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Russ Kick (ed.) - Everything You Know About God Is Wrong: The Disinformation Guide to Religion

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Russ Kick (ed.) Everything You Know About God Is Wrong: The Disinformation Guide to Religion
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In the new mega-anthology from best-selling editor Russ Kick, more than fifty writers, reporters, and researchers invade the inner sanctum for an unrestrained look at the wild and wooly world of organized belief.

Richard Dawkins shows us the strange, scary properties of religion; Neil Gaiman turns a biblical atrocity story into a comic (that almost sent a publisher to prison); Erik Davis looks at what happens when religion and California collide; Mike Dash eyes stigmatics; Douglas Rushkoff exposes the trouble with Judaism; Paul Krassner reveals his Confessions of an Atheist; and best-selling lexicographer Jonathon Green interprets the language of religious prejudice.

Among the dozens of other articles and essays, youll find: a sweeping look at classical composers and Great American Songbook writers who were unbelievers, such as Irving Berlin, creator of God Bless America; the definitive explanation of why America is not a Christian nation; the bizarre, Catholic-fundamentalist books by Mel Gibsons father; eye-popping photos of bizarre religious objects and ceremonies, including snake-handlers and pot-smoking children; the thinly veiled anti-Semitism in the Left Behind novels; an extract from the rare, suppressed book The Sex Life of Brigham Young; and rarely seen anti-religious writings from Mark Twain and H.G. Wells.

Further topics include exorcisms, religious curses, Wicca, the Church of John Coltrane, crimes by clergy, death without God, Christian sex manuals, the ex-gay movement, failed prophecies, bizarre theology, religious bowling, atheist rock and roll, how to be a good Christian, an entertaining look at the best (and worst) books on religion, and much more.

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This collection Copyright 2007 The Disinformation Company Ltd All of the - photo 1

This collection Copyright 2007 The Disinformation Company Ltd.

All of the articles in this book are Copyright by their respective authors and/or original publishers, except as specified herein, and we note and thank them for their kind permission.

Published by The Disinformation Company Ltd.
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New York, NY 10003
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Fax: +1.212.691.1606
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Library of Congress Control Number: 2007930618

eISBN : 978-1-934-70837-8

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Attention colleges and universities, corporations and other organizations: Quantity discounts are available on bulk purchases of this book for educational training purposes, fund-raising, or gift-giving. Special books, booklets, or book excerpts can also be created to fit your specific needs. For information contact Marketing Department of The Disinformation Company Ltd.

Disinformation is a registered trademark of The Disinformation Company Ltd.

The opinions and statements made in this book are those of the authors concerned. The Disinformation Company Ltd. has not verified and neither confirms nor denies any of the foregoing and no warranty or fitness is implied. The reader is encouraged to keep an open mind and to independently judge the contents.
Table of Contents

Russ Kick
INTRODUCTION
SO WHAT WILL YOU FIND when I assemble and Disinformation publishes one of our patented huge anthologies, with the theme being religion? The proceedings open with a trinity of articlesfrom Richard Dawkins, James A. Haught, and Douglas Rushkofflooking at the general problems inherent in religious belief. From this foundation, we jump right into several of the ways in which religion is presently grating its nails down society's chalkboardfrom posting an old list of rules for late-Bronze-Age Israelites in public places to the decades-long cover-up of priests who rape children. The Buckners, a father-son team, demonstrate that the US simply was not founded on Christianity, and Douglas Rushkoff gives first-hand accounts of institutionalized Judaism's attempts to smother itself. Nasrin Alavi sounds a note of some hope regarding a possible Islamic Reformation beginning in Iran.
Next up, four steely-eyed looks at the Bible. Ruth Hurmence Green's long article irreparably destroys the lovely image of Jesus by doing the most straightforward thing imaginable: reading the New Testament, particularly the Gospels, and relaying what they say. And if you've wondered who actually wrote the Gospels traditionally accorded to Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, Gary Greenberg's article will be, shall we say, a revelation. Bobbie Kirkhart examines the pretzels people make of themselves while trying to take the Bible literally (except when they don't want to). And what would a look at the good book be without an illustrated story from it? You know, the kind you find in dentists offices. Except that they never contain the gang rape, murder, and dismemberment of the Book of Judges chapter 19, presented by none other than Neil Gaiman and Steve Gibson.
The next section, bearing the pulpesque title I Was There!, presents spine-tingling, nail-biting accounts of a jihad-oriented Muslim students conference, a blood-thirsty Christian church, a new religious movement's weekend retreat, and a Macumba ceremony, complete with animal sacrifice. Two photo essays present startling images of religious relics, places, and rituals.
After that, Dianna Narciso, Greta Christina, and Paul Krassner discuss their nonbelief in a supreme being, which segues nicely into the following section, which looks at a few things that people have done in the name of God and prophecy, from cursing enemies to enslaving attractive women.
Because Im constitutionally incapable of editing an anthology that doesn't deal to some degree with sex, prepare yourself for four articles on The Most Popular Sin. The first two give us Eastern approaches, with a literal look at the explicit statues on Hindu temples and a sampling of the erotic verses crafted by one of the Dalai Lamas. In the second set, Christianity gets exposed when Jack Murnighan unearths a surprising medieval poem and Kristan Lawson finds something very peculiar on Christianity's most sacred altar.
From there, we turn to music and books. In the anthology's longest article, Dan Barker provides an epic look at the nonbelievers who gave us much of the world's greatest music through classical compositions and the Great American Songbook. You'll find some very familiar names. Then David V. Barrett and Michael Standaert read between the lines of two of the all-time most successful religious publishing phenomena: The Da Vinci Code and the Left Behind series.
Our history lessons open with Bill Brent's breezy look at the surprising nexus of religion and bowling, then becomes deadly serious when Michael Parenti strips away the romance and sugar-coating from Tibet's theocratic history. Robert Damon Schneck entertains us with the true tale of a nineteenth-century man who took it upon himself to build a messiah, and Erik Davis brings us up to recent times by examining California's role as religious Petri dish.
We conclude with an unthemed collection of odds and ends, including H.G. Wells surprising conversation with Jesus, an examination of the underappreciated roles of feces and urine in religious worship, Bejamin Radford's drubbing of exorcisms, and a collection of religion-related notes found by everyday folks. At the very end, I offer up mini-essays on a number of topicsfrom the long-running theological debate about exactly how the Virgin Mary got pregnant to the movie that triggered a major, though largely forgotten terrorist incident in the USand book reviews covering, among other things, Jesus penis in Renaissance art, Mark Twain's takedown of Christianity, the Islamic slave trade, the myth of Confucius, and the real creator of the word scientology.
The beliefs (or lack thereof) of any contributor cannot be assumed simply because he or she appears in this anthology. If a contributor reveals his or her beliefs in the course of an article, that's obviously a different matter, but simply appearing here is not an indication of affiliation.

Similarly, bear in mind that no contributor necessarily agrees with the other contributors. In fact, Im sure some would get into arguments if invited to the same dinner party. So, inclusion is not an indication of collusion.
IN THE BEGINNING
Richard Dawkins
GERIN OIL
GERIN OIL (or Geriniol, to give it its scientific name) is a powerful drug which acts directly on the central nervous system to produce a range of symptoms, often of an anti-social or self-damaging nature. It can permanently modify the child brain to produce adult disorders, including dangerous delusions which are hard to treat. The four doomed flights of September 11, 2001, were Gerin Oil trips: All nineteen of the hijackers were high on the drug at the time. Historically, Geriniolism was responsible for atrocities such as the Salem witch hunts and the massacres of Native South Americans by conquistadores. Gerin Oil fueled most of the wars of the European Middle Ages and, in more recent times, the carnage that attended the partitioning of the Indian subcontinent and of Ireland.
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