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oraxx's avatar

The Ten Commandments came out of a culture that didn't know where the sun went at night. A culture that convinced itself they were the chosen people of an invisible man in the sky who will sometimes grant wishes if one just begs hard enough. A culture that managed to convince itself they were operating under divine sanctions to justify the many horrors they were responsible for. Today's religious right isn't a whole lot more perceptive, and they always seem to assume everything will have a happy ending if they can just impose their religion on others. Entrusting our civil liberties to the Christian Nationalists would be the definition of insanity.

Lost In Alabama's avatar

Thank you for this article, but this was one of your most painful to date to get through. How can anybody respect these morons like Ted Crocket and Lauren Ventrella? But you answer this question so well by referring to them coming off as preaching a Sunday sermon. I know, because I sat through thousands of these sermons every Sunday as a Southern Baptist. You accept everything you’re told and you don’t ask questions. This is how we got into this mess in this country in the first place - blind, unwavering, unquestioning faith in Christian leaders. Well, I started asking questions at a young age and now I am an atheist. Maybe, that’s why you don’t ask questions, because all of their arguments and beliefs quickly fall apart to anybody that thinks critically.

I am a scientist. I am an atheist. I believe in the ever evolving evidence our world and our minds provide us. I don’t think I was ever wired to believe in an invisible, mythical god. Wouldn’t there be some proof of this being in the thousands of years humans have been around? My mind cannot compute, and I wonder if there was ever a study comparing the brains of atheists and religious people?

I know studies show that the brains of conservatives have less gray matter and larger amygdalas (the fear center) than liberals. I would hypothesize that these studies would correlate well with my hypothesis. Christians do not like hypotheticals or “gray” areas. Just look at how Ventrella acts when presented with a hypothetical. She melts down.

Oh, and Crockett’s face when Tapper tells him that something he absolutely knows to be true is not. He can’t handle it. As an Alabamian and previous Southern Baptist, Crockett’s look of disbelief is one I know all too well. I have seen the same look so often on the faces of my friends and family.

Their interviews encompass everything that is wrong with this country right now. Like you said, when anyone objects to their Christian nationalism, they say ignore it, but yet they cannot for one second ignore anything or anyone that doesn’t fall into their narrow, contradictory moral purview. The blinding light of their proud ignorance and hypocrisy makes me gag a little in my mouth every time I hear and see it. Unfortunately, the members of their cult have closed their ears and eyes, so the truth is irrelevant to them.

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