No, I have a problem tolerating it.
There are three points I'd like to make to back up this statement, but before everyone jumps onto me to burn me at the stake, I'd like to say the following: I don't think all religion is bad, religions that do not apply to any of the three following points can be lived by for all I care. What someone wishes to believe is none of my business, it is what people do that concerns me.
First of all, religion poisons the young mind. Why religion tries to ensnare the young child is quite obvious to me: children are much easier to manipulate. The young child is; by nature; programmed to accept information from adults without putting much thought into it himself. Information gathered in the earliest ages doesn't wear easily, especially not when that information is repeatedly confirmed on a regular basis. This is what I call indoctrination, and it deeply disturbs me. Children are the future of this world, and it really hurts me to see them corrupted by religion.
Adults might find some use in religion, to ease their stressed existence, to answer impossible questions and to supply for a social gathering. Children don't need religion to provide them with anything. They are perfectly happy without worrying about eternal damnation or the beginning of the Universe - let alone a fairy godmother that keeps an eye on them 24-7. Because children don't need any of the; as presumed; positive assets of religion, they should be spared the negatives. A parent's conviction that a child that is not circumcised will be a lesser person (in the eye of the Deity), shouldn't be reason enough to allow that parent to mutilate the child's reproductive organs. And that is just one of the many physical corruptions brought onto children by religion. Think of what the idea of hell must do to a child, or even just that of a devil and a god. Suddenly the child is burdened with all these worries, that no child would naturally be bothered with. And imagine what the child goes through when he realizes that he doesn't fit the ideal of the Deity, or imagine a child concluding that he sinned and will have to ask for forgiveness or be damned to eternal hell?
Children hold the future of this world. It is plain criminal in my eyes, to push religion onto your children, just because you happen to have a particular belief. Sure it is uncomfortable for a parent to find out their kid voted Democrat while that parent is a devoted Republican, but don't you think the individual should be left to choose for himself? If a child grows up and feels the need to turn to religion, then so be it. But parents, please, keep your supernatural ideas to yourself and let your child grow up to be the complete individual it was born to be - unhindered by its parent's religious conviction.
Second, religion obstructs fulfilling the potential of the individual. Many religions issue restrictions on our lives. We can't masturbate, we can't have sex with people of the same gender, we can't eat shellfish, we can't eat pork, we can't build statues to other gods, we can't work on Sundays, we can't kill other people, we can't go about in life without praying at least three times a day, we can't start eating until we thanked god, we can't die without being judged, we can't be born without a ceremony of superstition, we can't be rational about the existence of god, we can't just get along, and we sure as hell can't criticize (other people's) religion - without being condemned to eternal suffering after we've died, without being bullied or excommunicated, without being tortured, without being murdered. Religion can be very nasty to individuals, just for saying and acting on what they think.
Not only does religion oppose individualism, it tries to destroy it. In a perfect theocracy, everyone would do exactly as the default religion tells them to do. It would be a nation far worse than any one of communism of fascism. Only under totalitarianism do we see the likes of religion. We are told to stop looking for anything that religion has already provided for, we don't need to keep looking for the beginning of the universe, or the origin of species. It's all there. Let alone philosophizing about ethics, or cultural values - religion has served us with an abundance of fantastic rules and/or guidelines to live by. Someone who is unfortunate enough to find himself in a religion, will be unlikely to open a book concerning evolution, nature physics, astronomy, or any science (any REAL science) and read it truly considering what it says. I know this for a fact, because even under the immense evidence of evolution, or gravity for crying out loud! - people claim those things are "only a theory". Utter nonsense, because: evolution is a fact, gravity is a fact, black holes are a fact, the end of the solar system is a fact, natural diversity of sexuality is a fact, albino's are a fact, the Holocaust is a fact, the Spanish Inquisition is a fact, death is a fact, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera. In every religion, there is a fact of reality being repressed. People are missing out on experiencing a fuller realization of what this world is really made of. We will never know everything; and it is perhaps better that we don't; but to ward yourself from scientific facts over a perhaps more comforting fiction, is - please forgive me - rather stupid.
If religion allowed everyone to live a free life and completely explore the boundaries of reality without being inclined to keep some sort of fictional truth in the back of their heads; I wouldn't be writing this. Religion corrupts a person's perception of reality, religious fiction correlates with truth and the placebo function grows out of proportion into something as vile that I honestly consider it the greatest mistake in the history of Man. Needless to say it sickens me to learn that people are actually considering to teach ID in the same place evolution is taught. People who are in religion, build a wall around themselves to protect their placebo - some are aware of this, others are not - this wall obstructs reality from entering where that reality collides with the fiction surrounding the placebo and this wall can expand according to how the wishful thinking inside it grows. Everyone has a personal vision of the world, built up from scratch by all the information the person ever received. Religious people simply belittle themselves by consciously replacing parts of that vision with untruths that might make them feel a little better.
Thirdly, religion degrades the human race. Simply because it can never be up-to-date, it will never be fit for the modern Zeitgeist, it can never comply to current society at large - unless of course that entire society is filled with religionists. Religion requires a certain level of ignorance from the people practising it, because it would fall at the sight of a large enough dose of reality. This ignorance makes it stagnate. It is closed-minded because it is not open for change. The existence of god is not under consideration, same as any established 'facts' coming with the religion are not to be questioned. This is commonly called faith, I call it wishful thinking. Wanting something doesn't make it real, though that is exactly where everyone in religion fails to see what is obvious. This prevents huge amounts of people to think freely, openly and rationally in order to deal with the problems of mankind head on. Instead these people stick their heads in the sand, pretending the world to be different. But that won't do. The world is what it is, we die when die, this solar system is temporal, Man is most likely finite, and there are billions of people who are suffering life instead of enjoying it - the only thing that keeps them away from suicide their natural desire to survive, to solve problems and to help other people.
There are two kinds of people in religion. Those who are conscious about the fact that they are keeping up a charade for their own superficial pleasure, and those that are numb with religion that they actually, wholeheartedly believe it. Among both of these categories, are people who I would consider bad... 'bad' because they harm other people, by indoctrinating them into something that is not true, by condemning them for being who they are, by inciting unjust fear and hatred, by inciting unjust joy and love, and by using violence in the name of keeping their own placebo real for themselves - or because the appendage of the placebo "told me to". This ignorance of what is really going on makes it harder to give what the individual can give, in order to assist in the progress of Mankind.
I am a Humanist, my purpose in life is reducing suffering, increasing pleasure and attempting to increase life sustenance for all human beings. I find religion to be an inapt, insufficient and unsatisfying substitute for reality-based solutions to accomplish those goals. Beyond trying to do what I can to add in the positive momentum toward achieving Humanistic goals, I seek to minimize the negative forces that counter that movement; hence the above negative approach of religion.
Love,
Diederick
---
By the way, concerning whether religion should be tolerated or not: let it be clear, as I stated on the top of this comment, that I don't have a problem with a person's private fantasies. My dislike of religion comes from the people that try to spread their distortion of reality unto other people; especially defenceless children; and so embodying a detrimental force in the progress of this world. People with an individual religion (Deists, I guess) enjoy my respect of the individual.