Luis, stop. None of us are saying that what the people did in this circumstance wasn't wrong. However, that doesn't make what you're doing any less wrong.
So I am equally at fault as the people who tossed their own son out of their house now?
Ok, now that you've stated the most insanely silly thing yet, why should I take you seriously now?
The same goes for my opinion on the Mohammed cartoon fiasco.
Again, the cartoons are as faulty as the people who actually burned embassies now? Or the forces that acted on such purpose?
The second you blame the institution you remove personal culpability for one's own behaviours.
It's exactly backwards. It's because of the groupthink of these people that they think they did
the right thing and even if they know they didn't, they do not consider it as part of the personal responsibility.
The problem is the existence of said groupthink. Which is its religious identity.
You're just as blinded by groupthink as the people in that Louisiana town claiming to be Christians - both parties are clinging to their social belief set to the exclusion of all else, despite rational positions to the contrary of their own.
If you can't see any difference between an army of bullies who harrass an young man who merely fought for his constitutional rights and someone who proposes verbally that religion might have something to do with it, then really I don't know what to say. The astronomical lack of grasp of the morally inequivalent is so huge that I am at a loss of words.
It is impossible for a human being to be a rational observer, but it is possible to approximate one by acknowleding one's own beliefs and biases and accounting (rather than excluding) for them when making a judgement. You have not done so.
Yes I have. You just don't like the conclusions I still arrive with that accounting in mind.