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inocente
Guest
On that thread they’ve not just argued that intelligent design should be taught as science, but that current biology lessons are a “heinous crime”, and that God designed biological weapons for the greater good.And they are entitled to do so, but Catholics are not bound to same ideology as a consequence of their faith. I did not say there are no fundamentalist Catholics. Every faith has their radicals, and as such fingers could pointed at any faith for this reason.
Seems some radicals are not just bible literalists.
*My claim is comparisons can be drawn between radical atheists and religious fundamentalists. Not all atheists and religious fundamentalists. Comparisons can be drawn between radicals or fundamentalists irrespective of what race or creed they are.
This is not my personal claim. It is documented. A few years ago I read an authoritative work compiled by history scholars that compared Stalin and Hitler, and their conclusions were the only distinction that could be drawn between Stalin and Hitler was their respective ideologies in that one was a communist and the other a fascist.
Any comparison between Stalin and Hitler is on the basis they were both bad, and I know comparisons can be drawn between fundamentalists and atheists because some posters have concluded fundamentalists = atheists = bad. Nice and easy stereotypes. Divide up the world by tribal loyalties. Except it contrives to ignore that there are many Catholic fundamentalists, both on CAF and in real life, and that they and others who sincerely believe the bible is the word of God are not necessarily bad any more than people who don’t believe in God.There are plenty of atheists who are intelligent, rational and balanced. I’m confident those following this thread know I was not suggesting all atheists are unintelligent, irrational and unbalanced simply because they are atheists. Nor one is intelligent, rational and balanced simply because one is Catholic.*
So it’s good we agree that such stereotypes are vacuous.
*“Ulster Defence Association (UDA), loyalist organization founded in Northern Ireland in 1971 to coordinate the efforts of local Protestant vigilante groups in the sectarian conflict in the province.” - britannica.com/topic/Ulster-Defence-Associationinocente;14732918:
Stop right there - No one blew anyone up in bars in Ireland in the name of Jesus. Given the attention Ireland received in the media I can’t believe someone would say people were killed in the name of Jesus. I don’t know if you genuinely think this, but for now I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt.Parents teach it to children, and in Ireland they used to blow up people in bars in the name of Jesus. In America they segregated churches, school buses, even toilets.
For historical reasons Catholics and Protestants found themselves on opposite side in a political war - not a religious one. That does not make blowing people up in bars more acceptable.
What’s your point? Religious fundamentalists are worse than atheists? Comparisons should not be drawn between radical atheists and religious fundamentalist because they are nicer or don’t exist?
“Units of the IRA were organized to defend besieged Catholic communities in the province and were sustained by support from units in Ireland.” - britannica.com/topic/Irish-Republican-Army*
My point is that stereotypes often don’t reflect reality and are used to divide between “us” and “them”, as with: all atheists bad; all fundamentalists bad; therefore atheists = fundamentalists = bad.