I was more referring to this clip, but I also appreciate a little Silence of the Lambs.
GreyEyedGhost
Saying "religion is the problem" when the problem crops up in many different areas regardless of which religions are present in an area or if religion isn't present at all makes it seem like you might be focusing on the wrong thing. Nationalism, religion, strong ideologies, groups with deep emotional bonds and a sense of insularity are all susceptible to the same things - charismatic leaders can easily direct their attention and they have a tendency towards directing their hostility towards groups that don't fit into their group.
So, tribalism. And if one tool won't work, or is removed completely from access, those who wish to use tribalism to mobilize a large group to help them achieve their goals will just use the next one that is available to them. The tools are rarely what are important to them, but the results. So I don't see how focusing on one tool, even a particularly well-suited tool, will solve the problem.
And not in a good way!
It's been terrible for me. My 5G signal still isn't great. At least I have WiFi calling.
If I look at the ceiling will you steal my lungs?
I wasn't making any judgement on this, although if I were, I would point out that one of the benefits of open source is the ability to fork projects and move away from the elements you have a philosophical issue with, such as what the OpenOffice developers did when Oracle purchased Sun and started imposing their unplayable rules. What I was half-jokingly pointing out was some guy coming in deep into the conversation of highly opinionated people and acting like the conversation wasn't about their various opinions.
First, religions and the existence of God are two different things, just like the existence of the earth and the earth being flat are two different things. Likewise, the existence of religions is no guarantor of God's existence, nor is there many flaws proof of his non-existence. And unknowns are facts we haven't discovered or proven yet, much like germ theory, or fanciful ideas which haven't been debunked, such as the idea that an imbalance of humors was the cause of disease.
Vote early, vote often!
I get what you're saying, but saying people who choose to believe something that can't be proven and hasn't been disproven need psychotherapy is like saying the same for color preferences. Sometimes there is no right answer and people should be able to choose.
I don't tell non-straight people they can't have their pride parade, I don't tell people they shouldn't kiss or hold hands in public, I don't tell religious people they can't have public displays, either. What I object to is if any of those groups insist I join them, or insist I don't.
Every terrible thing done under religion has been done without religion. None of them have happened without people (except for killing the different). Maybe people are the problem and religion is just one of many tools that can be used to harm other people. Tribalism exists in many forms, religion in its many flavors being just one of them.
I do hope you taught him the many better ways of doing this. I absolutely agree with making an environment where mistakes are easily owned up to (I made a mistake that ended up costing my employer over $10k in the last year), but if it isn't coupled with turning those into learning experiences (here's why you don't do that, here's why this is a better solution) then you just have a lot of mistakes happening over and over again.