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| Does hell exist? |
| Yes, definitely. |
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22% |
[ 5 ] |
| Maybe. |
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18% |
[ 4 ] |
| I seriously doubt. |
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0% |
[ 0 ] |
| No, hell is a myth. |
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59% |
[ 13 ] |
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| Total Votes : 22 |
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Mr. Pessimistic  Professor Silver Contributor


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Posted: Tue Sep 30, 2008 1:07 pm Post subject:
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| Interbane wrote: |
Penelope: "I can only explain myself by saying, that when I have managed to absorb or assimilate, certain spiritual matters, it is like a feeling of recognition..."
That feeling can and has been explained scientifically numerous times. The human mind is incredible. Don't take that personally. Words can't express the complexity of this matter, of course.
I sometimes feel sorry for people that can't see the magic that is all around us and instead must believe in the fantasy of angels and demons and omnipotent beings. Reality is so must more mezmerizing than the illusion of religion.
Penelope: "I do know that when mankind tries to categorise, analyse and pigeonhole 'God' or spiritual truths.....and when people believe they have it all sorted.....and then attempt to inflict their truth on others.....then follows the inquisition."
The only people that have suffered rape, murder, slaughter, and other atrocities via inquisition are people who religion saw as nonbelievers. This is part of our history that motivates me to speak out against religion. I would never cross that line, it's ridiculous. Only someone with absolute faith would do something like this, too fearful of a false hell to change their beliefs. |
Ahhh...welcome back Interbane.
Mr. P. |
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Penelope  Stupendously Brilliant Silver Contributor


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Location: Cheshire, England

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Posted: Tue Sep 30, 2008 1:11 pm Post subject:
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Well, Interbane, I happen to think that God and Spirituality is 'natural' to us. We can't explain it, but that doesn't mean it isn't there.
I can pray with all my might and main for bananas to grow on my tomato bushes in the garden.
But God doesn't do those kind of miracles.
God, the spirit, the reality....whatever it is....uses natural means....
and during my life....I have been satisfied...in my search....but all searches and pilgrimages are personal.....
If you see life as a pilgrimage....a search...then you will receive the answers that are relevant to 'your' questions......but 'your' questions will always be different than 'mine', or the next persons. It is personal you see, that is why it is wrong to inflict our own questions and answers, of a spiritual nature, onto other people, who might have different questions entirely. |
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Interbane  Stupendously Brilliant Gold Contributor

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Posted: Tue Sep 30, 2008 2:15 pm Post subject:
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Penelope: "It is personal you see, that is why it is wrong to inflict our own questions and answers, of a spiritual nature, onto other people, who might have different questions entirely."
My belief is fluid. Constantly changing. I've reached this point by being inquisitive and searching for the truth my entire life. During my mental journey, I've come across almost every common explanation and have had it answered in a way that does not involve anything Spiritual or God. The explanation you give, I've had my own brain ask myself in the past. I've felt that way. My responses are to answer your explanations the same way I've answered my own, not to inflict my beliefs upon you. No matter what you feel, or how you interpret things, that is able to be explained without spirituality.
"If you see life as a pilgrimage....a search...then you will receive the answers that are relevant to 'your' questions......but 'your' questions will always be different than 'mine', or the next persons."
I'll respond again in a second, gotta jump computers.
Okay... lost my train of thought.
I appreciate the compliment. I realize that my beliefs may be unique, but having a cookie cutter belief such as yours is less noble. You shouldn't rely so much on the answers that others provide. Think deeply about your beliefs, they may then not be so inexplicable. |
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GentleReader9  Sophomore Silver Contributor


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Thanks Given: 15 Received: 18 in 18 Posts
Gender: 
Location: Eugene, Oregon, USA, Earth.
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Posted: Wed Oct 01, 2008 7:49 pm Post subject:
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Hey, Interbane,
| Quote: |
| The only people that have suffered rape, murder, slaughter, and other atrocities via inquisition are people who religion saw as nonbelievers. |
This is factually incorrect. Most people who suffered at the hands of the Inquistion were believers in something slightly different, but no less spiritually grounded, than what the Inquisitors believed. All the so-called heresies of the Church, the other world religions, the varied and diverse sets of symbolic language and imagery people use to describe what they believe when they get to the edge of the Known -- these are the things that upset the Inquisitors.
Historically, there are very few self-proclaimed atheists in the records of the Inquisition. This is because spirituality is not at all a "cookie cutter" belief. As very broad category for diverse expressions of subjective experiences, spirituality is an individual's way of exploring and expressing how they believe themselves to be connected to a greater whole with life around them. It is fluid, changing, based on what cultures and people learn through internally-directed questioning about their experiences, just like your changing intellectual growth.
| Quote: |
| I do know that when mankind tries to categorise, analyse and pigeonhole 'God' or spiritual truths.....and when people believe they have it all sorted.....and then attempt to inflict their truth on others.....then follows the inquisition. |
If you really look honestly and with your mind open at what Penelope is saying above, and if you consider the actual history of the Inquisition, you will admit that hers is an accurate assessment of what the motivation behind it is, and that your claim that hers is a "cookie cutter" belief is not an accurate description of that.
I don't send more emails than you, do, by the way, and it won't kill you to read the ones you receive with attention to what is said rather than with preconceived ideas that you already know what people mean and it's something you already understand and have encountered elsewhere: a recognizable heresy according to your sense of reality. What if it were new and interesting and you missed it? |
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Interbane  Stupendously Brilliant Gold Contributor

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Posted: Wed Oct 01, 2008 11:19 pm Post subject:
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Gentle: "This is factually incorrect. Most people who suffered at the hands of the Inquistion were believers in something slightly different, but no less spiritually grounded, than what the Inquisitors believed."
I stand corrected. Religion is responsible for slaughtering all types of people, not just nonbelievers.
"As very broad category for diverse expressions of subjective experiences."
The term "subjective" is enough for me. It is cookie cutter because it involves initial indoctrination, then when critical thinking is concerned, it leads 99% of the time to emotions and feelings and "I just know" rather than anything remotely objective. The templates for the cookie is monotheism, structured with a few different templates that get more specific. Created by men thousands of years ago.
Penelope: "It is personal you see, that is why it is wrong to inflict our own questions and answers, of a spiritual nature, onto other people, who might have different questions entirely."
You may have your questions, but you've been indoctrinated to accept a certain answer. Everything else with respect to your belief follows suit. Following faith, subjective experiences fill the gaps.
If you think it's wrong to inflict your answers onto others, then you agree that monotheism is doing exactly the opposite in "spreading the word."
If your spirituality is not only completely separate from all major religions, but also didn't start with them originally, then you have my full apology for being a turd. |
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GentleReader9  Sophomore Silver Contributor


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Gender: 
Location: Eugene, Oregon, USA, Earth.
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Posted: Mon Oct 06, 2008 7:35 pm Post subject:
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Interbane,
You are not "a turd;" I don't think so and I'll bet Penelope doesn't either. As usual, it's a straw man, or should I say a "turd man?"
You said:
| Quote: |
| The term "subjective" is enough for me. It is cookie cutter because it involves initial indoctrination... |
Not at all. "Subjective" has much more to do with an individual's direct experience, personal explorations and what he or she makes of them, internally in processing, as opposed to "objective," a term implying checking outside oneself with other people about an entire framework for oganizing and validating any ideas or perceptions with theirs or with standards they agree with you about. There is much more scope for indoctrination to influence what we as a culture decide is "objective" and it is a term that claims absolute authority to which the term "subjective" does not even aspire, nor pretend. The Inquisition would not have admitted it was at all "subjective." It claimed to uphold "objective" truth about an absolute reality, applicable to everyone, regardless of how they felt or what they sensed or experienced subjectively.
| Quote: |
| ...then when critical thinking is concerned, it leads 99% of the time to emotions and feelings and "I just know" rather than anything remotely objective. |
Ultimately, everything leads to some endpoint of supposition. These are ususally called premises. You cannot start a logical line of argument without a given, a language to make statements with, someone who has a life, culture, history (read potential "indoctrination") to influence the framing of whatever is said or argued. A person can choose to fall for the "impression" of every single ego and declare, "But my thoughts are clearer and based more on what is true than those other people's because..." or one can notice what tends to go on, be honest and admit, "My point of view is subjective and these are the practical and personal reasons why I choose to think this way in my particular life. No one else has to, and I'm willing to entertain other ideas if people have them. But we will never know for a fact what the Truth is, and it is highly unlikely that any of us has it completely right at this point." That's what I think. I don't claim to have invented it, and I may have been indoctrinated. If so, there's a lot of flexibility for changing my mind about things inside the indoctrination. And I don't have to kill anyone over it, which I think is nice, personally. If it were objective truth, and some evil people who didn't think so had to be offed, things could get a lot more unpleasant for me. I don't want to do it. I'm just subjective like that. |
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Chris OConnor  Rhodes Scholar BookTalk.org Owner

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Gender: 
Location: Florida

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Posted: Tue Oct 07, 2008 12:13 am Post subject:
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| I stand corrected. Religion is responsible for slaughtering all types of people, not just nonbelievers. |
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Interbane  Stupendously Brilliant Gold Contributor

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Gender: 

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Posted: Tue Oct 07, 2008 12:25 pm Post subject:
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Me: "The term "subjective" is enough for me. It is cookie cutter because it involves initial indoctrination..."
You slightly took that sentence out of context. The primary point was there there is no reference to anything objective for the people I'm speaking of. They cannot point to empirical evidence that supports their beliefs. Their system is based entirely on internal feelings and subjective experiences.
"The Inquisition would not have admitted it was at all "subjective." It claimed to uphold "objective" truth about an absolute reality, applicable to everyone, regardless of how they felt or what they sensed or experienced subjectively."
That is what scares me. With religion, it's capable of producing radicalists who warp the truth of things. Such thinking gives way to events like the inquisition. The torture and slaughter of so many people. The only support that is objective is a book, written by man. That is terrible support, even given it can be considered objective as Popper would see objective knowledge.
"These are ususally called premises. You cannot start a logical line of argument without a given, a language to make statements with, someone who has a life, culture, history (read potential "indoctrination") to influence the framing of whatever is said or argued."
You used the word indoctrination differently than I. There are a few different connotations, one of which has to do with imbuing a person with an ideology or belief. Another, separate, definition is simply to teach someone. The difference may be minor, but precision is critical to discussions like this, and it makes all the difference.
The endpoint of supposition... how about we only really need faith in our senses, with respect to how we percieve other people? That is about as basic and fundamental as you can get, and nearly entire worldivews can be built upon it. There isn't need for faith in your emotions or to base beliefs on your emotions to gain a highly truthful(for lack of a better phrase) perspective on reality. Further, emotions do nothing but cloud our perspectives if our goal is a belief or understanding that is highly truthful. They should have no part in the critical thinking that we use to understand the world, unless they are the topic of the critical thinking itself.
"But we will never know for a fact what the Truth is, and it is highly unlikely that any of us has it completely right at this point."
I completely agree. The most we can do is aim for the Truth as an ideal, and attempt to get as close as possible.
"If it were objective truth, and some evil people who didn't think so had to be offed.."
That's hypothetically flawed. Who would be the one to define whether or not the people in question were evil? It couldn't be an objective truth, evil is a subjective concept. But for the sake of discussion, let's say you're right. An evil person is loose on this world. Objectively defined, this person isn't even a human, but is the embodiment of evil that will lead to the end of the universe. Your subjectivity that influences you to not pull the trigger indirectly destroyed the entire universe.
Playing with words works both ways, and it's a world all it's own. Taking sentences out of context(which I do sometimes unintentionally), creating concepts that are false, yet too slippery to be debated against or refuted. Using a word ever so slightly out of context as to be almost undetectable, to prove a fallacious point. I'm not pointing the finger, I do these things too, again unintentionally. It is the power of belief bias that helps us shift the truth of concepts in certain directions, even against what is true, most times without us conciously realizing this false shift. I have faith that my perceptions of other humans is true. All else follows suit and is able to be altered. I think that's the only way to battle belief bias and hold a truthful perspective on reality. My current beliefs are much more complicated, of course, but the only anchor I rely on is what I've said above. |
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GentleReader9  Sophomore Silver Contributor


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Location: Eugene, Oregon, USA, Earth.
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Posted: Tue Oct 07, 2008 8:04 pm Post subject:
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I think that on the most important things at issue, Interbane, you and I would actually be in agreement if we could figure out how to explain enough things to each other.
What I am really hoping you will understand and agree with is that everyone's culture, experience, background and basic humanity makes their notion of truth necessarily subjective and somewhat limited, regardless of if they choose to use religious, scientific, historic, artistic, psychological or other frameworks for understanding. In my view the most honest and responsible approach we can take is in declaring how we mean (in terms of the above approaches or whatever we are using) and what we mean (what kinds of the above factors of culture, history, experience, etc.) influence our perspective. I think I get more out of doing this without deciding ahead of time that one way or one set of influences is better or best. It works out (in my experience) with more learning for me and for others the more respect and the fewer assumptions that are involved. That respectful suspension of complete belief, as I choose to think of it, is not far from your much loved "skepticism;" it's a matter of tone, perhaps and places others' thoughts beside mine rather than ranking them, as much as I can.
I do see that many religions, especially Christian religions since the Middle Ages, have tried to violently enforce their beliefs upon others, whether they are fellow-Christians or not. What I would like to call to your attention is the fact that people, also in Europe but elsewhere have done equally heinous things for entirely non-religious reasons (Pol Pot, the Nazis, Stalin, various right-wing regimes in El Salvador, Guatemala -- this list could go on and start much earlier with more diverse ideologies). At this time, the greatest source of torture and repression in the world is not the act of religious ideologues attempting to convert people, nor do I believe that was ever the true goal of the Inquistion or witch-hunting. The torture for which our government is responsible in Guantanamo Bay, being taught in the former school of the Americas which is now called Fort Benning in Georgia and which continues at U.S. taxpayer expense to train torturers from Third World countries -- these people have no religion. This is about power and control, with money as only one form that power and control can take. They use the notion that there are evil people we have to hurt and kill to justify it.
This is true and happening now. Our government, a supposed democratic republic is perpetrating it. How, in the face of that, can anyone, especially anyone American, who thinks he has ethics accuse Penelope, of all people, of unconsciously having the kind of belief that is dangerous in the world today? I question the focus. I question the sense of proportion. I don't question the motive, because I believe you are sincere and this is something you haven't placed together, side by side to look at. When you do, what does it look like to you? |
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Lawrence  Experienced Gold Contributor


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Posted: Wed Oct 08, 2008 10:35 am Post subject: A little levity is always good if not always appreciated
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This story has been around the internet for a while but some of you may not have seen it. Best wishes,
HELL EXPLAINED BY CHEMISTRY STUDENT
> The following is an actual question given on a
University of Washington chemistry mid term.
> The answer by one student was so 'profound' that
the professor shared it with colleagues, via the Internet, which is, of
course, why we now have the pleasure of enjoying it as well :
>
> Bonus Question: Is Hell exothermic (gives off
heat) or endothermic (absorbs heat)?
>
> Most of the students wrote proofs of their beliefs
using Boyle's Law (gas cools when it expands and heats when it is
compressed) or some variant.
>
> One student, however, wrote the following:
>
> First, we need to know how the mass of Hell is
changing in time. So we need to know the rate at which souls are moving into Hell and the rate at which they are leaving. I think that we can safely
assume that once a soul gets to Hell, it will not leave. Therefore, no souls
are leaving. As for how many souls are entering Hell, let's look at the
different religions that exist in the world today.
>
> Most of these religions state that if you are not
a member of their religion, you will go to Hell. Since there is more than
one of these religions and since people do not belong to more than one
religion, we can project that all souls go to Hell. With birth and death
rates as they are, we can expect the number of souls in Hell to increase
exponentially. Now, we look at the rate of change of the volume in Hell
because Boyle's Law states that in order for the temperature and pressure in Hell to stay the same, the volume of Hell has to expand proportionately as souls are added.
>
> This gives two possibilities:
> 1. If Hell is expanding at a slower rate than the
rate at which souls enter Hell, then the temperature and pressure in Hell
will increase until all Hell breaks loose.
> 2. If Hell is expanding at a rate faster than the
increase of souls in Hell,then the temperature and pressure will drop until
Hell freezes over.
> So which is it?
>
> If we accept the postulate given to me by Teresa
during my Freshman year that, 'It will be a cold day in Hell before I sleep
with you,' and take into account the fact that I slept with her last night,
then number two must be true, and thus I am sure that Hell is exothermic and has already frozen over. The corollary of this theory is that since Hell has frozen over, it follows that it is not accepting any more souls and is
therefore, extinct......leaving only Heaven, thereby proving the existence
of a divine being which explains why, last night, Teresa kept shouting 'Oh
my God.'
>
> THIS STUDENT RECEIVED AN A+.
> |
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Interbane  Stupendously Brilliant Gold Contributor

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Posted: Wed Oct 08, 2008 7:29 pm Post subject:
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Gentle: "What I am really hoping you will understand and agree with is that everyone's culture, experience, background and basic humanity makes their notion of truth necessarily subjective and somewhat limited, regardless of if they choose to use religious, scientific, historic, artistic, psychological or other frameworks for understanding."
I understand that, and am unhappy that people accept that. Being comfortable with that mindset leads to unwillingness to accept others ideas, and believing too strongly in different worldviews. If I appear the contrary, I challenge you, give me a down to earth, deeply and well thought out explanation of your beliefs, and I'll consider them. The problem is from what I've seen in these forums so far, there is no deep thinking. Either beliefs can't be explained, or the attempted explanation gets waterlogged in poetic hodgepodge. I've seen no coherent explanation or even partial explanation of spirituality, God, or more to the point of this thread, Hell.
"Our government, a supposed democratic republic is perpetrating it. How, in the face of that, can anyone, especially anyone American, who thinks he has ethics accuse Penelope, of all people, of unconsciously having the kind of belief that is dangerous in the world today?"
Do you think there is zero religious motivation in Bush's regime?
"At this time, the greatest source of torture and repression in the world is not the act of religious ideologues attempting to convert people, nor do I believe that was ever the true goal of the Inquistion or witch-hunting."
Conversion efforts would most likely very rarely be a cause of death, I agree. Why kill potential cattle? It is also most likely not a goal. It is the side effect of the mentality it instills in people. Absolute beliefs, and the idea that it isn't as bad to kill someone who believes differently than you. Heretics, blasphemers, evil atheists, philosophers.
In today's world, we rarely see such a direct link as was evident during the Inquisition, but we can greater humanitarian efforts and separation of church and state for that. Below is some literature showing indirect, but still linked, evidence of religion influencing mass slaughter.
"My feelings as a Christian points me to my Lord and Savior as a fighter. It points me to the man who once in loneliness, surrounded by a few followers, recognized these Jews for what they were and summoned men to fight against them and who, God’s truth! was greatest not as a sufferer but as a fighter. In boundless love as a Christian and as a man I read through the passage which tells us how the Lord at last rose in His might and seized the scourge to drive out of the Temple the brood of vipers and adders. How terrific was His fight for the world against the Jewish poison. To-day, after two thousand years, with deepest emotion I recognize more profoundly than ever before the fact that it was for this that He had to shed His blood upon the Cross. As a Christian I have no duty to allow my self to be cheated, but I have the duty to be a fighter for truth and justice… And if there is anything which could demonstrate that we are acting rightly it is the distress that daily grows . For as a Christian I have also a duty to my own people." –Adolf Hitler, in a speech on 12 April 1922 (Norman H. Baynes, ed. The Speeches of Adolf Hitler, April 1922-August 1939, Vol. 1 of 2, pp. 19-20, Oxford University Press, 1942)
"We--with God's help--call on every Muslim who believes in God and wishes to be rewarded to comply with God's order to kill the Americans and plunder their money wherever and whenever they find it. We also call on Muslim ulema, leaders, youths, and soldiers to launch the raid on Satan's U.S. troops and the devil's supporters allying with them, and to displace those who are behind them so that they may learn a lesson." Feb. 1998 - Bin Laden edict
Theistic related body count:
# The early 20th century's Armenian Genocide (and yes, it was a genocide), carried out by a vassal state of the theocratic Ottoman empire, cost 1.5 million lives.
# Hitler, an avowed Catholic, Mussolini, who had the good sense to be non-religious in his youth but who later converted to Catholicism in 1927, and Hirohito, an avowed participant of the state religion of Japan, launched the Second World War in 1939 (or was that 1941?). The total deaths from this war have been calculated at about 72 million, including the Holocaust. The largely atheistic citizens of the Soviet Union were the biggest victims of this war of theistic expansionism. This does not include
# the Nanking massacre, which modern historians estimate took about 500,000 lives, almost entirely Chinese.
# The 1948 Arab-Israeli War has been reliably tallied at almost exactly 20,000 casualties.
# The Six-Day War has been reliably tallied at almost exactly 22,000 casualties.
# The First Sudanese Civil War (which is not the Darfur crisis), which was explicitly religious in nature, cost about 500,000 lives. The Second Sudanese Civil War (which is also not the Darfur crisis) cost about 2 million.
# "Operation Searchlight," the pogroms carried out by the megalomaniacal theists in charge of Bangladesh in the early 1970s, cost 3 million lives.
# Conservative estimates of the Hindu extremist group known colloquially as the Tamil Tigers place the ongoing death toll at 215,000.
# Other forms of modern Hindu violence against other religions or lapsed Hindus (almost entirely in the form of Hindu-on-Muslim violence) can be veeeery conservatively estimated at 25,000.
# Late 20th century violence by the Islamic Ba'ath party of Iraq (a nation so religious that it had the phrase Allahu Akbar scrawled across its flag and which once hosted one of the largest mosques in the region built by Saddam Hussein) against ethnic Kurds cost about 150,000 lives.
# The 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War, also known in Iran as the Holy War, cost about 750,000 lives, conservatively.
# The 1994 Rwandan genocide, not religious in nature but certainly caused by theists, resulted in about 1 million deaths.
# The Ustasa regime's mass murders, which would have been impossible had not the regime been propped up by the Catholic Church (whose fingerprints can be found in nearly every example of 20th century fascism; see "God Is Not Great" by award-winning journalist Christopher Hitchens), tally up to "hundreds of thousands." Lets call it 200,000.
# The 2001 attack on the World Trade Center by Muslim fundamentalists who all came into extremist Islam in adult life after coming out of good educations and good backgrounds in countries that had never known any measure of oppression by the United States cost almost 3,000 lives.
# The 2003 invasion of Iraq by the avowed theocrat George W. Bush who said that the war was waged on instructions from God, launched against the (above-mentioned) theocratic Ba'ath Party of Iraq, has, between insurgents, Americans, Iraqi security, Iraqi civilians, foreign military officers, and foreign civilians, cost about 1 million lives, mostly caused by Muslim fundamentalist extremists. |
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GentleReader9  Sophomore Silver Contributor


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Posted: Wed Oct 08, 2008 9:02 pm Post subject:
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Hi, Interbane,
Sigh. Hell exists; I was wrong. Hell is when I find a list of examples like the one you just posted all poised and waiting for me to go through each one and explain to you ideas like: the conflict between Israel and Palestine and the surrounding countries is not primarily religious, but territorial, and was created after WWII along with the creation of Israel, previous to which such animosity was so much less as to be negligible in comparison to what it is now...sorry if that sounds rude.
Such a project is tempting, even at 6:25 pm after a day which began at 5:20 am, but I'm not going to do it. Instead, I admire and acknowledge the merits of your list. Religion has contributed to world suffering: I give you that.
I want to focus on the one thing I think is really important: "the Bush Regime," as you call it, is not responsible for the U.S. export of torture, much as I wish I could blame it on them and their sucky religion. It has existed since at least the late Viet Nam War Era and probably before that, but that's the history I am most aware of since I was only born in 1961. If I really wanted to incur your utter scorn I could go on to add that as a Libra I like things to be nice and to avoid icky topics like Hell and torture as much as the next person....(wait, I just did put that in; I really am tired)...so I haven't researched all the parts before I was born.
My point is, the "Hell" I think we should be paying attention to is not a literal geographic place, a particular system of belief, or anything so "superstitious or supernatural." So people throughout history have used whatever symbols, words, metaphors, analogies, parables they can in order to speak of moral, ethical, subtle principles that have no material bodies -- and?
The fact remains that choices we make can cause excruciating and unbelieveable suffering for ourselves and others that outlives our bodies and the ability of the mind to look at it calmly, intelligently enough to untangle the chains that tie us in the burning embers. I believe we have a primary responsibility to look at our part in anything major that is going on right now that resembles that creation of a Hell not founded in justifiable fact or moral principle, first and foremost, instead of quibbling over ancient and rarified issues of text and interpretation versus silly material literalism, skeptical or credulous.
Truthfully, do you think it is an honest and sufficient and responsible reply to my raising that issue about U.S. export of torture as the present "evil" equivalent of the Inquisition, with an off-the-cuff remark about George W. Bush's supposed religion? If so, I think that is remarkable in an intelligent skeptic like yourself. I have changed my initial answer that there is no Hell. There is something very much like Hell and it was here before George Bush, has little to do with spiritual principles, and can use any ideology whether religous or not to harvest victims. |
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