RE: why not religionism ?
April 3, 2021 at 7:44 pm
(This post was last modified: April 3, 2021 at 7:58 pm by Ferrocyanide.)
(April 1, 2021 at 7:09 pm)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote: Claustrophobia.
Arachnophobia.
Agoraphobia.
Technophobia.
Boru
Nephophobia = An exaggerated or irrational fear of clouds
Trypophobia = fear of holes
stygiophobia =fear of hell
and the list goes on.
(April 1, 2021 at 7:54 pm)Fake Messiah Wrote:(April 1, 2021 at 6:32 pm)Irreligious Atheist Wrote: I don't like religiophobia either. It bunches together hate of religion and hate of the religious like the term Islamaphobia does, and that way, Islamic apologists can basically call us bigots for having issues with the religion of Islam. That's why I stick to calling it anti-Muslim bigotry.
Yeah, there is no such thing as ISLAMOPHOBIA
It is the right of every individual to question a religion which CLAIMS to be peaceful, and yet is responsible for more terror attacks than any other.
In the Islamic world, women are treated as second class citizens and bound by ancient laws that have no place in a modern world.
If anything, ISLAM has a phobia about ANYTHING not ISLAMIC.
Questioning a religion is important. It helps to develop argumentative skills and encourages exchange of information. Each party learns from each other. If a muslim is calling a person who criticizes islam an islamaphobe (in the same sense as racism) then that muslim has not developed the skills yet to deal with the criticisms or simply, there is no proper response at all.
If islam claims that it should not be criticized and claims that violence should be used when I criticize it, then I have a large problem with that. It is a religion that does not belong in my sector.
I agree. Islam is often on the news when it comes to terrorism. There sure are a lot of islamic terrorist groups.
Where did muslims get this idea that a woman should cover there body parts?
Is it cultural or is it something that is said by one of their "prophets".
Women are treated as second class citizens in judaism, christianity, islam, mormonism. it is clear that the text are written by men. Women are often nameless in these "holy" books. There is very little information about them. Often, the story revolves around the males.
Even the son of the jewish god is a male and so are his 12 followers.