Monday, December 8, 2014
Why I am not going to see the new Ridley Scott movie and you shouldn't either.
Look at that!
Doesn't
that look good?
Yeah I think so too. I love going to the movies
and that looks right up my alley.
I mean I love the director Ridley
Scott, I am a big Christian Bale fan, and big extravagant films like this
are why I go to the movies.
Except I am not going to see it. Ever!
Why
you may ask?
Because it is all bullshit that perpetuates a myth
that is incredibly destructive and vilifies an entire nation even though
there is absolutely NO evidence to support it.
Don't believe me? Here
you go:
It turns out that there is no archaeological
evidence of any kind relating to a separate settlement of religious people
in Egypt during that time. There is also no evidence of any kind relating to
a mass migration across the Sinai Peninsula.
If things
did indeed happen as it says in the Bible (and the Torah), there would have
to be some archaeological evidence. But there is none.
Further,
there is no evidence of any kind that Egypt even used slaves, and certainly
no evidence that they enslaved an entire nation. The workers that built the
pyramids are known to be well payed Egyptians. The pyramids weren’t even
built in the right time period, being 800 to 2,000 years older than the
supposed “Exodus”.
The same techniques used to track
the migration patterns of ancient humans by examining DNA also show that
there was absolutely no procreation between ancient Egyptians and ancient
Israelites during the time that the story was supposed to have taken place.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but if an entire nation was enslaved for
hundreds of years, surely there would have been some inter-breeding.
In
short, this story never happened.
There is more here and here
if you need further convincing.
Last year I was talked into
going to see the movie Noah, starring
Russell Crow, by my daughter.
However halfway through I thought
"Well this is just religious bullshit. And by purchasing a ticket I am
financially supporting this religious bullshit and probably helping to
convince movie makers to create more of this religious bullshit."
It
actually bothered me for days afterward, and even though I tried to
rationalize it by reminding myself that I also watched the movie Troy, which is
also based on mythologies, I still couldn't do it.
You see it is
easy to dismiss a craptastic flop like Kirk Cameron's recent
Christmas movie, but these movies support the mythologies that are vital
to propping up a religion that, let's face it, is now well past its sell by
date.
You see I dearly love fantasy movies and will gleefully spend
my hard earned money to watch all kinds of completely unrealistic action
sequences on the big screen. I like horror movies, superhero movies,
dinosaur movies, Liam Neeson movies, you name it.
However in most
cases the line between fantasy and reality is pretty easy to identify.
(Though I actually have problems with movies about demonic possession as
well because I think they perpetuate a superstition that can be quite
harmful to people with mental health problems.)
And besides at
least Captain America movies never promoted a mythology which supports the
oppression of women, makes it alright to hate gays, and is actively trying
to destroy scientific education in this country.
I'm just saying.
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