First it’s a Kenyan in the White House turning this country over to Godless communism and codling mooselimb terrorists, then earth quakes in Haiti, followed by BP opening up the earth to a continuous flow of Satan's bile spewing forth from the bowels of the deep sea. Adding insult to injury, in addition to cathylicks on the Supreme Court, we now have a diesel dyke as Obama's latest nominee.
No doubt Jesus is pissed off, and I'm barely able to contain my outrage when this article graces the pages of USA Today this past week. The next time you get food poising save yourself the Ipecac Syrup and keep this article around. Atheist Summer Camp for Children is no doubt funded by Dawkins and his inhumanists to mock God and send the next generation to hell.
No doubt Jesus is pissed off, and I'm barely able to contain my outrage when this article graces the pages of USA Today this past week. The next time you get food poising save yourself the Ipecac Syrup and keep this article around. Atheist Summer Camp for Children is no doubt funded by Dawkins and his inhumanists to mock God and send the next generation to hell.
Summer camp caters to kids of atheists, agnostics
By Meredith Heagney, The Columbus Dispatch
CLARKSVILLE, Ohio — The camp director's housekeeping lecture met the usual disinterest from the dining hall full of sweaty, bug-bitten kids.
Messy cabins are a staple of summer camp. Who wants to tidy up when you can swim, play games and goof around with your friends?
But August Brunsman finished his cleaning directive with a so-subtle-the-kids-probably-missed-it pun that made clear that Camp Quest is not the usual summer offering.
"Remember," he said, a slight grin crossing his face, "cleanliness is next to godlessness."
Camp Quest is a sleep-away camp for the children of atheists, agnostics, humanists and other nonbelievers, though kids from religious families are welcome, too.
Most of the time, the kids do normal camp stuff such as hike, compete in relay races, sit around campfires.
But the overarching philosophy is that life without religion is a perfectly healthy, viable option.
Started in 1996, Camp Quest emphasizes critical thinking and the scientific method. Counselors lead philosophical discussions about topics such as the nature of happiness.
…
Each day, the kids split into teams for competitions such as the human-knot race, where teams form a circle and grab hands at random in a tangle. They race up and down a field, then have to unwind the knot without releasing hands.
The team names included the Flaming Messiahs, a nod to the incinerated "Touchdown Jesus" sculpture north of Cincinnati struck by lightning last week, and the Dinosaur Jesus Riders, whose cheer goes like this: "Yeehaw, ride that Jesus!"
At each meal, cabins present brief presentations on "famous freethinkers," who were either known to be nonreligious or made comments questioning belief systems.
…
By Meredith Heagney, The Columbus Dispatch
CLARKSVILLE, Ohio — The camp director's housekeeping lecture met the usual disinterest from the dining hall full of sweaty, bug-bitten kids.
Messy cabins are a staple of summer camp. Who wants to tidy up when you can swim, play games and goof around with your friends?
But August Brunsman finished his cleaning directive with a so-subtle-the-kids-probably-missed-it pun that made clear that Camp Quest is not the usual summer offering.
"Remember," he said, a slight grin crossing his face, "cleanliness is next to godlessness."
Camp Quest is a sleep-away camp for the children of atheists, agnostics, humanists and other nonbelievers, though kids from religious families are welcome, too.
Most of the time, the kids do normal camp stuff such as hike, compete in relay races, sit around campfires.
But the overarching philosophy is that life without religion is a perfectly healthy, viable option.
Started in 1996, Camp Quest emphasizes critical thinking and the scientific method. Counselors lead philosophical discussions about topics such as the nature of happiness.
…
Each day, the kids split into teams for competitions such as the human-knot race, where teams form a circle and grab hands at random in a tangle. They race up and down a field, then have to unwind the knot without releasing hands.
The team names included the Flaming Messiahs, a nod to the incinerated "Touchdown Jesus" sculpture north of Cincinnati struck by lightning last week, and the Dinosaur Jesus Riders, whose cheer goes like this: "Yeehaw, ride that Jesus!"
At each meal, cabins present brief presentations on "famous freethinkers," who were either known to be nonreligious or made comments questioning belief systems.
…
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