Am I overly paranoid to assume that "Alizongle" is a conflation of Alibaba, Amazon, and Google, plus a pervasive bird avatar and "toots" to refer to Twitter, "Buuber" for Uber, etc.?
Which would suggest that "World Council" might not be chosen at random, either ...
You are not paranoid, just more perceptive than I was. It seems absurdly obvious now that you point it out.
The commentary really was disappointing, though. Especially coming from the Jewish tradition, where questioning everything and having your own opinion is fundamental to understanding. Even my Orthodox Rabbi freely admitted that most of his congregation were atheists or agnostics, and that believing without question or believing you alone understood god's truth and the path to god was narcissistic at best; how could any one person claim to understand that, or judge others for their interpretation or rejection?
There was a story he shared about a Hasidic Rabbi: A student asked why God would create atheists, and lead people to reject him. Did God not want all people to be in awe of him?
The Rabbi responded that atheists taught us about performing moral acts without promise of reward. They act with true compassion when they help others. When an atheist does charity, visits a sick person, and so on, they aren't doing so because of God or a moral commandment. With no belief in God, all acts are based on an inner sense of morality. They do not pray for God to help others, they take the responsibility on their own shoulders.
Just a fun story, but the contrast with the idea and hubris that one person somehow has realized and understood that eternal plan of god and their way is the correct way and all the rest of humanity will burn in Hell for not following their version... I think Alizongle's the good guy in her bunny story, promoting a much healthier form of Christianity than the original misogynistic collection of bronze and iron-age mythological stories and books that the original version is. And the version promoted in the author's commentary is just downright scary. It also shows just how much of a persecution complex she has now, and attacking her or her faith would just make her retrench even further. Given how full of contradictions and logically inconsistent it is, with time and some actual study and thought, she should be in a much better place. I went to a Jesuit university (Georgetown), and as the priests there loved to say, the best way to make an atheist or agnostic out of a Christian is to force them to study the Bible and think about it.
Still, I'm glad she's still writing SSSS, and hopefully it won't be rushed or changed too much by her new perspective. Religious authors can write astoundingly good fantasy, and explore questions of faith and spirituality within them. If the bunny comic is indicative of the direction of her future direction, I'll definitely leave her to it, the fundamentalist Christian world is a large and loyal audience. Hopefully she'll eventually come to her senses, or if not, hopefully her faith will be a source of comfort and stability for her personally, and not a source of hatred and judgement for others.