What's new
Fantasy Football - Footballguys Forums

Welcome to Our Forums. Once you've registered and logged in, you're primed to talk football, among other topics, with the sharpest and most experienced fantasy players on the internet.

The Schism - an American Tale (1 Viewer)

The Soviet Union was largely Orthodox Christians.
Russia's religion is Orthodox Russian. Their government at the time hated these people and did everything they could to discourage their existence as they were part of the former aristocracy. 

Your knowledge of 20th Century history is suspect. 

The Soviet Union was not largely Orthodox Christians. The government hated those people. 

 
Last edited by a moderator:
30 million in the USSR

10-15 million worldwide in Germany. 

Way more than the Crusades or Inquisition or anything else could ever even imagine. 
Committed by the government, correct? America was founded on escaping religious violence. We are the only country that doesn't include religion in its Constitution other than to say there shall be no national religion.

We're free to believe and worship, or not, as we see fit. 

 
Russia's religion is Orthodox Russian. Their government at the time hated these people and did everything they could to discourage their existence as they were part of the former aristocracy. 

I'm no longer debating this with you. You have absolutely no knowledge of what you're talking about. 
And I'll assert again, that the idea of "believe in my god or your a bad person" is highly offensive and arrogant. But when you're taught nothing else, that's what you'll grow up believing.

 
We must have our wires crossed because you're fundamentally arguing about something I never said nor implied. 

Those 45 million dead people were at the hands of atheists and atheism run amok in the form of statism. 

 
And I'll assert again, that the idea of "believe in my god or your a bad person" is highly offensive and arrogant. But when you're taught nothing else, that's what you'll grow up believing.
I'm agnostic. I don't believe anybody can comprehend or know God. I also don't practice a religion, which makes me an atheist, if theism is the worship of a God. I'm a full-on agnostic/atheist who believes in the separation of church and state. 

 
We must have our wires crossed because you're fundamentally arguing about something I never said nor implied. 

Those 45 million dead people were at the hands of atheists and atheism run amok in the form of statism. 
And if that state sponsored religious persecution ever presents itself in the US, I'll fight against it. But don't try to push this "believe in god or you're bad" BS.

 
But don't try to push this "believe in god or you're bad" BS
You must have a major malfunction to be getting that out of what I'm saying. Breathe a little. Slow breath. Deep breath. Newly-challenging worldview doesn't need to make you asthmatic. 

I've never said that. You're massively straw-manning my argument. 

 
when people ditch organized religion, they typically don't replace it with a well-formed, healthy set of ethics.
To be clear, this is the quote that I find extremely arrogant. Believe in organized religion or you most likely will be a bad person. My ethics are just fine, thank you. I don't need a vindictive god to believe otherwise.

 
We've always had disagreements over policy.  Those are nothing new.  

What's different is that people now see all of these as existentially important, so they won't accept being on the losing end like normal people who get outvoted in a democracy.  That's why people storm the capital building in response to losing a close election and try to assassinate supreme court justices because they don't like a particular ruling.  Those are really extreme examples of course, but they follow logically from other violations of ordinary democratic norms, like refusing to vote on a president's supreme court nominee or trying to impose a vaccine mandate by EO that you openly acknowledge is probably unconstitutional.    

Basically, if your response to being on the losing end of abortion, gay rights, gun control, or whatever is that this must not stand and we must take the streets, you're part of the problem.
This. People just can't stand losing anymore. If you lose an election cycle and policies are put in place you don't like, campaign campaign campaign and try next time. Sway voters and win the next election cycle. 

 
To be clear, this is the quote that I find extremely arrogant. Believe in organized religion or you most likely will be a bad person. My ethics are just fine, thank you. I don't need a vindictive god to believe otherwise.
Arrogant and dumb. The Bible promotes genocide, draws rules around slavery, and preaches the subjugation of women, but we're supposed to believe it's some moral roadmap.   :loco:

 
To be clear, this is the quote that I find extremely arrogant. Believe in organized religion or you most likely will be a bad person. My ethics are just fine, thank you. I don't need a vindictive god to believe otherwise.
I agree with you.  Some people are perfectly capable of discerning moral law without any sort of underlying religious belief.  (Paradoxically, this idea comes up in the New Testament a few times -- it's not a new concept or anything).  But most people aren't.  

For that matter, most people are incapable of being "good people" even with organized religion.  I'd hate to see how things would go for them without it. 

 
To be clear, this is the quote that I find extremely arrogant. Believe in organized religion or you most likely will be a bad person. My ethics are just fine, thank you. I don't need a vindictive god to believe otherwise.
I agree with most of @IvanKaramazov,  but not that. I'm agnostic, but I live my life by the laws and, believe it or not, the Ten Commandments. They are a pretty good set of rules to live by with or without believing in a god.

 
I agree with most of @IvanKaramazov,  but not that. I'm agnostic, but I live my life by the laws and, believe it or not, the Ten Commandments. They are a pretty good set of rules to live by with or without believing in a god.
They really aren't. They're either "No ####, Sherlock" or in direct opposition with the Constitution.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
I agree with you.  Some people are perfectly capable of discerning moral law without any sort of underlying religious belief.  (Paradoxically, this idea comes up in the New Testament a few times -- it's not a new concept or anything).  But most people aren't.  

For that matter, most people are incapable of being "good people" even with organized religion.  I'd hate to see how things would go for them without it. 
Totally agree, reference the Catholic rapists who are still being protected by the Church. Horrible people who need to go to jail or worse. So let's just say there are bad people and remove the religious requirement for being good. There are bad atheists. There are bad religious people. There are bad people.

 
10-15 million worldwide in Germany. 
Christianity and the Holocaust
 

The vast majority of Germans belonged to a Christian church during the Nazi era. In 1933 there were 40 million Protestants, 20 million Catholics, and small numbers of people adhering to other Christian traditions. The German Evangelical Church (the largest Protestant church) and the Roman Catholic church were pillars of German society and played an important role in shaping people’s attitudes and actions vis-à-vis National Socialism, including anti-communism, nationalism, traditional loyalty to governing authorities (particularly among Protestants), and the convergence of Nazi antisemitism with widespread and deep-seated anti-Jewish prejudice.

Within the German Evangelical Church the pro-Nazi “German Christian” (Deutsche Christen) movement emerged in the early 1930s. It attempted to fuse Christianity and National Socialism and promoted a “racially-pure” church by attacking Jewish influences on Christianity. This attempt to nazify the primary Protestant church provoked a backlash, leading to the formation of the Confessing Church (Bekennende Kirche) in 1934. Both the Confessing and the “German Christian” movements remained part of the German Evangelical Church. The Confessing Church movement condemned Nazified theology and the attempt to nationalize the church, but it limited its protest to maintaining the theological integrity and autonomy of the Protestant churches—not protesting the legitimacy of the Nazi state itself. Although there were individual resisters, many mainstream Protestant and Catholic church leaders made numerous compromises with Nazi authorities and supported many of the Nazi measures throughout the period.

A range of reactions can be observed among Christian churches and institutions across Europe and North America during the Nazi period. As in Germany, the attitudes and actions of Christians were shaped not only by religious belief but by national politics, legacies of Jewish-Christian relations, World War II, and the experiences under Nazi occupation in some countries. Some Christian individuals, as well as Christian networks and religious institutions, aided and rescued Jews but the majority did not.

In the wake of the Holocaust, a long process began in which Christian churches acknowledged their failure to withstand National Socialism and their role in promoting antisemitism. A large body of literature now exists on inter-faith issues and post-Holocaust theology and ethics. The history of Christianity during the Holocaust has also informed and interacted with the growing field of study on religion and mass violence in a global context.

The following bibliography was compiled to guide readers to selected materials on topics related to Christianity and the Holocaust that are in the Library’s collection. It is not meant to be exhaustive. Annotations are provided to help the user determine the item’s focus, and call numbers for the Museum’s Library are given in parentheses following each citation. Those unable to visit might be able to find these works in a nearby public library or acquire them through interlibrary loan. Follow the “Find in a library near you” link in each citation and enter your zip code at the Open WorldCat search screen. The results of that search indicate all libraries in your area that own that particular title. Talk to your local librarian for assistance.

More in the link.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
I mean, anybody who thinks that the Christian impulse in Nazism caused the Holocaust is drugged and skull####ed out of their minds. 

 
Totally agree, reference the Catholic rapists who are still being protected by the Church. Horrible people who need to go to jail or worse. So let's just say there are bad people and remove the religious requirement for being good. There are bad atheists. There are bad religious people. There are bad people.
Okay, sure.  I agree.

FWIW, I've never argued that religious belief is a prerequisite for being a good person.  First of all, I see that position as being in direct contradiction to the New Testament, paradoxically.  Second, nobody is a good person -- atheists are just as broken and in need of salvation as the most fervent fundamentalist Christians.  

 
The link I provided is for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. 
Yes, I know. And they'd never say that the Christian religion was the cause behind the Holocaust. That's just not in their modus operandi nor is it intellectually honest. Discussing what roles the churches had under Naziism is one thing, to flat out blame the Christian churches would be insane. 

 
Okay, sure.  I agree.

FWIW, I've never argued that religious belief is a prerequisite for being a good person.  First of all, I see that position as being in direct contradiction to the New Testament, paradoxically.  Second, nobody is a good person -- atheists are just as broken and in need of salvation as the most fervent fundamentalist Christians.  
I don't believe I need salvation from Christians or anyone other religions. You can believe it just as I believe it to be an arrogant view. And our thankfully Constitution allows for both viewpoints. 

 
It's fun when people make claims, expect you to capitulate to their opinion without evidence, and then run away with a twisted sense of intellectual superiority. 
I'm frankly tired of arguing the obvious with a bunch of people that obviously have a religious-like bias against religion. 

 
I don't believe I need salvation from Christians or anyone other religions. You can believe it just as I believe it to be an arrogant view. And our thankfully Constitution allows for both viewpoints. 
Jesus, you're tendentious. We get it. Religion bad, atheism good, all that rot. 

History is not on your side. 

 
Yes, I know. And they'd never say that the Christian religion was the cause behind the Holocaust. That's just not in their modus operandi nor is it intellectually honest. Discussing what roles the churches had under Naziism is one thing, to flat out blame the Christian churches would be insane. 
I didn't blame anyone - I posted a link. Infer what you want.

 
This is not running away. This is what one does when an easily disprovable sentiment is proffered, evidence given, and then straw-manned by a bunch of people hostile towards religion. It's futile to even argue, which makes me wonder what zealotry is worse. 

 
Okay, sure.  I agree.

FWIW, I've never argued that religious belief is a prerequisite for being a good person.  First of all, I see that position as being in direct contradiction to the New Testament, paradoxically.  Second, nobody is a good person -- atheists are just as broken and in need of salvation as the most fervent fundamentalist Christians.  


Nobody said that. You're being obtuse. 
I'm not "broken" or in need of salvation. There's nothing to be "saved" from.

 
It's not just being obtuse. This is willful misrepresentation of an argument and a willful obduracy due to some creeping hate of religion or religious activities. 

You've said eight ####### times that you want to be free from religion. You keep saying that in other threads. I was saying that states actively hostile towards religion tend to be the biggest mass murderers in history. From the Bolsheviks to the Nazis to Mao Zedong and China's Cultural Revolution, the 20th century is littered with governments rooted in the state above all else or über alles mass murdering people. 

 
You've said eight ####### times that you want to be free from religion. You keep saying that in other threads. I was saying that states actively hostile towards religion tend to be the biggest mass murderers in history. From the Bolsheviks to the Nazis to Mao Zedong and China's Cultural Revolution, the 20th century is littered with governments rooted in the state above all else or über alles mass murdering people. 
Let me know when the US is actively hostile towards religion. I'll fight along side of you against it.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
I'm not "broken" or in need of salvation. There's nothing to be "saved" from.
I disagree, but that's beside the point.  The point is that you are correct that atheists are not somehow automatically more evil or less good than professing Christians, and Christians shouldn't think so.  Christianity itself tells Christians that they're not all that great.   

 
You're saying that the United States are one of the biggest mass murdering states in history? Are you serious? 
Not at all what I'm saying. Not as a government. And they're not openly hostile against religion. I push back (and will continue) against blanket statements that atheists lack morals, or need to be saved, or are the cause of our nations evils (like politicians blaming school shootings on prayer being taken out of schools).

 
Last edited by a moderator:
I sense a straw man in the room. 

I wanna *punch* it. 

I mean, just *punch*

*straw man punch* 

Are you dead yet, straw man? 

 
- I don't believe Conservatives have hatred in their hearts toward minorities or gays.  I really don't.  I talk to these people every day.  They are fair.  What they don't want is reverse discrimination - paying for past racial sins by giving blacks a leg up.


As far as the bolded section, I wanted to quickly address that too.   NO - I don't believe conservatives have hatred in their hearts as you say.   But I think way too many people still do (notice I didn't bring up party here).    I honestly don't think you are accurate with all that section either.  I think if we sat down and hammered out some things you and many conservatives would agree that SOME things needed to be corrected from our past, or maybe still do.   So I don't think the idea of anti-reverse discrimination applies.  We discriminate for all sorts of things and reasons.  What I think is going on is through all the identity politics and demands from others, a harder line has been drawn in the sand and there is a feeling that we have either gone too far, or are right there.   IMO that is where I disagree with that side of the aisle - I look around and think we still have work and healing to do.  Unfortunately the only way to get there is by continuing to talk about it, which largely gets met with frustration and anger from opposing people because of sentiments like "why does EVERYTHING have to be about race!!!??" .  
Completely agree with Karma here, but to add…… Ek your sentiments are pure, and I believe your heart is too, but imo your statement here has a massive hole in its logic.  It’s missing history and acting as if said history doesn’t have reverberations on today.  If we could just start over and wipe the slate clean then I would agree, but we cant, the past (and that past is still very recent) influences today.  Basically what the bolded does is completely ignore the centuries of advantages 1 race of people has had over another (and when I say advantages I mean in every imaginable unfair context) and the massive head start.  Then when the race that has held ALL the power and advantages finally realizes that how they went about getting those advantages for centuries was wrong says OK we’ll play fair now it’s somehow supposed to just wash history’s repercussion’s away?  And then on top of that say but don’t dare give that subjugated race any advantages today because it’s not fair, well man that’s a tough pill to swallow imo for many people of color who’s family have been held down, by literal boots on their necks, for generations.  

 
I quoted and bolded every statement I objected to. Tell me which ones were strawmen.
You haven't been able to bold anything I've said because it's not there. I never said a thing about it and you were using it as a straw man from Page 2 on. The only thing you did on this page was object to Ivan's use of people as broken and in need of saving. That's a philosophical and literary way of looking at things like he does, and I'm not inclined to disagree with him. Nobody says religion is the only thing saving your broken ###. That could be the liberal arts, a love of beauty and symmetry, mathematics, science, anything. 

But if we're measuring the whole "human beings are born innocent" vs "human beings are born pretty bad" then I know upon which side I land. 

 
it is better to have a separation of church and state wherein most people have faith in a almighty God
The quote I first replied to. We're better off when most people have a faith in almighty God. I believe that's Christian arrogance. Believe in god and we're better off.  I will always push back against that. Bad people are bad people. Period.

Believe what you want and I'll believe what I want. But I have the same right to voice my objection as you have to voice your opinion.

 
Frankly, I'm flummoxed people would argue this with the 20th century sitting right in the background. 
My take on it rock is they are tied together (governances of whatever type and religion) largely because the extreme overwhelming majority of people believe in God in one form or another so therefore there seems to be a cause and effect like you point out.  But I believe that’s only coincidence because of the majority.  Think about it this way, if the numbers were reversed and 98% of people didn’t believe in a God there would be forms of governances that subjugate their peoples (as there is now) but there would also be others that valued freedoms (as there are now).  I don’t believe it’s solely religion that’s driving these things to happen, it’s just that having religion is all we know so it’s intertwined into everything.   
 

*I’m not sure this is reading as I intend as my coffee hasn’t fully kicked in this morning yet, if it doesn’t make sense I will trying again later when fully operational.

 
The quote I first replied to. We're better off when most people have a faith in almighty God. I believe that's Christian arrogance. Believe in god and we're better off.  I will always push back against that. Bad people are bad people. Period.

Believe what you want and I'll believe what I want. But I have the same right to voice my objection as you have to voice your opinion.
I was saying that's the optimal situation as opposed to theocracy. Seems fairly obvious that's the point I was trying to make. And the claim that we're better off with a populace that has an underlying Abrahamic or monotheistic religion with "good" and "evil" was an aggregate claim, not a personalized one. You're pushing back against a totally different argument than the one I was giving. 

 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top