First of all, people who wish to eradicate religion are not all 'bigots.'
What would you call people who can't tolerate diversity?
As I have said in another thread, atheism and science is open-minded and if there was evidence for God then it would be accepted.
1) Anti-theism has little to do with atheism, and nothing at all to do with science.
2) Atheism and science likewise have nothing to do with each other.
3) Tolerance for diversity has (say it with me) nothing to do with evidence.
I am not, of course, referring to moderates.
"Of course?" When you say "religion," you include moderates as well as extremists.
However, a moderate climate of respect for and fear of offending the religious provides a climate from which more extreme positions can come about. I will stick to Christianity:
Again, when you say "religion" you include everybody. If you mean Christianity, SAY "Christianity." And even then, bear in mind that there is such a thing as a Christian moderate.
Things for new people to know in order not to look completely foolish while posting in RF
I feel that it is wrong for people of the church to claim to know the mind of God and to tell people how their lives should be lived.
Pot, have you met my friend kettle?
Those who want to "eradicate religion" are doing the same thing, just without God.
It is a form of child abuse to label a child with the religion of his or her parents and expect the child to follow these values.
No, it isn't. Fair warning, as someone who was
actually abused as a child, this is one of the best ways to make me lose my temper.
Abuse is traumatic. It leaves deep scars, as well as wounds that never heal at all. Religion does not qualify, and calling it abusive only serves to belittle the very real suffering I and far too many others have endured.
It is also wrong to teach children creationism in schools as if it has the same scientific merit as evolution.
Granted, but see the thread linked above.
This is aside from actual child abuse that Christianity is riddled with. The Pope himself knew of allegations of child abuse amongst members of the church and it is for this reason that there is a campaign to arrest the Pope upon his next visit to Britain.
While this is a legitimate grievance, it is all too often used as a political football, which is almost as bad.
The Pope, from the Vatican, feels that he has the right to spread the lie that condoms will not help to stop the spread of AIDS. To tell people in third world countries who have little other sources of informaion that condoms are wrong makes the Pope responsible for the deaths of thousands of people, including children. AIDS is bad but condoms are worse? What gives religion the right?
What makes this typical of religion? Where in Christianity does it say that such tactics are acceptable? I'm pretty sure their God was rather clear about bearing false witness.
When you use a legitimate, specific criticism as a club against those who have nothing to do with it, you rob it of its power.
Religion, or in this case, the religious should not be exempt from criticism. Nor should it's wealth of mind-bogglingly diverse adherents be lumped together.
I do not feel that it is bigotted to refuse to give 'respect' to institutions that contain such crimes and I can not understand how any person can remain a member of a religion when members of the same / similar religions use their faiths as excuses for such crimes.
Then don't respect them. That's not bigotry; respect should be earned. However, when you lump people together, self-righteously condemn them, and say they shouldn't have the very rights which protect you (freedom of conscience), you cross the line to bigotry.
Christianity has a lot to answer for, from all of the above, to the holding back of the advancement of science, to the views on homosexuality and more.
Not really. Some Christians do. Big difference.