My hypothesis was, and is that religious people (who are not practicing spirituality, i.e. acceptance and tolerance, and promoting human rights) are not good for our society when they get into the political field.
I don't agree that MLK was inspired by religion, but rather by spirituality.
If you can't see, or know, or understand the difference between religiosity and spirituality, I don't know how to explain it.
Jefferson was spiritual, but as a deist he was not religious.
Maybe that helps, I don't know.
You seem to be missing the point entirely.
I don't agree that MLK was inspired by religion, but rather by spirituality.
If you can't see, or know, or understand the difference between religiosity and spirituality, I don't know how to explain it.
Jefferson was spiritual, but as a deist he was not religious.
Maybe that helps, I don't know.
You seem to be missing the point entirely.
Quote from whitster:
"No, I am not back peddling. It happens all the time that some people need clarification of a statement, which is apparently what you need, and what I am providing. "
no, it happens all the time that people in support of an ill defined hypothesis/idea/etc. throw out false statements based on no evidence, in alleged support of their biases and prejudices (as u did) and then when called on it, instead of acknowledging their mistake, merely change the argument
i have quoted you exactly.
i have responded to your false statements and you have now CHANGED them without admitting them
the original point remains
when you AGREE with religious inspired political movements, then it's ok to have religion in politics. when you don't agree, then it's not
that's quite typical and understandable. what is also typical (but not excusable) is promoting falsehoods to promote your pov, and then when called on their falsity denying that you made them
you stated what you stated. i quoted it. i can quote you again, but you won't have the intellectual honesty to respond to what YOU claimed. that much is clear