First of all, hi there! It's really good to get a meaty, courteous response - I hope my response provides some enjoyment too, this is the bit I really love, I've never minded jokes and fun, even liked them but for me the debate is the heart of it all.
Oldskeptic wrote:All religions seem to have something in common: New ways of thinking and or doing things are resisted. Also for some if not most of the largest most influential religions there is outright denial of the dangers that their hidebound thinking promotes, and they have no problem ignoring or denying actual evidence.
Religion is defensive, it has to be because it cannot let itself go, by that I mean for people wishing to reason ideas passing through, changing one's own opinion is not a great event, rather it is the means by which learning is achieved and goals reached but religion has no such agenda, no goal beyond it's current place and therefore the current place is defended. But these structures are man made and reflected in an array of other areas, such as extreme ideologies like China's communism and it is that reality which makes me challenge the notion religion rather than lack of reasoning and lack of access to information is the cause of the harm seen.
If peace, love, and understanding, and a promise that you would go to a better place after death if your were a good person was all that was involved then I would not see religion as harmful, and would say that you could not blame religion for bad things. But that’s not the case.
The other side of religion was also authored by people and I believe that was done with intent to control and suppress the growth of alternative ideas - remove the religion and that intent still remains it's simply served by other means. One can look at religion's actions in restriction of the printed word many moons ago and see the same reflected in China's action to suppress the internet. The point of both is to restrict the spread of reasoning because that, and only that can unpick tradition, culture, 'values' and most importantly the appeal to authority on which dogma depends.
Harm does not have to come in the form of war or inquisitions. An immense amount of harm can come from vast amounts of resources that are directed towards retaining the infrastructures of expensive rituals and the extravagant accoutrements that they require.
I prize democracy highly and I'm aware of the hold religion has (like bishops in the HOL), that said, because I prize democracy I understand much of my tax will go to things I would not choose, one of those things is religion, another is CAM - both, in fact all of these issues can only be resolved by the spread of reasoning, however I doubt that I would be any more happy about public spending if religion was cut out WITHOUT reasoned spending taking it's place. What people donate of their own money is up to them, I dislike the pressure placed on vulnerable people to part them from there dosh (more than most folk!) however again religion is only one of a huge swathe of means to do so.
It is my opinion that the incredibly impoverished state of the majority of people in pre-industrial Europe can be placed accurately on the doorstep of the Vatican and the royal system of tribute that was established there. As in pre-invasion Tibet the goal of the church in Europe did not have a goal of making life pleasant or even bearable for common people; the goal in both places was to further the religion itself.
This is not in opposition to my initial contention. The structures and institutions are again man made and wish to extend and keep both power and wealth. I would draw attention to the Inclosure Acts from 1750, an example of blatant impoverishment of the many to serve the few. In other words - I'm not arguing the vatican is harmless, rather that it's harm is not caused by religion, instead it is caused by mere greed and advantage.
In other threads in other places people have pointed out that the churches of pre-industrial Europe were the only places that the suffering could go for solace and charity. My response is that the churches created the main part of the misery that the common people were seeking relief from.
I'm perhaps a little more generous. I volunteered in a roughsleepers day centre that attracted me because of it's democratic approach, it's inclusion of service users in making decisions, not that different from what makes me support rationalia's approach. I was there for months before I realised it was church run! (God is so not on my radar I even missed the importance of the name 'Emmanuel House'!), either way I think what was done was done with good intent and it was valued. I used to muse how many people would be left supping tea if we asked all of those with disabilities to leave because someone else would care, then all those with LD, then those with mental health problems. As a society we are truly crap at caring for the most vulnerable and I'm reasonably sure we would remain so without religion. Secular society has hardly blazed a trail of blinding compassion, look at the response to refugees, and the tardiness in supporting the NHS to the full - and we (in the uk) are rich despite our wailing and teeth gnashing.
Would things have been different without organized religion, better or worse? We cannot know that, but we can say that at times it could not have gotten much worse.
What if I asked the same question about reasoning? My guess the answer could be given with far more confidence, our increasing ability to reason (given the hard work of past/present lives in offering us so much better information!) is all good. So, if my approach is wrong, to stop blaming religion and instead spread reasoning it still remains a safe bet in terms of social returns - but, if I am right and religion is not to blame, that it's merely one of many tools then all the efforts to quash religion are a waste. I whole heartedly accept it's ultimately about probability, neither side of this debate can know what would or would not be had religion not been present, my point is that if I'm wrong we still move forward, if the religion blamers are wrong we stand still.
This is my first real post here. I came from RDF after over three years and 2334 post there, and would like say that I appreciate having somewhere to go where things like this can be discussed in the way that this thread has gone so far.
I really hope that hasn't changed...

"Whatever it is, it spits and it goes 'WAAARGHHHHHHHH' - that's probably enough to suggest you shouldn't argue with it." Mousy.