What can make tens of millions of people – who are in their daily lives peaceful and compassionate and caring – suddenly want to physically dismember a man for drawing a cartoon, or make excuses for an international criminal conspiracy to protect child-rapists? Not reason. Not evidence. No. But it can happen when people choose their polar opposite – religion. In the past week we have seen two examples of how people can begin to behave in bizarre ways when they decide it is a good thing to abandon any commitment to fact and instead act on faith. It has led some to regard people accused of the attempted murders of the Mohamed cartoonists as victims, and to demand ‘respect’ for the Pope, when he should be in a police station being quizzed about his role in covering up and thereby enabling the rape of children. In 2005, 12 men in a small secular European democracy decided to draw a quasi-mythical figure who has been dead for 1400 years. They were trying to make a point. They knew that in many Muslim cultures, it is considered offensive to draw Mohamed. But they have a culture too – a European […]
Saturday, March 20th, 2010
The Pope, The Prophet, And The Religious Support For Evil
Author: JOHANN HARI
Source: The Independent (U.K.)
Publication Date: Friday, 19 March 2010
Link: The Pope, The Prophet, And The Religious Support For Evil
Source: The Independent (U.K.)
Publication Date: Friday, 19 March 2010
Link: The Pope, The Prophet, And The Religious Support For Evil
Stephan: I have one SR reader who wrote me to say he thought I was being too hard on organized religious institutions. My response was that I strongly supported spiritual experiences, but that I saw no reason why it should be possible to hide behind religion as justification for behavior which would otherwise result in massive criminal prosecutions. Imagine that we had a ring of middle school coaches throughout the country who were sexually abusing the children they coach. What do you think would happen?