Foster Zygote
Dental Floss Tycoon
- Joined
- Jun 24, 2006
- Messages
- 22,105
I'm sure there's some of that behind it, but there's also just a lot of people who cannot grasp the concept of critical thinking: they think to talk about something is to endorse it. They can't understand the difference between teaching children what something is and persuading children that thing is good. Like teaching what various religions believe is inseparable from proselytizing. Intellectual rigor is not widespread.
I had a conversation like that with an elderly aunt once. She was very indignant that her grand daughter's state college was "teaching Islam". I said I was 100% sure that they weren't, and that it was certainly a class teaching students about Islam from a secular perspective. I said such comparative religion classes are common. I then asked her if she wouldn't rather know what followers of other religions actually think. When it came up that she thought that Muslims believe that all the non-Muslims in the world have to be killed before the Muslim version of Jesus can come, I pointed out that that was exactly the sort of falsehood that such a class could eliminate. But she was becoming visibly upset, doubling down on that delusion because her Evangelical pastor had told her congregation that "fact" about Islam, and he would never lie. The last thing I pointed out was that it needn't be a lie if he actually believed it, but that it was still wrong.
She doesn't live in Florida, but if she lives long enough and DeSantis is the GOP nominee for POTUS, I could totally see her voting for him.