Talya wrote:
Elaboration: Considering that the Sabbath is on a Saturday, yes, it is "retarded" for someone to call a shop closing on Sundays as "oppression by religious zealots." The actual religious zealots would close the shop on Saturdays. (Specifically, from sundown Friday evening until sundown Saturday evening, if you really want to get technical.) Not to mention that someone choosing to not be open on some specific day for their own reasons, religious or not, is not oppression. If the government forced you to be closed (or open!) for a specific religious observance, that would be oppression. *coughChristmascough*
Ergo, I'm agreeing with Arathain. You're looking for snark where none exists.
Because suspecting snark in Hellfire is totally ridiculous!!
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This is also true.
There's a subset of the population that will vocally and obnoxiously disagree with anything they don't like in any situation, regardless of its religiosity. However, you simply don't get personal secular evangelism without putting your religious views out there to start with.
That's true, you don't. However, "putting your views out there" includes the innocuous such as the "decorations in my office cubicle thing" mentioned before. What nonbelievers do instead, are the aforementioned drive-by, generalized prostelytizing-by-ridicule, often at the most oblique reference to religion. We have a female (who is a general loudmouth about everything) in my EVE alliance who hardly lets a day go by without needing to get some irrelevant dig in at religion, and relying on the directors to shut down the discussion immediately because of the "no politics or religion on alliance chat" rule, which exists for the obvious reason of keeping comms free of flamewars while someone else is trying desperately to get help because his battleship is pineed by 6 interceptors 2 systems away.
By "irrelevant dig" someone mentioned something about "going to hell" the other day, and I'm pretty sure everyone here understands that references to "going to hell" may be an outgrowth of Christianity on the subject, but are frequently used for a wide variety of colloquialisms that are not related to any actual religious conviction at all. This incident certainly had nothing to do with any religious belief or lack thereof from the speaker, but yet we got a loud interruption from this female talking over everyone else about how there is actually no Hell, as if that were actually a topic at the time, and despite our rule of politeness and civility. This person is not the least bit interested in reasoned discussion on the subject; she's interested in taking a quick **** on it and having any reply silenced as everyone races to remind each other that our standards of politeness mean we don't go down that road. Not that replies would be good; we'd just have a shouting match that might crash the chat with everyone keying at once.
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There are lots religious types who will try to preach to you unsolicited - in public, on your doorstep, in the workplace, etc. "Have you accepted Jesus Christ as your personal Lord and Saviour?" is a well known phrase for a reason. "Have you rejected the concept of a personal Lord and Saviour?" is not, also for a reason. "Have you accepted the fact that we evolved from other life forms?" is also not something that gets bandied about unsolicited.
Again, I haven't really seen this from religious people OR nonreligious in the workplace. Religious people don't do it for fear of falling afoul of HR, and nonreligious people do it via the drive-by method. Outside of work in public, religious people DO tend to do it more, but public or at your doorstep is the appropriate format for approaching strangers you with to speak with. Religious people handing out pamphlets on the sidewalk are no more irritating than those handing out pamphlets about the evils of nuclear energy, or at least shouldn't be. Having to answer the door to tell Carlos you don't need your lawn mowed is not any more annoying than telling Maria that you're not interested in the Watchtower - especially down here, where in both cases you almost certainly have to do so in Spanish.
You're right that there IS a reason, and that's that atheism doesn't lend itself well to prostelyzation. That's why the drive-bys, which are more about atheists that aren't actually capable of defending their views needing to splurge and vent, much like Christians who can't defend their theology but are very highly enthusiastic try to substitute zeal. The difference is that Christianity not only has its distinctly theological message of salvation after death, but also a moral message for living in the meantime, while atheism pretty much amounts to "I don't/you shouldn't believe in God because (I think) there isn't one". Ok, so what? How do you make that into an effective moral point? Atheists may not believe in God, but any unified message on how one should live is absent since there's no universal atheist morality, not even the fragmented doctrine of Christianity. It pretty much amounts to "don't follow religious rules because you don't have to", but other than that atheists can run the gamut of political and moral conviction. Every once in a while this becomes hilarious when a certain stripe of atheist disagrees with a certain principle
just because there's religious support for it, even though it otherwise fits with his moral philosophy and political outlook.
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People are quite willing to attack views openly in conflict with their own. But even Richard Dawkins, who's about as dogmatic and vicious as an atheist gets, is highly unlikely to walk up to people unsolicited on the street and tell them that the cross they are wearing around their neck is a relic of silly superstition.
That's true, but neither does Billy Graham, his advanced age notwithstanding. Both are major public figures. Dawkins also probably doesn't feel the need to engage in drive-by anntagonism as he already gets plenty of attention for his views.
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While I'm here agreeing with points on both sides, I also want to state Diamondeye made a good point that, at least in North America, Christendom outnumbers secularists by a good number. If you go solely based on relative "noise levels," you're certainly going to hear more out of the bible thumpers. Hell, they irritate each other, let alone us unbelievers.
That's true, and my contention is not that evangelicals are never annoying, but that secularists are equally annoying albiet in different ways, as are people going about making a big deal over issues that are not related to religious persuasion, or even just trying to sell you something.