Non-religious communities: A Thread
Growing up Southern Baptist I was programmed to look for the common thread. Anyone that "Loved Jesus" must be okay. And that would blanket the bad in that person. They would be okay because they were tryin'. This is at the heart of their community. This is a super-power.
#Community
Non-religious communities: A Thread
Once I left religion, I missed the society. We are largely defined by our societies. They give us a context. They give us belonging. Any cause that the leaders of said society rally behind, we are overwhelmingly likely to adopt as our own.
Non-religious communities: A Thread
What you see in societies that don't have as strong of a banner as a deity is fracturing of concerns. Smaller banners, smaller circles, further divides. It is easy to move past most of those divisions with a "live and let live" mentality, but there is no unity in that.
@jasod I agree with you.
Any community with merit will naturally shun hateful people.
There need be no greater rallying cry than "All you need is love".
By "believers" I mean folk with a spiritual faith of *any* kind. There will always be bad apples, of course, and those people need to be re-educated or avoided.
It *can* be done, but as I said, it's hard work because we need to deal with everyone with great love, including the hateful people.
The MLK "hate can not drive out hate" quote is true.
@stueytheround It is the "Believer" part that is the magic. Believe in what? What is the rallying cry for humans? To each their own? We need a firewall. The line that it is unacceptable to cross no matter the reason. We need a point of intolerance. My belief? All humans have the inalienable right to worthiness and dignity. Anything that denies a human of their worthiness or dignity should not be tolerated.