Atheist Soldier Sues The DoD, and The Evolution of Compassion
July 8, 2008 on 8:26 am | In culture, ethics, politics | 6 CommentsThis April, The New York Times reported the case of U.S. Army Specialist Jeremy Hall, a soldier who started a chapter of the Military Association of Atheists and Freethinkers and subsequently had to be removed from Iraq due to numerous threats from his fellow soldiers. Now, I’m not exactly surprised by this. I’d expect the military to be drooling with evangelicals, of course. And I could probably cynically overlook verbal harassment of an atheist in the armed forces, just because I expect that sort of bullshit from indoctrinated meat-heads. But physical threats? That really is beyond the pale. Now, Spc. Hall is suing the Department of Defense and former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld for failing to protect his freedom from religious persecution as protected by the 1st Amendment to the United States Constitution. You go boy.
Seriously, this is not the sort of reputation the military should want, given that non-religious Americans are the largest (non) religious group after Christians. They have enough trouble recruiting as it is! This is just another example, sadly, of Christians thinking the world revolves around them. It’s bad enough that brave men and women who are devoted to the service of their country were blithely thrown into harm’s way in Iraq by a callous and evangelically-motivated administration… but non-religious soldiers’ lives are threatened by their loving, Christian comrades-in-arms as well? What a disgusting blemish on our armed forces. I hope Spc. Hall wins his lawsuit and the DoD cracks down on prosyletizing by officers.
I haven’t posted anything in a while, have I? Still, life marches on. I got some paperwork done that’s been taking forever (to put it mildly). I also was inspired by the news I wrote about in my previous post, and decided to read Robert Axelrod’s The Evolution of Compassion. This book tells the story of his experiment: a computer tournament in the early 1980s that pitted programs submitted by game theorists from various academic disciplines (as well as an 11 year old computer prodigy) in the iterated Prisoner’s Dilemma game (a classic thought experiment). It’s quite interesting, and you can expect me to write a more in-depth review when I’ve finished it.
P.S. - I would love to get some comments on my posts. If you’re reading this, any feedback will be appreciated. It’s hard to talk myself into posting when it feels like no one is reading! I’d really like to get this blog fired up.