TexasRaceLady
Active Member
I've no problem with people like that. ...... until they demand the right to vote.
Amen, Brother. Have a cold one on me.
You must spread some Reputation around before giving it to Professur again.
I've no problem with people like that. ...... until they demand the right to vote.
Gato_Solo said:If the opinions of the majority are backwards, then why are our schools teaching things like alternative lifestyles instead of focusing on things like math and science? I'm sure you'll bring up Kansas, but Kansas is not the only state in the union...
2minkey said:i didn't say having a belief system categorically makes people dumb. and of course i don't think ALL religious folks are dumb or uneducated. but i do think that certain belief systems don't prepare adherents for the future as well as other belief systems may. i also think that certain belief systems that take things literally instead of symbolically tend toward weird ideas. unrealistic, weird ideas that are inconsistent with critical thinking and breed simple acceptance of dogma. again, my opinion.
but if you dig around i'm sure you'll find that most statistical studies do roughly correlate religious attendance inversely with education levels. income levels too, for that matter. and you will find the most athiests in the most educated and highest income areas.
2minkey said:i don't know what's going on in kansas... some educational debate?
i'm not sure if the kiddies need to spend much time learning about alternative lifestyles either. maybe any emphasis on that shit is because public school teachers and administrators are often the stereotypical "pussy liberals?"
2minkey said:now i'm pro-fag ("some of my best friends are...") but that doesn't mean i think school time should be spent talking about that kinda stuff. school should be for the three R's. parents can teach kids about religion, lifestyles, and whatever else.
and yeah, i'd agree, the article is most certainly written from a particular point of view. shit, all "science" is as well...
and my opinion is not ex nihilo either.
nobody's is.
2minkey said:and you'll still find that less education, lower incomes, and higher church attendance go together... how about snake handlers? now there's some religious folk that trend toward less education and being piss poor.
Gato_Solo said:Is that really true, or are the statistics skewed? The majority of people worldwide are poor, and uneducated. Most of the middle class is in Western society. Therefor, by sheer weight of numbers, I can safely say that the world outside of the West is a backwards, uneducated wasteland. This is the same thing that the study is saying about people who are religious.
How about this to stir your pot...
More education, higher income, and low church attendance are a direct result of criminal activity. One only has to look at a Frat party to see drunken binges and "date rape" to prove my point...Not all religious people are poor, and not all 'educated' people have higher incomes...
I disagree, Luis. I'll bet there are a lot more scientists who espouse a religion than there are that do not. Certain religions screw science, to be sure. You know how I feel about religion, but that does not make religion and science mutually exclusive. Hard to reconcile at times, but hardly mutually exclusive.Luis G said:C'mon gato, religion screws science. It sure screwed the arabs
Professur said:Debate it all you want. Look back at 8000 years of human history. Who were the first leaders? Who did all the writing? What drew people out of their fields, and away from their flocks, to form cities?
You can, and certainly will debate, dispute and needlessly beat the subject to uselessness, and more power to you all. But start with the (to me) obvious first question. What was the point of recognizing the first god(s) to begin with? Animals for millions of years existed on earth without creating, fearing, or worshipping gods. So why did men do it?