He may be doing a bad job of arguing it, but I agree with the general point. I've been an open atheist in America for several years now. America is 75+ percent Christian and generally considered to be much more religious than most developed countries. I've dealt with hostility and prejudice, but I've never been afraid of violence for saying (to quote Wong) that God doesn't exist, was a stupid idea to begin with and is an evil asshole if he does. I can think of plenty of other Christian majority countries where that would be just as true. Muslim countries, not so much.madd0ct0r wrote:Blsh blah blah. I have muh sterotypes, and i refuse to bring any evidence to the table, so ill ask a load of questions irrelevant to the op and hide behind them when people call me out on my own bullshit.
Grow up.
I might be inclined to answer a question for a question. If only because in answeribg them you might actually do somer esearch and learn something about a topic that clearly interests you.
Which is why I buy into the 'it's the extremists' argument less and less. Near as I can tell there's nothing 'extreme' about a Muslim who supports violence against blasphemers, apostates, women who do not know their place, etc. When shit like that starts getting written into law it stops being 'the extremists.' I'm pretty sure you call that normal.
And yes, you can find plenty of equivalent examples of Christians doing things just as bad and for reasons that are just as based in their religion. Yes, there are many Muslims who don't buy into those things and who suffer unfairly because of association. But overall those bad things seem way more prevalent among Muslims as a demographic.