Secular Blogging / Ingersoll Oratory Contest First Place Video

I’ve been invited to blog over at Secular Perspectives, a regional blog for “secular humanists, atheists, agnostics, freethinkers, brights and others”. I’m a couple of those, and I’ve submitted my first post the other day. I haven’t decided what kind of stuff I’ll be writing, but keep yer good eye open.

The video for my winning Robert G. Ingersoll speech was uploaded to YouTube this morning. I’m going to start a video page at the top to collect that kind of stuff in one place. Damn my hair looked good that day.

Suzanne Perry wrote the following in November. I think it was supposed to be for print, but I’m not sure. It’s available at the Contest Website.

PRIZES AWARDED IN SECOND ANNUAL ROBERT G. INGERSOLL ORATORY CONTEST
Washington, DC, November 2010 – Kevin Slaughter, of Essex, Md., won first prize in the second annual Robert G. Ingersoll Oratory Contest for his rendition of an Ingersoll lecture about blasphemy, “How the Gods Grow.”
Slaughter, competing for the second time, took top honors at the October event in Washington, D.C.’,s Dupont Circle, which was designed to bring to life the words of the 19th-century orator known as the “Great Agnostic.”
A graphic designer, publisher and sign maker who has emceed burlesque shows and hosts a podcast, Slaughter says he has been an atheist since high school and started reading Ingersoll seriously after hearing about last year’s oratory contest. “In the Venn diagram of things I’m interested in, Ingersoll finds himself at the intersection of my fascination with forgotten/intentionally neglected icons of the early 20th century, lost art forms and entertainments, godlessness and anti-theism,” he says.
Slaughter won $150; a rare original period poster including a color gravure photo of Ingersoll with his grandchildren, a quote from “Love,” and a facsimile signature; and the biography Robert G. Ingersoll: A Life, by Frank Smith.
The contest was sponsored by the Washington Area Secular Humanists (WASH), the Center for Inquiry DC, the American Humanist Association, and the Robert Green Ingersoll Birthplace Museum as a way to revive interest in Ingersoll–a Civil War veteran, successful lawyer and political speaker who has been neglected by history.
The seven contestants entertained the audience with Ingersoll’s critiques of religion, defense of reason and liberty, and homages to Charles Darwin and Walt Whitman. The contest, held outdoors to draw attention of the public, attracted numerous passersby who stopped to watch, take fliers about the event, or sign up for e-mail notices.
The other winners were:
Second place: Donald Ardell, of St. Petersburg, Fla., a writer, speaker, and blogger on REAL (reason, exuberance, athleticism, and liberty) wellness. Speaking from memory, he presented selections from three Ingersoll works: “A Reply to the Rev. Henry M. Field, D.D.,” “About the Holy Bible,” and a speech at the Lotus Club’s 20th anniversary dinner. He won $100, a mounted photo of Ingersoll and his two granddaughters, and the Smith biography of Ingersoll.
Third Place: Tony Toledo , of Beverly, Mass., a professional storyteller. He presented selections from four Ingersoll works: “Reply to Rev. Drs. Thomas and Lorimer,” “The Ghosts,” “The Gods,” and “What is Religion?” He won $75 and a book, The Best of Robert Ingersoll, by Roger E. Greeley.
Fourth Place: Wendy Shore, of Ashton, Md., a triathlete and academic researcher. She read an excerpt from an Ingersoll letter, “How to Edit a Liberal Paper.” She won $50 and a book, Reason, Tolerance and Christianity: The Ingersoll Debates.

Each contestant also won one of two DVDs: about the Ingersoll museum in Dresden (see http://www.rgimuseum.org) or about D.M. Bennett, founder of Truth Seeker magazine (see http://vimeo.com/10514808 .
The prizes were awarded by a panel of three judges: Margaret Downey, founder of Freethought Society of Greater Philadelphia; Tom Flynn, Executive Director of the Council for Secular Humanism and Director of the Ingersoll Birthplace Museum; and Monifa (Mo) Hamilton of Washington, a Distinguished Toastmaster and Lieutenant Governor of the world’s 10th largest Toastmasters District.
Ms. Downey helped to open the event by performing in period costume as Ingersoll’s wife, Eva, known as “a woman without superstition”. Robert and Eva Ingersoll lived in Washington, DC, on Lafayette Square from 1878-1883 and were most surely seen in Dupont Circle.
Steve Lowe, founder of the Ingersoll Oratory Contest, thanks the coordinating committee, judges, sponsors and especially the contestants for their contributions in making one of his favorite Ingersoll sayings come true: “The hands that help are better far than the lips that pray.”
In addition to Steve, the coordinating committee included Lindsay Gemberling, Beth Kingsley, Suzanne Perry, and Jeff Randall.
The other contestants were Joseph Ben-David, of New York City; Craig Howell, of Washington, D.C.; and Steven E. Jones, of Herndon, Va.
For more information about the contest, including videos of the presentations, go to http://www.ingersollcontest.wordpress.com. Write to Ingersoll@wash.com with questions or comments.
–Suzanne Perry

Book Nerd :: New and Used Books, Dark Ages, Camel City and Coop [VIDEO UPDATE]

I booked a flight and secured a seat at the 2011 AmRen Conference, and set aside a few days to spend with the folks in the town of my birth. As you can see from the prior blog post, the conference didn’t work out so well, but there was a last minute “shadow conference” set up, called the “American Dark Age Meetup“. I’ll be doing a podcast in regards to all that, so I can skimp here.

There are probably folks there who would disagree with me on many things, and I them. There is a lot I would agree with. Most likely it would all be done in a polite manner, unlike those who sought to shut it down, who now gloat that attendees don’t deserve the right to free speech.

As this is a Book Nerd post, it’s an update to new books that I’ve added to the library, and I’ve stacked them up according to day I acquired them.

Friday, 2/4 in Winston-Salem:

(Goodwill)
Drunkard’s Walk, How Randomness Rules Our Lives by Leonard Mlowdinow (not pictured, oops)

(Piedmont Books on Reynolda Rd.)
Sin in the Second City: Madams, Ministers, Playboys, and the Battle for America’s Soul by Karen  Abbott (hadn’t heard of it, but hell, it sounds good)
The End of Faith by Sam Harris (I couldn’t remember if I had this or not. Because I’m rearranging books right now, I still don’t.)
Infidel by Ayaan Hirsi Ali

Saturday, 2/5 in Charlotte:

Since the American Dark Age Meetup was sponsored by Lighthouse Literature, I wanted to give them money for their effort. I picked up about $75 worth of dead tree, and surprisingly all fiction titles. All the non-fiction I either had or was not interested in. I can’t comment on the actual writing, as I haven’t read any of them, but I will say that I’m REALLY impressed with “Mister”. On my initial browsing of the book, it appears that the type is set well, the jacket is designed well, and it’s a thick, well bound hardback with a built-in bookmarker (see photo). All links are directly to Lighthouse Literature, as if you’re interested in picking one of these up, I’d want you to support them.

White Apocalypse by Kyle Bristow
Hitler: The Adjournment by Troy Southgate
Mister by Alex Kurtagic

Sunday back in Winston-Salem:

( Edwin McKay books off Stratford Rd. )
Diversity: The Invention of a Concept by Peter Wood
Forgotten Fatherland by Ben Macintyre  (I see that the paperback got a new cover with TWO swastikas and a subtitle change)
The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins (I’ve listened to the audiobook, but this copy was cheap enough)
The Age of American Unreason by Susan Jacoby (I’ve heard good things about this)
1001 MAD Pages You Must Read Before You Die by Mad Magazine (I picked this up to replace the 14 paperbacks that live in the bathroom)

Monday:

nothing! I mainly hit thrift and antique stores, but came up with nada.

Tuesday home in Baltimore:

(I arrived home to a package from a freind, it included the following…)
Oh! Dr. Kinsey! a Photographic Response to the Kinsey Report (this is GREAT, and a nice mate to The Frenchman: A Photographic Interview with Fernandel)
Beyond the River of the Dead by D.G. Fabre
The Big Fat One by Coop, limited edition, signed (I had the paperback, it’s an amazing book, but this hardback limited edition is REALLY nice)

UPDATE:

I recently got a new camera. That means I’ve got to figure out how to USE a real camera, both still and video. That means I’ve got to try and fail and do shit that doesn’t work to find out why, etc. Here’s the result of my first real test of the video, and it’s boring as hell (but the purpose isn’t to entertain anyway).

Interviews from the HL Mencken Club 2010 conference…

Craig Bodeker filmed a series of interviews at this year’s HL Mencken Club event, I’ve embedded a few of them:

John Derbyshire famously claimed “we are doomed,” but as he reveals, his rejection of utopia, wishful thinking, and pretty lies doesn’t entail gloom but a sober, empirically grounded conservatism.

Is race a social construct? Are golden retrievers a social construct? Can one accept heritable genetic differences within sub-species for dogs and deny them for men? Professor Henry Harpending explains.

Steve Sailer discusses the science of Human Bio-Diversity (HBD) and the challenge of writing about racial differences in an atmosphere of political correctness.

Socialism, as the Bolsheviks understood it, might be dead, but that doesn’t mean that governments has given up their desire to control citizens’ lives. VDARE.com’s Peter Brimelow explores the ways in which the modern state seeks to re-engineer the public through “diversity” regulations and mass immigration.

Le Danse Apache

Wikipedia:

Apache is a highly dramatic dance associated in popular culture with Parisian street culture in the beginning of the 20th century. The name of the dance (pronounced ah-PAHSH, not uh-PATCH-ee, like the English pronunciation of the Native American tribe) is taken from a Parisian street gang, which in turn was named for the American Indian tribe due to the perceived savagery of the hoodlums. The term came to be used more generally to refer to certain vicious elements of the Paris underworld at the beginning of the 20th century.

The dance is sometimes said to reenact a violent “discussion” between a pimp and a prostitute. It includes mock slaps and punches, the man picking up and throwing the woman to the ground, or lifting and carrying her while she struggles or feigns unconsciousness. Thus, the dance shares many features with the theatrical discipline of stage combat and also with professional wrestling. In some examples, the woman may fight back.

Demonstration:

Center for Inquiry’s Campaign for Free Expression Video Contest

Center for Inquiry’s Campaign for Free Expression Video Contest has begun! The right to freely express oneself is vital in a modern society; we would like you to tell the world why.

Participation is easy: create a short video public service announcement about the importance of free expression, upload the video to YouTube, and tag the video with “Campaign for Free Expression Video Contest”. On International Blasphemy Rights Day, September 30th, 2010, we will announce the top three winners, with a grand prize of $2000! See the full instructions and rules before creating your entry.

Center for Inquiry: http://www.centerforinquiry.net/
Campaign for Free Expression: http://www.centerforinquiry.net/campa…
Contest rules: http://www.centerforinquiry.net/campa…

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About the Campaign for Free Expression:
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Some governments and institutions—and even some individuals—want to keep certain topics off limits. This is especially true with religion. In many places, discussions and questions about religion are discouraged, even punished. But how can we come to our own conclusions about religion if we can’t freely examine and discuss it?

The Campaign for Free Expression is a CFI initiative to focus efforts and attention on one of the most crucial components of freethought: the right of individuals to express their viewpoints, opinions, and beliefs about all subjects—especially religion.

Various United Nations bodies, including the UN’s Human Rights Council, have recently adopted resolutions condemning so-called “defamation” of religion. These resolutions lend credibility to efforts to suppress dissent and criticism, especially in Islamic countries, but Western European countries are also debating, or have already instated, laws that would criminalize religiously offensive statements. For example, Ireland recently enacted a new blasphemy law that prohibits publication of material “insulting in relation to matters held sacred by any religion.”

CFI believes we must increase public awareness of these threats to freedom of expression, discuss and develop plans to prevent curtailment of free expression, and demonstrate that people care about their rights to free expression and are eager to exercise them.