Lessening religion's impact won't cure the world of all its ills, but it will certainly improve things. What I meant is that when you have people living in a fantasy world and couple that with destructive nuclear technology, we could all be wiped out. Will the fairy tales be worth it then?
I think believing the fantasy that there is no God is much more harmful to society.
You like to bring up examples such as the Inquisition and the Crusades.
Many other Christians were brought before the Inquisition because they were teaching from the Bible instead of from "officially sanctioned" Roman Catholic Church materials. In addition, the Crusades resulted in "holy" wars between "Christians," Jews, and Moslems. In more modern times, wars have been fought between Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland and between Jews and Arabs in the Middle East. However, common to all this violence was an underlying struggle for power. Today, some people kill abortionists in the name of God. Are these people unwilling pawns of religion or using religion to justify their own evil agendas?http://www.godandscience.org/apologetics/atrocities.htmlYou like to talk about how Hitler was Catholic. Have you read about Hitler's spiritual journey? Have you read anything about Hitler's dabbling in the occult? Are you aware that Hitler persoanlly presented the writings of Nietzche to Stalin and Mussolini? Are you ignoring the fact that others who were not Jewish were also slaughtered by Hitler? Did you read *bleep* mastermind Adolf Eichmann's last words that refused repentance and denied belief in God? Do you know how many Russians were killed by the *bleep* machine? Do you recall Hitler's words inscribed over one of the gas ovens in Auschwits, "I want to raise a generation of young people devoid of a conscience, imperious, relentless and cruel"? Do you know that Hitler's point was that the destruction of the weak is a good thing for the survival of the strong and that "nature intended it that way", as is taught by atheistic evolution's tenet of natural selection--"the survival of the fittest". None of these signs of the Holocaust point back to Christianity.
How conveniently the atheist plays word games. When it is Stalin or Pol Pot who does the slaughtering, it is because they are deranged or irrational; their atheism had nothing to do their actions.
Vox Day, in
The Irrational Atheist, lists 22 atheistic regimes that committed 153,368,610 murders in the 20th century alone:
Murders by Atheists (20th Century) Country Dates Murders
Afghanistan 1978–1992 1,750,000
Albania 1944–1985 100,000
Angola 1975–2002 125,000
Bulgaria 1944–1989 222,000
China/PRC 1923–2007 76,702,000
Cuba 1959–1992 73,000
Czechoslovakia 1948–1968 65,000
Ethiopia 1974–1991 1,343,610
France 1793–1794 40,000
Greece 1946–1949 20,000
Hungary 1948–1989 27,000
Kampuchea/Cambodia 1973–1991 2,627,000
Laos 1975–2007 93,000
Mongolia 1926–2007 100,000
Mozambique 1975–1990 118,000
North Korea 1948–2007 3,163,000
Poland 1945–1948 1,607,000
Romania 1948–1987 438,000
Spain (Republic) 1936–1939 102,000
U.S.S.R. 1917–1987 61,911,000
Vietnam 1945–2007 1,670,000
Yugoslavia 1944–1980 1,072,000
Yes, "Christians" have committed atrocities against other religious and non-religious people. However, atheists have committed far more atrocities than all religious groups combined (see more statistics on the web page). Even so, the key factor in these atrocities has been totalitarian power, rather than religion, which has resulted in these hundreds of millions of murders. The Bible says that people are evil, but that they can become transformed through the power of the Holy Spirit to live lives of love, joy and peace.
You can't judge a philosophy by it's abuse. The decisions and actions of each individual are determined by what is important to that individual. The difference between someone who calls himself or herself a Christian and yet kills and slaughters and an atheist who does the same thing is that the Christian is acting in violations of or her own belief, while the atheist's action is the legitimate outworking of his or her belief.