Wednesday 18 March 2009

Contraception Denial: The pope and crimes against humanity

During his current visit the pope has once again told millions of African catholics that if they use condoms they will go to hell. As most are poor and ignorant they believe this fallacy and so continue to have unprotected sex. But this time the catholic church has gone even further claiming the condom use does not protect against HIV/Aids.

Denial of the Holocaust is illegal in some countries. Perhaps claiming condom use does not protect against HIV/Aids should be regarded as Contraception Denial. 

The pope is responsible for this doctrine and he can change it; that he refuses to do so should be regarded as a crime against humanity. He knows that in the developed world most catholics ignore this doctrine and so is guilty of exploiting ignorance and poverty in order to enforce his will in the only region where he knows he will be obeyed. 

In any other sphere such behaviour would be regarded as deeply immoral and yet to a large extent it goes unchallenged. Add to this its attitude towards homosexuality and one must conclude that the catholic church is bankrupt of any moral authority.

Monday 2 March 2009

Thought for the Day

The BBC policy of restricting contributors to Radio 4’s Thought for the Day to those who subscribe to a particular set of religious beliefs clearly breaches the Equality and Human Rights Act. Although the relevant legislation is set out at various government websites, it is most clearly presented at the Citizens advice site.

http://www.adviceguide.org.uk/index/your_rights/discrimination/discrimination_because_of_religion_or_belief.htm

To summarise (quoted verbatim from adviceguide)

1 What does religion or belief mean

You are protected by law from discrimination because of your religion or belief if you:

# Belong to an organised religion such as Christianity, Judaism or Islam
# Have a profound belief which affects your way of life or view of the world, such as humanism
# Take part in collective worship
# Belong to a smaller religion or sect, such as Scientology or Rastafarianism
# Have no religion, for example, if you are an atheist.


2 Religious discrimination by organisations providing goods or services

It's against the law for anyone providing goods or services directly to the public to discriminate because of religion or belief. The law applies to businesses, charities and public bodies such as government agencies, local authorities, education and health facilities.

Discrimination includes:

# Refusing to provide goods or services
# Discriminating in the way goods or services are provided.

The BBC is a public body and is clearly discriminating in the way goods or services are provided. The Act defines Humanism and Atheism as systems of belief. The BBC seeks to justify the status quo by saying that TftD is produced by the BBC Religious Affairs department. It is thereby promoting religious belief at the expense of any other system of belief like humanism. This is not an adequate defence any more than denying women access to hitherto men only club would have been.
The BBC should think again and reverse this indefensible policy or they will find themselves having to defend it before the Equality and Human Rights Commission.