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mpjh wrote:I wonder how I could learn more about the forced conversions. For example, what is a forced conversion?

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mpjh wrote:Basic solution to stopping the atrocities of the past is to have the powerless take power and maintain power with true democracy. When you combine power with the autocratic approach of "god told me to do it," you have atrocities.
















mpjh wrote:No, crazy, the point is that religions don't support the liberation of the poor, rather they need to poor to continue their existence. If religions truly supported the liberation of the poor they would not own churches or other property, they would not be building or sustaining large cathedrals, they would be putting all their resources into the goal of empowering the poor to take care of themselves. Right now most organized religions support the ruling elite of the country they are in at the expense of the disempowered.
















CrazyAnglican wrote:Give an example from the 20th century, then. I've already cited a fantastic resource that contains other links as well. Where is this "God told us so" that has Christians marching off. George Bush's thoughts on the subject notwithstanding, The Iraqi conflicts aren't even a drop in the bucket compared to the bloodbath caused by philosophies gone awry. Not that religion gone awry is no cause for concern, but that it does not stand out as any moreso than philosophy, as Snorri claimed. Do you agree with snorri or with the actual data?





























mpjh wrote:Revenge isn't a democratic imperative and not a necessary result of revolution.





























mpjh wrote:No, crazy, the point is that religions don't support the liberation of the poor, rather they need to poor to continue their existence. If religions truly supported the liberation of the poor they would not own churches or other property, they would not be building or sustaining large cathedrals, they would be putting all their resources into the goal of empowering the poor to take care of themselves. Right now most organized religions support the ruling elite of the country they are in at the expense of the disempowered.
mpjh wrote:True, but it is still not an imperative of a democratic government, primarily because it is not in the self interest of the people to conduct revenge. I think the most compelling example of an exhibition of this is South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
Desmond Mpilo Tutu (born 7 October 1931) is a South African cleric and activist who rose to worldwide fame during the 1980s as an opponent of apartheid. In 1984, Tutu became the second South African to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Tutu was elected and ordained the first black South African Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town, South Africa, and primate of the Church of the Province of Southern Africa (now the Anglican Church of Southern Africa). Tutu chaired the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and is currently the chairman of The Elders. Tutu is vocal in his defence of human rights and uses his high profile to campaign for the oppressed. Tutu also campaigns to fight AIDS, poverty and racism. He received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984, the Albert Schweitzer Prize for Humanitarianism, and the Gandhi Peace Prize in 2005.[1] Tutu has also compiled several books of his speeches and sayings.

























CrazyAnglican wrote:Hi JCKing,
I don't think anyone was equating Christians and Jews in terms of belief. The charge (yet again ) was how terrible Christians can be if you let them have any actual say in what's going on in the world. Let's keep quiet about it, mind you, if any other groups can be as terrible or even moreso.







FabledIntegral wrote:Through manipulating it to however you see fit, you can gain a following of virtually mindless souls willing to do whatever asked because they believe they are serving God.
FabledIntegral wrote:Secularism typically doesn't garner such followings,.....
FabledIntegral wrote:rather it's people that are being oppressed and would rise against the ruler if possible. Although, I must admit, I'm not sure the distinction between the two matters - atrocities are atrocities...



CrazyAnglican wrote:FabledIntegral wrote:Through manipulating it to however you see fit, you can gain a following of virtually mindless souls willing to do whatever asked because they believe they are serving God.
Here's the rub. What makes a Christian who believes he's doing the right thing more of a "mindless soul" than a communist (which is certainly secular) or a fascist. You're swaying into the realm of ad-hominem, why must we assume that a person belonging to a religion is "mindless" in support of any particular aim. What specific faculty do you assume they lack that everyone else seemingly has?
FabledIntegral wrote:Secularism typically doesn't garner such followings,.....
FabledIntegral wrote:rather it's people that are being oppressed and would rise against the ruler if possible. Although, I must admit, I'm not sure the distinction between the two matters - atrocities are atrocities...







FabledIntegral wrote:CrazyAnglican wrote:FabledIntegral wrote:Through manipulating it to however you see fit, you can gain a following of virtually mindless souls willing to do whatever asked because they believe they are serving God.
Here's the rub. What makes a Christian who believes he's doing the right thing more of a "mindless soul" than a communist (which is certainly secular) or a fascist. You're swaying into the realm of ad-hominem, why must we assume that a person belonging to a religion is "mindless" in support of any particular aim. What specific faculty do you assume they lack that everyone else seemingly has?
Nothing - they could all be mindless souls. Nationalism I would say is the second most driving force for "mindless souls," immediately after religion. It's all relative to the amount of "zeal" someone has for a particular belief. I did not mean in any way to downplay religion itself - rather the people who follow such movements.
FabledIntegral wrote:CrazyAnglican wrote:FabledIntegral wrote:Secularism typically doesn't garner such followings,.....
Sure it does. The Stalinist atrocities of the WWII era and a little after were completely secular. Do you suppose that he concocted and carried out these atrocities by himself? I'd say that it's hardly likely. Some, probably many, Communists had to be willing to go along with the brutality in the name of a new and better world order, or it simply could not have happened. The same could be said for Pol Pot, Kim il Jung, Mao Zedong, etc. There is so much evidence that secularism garners such followings that it would be impossible to cite it all.
After Stalin took power - his followings were more out of fear than out of any particular zeal. Sure - it existed, but it was more so due to people knowing they would die themselves if they didn't follow his order. Don't get me wrong, he had his supporters and people were VERY nationalistic for the USSR as a country, but the policies he enacted in order to commit the atrocities were far less accepted.
CrazyAnglican wrote:FabledIntegral wrote:rather it's people that are being oppressed and would rise against the ruler if possible. Although, I must admit, I'm not sure the distinction between the two matters - atrocities are atrocities...
In the, above mentioned, example it was the oppressed people being ground into the dust by the adherents to the ideology that "if we all work together and be equals the world would be a much better place". Philosophies do garner wide popular support any go every bit as (arguably, more) awry as any religion ever has.
FabledIntegral wrote:Which above mentioned example..?
FabledIntegral wrote:Either way, I more so was correcting your interpretation of what the "charges" were rather than saying what I believed in myself. Hence me saying "from what I can gather, THESE are the charges the others are saying..." I wasn't trying to really support it nor defend it, I just believe you answered to JC in a quite a manipulated twist of what they were saying in order to make their argument seem less viable.



CrazyAnglican wrote: What is the harm in taking a broader view of atrocity and seeing it for what it is?
















PLAYER57832 wrote:CrazyAnglican wrote: What is the harm in taking a broader view of atrocity and seeing it for what it is?
Actually, there is a GREAT DEAL of harm in claims that only this group or that group, this type of group or that type of group are capable of the greatest atrocities. It is harmful, because it is how the speaker sets him/herself apart from those others .. who ARE capable.
We are all, as a group, capable of atrocities, UNLESS each and everyone one of us works hard to not just understand, but also to say "stop" ... beyond this line we cannot pass, when we see things beginning.
And that, is the greatest lesson we ALL must learn from history!
















mpjh wrote:The best way to prevent atrocities is to empower those without power, in short, a revolution that eliminates the absurd dominance of the elite in this world.
The Reign of Terror (5 September 1793 – 28 July 1794) or simply The Terror (French: la Terreur) was a period of violence that occurred fifteen months after the onset of the French Revolution, incited by conflict between rival political factions, the Girondins and the Jacobins, and marked by mass executions of "enemies of the revolution." Estimates vary widely as to how many were killed, with numbers ranging from 20,000 to 40,000; in many cases, records were not kept, or if they were, they are considered likely to be inaccurate. The guillotine ("National Razor") became the symbol of a string of executions: Marie-Antoinette, the Girondins Philippe Égalité and Madame Roland, as well as many others, such as "the father of modern chemistry" Antoine Lavoisier, lost their lives under its blade.
































mpjh wrote:The best way to prevent atrocities is to empower those without power, in short, a revolution that eliminates the absurd dominance of the elite in this world. Unfortunately, most church leaders strive to be part of the elite, or at least it apologists.







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