Non-religious contemporary (and almost contemporary) sources also claim that the crucification was a symbolic act common with Jesus's Nazarene sect (of which he is said to have been a leader, so "INRI" was even true to some extent), and the "resurrection" was basically the end of his coma, of...
I hope so, at least. :)
I had read contradictory statements about that on the internet, so it’s good to know that you all seem to agree that my perception was wrong. :)
I don’t plan to convert (you won’t change your beliefs just because you like some other aspects), but I like to know things...
Yes, I would. Because not being killed for whatever reason is a human right and people who don’t respect human rights should not be able to violate them “legally”. It’s fine for me if you disagree with me here, but I actually wonder why anyone should be allowed to violate human rights.
Ha, I would be very happy if only people who agree with me were allowed to vote, but what I suggest is actually to have a mandatory test for everyone. Prove that you value basic human rights (defined in several global agreements) and that’s it, basically.
The most worrying fact about the news posted here is that people who are allowed to vote actually want someone killed.
I think we should generally reconsider everyone’s right to vote.
Ah, don’t assume that English is most people’s first, second or third language. It’s pretentious to do so.
A lot of today’s internet communication, however, can still be traced back to good old Usenet days where it is rather common to save some characters, even today with byte flatrates.
It amazes me that porn, the least Christian movie genre, almost always has a woman (or several of them…) moan “oh God”.
Then again, I never watched Buddhist porn. Are they different?
Even those living in “democracies” often live in some kind of theocracy. In Germany, the church can (and will) deny you to publicly watch Life of Brian on Good Friday. Oh, and you must not dance when the church says it is an holy day. I wonder how Germany isn’t a theocracy now.
I have read a German translation of the Edda, and some of it showed that it was written by Christians. One of the major problems with our beliefs is that there was a sudden break in our traditions.