Well, most obviously because religion is not subjective in the way that morality is. In most cases, religion consists of (controversial and unestablished if not outright untenable) factual claims, morality does not- e.g. "God exists", "God created the heavens and the earth", "Christ rose from the dead", etc. are not subjective claims.
This is good. This is not. Are statements made as if they were objective. They are not "My personal opinion is that you shouldnt hit your brother" they are "you should not hit your brother" "stop hitting your brother" "if you keep hitting your brother I will x"
Ironically, if you check out techniques used by brainwashing sects you ll notice most of them happen naturaly on a family, because parents have a huge amount of power on the lifes of their kids. This is not news.
Parents can and do use the same techniques to modify behavior. The difference is whether or not the behaviour is damaging.
Ultimately that was the problem with sects: they lead to damaging behaviour.
No, not really- at least not how the word "brainwashing" is ordinarily defined in English. Brainwashing is not equivalent to teaching. Teaching my child how to tie their shoes or do long division is not brainwashing.
Meet the Oxford:
verb
[with object]
pressurize (someone) into adopting radically different beliefs by using systematic and often forcible means:
people are brainwashed into believing family life is the best
(as noun brainwashing)
victims of brainwashing
As you can read, its pretty hard to "brainwash" something that wasnt there. Unless the kid starts out thinking "I know there has been no one called .jesus that had been crucified and there is nothing like God, and I believe this to be so" then you are not changing any belief of his. You are
introducing a new belief in him.
Brainwash is meant for a way in which to put ideas into someone, not to talk about e veracity of such ideas.
The veracity of the ideas have nothing to do with whether it was brainwash or not. The way in which you put those ideas in does.
Um, ok, and being spanked is similar to being raped... How? Perhaps you should re-read the post you're responding to here, because I don't think it took the first time.
The problem of rape is absolutely psychological. What changes is not so much the physical reality but the psychological one. What separates a consensual and pleasurable session of bdsm and rape is something entirely psychological and not physical: consent.
I also wasnt talking specifically about rape but your blanket claim of not being able to imagine how psychological damage could be worse than physical, but maybe I read that wrong? I missed the word rape if it was in there