An Unmerry Hitchmas

On December 14, Atheism UK and the Origins Project Foundation hosted a “Merry Hitchmas” event at the Royal Geographical Society in London to commemorate the life of atheist journalist Christopher Hitchens, who died of cancer in 2011 at the age of sixty-two. Four prominent atheists—physicist Lawrence Krauss, biologist Richard Dawkins, journalist Douglas Murray, and actor Stephen Fry—took the stage to reminisce about Hitchens, discuss literature, and, of course, mock religion. The event was, albeit unintentionally, a memorial not only for Hitchens, but for the New Atheist movement, which did not long survive him. 

Krauss, marshaling all the adolescent wit at his disposal, called religion “the opposite” of wisdom and referred to the “intellectual laziness and pretentious nonsense that encompasses so much of religious faith.” Dawkins noted that atheists lost their “heavy artillery” when Hitchens died, trotted out several of Hitchens’s arguments against divine “tyranny,” and mocked the stupidity of the “tremolo-voiced preacher.” He fondly recalled their “shared fight about religion,” but noted his disagreement with Hitchens about abortion (Hitchens was pro-life; Dawkins has advocated aborting babies with Down syndrome).

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