First, belief that fetal life is sacred is not explicit anywhere within the religious doctrines and in fact there is nothing inherently religious about the belief.
There's nothing inherently religious about the belief that, since the soul enters the body at conception, and a soul defines a person, the destruction of the embryo is in effect killing a person? How can you say this?
The new Testament is awfully silent on the matter. I'm pretty sure it doesn't mention when it considers a being to live.
And in fact, when you think of it, what is abortion doing? Is the child alive, or is it not. What makes the arbitraty definition between a child with age X weeks, and a child with ages X+1 week. When does it stop being abortion, and where does murder start? I'm not going to judge anyone, but it's a thing we should think about.
But would there be cultural Jews if there was, and never was, Judaism?
And would there be a stigma against them if there was no such thing as Islam or Christianity?
You could be something similair. Just need to be a group that sticks together somewhat isolated from society and easily identifiable by a common trait. There's the Romani people(also known as gypsies) and much other ethnic groups who were/are also targetted from being different, and this time without religious reasons. Judaism was just a very large group of these, and their religion allowed them to keep together.
Considering other minorities can be discriminated against without religious reasons, I'm pretty sure there will/would have been.
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Other points for the antisemitism can be found in WW I, (the person who signed the treaty was a Jew) and the years after. During the interbellum, some major figures in the governement were Jews (during their aforementioned expertise in financial matters) and in fact, if one of them hadn't been eliminated it's unlikely World war II would have been a fact.
Someone murdered someone else while wearing a party hat.
The is not representitive of my argument, since I am finding an example where religion was the cause, not just that someone doing the crime was religious (someome murdered someome because of the party hat, not just happened to be wearing it. If someome murdered directly due to wearing a party hat, then wearing a party hat would sometimes cause murder).
I am not trying to show that religion is bad overall, or even that there is a correlation between religion and bad things.
Besides,
Recent research on the rationale of suicide bombing has identified both religious and sociopolitical motivations. Those who cite religious factors as an important influence note that religion provides the framework because the bombers believe they are acting in the name of Islam and will be rewarded as martyrs.
I also can not find any information on Causation !=> Correlation on the internet (all the results are the other way around, unsuprisingly.). I would be literally interested in a link on an explanation, since with respect to Correlation !=> Causation (which we know is right, and is the only think I have to go on) (A !=> B) !=> (B !=> A).
Got a point there, I suppose. It's not good to base moral systems on the litteral, fundamentalist intrepretations of a text.
Hold your horses. Correlation doesn't justify causation.(Yeah, got it the other way around I believe) It might hint at Causation, but it doesn't always imply it. Hence my paper hat argument. I was wearing a hat when I killed somebody, but that doesn't imply that wearing hats cause people to murder each other.
Your version of the paper hat story says that Causation means Causation, which it does. The argument is most clear when used with statistics. (90% of all murders happens by people with paper hats on. Either paper hats causes murder, murder causes paper hats, an unknown thing causes murder and paper hats or both are completely unrelated)
How the hell can you say that religion is just an excuse used and not a cause? Do you really think that all these people have ulterior motives and just use religion as an excuse? That they don't actually believe? What type of conspiracy world are you living in? I've stated a whole lot of sensible motives. Religion is often molded by the society it's founded in, so you need to look for the problems there, not with the religion. What kind of conspiracy world are you living in that you believe that there's a giant organised system causing evil on large scales, while being supported by large parts of the population and justifying it's actions by stating it's doing just the reverse of what you're accusing it of.
As for Hitler...
1) Yes, religion was the justification. I don't care whether he was religious or not, the soldiers and common people believed what they were doing was right because of religion.Not anymore than that they believed they were the master race, and that the Jews were bad(And not because their religion said so.).
2) Why the hell would he also target Catholics?Because he was a Lutheran Christian. They have radically different visions on certain parts, but there was no real animousity at that point in time. He did target mormons for example, as well as several other minorities. Not because the religion said him to do so, but because they were easy targets.
3) How the hell does fundamentalism increase because of atheism vs religion? Do you really need to ask that question? If people get the feeling they're being threatened/ repressed, you automatically get a polirazation of beliefs. The middle ground dissappears, and you're left with fundamentalist and radicalization.
I am starting to get the feeling that you don't know what you're talking about.Trust me, I have that feeling a lot around here.
Yes you've stated a bunch of sensible reasons that people could commit horrible acts. So what? How does that automatically make it so religious based horrrible acts are not something that should be focused on? Or are you saying that these problems are already going to happen and religion just is tacked on? And yes religion is founded on the society it was created by. Hence the Bible was based off the culture of a bunch of pillaging and raping Jewish people. And now it is a book that people worship as the word of God. To deal with the problem of that society is to dismiss the Bible as not the word of God, as just an immoral book. And I agree with this, but do you really think that the current religions would stand if that happened? This is what I mean by getting rid of religion.
Yes, But hitler believing that there should be a master race is also a huge factor. But it doesn't excuse religion's role in this. What do you think would sway more people to allow mass murdering to occur? "God wishes this", or "this race is superior"?
Jews WERE targetted mainly because of religion. Hitler choose them and other weak targets. They were weak because they were discriminated against, because of their religion. And religion OS what made people turn the other cheek to the slaughter.
Yes, those problems would happen anyway.
I don't remember much pillaging and raping going on when the Bible was being written. At that point, the Romans were firmly in charge of the Jewish terretory. Remember that the Bible is a book over the life of Jezus, which at that time must have been a pretty amazing figure. So amazing, that the writers of the gospels went to methaphors and symbolism to explain it. The strongest and most wellknown symbolics known in those time where to be found in the Jewish religion. Hence the inclusion of the old Testament in the Bible.
This argument is supported by several early- medieval writers, and by much Christian art. You constantly see parts of the life of Jezus being pictured next to parts of the Old testament. Hence the old testament provided the background/ foreshadowed the life of Christ. It's not primarly intended to be a consecutive story. I'm also firmly against the censorship and such that would imply. Provided with proper background, the Bible ( and several others books, even Mein Kampf and such) are perfectly fine. I get it if you want to crack down on certain intrepretations, but what you want to do implies a lot of censorship on old and contemporary works. ((Also, it's completely impossible, and forbidding things is absolutely not going to help. It's the easiest way to see [Insert nation here] go up in flames))
This race is superior is a very strong argument. You're ridiculizing it, but psychological experiments have been done, and found out just what horrible things you can let people do if you control their main influence of information. Hitler controlled radio, television, everything. What he didn't control where the churches, who went against it as much as they could. (Read, didn't openly support him. Most priests aren't crazy.)
Jews weren't targetted mainly because of religion, they just made an easy target. If you look at the different people Hitler ordered to kill, you don't see a religious motive for most of them, but you do see them fit into his vision of an uberrace.