What a load of ballcocks. My post was pretty uncontroversial, but you found things to disagree about just for the sake of being disagreeable. Religion learned behaviour, indeed! If it was it'd've died out long ago. Humans obviously have a religious capacity and need. That says nothing at all about whether any religion is true in the straightforward sense, but any of them can be true subjectively. We can practise our chosen religion without worrying about its objective truth.
And a Merry Christmas to you too Steve.
I never said your post was controversial; I merely pointed out that the notion that suggesting that some people are brought up religious and then become non-religious while others are brought up non-religious and then religious as being somehow equivalent and therefore happening as often as each other is simply not true.
And yes being specifically religious (i.e a christian, or jewish, or hindu etc) is clearly learned behaviour. Can you provide any evidence that anyone has independently become a christian (or any other specific religious) without learning about it from other people - nope you can't because it has never happened. No-one has ever found a tribe that had never previously had contact with christians and discovered they were also christian, which would be possible is being christian wasn't learned behaviour, or was transmitted from god rather than via people. Never happens.
And religions understand this very well. As far as I'm aware all mainstream religions have well defined ceremonies and customs to induct children into that religion, involving teaching them to be religious. Why - because they are, quite rightly, aware that if children do not learn to be religious at an early age they are very, very unlikely to become so as adults. Give the the child at 7, and all that. And perhaps there have been religions that didn't instruct their children into that religion - guess what they'd have died out. All the successful ones make sure that children are instructed into that religion. Learned behaviour.
But being non religious isn't learned behaviour as there are countless non religious people who were not taught to be non religious as children - rather they were taught to be religious in religious households, but 50% of those children turn their backs on religion as adults.