It's not just the stuff they teach at schools, you'd think with all of the education and all of the readily available information at the touch of a fingertip, religion should be off on its way, but unfortunately the religionists have left us with this continuing legacy of a kind of self replication that entreats so many to fall hook line and sinker for their myths and the rest.
Nobody really wants to persecute religionists whatever the religion might be, it's only infighters among the various religions that seems to me to be the ones doing the persecution and very few others; all of these religionists should be free to believe whatever they want to believe.
Having said the above every time it's suggested that religion should be for private sphere, those that suggest this are, deemed by the religious, to be persecuting them?
Most of the adult people here in the UK have the right to vote and that's should be the starting and finishing point of where religious opinion should count in any way toward the running of this country, if and when we reach this happy state perhaps we will be hearing a lot less about the inns and outs of these primitive beliefs, it seems pretty obvious to me that the only thing that enables religion to punch over its weight here are the numerous privileges they have here in the UK and it will take some time before we rid ourselves of those privileges in an attempt to create a level playing field.
Perhaps along with doing away with these privileges it might accelerate the already exponential decline of these beliefs, perhaps it's the privileges that are a part of why so many still have these religious beliefs?
ippy