Gabriella,
No you don't. Atheism is increasing in the UK. People might learn about different religions in school or discuss different religions in the media but there is plenty of opportunity to consider switching to atheism if it has utility for you. Consumers of religion especially teenagers and adults will decide to buy if religion adds value to their lives. Children probably just absorb their family culture as it provides them with security and identity until they experience enough of life to want to define their own identities separate from that of their families.
Yes you do. The extent to which choice is unfettered is moot, and perhaps given enough time the C of E will disestablish, faith schools will end, bishops will cease to have automatic rights to the legislature, clerics will stop having their views broadcast automatically on matters of moral import etc. My point though was that these things are harder – not impossible as you imply I think - to achieve given how heavily the dice are loaded just now.
The day that Justin Welby’s views on, say, homosexuality are afforded the same privileges as Fred McBonker’s views on a flat earth though,
then you’ll have a point.
You have a real talent for this bigot schtick. Well done. There isn't a single faith, just lots of interpretations by individuals. But you already knew that.
Yes, but faith itself is the common underpinning for all those interpretations. “But that’s my faith” is the beginning end of the conversation, regardless of what the interpretations might happen to be. And that’s what I was actually talking about when you accused me of attempting to close down free speech. But you already knew that.
It's like Brexit - you might not like it but there is currently a demand for that privilege to exist and the media generate revenue by disseminating those comments to a wider audience.
It’s not like that at all. Are there special schools to teach children the certain facts of Brexitism? Guaranteed places set aside in the legislature by right for those who would promote Brexit because that’s their “faith”? How about a slot for Brexiteers every morning on Radio 4 with no right to reply and no equal time for counter-argument perhaps? Or perhaps you think that leading Brexiteers are routinely consulted and have their views broadcast on matters that have nothing to do with Brexit, but on which they choose to pontificate in any case?
Can you see now how hopeless that analogy is?
At the risk of simply repeating myself - it's like Brexit - if the public want to remove the privilege, they can set that in motion by lobbying their MPs - or do something similar to Nigel Farage to bring about a referendum on the issue.
Not even close – see above. You seem determined (wilfully perhaps?) to ignore the
argument. Brexit (or fox hunting, or funding for the NHS, or whatever) are one thing. Privileging the views of those whose only argument is, “but that’s my faith” in all sorts areas of public life on the other hand is loading the dice.
Is that your version of love the sinner but hate the sin?
No.
Are you arguing that you can choose your beliefs?
Isn’t that what you’ve been doing all along (while ignoring the actual argument about how free choice can be in a loaded game)? But yes, people clearly do choose their beliefs if the remarkable changes to social attitudes to all sort of issues in the last few decades are anything to go by (equal marriage, gender rights etc). It’s mostly religions that lag behind, presumably because their supposedly inerrant “holy” texts can’t adapt.
Some people who claim to "know" God exists think equal marriage is wrong whereas other people who claim to "know" God exists think equal marriage is perfectly fine. Some people who claimed to "know" God exists dedicated their lives to abolishing slavery. Not seeing why religion is a special problem.
Clearly, despite having it explained to you many times now. If someone thinks that an inerrant god has decided that homosexuality is a “sin” because it says so in a “holy” book, how would you propose to argue against “but that’s my faith” exactly?
Ok so you're saying it's pretty easy to argue against someone who says "I know I am right". Again not seeing what the problem is.
It’s, “I know I’m right no matter what reasoning or evidence there may ever be” and the problem with it is, as you well know, faith. That’s a faith position and when its objects are very bad ideas, there’s no possibility ever of changing them (at least unless the person who holds them abandons his faith).
Why is this difficult to comprehend?