Herzblut
Master Poster
- Joined
- Sep 29, 2006
- Messages
- 2,234
No prob. I did hammer my stake in the ground, I think. Cheers mate.which equals 10 mins in the sin-bin. Herz; let it go, mate.![]()
Herzblut
No prob. I did hammer my stake in the ground, I think. Cheers mate.which equals 10 mins in the sin-bin. Herz; let it go, mate.![]()
3- Shintoism is a full blown religion with many, many gods. Every village in Japan had its own Shinto god and there were festivals for each. Shintoism was the state religion of Japan and was used to control the population. In the Shinto belief, the emperor was a living god.
Religion hasn't harmed me yet.
Explain how religion has harmed you in such a profound way. You can disagree with something and still have an open mind. Yet to blanket all religions as bad regardless of any good that may come out of them is mum....
And if I'm very lucky, maybe the people I put on ignore will return the favor, so that I can talk about them at my leisure.
Do you mean bad like in the Micheal Jackson way?
Ok. Let's take a step back here. I have never and will never claim that any particular sect, type or denomination of religion is "good". My argument all along is that religion is not all bad.
The list of things religion does which is good is a very long list. It may only be a fraction of the size of the bad list, but my premise was always - as is this poll - that religion is not all bad.
Again, I sense a touch of goalpost-shifting in the wind. Qualifiers are irrelevant. The premise was never that a particular brand of religion was inherently good, or bad even.
What do atrocities in the past matter to today? Do you hate all Germans because of Hitler? Do you hate all Japanese? Turks? Should Islam hate the western world because of the Crusades?
Again, nobody - other than christians - came to a conclusion that religion was good. I took great pains to explain that I could not accept that religion is all bad, simply because I have seen personally some of the good results religion has brought about. This is your own strawman you keep setting fire to. I repeat the question; are you changing your premise now?
When it does harm.
According to your own words again, all religion is harmful. I wonder how you equate that with the Catholic nurse giving an injection to save a child's life thanks to her church's charity program, but obviously, in your warped version of the planet, that is harmful, so no conflict exists.
Religion is a lie. It is all made up with not a shred of evidence to support it. All Lies = All Bad.
I never said that everything a religion does is bad. I said all religions are bad because of the sum of all the things they do, good bad and indifferent.
P.S. When are you going to correct you intellectual dishonesty?

Do you mean bad like in the Micheal Jackson way?
How do you judge the idea of combining religious and state campaigns? The former ones propagating abstinence and the latter ones educating towards condom usage. That may reach more target groups.Qualifiers do matter so much. If you say the RCC is doing good work in Africa, I will ask about their position on condom use in light of the AIDS epidemic. If you say they do good in Africa except for their stand on condoms, that is different.
My premise is, and always has been, that all religions have a net sum of being bad. Which is why I said, "Religions are all bad."
ok, I submit that on a net sum, Shintoism as it exists today in Japan is more good than bad.
To qualify,
Just looking to create a very general and arbitrary cost-benefit on individuals and society.
1 = all bad
5= neutral
10 = all good
I would give Shintoism a 5.5
and of the monotheistic religions I would give
CofE about a 4
Catholicism about a 2
Evangelicalism about a 2
fundamentalist sects would be in the 1.x range....
with (1) and (10) existing as a limit rather than a value.....
I'd be interested in other people's ratings.....
sometimes there's a significant disjoint between individual affect, societal effect and global effect - catholicism suffers significantly IMO globally as a result of its contraceptive policy - indeed, I could be persuaded to rate it lower....so this is really quite rough and ready - and remember - it's just a bit of fun![]()
Sorry, but what is CofE?I would give Shintoism a 5.5
and of the monotheistic religions I would give
CofE about a 4
Catholicism about a 2
Evangelicalism about a 2
fundamentalist sects would be in the 1.x range....
Yeah, I saw that. I perfectly agree, the policy is very outdated. It has to change sooner or later or the RCC will suffer from further massive member losses, esp in Latin America. The fundamental catholic doctrine is that sex shall only serve reproduction. That's just rediculous.catholicism suffers significantly IMO globally as a result of its contraceptive policy - indeed, I could be persuaded to rate it lower....
How do you judge the idea of combining religious and state campaigns? The former ones propagating abstinence and the latter ones educating towards condom usage. That may reach more target groups.
Based upon your presented evidence, of course. Phrases like "I think <list of unsupported claims>" are of no interest for this topic.
Oh, let me tell you my very initial reasoning of this topic because you might profit.
First of all, I completely dislike the sex moral of the RCC. My whole life is an act of disobedience.
Having said that, I nevertheless leave out any emotions analysing the RCC's tactic against HIV, namely
(1)abstinence,
(2)then faithfull marriage
(3)no condoms
which cannot be refuted right away because it is protective for those who stick to it.
OK, those who break these demands obviously disobey the Pope. For the problem at hand, non-abstinence is important. So, somebody ****ing around, breaking the abstinence demand, why the hell should he/she stick to the no-condoms demand? That makes no sense, obviously.
"Hey, I am the big black womanizer in town! Don't care what da papa says! But wait, didn't he demand no condoms? Holy ****! Then I must stick to it, because I really care what da papa says!"
That is absurd!
Conclusion: there is no case to make against the RCC right away, proper investigation of available data is required.
What it means: show me data when you argue. No data, no argument.
Herzblut
How do you judge the idea of combining religious and state campaigns? The former ones propagating abstinence and the latter ones educating towards condom usage.
Is there a religion that is good? Can anyone name one?
There's your intellectual dishonesty again. One is unrelated to the other.
Then this person doesn't care what da papa says about condoms neither and could use condoms, if he wanted. But, simply put, the average male in Africa does not adhere to the idea of condoms. Regardless of what da papa says.Simply put, the averge person in Africa does not adhere to the abstinance idea.
Possibly, but not necessarily. If a strong believer follows the Pope's doctrine - it's fine. If somebody ignores the Pope's doctrine - it's also fine.Then the pope comes out with a statement saying that condom use is against the policy of the church and that condoms actually spread HIV.
Hasn't this pope then done exactly what his counterpart did in Germany? Hasn't the church once again hamstrung the good fight?