I'm going to have to agree with you completely on this one.
>You've touched my two (among other dozen) complaints against such religions: the sin of hubris ("we are right and everybody else is wrong"), and the will to expand. Communists also started with the idea of making people happy, and we saw where it got them.
>
>So in some way, Buddhism doesn't rank that bad on my bad religions list, nearly to the point that it may not even count as a religion. But it does, because of those monks.
>
>>And, of course, for all the People of the Book there is a great anthropomorphic God, who seems to resemble an ancient Babylonian despot more than a cosmic force or a Great Ground of Being. And this God is vengeful and angry and jealous and requires a lot of ego-stroking.
>
>Can't remember who said "Books are not dangerous. One book is. Beware of people with one book."
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.·`TCH
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"When the debate is lost, slander becomes the tool of the loser." - Socrates
Vita contingit, Vive cum eo. (Life Happens, Live With it.)
"Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away." -- author unknown
"De omnibus dubitandum"