this post was submitted on 07 Oct 2023
796 points (94.0% liked)

Atheist Memes

5600 readers
5 users here now

About

A community for the most based memes from atheists, agnostics, antitheists, and skeptics.

Rules

  1. No Pro-Religious or Anti-Atheist Content.

  2. No Unrelated Content. All posts must be memes related to the topic of atheism and/or religion.

  3. No bigotry.

  4. Attack ideas not people.

  5. Spammers and trolls will be instantly banned no exceptions.

  6. No False Reporting

  7. NSFW posts must be marked as such.

Resources

International Suicide Hotlines

Recovering From Religion

Happy Whole Way

Non Religious Organizations

Freedom From Religion Foundation

Atheist Republic

Atheists for Liberty

American Atheists

Ex-theist Communities

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

Other Similar Communities

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Marx's vision as expressed in his opiate of the people quote is for a world in which the truth is comforting and hopeful, and the people of the community don't have to turn to myths and legends for positivity.

Religion is a symptom that emerges from misery and trauma, and should be regarded by the state like an epidemic of an infectious pathogen.

[–] fkn 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I don't think calling religion a symptom is fair. I think it is it's own kind of virus that infects people who don't have the tools to withstand it... And misery/trauma provides the blow that weakens people and makes them susceptible.

Staph doesn't kill healthy people, but it sure as shit fucks up people who have other ailments.

Vulnerability is the symptom of trauma and pain. Religion exploits that.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Religious conviction and adherence to organized ministries is more prevalent in regions where the quality of life suffers, such as throughout the Americas. Here in the US, precarity (housing precarity, food precarity, job precarity, etc.) feeds into the kind of magical thinking that fuels adherence to faith and authoritarian ideology (that a charismatic figure will use their power to fix our personal woes).

So religion is not a personal symptom like a fever or cough, it's a community problem, like elevated hate crime or recurring rampage killings.

[–] fkn 1 points 1 year ago

Again though, religion isn't necessarily the symptom of these things. Those things can exist without religion. Religion definitely thrives in these environments...

The same way staph/mrsa thrives in hospitals.

[–] [email protected] -1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I hope that a world in which the truth is comforting and hopeful is eventually achieved however I kinda doubt that any kind of economic/political formation will ever change the fact that being alive kinda sucks, people will always experience hardship and sadness and insurmountable problems and faith in something intangible helps a lot of people get through that.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Throughout the history of post-agricultural humanity, we've had elites that yoked the work of an underclass and only recently (in the last few centuries) have we been able to recognize this is not a good thing and will ultimately lead to the downfall of human civilization on a short time frame (say, the next few centuries as an upper limit).

This may be the fate of the human ape, and while I'd rather we worked out how to organize well enough to go to space and colonize other worlds (what I think would require an egalitarian system), I acknowledge that we just may not be socially developed enough. It's telling that billionaires don't invest their gains into massive humanitarian projects that could put their statue in every state park worldwide. Many of them could become the god of Haiti if they wanted and yet none of them do. They invest in charities that are fit to market how much good they're doing, rather than actually doing major good, and when they think of massive works, they automatically consider profit motives. That's telling to me.

But not all hope is lost. We've psychological tricks to run against our less-than-social instincts before, and as we develop more collective self-awareness (such as our more general awareness of mental health language) we might be able to rise above our tribalist tendencies towards a collective system. Perhaps in the looming population correction we'll be able to see that the capitalist, transactional society we made lead us to the climate crisis and a cascade failure of the state, and instead of choosing to cling to tradition we'll decide to try something else.

It's a far reach, but the only other option is to get comfortable with the risk of human extinction.

[–] SuddenlyBlowGreen 1 points 1 year ago

faith in something intangible helps a lot of people get through that.

It also causes those people to become the hardship and sadness and insurmountable problems other people have to experience.