dimosthenis9         
         Notice how they do not make reference to historical documents? — Banno
Michael Zwingli         
         while Capitol Police officers were killed in the building,
— Michael Zwingli
This never happened. Why did you write it? — tim wood
Banno         
         
Banno         
         
Michael Zwingli         
         Gibbon was a Roman Catholic convert. If anything he is at pains to be even-handed . Any anti-religious bias is in the eye of the religious, in their need for comfortable lies. — Banno
Notice here the pile-on of apologists? — Banno
What if the goal of a religion isn't to be factually correct? It isn't; no need for the "what if..." — Banno
Banno         
         Gibbon was a Roman Catholic for exactly a year and a half, — Michael Zwingli
dimosthenis9         
         
Banno         
         I explained you why. — dimosthenis9
Notice how they do not make reference to historical documents? Notice the ad hom nature of their arguments - that I hate Christianity, that Gibbon was anit-christian; the accusation suffices for them; no need for evidence.. Notice the non sequiturs - that there are tolerant Christians, hence Christianity as a religion must be tolerant. — Banno
your unspeakable claim that Christianity was the first to be intolerant, proselytize and seek political power — dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         ...to wich we can now add the misrepresentation of my view here: — Banno
Every religion(from the very first one) used and achieved political power. They are combined. And humans always used religions for other "purposes". Taking advantage of them.
It wasn't Christianity's privilege at all. It just seems that you find Christianity especially "guilty" for every humanity harm. It has to do with religions in general and not at all with Christianity itself. — dimosthenis9
Even the obvious fact with Egyptians oppressing Jews, you almost demonstrated that it was Jews fault! So what else to say? — dimosthenis9
Blames for all human nature weaknesses religions. As if behind them aren't people.
And after Christianity especially. That Logical row simply makes no sense at all. Add to all these, the historical error that Christianity was first to oppress others, be intolerant and seek political state and you will understand that there isn't much to argue about here. — dimosthenis9
Banno         
         Every religion(from the very first one) used and achieved political power. They are combined. And humans always used religions for other "purposes". Taking advantage of them. — dimosthenis9
you find Christianity especially "guilty" for every humanity harm. — dimosthenis9
Even the obvious fact with Egyptians oppressing Jews, you almost demonstrated that it was Jews fault! So what else to say? — dimosthenis9
Blames for all human nature weaknesses religions. As if behind them aren't people. And after Christianity especially. That Logical row simply makes no sense at all. Add to all these, the historical error that Christianity was first to oppress others, be intolerant and seek political state and you will understand that there isn't much to argue about here. — dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         I don't see the relevance of the situation of the jews here; except to promulgate the glorification of oppression. And yet another ad hom, this one seemingly saying that my claim is too successful. — Banno
Michael Zwingli         
         But of course this is in the end irrelevant. That the discussion falls back on the character of the writer and not to the case presented is itself telling. For the facts are there. — Banno
Alkis Piskas         
         What kind of cost? Can preventing a war cost more than conducting it? What could cost more than taking lives?So, doesn't preventing a war help survival? If so, isn't it an ethical decision and action?
— Alkis Piskas
Depending at what cost. — stoicHoneyBadger
stoicHoneyBadger         
         What could cost more than taking lives? — Alkis Piskas
Hermeticus         
         And all the days of Adam that he lived were nine hundred and thirty years, and he died. — Genesis 5:5
Alkis Piskas         
         I have already brought this up the subject of freedom. I said "Other wars were started to gain independence (liberated from the yoke of an oppressor, etc.) These were done with the purpose to pretect the survival of the oppressed. So they can be considered ethical endeavours rather than unethical." Most probably you got the idea from me. But here it is out of the right context. Or, rather, it's not the right answer.Freedom! What if the cost of preventing a war is to surrender and live under an oppressive regime? — stoicHoneyBadger
Tom Storm         
         And all the days of Adam that he lived were nine hundred and thirty years, and he died.
— Genesis 5:5
Clearly factual. — Hermeticus
Ciceronianus         
         Even the obvious fact with Egyptians oppressing Jews, you almost demonstrated that it was Jews fault! — dimosthenis9
Ciceronianus         
         he temples were not just left to collapse; they were brought to ruin; the statues did not fall because of mere age; they were pulled down. — Banno
Ciceronianus         
         Not to mention science's intolerance towards the non-scientific. — Thunderballs
Ciceronianus         
         Titus did destroy Judea and the Temple in Jerusalem, so to the extent the argument is made that polytheists stand for tolereance over their aggressive monotheistic neighbors, I don't see that — Hanover
Hanover         
         The Roman's didn't lay waste to Judea and Jerusalem because the Jews were monotheists. — Ciceronianus
Ciceronianus         
         Nor did the Jews lay waste to various other nations because they weren't monotheists.
I'd also argue that the Christians laid waste to all sorts of nations (as did the Romans) for all sorts of reasons that went well beyond religious differences. — Hanover
Hanover         
         There's also the genocide of Amelek — Wheatley
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