TS,
First of all, know it all,…
I don’t need to be a know all to falsify your arguments (or rather, your unqualified assertions) – I just need to be a “know more than you do” which, so far at least, has been a simple matter.
…luck is a false god.
It’s not a god at all, just a reality – at least until we get to the quantum field level.
I don't believe in luck.
Why not? Luck, chance and happenstance have an overwhelming effect on all our lives. If you want to argue instead for an
a priori, purposive planner then you have a vast amount of epistemological work to do to get there. And no, “but that’s my faith” is worthless for this purpose. The only proper answer to that is, “so what”?
Secondly,…
You can’t have a secondly when your firstly has just collapsed.
…the modern day school of medicine was founded by robber barons of the industrial age and a farce.
Actually the modern day school of medicine was founded by Galen (c129 AD – c200 AD). If you’re referring though to the Enlightenment, the modern discoveries in medicine began in the 18th century with, for example, the germ theory of disease. If you consider modern man to have existed for around 150,000 – 250,000 years before then (I’m assuming for now that you’re not a complete fruit loop creationist, though your efforts so far don’t give me much confidence about that) then, while shamanic attempts at medicine during that time might be culturally interesting, they produced little of demonstrably remedial use.
They chased all of the real medicine out of this country and made it illegal.
“The real medicine” eh? What real medicine do you think pre-Enlightenment shamans and witch doctors actually produced?
I'll take the latter and you can shove science elsewhere.
I don’t believe you. If you had a child in hospital with life-threatening sepsis, are you seriously claiming you’d turn down the antibiotics in favour of Hopi chanting or suchlike?
Thirdly…
Again, there is no “thirdly” when your attempts at a firstly and a secondly have just collapsed.
…ain't nobody going anywhere in anything unless God had created them.
Thank you for that expression of blind, albeit incoherent, faith. What value do you think it has though when you’re talking to rational (rather than credulous) people?