Should critical race theory be taught in K-12 education?
How is it bad for society? You never addressed that? How is people believing in objective morality,…
Your argument is that religious fanatics are spreading "misinformation" which is begging the question and assuming the point you're already trying to make. It's a vicious circle and utterly illogical.
@9CJ6CB64mos4MO
Illogical is promoting one person’s god over another with about the same amount of evidence. Illogical is denying what we do know for something that Christians only hope is real. Illogical is spreading proven lies over and over and claiming god is on your side.
@VulcanMan6 4mos4MO
No actually it is quite simple: things that are objectively true require empirical evidence to support it, therefore promoting things as objectively true that are NOT supported by empirical evidence is propagating misinformation. Your religious beliefs on the world, such as young-earth creationism, are both 1) not supported by any empirical evidence, AND 2) contradicted and refuted by all the empirical evidence that we do currently have. Promoting something that is not only unproven, but also DISPROVEN by empirical evidence, as if it was an objective fact is misinformation in every sense of the word.
If YOU want everyone else to accept your claims, then the burden of proof is on YOU to provide that empirical evidence to prove it. That is how science and reality works...