My point was not to make you feel bad, but to think before casting aspersions on a different religion where the zealous are up to "convert or die" actions, and claiming that one's religion has the moral high road because it's not popular to kill folks in the name of one's religion this century.
It's the same actions, just different times. As we see that people of the same religion as those slaughtering others for not being the same managed to move beyond that stage, remember that this, too, is a phase. It's all about power, not even religion.
If it were, then it would make no sense for Muslims to kill other Muslims in the name of Allah. For that same token, remember what the 100 Years War was about, and it makes about the same amount of sense.
It's not about religion. It's about politics and social control, and violence is being done in the NAME of religion.
I apologize if it came across as moral elitism.
I communicated poorly.
I was born Italian American.
It would be a very big deal for me to renounce all trace of my Italian American cultural baggage and embrace an inner Afrikaner culture.
Judaism is similarly tied to more than a religious belief, it is often part of a cultural identity as well ... so leaving Judaism to embrace Buddhism (just to give someone other than Christians a fair mention) is much harder than leaving the Baptist Church to embrace Buddhism.
So I am inclined to give members of Judaism the benefit of the doubt when they say that they would never consider changing their faith.
Likewise, I know of few (bordering on none) worldly Muslims (as in a Muslim in name, but not really practicing their faith except on Muslim holidays).
My limited experience (in total numbers, but spanning three continents) indicates that Islam is the center of most Muslims lives ... health care, jobs, social network ... and even the most progressive Muslims are likely to completely cut off a Muslim apostate.
There are MANY Muslims who believe that a former Muslim should be killed.
So leaving Islam is more like leaving Judaism than leaving the Baptist Church.
So I am inclined to give members of Islam the benefit of the doubt when they say that they would never consider changing their faith.
I know Christians from/in China and the Maldives.
Joining Christianity cost them a great deal.
Remaining Christian carries criminal risks (and worse).
So I would be inclined to give those Christians the same benefit of the doubt when they say that they would never consider changing their faith.