barmar, on 2014-May-23, 10:58, said:
So when you paint all religion with one brush, you're going to miss the mark with many people who consider themselves religious.
I used the word 'usually' and I stick by it. The fact that minority sects such as Unitarians, who would likely have been executed by their co-religionists, for denying the divinity of Jesus, during much of the past 2 millennia, don't worship some monster of their imagination, but (rather) a fairly benign, hands-off creator entity doesn't make my usage inappropriate. Virtually all large and most fringe sects in Xianity use fear as a tool for instilling obedience.
I suspect that even Unitarians have subtle coercive measures at play, such as fostering a sense of community (which sounds and often would be 'nice') that punishes, by expressions of disapproval ranging up to exclusion from the group should one not comply with the doctrine of the church. I think all 'groups' inevitably do that, and that it is simply part of our being a social animal so I am not being critical of any group that does that. It is, as best as I can tell, one of the things that makes a group a group.
Buddhists are in a different category, as best as I can tell. They do not worship an anthropomorphic entity as god.
But even Buddhism, usually shown as a pacifist belief system, other than as portrayed in the Kung Fu television series of yesteryear, has some dubious elements. The Chinese seem definitely to have been in the wrong when they invaded Tibet, but at the same time, the regime they invaded was a fairly rigid and, for the peasants, tough theocracy, where there was little freedom and no democracy (not that those problems disappeared with the invasion, of course). The dalai lama seems like a very 'good' guy, but the regime over which he was to rule was pretty nasty by western standards. Sort of like the new pope, who has gotten a free pass from a non-critical media, but whose core beliefs, including a belief in demonic possession and the exorcism thereof, and the lust to create saints, are very much redolent of medieval Catholicism. Nice on the outside...just don't look too closely at what he does, or in the case of the dalai lama, would do with power.
I can't really say much at all about conservative Judaism, but what little Wikipedia told me didn't exactly suggest that they disavow the god of the Torah. Who remains one of the vilest characters that the human imagination has ever created: far worse than Stalin, Hitler, and Pol Pot rolled into one.
I don't expect any member of a mainstream branch of any religion to ever agree with me. I would love to think that somebody, sometime, is going to ask themselves 'why have I been believing all this stuff? What on earth made me think that any of it was real?' but to think that anything I write would have that effect would require a greater suspension of disbelief than would be required for me to start worshipping anyone's god...and that ain't happening any time soon.