December 16, 2006

gapingvoid complaint


[Add the gping­void wid­get to your blog.]
Richard Car­ter sent me this e-mail:

Hugh,
I dis­play your wid­get on my home­page — in fact, I believe I was the
very first per­son to do so. I elec­ted to dis­play all ima­ges, rather
than invoke the sani­ti­sed option because I am not easily offen­ded. Now
I find your wid­get is dis­pla­ying adverts for Jesus. As a proud
Atheist, I have a big pro­blem with this and con­si­der it a breach of
trust. I really don’t mind peo­ple being reli­gious, but I don’t want
them using my web­site to pro­mote their reli­gious views.
I’ll keep the wid­get up for the time being (in the assump­tion that
there will be a new non-religious car­toon coming along soon), but, if
there’s any more, I will be for­ced, reluc­tantly, to take it down.
Regards,
Richard

Adverts for Jesus. “Your Total Second Coming Solu­tion.” Heh.
[NB: This e-mail was published with Richard’s consent.]

27 Responses to “gapingvoid complaint”

  1. krzysztof kurowski says:

    pathe­tic…

  2. Bill Olen says:

    Hugh isn’t selling it, he’s giving it away for free!

  3. Matt Gifford says:

    Isn’t it funny how our society is open to ideas as long as they are the same as our own?

  4. Justin Lewis says:

    Ok, selling Jesus would have been more like… “The bible, buy it or the puppy gets it” heh.

  5. I’m an atheist, as well, but I will not remove the wid­get from my blog. I don’t like you just because I think you believe the same things I do or because I can use you to pro­mote my own inte­rests. I like you because you’re an ori­gi­nal, doing a lot of really cool stuff that rocks.

  6. Kevin Dugan says:

    I think the pro­per reply to that is, “You’re Wel­come.” Or, if you’re fee­ling snarky, “Jesus Saves.”

  7. Michael Neel says:

    An atheist, not easily offen­ded, taking offense to a Jesus refe­rence…
    …I’m bad at math, but something doesn’t add up!

  8. Dave Snowden says:

    To be honest I was not sure what it meant — not clear if it was pro pr con, or what the mes­sage was.
    I cer­tainly would not remove it just because I did not like one car­toon.
    (Love the Ame­ri­can Dream one by the way)

  9. KG says:

    That’s funny.
    Adverts for SUVs offend me. Those huge cars’ toxic out­put is des­tro­ying our planet’s fri­gile environment!

  10. Holly says:

    I’m an atheist too (good lord, they’re coming out of the wood­work!) but I’m more offen­ded by this mar­ke­ting clun­ker in the Cash­mere Truths link you gave us (http://www.simply-cashmere.co.uk/cashmeretruths)than your love of Jesus.
    “Once you have worn cash­mere everything else beco­mes less desi­ra­ble and one stri­ves to attain more and more cash­mere pie­ces.” ;)

  11. Jason Bates says:

    Jesus 2.0 ??? ;o)

  12. Craig says:

    Actually, I have the same com­plaint. Until fairly recently, you were a blog about mar­ke­ting. What’s with the sud­den injec­tion of reli­gion? It’s out of place and irritating.

  13. Ashish Banerjee says:

    Second coming? Must be Jesus 2.0 then.

  14. Thin­king about it some more after­wards, I think what I was really objec­ting to was the change in tone from Hugh’s usually ins­pi­red cyni­cism to one of (appa­rently) una­dul­te­ra­ted (and, in my opi­nion, naive) reli­gio­sity.
    Hugh can obviously say wha­te­ver the hell he likes in his car­toons, but I con­si­de­red the happy-clappy Jesus stuff to be off topic and a dilu­tion of his brand. I thought I knew what I was get­ting when I dis­pla­yed his wid­get. Not any more. But I’m kee­ping it up for the time being because I still enjoy 99% of his stuff.
    Merry Christ­mas to one and all. Even those of you who mis­read the tone of my ori­gi­nal email.

  15. Anonymous says:

    They say you can tell a fana­tic because he (or she) doesn’t have a sense of humor… I’m used to seeing reli­gious fana­tics, but I guess they come in all per­sua­sions.
    Fin­ding reli­gion offen­sive has nothing to do with being an atheist per se. It has to do with being intolerant.

  16. Andrew Denny says:

    Inte­res­ting that he uses a capi­tal A for ‘Atheist’, and calls him­self “proud” to be so. He sounds pretty devout, and if he belie­ves in Atheism, good for him.
    I used to call myself an agnos­tic, until I read recently that ‘agnos­tics believe that the nature of God can­not be known’. Per­so­nally, I don’t ‘believe’. I’m not proud to say it; it’s just that reli­gion — atheism and agnos­ti­cism inc­lu­ded — is beyond my unders­tan­ding.
    I recall a Hugh­train slo­gan: “The mar­ket for something to believe in is infinite”

  17. sky says:

    nice fuc­kin comic!

  18. Bernardo says:

    “Proud atheist” is an euphe­mism for “asshole”.

  19. Kat Meltzer says:

    As an atheist, I had a simi­lar dis­com­fort the car­toon in ques­tion. But then I remem­be­red how my hus­band has sho­ved any num­ber of foul subs­tan­ces under my nose and exc­lai­med “Holy crap, this reeks! Here honey, smell it!”
    I bet Jesus smells like pretend.

  20. hugh macleod says:

    It’s funny to me how something so UTTERLY ambi­guous was inter­pre­ted just one way… by an atheist.
    And to say one of my car­toons looks “out of place” on my own blog is also pretty amu­sing ;-)

  21. Jenny says:

    What I per­so­nally find inte­res­ting is the amount of dis­res­pect shown towards someone who, ins­tead of silently taking down the wid­get, tried to engage in some kind of “feed­back pro­cess” regar­ding something that bothe­red him. Somehow I thought trying to com­mu­ni­cate about issues openly was a good thing.
    I do hope none of the peo­ple who sha­red their pre­cious “subtle” sar­casm with the world would usually be so dis­res­pect­ful to a com­plete stran­ger or pos­sibly neigh­bor who might actually be a nice guy, even though he doesn’t share some of your opi­nions.
    Com­ple­tely inde­pen­dent from my opi­nion on the car­toons with reli­gious topics, I find it a bit strange to asso­ciate someone with reli­gious fana­ti­cism simply because he voi­ced that the wid­get he put up on his site shows other things than he expec­ted, which he wouldn’t usually like to have on his web site.
    And…I still read Hugh’s blog “reli­giously” :D . I couldn’t resist that pun.

  22. silverfoot says:

    huh. i took the tone of the car­toon to be iro­nic — the wry, back-handed com­men­tary pre­sent in much of Hugh’s other work. not so much a “You’d bet­ter believe in Jesus” than a “You’d bet­ter be paying atten­tion, because the Reli­gious Right is on the move.”
    so i’m curious how this could be ‘dilu­ting your brand’…

  23. Hugh:
    As a Chris­tian, I am offen­ded by all the atheist talk. I will stop rea­ding. Maybe you should bend your writing/publishing on YOUR blog so that I am happy!
    Give me a break. If he doesn’t like what you post, maybe he should not host the wid­get, ins­tead of trying to make you write/publish/believe what he does.
    I think he should have to change his blog/site to reflect my beliefs, because his site is offen­sive to me.
    Give me a break.

  24. heather says:

    and then the Atheist tells us Merry Christ­mas. i think it’s time to start drinking.

  25. Shazz says:

    LOL … Ooh, let’s start a “Wake up and smell the _________” con­test and offend lots of closed-minded peo­ple. Hugh can pick a win­ner and car­toon it for us all. ha!
    I’ll start:
    “Wake up and smell the Crea­tio­nists.”
    Have fun.

  26. This is something I do not unders­tand about Atheists. Even my Atheist friends fall into this smug pom­po­sity that they need to be shel­te­red from all Chris­tian sym­bo­lism and the­mes. I hear peo­ple argue that Crea­tio­nists are close-minded and then from the other side of their mouth demand that “under God” be taken out of the pledge. It’s the same thing. The key for both groups, I think, is to be in the world, if not of the world. Shake your head with laugh­ter or disap­point­ment — but don’t over esti­mate your own impor­tance.
    “I will be forced.” — *shakes head*
    Also, Mr. Car­ter should mind his com­mas. It appears they’ve got­ten away from him :>)

  27. Chuck Law says:

    Gosh… I’ve been quo­ting the “wake-up” car­toon for a cou­ple of weeks at the work place. The devout chris­tian friend thinks it’s a slur. The atheist friends think it’s a sell…love it for just that rea­son. I’m a refor­med atheist non-christian, so that phrase just added to my mantle of reli­gious ambi­guity. Thank­you for hel­ping me further my cause.