I'm going to put the burden of proof on the people who believe there is an imaginary man in the sky for this one.
I will mark you down as Agnostic, then.
I'm going to put the burden of proof on the people who believe there is an imaginary man in the sky for this one.
How's that? You believe there is no God.
no, i believe there is a total lack of evidence of the existence of an infinite omniscient benevolent being
no, i believe there is a total lack of evidence of the existence of an infinite omniscient benevolent being
Not even one. Gallup survey:
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2009/may/07/muslims-britain-france-germany-homosexuality
We would all appreciate hearing your fresh ideas on combating middle eastern Islamic extremism, since it's a problem that we can't ignore
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Would you really? Seems like my sarcasm meter is going to 11.
That pew poll that Bob #2 loves to post about Muslim views worldwide just so happens to also contain data about American Muslims, surprising none of the results are posted because it doesn't fit the narrative being portrayed by people like him. What it does point too is that Muslim Americans and those that immigrate here are not a problem at all. That begs the question what makes here so much better than elsewhere and how do we let other Muslims around the world know that they to can have this in their own country, that is what Maher wants and is correct about.
Gun accidents happen*, because guns are just tools or instruments like bicycles or carsHow about Islam vs. Guns.
Which has killed more in America in the past 20 years?
Openly gay Representative Sean Patrick Maloney, a New York Democrat, didn’t hold back in talking about members of Congress who blocked a vote to protect LGBT rights last week, taking aim squarely at GOP House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), as well as Rep. Rick Allen, a Georgia Republican who, just two weeks before the Orlando massacre, read from Bible verses that condemn homosexuality as “worthy of death.”
“When the guy stood up in their Republican caucus meeting, the morning prayer that they hold, he read Scripture — he read a passage suggesting that gays are worthy of death,” Maloney explained in an interview with me on SiriusXM Progress on Friday, discussing Allen. Republicans had passed an amendment in April to rescind President Obama’s executive order banning discrimination against LGBT people among federal contractors. And Allen and other GOP lawmakers in the month following have continually blocked attempts by Maloney to protect the president’s order.