Gabriella,
If you know this then stop lashing out and start presenting an actual argument.
Your dishonest claims is not the same as you putting forward an argument in logic - so if that means you think you are done here, ok.
Using argument and logic to show you where you go wrong isn’t “lashing out”. Failing to deal with any of it and using pejorative language, ad homs, personal anecdotes etc in response on the other hand probably is.
Look, I’ll help you:
Advertising works, otherwise businesses wouldn’t spend big money on it. Do you agree or disagree?
Organised religions effectively have huge amounts of advertising for free because of the position they’re afforded in society. Do you agree or disagree?
There’s no argument (or at least none from you) to suggest that advertising sells VWs but doesn’t sell God. Do you agree or disagree?
Unless of course you can be honest enough to provide a quote to substantiate your claim that I implied that faith or utility can be used establish truth or facts.
Congratulations – I think you’ve just invented the double straw man. What’s actually happened (as I suspect you well know) is that on various occasions when I’ve talked about the epistemic worthlessness of faith you’ve responded by telling me that people derive value from it, as if deriving value in some unexplained way was relevant to the point.
Your claim that people like me or Welby for that matter, who have a faith, provide intellectual cover for people who commit criminal acts isn't much of an argument let alone one based on logic. Especially if you can't identify how referring to something as a sin leads to someone else voluntarily committing an assault without this voluntary act leading to a break in the chain of causation.
You can assert that all you like but it doesn’t change anything. As you won’t address the issue direct, let's return to an analogy (yes, one of those) and I’ll take you through that too.
Trump is far more ambivalent on race issue at best than his predecessor, and is often outright racist. Do you agree or disagree?
Since his inauguration, there has been a significant rise in neo-nazi activity in the US expressly emboldened by the tacit approval of an authority figure. Do you agree of disagree?
There’s no argument (or at least none from you) to suggest that the phenomenon in the US (where Trump talks about rapist Mexicans) should not apply here too (where Welby talks about the “problem’, “sin” of homosexuality. Do you agree or disagree?
Note by the way that at no time has Trump said, “burn a cross on your lawn” any more than Welby has said, “beat up a gay man”.
They don’t need to though do they.
And your attempt to try and use an analogy referring to the Nazis while presenting absolutely no specifics about the chain of causation in your analogy nor how your analogy therefore supports your intellectual cover claim about Welby doesn't help you make an argument. If you can't show the relevance of the analogies they are worthless, a joke - like I said they are entertaining but no more valid than my anecdotes.
You’ve lost it entirely now. The “at least Hitler built the autobahns” line is just an analogy (that word again) to illustrate that posting an irrelevance (“faith is epistemically worthless”/”but people derive value from it” etc) is rhetorically hopeless.
Your VW analogy is similarly vague and irrelevant. So what if companies spend on advertising - that does not necessarily translate into increased sales. See Superbowl adverts and sales.
http://time.com/money/4206369/super-bowl-ads-affect-sales/
And asking questions like "Why do you suppose they did that if advertising had no effect?" isn't making an argument. You do these questions a lot by the way - it's just laziness on your part not an argument.
This is getting grim. Really, VW wouldn’t spend $6 billion on advertising if it didn’t
work. They might not know how many more cars exactly it sells (or how many lost sales it prevents), which bit of the $6 billion does the job most effectively, how they could change the ads to be even more effective etc) but what they
do know is that it
works.
What magic process in your head suggest that it doesn’t work though for the C of E? (Remember, you’re weaned off anecdote in place of argument now so, “but my local church only has three old dears in it on a Sunday so advertising can’t work” is now out of bounds.)
Regardless of privilege and any advertising benefit that brings, there are falling numbers in the CofE and if this continues I see no reason why eventually their privilege might not be revoked, as people appear to be less and less inclined to stick with tradition. Not seeing the problem with it taking time for cultures to change and for people to let go of their allegiances to tradition.
And right on cue…
How much quicker do you think those numbers would fall if tomorrow the church became a private members’ club and had to pay for its own advertising? Increasing sales is one measure of the effectiveness of advertising, but so is slowing sales
losses. You do know that right?
Oh and by all means, feel free to believe that people can choose their beliefs but not sure why you expect your belief to be taken seriously.
Tell it to the children of religious parents. Yours might be a good place to start.