kenberg, on 2013-January-09, 08:25, said:
My approach, fwiw, is something like this:
I have known people who believe that the position of Saturn in the sky influences daily events. Possibly Nancy Reagan believed something like this. I don't. Of course it could be true, but by saying that it could be true it does not really make me agnostic on the issue. I simply don't believe it and I don't plan to spend any time thinking about it. It could be true only means that it also could be true that I have a brother somewhere that everyone has kept secret from me. Could be so, but in practical terms it is not so.
I applaud, and have upvoted, this post (which I have only partially quoted). As I think most of the atheists here have stated, the problems with religion arise, in our view, when the requirements imposed by the religions upon their followers become imposed on non-believers by the religious control of secular institutions.
To use your astrology argument, I suspect that you and most others in the US would become very worried indeed if evidence emerged that Obama was using a tarot reader and/or an astrologer to make important decisions, such as whether to invade Iran.
Yet many governments around the world do allow the dictates of local religious leaders to influence and in some cases direct important decisions.
It may be that the short-sighted and selfish desires of Big Oil in the US has a lot to do with why climate change deniers dominate the Republican Party and thereby thwart any attempt to rein in the contributions by the US to combat the problem...which thwarting is a handy reason for the leaders of other, less wealthy countries to refuse to do anything of substance. But there can be no argument but that many of the republicans (and others in the denial business) point to the bible in support of their position. A number of eminent politicians have espoused the view that man cannot destroy what god has provided for us, so that it is therefore impossible that man has caused or will cause any sort of global catastrophe.
In Nigeria, the impact of US Xian fundies on the body politic has resulted in extreme anti-gay legislation, while in the US (and elsewhere to perhaps less effect) the opposition to gay marriage is almost entirely religious even tho many aspects of marriage have primarily secular effect.
So while one can perhaps remain on the sidelines with respect to a belief system (astrology) recognized by an overwhelming majority as kooky, and with no apparent real life consequences, it seems mistaken to remain on the sidelines with respect to a belief system that is used by the majority to oppose efforts to save the planet from the effects of massive climate change, or to continue a long-standing tradition of discrimination against a recognized minority.
When one stays neutral, despite a belief that one side is demonstrably more likely, than the other, to be correct, then one enables the sort of situation in which a Michelle Bachman, a Sarah Palin, or a Rick Santorum are seen as legitimate contenders for the most powerful position in the world.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari