A List of Former Team Members of Debunking Christianity

[Written by John W. Loftus]Someone recently asked me for a list of former Bloggers. I started DC in January of 2006, four years ago. Some Christians took notice and I was pummeled every single day by some of them, mostly by Calvinists, and in particular presuppositionalists. A Ph.D. student helped me argue with them, so I soon invited him on as a team member. His handle was exbeliever. Since this worked well I began inviting others as team members. Some of them didn’t work out too well, just wanting to post their deconversion story or promote their book and that was it. Others stayed for a few years. While I haven’t listed them all, team members here at one time included (in no particular order) Hector Avalos, Dan Barker, Farrell Till, Ed Babinski, Joe Holman, Jason Long, Valerie Tarico, Ken Pulliam (Former_Fundy) Marlene Winell, exapologist, Harlan Quinn, Harry McCall, DagoodS, Matthew Green, Spencer Lo, Kenneth Daniels, Bart Willruth, Darrin Rasberry, Dennis Diehl, Robert Bumbalough, Bill Curry, Craig Duckett, Paul Harrison, Glenn Kachmar, Troy Walker, Theresa, Glenn Dixon, Zac Taylor, Sharon Mooney, Scott Burgener, Anthony, Shygetz, Touchstone, Evan, WoundedEgo, Brother Crow, nsfl, and a few others who posted once or twice. A few of them already had their own Blogs while a few others moved on to Blog themselves. Others dropped out of Blogging for one reason or another. It became time consuming for me so I took it back in September of 2009. You can do a "Search This Blog" for their names to see what they wrote.

4 comments:

Qohelet said...

You said before that a former team member has returned to Christianity and asked that his/her post be removed. Can you reveal his/her identity? I'm curious.

Anonymous said...

Qohelet, he posted twice and asked that I remove his name. He had mental problems I discovered.

Layman said...

Curious. How did having cobloggers become too time consuming?

I team blog precisely because I like not having to spend as much time blogging or maintaining the blog and can count on some friends to help.

Anonymous said...

Layman I was always trying to get better and better bloggers, for one. And then I had to herd others like the cats we skeptics are. Then for some of them I had to continually work at formatting their posts, and I was attacked when they wrote something that didn't appear very well argued. People assumed I wrote the post. It's just better now. I take ownership for everything I write. And I don't have to worry about these things anymore.

Cheers.