Religion
In reply to the discussion: How to Be an Atheist Without Being a Dick About It [View all]AtheistCrusader
(33,982 posts)I can't see the OP's point then.
"When right-wing religious assbags come at me spewing bigoted garbage (a.k.a. TUESDAY #isthisthingon), it is extremely difficult for me not to fire something back about their "magic book" or their "special sky friend" or some dismissive, infantilizing shit like that. Sometimes I don't manage to restrain myself, and I feel bad about it because it's a cheap shot about a thing that means a lot to a lot of people. It's not my nice neighbor's fault that some Twitter troll called me a baby-murderer."
So, I'm supposed to be nice in the face of bigotry? For why? Do we really think that will help?
What of observers that see my milk toast response to blatant bigotry in that context? Will they see me as a fervent ally, or just a ho-hum bystander?
When I attack religion on political grounds, my goal is not always the conversion of the person I am arguing with. I may be after the silent victim who thinks he or she doesn't have a friend in the world. That thinks no one will stand up for them. That they have no allies. That no one sees a Boolean good/bad moral/immoral proposition, that everything is soft fuzzy debateable equivalence.
I think there is a place and a time for respectful silence, but the places the author of the OP drew lines, I cannot agree upon.