I've been discussing religion on these pages before, often with the same people who are debating the subject right now. It's no mystery that Villain and I don't see eye to eye on the matter, although on the surface I might even seem like a better candidate for sharing the same view: I'm an agnostic who has never had any affiliation with religion.
Let me just mention something I've noticed in people's replies to Villain: it doesn't really help to look for flaws in his logic, because there aren't.
If religions are responsible for conflict and
if you think conflict is damaging mankind,
then you gotta try and get rid of religions. It's sound reasoning. I'd buy it.
Our common ground is quickly swept from under our feet, however, leaving merely amicable tolerance for the other person's point of view! Because I would disagree on (a) religions being responsible for strife and division among men, as I'm convinced they are one of the effects; (b) religions being something that can be taken away from the minds of men at all, as I believe they channel people's spirituality one way or the other:
not being a follower requires their existence to shape one's own feelings towards the transcendental*.
In short, Villain's stance towards religion sounds to me like: "we should have no more CEO's, because they are responsible for people's unquenchable thirst for money."
Religions are a product of man's invention - which is not the same as saying gods are, by the way - and I think they necessarily reflect cultural and social tensions. They even
evolved to mirror changes, and I believe it naive to assume they've somehow lagged behind dragging their feet reluctant to leave the Middle Ages while mankind reached for the light of Reason and Science: we're still pretty horrible, in case you haven't noticed.
They're also quite inextricable from our lives, and by that I don't just mean Villain's purpose is technically impossible to achieve. Random people just "believing whatever they damn well like" without any sort of organization, sense of community-- even, if you like, intrusion in daily habits and collective thinking, is a chimaera. Reform? Sure. Destruction? A dream.
Actually - and believe me when I say I mean no offence at all by this - a
childish dream. The passion that is implied (and employed, to an extent) in adding the capital E to an enemy seems to suggest a strong conviction not only that "things would be better if", but that some sort of momentuous turning point is at the other end of the tunnel. But it defies reason to assume that issues in a society as complex and articulated as ours can be
solved by pushing the right button.
This kind of candid straightforwardness would take away from the credibility of the most solid argument, but in this case it adds insult to injury, as one of the reasons why the Enemy is so dangerous and so vile appears to be its relentlessness: religious extremists are impervious to criticism, refuse to soften their beliefs, tend to claim they have THE cure/truth/salvation/solution, and are generally unable to think outside the box because they're too busy building a smaller one for themselves each day. How trustworthy can the theory that plots their destruction be if it doesn't at least rely on the
very opposite qualities?
Then again, it's a debate without an end, which probably suits the habits of this forum's regulars even better than other discussions.
Villain and I can certainly agree to disagree, what with him being a great guy and me never at risk of going to him with the Word of the Lord (which would probably be something along the lines of "What do
you want?" if it's me asking, anyway).
*which is not the same argument that goes "atheists are believers in God's
NONexistence", I promise!