happy.
    8. We are all sla­ves to something, and until some­body shows me how they live without money, food, water and sex, I won’t believe they’re not.
    9. Your Mum and Dad always love you, but that doesn’t mean they like you. Vice versa is also true.
    10. I will gua­ran­tee every­body rea­ding this will do one of those at some point in their life. Kno­wing why you did it and taking mea­su­res to ensure you don’t do it again is more impor­tant than put­ting your­self in a state of guilt. Unless it’s the thing with the don­key, in which case you’re a very, very bad person.

  2. milo says:

    What about a blogger’s mani­festo based on your ten rules?

  3. David says:

    Not an atheist?
    Kid­ding, right?

  4. Angelo says:

    The only one I’d change is 4):
    ”…*don’t* treat anyone how you *wouldn’t* want to be trea­ted.“
    It can be anno­ying when peo­ple treat you the way they want to be treated.

  5. nakedpastor says:

    the car­toon: good defi­ni­tion of ido­latry (making god in our image)

  6. Dexter says:

    What’s so wrong with fuc­king a cute donkey?

  7. mOe:) says:

    I think 10 are too much for idlers like me… even Christ redu­ces them into 3: what about it?? :)

  8. believer says:

    You speak my mind

  9. Johnny C. says:

    Paul, you fell into his trap. If we wan­ted to hear your mani­festo we would’ve gone to your blog.

  10. Alex says:

    I’m not a church going per­son, and I’m rather agnos­tic if it comes to it. The idea of an “atheist mani­festo” looks nice and is defi­ni­tely funny.
    Still, I couldn’t ever ima­gine what life would be without the belief in someone/something all-powerful which could even­tually help me get out of the mun­dane shit. Peo­ple need to have hope, and that’s where belief comes into play. I honestly can’t ima­gine why an atheist would agree to play the “moral” game and follow your 10 commandments(especially the don­key one :P ), if it weren’t for the slight fear that karma/god/some form of jus­tice would even­tually get him punished.

  11. Santo says:

    Again?
    Another per­son trying to be funny and it ends up so lame. And if you want to make fun of bible, make sure you really know what it is about. Regret at the end is just pure stupidity.