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@atheist-ideas
“God” gets an ouchie.
The only “injury” associated with blasphemy is to human people as the result of blasphemy laws.
Religion: the only fandom where they literally go to war and kill people over the plot holes and continuity errors.
Pew research shows that out of all Americans, Christians are the least like Jesus.
i came across one of your posts because you put it in the mental illness tag and... dude, you can talk about how you dislike religion and think it's stupid without being ignorant and referring to it as a mental illness. there's nothing bipolar or schizophrenic about religion. stop using mental illness as an adjective to describe something you don't like, it makes you sound like an idiot.
Firstly, are you aware that there are mental illnesses other than bipolar and schizophrenia? You kind of zeroed in on that for some reason i can’t quite figure out. (Oh, wait. It’s all about you.) Here’s a list you might find helpful: https://psychcentral.com/disorders/
I do want to make a specific point here that you’ve derived the “bad” from the “religion” side of the “religion” = “mental illness” equation. Noted. Some people derive the “bad” from the “mental illness” side of the equation. It’s always interesting to see where their bias and offended feelings lie in an essentially neutral equation; the judgements revealed when a reader harangues me about what they’ve chosen to infer. It’s a fascinating litmus test.
So, you think that genuinely believing and even feeling the presence of an unseen wizard, who talks to you, who helps you, who guides your life, who desires fear, obedience and compliance, and who is angry at the people who don’t think he (the wizard) is real and wants to set them on fire – that this is not delusional?
What if the wizard lived in their shoes, on their shoulder, or in their garage? Would you be able to spot the problem then? Why does its residence in shoes, on shoulders or in garages, rather than in the clouds, change the equation? What places can an invisible wizard live that constitute delusion and which places can an invisible wizard live that constitute religion?
Religious “faith” is indistinguishable from delusion. The definitions are nigh on identical. They both constitute belief in things without evidence or good reason that cannot be shown to exist in reality. The difference is that one is believed en masse - which of course, doesn’t make it any more true - while the other is believed individually.
It doesn’t bother me if you think I’m an “idiot” - I don’t even know you. However, this “idiot” finds it rather ghastly to not desire unwell people to get the help they need, to rejoin us in reality, as best society and medicine can accomplish. To shed these shoe, shoulder, garage and cloud wizards people are mumbling to that make them scared in the dark, that hurt people and ruin lives – and instead live full, wizard-free lives.
But then, I just probably care more about humans and their wellbeing as individuals and as a society - and the prospect of society exhaling a collective sigh of relief when the last wizard evaporates - than your triggered feefeez, virtue signalling and fixation on/fetishization of your illness as your single defining personality trait, though. I guess it’s a failing I’ll just have to learn to live with.
I don’t think being religious/having a mental illness makes someone a bad person. They shouldn’t be harassed or anything for it. But while the person may be entitled to respect by default, a religion/delusion/illness is not a person, and we should strive to attack and eliminate these detriments to individual and societal health with as much vigour as we can muster.
If an “idiot” can figure all of this out, why can’t you?
#WizardFree
P.S. Not that it matters, but I have lived with depression my whole life, and my best friend has bipolar.
Bill Watterson, cartoonist and author of “Calvin and Hobbes”.
What’s even more absurd is the fact that a lot of human beings still believe this bullshit in the 21st Century…
PJ
“Americans overall are bad at science. Scared of math. Poor at physics and engineering. Resistant to evolution. The consequence is that you breed a generation of people who do not know what science is nor how and why it works. You have mortgaged the future financial security of your nation. Innovations in science and technology are the basis of tomorrow’s economy. “Just look back 1,000 years ago at the Middle East, where math and science flourished in Baghdad. Algebra and algorithms were invented in the Middle East. So were Arabic numerals, the numbers we still use today. But when a new cleric emerged during the 12th century, he declared math and science to be earthly pursuits, and good Muslims should be concerned about spiritual affairs. The scientists drifted away, and scientific literacy faded from that part of the world. “Today, too many Americans mistake clouds for UFOs, believe in alien abductions, reject evolution, fear the number 13 and negative numbers, and freak out about supermoons that really aren’t any bigger than regular old full moons. This science illiteracy is a threat to the nation.” — Neil deGrasse Tyson
As we fall further and further behind the rest of the world, and have to import most of our scientists. Religion is a root cause.
“Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a lightsaber.“ - Darth Jesus
Over-simplification based on stereotypes for the purposes of humour.
The design of nature isn’t that intelligent in an omniscient sense the more you study it… which is why evolution is so much more interesting and beautifully practical than creationists give it credit for!
So I recently started reading Neil Gaiman's Norse Mythology, and I am sorta bothered by how those who die of disease or old age are sent to Hel?(or accidents or childbirth, esp since it is often referred to as being for cowards?) Like, I struggle with Type 1 diabetes, I will most likely die of complications to it. I fight every day just to live, but this just means what? That none of that matters?
Your issue here is in thinking of Hel as a bad place, which Christian culture has done a good job of insinuating.
Hella punishes those who were dishonorable in life by feeding them to Nidhogg, yes…but if you are a basically good person who simply didn’t die in battle, Helheim is a rather nice place. It’s said to be a misty forest, one that’s peaceful and restful. You’ll find family there, and be healed of any hurts or illness from life. You’ll engage in the same activities you enjoyed in life; dancing, feasting, games, having a nice nap in a meadow whenever you like, ect.
The warriors, see, who go to Valhalla…they will be needed at Ragnarok, and there they’ll die a final time. Those who go to Folkvanger will help Freyja rebuild Midgard. But those in Helheim have no obligations. There, you do as you please, when you please, without the inconveniences of mortal diseases or infirmity.
That’s all Helheim is, for people who weren’t assholes in life. Not some pit of fire and torment.