Sorry, don't accept that. If you don't accept it, move on. Simple as that And to call theists your enemy is plain silly.
And if we hadn't accepted the religiously motivated (amongst others) idea that gay marriage shouldn't be permitted? If we hadn't accepted the right die shouldn't be permitted?
Some of these religious ideas have profound negative effects on actual people's actual lives. We don't just 'accept it and move on', we research, we learn, we construct arguments and we argue back, we campaign and, increasingly, we win.
To call theists our enemy is not silly - on specific issues they are if not 'the enemy', then certainly amongst them.
And of course, not all theists, by any stretch, fully understand it all: I don't pretend to, and it was one of my college subjects; and it has been a life-time study. For atheists to pretend to fully understand it all, even allegedly having read it all, is being economical with the truth.
Not really. I don't need to read every study on leprechauns to know that they aren't real. I don't need to exhaustively research treatises on the contents of the pot at the end of the rainbow to know that it's not a pot of gold.
You can't dismiss any idea out of hand, but if you read the widely regarded commentaries and there's still nothing logically valid in any of it, it it's all based on circular arguments, question begging and developing ideas from baseless assertions then you can stop researching and just wait for someone to proffer something new.
Life's too short - when you become obsessed with the enemy, you become the enemy.
O.
There is nothing the religious can force you to do, or not to do, if it is against your wishes. And for you to assume that the Bible, or aspects of it are unreal by comparing them to pots of gold and leprechauns, is rather silly. If you do not accept it, I say again, walk away. Do you really believe blathering on about it all on here, is in any way doing anything to alter anything, outside of the occasional poster here, and even that's most unlikely!. And I still maintain that with such an attitude, it is highly unlikely that you have spent any appreciable time bothering to read it all in a meaningful and open manner.
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Yes the religious can, because if they are in a position of authority they can block you.
Doctors for example.
If your doctor has religious objections to abortion for example, he can make it difficult for you.
Abortion probably is a bad example, but even if you have private health insurance it the request still has to come via your doctor.
Should he be awkward for some reason, he can make it difficult.
I have had a Catholic doctor in the past give me a lecture on God before now.
I'm not a Catholic, so don't expect to be lumbered with their beliefs.
Remember, they don't agree with birth control, for married couples and this particular doctor refused to proscribe the pill, his religion being the reason m hence the lecture on God.
Yes I could get the pill elsewhere, but your doctor is often the first port of call.
So I don't agree with you BA.
Religious people do abuse the power they have, sometimes.
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You've had a catholic doctor lecture you?
I had half a dozen philosophical naturalists lecturing me!