I basically, most of the time, think people should be free to believe whatever they like. But when you get things like government policy, wars and acts of terrorism being driven by religion.... that's when I think "this is bullsh!t, $%&# your religious freedom, we'd be better off acknowledging it's all complete hogwash". :|
I'm not so sure, PQ - I think that religion is a handy excuse, easy to categorise into good and bad, black and white, us and them (...and after all, we're only ordinary men... etc). However, I think that MOST conflicts that we categorise as "religious" actually boil down land, poverty and oppression.
Religion is a handy tag to use, but it's far less of a driver than hungry people.
(that's people who are hungry, by the way - not people from Hungary)
i completely agree with you.
i don't really believe in "holy wars". as you said religion is just a tag. politic beliefs work exactly in the same way... if we've got an enemy
or just decide to create one it's easy to put him behind the unwalkable line of religion or other marks of birth or thought...
and very often those tags put people in categories they never felt to belong.
if you think about what happened in Jugoslavia, in many cases people who lived in the same building found themselves on the opposite sides of the front because of their "official" belonging to Catholic, Orthodox or Muslim faith, even if they weren't religious at all.
in other cases religious feelings are just an easy way to feel part of a bigger group with a common enemy... i don't think that every Palestinian is muslim. personally i know some guy from Gaza. most are just vaguely believers or even atheists. like most europeans are. but their problem is common... sometimes a friend or relative of theirs gets killed by stray bullets fired by israeli tanks or helicopters or soldiers... or their home gets bulldozed at dawn. and this has little to do with religion.
that is not a conflict between muslims and jews, just a military occupation carried on by a nationalist government. of course not every israeli out there supports it, but i don't think that russian people looked at germans with much sympathy in 1946, even if many of them had no direct responsability in the invasion of their homeland, soldiers NOT excluded.
and so hate leads to hate, with no exception.
i think this is completely off topic, but who cares...