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"Early morning, April 4
Shot rings out in the Memphis sky
Free at last, they took your life
They could not take your pride"

I really wish someone like him were here today to confront the fundamentalist theocrats. I suspect that the large rise in "Nones' come largely from the moderate and liberal wings of Christianity. That leaves few outspoken moderate/Liberal Christians, and none as famous as he was.

This is why I think all Agnostics and Atheists need to become more involved, more political. There are not many Liberal/Moderate Christians to take action to resist special rights for believers at the cost of the rights of others.

We need to stand up for ourselves, preserve our right not to believe. God's not gonna do it for us.

Davesnothere 7 Jan 20
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7 comments

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1

From what I have heard the number of liberal Christians is shrinking. A lot are becoming nones (more agnostic than atheists). It's hard being a centrist these days with the world increasingly being taken over by extremists.

That shrinking is why I think we all need to become proactive, vote, talk about issues in public. I do not expect there are enough Liberal/Moderate christians to effect any change in the population, and no celeb of their faith big enough to make that impact.

@Davesnothere Absolutely agree. When I left religion I joined a liberal, non-denominational group known as "Earth Ministry." It was an environmental group and there were a lot of Unitarians. However, I soon found many still believed in an after-life and if they made efforts to support the life support system they could still be rewarded. The goal was less important than the efforts so things were sort of done in a half-assed way so I left. As long as there's a reward/punishment idea there is no real morality.

1

Not about religion today. ☺️

1

Thank you. One of the my absolute favorites. It is timeless, as he was/is. Good call.

2

God's not gonna do it for us.

So why do you want moderate/Liberal xtians to get involved? I'll look the article up if you want, but what you want has already started to happen, and do you want to know how they were approaching the issues they were debating? By trying to figure out if Josheph and Mary were actually refugies and if jesus was actually poor or not, because he had a job as a fucking carpenter.

I shit you not.

So keep them out of politics/civics, please. Being only moderatly deluded instead of fully deluded is still a bug, not a feature.

1of5 Level 8 Jan 20, 2020

"So why do you want moderate/Liberal xtians to get involved?"
Because a moderate or liberal Christian, can, as a believer, dispute their political position as "unchristlike."
That has a greater likelyhood of convincing more evangelical or even fundamentalists from supporting Racism, Classism, Xenophobia and Mysogeny from that perspective than any non believer has of convincing them. They could, as did the abolitionists, confront the Faith itself forcing people to consider more than just accpetance of a particular church leaders opinion on theology.

Nor am I wishing they will become involved. I said "I really wish someone like him were here today" because there is no one remotely like that, and the demographic of christians which spawned him has been weakened by folks leaving.

"but what you want has already started to happen"
If you are referencing the letter composed by a bunch of religious leaders about current policies, I am aware. The problem is NONE of those people is a celebrity like Dr. King was. There are no religious leaders of such a public status anymore, and the world has changed so much the mechanisms which allowed him to gain such provenance have been overwritten by social media and mass media.

"So keep them out of politics/civics, please"
They are already in politics, they are citizens and they vote, AND they outnumber us 4 to 1 or so. Further, they do not have to act to be of major import. IF someone they respected for their piousness was to convince them they could not support such policies without angering God, then many would not vote at all or vote against this admin's policies.

I do not see such a person, no one has such celebrity in religion anymore. Rather each sect/denomination, has several they like. In the same way at the same time that reality gave us THE BEATLES and all the other bands, there was Dr. King, and all the other preachers. I see no one of that ilk alive to motivate that voting block.

I do not expect the Liberal Xtians to do it for us, rather my point is they will not , so we need to step up all our games.

The enemy of our enemy is our potential ally.

@Davesnothere I think you make some good points. It doesn't look like christians are going to 'see the real light' any time soon so it would be good if Jesus (or someone like him) arose and reminded christians what jesus was all about. I blame the pentecostals. They promise riches as they extort their congregation. They preach that a rich man is someone blessed by god. Where are those orthodox monks hiding?

@Davesnothere ...can, as a believer, dispute their political position as "unchristlike."

They can also argue those positions are "unmothergoose like". Its still fantasy based bullshit. Abolisionists don't always work, go back to the civil war where both sides found thier beliefs "supported" by the bible. That didn't end well at all.

No, the demographic of Christians that supported a King like figure has been moving into the nones column. Let's keep them there.

No, I'm not referencing some silly letter. [washingtonpost.com]

They are already in politics, they are citizens and they vote which is the problem, they vote through a religious lens. Your basically saying you want the religious left to shift the lens, I'm saying get rid of the lens - it's never going to focus where you want and is always subject to change. Coupling religion to politics of any stripe lessens both. You can see the backlash the religious right/GOP marriage is causing for both - young people are fleeing both, essentially counteracting it's own temporary shortter success with what looks to be a long term setbacks to both conservatism and fundamentalist xtianity. Getting the "religious left" to enter a marriage with progressive/Liberal politics will create the same backlash, eventually.

Good, I don't want that voting block motivated by religion, or any voting block motivated by religion -unrealistic, for sure, unless religion gets decoupled from politics all together. What we don't need is any one sects leader rising up and telling them how to vote - what happens when that leader is gone, or shifts thier views?

All that said we are stuck, at the moment, with folks who's faith influences thier vote. Which fucking sucks.

So in conclusion, fuck.

@1of5 "Your basically saying you want the religious left to shift the lens, I'm saying get rid of the lens"

NO, I am not, not my intent at all.

I am saying yes they look through the lens of faith, but that lens does not provide the same world view. The far right fundamentalists are actively legislating, but the christian lefgt does little, and WE (agostics, athiests, none)
WE are ignored and likely will remian so.

So do you think we can remove the lens of faith from the 70% who have it, half that, before the elctions?
Or do you think we might want to find a way to appeal to that demographic both for their benefit and our own?

Nor is our heathen outlook likely to be embraced by that more liberal xtian demographic.
However there are lots of things we agree on, in policy, things like climate change.

I think addressing that is of more import than trying to hope religion will just fade away, and that means setting aside differences to work twoard a common goal.

I hope for this, I have no expectation of success.

2

Good stuff, and sentiments.. I think MLK Jr. had a successor of sorts, Barack Obama. As I recently watched Robert Reich basically describe Obama as naive in his attempt to - and expectations that Republicans would work with him for the betterment of our nation - those R’s were more intent on proving a man of African descent incapable of such success than strengthening the nation. And though I’m generally in agreement with Robert Reich, feel he’s wrong on that assessment..

It was sickening to watch Obama constantly ‘asking a god to bless America,’ just as it is to watch MLK Jr. seek the blessings of a non-existent entity to further his noble desires.. Both men were moderates, perhaps making more progress than their contemporary radicals, but progress is slow … that’s why so many dive toward radical 😕

Varn Level 8 Jan 20, 2020
1

who? Bono? I think he's still around......pontificating.

Dr. King.
I do not agree with his religion, but his ability to motivate a lot of moderate, liberal Christians to stand up for the rights of humans?
THAT I do agree with.

I wish the Moderate Christians today had a voice like that to counter The Religious Right.

@Davesnothere Perhaps get the likes of Dawkins, Harris and the other high profile atheists to preach from the heart like Dr King instead of the cheque book and publishing deal. That might make a difference!

0

Let us spray.........

Prayer has nothing to do with it, motivating that demographic to stand up for Human rights does.

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