• @AnalogyAddict
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    6 months ago

    That’s a false comparison. You can’t lead anything without, to a point, manipulating people. You can manipulate them transparently and for their benefit, or you are manipulating them for your own. The people who lead and run sports leagues are definitely not doing it out of a sense of charity.

    Plenty of churchgoers and even pastors are in it to serve people with no real personal benefit. The same can’t be said of professional sports players.

    • @[email protected]
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      16 months ago

      At some point in an ecclesiastical hierarchy someone is manipulating people for their own benefit, knowing they’re doing so. They profess miracles while knowing there are none.

      Above a certain level all you’ll find are charlatans.

      The only religions that do not operate like this are unaffiliated churches, mystical, or nontheistic religions like Buddhism, Jainism etc.

      If you profess a god and have a hierarchical structure your leaders manipulate you for their own gain or prestige. They do not believe.

      • @[email protected]
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        46 months ago

        If you think Buddhists and Jains aren’t hierarchical or corrupt oh boy

        those big temples and libraries aren’t built by prayers but cold hard cash

        they’ve also been doing this for thousands of years

        but yes I agree with your point overall just nitpicking your choice of counter examples

      • @AnalogyAddict
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        6 months ago

        Sigh.

        People use sources of power for their own benefit. I’m not arguing otherwise. What I’m saying is there’s a chance a churchgoer or a pastor is doing it for selfless reasons, where that is never the case for sports.

        And your use of superlatives only displays your own ignorance. I’ve met people in power from several denominations, and many just want to help people. Plenty of denominations teach servant leadership. No doubt many people exploit religion. But at least religion generally tries to teach otherwise.

        You really should expose yourself to more real people before just parroting what you hear from loudmouths on the internet. Confirmation bias is a powerful thing.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          What I’m saying is there’s a chance a churchgoer or a pastor is doing it for selfless reasons, where that is never the case for sports.

          I never said otherwise.

          But the whole point here is we’re talking not about selfishness we’re talking about manipulation.

          Manipulation of others to do ones bidding is not the purpose of sports. Panem et circenses sure but not “do my bidding proles”

          And I’m extremely aware of how people act and grow up in religions: I grew up in a very hierarchical religious structure and have seen the well intentioned abuses that people earnestly trying to help inflict on others. Manipulation is manipulation, ill intentioned or otherwise. And when you get higher up in a hierarchical structure that professes faith you will reach a point where everyone knows it’s fake and chooses to act otherwise.

          • @AnalogyAddict
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            -16 months ago

            That’s cute that you think sports aren’t about manipulation.

            Growing up in a single denomination is hardly a varied experience.