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Creating Change Through Humanism Creating Change Through Humanism by Roy Speckhardt
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“Roy writes: When you no longer need to feign an identity that isn’t yours, you’ll discover confidence and the ability to say, “This is who I am,” and speak out on any issue that stirs your heart and mind. By announcing your presence, others will come out to you who you didn’t previously know shared your nontheism. You’ll finally be able to meet other nontheists and build relationships based on truth and honesty. You can love and be loved by people who know the real you. No matter what you’ve been told, that person deserves to see the light of day.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“Foundationally, fundamentalists believe that all goodness derives from their god, so the presence of anyone being good without their god is a constant reminder that something is wrong with their belief on the source of goodness.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“When considering which identity to emphasize in our humanist/freethought/nontheist communities, reflect on the fact that you can use more than one, and keep in mind the benefits of humanism. Humanism is a positive identification that speaks about what you do care about, as opposed to only what you don't. I am a non-smoker, a non-physicist, and a non-German speaker, and as much as those aspects may have meaning, they aren't what's important to know about me. In the society we happen to live in, my absence of a belief in a god is a relevant component of my identity, but it doesn't define who I am. Humanism does that better than any other description.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“Even with popular role models, some people are afraid to part with religious belief. Many Americans, even those who have become disillusioned by their religion, are uncomfortable at the thought of a life without religion. Without a traditional religious framework, where would they find meaning or joy? But there's no need to view this freedom with such trepidation. The possibilities for a meaningful and joyful life free from traditional religion are limitless. Knowing how best to solve problems, that you are free from arbitrary constraints of thought, and that you can live a life of real meaning is exhilarating.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“While achieving accomplishments through work can be beneficial and satisfying, lasting fulfillment isn't gained from feeling safe and comfortable, or from examining a win/loss record. When we look back on what we've accomplished in our work, at home, with family and friends, and through our charity and activism we find meaning in life in the ways we've changed things for the better.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“The danger of the government's public embrace of religious belief is that it inhibits academic freedom, compromises civil liberties, and tears down the wall of separation between religion and government.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“In order for tomorrow to move in an enlightened direction, humanists and nontheists of all stripes must unite coalitions on every matter facing us today.   As Frederick Douglass said: "Power concedes nothing without a demand.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“As we move into the future, one can predict where traditional spirituality will continue to lose its authority. The prejudice seen commonly among the faithful today, that goodness can only come through godliness - will be less and less accepted. As more and more of the population who are atheists and agnostics come out of the closet to their friends, family, and neighbors, it will be difficult to hold the claim that so many lack the ability to lead productive moral lives. As this claim breaks down, religion and spirituality will begin to lose its connection to goodness in general. No longer will it be a social liability to voice rationalist principles.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“Foundationally, fundamentalists believe that all goodness derives from their god, so the presence of anyone being good without their god is a constant reminder that something is wrong with their belief on the source of goodness. They fumble for other possibilities like the improbable idea that all atheists are bad or the absurd conclusion that atheists don't exist and instead, that atheists have just deluded themselves into thinking they are atheists. That's why fundamentalists react with such remarkable aversion and hate when confronted with the AHA's simple GOOD WITHOUT A GOD stickers, advertisements, and billboards. It's why they so vehemently characterize our positive personal statement as a personal attack on them.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“Hiding your identity means lying to everyone you know, forcing them to love someone fictional out of fear that they might not like the real you. However, given the chance, most family members love the person, not the lie, and everyone benefits from a more honest relationship.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“If people are to be respected, they deserve to know who we truly are.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“When we come into money or lose a job, when our land experiences floods or droughts, when our country finds peace or enters wars, there are this-worldly reasons for these events.  Appealing to a mystical force will do no good.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“When we come into money or lose a job, when our land experiences floods or droughts, when our country finds peace or enters wars, there are this-worldy reasons for these events.  Appealing to a mystical force will do no good.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“Trying hard to understand ourselves is a defining characteristic of being human, even if it doesn't result in the comfort provided by unquestioning faith in a supposed omnipotent being who knows us completely.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“Faith" itself is a word which implies trust or belief without evidence.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“Humanism is the not so radical idea that you can be good without a god. It's the discovery that you not only don't need outdated texts or god experts to make good choices, but that those are frequently poor resources for decision making. Humanists affirm our ability and responsibility to lead ethical lives of personal fulfillment that aspire to the greater good of humanity. We ground that pursuit not in theism or supernatural beliefs, but in the best of modern knowledge determined from trial and error and the scientific process.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“Do you think science matters more than dogma? Do you think this life is all we're going to get, so we need to make the most of it? Do you find that helping other humans in the here and now gives you well-being? Do you think common sense is more important than rules in ancient texts? Do you trust your experience and knowledge over those who claim a personal connection to their god? Then, whether you recognized it before or not, you're probably a humanist!”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“Is it possible to be a person of integrity while maintaining a radical bifurcation between one's outer and inner lives? And if that inner life should value, above all, rationality, free inquiry, and the right of us all to flourish to our fullest, then how can you keep silent as to the conclusions to which your rational free inquiry has brought you? How can you deny for yourself the right to flourish in the company of like-minded people who will not disapprove of you for subjecting your beliefs and actions to the standards of rational accountability? If you believe in the integrity of your conclusions then you must show them to the world, making the case for them not only by the arguments you hash out in the privacy of your own mind but by the life that you publicly lead.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“Our tax dollars are spent on religious charitable organizations that refuse to employ us and even bar us from using their services.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism
“Nonreligious Nelson Mandela expressed his humanism as ubuntu. A Nguni Bantu word translated as “humanity toward others,” ubuntu incorporates aspects of sharing, community, respect, caring, trust, and unselfishness.”
Roy Speckhardt, Creating Change Through Humanism