Not that there’s anything good about this, but hearing that both Steven Pinker and Richard Dawkins “resigned” from whatever honorary positions they had with the FFRF rather made my heart sink.

I was a linguistics student for a time, and Pinker’s books always had a sociolinguistic aspect to them, but I never saw transphobia. It was admittedly a while back, so it really wasn’t yet settling into the national consciousness.

I also admired Dawkins’ writing style; again, I saw nothing transphobic.

So for both of these guys to be like “nope, you should have totally kept a piece up that says transwomen should have fewer rights and options” is, maybe, the final insult of 2024.

  • CyberEgg@discuss.tchncs.de
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    4 days ago

    While I like Steve Shives generally, I don’t like the title. Now, I haven’t watched this video yet so I don’t know if he differentiates, but from I read in the comments it’s (mostly) about Dawkins and Pinker (whom I don’t know). Most activists who support trans communities and the LGBTQIA±movement are atheists though.

    Quite the same topic (Dawkins’ transphobia) is this video by Genetically Modified Skeptic: Why I Turned Down Working With Richard Dawkins

    (I don’t want to take anything away from Steve Shives though. I’m not saying ”Watch this video instead“, I just want to add.)

    • millie@beehaw.org
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      3 days ago

      I wouldn’t assume that most queer-supporting activists are atheists. They’re probably not latching onto bigoted religious organizations, but there’s a massive range of worldviews between adherence to any particular religion and a firm belief in a lack of deities or of other things we’d typically qualify as religious, spiritual, or supernatural. They’re probably unlikely to be your typical churchgoing conservative Christian, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they’re fully landing on atheism specifically.