What from r/atheism at the old place do we want to avoid here in c/atheism?
What from r/atheism at the old place do we want to avoid here in c/atheism?
I'll start! There was a lot of absolutist rhetoric there that said things along the lines of "All Christians are terrible, horrible, no good, very bad people!" I think a little nuance is in order, no?
Provide rules that require religious tolerance, while still allowing respectful criticisms of said religions.
Basically just avoiding the edge lord/ hate speech stuff.
Over at /r/nihilism we always had a similar issue.
Any posts that are critical of religion should be fact based and impartial as possible. Sources should be required.
As an example:
Posting a rant about how how you don't like Islam: [deleted]
Posting a link to a news article about the statistical rate of s**ual harassment in the catholic church: "A+"
(Just examples)
All that being said, I think we should more focus on how to live our lives positively and effectively. A lot of people perseve atheists as having no motivations/ being unreliable. I think we should try to overcome that image by focusing on progressing our own "beliefs", and spreading our message: "Life is what you make it."
We should also strive to be a safe place for recent refugees of different religious backgrounds. Not only should we be a place of open discussion and critical thinking, but a place of support and recovery. That's more my opinion, though.
I would love to see posts like:
"Tips on staying positive after recently losing your faith"
"Rebuilding a social network after cutting ties with toxic family"
"How to come out to your religious family as atheist"
"I recently came out as atheist and my family disowned me, what should I do?"
"What are some good movies you'd suggest for an atheist?"
"Here is some art I made as a social commentary on religion"
"Making eye contact during prayer"
Etc...
Seconded.
I personally have adopted an "as long as it's not hurting anyone" view of religions for individuals and smaller local groups, but I recognize that there's a lot of factual hurtfulness that goes on systemically. That inherently will try and make this community devolve into intolerance, so there's a tricky balance of moderating intolerance and welcoming open conversations that I don't have the answer to.
One thing to keep in mind is that some people are anti religion due to experience. There are a lot of religions that ARE hurting someone by fly under the radar.
For example, I always see people say Lutherans are chill. Look up LCMS, it's a literal cult. I grew up in it. There is a lot of abuse prevalent in it, ie teaching you how to hit your kid "correctly".
But then people who speak up about it are labeled as "intolerant" or "edgelords" because "but everyone else told me Lutherans don't hurt anybody!"
And even beyond that, there can always be specific churches within religions or denominations that are seen as "okay" that are abusing their power to hurt others. I am not going to go out and attack religious people or anything, but I'm also not about to be neutral on the subject when I know it opens up a world of potential abuse.
I am very against requiring religious tolerance, abuse victims require a place at the table.
Where does not tolerating religiously motivated hatred and intolerance fit into that framework?
I used to be one of those toxic circlejerkers on r/ as a newly-deconverted teen with no life, now as a more mature adult I’ve also adopted that more nuanced stance- a major reason why I left that sub a long time ago
What is the point of censoring the word sexual?