@Khandro
You still make empty assertions, with no reference to anything substantive.
What are you talking about when you claim that "Dawkins Atheist Alliance" is belly up? Maybe we are talking at cross purposes, but that is hardly surprising, given your lack of clarity.
Certainly Atheism is not dead, its alive and kicking, harder than ever. Dawkins himself seems his usual active self, and as forthright with his opinion. The Atheist Alliance International is an actual organisation with a growing membership and range of activities, so thats hardly going belly up.And that organisation does not belong to Richard Dawkins.
You complain I misquote you - but you still fail to make your self clear! I know its difficult for you, but do try - when you talk about "Atheist Alliance going belly up" - what, precisely, is your meaning? And, by what measure are you drawing that conclusion?
Do you mean:
1. Dawkins' influence and argument is going belly up?
2.An organisation of Dawkins, called the "Atheist Alliance", is going belly up?
3. The seperate, established organisation called " Atheist Alliance International" is going belly up?
4. A general comment that the alliance between atheists is going belly up?
Hint - all of the above have different meanings.
Re: Dawkins and your ongoing misquotation. You may very well have taken the phrase from the Observer, as you claim, and I am not disputing that. I have told you, repeatedly, that the phrase, as used by you, was as a result of selective editing, from an interview between Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens, whilst Dawkins was doing a guest editing spot for the 2011 Christmas Edition of the "New Statesman".
This selective editing and misquotation totally changes the tone of Dawkins original comment, to make it sound like a kind of rallying call, a kind of atheist jihad - and of course, that's what the faith heads wish to insinuate.
Tone and context is everything, and one can see from the transcript that this was not Dawkins meaning. His meaning is rather less dramatic, and reflects the concerns of many - were we hypothetically able to reason christians out of their faith, we have the more difficult and potentially more frightening task of doing the same for the followers of Islam.
In the first link there are some excerpts from interview, from the New Stateman itself.
http://www.newstatesm...ins-hitchens-catholic
For the transcript of the section of the interview where this selective misquotation occurred ,there is this article, taken from the Daily Mail:
"the Prof gets this in edgeways: 'Do you ever worry that if we win and, so to speak, destroy Christianity, that vacuum would be filled by Islam?"
http://www.dailymail....ty.html#ixzz213UFFa5f
This article is written by the Rev. George Pitcher, and, unsurprisingly, given his vocation, displays a bias. He himself leaps on the conflation - "Richard Dawkins calls for the Destruction of Christianity!", but acknowledges that Dawkins used it as a figure of speech. He still goes on to try and make political capital out of the selective quotation, but his attempt is clear for all to see, and fairly crass.
Type "Dawkins Destroy Christianity" into Google, and you will find pages of references where the selective misquotation is enthusiastically repeated by bloggers, writers and news organisations sympathetic to faith, all of whom portray Prof Dawkins as calling for a kind of atheist jihad against christianity - Which is the way I think you understand it, and the way you intended it to be read.
Not the first time that someone has been quoted out of context, I am sure, and probably not the last. I just want you to acknowledge the fact.
Faith - Where irrationality is a positive virtue.