Religions Side Effects
Why doesn’t this surprise us? Religion has been the fuel behind many conflicts yet we hardly ever take the time to question the logic behind it. It’s almost as if we use religion as an excuse to hate each other and upset the balance of what could be a peaceful world.
There have been many wars in mankind’s past that have been affected and cause by religion. The Korean War had its roots in religion when 300,000 Christians were forced to flee. In the Civil War slave owners thought it was their “god given right” to own slaves. During World War Two Hitler used the 'Jews Killed Jesus' thing to rally his cause. All of the wars could have most likely been resolved or at least ended quicker had we thrown our ridiculous religious intolerances out the window.
Even today we are in a “war on terrorism”, which is more a war on Muslim fundamentalists than anything. To have a war on “terrorism” makes no sense. Terrorism is a simple side effect from Muslim fundamentalists intolerance for non-Muslims. Sam Harris the Author of “The End of Faith” states: “If Osama bin Laden were the leader of a nation, and the World Trade Center had been brought down with missiles, the atrocities of September 11 would have been acts of war. It should go without saying that we would have resisted the temptation to declare a war on “war” in response.” What Harris is implying is that terrorism is caused by religious intolerance, it isn’t terrorism itself that is the problem, the intolerance is.
We live in a world where most people have faith in a divine being. People’s thoughts and actions are premeditated and filtered through their belief system before the logic of the situation is analyzed. This world has witnessed prejudices, murder, war, and other terrible events any of us would call “crimes” had the causation not had been religion. Today prejudice does not come from the color of a persons skin (we have gotten over that ridiculousness), but now it comes from a persons belief system. We are threatened by weapons that could destroy our earth, simply because we don’t share the same “faith” as others.
Now I am completely aware that this is a very unique and complex situation. We will never see the end of religion, it has been around for nearly as long as we have and will be until our species is extinct. Some people simply need faith, they need something that makes sense to them to explain why they are here and have some comfort knowing that death is always around the corner. What I would suggest as a potential step towards a more tolerant society is that we focus more on morals from a common sense standpoint. Just because some people aren’t Christians doesn’t mean they can’t be “Christ-like”. I know plenty of atheists who are kind-hearted, charitable, loving people. The point is that we can be a kind society with our religious affiliations set to the side. I’m not saying that people should stop believing, but that they should try believing in their own space and be open to living amongst a diverse society of varied religions.
I’m not trying to disprove or belittle religion in any way. I feel that everyone should have the freedom to believe whatever he or she wishes to believe in. Whether a certain religion has more evidence or proof behind it shouldn’t play a role either. It just doesn’t make sense for us to continue fighting each other over this. I simply am stating from a common sense and logical standpoint that religious extremists (mostly the violent ones) are harming the world more than helping it. We need stop fighting over faith.
*Info taken from NY Times Article “Pakistan Bombing Kills More Than 30” by Pir Zubair Shah
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
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I’m sorry to her about your fabricated reputation of being a porn addicted ungodly teenager. I think this is a great piece because a lot of people can relate to it. With the changing times, religion is becoming a less prevalent issue in kid’s lives today. Having to deal with those insufferably overbearing young life people in high school was something every kid in my school had to deal with. I also lived in a very small, white Christian community so I 100% feel your pain. Seeing those people come into power by means of money of other influences is always so frustrating, topics such as Prop. 8 never seem to settle quite right with me. It’s unfortunate knowing this will be a very difficult situation to correct in the sense that religion will always seem to have such a strong hold on individuals.
ReplyDeleteI really don't think religion and school mix well at all, and they shouldn't. I think what people do religiously should be left to them instead of being exposed to everyone they go to school with. Sure, if you want to go to a Christian school and share all those beliefs with people, go for it. But no one should be stuck in a religious school if they don't want to be. I personally don't care how religious someone is, but the other day my three year old niece came home and told me the prayer they learned at daycare before meals. Not to say that praying pisses me off, but I didn't agree with the fact that all the kids had to learn the prayer. I know they don't understand it yet, but it's like forcing it upon them to try and make them decide on religion early in life. It was weird.
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