As a nonbeliever, I have to have the utmost respect for the truth. Because I don’t expect anyone to believe what I say, I must strive at all times be be as truthful as possible.

As we make our way through this life, we must make decisions on the data we have at hand. To make the correct decisions, we must have as much true data as we can get. Withholding data (or outright lying) to manipulate people to act in a way that is beneficial to us is wrong in my opinion.

Because of this, I must also try to practice unconditional love for all. If I expect people to open themselves up to me truthfully, I must be ready to accept them unconditionally as they are.

I have become politically active in the past year, and I am shocked by the amount of deceit involved in playing politics. The city has been especially two-faced in its dealing with our community. Because of the anger this provoked, I let my anger and frustration show at the last council meeting and was chastised for not showing respect.

Pretending to respect people who are not respectable is just as deceitful as pretending to believe in God or Allah or whatever you want to call it. It would be as deceitful as pretending to have allegiance to an inanimate object such as a flag (of any country).

It is not just the city that has the problem. I have been encouraged by some of my activist partners to try to put on a good face for working with the city and to “manage our message” in order to influence public opinion.

I remember the same pressure from the old guard at Columbia University in 1968. They tried to press the student activists to tone down their rhetoric and actions for better PR. That was not the first time I realized that “liberals” are sometimes too conservative for their own good. That was after a “liberal” president escalated the Vietnam war (after his dovish campaign promises). That was also the year that the Democrats beat up protestors at their political convention.

So you might see why I am disillusioned with the political process. Our government has been taken over by a plutocracy, and sadly, that takeover has reached the local level here in Eugene. This takeover has been aided by a massive amount of misinformation going out to the public. We shouldn’t try to counteract this with more misinformation.

Tonight I’d like to consider the word “public”. It is generally used to refer to the people or citizens of a city, state or country. I am concerned that our public servants (city government, police, etc.) have abandoned the people they have sworn to serve.

Finally giving up all pretense of serving the people, the city is now considering the final privatization of the last “public” area of Eugene, Kesey Square. They have slowly been taking this place away from the public and turning it over to for profit businesses. They tore down the only public place to sit, and rented space to food carts to use during the day.

These food carts fill the plaza with chairs for use by their paying customers, instead of the general public. ( As a person suffering from stenosis, sometimes after being on my feet for 15 minutes, I have to sit down until the pain goes away and I can continue on my way.)

These carts have worked out a sweetheart deal that basically allows them to run restaurants (using public land) without even providing rest rooms for their customers. This gives them a big advantage over other restaurants in the city.

Now the owners of the food carts want Kesey Square to be closed at night so they don’t have to clean up human waste that is left in the square due to the lack of restrooms. This is another direct attack on the unhoused people of Eugene, taking away the one place they can be. Instead of this, the city should ban food carts from the plaza and put in benches and restrooms for the people.

I can think of no public good that can be accomplished by waging a war on homeless people. The city has been spending a lot of the public’s money to do this. I hope soon to see a report on how much this endeavor has cost the taxpaying public. I hope that the city would release this information without requiring the people to file a formal request for these public records. I am especially interested in how much the city spent on the April 4 Whoville closure as well as the accumulated price tag for the continued harassment of the who’s.

Eugene needs at least one place where people can be without being arrested for being there. It doesn’t have to be Kesey Square, but it has to be somewhere.

Last Sunday, the local paper printed a guest viewpoint by Gil Gaudia concerning the negative view that religious people have of non believers. He refers to them as “nones” because they check the box labeled “none” when they fill out forms asking their religion. They include atheists, agnostics, secular humanists and other free thinking types.

He mentioned that non believers can be perceived as negatively as homosexuals are, and for that reason a lot of them fail to speak out to express their views. I think it is important for non believers to come out in order to slow the trend toward theocratic rule that seems to be happening in the world today.

The gay rights movement profited greatly when more gays started to come out. People with preconceived notions about homosexuals started to see them in a different light when they saw their family members, friends, and acquaintances admitting to being gay. In the same way, the anti-theocratic movement can be aided if people realize that people they know are non believers.

It will come as no surprise to people that know me, but I am now officially coming out as a non believer. I do prefer to be thought of as a non believer, and not as an atheist, though. To me, atheism implies a belief that “God” doesn’t exist, and as a non believer I have to accept the possibility (however remote) that it does.

It would be interesting to see a study comparing the brains of believers and non believers. A lot of people started viewing gays more positively when they saw reports of studies that showed physical differences in the brains of straights and gays. Those studies confirmed that a person’s sexual orientation is not a choice. I wonder if the same sort of study could show that believing is not a choice.

I do not think that belief is a choice. I am not able to believe in “God”, but I know people who claim that they do. I wonder if they really think their beliefs are real or if they are just suspending their disbelief because of their religious training. Or is there something in their brains that makes it impossible for them to not believe?

Whether or not there are physical differences, it will be beneficial for non believers to come out and band together in order to work towards the goal of having truly secular governments. The mess in the Middle East is just the worst example of what happens under theocratic rule,  but we could all benefit from less religious interference in our government.

This is to announce the formation of the Tufnel Instrument Co-Op. Its purpose is to provide musical instruments for homeless people to borrow and use. I found that there are many homeless people with musical talent who have a hard time keeping their instruments because they don’t have a secure place to keep them.

This co-op is an adjunct of The Church of Universal Soul and it is donating some instruments in the hope that this will inspire others to donate instruments or money to make the project work. I look at these donations as priming the pump. Pouring water into a dry pump will enable you to pump out more water. I remember a song the Kingston Trio played:

These instruments will be available for people to play during the Whiteaker block party on Saturday, August 3 at the CALC office (458 Blair Blvd.) from 1:00 to 6:00. I hope that people will come by to try them out. (You don’t need to be homeless to play them.)

This co-op is the first step for the church to fulfill its mission, which is to provide shelter for the homeless (which might be used from time to time for musical events). If this works, I will start to set up the Tufnel Land Co-Op (TLC). This is a much more ambitious project, but the experience I get from this might help me set it up. I will go ahead with the land co-op if I find that the well of human compassion in Eugene is not dry.

One of the ways that the theocratic wannabes want to impose their religion on the general public is the teaching of creationism in public schools. As unlikely as it sounds that an eternally existing entity would wait until eternity is practically half over to create a temporary universe, as a non-believer I have to accept the possibility. But while accepting this possibility, let’s look at the universe that he (since I am accepting the possibility of creation, I can accept the possibility that the creator has a Y chromosome, too) created.
He created an incredibly old and vast universe with a lot of details that show how ancient and vast it is.
Not only did he create stars and galaxies that are billions of light years distant, he also created light that would have been emitted from them billions of years ago so we can see them.
He created a world with deep canyons that would have taken millions (or billions) of years to be dug, and a process of erosion that is still at work today digging the canyons deeper. Some of these canyons were dug through sedimentary rock which would have taken millions (or billions) of years to form, and a process of sedimentation (fueled by the process of erosion) that is still at work today. He created a world with a wide variety of animal and vegetable life and a process of natural selection (still at work today) that would have been required to account for this variety.
So, those who want their children to learn about creation should teach them themselves or allow their churches to teach them. They should allow science classes to teach about the world that was actually created. This should include study of the processes that helped to form the world as we know it. Any less would be disrespectful of the creator.
Now that we have accepted that creation could have happened at some arbitrary point in the near past, I would like to propose another point of time for creation. That would be at the exact halfway point in eternity, which is, of course, right now. The world is being created right now, and we are helping in the process. After all, right now is the only moment that truly exists. The past is memory and the future is imagination.
When we build a sand castle, the sunlight that reflects off of that sand castle will head away from the earth and exist forever. At any time in the future that image of the sandcastle will be traveling at the speed of light somewhere in the universe. So, even though what we build is temporary, we can think of it as being part of the world forever. Assuming that brain waves are electromagnetic radiation, our thoughts are doing the same. (This is how music can exist beyond the atmosphere that propagates the sound waves. The brain waves of those enjoying the music can exist in space.)
The fundamental creationists also believe that the creator will destroy the world a short time from now. Using the same logic of creation happening now, we can say that the world is being destroyed right now and we are helping in the process. Some of us are more creative and some of us are more destructive. (Two-year-old’s delight in kicking down stacks of blocks and sandcastles.)
So, for all those helping in the creation, keep up the good work.

A couple of weeks ago I witnessed another example of America’s collaboration with international terrorism. The event was a talk given by His Holiness the Dalai Lama at Matthew Knight Arena in Eugene.

All those entering the arena had to go through metal detectors or submit to body scans. I don’t know if these security measures were in response to the Boston marathon bombing or just to all other terrorist attacks that have happened in the last dozen years, but the metal detectors seem to have been built in to the entrance gates of the building. Everyone attending was told to get to the event early enough to go through the screening process.

We have gotten used to getting to the airport early to undergo screening, and all the time that we spend doing so represents another minor victory for the terrorists. These screenings keep the awareness of terrorism alive in the minds of the people, and the hope of the ruling class is that this fear will numb people to the reality of their disappearing constitutional rights and the perpetual wars being waged by and for the military industrial complex.

As a response to the wars and terrorism that have been feeding on each other and gaining momentum, I have decided that the one thing I can do as an individual is to declare peace. This means that I will not base my actions on fear of a terrorist attack or an invasion or a government tending towards tyranny. I will do what I can to live peacefully and hope that others will do the same. This doesn’t require ignoring the wars, it just requires excluding the fear of war from our lives.

The more people who can follow this path, the more likely it will be to succeed. It has to start from within each individual, and it needs to happen worldwide.

There should be an international declaration of human rights to protect people from whichever form of government has control of a country. We need to establish that everyone in the world has the right to live peacefully. This declaration should include freedom from governmental violence of any kind. Killing should be considered to be a crime whether the killing is done as an act of war or an act of governmental “justice”.

Freedom of (and from) religion should be included in this declaration. Much of the violence in the world could be eliminated if religions were not allowed to impose their views on the people of any country.

I am interested in hearing from people who have ideas of what to include in this declaration, and how to go about getting enough people behind it for governments to take notice without any implied threats on our part, since this must be a strictly peaceful declaration. Obviously this has to be a worldwide effort, but with the power of the internet, it might be doable.

After clicking on one of the latest online petitions (in response to Obama’s decision to help with the budget by altering the chained CPI for social security), I began to wonder how much our elected representatives actually pay attention.
I decided that there might be something I could do to emphasize my disappointment, so I changed my voter registration to drop my affiliation with the Democratic party. I also notified Obama and my congressional representatives that I did so.
If enough people will do this, our politicians might take more notice that they should start watching out for the general public instead of their donors.
If you agree that our elected representatives need a stronger message than online petitions, please share this post.
Thank you.

Most of the religious (and political) conflict in the world today involves three religious systems, Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. There is even conflict within these three systems involving different sects, for example Protestants vs. Catholics in Ireland or Shiites vs. Sunnis in the Middle East. These religions all trace their lineage to the prophet, Abraham, and as mechanics, engineers, and Mythbuster Adam Savage are wont to say, “There’s yer problem!”

I learned the story of Abraham when I was a child, and to this day I can’t imagine how he could be regarded as anything but a villain, let alone as a pillar of a major religion. His willingness to do away with his son for any reason is abhorrent. Whether his motive was cowardice (fearing God’s retribution) or avarice (hoping to receive favorable treatment from God), it doesn’t excuse his intention to kill his son. He clearly put his self above his relationship to his son.

The troubling thing about the story is not that one man showed such weakness but that there is belief in a supernatural being that deserves such action. I think of this as the Abrahamic fantasy (or fallacy, or misconception, or illusion, or delusion, or Abrahamism). The lesson I got out of the story of Abraham is that there are people who think that anything can be justified if done in the name of this being. Who knows when a person who subscribes to this belief might think it necessary or desirable to kill a child, burn a witch, or fly an airplane into a building?

Of course many good things are done in the interest of gaining favor with God. One person who comes to mind is Mother Teresa, who cared for poor people in India as part of her mission. She could have done more to fix the problem if she had been motivated by compassion, rather than the promise of a heavenly reward. I would regard her as a true saint if she had gone against Vatican orthodoxy and helped to teach the starving Indians about birth control and family planning instead of just caring for their abandoned children.

My family and I traveled to India in 1997 as part of a tour for adoptive families to visit their adopted children’s birthplaces. While we were in Calcutta, we visited the orphanage that Mother Teresa started. This was about three months after she died. The chapel in the basement was full of nuns praying for her soul, trying to insure that she would soon be granted sainthood. It was a really peaceful scene in contrast to the nursery upstairs where some overworked nursemaids were playing loud music in an attempt to drown out the sound of the screaming babies who were in desperate need of attention. Clearly for these nuns, Mother Teresa’s sainthood was deemed more important than the needs of the children.

So in order for the human race to evolve beyond its present childish state, people have to give up on the idea of pleasing a supreme being to be rewarded or avoid punishment. We have to develop our sense of compassion and love for one another, and motivate ourselves to act out of those feelings.

Now that Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert have shown that sometimes “fake” news can be more credible than “real” news, it is time to show that a fake religion might work as well as some of the “real” religions in operation today.

The Church of Universal Soul is just such a religion. It does not claim to be a “true” faith. It is based on a hypothetical idea that, just as matter and energy can be interchangeable, energy and “spirit’ or “soul” can be interchangeable. Because of this, the entire universe can be said to be made up of spirit, either in the form of true spirit, energy (made of spirit), or matter (made up of energy). This is not a matter of belief, it is just a hypothesis that I made up, and doesn’t necessarily describe reality.

Since I have no experience to confirm this hypothesis, I feel that it is enough to act as if this were the case. If we imagine that we are all one, we will act in an appropriate manner, which is to say we will treat others as we would like to be treated. If we live this way, that experience might come to us eventually.

This hypothesis was created only to give the church a basis for existing, not because it is thought to be a true possibility. (Although there is no evidence that I know of that it is not true.) Since many fundamentalists are trying to say that secular humanism is a religion (when opposing the teaching of evolution, for example), I thought it best not to base a church on secular humanism, because they would claim that it proves their assertion. With this hypothesis, we can define our religion as secular spiritualism.

The main reason for the existence of the church is purely defensive. If we get enough members, we can work against the theocratization of our government. Since it is not a real religion, I can feel free to criticize other religions. If I claimed to be representing a true faith, I would have to give other religions the benefit of the doubt. My criticism will generally be in regards to the religions that trace themselves to the prophet Abraham, since they seem to be the source of most of the religious strife in the world today.

Just because it is fake doesn’t mean a religion is not useful. Musicians sometimes use a “fake book” to help them play along with songs that they don’t know. Instead of learning all the notes and phrases of a song, they can follow a simple chart of a tune and chord progression to improvise a part that fits in the song.

Think of this religion as a fake book for life. You can use it to find some general guidelines for living that will allow you to improvise a life in harmony with the world. This can be as easy or difficult as you choose to make it. A lot of songs can be played using only three simple chords, and there are just a few simple ideas necessary for harmonious living. These ideas are common to most religious faiths, and all of them promote feelings of love and compassion.

The “golden rule” is one of these. It is the idea that people should treat each other as they would like to be treated. If everyone lived according to this rule, there would be much less strife in the world. This is the definition of compassionate behavior.

During the last election, there was a movement of preachers, some of whom claimed to be receive instructions directly from “God”. These preachers endorsed political candidates from the pulpit to defy the IRS ban on non-profits making partisan political statements. There seem to be a number of people who desire to forget about separation of church and state, and transform the country into a theocracy.

One reason I can think that they might have for this is to get the military might of the US behind them to get rid of some of the other theocratic states in the world. Since we seem to be on the brink of a perpetual “holy war”, it seems that what the world needs now is a good prophet. Unfortunately, it will have to get by with me, since no one else seems willing to step up to the plate. So I am coming out today as a prophet. I hope what I have to say will help.

When I heard about God speaking to those other people, I started imagining what It really would have to say if It would speak out today. Here is what I made up:

A few years back, a spirit came and spoke to me. Maybe I should say “The Spirit”, or simply “Spirit”. And when I say “spoke” I am speaking metaphorically, because it exists beyond the limitations of language, and doesn’t need to speak to get its message across. But since we are still limited to the use of language for communication, I will report this as if it were a conversation.

Now I could use a name for this spirit, so everyone would know immediately who (or what) I am talking about, but that was one of the things It mentioned. It said, “Since I exist in a realm beyond the limitations of language, I don’t need a name, so I don’t have a name. But since you still require language to communicate, I don’t have problems with you giving me a nickname so you can talk about me. The problem is that you tend to get attached to the name you give me, and this causes problems dealing with those who have chosen another name for me.

“But you should be careful when choosing a nickname. For example, the name ‘God’, even though it is fairly generic (and this brings to mind the generic labeling fad of the 70’s – drinking BEER beer, eating FOOD food, worshiping GOD god) , is derived from the word for a male deity, so it gives the impression that I am a male. This might be why some religions suffer so much from a misogynistic attitude.”

Then it said “I swear to God, I’m going to smite the next one who calls me ‘God’.” (It’s exact words, which shows that It does have a sense of humor.)

So I said, “How should we refer to you, then? Should we just call you “The Creator”?

It said, “That’s not an accurate description. The only reason you think the world needs a creator is that you think that there was a time when nothing existed, and that’s not the case. Nothing doesn’t exist. It never has and it never will. There is no such thing as nothing. Nothing is impossible. It would be more accurate to refer to me as the soul or spirit of the universe.”

So I said, “Oh yeah, the Holy Spirit.”

And It said, “’Holiness’ has very little to do with it. To be whole, you have to include the profane along with the sacred. At the level of the spirit, we are all connected. Every spirit is included in the whole. Holiness has lost most of its meaning, anyway. People can talk about being ‘holier than thou’ and the ‘holy Roman empire’, or think of fighting ‘holy wars’. You can refer to me as ‘the spirit’ or maybe just ‘Spirit’” unless you can come up with a gender neutral nickname.

“But that’s not why I came to talk you. I want you to do something for me.”

And I thought “Oh no. I don’t want to build an ark. I hope It’s not an ark”

And since it knew what I was thinking, it said, “No this doesn’t involve any carpentry at all.”

Then it said, “Ever since ‘Spinal Tap’ came out I’ve been thinking that sometimes 10 really isn’t enough, so I’ve decided that what the world needs is an 11th commandment. I would like you to get the word out and spread the news to everyone in all lands, telling them of the new rule. And the 11th commandment is: ‘Thou shalt not proselytize!’”

It said, “There’s another reason that the number 11 is special. In binary notation, 11 is actually number 3, which is an important number.” For example you can make a good song with three chords. Then there is the rule of three in comedy, where things seem funnier if they come in groups of threes. It is also suggestive of the trinity.

And I said, “Oh yeah, the holy trinity.”

And It said, “There’s that word again. I’m not referring to the ‘holy trinity’, which has not just one, but two males involved. I’m speaking of the real trinity: matter, energy, and spirit. Now that the world has come to find out that matter is really made up of energy, you might be able to fathom the idea that energy is made up of spirit. Someone might even be able to come up with an equation to link the two. The best way to honor me would be to help turn energy into spirit, and one of the best ways to do that is with music.” After all, the one thing common to most religions is music and fellowship. The two things common to most religions are music and fellowship and surprise. No, surprise is one of the weapons of the Spanish inquisition. Among the things that are common to most religions are music, fellowship, and what was that other thing?

And after wishing me well, before leaving, it said, “There’s a few more things I wanted you to pass along to the human race. And those are, ‘Grow the F@#* up! Stop fighting amongst yourselves! Clean up your planet! Take care of one another! Take responsibility for your actions!’”

“Oh, and the twelfth commandment: “Enjoy.”

At first I thought that “spreading the word” would be an easy gig. All I would have to do would be to not proselytize, and people would notice and get the message. Sadly, that doesn’t seem to be the case; nobody noticed that I wasn’t proselytizing. So I figured that we need to go into the “do as I say, not as I do” territory and I started a church.

* F@# – An obscenity previously unknown to the human race. Unfortunately, it is unpronounceable, but it does rhyme with everything (except the word everything).