Essay: Conservapedia: The online encyclopedia that feminist atheists trust
From Conservapedia

Prior to Elevatorgate, Monica Shores' Ms. Magazine article titled Will “New Atheism” Make Room For Women? criticized the News Atheism movement for being sexist.[1] She also cited Conservapedia in her article and indicated: "The lack of lady presence is so visible that Conservapedia commented on it by noting that Dawkins’ website overwhelmingly attracts male visitors."[2]
On November 26, 2013, the atheist activist and blogger Jen McCreight posted at Twitter the message: "Did anyone on Dawkins AMA ask how he feels about singlehandedly destroying the atheist movement with the Dear Muslima yet?"[3]
If only Richard Dawkins had listened to Conservapedia and made greater efforts to be gentlemanly to women. The death of the atheist movement could have been avoided! See: Essay: July 2, 2011: The day the atheism movement died on the information superhighway
Contents
Conservapedia: The trustworthy, online encyclopedia that godless, British motorists trust when doing searches at Google UK
See also
- Richard Dawkins and the supervolcanic eruption of feminist atheism
- Comedy and satires concerning atheism and evolution
- Comedy and satires concerning Richard Dawkins
- Atheist feminism
- Atheism plus
External links
- According to Alexa, what percentage of Richard Dawkins' website visitors are women? - Post Elevatorgate
References
- ↑ Will “New Atheism” Make Room For Women by Monica Shores, Ms. Magazine, 2010
- ↑ Will “New Atheism” Make Room For Women by Monica Shores, Ms. Magazine, 2010
- ↑ Jennifer McCreight on the Twitter about the Elevatorgate scandal