Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human beings?

Why not extend this topic to religion too.  After all more wars have been fought for "religious" reasons than any other.  The current state of the world is heavily dominated by religious beliefs and cultures that have very strong religious overtones confused with mixed in with national laws.

What about leaders like David Koresh, Jim Jones and People's Temple Christian Church crowd, the Hale Bopp Heaven's Gate crowd, and now the David Jeffs Morman sect. to name just a few.  These leaders had (have) such a hold on their followers than many gave up their wealth, their wives and their kids to these guys.  Many gave up their lives willingly.  What makes a person willing to do these things?

The petty acts of our current political parties are nothing compared to the influence and power most religions have on their members.  Look at the current "noise" about the DaVanci Code.  There are signs at most churches here that denounce the movie in very strong terms.  Sermons are based on swaying the masses to ingore the "lies" and remember that the "truth" is that which you are told at church.  After all, only religion (choose any one you wish) will give you eternal life after you are dead or 7 virgins or your own planet, etc. .........but if you don't believe then you must go to Hell and burn for eternity or be stuck in-between the world and Heaven, etc.  

No science to back this up either way so I guess you just have to "believe" what you want.   :-\
 
Well, there is a fair amount of science regarding evolution, the age/history of the earth/universe, etc., as well as copious amounts of research regarding the history of, for instance, the Bible - who wrote what, who decided what to include/exclude, who did what to appease the masses for political expediency...
 
SteveR said:
Why not extend this topic to religion too.  After all more wars have been fought for "religious" reasons than any other.  The current state of the world is heavily dominated by religious beliefs and cultures that have very strong religious overtones confused with mixed in with national laws.
Amen to that, Steve  :D, oops, sorry.

Really, I'm not religous, I swear to God!
 
Papi said:
Amen to that, Steve  :D, oops, sorry.

Really, I'm not religous, I swear to God!

Good one!

I thought as long as the discussion was into politics it might as well sink into the abyss of religious discussion as well since nobody is going to be swayed to change their mind anyway. ;)
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

Better watch it SteveR. Sounds to me like you might stir up a beehive... ;)
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

REWahoo! said:
Better watch it SteveR.  Sounds to me like you might stir up a beehive... ;)

So that is what all the BZZZZZZZZZZZ is about!
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

Later in the thread we'll be sure to discuss abortion, Linux versus Windows and emacs vs. vi.
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

BigMoneyJim said:
Later in the thread we'll be sure to discuss abortion, Linux versus Windows and emacs vs. vi.

Do we even need to? I already know that I'm right about everything and everyone else is wrong about everything.
 
HFWR said:
Maybe if we outlawed hyphenated words...

And middle names.

Ever notice all serial killers and assasins are known by all three names?

John Wayne Gacy. John Wilkes Booth.

Except that Sirhan Sirhan guy, but he had the same name twice, which cancels everything out apparently.

Cool Dood said:
Do we even need to? I already know that I'm right about everything and everyone else is wrong about everything.

Shoot, cuz I thought you were always right too, but since I'm part of "everyone else", and since you're always right and you say that everyone else is always wrong, that means i'm wrong about you being right.
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

Cute Fuzzy Bunny said:
Shoot, cuz I thought you were always right too, but since I'm part of "everyone else", and since you're always right and you say that everyone else is always wrong, that means i'm wrong about you being right.

Good thing I'm not a robot, otherwise I'd be stuck in an infinite loop. Good thing I'm not a robot, otherwise I'd be stuck in an infinite loop. ...
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

Cute Fuzzy Bunny said:
Shoot, cuz I thought you were always right too, but since I'm part of "everyone else", and since you're always right and you say that everyone else is always wrong, that means i'm wrong about you being right.

I agree.
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

No, its ok, because since i'm wrong about you being right, that means you're wrong...which means...

Lemme get back to you.
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

Cute Fuzzy Bunny said:
Quit that. Its just going to make a three way conundrum out of this.

I sense this is slipping back into familiar territory.....
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

Cute Fuzzy Bunny said:
Quit that. Its just going to make a three way conundrum out of this.

I'll have no part in a three way. Especially when at least one member (other than me) is a confirmed "dood".
 
SteveR said:
Why not extend this topic to religion too.  After all more wars have been fought for "religious" reasons than any other.  The current state of the world is heavily dominated by religious beliefs and cultures that have very strong religious overtones confused with mixed in with national laws.

What about leaders like David Koresh, Jim Jones and People's Temple Christian Church crowd, the Hale Bopp Heaven's Gate crowd, and now the David Jeffs Morman sect. to name just a few.  These leaders had (have) such a hold on their followers than many gave up their wealth, their wives and their kids to these guys.  Many gave up their lives willingly.  What makes a person willing to do these things?

The petty acts of our current political parties are nothing compared to the influence and power most religions have on their members.  Look at the current "noise" about the DaVanci Code.  There are signs at most churches here that denounce the movie in very strong terms.  Sermons are based on swaying the masses to ingore the "lies" and remember that the "truth" is that which you are told at church.  After all, only religion (choose any one you wish) will give you eternal life after you are dead or 7 virgins or your own planet, etc. .........but if you don't believe then you must go to Hell and burn for eternity or be stuck in-between the world and Heaven, etc.  

No science to back this up either way so I guess you just have to "believe" what you want.   :-\

This is a popular myth, but the numbers don't add up.  WWII was the costliest war in history, in terms of lives, an estimated 40-50 million dead.  This was not a religious war.  Stalin exterminated 20 million of his own people, and we all know communist states are a-religious.  Not to say there hasn't been horrible acts committed in the name of God.  It could be technically true more wars were fought in his name, but more have died with no relation to God.  Cambodia's killing fields, on and on. Religious influence in the western world has been on the decline for 200 years, and wars have only become bloodier.  I'm not proposing causation, just observing.  Wars are about power, an extension of politics, religion was/is a tool of the state and used to weild power as well, thus the intertwining in history.

EDIT: Ooops, I see we have decended into our usual...hmm...huh, huh, I said "tool".
 
SteveR said:
Why not extend this topic to religion too.  After all more wars have been fought for "religious" reasons than any other.  The current state of the world is heavily dominated by religious beliefs and cultures that have very strong religious overtones confused with mixed in with national laws.

What about leaders like David Koresh, Jim Jones and People's Temple Christian Church crowd, the Hale Bopp Heaven's Gate crowd, and now the David Jeffs Morman sect. to name just a few.  These leaders had (have) such a hold on their followers than many gave up their wealth, their wives and their kids to these guys.  Many gave up their lives willingly.  What makes a person willing to do these things?

The petty acts of our current political parties are nothing compared to the influence and power most religions have on their members.  Look at the current "noise" about the DaVanci Code.  There are signs at most churches here that denounce the movie in very strong terms.  Sermons are based on swaying the masses to ingore the "lies" and remember that the "truth" is that which you are told at church.  After all, only religion (choose any one you wish) will give you eternal life after you are dead or 7 virgins or your own planet, etc. .........but if you don't believe then you must go to Hell and burn for eternity or be stuck in-between the world and Heaven, etc.  

No science to back this up either way so I guess you just have to "believe" what you want.   :-\
I agree that religion causes more (most?) problems.  How can a young man wind dynamite around his body and blow himself up, if not with some mistaken religious belief. Somebody said that 9/11 was an act of religious faith.

I like Kinky Friedman's quip.  "If you don't love Jesus, you can just go to hell."  Spoken by a Jew.  :)
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

-- The First Crusade was launched in 1095 with the battle cry "Deus Vult" (God wills it), a mandate to destroy infidels in the Holy Land. Gathering crusaders in Germany first fell upon "the infidel among us," Jews in the Rhine valley, thousands of whom were dragged from their homes or hiding places and hacked to death or burned alive. Then the religious legions plundered their way 2,000 miles to Jerusalem, where they killed virtually every inhabitant, "purifying" the symbolic city. Cleric Raymond of Aguilers wrote: "In the temple of Solomon, one rode in blood up to the knees and even to the horses' bridles, by the just and marvelous judgment of God."
-- Human sacrifice blossomed in the Mayan theocracy of Central America between the 11th and 16th centuries. To appease a feathered-serpent god, maidens were drowned in sacred wells and other victims either had their hearts cut out, were shot with arrows, or were beheaded. Elsewhere, sacrifice was sporadic. In Peru, pre-Inca tribes killed children in temples called "houses of the moon." In Tibet, Bon shamans performed ritual killings. In Borneo builders of pile houses drove the first pile through the body of a maiden to pacify the earth goddess. In India, Dravidian people offered lives to village goddesses, and followers of Kali sacrificed a male child every Friday evening.
-- In the Third Crusade, after Richard the Lion-Hearted captured Acre in 1191, he ordered 3,000 captives -- many of them women and children -- taken outside the city and slaughtered. Some were disemboweled in a search for swallowed gems. Bishops intoned blessings. Infidel lives were of no consequence. As Saint Bernard of Clairvaux declared in launching the Second Crusade: "The Christian glories in the death of a pagan, because thereby Christ himself is glorified."
-- The Assassins were a sect of Ismaili Shi'ite Muslims whose faith required the stealthy murder of religious opponents. From the 11th to 13th centuries, they killed numerous leaders in modern-day Iran, Iraq and Syria. They finally were wiped out by conquering Mongols -- but their vile name survives.
-- Throughout Europe, beginning in the 1100s, tales spread that Jews were abducting Christian children, sacrificing them, and using their blood in rituals. Hundreds of massacres stemmed from this "blood libel." Some of the supposed sacrifice victims -- Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln, the holy child of LaGuardia, Simon of Trent -- were beatified or commemorated with shrines that became sites of pilgrimages and miracles.
-- In 1209, Pope Innocent III launched an armed crusade against Albigenses Christians in southern France. When the besieged city of Beziers fell, soldiers reportedly asked their papal adviser how to distinguish the faithful from the infidel among the captives. He commanded: "Kill them all. God will know his own." Nearly 20,000 were slaughtered -- many first blinded, mutilated, dragged behind horses, or used for target practice.
-- The Fourth Lateran Council in 1215 proclaimed the doctrine of transubstantiation: that the host wafer miraculously turns into the body of Jesus during the mass. Soon rumors spread that Jews were stealing the sacred wafers and stabbing or driving nails through them to crucify Jesus again. Reports said that the pierced host bled, cried out, or emitted spirits. On this charge, Jews were burned at the stake in 1243 in Belitz, Germany -- the first of many killings that continued into the 1800s. To avenge the tortured host, the German knight Rindfliesch led a brigade in 1298 that exterminated 146 defenseless Jewish communities in six months.
-- In the 1200s the Incas built their empire in Peru, a society dominated by priests reading daily magical signs and offering sacrifices to appease many gods. At major ceremonies up to 200 children were burned as offerings. Special "chosen women" -- comely virgins without blemish -- were strangled.
-- Also during the 1200s, the hunt for Albigensian heretics led to establishment of the Inquisition, which spread over Europe. Pope Innocent IV authorized torture. Under interrogation by Dominican priests, screaming victims were stretched, burned, pierced and broken on fiendish pain machines to make them confess to disbelief and to identify fellow transgressors. Inquisitor Robert le Bourge sent 183 people to the stake in a single week.
-- In Spain, where many Jews and Moors had converted to escape persecution, inquisitors sought those harboring their old faith. At least 2,000 Spanish backsliders were burned. Executions in other countries included the burning of scientists such as mathematician-philosopher Giordano Bruno, who espoused Copernicus's theory that the planets orbit the sun.
-- When the Black Death swept Europe in 1348-1349, rumors alleged that it was caused by Jews poisoning wells. Hysterical mobs slaughtered thousands of Jews in several countries. In Speyer, Germany, the burned bodies were piled into giant wine casks and sent floating down the Rhine. In northern Germany Jews were walled up alive in their homes to suffocate or starve. The Flagellants, an army of penitents who whipped themselves bloody, stormed the Jewish quarter of Frankfurt in a gruesome massacre. The prince of Thuringia announced that he had burned his Jews for the honor of God.
-- The Aztecs began their elaborate theocracy in the 1300s and brought human sacrifice to a golden era. About 20,000 people were killed yearly to appease gods -- especially the sun god, who needed daily "nourishment" of blood. Hearts of sacrifice victims were cut out, and some bodies were eaten ceremoniously. Other victims were drowned, beheaded, burned or dropped from heights. In a rite to the rain god, shrieking children were killed at several sites so that their tears might induce rain. In a rite to the maize goddess, a virgin danced for 24 hours, then was killed and skinned; her skin was worn by a priest in further dancing. One account says that at King Ahuitzotl's coronation, 80,000 prisoners were butchered to please the gods.
-- In the 1400s, the Inquisition shifted its focus to witchcraft. Priests tortured untold thousands of women into confessing that they were witches who flew through the sky and engaged in sex with the devil -- then they were burned or hanged for their confessions. Witch hysteria raged for three centuries in a dozen nations. Estimates of the number executed vary from 100,000 to 2 million. Whole villages were exterminated. In the first half of the 17th century, about 5,000 "witches" were put to death in the French province of Alsace, and 900 were burned in the Bavarian city of Bamberg. The witch craze was religious madness at its worst.
-- The "Protestant Inquisition" is a term applied to the severities of John Calvin in Geneva and Queen Elizabeth I in England during the 1500s. Calvin's followers burned 58 "heretics," including theologian Michael Servetus, who doubted the Trinity. Elizabeth I outlawed Catholicism and executed about 200 Catholics.
-- Protestant Huguenots grew into an aggressive minority in France in the 15OOs -- until repeated Catholic reprisals smashed them. On Saint Bartholomew's Day in 1572, Catherine de Medicis secretly authorized Catholic dukes to send their soldiers into Huguenot neighborhoods and slaughter families. This massacre touched off a six-week bloodbath in which Catholics murdered about 10,000 Huguenots. Other persecutions continued for two centuries, until the French Revolution. One group of Huguenots escaped to Florida; in 1565 a Spanish brigade discovered their colony, denounced their heresy, and killed them all.
-- Members of lndia's Thuggee sect strangled people as sacrifices to appease the bloodthirsty goddess Kali, a practice beginning in the 1500s. The number of victims has been estimated to be as high as 2 million. Thugs were claiming about 20,000 lives a year in the 1800s until British rulers stamped them out. At a trial in 1840, one Thug was accused of killing 931 people. Today, some Hindu priests still sacrifice goats to Kali.
-- The Anabaptists, communal "rebaptizers," were slaughtered by both Catholic and Protestant authorities. In Munster, Germany, Anabaptists took control of the city, drove out the clergymen, and proclaimed a New Zion. The bishop of Munster began an armed siege. While the townspeople starved, the Anabaptist leader proclaimed himself king and executed dissenters. When Munster finally fell, the chief Anabaptists were tortured to death with red-hot pincers and their bodies hung in iron cages from a church steeple.
-- Oliver Cromwell was deemed a moderate because he massacred only Catholics and Anglicans, not other Protestants. This Puritan general commanded Bible-carrying soldiers, whom he roused to religious fervor. After decimating an Anglican army, Cromwell said, "God made them as stubble to our swords." He demanded the beheading of the defeated King Charles I, and made himself the holy dictator of England during the 1650s. When his army crushed the hated Irish Catholics, he ordered the execution of the surrendered defenders of Drogheda and their priests, calling it "a righteous judgment of God upon these barbarous wretches."
-- Ukrainian Bogdan Chmielnicki was a Cossack Cromwell. He wore the banner of Eastern Orthodoxy in a holy war against Jews and Polish Catholics. More than 100,000 were killed in this 17th-century bloodbath, and the Ukraine was split away from Poland to become part of the Orthodox Russian empire.
-- The Thirty Years' War produced the largest religious death toll of all time. It began in 1618 when Protestant leaders threw two Catholic emissaries out of a Prague window into a dung heap. War flared between Catholic and Protestant princedoms, drawing in supportive religious armies from Germany, Spain, England, Holland, Denmark, Sweden, France and Italy. Sweden's Protestant soldiers sang Martin Luther's "Ein 'Feste Burg" in battle. Three decades of combat turned central Europe into a wasteland of misery. One estimate states that Germany's population dropped from 18 million to 4 million. In the end nothing was settled, and too few people remained to rebuild cities, plant fields, or conduct education.
-- When Puritans settled in Massachusetts in the 1600s, they created a religious police state where doctrinal deviation could lead to flogging, pillorying, hanging, cutting off ears, or boring through the tongue with a hot iron. Preaching Quaker beliefs was a capital offense. Four stubborn Quakers defied this law and were hanged. In the 1690s fear of witches seized the colony. Twenty alleged witches were killed and 150 others imprisoned.
-- In 1723 the bishop of Gdansk, Poland, demanded that all Jews be expelled from the city. The town council declined, but the bishop's exhortations roused a mob that invaded the ghetto and beat the residents to death.
-- Islamic jihads (holy wars), mandated by the Koran, killed millions over 12 centuries. In early years, Muslim armies spread the faith rapidly: east to India and west to Morocco. Then splintering sects branded other Muslims as infidels and declared jihads against them. The Kharijis battled Sunni rulers. The Azariqis decreed death to all "sinners" and their families. In 1804 a Sudanese holy man, Usman dan Fodio, waged a bloody jihad that broke the religious sway of the Sultan of Gobir. In the 1850s another Sudanese mystic, 'Umar al-Hajj, led a barbaric jihad to convert pagan African tribes -- with massacres, beheadings and a mass execution of 300 hostages. In the 1880s a third Sudanese holy man, Muhammad Ahmed, commanded a jihad that destroyed a 10,000-man Egyptian army and wiped out defenders of Khartoum led by British general Charles "Chinese" Gordon.
-- In 1801 Orthodox priests in Bucharest, Romania, revived the story that Jews sacrificed Christians and drank their blood. Enraged parishioners stormed the ghetto and cut the throats of 128 Jews.
-- When the Baha'i faith began in Persia in 1844, the Islamic regime sought to exterminate it. The Baha'i founder was imprisoned and executed in 1850. Two years later, the religious government massacred 20,000 Baha'is. Streets of Tehran were soaked with blood. The new Baha'i leader, Baha'ullah, was tortured and exiled in foreign Muslim prisons for the rest of his life.
-- Human sacrifices were still occurring in Buddhist Burma in the 1850s. When the capital was moved to Mandalay, 56 "spotless" men were buried beneath the new city walls to sanctify and protect the city. When two of the burial spots were later found empty, royal astrologers decreed that 500 men, women, boys, and girls must be killed and buried at once, or the capital must be abandoned. About 100 were actually buried before British governors stopped the ceremonies.
-- In 1857 both Muslim and Hindu taboos triggered the Sepoy Mutiny in India. British rulers had given their native soldiers new paper cartridges that had to be bitten open. The cartridges were greased with animal tallow. This enraged Muslims, to whom pigs are unclean, and Hindus, to whom cows are sacred. Troops of both faiths went into a crazed mutiny, killing Europeans wantonly. At Kanpur, hundreds of European women and children were massacred after being promised safe passage.
-- Late in the 19th century, with rebellion stirring in Russia, the czars attempted to divert public attention by helping anti-Semitic groups rouse Orthodox Christian hatred for Jews. Three waves of pogroms ensued -- in the 1880s, from 1903 to 1906, and during the Russian Revolution. Each wave was increasingly murderous. During the final period, 530 communities were attacked and 60,000 Jews were killed.
-- In the early 1900s, Muslim Turks waged genocide against Christian Armenians, and Christian Greeks and Balkans warred against the Islamic Ottoman Empire.
-- When India finally won independence from Britain in 1947, the "great soul" of Mahatma Gandhi wasn't able to prevent Hindus and Muslims from turning on one another in a killing frenzy that took perhaps 1 million lives. Even Gandhi was killed by a Hindu who thought him too pro-Muslim.
-- In the 1950s and 1960s, combat between Christians, animists and Muslims in Sudan killed more than 500,000.
-- In Jonestown, Guyana, in 1978, followers of the Rev. Jim Jones killed a visiting congressman and three newsmen, then administered cyanide to themselves and their children in a 900-person suicide that shocked the world.
-- Islamic religious law decrees that thieves shall have their hands or feet chopped off, and unmarried lovers shall be killed. In the Sudan in 1983 and 1984, 66 thieves were axed in public. A moderate Muslim leader, Mahmoud Mohammed Taha, was hanged for heresy in 1985 because he opposed these amputations. In Saudi Arabia a teen-age princess and her lover were executed in public in 1977. In Pakistan in 1987, a 25-year-old carpenter's daughter was sentenced to be stoned to death for engaging in unmarried sex. In the United Arab Emirates in 1984, a cook and a maid were sentenced to stoning for adultery -- but, as a show of mercy, the execution was postponed until after the maid's baby was born.
-- In 1983 in Darkley, Northern Ireland, Catholic terrorists with automatic weapons burst into a Protestant church on a Sunday morning and opened fire, killing three worshipers and wounding seven. It was just one of hundreds of Catholic-Protestant ambushes that have taken 2,600 lives in Ulster since age-old religious hostility turned violent again in 1969.
-- Hindu-Muslim bloodshed erupts randomly throughout India. More than 3,000 were killed in Assam province in 1983. In May 1984 Muslims hung dirty sandals on a Hindu leader's portrait as a religious insult. This act triggered a week of arson riots that left 216 dead, 756 wounded, 13,000 homeless, and 4,100 in jail.
-- Religious tribalism -- segregation of sects into hostile camps -- has ravaged Lebanon continuously since 1975. News reports of the civil war tell of "Maronite Christian snipers," "Sunni Muslim suicide bombers," "Druze machine gunners," "Shi'ite Muslim mortar fire," and "Alawite Muslim shootings." Today 130,000 people are dead and a once-lovely nation is laid waste.
-- In Nigeria in 1982, religious fanatic followers of Mallam Marwa killed and mutilated several hundred people as heretics and infidels. They drank the blood of some of the victims. When the militia arrived to quell the violence, the cultists sprinkled themselves with blessed powder that they thought would make them impervious to police bullets. It didn't.
-- Today's Shi'ite theocracy in Iran -- "the government of God on earth" -- decreed that Baha'i believers who won't convert shall be killed. About 200 stubborn Baha'is were executed in the early 1980s, including women and teenagers. Up to 40,000 Baha'is fled the country. Sex taboos in Iran are so severe that: (1) any woman who shows a lock of hair is jailed; (2) Western magazines being shipped into the country first go to censors who laboriously black out all women's photos except for faces; (3) women aren't allowed to ski with men, but have a separate slope where they may ski in shrouds.
-- The lovely island nation of Sri Lanka has been turned hellish by ambushes and massacres between Buddhist Sinhalese and Hindu Tamils.
-- In 1983 a revered Muslim leader, Mufti Sheikh Sa'ad e-Din el'Alami of Jerusalem, issued a fatwa (an order of divine deliverance) promising an eternal place in paradise to any Muslim assassin who would kill President Hafiz al-Assad of Syria.
-- Sikhs want to create a separate theocracy, Khalistan (Land of the Pure), in the Punjab region of India. Many heed the late extremist preacher Jarnail Bhindranwale, who taught his followers that they have a "religious duty to send opponents to hell." Throughout the 1980s they sporadically murdered Hindus to accomplish this goal. In 1984, after Sikh guards riddled prime minister Indira Gandhi with 50 bullets, Hindus went on a rampage that killed 5,000 Sikhs in three days. Mobs dragged Sikhs from homes, stores, buses and trains, chopping and pounding them to death. Some were burned alive; boys were castrated.
-- In 1984 Shi'ite fanatics who killed and tortured Americans on a hijacked Kuwaiti airliner at Tehran Airport said they did it "for the pleasure of God."
 
Laurence said:
This is a popular myth, but the numbers don't add up.  WWII was the costliest war in history, in terms of lives, an estimated 40-50 million dead.  This was not a religious war.  Stalin exterminated 20 million of his own people, and we all know communist states are a-religious.  Not to say there hasn't been horrible acts committed in the name of God.  It could be technically true more wars were fought in his name, but more have died with no relation to God.  Cambodia's killing fields, on and on. Religious influence in the western world has been on the decline for 200 years, and wars have only become bloodier.  I'm not proposing causation, just observing.  Wars are about power, an extension of politics, religion was/is a tool of the state and used to weild power as well, thus the intertwining in history.

I never said more people died in religious wars....I said more wars have been fought for religious reasons than for any other.  

IMHO...power is power...world religions are no different than political parties when it comes to getting into and staying in power.  I live in an area that is ground zero for the fastest growing religion in the world.  Their net worth is north of $8 Billion..tax free; seems to be a lot of $$ for buying a few Books of Morman every time a new Marriott opens.  :D
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

TH,

You win on volume alone. I didn't read your post. Too much work and I'm retired! :D
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

justin said:
I'll have no part in a three way. Especially when at least one member (other than me) is a confirmed "dood".

Oh sure, start with the sexual preference bigotry already. :D What if he's a really nice, effeminate guy? :LOL:

Eagle43 said:
I agree that religion causes more (most?) problems.

Well, everyone else's religion, of course. Not mine, of course. ;)

(CYA smilies: :D :D :D )
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

Any way you slice it, religion has caused a hell of a lot of bloodshed and pain. It's particularly disturbing that so many have died when the whole basis is some made-up little gods and other pointless delusions.

BMJ: are you discriminating against mean, masculine guys? ;)
 
(sigh) well I always got to try, I stand by my statement that most wars have been fought over power, most of the time when religion was evoked it was just a recruitment tool.

It's interesting that intolerance is perfectly acceptable in certain, pre-selected categories. :-\
 
Re: Do you think that the folks that followed Hitler were truly unique human bei

Laurence said:
It's interesting that intolerance is perfectly acceptable in certain, pre-selected categories. :-\

What intolerance are you talking about?
 
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