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Those fundamentalist groups are fundamentalist to what?Yes. That being literally what I quoted you saying and my single-word question response to it.
It shouldn't take multiple enquiries to get a simple response, but bad-faith gonna bad-faith.
It's the entire point of your argument and therefore beholden on you. Rejecting it doesn't require anything from anyone else and doesn't shift any responsibility to them.
That you're choosing to entirely ignore fundamentalist groups - groups which adhere only to fundamentals - that are inconvenient to your argument while directly quoting the actual Taliban and using cherry-picked, English translations of Arabic oral tradition speaks volumes as to the nature of your argument.
The teachings of Buddha?
It's not convincing here. Step into Reddit or Twitter for reasons why it...erm...is convincing, and the world has moved on from the opinions being shown here.Your argument is simply not convincing to those not already convinced, and to those already convinced it's just reinforcement.
What, in Jesus's life would be bad to disagree with?I'm taking from more than your posts.
Jesus is still divine in Christianity, and still perfect. So it's the same situation as the one you pointed out with Mohammed where they can't really disagree with what they think he says, which can be a lot of things given the nature of religion. Also religion is a huge motivation behind pushing things like intelligent design, abortion bans, and gay marriage bans. Jesus isn't stopping Christianity from promoting bad ideas.
Look up how many terrorist groups atm are Islamist. Name me even a few fatal attacks this year that have been committed by the other faiths.I don't know what the rates are across religions, but I also don't think it's very important given how much religions can change with time and other factors.
It's a MASSIVE problem!Religious influence in the US, which is mostly Christian, is currently a massive problem.
Hence my "Don't Alabama my Western World" post.
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