I'll be giving a talk during the pre-conference workshop sessions at this week's
American Humanist Association conference, which is being held June 5-7 at the Tempe Mission Palms Hotel.
My talk is on Thursday, June 4, from 4-5 p.m. in the Palm F room. While there is ordinarily a $20 charge for the pre-conference workshops, readers of this blog may attend for free (but donations to the AHA are appreciated).
My talk is entitled "Lessons learned from 25 years of battling creationists, Scientologists, and fundamentalists online."
I'll also be representing the
Arizona Coalition of Reason at a press conference on Friday morning about
a new billboard campaign.
More about that on Friday.
UPDATE (June 4, 2009): My presentation (Keynote format) is
here, published with a Creative Commons license (noncommercial, attribution, no derivative works).
UPDATE (June 8, 2009): Friday's press conference was held by the
American Humanist Association, the
United Coalition of Reason, and the
Arizona Coalition of Reason. Roy Speckhardt of the AHA introduced the press conference, Fred Edwords of United COR announced his new group and that it plans to start up about 20 COR groups throughout the country by the end of the year, and I spoke on behalf of ArizonaCOR. We have a billboard up at 44th St. and Washington, on the southbound route into Sky Harbor airport.
We got press coverage from
ABC Ch. 15,
Fox Ch. 10, and
independent Ch. 3, from the
Arizona Republic and
New Times, and from
KTAR radio. ASU's
State Press will also be running a story.
Most spun the issue as a big controversy, but that seems outlandish to me. Fox's "man on the street" interviews ended up with two atheists out of five interviewed, and most didn't seem to think it was a big deal. The owner of the business near the billboard made some strange argument about how the billboard should have required special regulatory approval, since he needed to get approval for his own business's signs--but apparently didn't recognize that such approval would only be needed for the billboard itself (unless it was grandfathered), not for its content.
UPDATE (June 21, 2009): Here's my presentation, embedded via SlideShare:
UPDATE (June 29, 2009): Leslie Zukor of the Reed Secular Alliance at Reed College
gives a recap of the AHA conference.