• untorquer@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    I mean, it’s the community that keeps people around. The rules and dogma push people who aren’t being served well by the community out.

    So in group this is natural to say. But external, directed at religious peoples, it’s not going to do the work of bringing them into your community. It’s not welcoming and it serves to push people to build walls rather than promote a change in thinking.

    So i think you’re right in the context of being in community with a believer, but the comment wasn’t about that to begin with.

    Alternatively, it’s hard to see how much religion is pushed until you’re outside of it. It’s like the opposite of getting a new (to you) car or phone. When you are, all of a sudden you realize how saturated everything is with it. It’s like living off the end of the runway of an international hub airport, there’s no rest.

    • GrammarPolice@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      I don’t deny there’s an element of groupthink within the Christian community that keeps its participants ensnared in the system while also alienating potential partakers, but adding the word ‘psychosis’ - like the user i responded to did - is rather disrespectful of the Christian position. You’d be falling victim to the outgroup homogeneity bias where you perceive individuals separate from your in-group as being alike and less diverse than yours. Just because you see many delusional participants does not mean all participants are equally as delusional.

      Classifying belief in Christianity as psychosis simply shows one’s ignorance as they think one can only be religious if they’re “insane” which is just not the case since there are many who participate in Christianity with perfectly reasonable reasons.

      I’m an atheist, but i think it’s high time, as atheists, we stopped making these stupid ad hominem attacks towards differing ideas.

      • Cuttlefish1111@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        Taking the position gay/trans people shouldn’t exist is abhorrent.

        You’d be falling victim to the outgroup homogeneity bias where you perceive individuals separate from your in-group as being alike and less diverse than yours. Just because you see many delusional participants does not mean all participants are equally as delusional.

        The thing is, the second you let in a Nazi, it becomes a Nazi bar.

        Also, yes we all know how indoctrination works.

        • GrammarPolice@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          Taking the position gay/trans people shouldn’t exist is abhorrent.

          Once again, you’re committing the same mistake as before. You’d be surprised to learn that the discourse concerning this is more nuanced than before.

          Also, non-acceptance of LGBTQ groups isn’t actually a disproof of religion. I mean think about it. Christianity is an absolutist doctrine, that means that regardless of what you feel or how the times have changed, Christian law remains absolute. If an all powerful being deems it so that homosexuality is a sin, then all power to him really. You don’t have to like it, but that’s the reality you’re presented with if the Judeo-Christian God actually exists.

          • Cuttlefish1111@lemmy.world
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            3 hours ago

            I answered a simple question with a simple answer. You proved the point better than I ever could have. Now tell us how to think and talk again.