Race and religion are hardly secondary issues in some conflicts.
It's been asserted that the defining issue in the post-Perestroika world is the demand for self-determination of the
one fourth of the world's population who are Muslims. Islam certainly had its glory years, but since the Industrial Revolution the Muslim world has been on the defensive against Christian Europe and now a relatively irreligious (by Islamic standards) hegemony of Europe, China, Japan, the Western Hemisphere and the Antipodes.
You really believe this shit, don't you?
If we do nothing but make jokes about each other's positions, this discussion will become pointless. Jung studied the same human behavior that your prophets studied. The difference was that he used science and came up with a paradigm that doesn't require an adult to remain in the same state of mind that allowed him to believe in Santa Claus.
Nonsense. Theism is belief in God, nothing more nothing less, that's what I've always used, and that's what I'm using now.
But you keep waffling about what "belief in God" means.
So dictionary.com doesn't always win? At least when it comes to you guys.
The dictionary also has a more expansive definition of "believe." I'm not going to scroll to that website and quote it verbatim, but essentially in addition to believing in the existence of something/someone, one can also "believe" in its ability, honor, etc. So belief in God could also mean belief in God's intention to treat humans kindly (at least the ones who follow his religions), or belief in his ability to perform the feats necessary for that treatment, etc. But all of these subsidiary "beliefs" hinge on
belief in his existence. If God does not exist, he can hardly perform miracles or reward us for being kind to our neighbors.
When I say "I believe in Jerry Brown" (sorry, that's a totally lame example but it seems that all the people I really believed in are dead) of course I mean that I believe in his ability to help California recover (and I'm not sure I do but this is just for the sake of the example) and his honorable intention to do so.
But there is no controversy over his existence. No one is going to ask me why I believe he exists. This is not true of God.
So I still don't understand how the phrase "belief in God" could possibly not automatically include belief in his existence. And you still have not answered that question.
Wikipedia is not the best authority when you delve into the arcana of a discipline. We're talking about the nature of the universe here, not the contents of your garage. Energy also exists, duh? So do religions and schools of thought and alliances and progress.
I would rather take my chances with irreligious organisations than two of the worlds most famous atheists who demonstrated the art of cold-blooded, mass murder on an unprecedented scale in a such a short space of time.
Hitler could not have prevailed without the support of European Christendom, which for a millennium included antisemitism as one of its defining characteristics. The word "holocaust" was coined long before Hitler, because Christians were destroying Jewish villages long before they had gas chambers and machine guns to make the cleansing more efficient.
As for Stalin, I'll forgive you for not knowing that communism is an offshoot of Christianity. Despite a surname that is most common among Jewish families in the USA, Karl Marx was a Christian. His slogan, "To each according to his needs, from each according to his abilities," is an elaboration of a line from the Book of Acts. I mean come on now, how many self-respecting Hindus or Confucians would take an economic system seriously in which what a man takes from civilization does not have to correlate with what he gives back? The result would be an implosion of the national economy, once they dissipated the leftover surplus from the preceeding government and the surplus they appropriated by annexing their neighbors. Oh wait a minute, that's what actually happened!
Yes. We can't even smoke a cigarette because of religious wars that occur daily on our very doorstep.
I'm not sure what you're referring to. But our need for constant vigilance to avoid reversals of progress regarding gay rights and abortion is
entirely due to the still-strong influence of the phallocratic Abrahamic religions in American politics.