Thursday, April 20, 2006
Pastafarian's Delight
Connie Morris tells Roy Wenzl of the Wichita Eagle that Pastafarians have sent her at least a thousand e-mails since last fall.
"They are very serious about claiming to be a religion," she said. "We know it's a satire. I don't mind the ridicule; it comes with the job. But I do personally object to my own religious beliefs being ridiculed, and that's what the Pastafarians delight in doing."
Beyond Connie's problems with assertive Pastaferians, this article provides a serious profile of science teacher Randy Mousley, the teacher who drew Morris' ire by having his Noodly Eminence stuck to his classroom door.
"They are very serious about claiming to be a religion," she said. "We know it's a satire. I don't mind the ridicule; it comes with the job. But I do personally object to my own religious beliefs being ridiculed, and that's what the Pastafarians delight in doing."
Beyond Connie's problems with assertive Pastaferians, this article provides a serious profile of science teacher Randy Mousley, the teacher who drew Morris' ire by having his Noodly Eminence stuck to his classroom door.