asbestosman wrote:Moniker wrote:Are you trying to make a point? I'm not getting it.... :)
I don't know that it was much of a point. I was just saying that I'm not sure that Sethbag would agree with you that it should be up to parents to decide how to indoctrinate children. I'd like to hear his remarks.
Sorry, I was away from the keyboard most of the day. I recognize that parents commonly, some might even say almost universally, take advantage of their positions to indoctrinate their kids into believing certain things. To some extent this is inevitable, and it's obviously a parental role to teach their kids the things they'll need to know to survive and prosper in life. I recognize that religious believers will usually include in such necessities the necessity of believing exactly how they believe about the God that they imagine to exist. I disagree with this, but as nobody died and made me king, there's not much I can do about it.
But I do think Dawkins has it spot on about how retarded it is that kids are basically molded into Catholics, or Jews, or Mormons, or whatever from the day they're born, without much if any input of their own in the process, by their parents. It's like in that "Root of All Evil?" video with that jewish rabbi in London, when he claims that the kids in their little community are free to believe in Evolution if they want. Dawkins asks how many actually do, and the guy has to admit that it's not very many. Well of course not. These kids have grown up being told that evolution is wrong and conflicts with the truth about God, and low and behold, they don't believe in it when they're older. Their minds have been successfully molded and fashioned into little orthodox jews. Just like many kids born to TBMs are molded into little TBMs by their parents, and remain such for the rest of their lives. And little muslims, etc.
I would like to hear your remarks about Dawkins (or at least Sethbag) on the dangers of indoctrinating children just because we can. I'm not looking for a fight or even a big debate. I just want to give you guys a bit of a chance to clarify or something.
Part of the danger of parental indoctrination is that there's very little check and balance on what the parents can get a child to believe. Just watch "Jesus Camp" on YouTube and see all those kids start babbling in tongues and whatnot after just a short while being told this is what they believe, and should do, etc. If the parents are completely wrong about things they're teaching their kids, then there's a good chance that the kids are going to suffer the burden of this false belief baggage for the rest of their life.
Just take the orthodox Mormon viewpoint for a sec. According to this viewpoint, the Mormon church is the only true church on Earth, and
every other church on the planet is false. Now imagine that there are billions of parents out there indoctrinating their children into false belief systems (I think the Mormons are right there with everyone else, but for the sake of argument, feel free to believe the Mormons are the exception to this rule). What if these false belief systems are actually harmful in some way. Don't you think it's unfortunate that the kid suffered this harm with no chance to avoid it, because they were at the mercy of their folks for the first 18 years of their life? I do.
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen