When 9/11 occurred I had been a Christian for around 20 years. The process and pretexts for condensing the whole of Religion into that one act or one person strikes me as a form of bigotry.
Has anyone suggested that the whole of religion is condensed to that? It was a striking, undeniable demonstration of the potential for religion to be harmful. Once that was overt and incontravertible, the conversation changed.
I still chuckle over the tiny Westbrook baptist community held up as typically Christian.
I don't know that anyone's suggesting they're typical, the problem is that they're undoubtedly Christian. They're not just abhorrent, they're abhorrent because of their Christianity.
Or Trumpite churches held up by atheists as American Christianity while forgetting totally about episcopalian and black churches.
If they were that relevant, Trump wouldn't have been elected on so evidently a Christian Nationalist platform.
As I understand it, certainly in this country relations between modern celebrity atheists and media Christians are quite cordial with each willing to provide tea and platform for the other
And as I've said many, many times, if every religion and religious adherent had had their distasteful edges blunted by a rights-based cultural archetype like ours, no-one would give a shit about religion. They haven't, though - Afghanistan's treatment of women, America's treatment of the non-religious, of women, of the gender-diverse, of the gay community, places like Uganda's treatment of gay people, religious conflicts in Israel, between India and Pakistan... the list goes on.
O.