snoopy wrote:The fallacy that I find in your view is that you separate "religion" from other belief systems.
Not a fallacy. Do you even know what that word means? There is an important difference, and it's exactly the reason why I find religion dangerous. Of all belief systems (political, economic, whatever), only religion bills itself as
unquestionable, universal truth. It demands a certain black and white thinking, good versus evil and whatnot. Yes, nationalism can be dangerous, but leaders can be overthrown and nations can fall. Non-religious beliefs are more mutable. Once a person starts to believe they are divinely blessed that's when you get some truly remarkable ignorance, which exacerbates problems with other belief systems (for example, theocracy as the marriage between political and religious views).
snoopy wrote:Believing that your worldview is somehow more enlightened and that others are "dangerous and worthy of ridicule" is quite the haughty way to approach life - especially when you display a penchant for displaying ignorance of those other worldviews - I believe the technical term is cultural elitism.
I also believe it's wrong to abuse women and treat them as property. Is that elitism, even in the face of overwhelming evidence that equal rights for women improves culture? Face it, some views are better than others. All the best parts of religious thinking is already embodied in
humanism, which leaves out things like killing babies because your people are chosen by God.
snoopy wrote:By refusing to engage with what religions actually say you certainly succeed in slaying your own fictitious religions, but then just about anyone would join you in that endeavour.
Are fvcking kidding me? I've made a serious study of religions for over two decades. I know both the ins-and-outs of the Bible along with a healthy understanding of other popular and not-so-popular religions around the world. Trust me, there are a lot better religions out there than the Abrahamic ones.