Undergod: Difference between revisions

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(New page: thumb|leftcategory:sloganscategory:religion I've been noodling around with the idea of making this into a mug or a sticker or somethi...)
 
(update -- link to Zazzle mug)
 
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[[Image:I Am Not Under God take 2 - crop.jpg|thumb|left]][[category:slogans]][[category:religion]]
[[Image:I Am Not Under God take 2 - crop.jpg|thumb|left]][[category:slogans]][[category:religion]]
I've been noodling around with the idea of making this into a mug or a sticker or something on Cafepress or some similar site, but then I discovered Facebook "Flair" and thought I'd try it out in that venue first.
I've been noodling around with the idea of making this into a mug or a sticker or something on Cafepress or some similar site ('''Update''': did a [http://www.zazzle.com/i_am_not_under_god_mug-168790511383801131 mug on Zazzle]), but then I discovered Facebook "Flair" and thought I'd try it out in that venue first.


It can be taken either as a statement of atheism (which is how I mean it) or as a rejection of the idea of being ''subservient'' to God. (If I were a theist, I'm pretty sure that I would insist on being in a ''partnership'' with God rather than a servant.)
It can be taken either as a statement of atheism (which is how I mean it) or, if you are a theist, as a rejection of the idea of being ''subservient'' to [[issue:God|God]]. (If I were a theist, I'm pretty sure that I would insist on being in a ''partnership'' with God rather than a servant.)
 
It's also (perhaps primarily) a rejection of the phrase "under God" which was added to the [[issue:US Pledge of Allegiance|US Pledge of Allegiance]] in the mid-1900s, and which is now being used by theistic hypocrites as "evidence" of [[issue:US is a Christian nation|America's innate Christianity]].

Latest revision as of 21:19, 30 March 2009

I Am Not Under God take 2 - crop.jpg

I've been noodling around with the idea of making this into a mug or a sticker or something on Cafepress or some similar site (Update: did a mug on Zazzle), but then I discovered Facebook "Flair" and thought I'd try it out in that venue first.

It can be taken either as a statement of atheism (which is how I mean it) or, if you are a theist, as a rejection of the idea of being subservient to God. (If I were a theist, I'm pretty sure that I would insist on being in a partnership with God rather than a servant.)

It's also (perhaps primarily) a rejection of the phrase "under God" which was added to the US Pledge of Allegiance in the mid-1900s, and which is now being used by theistic hypocrites as "evidence" of America's innate Christianity.