If religions make people feel that it's the right thing to do to go out and attempt to convert people, doesn't that make it somewhat... worse?
If someone is a perfectly happy Jehovah's Witness and you smash them online, completely undermine their ability to function as they were, and only because your correctness made you feel it's the right thing to do, isn't that somewhat... worse? Pot. Kettle. Black. You're both having the same urges to do something that you agree is very annoying and rude.
Fortunately they represent a tiny (but ridiculously vocal) group
Right there. What you said right there. Tiny as hell. Remember what you replied to? "I've never seen"? That's because it almost never happens. You're focusing on outrageous but tiny details. Logical fallacy. Drop that whole thing from your argument.
Converting someone away from such a belief is a matter of psychological necessity.
"Such a belief"? Then you might actually agree with me that there are theists that are perfectly fine with the belief they're currently under?
I'm driven by trying to teach humanity to think logically. If that's your definition of "proving someone wrong" then by all means. However, praying in your deathbed for "Jesus to help you" through this while declining medical treatment that could save your life doesn't seem logical if you are both going to die by not doing the treatment.
Having people think logically has NOTHING to do with destroying their religion. If someone is refusing medical treatment out of personal beliefs, you will have MUCH better success getting their peers or at least someone almost on the same page as them to convince them in the terms of their own belief otherwise. You don't have to completely dismantle people to get them to change their opinions about things. It's like removing stains with a shotgun. There are much less destructive, invasive, and inconsiderate methods of doing it.
Also, you tread a fine line when you state that the well-being of an individual is always in the minds of the believer
Never claimed that. I'm saying, the majority of the time, the theist's motivation is the well being of the other person. He was saying that the theist doesn't always have respectable motivation either, and that atheists can have respectable motivation too. My rebuttal, no claim, is granted what he said is true, that still the majority of theists tend to make appeals to the other's well being in comparison to atheists in my experiences.
Also, in address to the recent fad of atheism, I should note that there are many who believe that such a collection of closed thinking individuals can really be detrimental to the mental well-being of some people.