Mike Dulak grew up Catholic in Southern California, but by his teen years, he began skipping Mass and driving straight to the shore to play guitar, watch the waves and enjoy the beauty of the morning. “And it felt more spiritual than any time I set foot in a church,” he recalled.

Nothing has changed that view in the ensuing decades.

“Most religions are there to control people and get money from them,” said Dulak, now 76, of Rocheport, Missouri. He also cited sex abuse scandals in Catholic and Southern Baptist churches. “I can’t buy into that,” he said.

  • Meowoem@sh.itjust.works
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    2
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    Yeah absolutely, and the problem is they'll always find an excuse - someone on here recently argued to me that since we punch Nazis we should also punch people who use words like 'unalive' because it's an attack on our culture - he was being entirely serious too.

    You can see people rubbing their hands in glee at every climate change story too and it's scary, I've been involved with a lot of green groups and eco-positive movements which are full of wonderful people who really care about making a better world - then there are overly online lunatics who never lifted a finger to help native species or anything like that but have decided it's a wonderful excuse to live out their most destructive and hateful fantasies.

    Religion is a way of harnessing that awful impulse in people and using it for the benefit of a small theocratic aristocracy, it's a way of saying 'you can get away with being the awfull person you want to be if you do it in the name of our gang and to our enemies'