muso wrote on Jun 26
th, 2010 at 9:30pm:
gizmo_2655 wrote on Jun 26
th, 2010 at 4:10pm:
aikmann4 wrote on Jun 25
th, 2010 at 3:42pm:
It's interesting how conservative Atheists like Theodore Dalrymple and myself tend to take sympathetic or indifferent attitudes towards religion and usually find evangelical atheists irritating, while leftist Atheists always (see Richard Dawkins' forums) ascribe the cause of everything bad in the world to religion.
If you wouldn't mind....could you define "evangelical atheists"??????
LOL. In my view, the most irritating atheists from experience are the ex-evangelical Christians and ex-mormons. Ex-Muslims are a close third.
They seem to have this compulsive need to proselytize. For example, they love to post in forums about the negative side of religion, how we need to protect children from brainwashing etc.
Most atheists don't give a damn about trying to 'deconvert' people or change society in some way. Evangelicals do.
Well thanks for that condescendingly arrogant definition muso, it is a pity that some of your tolerance for religious idiocy cannot find it's way toward respecting the valid concerns of those who object to seeing children indoctrinated with ridiculous, religious prejudices from their earliest childhoods.
The simple , and I would contend unarguable, fact, is that religions impose their views upon society, and use the delusional belief that it is their supernaturally ordained right, and duty to do so.
These radical anti-theists merely wish to see these deluded nutjobs stop it. Keep your
religion to yourself, and especially do not seek to have it imposed upon society.
Go out in the wild and wave your willys at the sun for all I care, but do not seek to impose your beliefs upon society, because your beliefs are delusional, often harmful, and have no merit based upon your claims of being told so by an imaginary friend.
Morals can be determined by societal needs, and standards, and do not require a preacher, parson or pope, to validate them.
So when theists beliefs coincide with those of their society we have no problem, but when they clash, we do, and that is why we need to remind them that society rejects their claims of divine right to declare their own standards on anything other than their own very personal, and private morality.
Religion can do whatever it wants, as long as it does not place itself above the society it is contained in, but I do not know of any religion that does not place itself above all societies, because of their ridiculous claims of supernatural guidance, which is utterly disdainful of secular laws and standards, and only acquiesces to those standards at, or for, it's own convenience.