• @[email protected]
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    1220 days ago

    misogyny. I’m not saying it causes the most death and harm (though it may), just that I’ve never met or heard of any dangerous ideology where misogyny wasn’t a core element.

    Feminism inoculates against fascism.

  • @[email protected]
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    Neoliberalism. The belief that owners of corporations should be able to do whatever the fuck they want, because corporations always create the best outcome possible for society.

    The result is stuff like the US Opioid Crisis. Purdue Pharma knew that opioid pharmaceuticals were extremely addictive. For decades, they lied and said it was not addictive. In private, they laughed about their victims.

    They bribed doctors and dentists to overprescribe it:

    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/29/health/purdue-opioids-oxycontin.html

    https://www.latimes.com/projects/oxycontin-part1/

    They also paid think-tanks to defend them and aggressively challenged negative media coverage:

    https://www.propublica.org/article/inside-purdue-pharma-media-playbook-how-it-planted-the-opioid-anti-story

    The tobacco companies used the same techniques before western governments cracked down on them.

    In the 90s, they tried to prevent governments from acting by bribing politicians:

    An NPR review of McConnell’s relationship with the tobacco industry over the decades has found that McConnell repeatedly cast doubt on the health consequences of smoking, repeated industry talking points word-for-word, attacked federal regulators at the industry’s request and opposed bipartisan tobacco regulations going back decades.

    Soon after McConnell won a U.S. Senate seat, he was invited to the Tobacco Institute’s boardroom to give a speech in January 1985. The documents also reveal that McConnell and his Senate office frequently accepted gifts from tobacco industry lobbyists

    The gifts included tickets to NFL and NBA games, a production of Dostoevsky’s Crime And Punishment, a Ringo Starr concert, “top-quality brandy,” and what McConnell called a “beautiful ham.”

    When McConnell has sought re-election, tobacco company employees and PACs have typically donated to McConnell more than to any other member of Congress, according to data from the Center For Responsive Politics. Since 1989, he has received at least $650,000

    One of the most striking episodes revealed in the tobacco industry documents came in October 1998. Just a few months earlier, McConnell helped defeat major tobacco legislation championed by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

    The McCain bill would have ratified and strengthened the proposed settlement between the tobacco industry and attorneys general from most of the states. It would have also allowed FDA regulation of nicotine and penalized companies that failed to reduce teen smoking.

    McConnell, who had repeatedly clashed with McCain over campaign finance legislation, helped lead the opposition. “We know, of course, that only 2% of smokers are teenagers,” McConnell said.

    (In fact, nearly 90% of all smokers begin before they turn 18 years old.)

    “That to me is the most egregious incident that I have seen about the appearance of corruption since I have been a member of the United States Senate,” McCain later said of McConnell

    https://www.npr.org/2019/06/17/730496066/tobaccos-special-friend-what-internal-documents-say-about-mitch-mcconnell

    In many countries, tobacco corporations are still using mafia methods:

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/jul/12/big-tobacco-dirty-war-africa-market

    For neoliberals, the corporations should decide what is acceptable or not. If there is a profitable market for something, then it means it should be legal. Period. They don’t give a shit about selling addictive poison to kids, destroying the environment or underpaying workers. Corporate profits are their religion.

    Neoliberals believe citizens or lawmakers should never try to fix injustice, because corporations can’t create injustice. And if they want to be involved and threaten corporate profits, you have to punch them in the nose.

    In 1951, Jacobo Árbenz was democratically elected President of Guatemala. He wanted to tax rich banana companies and ensure they didn’t own all the land. So the United Fruit Company lobbied the CIA to overthrow him. Allen Dulles, the director of the CIA, accepted immediately. His brother, wealthy businessman John Foster Dulles, was chairman of United Fruits International. So the President Árbenz was violently overthrowed. At least 9000 people were killed.

    That’s extreme neoliberalism.

  • @[email protected]
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    3819 days ago

    Any religion. It makes people think of themselves as superior to other groups. It doesn’t even matter which religion. They’re all bad.

  • JackGreenEarth
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    20 days ago

    Islam. A combination of misogyny, oppressive laws, puritanical beliefs, child mutilation, condemnation of curiosity, and a particular focus on growth of numbers by both birth and conversion. Other religions are close behind though.

    Edit: Didn’t realise the OP was called Allah, lol

    • FistingEnthusiast
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      1020 days ago

      Didn’t realise the OP was called Allah

      Yeah, that and their defence of religion makes me question whether or not they ask this in good faith

      • JackGreenEarth
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        320 days ago

        I’m surprised by the number of downvotes I got, not that I particularly care about them per se, but the implication that so many people are either Muslim or support Islam on Lemmy is worrying.

        • AbuTahirOP
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          219 days ago

          i upvoted you even if i disagree because i like to engage opposite of my belief

    • AbuTahirOP
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      320 days ago

      yeah that’s my middle name, i don’t think i can change your mind but i will say this that majority of followers of islam have bad beliefs

      • JackGreenEarth
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        420 days ago

        If most Muslims have bad beliefs, what’s the common denominator/cause?

          • JackGreenEarth
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            219 days ago

            You literally said

            i will say this that majority of followers of islam have bad beliefs

  • Libb
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    20 days ago

    The certainty of being right.

    Why? Because when (any)one is sure to be right it means the other must be wrong and since they’re wrong they probably should not even be allowed to say what they have to say.

    • @[email protected]
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      318 days ago

      I cut a very cherished friend out of my life on Tuesday because of this mentality. When he said “I’m not going to read what you write or consider the point you’re trying to make” the first time it was enough. The second time was too much. I expressed my wish for his life to improve, told him good-bye, and removed/blocked him.

      The next morning I woke up to a text claiming I didn’t value his friendship and that he’d be here for me when I got better. That’s when I truly realized how long he’d been disregarding the support and compassion I’d been sending his way.

      I spent Tuesday mentally digging a grave for the friendship. I spent Wednesday filling it in, and that night I drank to the loss of a friend and to the health of the man who replaced him.

  • @[email protected]
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    19 days ago

    Well, Islam is definitely up there - and you only need to look at the Middle East for evidence. What makes it particularly dangerous, in my view, is the doctrine itself - especially the parts concerning treatment of women, martyrdom and hatred of infidels.

    • Dr. Moose
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      919 days ago

      As someone who escaped Islam - 100%. Unlike other religions that take original texts as interpretations Islam takes the original texts as literal words of God and is essentially stuck. It’s a dead religion that exists only through force.

      • @[email protected]
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        419 days ago

        Yeah, my understanding is that the interpretation of the Qur’an and Hadiths doesn’t allow for the same kind of flexibility or reform that the Bible does, for example. Of course, that doesn’t mean someone can’t practice a non-fundamentalist version of Islam - and many do - but it’s much harder to justify when you’re going against what’s considered the literal word of God.

  • @[email protected]
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    1119 days ago

    Religion, because they all believe that they are the only ones who are right, and everyone else needs to believe what they believe, or else something bad will come of it.

  • FistingEnthusiast
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    2620 days ago

    Greed.

    Religion has been said, but religion is always just the excuse for justifying greed

    Belief that some unfalsafiable deity is behind you, and therefore any of your actions are righteous is incredibly dangerous, because there’s no accountability. How many atrocities are justified by religion, and the belief that justice will be done in the next life?

    Religion is used to justify things like the fascist movement currently sweeping through the US, abhorrent regimes in the middle-east, and the subjugation of people (particularly women) everywhere

    Of course, religion is the justification, but the real objective is to gather more wealth and power

    From the mega-churches in the US, to the Vatican, to the mullah in a village somewhere in the world, it’s all about having more

  • @[email protected]
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    419 days ago

    Not an ideology but I say extremisms, of all kind. Not only religious and political, those are obvious, but also day to day habits.

  • @[email protected]
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    320 days ago

    Any ideology may be dangerous. People who are convinced they’re tuned into a privileged view on reality may be willing to kill others to protect it. Human history is full of proofs of that.

    “On the whole I think that knowledge is preferable to ignorance, and I am sure that human sympathy is more valuable than ideology.” — Kenneth Clark

  • @[email protected]
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    12020 days ago

    Isaac Asimov famously said, “There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there has always been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that ‘my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.’”.

    The idea that any idea is worth listening to because someone believes in it.

    Show me the proof.

    • @[email protected]
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      318 days ago

      I see four downvotes.

      Would love to know the position those people have. Are they threatened by their own ignorance being called out? Or are they just conservative?

      • @[email protected]
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        218 days ago

        I’d like to think that they are just mad that they have to see this quote so often these days.

        • @[email protected]
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          218 days ago

          I find this so confusing… it’s like the old saying, “if you don’t want to be called a fascist, don’t be a fascist!”

          Conservatives have the strangest contradictions. They want to be all these socially and morally odious things, then get upset when we call them out on those very things.

    • @[email protected]
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      I think any idea is worth listening to, it’s the assertion that we must inherently accept their viewpoint as valid that is outright absurd.

      • @[email protected]
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        419 days ago

        On the playground sure, but at some level it’s show the receipts first or get fucked up to discourage gish gallop. If we don’t preemptively shut it down, we’re in extreme danger.

      • @[email protected]
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        1120 days ago

        I felt this way until recently, when I’m becoming much more aware of how limited our collective attention is. Every honest belief probably deserves to have one (maybe 3) reasonable people listen to it. But they definitely aren’t all worth national/state/city/expert attention.

  • DeadNinja
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    720 days ago

    Neither is this about an ideology per se nor is this quote my own - but I’ve read this somewhere -

    “The greatest threat to our planet is the belief that someone else will save it.”

    • Robert Swan (British explorer and environmental activist)
  • @[email protected]
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    2720 days ago

    Fascism. It makes people loose their humanity. Fascists endure anything as long as people outside their group are suffering.