RobbyB1982 wrote:But they are all cases where we go "there is clearly a problem, we have known about this problem for decades and we could fix these things, but lets do nothing about it or even make it worse, because of our beliefs."
Saying "this alien race not dealing with a preventable problem because of their faith is stupid!" misses that humans do exactly that.
The point is "we're going to ignore the fact that a disease that is obviously spread through casual contact is wiping us out because it resembles a disease that was associated with a place that we think of immoral centuries ago" is a strawman version of it.
RobbyB1982 wrote:And for the record on women's issues specifically, no, it's not JUST abortion that we regulate. There's also general health care, not understanding that birth control/pads are a need not a luxury, denying maternity leave, lower pay rates across all industries, sexual harassment, and thousands of other things. There's absolutely a war on women. As far as abortion in particular goes, even though abortion and a woman's right to choose are legal, states have done a looooot of things to stymie those choices. In some states you would have to go to a different state entirely, hundreds of miles to find *a* clinic now and have to stay there for two days and you have to go through tooons of hoops to do it... rather than it being the safe and quick readily available procedure it can and should be. (And to say nothing of getting in the way of using contraceptives because of religious reasons.)
Again, this is more an issue of disagreement on values than of disagreement on facts.
To explain the difference, look at "Confessions and Lamentations" vs. "Believers." You can think that the parents in "Believers" were stupid and did the wrong thing, but they were not delusional about what they were doing. They were going to let their son die because they believed that the operation to save him would be worse for his soul. They did not think "if we just pray, he will get better on his own."
RobbyB1982 wrote:But they are all cases where we go "there is clearly a problem, we have known about this problem for decades and we could fix these things, but lets do nothing about it or even make it worse, because of our beliefs."
I think what people object to is the attitude of "the way to fix these things is totally obvious, and has no downsides, only upsides. On the gun issue, the healthcare issue, the pollution issue, there are trade-offs (for example, in the UK, thieves are not afraid to break into people's homes while the homeowners are inside, because the homeowners cannot effectively defend themselves; also in the UK, hospitals often fill up beds with cheaper-to-care for patients and critical patients wind up unable to get into the hospital, as for global warming, if we relied entirely on renewable energy we could not possibly maintain first world living standards). I don't really want to get into a debate over what the right policy is on all of these issues; I just don't think that you can argue that there is no real debate on what to do with these issues, only ignorant people who don't see things your way.
"We're going to die because we are in denial about the very existence of a highly contagious disease" just seems to me to be a bit of a strawmannish version of the "dogma before science" position.
"You say I'm a dreamer/we're two of a kind/looking for some perfect world/we know we'll never find" - Thompson Twins