Is anyone else on American television as rude as Bill O’Reilly? I don’t watch TV, so I can’t be sure, but I can’t imagine why anybody watches this rude and pompous guy.
In was in a restaurant last night that was turned to Fox News and O’Reilly’s show was on. Both televisions in the place were on the same channel and it was loud, so I didn’t have much choice but to hear it. I heard O’Reilly start interviewing Dave Silverman, the president of American Atheists. The group is suing to stop some activity or other that it considers an illegal government involvement in a religious holiday. Actually, it wasn’t as much an interview as it was a patronizing attack.
The guest tried to be polite and civil from the beginning, but O’Reilly wasn’t interested. He quickly cut off any polite talk and went on the offensive. He asked the man why his group was suing and the man replied that the atheists believe the case is about government involvement in religion.
O’Reilly asked what religion is involved. The atheist looked a bit puzzled before answering that it’s Christianity. O’Reilly cut him off quickly.
“[Christianity] is not a religion,” he said. “That’s a philosophy.”
I couldn’t tell whether O’Reilly was stupid enough to believe what he was saying or if he knew he was being disingenuous. I have to assume he was being intentionally dishonest, because I can’t believe anyone is that stupid. O’Reilly was rude and intellectually dishonest for the rest of the interview parts that I saw. At one point, he referred to the atheist as “You and your merry band of fascists.”
I eventually had to put my earbuds in and turn Laura Veirs on as loud as I could stand the music.

Target’s ID requirement for cold medicine is invasion of privacy
Childhood programming makes it hard to believe I’m ‘good enough’
Few things satisfy like giving thoughtful gifts to those we love
Was he angry to lose his family? Or because he lost his control?
Will rising anger about personal economic pain lead to trouble soon?
There’s pain in many faces I see, as reality doesn’t match dreams
Confirmation bias means most of us assume our opponents are ‘morans’