Thanks to you both.
Stef, my impression from some of your podcasts was that what someone
claims to believe is not so important to you as what they actually do in practice. My parents, and many religious believers, claim to believe in their scripture as the literal and binding word of God. That's well-understood. But obviously these billions of people don't have exactly the same religious beliefs. What's important is not what the book says, since the interpretations and adherences vary so greatly, but what people themselves believe - and more than that, what they actually do about those supposed beliefs.
You know as well as anyone that virtually no religious person, here in North American anyway, thinks that stoning a person to death is acceptable. They don't murder their neighbors for being heretics. If someone told my parents that he was going to sacrifice his child because God commanded it, they would take that child away for its own safety. Like most religious people in this country, religion plays a fairly benign, understated role in their lives. They go to church. They toss their prayers into the ether. They think about how nice it will be to meet Jesus after they die. That sort of thing. They don't advocate murder, incest, etc. The idea of my pedestrian, middle-aged parents even thinking practically about incest, murder, or genocide is kind of funny in an absurd way. It's just totally implausible.
And I think you know that, which is why you couch what you say. It's not what they advocate, but that they
"subscribe to a belief system that advocates..." That's not meaningful, though. A belief system doesn't advocate anything; people advocate things. And the things you are giving as examples are plainly not advocated by any religious person that I know.
Stefan Molyneux:
Of course, if your parents do not subscribe to any of the violence and evil in the Bible, then they are not Christians of course -- if they do, then they are not moral, as I'm sure you would agree.
I'm still perplexed by what you mean by "subscribe". Either my parents advocate murderous activities or they do not. It seems that, knowing nothing about them except that they are religious, you are putting forward some undeniably extreme claims about what they specifically believe. If one has to advocate murder in order to be a Christian, I think my parents would happily opt out.
It certainly seems that you aren't much interested in the specifics of religious belief. And that's fine, but it's a bit baseless to categorize all people who are "religious" as endorsing atrocities, regardless of what behavior they actually perform in their lives. Isn't that what really matters? Or would you say that anyone who holds superstitious beliefs should be cut out of one's life?
Thanks; I hope you'll help me get to the heart of this.