Kindralas wrote:
If I'm in no position to say "wow," neither are you. The belief is certainly the point for you, but you cannot speak for the entirety of religious people. For some, the ritual is the point, for others the dogma, for others the history, for others the social construct. There are a lot of things that go into religion, so much so that you cannot examine the effects of the institution without disassociating it from any one particular benefit or flaw.
Without the belief, even if it's only lip service belief, none of the rest of those things would exist.
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You can't claim religion doesn't enforce moral conduct when the ten commandments exist. You also can't claim it when the Catholic church persecutes homosexuality, and condemns abortion.
A) You're moving the goalposts
B) The catholic church does not persecute homosexuals at all. It has no legal power anywhere except its own tiny enclave.
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The Catholic church's view on homosexuality, in particular, is so laughably backwards that I'm surprised that you even attempt to make the point that their views are not antiquated or harmful. You can choose not to take part in some of the more radical or grisly sides of what the church does, but you cannot ignore that the church does do them.
Laughably backwards according to who? You? You're a taxi driver. Who made you the arbitrator of what teachings are right and wrong? I don't even agree with the catholic church, but your arrogance (as is typical of nonbelievers) is hilarious.
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As for the other points about believing in invisible friends and the like, most of that is just insensitive mocking, and should be taken as such. Most people have some things that cannot be proven that they believe in, from simple superstition to religion. The issue isn't necessarily that believing in something you can't prove is bad, but that there is an attempt to attach some sort of social stigma to doing so.
As opposed to attaching social stigma to believing, which is near-constant?
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If a religion I was a part of was being used, either directly or indirectly, to commit unspeakable acts upon children, I would be loudly crying to condemn and castigate those who would perpetrate such things in the name of that which I believed in. The fact that the Catholic church doesn't defend its own faith in such a manner is something that strikes many, particularly non-believers, as wrong. Whether you are of the faith or not, that is a criticism that the Catholic church should not be able to ignore.
I already said the Catholic church needs to clean itself up in this regard.
As for how it strikes non-believers, the fact of the matter is that nonbelievers love this scandal for the Catholic Church. It is the atheist equivalent of
and you are lynching Negros. No matter what the topic it's "but... but... pedophiles!"