I haven't changed my argumentation one bit. Don't try that cheap trick. Not with me. It won't work.
It's not about tricks. I'm not playing the Who's Going To Win Game that you like to play.
You can expect it, yes. But why do you accept it?
Because only a fool refuses to accept the inexorable. Especially when it doesn't hurt him and isn't a big deal.
I don't know. I don't have your experience, since I don't watch the porn channels.
Neither do I, actually. They want you to pay extra. And from what I've heard, the quality isn't that great.
And for good, rational reasons. There are no rational reasons why people should read the bible.
That is your opinion. Not everyone agrees. I don't, as it happens. The Bible is a big influence on my civilization. History, art, and literature are riddled with references to it. The only influence bigger than the Christian mythology insofar as literature and art go is Greek mythology. Which I also read, without believing in.
You bet I view it as something vastly more. Putting a bible in my hotel room isn't just putting a book there. It is showing me that the hotel wants me to consider a specific religion. I am not seeing a Koran there, or a Torah. I am seeing a Christian Bible. They send a clear message to me, one I haven't expressed any interest in, and one I don't expect.
And so? Do you have to give weight to religious messages endorsed by a hotel management? Who cares? I care about what a hotel might tell me about billing rates, and the pool usage, and how to get more towels. Its opinions on metaphysics, the origin of the universe, ethics, and how many angels can dance on a pin are irrelevant.
Yes, but they send different signals. Hotels generally don't send a signal that they are Christian hotels.
Maybe they didn't think they had to. Gideon Bibles are pretty universal in hotel rooms. I'd be more surprised to not find one.
Oh, that's cute. But wrong. You see, my ex-wife was Chinese. I am very familiar with other "races", especially the Chinese. So, there is no way you can paint me as a racist, especially not when it comes to Chinese.
Dang, that backfired. What will you come up with next? I'm a Nazi?
Oh, my. Well, that
proves you can't be racist, eh? You created an allowance for a Chinese restaurant to display a Buddha because it's Chinese, then graciously extended that to allow it to display the Virgin Mary, "because when I walked through the door, I had an expectation that I would be submitted to some form of belief." Why was that? Are Chinese restaurants inherently religious in some form, in your expectations? Why would a private business like a restaurant be allowed to display religion, in your ruling, while a hotel should not? Hmmm? Why would you object to one and not the other? I could only assume your "expectation of some form of belief" comes from one business being "generic" and the other "Chinese". Or will you now say that you would "expect some form of belief" displayed in any other kind of restaurant? An Intenational House of Pancakes with a Buddha? A Denny's with a Hanuman statue? A McDonald's with Chango candles?
"Some of my best friends are X!" isn't evidence of anything.
The Stardust allow people to put Korans in the drawers? Care to back that up with evidence?
Did I say that? I'm pretty sure I didn't.
Gee, is there no end to what issues I am irrational about? Politics, religion.... Heck, you wouldn't think I would be skeptical about anything!
Don't make the mistake of thinking that I am non-skeptical about a certain issue, just because you disagree with me on that particular issue. It could also be because you don't like what I am saying. You don't hold the patent on what is skeptical or not.
It just seems that your hatred of religion is blinding you to common sense.
I have decided that I feel that the default should be no religion. What is wrong with that, considering what you propose: That the majority should decide what I am subjected to?
Firstly, a Bible in a hotel room is not "subjecting" you to anything. You don't have to read it, or believe it.
Secondly, the minority has no more right to force its lack of belief on the majority than the majority has to force its belief on the minority. If most hotels, which are private businesses, feel like having Gideon Bibles in the room, why shouldn't they? It's their hotels, not yours.
If we follow your logic, Creationism should definitely be taught in science classes, and evolution should be banned. Is that really what you want?
This is quite laughable. Hotel room <> public schools. A Bible in a drawer <> conspiracy to teach Intelligent Design. The Gideons <> all that is evil and wicked done in the name of religion.
Why should a Muslim even have to put up with this? Why should a skeptic?
Because
a) it's private property and therefore the right of the hotel to furnish as they wish. If they want to paint scenes from the Book of Revelations on the ceiling, or have Tibetan Buddhist mandalas in the bathroom, that's their right.
b) Because it's not a big deal. It's a book in a drawer. You seem to feel that putting a book in a hotel drawer means the Mighty Hotel has extended it's Endorsement Of This Religion. Holy crap! Days Inn endorses the Bible! Let's convert!! WTF? Who cares what the hotel thinks? Who cares what it endorses? Did you convert to pseudo-Kabbalah because Madonna endorses it? Why should you care, even enough to object, to what a hotel does? And
c) it's not an endorsement. The hotels exist to make money. They don't give a flying fish what you believe, as long as you pay your bill and don't steal the towels. They let the Gideons do their thing because it doesn't hurt anybody, and it might be something many guests will ask for if its not there. I remember the days when every hotel room came with ashtrays. Did everyone smoke? Was the hotel encouraging, endorsing, forcing people to smoke? No. It provided, as part of its service, something that many guests might want and need. The rest could ignore them.
And yes, you are suggesting that, because a majority believes in a certain religion, religion should permeate all aspects of society, yet people are free to discard it. But they can't escape it.
Religion is one aspect of culture. Expecting to escape it is
silly. If you don't believe it, and you don't like it, fight the battles that matter: stop government endorsement, stop creeping religous agenda in law, stop censorship and the like. But bugging out over Gideon Bibles in hotels? Sheesh.
You want the majority to tell minorities what is the true religion or not. I don't.
What I want is for individuals to make up their own minds about religion. Deciding for them what they should and shouldn't be exposed to, and in what venues, is not the right way to do that. That's the sort of tactic a religion would use.
Hell, haven't you realized that the best argument against Christianity is the Bible? Have you ever read the thing? If you really wanted people to turn skeptical, you'd encourage them to!