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I have no religion, never have, never will. I do however have morals and standards that I believe make me socially acceptable.
Why is it that Wherever I go or whenever I have to fill in forms I am asked my religion? Is it important?
Why when I say I have no religion people tend to say 'Oh C of E then' when I am not, are non religious people accepting they are part of a 'Cult'
Surely religion has been the main cause of war over the past 3000 years or so, so an abstainer should be respected.
Any answers?
No best answer has yet been selected by vespaboy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.At my university the Christian Union actively pressurise you if they find out you don't believe in God, as they seem to equate no religion with no morals. It seems to be acceptable for the CU to hound Atheists/Agnostics for their beliefs (or lack of) but they wouldn't dare attempt this with a follower of another religion because they would be suspended from the university. This isn't some church-sponsored US college either, this is a UK redbrick university.
Although I am not a follower of any religion, I do have to defend it on one point. It is not religion that is the biggest cause of war, it's fighting over natural resources. (most recently oil!) The members of sides opposing each other tend to be part of their side because the members share their culture and beliefs.
MargeB - some people are allergic to peanuts, so theycan have too many, besides is roasting them the most humane method ....?
lilmonkey - The old 'religion causes war' is an argument which will be consistently used by non-religionists to enable them to talk about their favourite topic: religion. I would probably be inclined to thump anyone from the CU who "actively pressuried" me into listening to them, so please don't lump us religious types all together.
lady_p_gold - yes, they only want people of thier own kind to join their group. But then, I wouldn't be queuing up outside my local temple to join their prayer group, or outside the offices of the BNF to join their party. In fact I would probably avoid joining my local 'Atheists R Us' group as I couldn't stand the endless evenings of discussions about : religion.
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