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Has Radical Islam increased the spread of Athiesm ?

hexx 3 Apr 7
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8

No more than radical Christianity has. In my own experience I've been treated with more respect and kindness from the Muslims than the Christians, actually. The local Imam and I have a lot of pleasant talks.

@iamjc you seem to think christians aren't the same. Your complete bias and hatred claiming they're ALL extremists is no better than christians claiming we are all terrible people. Honestly I'm more scared of you after that hateful rant than I am of Imam. Radical and hateful atheists like you are no better than isis.

Here in the UK there is a good community spirit and although tensions exist still and it has risen with Brexit and Trump / May there is an awareness generally that Muslim people are on the whole peaceful. People in my experience freaked out are already affected by mental health / emotional problems and are easily influenced! I know some lovely Muslim folks.. Have done whole life. Good and bad in all groups of people. I do think the religion has some odd ideas but no odder than christianity really.

@iamjc fewer than you think support isis. We are done talking.

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Perhaps it is radical Christians who are driving the rise of secularism in America. Witnessing the hypocrisy, hatred, bigotry, misogyny, dishonesty, deceit, well the list could go on, all coming from people who loudly proclaim their Christianity, is surely enough to drive some people away from religion.

I quite agree.

When talking about Islam raise a false equivocation in order to pretend you answered the question. Good job at not answering a question!

A reasonable reply might have looked like this: IDK or Maybe it is all the killing and bigotry that the Quran instructs its followers to do.
You could have said: I don't know enough about Islam to give an intelligent answer.
This is for the purpose of making you think critically and logically. Don't get upset you're not the only one that does it!

4

I think just knowing about Islam radical or otherwise helps once people realize that a persons religion has more to do with who their parents are and where they are born than any truth to a particular doctrine

Hear, hear!

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nope. the medium of the internet, TV, Radio or generally the sharing of information is the reason for it.

here's why.

before the internet and everything else, atheists were few and far between any given location. they were likely to be closeted and secretive about their actual thoughts on the matter. if it wasn't for radio, or tv, people like George Carlin wouldn't have been able to tell interesting jokes which provoked conversations and those jokes lived on forever due to the record keeping of that medium. now we have the internet, free and open, we can coagulate and gather wherever we can. we can arrange meetings, discussions and even talk to believers in ways which were nigh on impossible before the internet. sending letters and messages into a newspaper was a hassle and wasn't 100% it would be printed. now, we can talk amongst ourselves, intelligently and ignorantly alike.

Islam is no different to any other religion. it has just as many offenders of the religion as the rest of the religions do. they just do it with more talent for video editing and propaganda spreading.

the only reason it seems Islam is creating a surge of atheism is because of it's prevelant presence in our lives. without Islam, there is just as likely to be the same amount of atheists. the only difference is, we're being noticed because of Islam enforcing the rule of killing apostates and non believers, just like christians did until they were forced to become more secular in order to save the religion and merge with a society which prefers knowledge over blind rage and ignorance. christianity had two choices, remain strict and stiff on the punishment for leaving or not believing, or drop the violence and secretly let the doctrine brainwash people into thinking a god is real and that christianity is the only true way towards obeying that god.

as Christopher Hitchens said "christianity tells you you're sick and commands you to be well." or something to that effect. he's right. it's the last few tactics the religion has. emotional, mental blackmail. that's why it's part of the 12 step program for drug addicts. those people are mentally broken and incapable of thinking clearly, so religion takes the reigns and tricks them into thinking their accomplishments are solely because of religion and tells them their failures are due to the lack of it. an objective perspective on this matter reveals the sadistic nature of religion and christianity. if the christians could, they would murder anybody who didn't conform. they truly would. those who didn't commit murder in the name of that religion, would be subjected to being murdered by proxy. don't treat Islam like the big baddy it wants you to think it is. it takes a lot of rearranging to make your religion a mental battle rather than a physical one. very few intelligent Muslims speak up and talk about the religion. the rest just stay quiet and let the violence and destruction continue. just like christianity did. lets not forget, Islam isn't the only religion to destroy priceless artifacts and remove people from history in order to defend its practices.

as soon as people are educated, they are much more likely to become atheist or at least adopt a benign version of their religion to remain within the realm of chance at having that sweet sweet afterlife. christianity stopped being so brutal once the populations could read the book for themselves, they stopped being so ignorant and they even split up into dozens upon dozens upon hundreds of denominations in defence of their religion and how they saw it to be practiced or interpreted. Islam is slowly going through the same transition. think of Islam as christianity but 400 years ago. the transition is happening super fast and it's all thanks to the advent of the internet and the age of reason and information sharing.

@MichaelSpinler when people were learning to read, that wasn't an advantage, it was a gift. that gift prevented further radical indoctrination. education ruins religion. the next few generations will show you that to be true. give it 30 years then read this again. i didn't mention a career or anything to do with jobs and that nonsense.

i also said educated people are much more likely to keep the religion but in a more useless form and just say they're part of the religion, effectively creating a denomination unique to the individual.

reading the bible for ones self is the best way to become an atheist, the same should go for every other religion based on a book.

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Isn't Islam radical anyway ?

3

It has in the 'Arab world' but openness about it can still mean deep trouble.

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I believe education and the fact we are a transient society opens us up to more ideas and influences.

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I don't know that it has. It's just another form of bullshit without a bit of evidence.

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I would hope so.

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I don't know has it?

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I don't think there's some special quality of radicalized fundamentalist islam and radical fundamentalist Christianity or radical fundamentalist anything else. A minority of all such followers will deconvert and some of those will become atheists.

Your reply only raises more questions.
How many Christians are killed each year for apostasy?
How many gays are thrown off a high building by Christians?
How many honor killings do the Christians do every year?
How many Christians kill other denominations within Christianity for not believing their particular doctrine?
What other religions kill people for not believing their religious doctrine?
Apparently, there is a high murder rate amongst Buddist. Oh no! wait a second that would be ISLAM
When someone asks a question about the effects of Islam people need to stop equivocating other religions. When the question is asked, Why does Islamic extremism have such a high murder rate your next statement shouldn't be "but the crusades"

@Proslice56 I don't know why you avoid the unforced commonalities between all religious beliefs. Islam is, at this point, more dominantly fundamentalist on a worldwide basis than, say, Christianity. We can argue to what extent this is a function of influences like poverty, or inherent to the religion. But all religion is a toxic fulcrum of control for some privileged group (the clergy), and often, the clergy is just a proxy for government control, particularly where religion is not well-separated from the state, and where the government is, in fact, theocratic in nature.

So that leaves us with the question: is Christianity less "on the hook" for being authoritarian and otherizing just because it doesn't physically throw gays off of roofs in public executions? Is it okay that they just quietly lynch them in private, or harm them in subtle and semi-deniable ways through social exclusion and denial of equal rights?

We're unbelievers here, so we're not (or shouldn't be, at least) interested in justifying the otherizing of one group as "worse" than another. That's being just as tribal as the different religious factions.

American Muslims are, on average, wealthier, more educated and more law-abiding than most other minority groups. It's unintelligent to paint them with the same brush as the generally more impoverished, uneducated and radicalized Muslims in, say, Europe. The only disavowal of radical Islam I can legitimately expect from them is the only disavowal that matters, and the one they're already providing: living respectfully and peacefully within our society. At least, until we radicalize them by treating them as if they weren't doing those things, and as if every mosque were a hotbed of covert subversion.

Finally, if you believe that Islam is the ONLY religion that kills for not believing their doctrines, you must have been living under a rock and/or ignorant of history. And yes, the crusades are entirely relevant to that. But it's far from the only example (the church was burning heretics at the stake long after the crusades, and there's the paranoia of the Salem witch trials), and it's not like there aren't contemporary instances, either, for example, the persecution of Buddhists by Christians: [en.wikipedia.org]

Because of secular laws the Churches now have more difficulty in persecuting heretics, but persecution is still part of mainstream Christian thought. The oath taken by Roman Catholic bishops at their consecration includes the following: "undertaking with all my power I will persecute and make war upon heretics".

So what it comes down to is that ALL religions end up, where they can get away with it, forcing conformity at the point of a sword. I would submit that Muslims just reside in countries where there is little distinction between religion and government, and thus they can get away with it.

@mordant I see by your carefully long thought out response, you really don't get it. Please allow me to highlight the key portion of my post!

We are talking about frigging ISLAM FFS!

So you want to make it about Christianity.
"THUS" you show how little you know about Islam as you draw a false equivalence.

I responded to your diatribe in under 100 words.

@Proslice56 That was not a response, it was a restatement of your original post that studiously avoided actually engaging a single point that I raised. "Frigging Islam FFS" is just a primal scream, with no substantiation at all, that Islam is both a monolith AND an especially inherently heinous religion.

I will leave it to the reader to decide whose is the less reasoned argument, and which qualifies as "diatribe".

@mordant Wow! What an overly dramatic way of saying nothing. I agree with one thing you said! Leave this here for everyone to form an opinion. Unfortunately, there will be those that think you actually made a point!

@Annie45 Christianity is just as dedicated to world domination as Islam. It has just been gentled (for sufficiently white and/or affluent societies) by the Enlightenment, which Islam bypassed (or rather its own version of it was stillborn because the fundamentalists won). Don't forget about the Crusades. Don't forget the Christian rationalization of and embrace of white supremacy and Trumpism. Just because Christians don't generally operate with suicide vests doesn't make their ideology less violent or arrogant.

Also don't mistake my lack of special pleading for Christianity as endorsing or ignoring Islamic threats. The threats exist. But if you try to address them by fingering Islam itself rather than the underlying forces -- populist resentments, basically -- then you're going to come up with the wrong cure. You're also playing into the same tribalist ideologies that are making civil society circle the drain -- whether the tribalism is dressed up in Islamic ideology, or to your abreaction thereto.

@Annie45 Okay then, how about the Inquisition? What's your rationalization for that? Or the apologetic for slavery on the part of the church, particularly in the US? Or the Bible's moral failure to teach against slavery -- in fact, telling you (even in the NT!) how to be a "good" slave owner or slave and just assuming it as a matter of course? Surely you're not going to give me the tired old chestnut that "slavery was different back then". The Bible leads from behind there, and with respect to gender equality, and any number of other things. If the Bible were divinely inspired we would expect it to be consistently and coherently pointing the way toward better moral sensibilities than those of the bronze and iron ages -- in fact, to better moral sensibilities than the information age.

Christianity fails to own the excesses of its fundamentalist wing, so while my critique of Christianity embracing white supremacy applies mostly to fundamentalists, it is an open and unaddressed shame on Christianity generally. Liberal Christians often tend to treat fundamentalists as the crazy uncle in the basement rather than really call it out for what it is.

Yeah when I was a believer I heard the standard BS about how Christianity enabled science rather than what it really does, which is to tolerate it only when it doesn't contradict asserted dogma. And that is what modern Christians do, historic Christianity is notably Luddite in orientation. Just ask Galileo how that went for him. It's a facile circumlocution by Christian apologists that doesn't stand up to scrutiny.

The Bible teaches that we should love one another and welcome the stranger and help widows and orphans, but it also argues that the armies of the righteous should utterly destroy its enemies down to the last man, woman and child, except that you can take the young virgins captive as "wives". And it argues that women should shut up in church and not have leadership roles.

Each sect cherry-picks what it wants to pay attention to and ignores the rest. If you're an authoritarian believer then you pay a great deal of attention to the wrath of god and to patriarchy, if you're more kum-by-ah then you don't. But it's all there for those with eyes to see. The inconvenient and inconsistent parts of the Bible are supposed to be the Word of God, too.

You also exhibit the standard-issue evangelical revisionism about what globalism, communism and socialism are and aren't. Globalism is not communism, socialism is not communism, socialism is not democratic socialism, and Islam is none of those things. You are just lumping bogeymen together without understanding any of them. To you it is just your tribe and all the amalgamated Forces Of Evil [tm] arrayed against it.

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I would be very surprised if it hasn't ..........

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I don't know about the term 'Radical' as using the term 'Fundamentalist' whom I find more dangerous and less intelligent. Muslins for the most part are very intelligent and can define and explain their beliefs which are very though provoking. A Bible Thumper on the other hand is only going to cite Chapter and Verse which they cannot explain or know how to discuss. Both Jesus and Abraham are cited in the Koran as is Budda. Try and discuss the fact that Jesus was probably a Dark Skinned Mediteranean and you may have a gun pointed at you.

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Good question. It has certainly suppressed it in those Islamic countries, which doesn't mean mean it has stopped it by any means, just driven it more underground. Now, whether it has increased the spread of atheism in the West, it does show that religious fanaticism in general is a flawed concept, so, maybe. Would need to do research to find if this is a contributing cause to the general rise of "nones" in most Western society.

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Watching radical Islam and then trying out my arguments against it on the history and current behavior of Christianity did have a significant role in my de-conversion, though I can only give this issue some small partiall—though in its' own way pivotal—credit.

0

This logic is like saying Trump Conservatives are responsible for increase in the number of Liberals in this country. No, wait they are.

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@hexx

Yeah, in the contrarian community and other reactionary groups, it causes that. Such behavior is a means of de-powering blatant misinformation.

0

No. If anything, it has increased the tendency of Christians to proscelatize.

0

September 11th, 2001 was certainly a catalyst to those losing their faith or strengthening it. Seeing first hand what fundamentalism of a religion or religions are capable of caused all of us to question ourselves as individuals and where we stood. Fast forward 17 years and you can see the architecture of the on coming attempt of a christian theocracy in this country. It's my opinion that christians in political positions were the architects of that horrific day, knowing it would cause the masses to take a side and that side was the exact opposite of those who supposedly attacked our people and country.
With the sides taken and lines drawn in the sand, non-believers began to see the true colors not only of islamic fundamentalism but christian fundamentalism in this country and could see the similarities between the two. The vicious bigotry of these zealots have caused many (mostly the younger generations) to question or lose their indoctrinated faith completely.
Religion is destroying itself by promoting its bigoted and barbaric fundamentals without a hint of demonstrable evidence of the deities that are behind the actions and beliefs. We can only hope that in the future these fairytales and fables will be
thought of as myths that gullible humans once thought actually happened.

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I believe so.! It is going in that direction anyway! Instead of believing in a religion, believe in yourself and try to educate your character for the better. If you lack a decent character, what is the point of being a devouted religious person? At least, this is my view.!

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