• @[email protected]
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    43 months ago

    I mean … I guess you could consider the planned extermination of Nepalese culture and faith or the concentration camps full of Uyghurs for “re-education” an attempt at genocide if you wanted to use the term very liberally?

      • @yesman
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        3 months ago

        You’re being dishonest. The definition of the words rules out the undesirable conclusion. People can’t do anything in the name of atheism.

        If “Religion poisons everything” then removing the poison should rehabilitate the patient, no? So please demonstrate that secular societies are more benevolent than religious ones. Show me that those who invented industrial murder are morally superior to ad-hoc killers.

        Did you know that the word genocide was coined to describe the actions of a government who was actively trying to secularize?

        • @[email protected]
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          43 months ago

          Goodness, you are right: I entirely forgot to name the Holocaust (which probably isn’t what you were going for). That could certainly be considered genocide against a religion.

      • @gibmiser
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        63 months ago

        Well you could argue they aren’t just like you can argue that religious genocides aren’t about religion but really about money and power.

      • @[email protected]
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        03 months ago

        How do you do something “in the name of Atheism”? You are being pedantic. These were/are crusades against the culture and faith of a different people. One could argue that they are not “genocides” and it needn’t even be in bad faith. Your “assuming 100% accuracy”-statement on the other hand disgusts me, no offense intended. People are suffering, at least aknowledge the fact.