pad, first i want to apologize for the perceived insult of allowing you to believe that my post was aimed exclusively at you. even though i used a quote from your post, i figured that by leading off with "y'all" you would understand that the following "you"s were to be taken in the general sense. after all - just look back through this and similar threads and you'll see hundreds of posts that bear out my claim that the anti-religion bandwagon is filled with people that ignorantly blame religion for the sins of mankind, simply because the unscrupulous use it to motivate the masses to acts of evil. every time i see or hear inane phrases like "Too often religious rules interfere with my life." or "Religion has definitely caused wars and it justifies certain evil acts..." i shudder because i can hear my younger self using that same sort of mindless parroting to justify my own intolerance. it's like claiming that studying physics is evil because it led to the creation of nuclear weapons or that medical science is evil because it has allowed us the abomination of abortion.
.....the good things that religion provide to people are FAKE, they're illusions. I believe the TRUTH is the ONLY WAY to true happiness. I believe science is the best way to achieve the truth, and religion and science conflict at every intersection.
Religion keeps people stupid.
How can you advocate LYING to people?!
People do not need this shit to behave well.
once again you paint religion with that broad brush. the burning bush is fake, the virgin birth is a fraud, heaven and hell couldn't possible exist - so religion consists entirely of illusion. try telling that to the millions who are comforted by these myths and are guided by their precepts.
your "true happiness" may be dependent of scientific truth and mine may run independent of these fairy tales, but we are a small minority. if reality were to be judged by consensus, as it so often is, our
truths would have little bearing.
people do not believe in what is false because they are religious, they do it because they are people. they are not stupid because they are religious, but because they are people. they don't murder, maim, subjugate others or hold their neighbors in contempt because they are religious, that is simply who they are. in all of the world's major religions there are prohibitions against each of these sins, it is merely our faulty definitions of them that allows the faithful to believe their actions are sanctified. all these failings are what much of religion is concerned with eradicating, a noble goal that i think we all aspire to.
our misperceptions of what is "right" certainly aren't restricted to the area of religion, just as the lies we choose to believe don't all originate there. all of man's various philosophies have led us down the wrong path from time to time. a perfect example of this is our tendency toward forming governments. we have watched our political systems turn against us, abusing their powers and their peoples, and we have yet to give up on the practice. we tear one down and build another in its place, but never do we consider just abandoning the idea altogether. instead we attempt to improve on the design, learning from past mistakes and aiming toward unreachable perfection. we have endured and rejected god-kings, emperors, dictators and myriad other rulers and potentates and come closer each time to perfection of the self-governance of the individual.
there seems to be a certain childish impatience and conceit to the demand that religion be relegated to the trash heap. those who flatly state that religion is false and that its followers are being lied to are claiming to have disproved the unprovable, as if they have some special insight into "the truth" that the rest of us lack. we might be forced to concede that the entire earth could not have been flooded and its fauna preserved on one single ship, but this does not preclude the
perception of a global flood nor the belief that its cause and our salvation from it was of divine origin. we may be able to show that a god does not exist in the sky, watching over the actions of men and judging them accordingly, but this does not prove that some presence somewhere is influencing the life we lead and that there may be some final reckoning for our transgressions. science may be able to explain how man might logically have evolved his sense of morality and how the best interests of the species are served by that evolution, but this doesn't mean that it is not part of some plan.
so why consider religion as something to be abandoned and destroyed instead of something to be evolved? you may see science and religion as in conflict, but they might better be considered complimentary. imagine them as two trains running on loosely parallel tracks. occasionally those tracks may intersect, causing one or the other to slow and reassess its situation. religion often acts as a brake on our headlong, often foolhardy, rush to ever greater scientific accomplishment and science as an incentive for religion to slightly alter its course. both trains will change over time, each picking up different passengers and freight, and influence each other by their very existence. eventually these two tracks may very well converge, uniting those two trains and melding all that both have accumulated. the outcome might leave us with a grand union of the practical and the spiritual, the advances of technology and logic tempered by the compulsion to be our most ethical selves.