Agora que chegámos ao mês de eu, desejo a todos os leitores do Portal um bom ano. Comecemos então com um assunto importante que já foi abordado aqui.
Apesar de todo o escândalo que anda na ordem do dia nesta ilha do Atlântico Norte, entrou há poucas horas em vigor a nova lei da blasfémia na Irlanda. E os nossos colegas irlandeses já se encarregaram de ser os primeiros a prevaricar, convidando o resto da malta a transcrever o que publicaram.
E é precisamente isso que faço aqui (apenas em inglês), com muito prazer!
«1. Jesus Christ, when asked if he was the son of God, in Matthew 26:64: “Thou hast said: nevertheless I say unto you, Hereafter shall ye see the Son of man sitting on the right hand of power, and coming in the clouds of heaven.” According to the Christian Bible, the Jewish chief priests and elders and council deemed this statement by Jesus to be blasphemous, and they sentenced Jesus to death for saying it.

2. Jesus Christ, talking to Jews about their God, in John 8:44: “Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him.”This is one of several chapters in the Christian Bible that can give a scriptural foundation to Christian anti-Semitism. The first part of John 8, the story of “whoever is without sin cast the first stone”, was not in the original version, but was added centuries later. The original John 8 is a debate between Jesus and some Jews. In brief, Jesus calls the Jews who disbelieve him sons of the Devil, the Jews try to stone him, and Jesus runs away and hides.
3. Muhammad, quoted in Hadith of Bukhari, Vol 1 Book 8 Hadith 427: “May Allah curse the Jews and Christians for they built the places of worship at the graves of their prophets.” This quote is attributed to Muhammad on his death-bed as a warning to Muslims not to copy this practice of the Jews and Christians. It is one of several passages in the Koran and in Hadith that can give a scriptural foundation to Islamic anti-Semitism, including the assertion in Sura 5:60 that Allah cursed Jews and turned some of them into apes and swine.
4. Mark Twain, describing the Christian Bible in Letters from the Earth, 1909: “Also it has another name – The Word of God. For the Christian thinks every word of it was dictated by God. It is full of interest. It has noble poetry in it; and some clever fables; and some blood-drenched history; and some good morals; and a wealth of obscenity; and upwards of a thousand lies… But you notice that when the Lord God of Heaven and Earth, adored Father of Man, goes to war, there is no limit. He is totally without mercy – he, who is called the Fountain of Mercy. He slays, slays, slays! All the men, all the beasts, all the boys, all the babies; also all the women and all the girls, except those that have not been deflowered. He makes no distinction between innocent and guilty… What the insane Father required was blood and misery; he was indifferent as to who furnished it.” Twain’s book was published posthumously in 1939. His daughter, Clara Clemens, at first objected to it being published, but later changed her mind in 1960 when she believed that public opinion had grown more tolerant of the expression of such ideas. That was half a century before Fianna Fail and the Green Party imposed a new blasphemy law on the people of Ireland.
5. Tom Lehrer, The Vatican Rag, 1963: “Get in line in that processional, step into that small confessional. There, the guy who’s got religion’ll tell you if your sin’s original. If it is, try playing it safer, drink the wine and chew the wafer. Two, four, six, eight, time to transubstantiate!”
6. Randy Newman, God’s Song, 1972: “And the Lord said: I burn down your cities – how blind you must be. I take from you your children, and you say how blessed are we. You all must be crazy to put your faith in me. That’s why I love mankind.”
7. James Kirkup, The Love That Dares to Speak its Name, 1976: “While they prepared the tomb I kept guard over him. His mother and the Magdalen had gone to fetch clean linen to shroud his nakedness. I was alone with him… I laid my lips around the tip of that great cock, the instrument of our salvation, our eternal joy. The shaft, still throbbed, anointed with death’s final ejaculation.” This extract is from a poem that led to the last successful blasphemy prosecution in Britain, when Denis Lemon was given a suspended prison sentence after he published it in the now-defunct magazine Gay News. In 2002, a public reading of the poem, on the steps of St. Martin-in-the-Fields church in Trafalgar Square, failed to lead to any prosecution. In 2008, the British Parliament abolished the common law offences of blasphemy and blasphemous libel.

8. Matthias, son of Deuteronomy of Gath, in Monty Python’s Life of Brian, 1979: “Look, I had a lovely supper, and all Isaid to my wife was that piece of halibut was good enough for Jehovah.”
9. Rev Ian Paisley MEP to the Pope in the European Parliament, 1988: “I denounce you as the Antichrist.” Paisley’s website describes the Antichrist as being “a liar, the true son of the father of lies, the original liar from the beginning… he will imitate Christ, a diabolical imitation, Satan transformed into an angel of light, which will deceive the world.”
10. Conor Cruise O’Brien, 1989: “In the last century the Arab thinker Jamal al-Afghani wrote: ‘Every Muslim is sick and his only remedy is in the Koran.’ Unfortunately the sickness gets worse the more the remedy is taken.”
11. Frank Zappa, 1989: “If you want to get together in any exclusive situation and have people love you, fine – but to hang all this desperate sociology on the idea of The Cloud-Guy who has The Big Book, who knows if you’ve been bad or good – and cares about any of it – to hang it all on that, folks, is the chimpanzee part of the brain working.”
12. Salman Rushdie, 1990: “The idea of the sacred is quite simply one of the most conservative notions in any culture, because it seeks to turn other ideas – uncertainty, progress, change – into crimes.” In 1989, Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran issued a fatwa ordering Muslims to kill Rushdie because of blasphemous passages in Rushdie’s novel The Satanic Verses.
13. Bjork, 1995: “I do not believe in religion, but if I had to choose one it would be Buddhism. It seems more livable, closer to men… I’ve been reading about reincarnation, and the Buddhists say we come back as animals and they refer to them as lesser beings. Well, animals aren’t lesser beings, they’re just like us. So I say fuck the Buddhists.”
14. Amanda Donohoe on her role in the Ken Russell movie Lair of the White Worm, 1995: “Spitting on Christ was a great deal of fun. I can’t embrace a male god who has persecuted female sexuality throughout the ages, and that persecution still goes on today all over the world.”

15. George Carlin, 1999: “Religion easily has the greatest bullshit story ever told. Think about it. Religion has actually convinced people that there’s an invisible man living in the sky who watches everything you do, every minute of every day. And the invisible man has a special list of ten things he does not want you to do. And if you do any of these ten things, he has a special place, full of fire and smoke and burning and torture and anguish, where he will send you to live and suffer and burn and choke and scream and cry forever and ever ’til the end of time! But He loves you. He loves you, and He needs money! He always needs money! He’s all-powerful, all-perfect, all-knowing, and all-wise, somehow just can’t handle money! Religion takes in billions of dollars, they pay no taxes, and they always need a little more. Now, talk about a good bullshit story. Holy Shit!”
16. Paul Woodfull as Ding Dong Denny O’Reilly, The Ballad of Jaysus Christ, 2000: “He said me ma’s a virgin and sure no one disagreed, Cause they knew a lad who walks on water’s handy with his feet… Jaysus oh Jaysus, as cool as bleedin’ ice, With all the scrubbers in Israel he could not be enticed, Jaysus oh Jaysus, it’s funny you never rode, Cause it’s you I do be shoutin’ for each time I shoot me load.”
17. Jesus Christ, in Jerry Springer The Opera, 2003: “Actually, I’m a bit gay.” In 2005, the Christian Institute tried to bring a prosecution against the BBC for screening Jerry Springer the Opera, but the UK courts refused to issue a summons.
18. Tim Minchin, Ten-foot Cock and a Few Hundred Virgins, 2005: “So you’re gonna live in paradise, With a ten-foot cock and a few hundred virgins, So you’re gonna sacrifice your life, For a shot at the greener grass, And when the Lord comes down with his shiny rod of judgment, He’s gonna kick my heathen ass.”
19. Richard Dawkins in The God Delusion, 2006: “The God of the Old Testament is arguably the most unpleasant character in all fiction: jealous and proud of it; a petty, unjust, unforgiving control-freak; a vindictive, bloodthirsty ethnic cleanser; a misogynistic, homophobic, racist, infanticidal, genocidal, filicidal, pestilential, megalomaniacal, sadomasochistic, capriciously malevolent bully.” In 2007 Turkish publisher Erol Karaaslan was charged with the crime of insulting believers for publishing a Turkish translation of The God Delusion. He was acquitted in 2008, but another charge was brought in 2009. Karaaslan told the court that “it is a right to criticise religions and beliefs as part of the freedom of thought and expression.”

20. Pope Benedict XVI quoting a 14th century Byzantine emperor, 2006: “Show me just what Muhammad brought that was new and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached.” This statement has already led to both outrage and condemnation of the outrage. The Organisation of the Islamic Conference, the world’s largest Muslim body, said it was a “character assassination of the prophet Muhammad”. The Malaysian Prime Minister said that “the Pope must not take lightly the spread of outrage that has been created.” Pakistan’s foreign Ministry spokesperson said that “anyone who describes Islam as a religion as intolerant encourages violence”. The European Commission said that “reactions which are disproportionate and which are tantamount to rejecting freedom of speech are unacceptable.”
21. Christopher Hitchens in God is not Great, 2007: “There is some question as to whether Islam is a separate religion at all… Islam when examined is not much more than a rather obvious and ill-arranged set of plagiarisms, helping itself from earlier books and traditions as occasion appeared to require… It makes immense claims for itself, invokes prostrate submission or ‘surrender’ as a maxim to its adherents, and demands deference and respect from nonbelievers into the bargain. There is nothing-absolutely nothing-in its teachings that can even begin to justify such arrogance and presumption.”
22. PZ Myers, on the Roman Catholic communion host, 2008: “You would not believe how many people are writing to me, insisting that these horrible little crackers (they look like flattened bits of styrofoam) are literally pieces of their god, and that this omnipotent being who created the universe can actually be seriously harmed by some third-rate liberal intellectual at a third-rate university… However, inspired by an old woodcut of Jews stabbing the host, I thought of a simple, quick thing to do: I pierced it with a rusty nail (I hope Jesus’s tetanus shots are up to date). And then I simply threw it in the trash, followed by the classic, decorative items of trash cans everywhere, old coffeegrounds and a banana peel.”
23. Ian O’Doherty, 2009: “(If defamation of religion was illegal) it would be a crime for me to say that the notion of transubstantiation is so ridiculous that even a small child should be able to see the insanity and utter physical impossibility of a piece of bread and some wine somehow taking on corporeal form. It would be a crime for me to say that Islam is a backward desert superstition that has no place in modern, enlightened Europe and it would be a crime to point out that Jewish settlers in Israel who believe they have a God given right to take the land are, frankly, mad. All the above assertions will, no doubt, offend someone or other.”

24. Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor, 2009: “Whether a person is atheist or any other, there is in fact in my view something not totally human if they leave out the transcendent… we call it God… I think that if you leave that out you are not fully human.” Because atheism is not a religion, the Irish blasphemy law does not protect atheists from abusive and insulting statements about their fundamental beliefs. While atheists are not seeking such protection, we include the statement here to point out that it is discriminatory that this law does not hold all citizens equal.
25. Dermot Ahern, Irish Minister for Justice, introducing his blasphemy law at an Oireachtas Justice Committee meeting, 2009, and referring to comments made about him personally: “They are blasphemous.” Deputy Pat Rabbitte replied: “Given the Minister’s self-image, it could very well be that we are blaspheming,” and Minister Ahern replied: “Deputy Rabbitte says that I am close to the baby Jesus, I am so pure.” So here we have an Irish Justice Minister joking about himself being blasphemed, at a parliamentary Justice Committee discussing his own blasphemy law, that could make his own jokes illegal.»
(e eu acrescento uma)
26. O espírito santo tem a forma de alheira de Mirandela. E peço desculpa se ofendi as alheiras de Mirandela.
Outros artigos relacionados:
Com todo o respeito, este não pode ser o primeiro post da década uma vez que ela começou em 2001 e so terminará no final de 2010. Em História não há ano zero!!!!!
Cumprimentos
Rui, foste apanhado! Ninathecat tem toda a razão.
Mas o que é que tem o ano zero a ver com a contagem dos anos em décadas? Isso é válido apenas para os séculos e milénios. A década começou em 2000 e terminou em 2009.
Portanto, Rui,parabéns pelo primeiro post da década!
“Mas o que é que tem o ano zero a ver com a contagem dos anos em décadas? Isso é válido apenas para os séculos e milénios.”
Tem tudo a haver, porque milénios e séculos são múltiplos das décadas…. Agora claro que uma pessoa pode começar a contagem dum milénio/século/década quando lhe apetecer….
Compreendo perfeitamente a raciocínio da Leo; quando nos referimos por exemplo à década de oitenta, pensamos imediatamente nos anos 80 a 89.
Mas tecnicamente (ou matematicamente) a década começa em 81 e termina em 90 (1 a 10).
Portanto, interprete-se como se quiser. E não nos desviemos daquilo que é o principal do artigo:
A nova lei da blasfémia na Irlanda. Enquanto produtores de noticias chocantes, ninguém os bate.
Essa é uma presunção popular, da mesma forma que muita gente celebrou o virar do milénio entre 1999 e 2000, quando, na realidade isso só aconteceu um ano depois…
Popularmente, quando nos referimos aos anos 60, por exemplo, aí sim, referimo-nos aos anos compreendidos entre 1960 e 1969. Esses são os anos 60, de facto. Referirmo-nos ao mesmo período de tempo como a década de 60, embora popularmente aceite como nos estarmos a referir ao mesmo período, está incorrecto.
Caso contrário, isso implicaria que a primeira década apenas teria tido 9 anos: ano 1 ao ano 9! De qualquer forma – já agora, para lançar mais a confusão – o termo mais correcto é decénio.
Portanto, Rui, parabéns pelo primeiro post dos anos 10!
Estamos muito sintonizados, Hélder…
“Referirmo-nos ao mesmo período de tempo como a década de 60, embora popularmente aceite como nos estarmos a referir ao mesmo período, está incorrecto.”
Podes-te perfeitamente referir aos anos 60 como a década de 60 porque foram realmente 10 anos.
Não podes é dizer em 1960 que estás na década nº 197…
O problema que se nota mais com milénios e séculos, é que tu estás a contá-los em absoluto relativamente ao ano 1. Estás a dizer quantos séculos e milénios já existiram. Século 21, 3º milénio etc… Aí sim é preciso rigor.
(tenho de deixar de escrever coisas depois de chegar a casa com os copos)
Novo título- Creio que assim já está melhor.
LOL… Não havia nexexidade!
O importante não é o título, é o resto. De facto, esta lei na Irlanda é um retrocesso civilizacional, muito ao agrado dos defensores das verdades inquestionáveis.
Há muita cerveja quente naquele parlamento, por certo…
Só Deus sabe em que ano estamos! O resto são tretas.
Um crente perguntou a deus:
“Meu Deus quanto é para ti um segundo?”
Deus: “Um segundo do mundo, para mim, é um milhão de anos”;
Crente: ” E quanto é um cêntimo, Deus?”
Deus: “Meu filho um cêntimo é para mim um milhão de euros”;
Crente: ” Meu Deus dá-me um benção nem que seja, apenas, de um cêntimo;
Deus: ” Está bem meu filho, vou dar-te essa benção; espera apenas um segundo.”
Grande confusão anda por aqui. Se nem os matemáticos nisto se entendem, começo e fim numeral, como é que o pessoal se há-de entender. Por mim fica ao critério de cada um. Um feliz ano novo para todos. A luta continua.
Rui, quando te der na telha, traduz isso para alentejano. Obrigado.
Infelizmente não tenho muito tempo para isso, mas há ferramentas que podem desenrascar a coisa…
http://translate.google.com/#
Segundo Josef Goebbels, arauto do regime Nazi, a táctica do Nacional-Socialismo assentava nos mesmos príncipios da igreja: Repetir, repetir, repetir. Uma mentira repetida passa a ter laivos de verdade’ E repare-se que ao lado de cada ditador, esté sempre representado o clero. Como dizía Jardel: Porque será?
(Peço que se desconsidere esta nova postagem de um mesmo texto, caso a primeira tenha sido vetada ao invés de ter tido problema de envio ou recepção)
PÉROLAS ATEÍSTAS PARA BRINDAR O INÍCIO DO DECÊNIO
(Nota: Suplico que se focalize apenas o teor ateísta e/ou anticlerical dos poemas, os quais apresento completos para não descontextualizar o referido teor.)
Velho Ateu (Brasil)
(Interpretação: Beth Carvalho)
(Composição: Eduardo Gudin e Roberto Riberti)
Um velho ateu
Um bêbado cantor, poeta
Na madrugada
Cantava essa canção, seresta
Se eu fosse Deus
A vida bem que melhorava
Se eu fosse Deus
Faria aos que não tem nada
E toda janela fechava
Pr’os versos que aquele poeta cantava
Talvez por medo das palavras
De um velho de mãos desarmadas
Ver em:
http://letras.terra.com.br/beth-carvalho/175044/
Preguntitas Sobre Dios (Argentina)
(Atahualpa Yupanqui)
Un día yo pregunté:
¿Abuelo, dónde esta Dios?
Mi abuelo se puso triste,
y nada me respondió.
Mi abuelo murió en los campos,
sin rezo ni confesión.
Y lo enterraron los indios
flauta de caña y tambor.
Al tiempo yo pregunté:
¿Padre, qué sabes de Dios?
Mi padre se puso serio
y nada me respondió.
Mi padre murió en la mina
sin doctor ni protección.
¡Color de sangre minera
tiene el oro del patrón!
Mi hermano vive en los montes
y no conoce una flor.
Sudor, malaria y serpientes,
es la vida del leñador.
Y que naide le pregunte
si sabe dénde esta Dios:
Por su casa no ha pasado
tan importante señor.
Yo canto por los caminos,
y cuando estoy en prisión,
oigo las voces del pueblo
que canta mejor que yo.
Si hat una cosa en la tierra
más importante que Dios
es que naide escupa sangre
pa’ que otro viva mejor.
¿Qué Dios vela por los pobres?
Tal vez sí, y tal vez no.
Lo seguro es que Él almuerza
en la mesa del patrón.
Ver em:
http://www.cancioneros.com/nc/1611/0/preguntitas-sobre-dios-atahualpa-yupanqui