Post
by gilthanass » Thu Feb 25, 2010 4:54 pm
I'm afraid I cannot answer some of your questions. Will this impact the RDF as a whole? I don't have enough relevant data to tell you. All I can say is that certainly the foundation drew some of its funding from the 10s of thousands of members of the forum, or from people those members interacted with in life. I can also tell you that I'm sure a sizable number of those members will no longer donate due to the treatment they feel like they've received. Will that make a noticeable impact on the foundations bottom line? Only time will tell.
I also won't go into too much detail about why we are angry. You can see from the many blog posts what our specific grievances are.
What I can speak to is the loss of the community itself. Richard obviously dismissed that community as trivial, but for some of us, it was anything but. I know, personally, I came to the forum after a disturbing self-conversion. Essentially, I starting thinking more and more about belief, and realizing more and more that I couldn't justify that belief to myself anymore. When that happened, when I realized I was an "atheist", I was, quite frankly, upset. I felt alone in life and felt like anyone I talked to about it would look down on me as some form of evil being. So, I decided to look on the internet for an atheist forum, see if there were others like me out there. What I found was the Richard Dawkins forum. What I found was a welcoming community that helped me get through the initial problems of coming to terms with your atheism, and helped me grow into a confident person, who isn't afraid to admit that un-belief to others I know, because I knew there was a community behind me. What I found was a group of people that I could turn to if I needed help approaching problems in like that are unique to atheists, or if I just needed to vent. What I found was what has long been thought impossible, a herd of cats.
And now, that's what I've lost. Remarkably, what I think Richard didn't realize was how successful his forum was at not only supporting science and debunking belief, but at promoting a campaign very near to his heart, the out campaign. The community there gave people the strength to stand up and be counted among the "amoral atheists", because they knew they were not alone.
That's also why you will see some people reacting with anger towards this. Think about being in a battered woman's group, meeting every week as your support network. Now imagine one week you show up, and the building is gone, and no one else is there. Those people you relied on as your community are gone, and you never even got their contact information. You'd be pissed, and you might react irrationally. You'd blame whoever shut the doors, and ask them to at least allow you to contact the other people in the group so you can find a new building, a new place to host it. That's what happened here, people who may have relied on this community for support had the rug suddenly pulled out from under them, and in the worst possible way.