Saturday, March 26, 2016

Spirit is not obsolete but Religions are

Why is this true?

Religions are not bad. That is not the problem.

The problem is some people in every religion are crazy and their fundamentalism will kill us all eventually.

Look at people like Timothy McVeigh who was a Christian terrorist that blew up the federal building in Oklahoma. Look at Osama Bin Laden, a Muslim terrorist that blew up the twin towers in New York City. Look at ISIS that killed so many in Paris and now Belgium and possibly more to come in Europe and around the world.

Terrorists are getting worse not better as time goes on. They are killing people by the thousands now and if this goes on they will be killing people by the millions soon.

What causes this? Children and young people become traumatized by horrific events in their lives and become fundamentalists and think nothing of killing anyone who doesn't believe the same way they do.

What's wrong with this picture?

What's wrong is traumatized children become traumatized PTSD adults who think they are right.

So, the end result will likely be:

a Nuclear blast or blasts that ends the earth and extincts all humankind on earth.

Therefore, Spirit is not obsolete but religions are----

As a human species we have to give up the part regarding religions where it is like  two or more teams fighting to the death for dominance.

Unless this ends the human race and Earth go extinct.

Religions are the problem when people become intolerant of other religions and have to kill anyone that believes something else. But, the real cause is PTSD from traumatic events in childhood or young adulthood or both when applied to a religion.

So, Religions cannot exist (at least in their present forms) without everyone going extinct.

No one religion can dominate the earth and kill the other ones off. It doesn't matter what religion it is.

To think this way is to advocate the end of all life on earth.

Think about what I'm saying here. To think otherwise is to embrace human extinction within the next 100 to 500 years.

No comments: