Ban T-shirts: Political T-shirts & Environmental Organic T-shirts

God is Dead anti-religion
Nietzsche T-shirt

God is Dead T-shirt. This well-known phrase comes from "The Gay Science", written by Friedrich Nietzsche in 1882. Nietzsche did not literally mean that God is dead - he was referring to the cultural concept of God. We are making this T-shirt because we believe that in order for the world to move on we need to overcome the concept of God that organised religions, particularly Islam and Christianity, present to the world. These religions present God in an inflexible, dogmatic way and demand slave-like conformity to an "objective" morality. While superficially preaching tolerance, they encourage conflict by insisting that they are the only source of "truth". This is a call to reject the God of organised religion and to believe in ourselves.
This design is printed on black sweat shop free shirts (American Apparel). $16.95 plus shipping. Size chart.

Ban T-Shirts home
View all shirt designs
Political T-shirts
Organic T-shirts
Anti-war T-shirts
Environmental T-shirts
Attitude T-shirts
Native American T-shirts
Anti-religion T-shirts
Anti-Bush T-shirts
Immigration T-shirts
New T-shirts
Special offers

EZLN T-shirt
Anti-terrorism T-shirt
Free Tibet T-shirt
Election T-shirt
Vegan/Vegetarian T-shirt
Che Guevara T-shirt

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Political T-shirts

Fix News
The Hunt
Fear

Anti-war T-shirts

War is Peace
Capitol of War

Organic T-shirts

SOS Earth
Say No to GMOs
Think Green

Anti-republican T-shirt
Anti-fascism T-shirt
Nietzsche T-shirt
Skull T-shirt
Straight Edge T-shirt
Organic Cotton Hoodie

Newsletter subscription

Contact
Hate mail
1st photo gallery
The Blog
Bush jokes
Customer feedback
Link to us
Links
Sweat shop free

Native American posters
Wholesale T-shirt Printing

Distribution by:



God is Dead T-shirt

US/Canadian orders

International orders


anti-organised religion t-shirt
sweat shop free t-shirt

All shirt designs and content copyright of Ban T-Shirts @ www.bant-shirts.com (c) 2008.