Everybody seems to think that Obama is in
his heart an atheist and in his heart a skeptic.
The church he belonged to in Chicago is a
whack-job church.
It's about equal to Palin's church.
Granted, he hasn't been as religious as...
do we know off the top of our heads the most
religious president in history in terms of
references... referencing to god... references
to god and in terms of appearing in churches?
Who the most religious president in history
was?
It's an interesting answer and I got this
information from NPR, so it's probably not
slanted in the way you think.
The most religious president in history in
terms of appearances in churches and mentions
of the bible was Clinton.
Bill Clinton is the most religious president
we've had.
He beats George Bush hands down and he beats
Carter, who we know was a born-again Christian.
He beats him hands down.
So Obama does that too.
I mean at the 9/11 thing, maybe appropriately
he read from the Bible.
But you have two choices with Obama.
You either believe that he is a man of Christ
who prays for decisions in the White House,
which he said he was or you think he's a liar.
And I'm surprised by the number of atheist
free thinkers that support Obama and their
argument is essentially, he's lying about
being religious 'cause you have to do that
to be elected.
I'm not happy with either one of those.
I mean, Obama is wicked smart, he's a wicked
good talker, there is no doubt in my mind
that his heart is in the right place, unfortunately
I think that about almost every president
we've had, but I think he wants to do good.
I don't think there's any malicious quality
to him at all.
But I think in some sense, he's a believer
or he's a liar.
So one to 10?
I rate him pretty high on the skepticism,
maybe a six or a seven, but I rate him that
way because somewhere in my heart I think
he might be lying about being religious and
that's horrible.
It's a horrible reason to like somebody.
I like him because he might be a liar.
Horrible.
Question: Michele Bachmann.
Penn Jillette: Michele Bachman's blasphemy
is greater than anything I've ever accomplished.
I have tried with friends to say the most
blasphemous sentence I can possibly say and
it does not come close to the blasphemy of
Michelle Bachman saying that earthquakes and
hurricanes were the way God was trying to
get the attention of politicians.
I cannot imagine a serious religious person
reading that quote or hearing that quote and
saying, "Yeah, right on."
It is solipsistic, it is opportunistic, it
is cynical.
It is deep and it is wrong and it is an insult
to religious people everywhere.
For an atheist, it's a burlesque; it's a little
bit of a joke you can dismiss her.
But I can't see it as an atheist.
I see it through my father's eyes, you know,
my father was a Christian his whole life.
And if he had heard Michelle Bachman say that,
he would have looked away from the TV.
The idea that you would lightly state that
people were suffering and dying in order to,
to prove that God was on the side of one politician
is sickening.
The only reason that Bachman and Rick Perry
are able to say this stuff is because of a
magic word.
And this magic word is, "Christian."
And if you look back in history, the word
"Christian" doesn't really appear in the way
we use it today until the anti-abortion debate
in the '60's.
When you had 1890, end of the 19th century,
you're top three highest paid speakers; the
highest paid speakers were atheists speaking
about atheism.
It was Ingersoll, Robert Ingersoll, number
one, Mark Twain, number two, Huxley, number
three.
Ingersoll was the, the great infidel, the
great skeptic, the atheist, Mark Twain of
course.
And these were people speaking on... he was
not reading from Huck Finn, he was reading
from Letters from Earth, he was reading atheist
stuff.
And Huxley, of course, Darwin's pit bull,
I guess bull dog at that time, I think he
was a pit bull.
There was a real sense of atheism being an
important point.
They were invited to the White House.
And the reason was that Catholics were terrified
of Baptists who were terrified of Pentecostals
who were terrified of Lutherans who were terrified
of Evangelicals, the whole list.
There wasn't a feeling of Christian.
The founding fathers were very afraid of Baptists
taking over from the Pentecostals.
Everybody was afraid of the Catholics.
So you had this divided thing.
If we still had that, if we still were dividing
people by sects like we should be... sects
like we should be, one of the largest groups
in this country would be atheists.
By the USA Today poll, I think it was 22 percent,
20 percent.
Even the lowest polls put it as eight.
Okay?
The next highest would be Catholics.
And they'd be knocking around 20, you know.
Then you've got all your divided up categories.
And then abortion happens, legalized abortion,
and some very smart people, very forward thinking
people decided we can never fight abortion
if it's the Catholics fighting the Protestants
who are fighting the Baptists, fighting the
Pentecostals, fight the... we have to get
them under one tent.
And there's a great book on this called The
History of Free Thought, these are not my
ideas.
This is my understanding of the ideas in that
book.
They pulled this tent together and they kind
of create the word, "Christian."
And then Carter with born-again Christian
really helps with the word, "Christian."
So what they've really done is they've taken
very different philosophies, I mean Catholicism
and Protestantism are very different philosophies,
very different.
You know, and they've pulled it together to
make this term, "Christian."
Which are people that don't agree at all and
they say I'm doing a Christian message.
So Michelle Bachman and Rick Perry just 40
years ago, really recently, would have been
terrified to speak about their God and their
church because the second they said they were
Baptist, the second they said they were Pentecostal,
the second they said they were Lutheran, all
the other people fall away.
But now they've got this magic word, "Christian."
And I am helping make it worse.
Because by using the word, "Atheist," I am
separating that even more from "Christian,"
I'm doing a broadening umbrella and I'm making
theist, atheist.
And if you do theist, atheist, the theist's
win completely.
You know, what I should be doing, if I were
a political thinker, if I were someone who
was interested in movements, which I'm not,
I'm against them.
If I wasn't for individual thinking, I would
be one of those people who was saying, using
a term like "free thinker," or "open-minded."
And I would be gathering this umbrella that
included people who self-identifies agnostic,
atheist, against organized religion.
I would get the Wiccans in there.
I would get as many people as possible and
I could probably pump that up to 25 percent.
And then I would be also saying, "Well, you
know, the Muslims are very different from
the Jews, who are very different from the
Catholics, who are very different from all
of that."
But what's gonna happen, and because I'm not
interested in tactical play, but rather than
telling the truth.
We are going to get theist to atheist.
But you can't imagine, we can't imagine in
1965, a Baptist talking...
Baptist politician talking about religion
and where they go to church if they have to
use the word, "Baptist."
It's using the word "Christian" that allows
this craziness to happen.
Also because I am an optimist, to the point
of being incorrect, to the point of not being
realistic, that's what flushes over me, that's
what I feel in my heart is optimism.
I tend to go with something Christopher Hitchens
said, and I don't remember where he said it,
it could have even been in personal conversation,
I don't know.
But Hitchens said that what we're seeing with
this incredible crazy religious stuff is the
death throws.
I mean, since 9/11, free thinking atheism
is growing so quickly because of the internet
and people who are seeing it first with those
who are called, and I realize this is a racist
term, but it's the easiest one to use, so
please forgive me, Gypsies.
We're seeing it with the Amish; we're seeing
it with the Hasidics.
All the groups that try to stay as a subset
of America and keep their own traditions are
going away.
And Elvis chipped away at them and malls chipped
away at them, but the internet is going to
take them down.
It is just too hard to keep your children
cloistered.
They're going to hear Katy Perry.
There's just no way to stop it.
They're gonna see video like this, you know.
Once you've gotten on the internet to see
Katie Perry, it's not hard to fall over to
the Big Think.
It's the same keyboard, it's the same screen.
It's the same everything.
And those... that information gets out there.
And I think that everybody knows that and
everybody feels that, so then those who are
religious, you're seeing a desperate, terrified,
clawing.
And that's the only way you can explain Michelle
Bachman and Rick Perry is the combination
of desperation coupled with the magic protective
word of "Christian."
And I think...
I think that's what we're seeing.
And whether they can pull together, you know,
the problem is a movement of individuals is
not going to have the muscle of a cohesive
movement of people who believe they're right.
And I'm not willing to lie to fight them.
I want individuals who disagree on everything.
And I want us to learn to band together for
freedom.
Band together in order to be different.
And that's a much harder thing to sell, but
it's all that matters, so we have to do it.
You know, I...
I stick up for Mormons.
I mean, Mitt Romney is wearing crazy underwear.
He's wearing magic underwear.
He is.
I mean, under his pants, he is wearing magic
underwear.
Magic underwear.
And he believes that a convicted con man got
golden tablets that no one else could see,
and sat with an angel to find out that the
original Jews of the Bible were living in
North America.
Crazy, crazy, crazy, crazy.
But... just more modern, not more crazy, than
other religions.
Not more crazy than Islam, you know, with
your... not more crazy than virgin births
and resurrections.
Not more crazy than any of that stuff.
What's really fascinating to me, fascinating,
is that... and I cover this in my book when
I say signs you may already be an atheist,
it fascinates me that you can have the Bible
Belt and you can have a court trial, and we've
seen this.
I'm going to use it hypothetically, but you'll
know the specifics I'm talking about, I just
don't want to talk about that kind of pain
too directly, it's too unpleasant for me.
But hypothetically, in the Bible Belt, where
you can have a born-again Christian Judge,
born-again Christian Judge.
I believe the Bible is the literal word of
God, there were talking snakes, there were
talking snakes and virgin births.
Burning bushes and Abraham being willing to
kill his son for God.
He believes that.
The jury is made up of 12 people who, let's
say 10 of them believe that.
And two of them believe that, but a little
less.
You're Prosecuting Attorney believes that.
The people that are sitting in the courtroom
believe that.
These are all people that know each other
in church.
And the person on the witness stand says that
she killed her three children in cold blood
because God told her to.
And every single person in the courtroom decides
whether she is guilty or not guilty by reason
of insanity.
Those are the two choices they weigh.
And nobody, not the Defense Attorney, not
the Judge, not the jury people, not the people
in the gallery, not one person stands up and
goes, maybe God told her to.
It's less weird than the talking snake.
Maybe God told her to.
And in this country, which they say over and
over again is founded on Christian values,
and I'll give them that; founded on Christian
values.
Okay, it is, fine.
This country, founded on Christian values
has guilty, not guilty, not guilty by reason
of insanity, end of list.
There is nothing that says, not guilty because
God told me to.
And why?
Why isn't that there?
Why isn't this country allowing in the court
system someone to go on the witness stand
and go, "Snake walked up to me, snaked opened
his mouth, snake said, 'go into McDonald's,
pull out an AK15, kill 10 people, walk back
out,' snake told me that.
It's that snake there, he's not talking anymore.
I throw myself on the mercy of the court.
Aren't you all good Christians?
Don't you believe in the miracles of the Bible?
You're seeing one now."
And that's the part that amazes me is that
kind of stuff.
So Mitt Romney comes along and at some level
doesn't he know what he believes is crazy?
At some level, isn't he going, "There weren't
Jews in North America."
You know, that's not where the Garden of Eden
was.
Doesn't that go through his mind?
And that's the part of that whole thing that
kills me.
If Mitt Romney really believes what he says
he believes, he is bug-nutty, bat shit crazy.
And he's not, bug-nutty, bat shit crazy.
He's the same as Obama.
If Obama believes what he was being taught
in that church in Chicago, okay, he is bat
shit crazy.
And Obama is demonstratively not bat shit
crazy.
So we have this weird deal we make with all
the politicians where we say, you can say
you believe bug nutty, bat shit crazy shit,
and we'll shrug it off because you're clearly
not bug nutty, bat shit crazy.
And all I want out of our politicians is for
them to just say, "You know, a lot of the
religious stuff I'm talking about is bug nutty,
bat shit crazy, but I'm not."
Because I don't think any of these men and
women are crazy.
And I'll even give you Michelle Bachman, I'll
even give you Rick Perry, I'll even give you
Sarah Palin.
I don't have that cynical MSNBC point of view
that they are bug nutty, bat shit crazy.
I think they are good people who somehow think
that they're morality and their love for humanity
and their love for their families are tied
up in this weird tradition.
And when they think that the Bible is the
word of God, I think they mean something else.
I sometimes think that many other people are
speaking in a code that I've not been given
the key to.
When someone says to me, I believe in the
Bible literally.
Well, I personally, Penn Jillette, read about
a chapter in the Bible a day.
I just read through it, over and over again.
So when someone says, they believe in the
word of God literally, I go back and think
about Genesis, where people were living to
be 900 years old.
And I say bullshit!
And then I think about Noah and the flood,
killing everybody?
God that loves us kills everybody?
And he wants to get two of every species and
seven of the ones that are clean onto a boat
that floats for that amount of time?
And I just go, really?
Because you don't act that way.
You're able to go to Home Depot, you're able
to pay with a credit card, you're able to
go to Starbucks, you know how to use a computer.
Really?
Do you really mean that?
What do you mean literally?
Do you really mean that you're going to stone
someone to death who because they work on
the Sabbath, are you really gonna do that?
Really, honestly?
You're gonna take a rock in your hand and
throw at the mother-fucker's head because
he worked on a Sunday to support his family?
Are you really gonna do that?
If you mix cotton and linen in your clothing
are you really going to go to hell?
What do you mean when you say that?
And no one's ever answered me.
There's a code going on that I need the Rosetta
Stone.
I need someone to sit me down and go, Penn,
when Obama says he went to that church and
they talked about all this stuff being literal,
what he really meant was... fill in the blank!
Tell me!
What does he really mean?
These people are good, honest, smart, not
bat shit crazy people, so why the fuck are
they saying bat shit crazy stuff to me?
