Are
Natural Disasters Caused by Unnatural Acts?
June 27, 2001
Janis Walworth
Pat Robertson,
founder of the Christian Coalition, once warned Orlando, Florida,
that it was courting natural disaster by allowing gay pride flags
to be flown along its streets. "A condition like this will
bring about ... earthquakes, tornadoes, and possibly a meteor,"
Robertson said.
Apparently
he was referring to his belief that the presence of openly gay people
incurs divine wrath and that God acts through geological and meteorological
events to destroy municipalities that permit gay people the same
civil liberties as others.
Before Pat
and his Christian cronies get too carried away promulgating the
idea that natural disasters are prompted by people who displease
God, they should take a hard look at the data.
Tornadoes
Take tornadoes.
Every state (except Alaska) has them some only one or two
a year, dozens in others.
Gay people
are in every state (even Alaska). According to Pat's hypothesis,
there should be more gay people in states that have more tornadoes.
But are there?
Nope. In fact,
there's no correlation at all between the number of gay folks (as
estimated by the number of gay political organizations, support
groups, bookstores, radio programs, and circuit parties) and the
annual tornado count (r = .04, p = .78 for you statisticians).
So much for
the "God hates gays" theory.
God seems almost
neutral on the subject of sexual orientation. I say "almost"
because if we look at the density of gay groups relative to the
population as a whole, there is a small but statistically significant
(p = .05) correlation with the occurrence of tornadoes. And it's
a negative correlation (r= -.28).
For those of
you who haven't used statistics since 1973, that means that a high
concentration of gay organizations actually protects against tornadoes.
A state with the population of, say, Alabama could avert two tornadoes
a year, merely by doubling the number of gay organizations in the
state.
Although God
may not care about sexual orientation, the same cannot be said for
religious affiliation. If the underlying tenet of Pat's postulate
is true that God wipes out offensive folks via natural disasters
then perhaps we can find some evidence of who's on God's
hit list.
Jews are off
the hook here: there's no correlation between numbers of Jews and
frequency of tornadoes. Ditto for Catholics. But when it comes to
Protestants, there's a highly significant correlation of .71.
This means
that fully half the state-to-state variation in tornado frequency
can be accounted for by the presence of Protestants. And the chance
that this association is merely coincidental is only one in 10,000.
Tornados
Drawn to Baptists
Protestants,
of course, come in many flavors we were able to find statistics
for Lutherans, Methodists, Baptists, and others. Lutherans don't
seem to be a problem no correlation with tornadoes. There's
a modest correlation (r = .52, p= .0001) between Methodists and
tornadoes.
But Baptists
and others share the prize: both groups show a definite correlation
with tornado frequency (r = .68, p = .0001). This means that Texas
could cut its average of 139 tornadoes per year in half by sending
a few hundred thousand Baptists elsewhere (Alaska maybe?). What,
you are probably asking yourself, about gay Protestants? An examination
of the numbers of gay religious groups (mostly Protestant) reveals
no significant relationship with tornadoes.
Perhaps even
Protestants are less repugnant to God if they're gay.
And that brings
up another point the futility of trying to save the world
by getting gay people to accept Jesus. It looks from our numbers
as if the frequency of natural disasters might be more effectively
reduced by encouraging Protestants to be gay.
Gay people
have been falsely blamed for disasters ever since Sodom was destroyed
by fire and brimstone. (We have been unable to find any statistics
on disasters involving brimstone).
According to
a reliable source, the destruction of Sodom was indeed an act of
God (see Genesis 19:13). Its destruction was perpetrated because
the citizens thereof were, according to the same source (see Ezekiel
16:49-50) "arrogant, overfed and unconcerned [and] did not
help the poor and needy" not because they were gay.
Now Pat would
have us believe that gays are the cause of tornadoes (as well as
earthquakes, meteors, and even terrorist bombs) in utter disregard
for evidence showing that Baptists are much more likely to cause
them.
As any statistician
will tell you, of course, correlation doesn't prove causation. Protestants
causing tornadoes by angering God isn't the only explanation for
these data. It could be that Baptists and other Protestants purposely
flock to states that have lots of tornadoes (no, we haven't checked
for a correlation between IQ and religious affiliation).
But if Pat
and his Christian crew insist that natural disasters are brought
on by people who offend God, let the data show who those people
are.
Sources:
Tornado Occurrence by State, 1962-1991 1990 Churches and Church
Membership; Population by State, 1990 US Census; Gay & Lesbian
Political Organizations, Support Groups, and Religious Groups from
Gayellow Pages, National Edition, 1987.
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