What about the Islamic East African tribes who continue to castrate their female children in direct contravention of Islamic (i.e., their own religious) law?
Isn't this still a religious atmosphere? Or do you think Africans do not count?
To be quite frank, I don't see circumcision as mutilation. My sons were both circumcised and not for any religion ritual either.
I wholeheartedly agree with Storm with this quote.
She is right, these things can happen even if there was never any religion at all.
I am not really talking about the sterile, secular, hospital-circumcisions we have in the first world; I am talking about circumcision in a religious setting, and not just the one we're familiar with. I also am talking about the priest biting off the foreskin of a boy, and the women of some Islamic tribes that cut off the vagina of a young girl and sow the hole shut leaving hardly an opening to pee through - supposed to be torn open when the girl looses her virginity (probably at age 10).
Concerning things that are possible to happen without religion: it may be so that any madman could commit the crimes against humanity that religion submits, but nowhere, does this happen as systematically, collectively and with such pompous ignorance and arrogance as in religion. You only accept it, and I am only mildly tolerant toward it, for one simple reason:
its size. A great comparison by Bill Maher:
"If you have a few hundred followers and you let them molest children, people will call you a cult leader, if a you have a billion they call you Pope. It's like: if you can't pay your mortgage you're a dead beat, but if you can't pay a million mortgages you are Bear Sterns and we bail you out. And that's what the Catholic church is; the Bear Sterns of organized paedophilia. Too big to fed.
"
To show how religion is kept up:
"Volume, volume, volume!
" Watch it
here. Being popular doesn't make something true, let alone acceptable. For the record, the above quotation is meant to be an illustration to my point, not my actual point. (I'm sorry if this seems off-topic, I justed wanted to make the point.
Did you read my post? There are people with flat EEG's, no brain activity, that have had NDE's. Are these people lying because of "social pressure?" You say you don't care about spirituality, and yet you care about what is real. Spirituality is quite real. Read some of these people's accounts, please do. To not acquaint yourself with these things is missing a whole argument for faith. Also, skeptics, in large numbers, have converted to faith after seeing incredible things. Are these people all thinking wishfully?
Haha, oh dear... Yes, I read your post, remain calm. Let's have a look at this baby.
People with flat EEG's are dead, their near death experience must have killed them. People can really believe what they say, giving no special response to a lie-detector test, if that's what you're saying. I never said they were all lying.
Spirituality seems very unreal to me, at least far from being a fact of reality - simply because I demand some evidence before acknowledging facts. You are overlooking the fact that the human mind is much more complex than what you make it seem to be, it's all three influences I listed - probably more, that can explain why people think they witnessed something supernatural.