Originally posted by KabeRinnaul
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Galileo's case is frequently exaggerated. He was actually aquitted of heresy, and simply had to agree to quit publicly promoting his theory. He agreed, but kept at it anyway. That's when he was retried and actually punished.
The Inquisition occured nearly 400 years ago. Referring back to it constantly is a bit like saying "The United States supports freedom? Tell that to the black slaves!" After all, our government has been in continual existence since then.
Also, the church has been persecuting the jews for the alleged death of Christ for a lot longer than 400 years.
Again I'll say that the people who make up the church are fallible.
Don't forget that the pope has also come out blaming homosexuals for the sex abuse scandals. Yes humans are fallible, they make mistakes. But covering up those mistakes, and projecting blame onto innocent parties indicates an entirely different kind of human fallibility.
And don't blame the church for the entire epidemic.
What I was trying to say was the pope's lie about condom effectiveness in stopping AIDS transmission in the middle of an epidemic, was tantamount to lighting a match in a gas-filled room.
Lack of education about the disease is what keeps the AIDS epidemic going. In some parts of Africa, there is a belief that sex with a virgin cures AIDS. You can imagine how counterproductive that is.
However, not all followers of religion are unthinking slaves to it's ideas, despite that being an insult commonly flung their direction.
Both religious people and atheists can be moral or immoral, the main difference being how they justify it. Neither one is really better than the other.
The point of religion is to provide order and reason...
BTW, in case anyone thinks I'm picking on christianity, it's because that's the religion that was brought up in the OP. I could go on about the violence and misogyny of Islam, but not in this thread.
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