Not legally, no. You are allowed to go up to someone's door and ring their doorbell under, I think, any circumstance; if it is for a religious purpose you can go into gated communities as well (not that I did).
Not legally, no. You are allowed to go up to someone's door and ring their doorbell under, I think, any circumstance; if it is for a religious purpose you can go into gated communities as well (not that I did).
Also, Nihilistic, awesome posts. That second one you linked to was especially incredible. I couldn't have said it better myself.
No. What is wrong is when said decisions harm others. Bigotry, terrorism, indoctrination to the unwilling, et cetera. Decisions based on beliefs that Affect yourself and those that hold your beliefs is perfectly fine.So, according to 40.28% of you, it's wrong if I, say, move to Israel because my faith tells me it is the right thing to do? Or if I donate large amounts of my income to charity because my faith tells me it is the right thing to do? Or to advocate for the poor and the oppressed because my faith tells me it is the right thing to do? Or to marry and have children because my faith tells me it is the best thing to do?
Either/or is just as bad.
I have no wish to be forced to live by ANYONE's religion's code of conduct ; nor would I, even if it was made law (Exile before church. It's that simple.). Nor do I wish to force anyone else to live by my philosophy's code of conduct, though I do think we'd all be better off for it.
Only when they push it on others.
When they indoctrine others.
When they teach it to the unwilling.
When they base thier important decisions on thier religion.
If they are intolerent.
When they use it as a rule in there family/institution.
So, according to 40.28% of you, it's wrong if I, say, move to Israel because my faith tells me it is the right thing to do? Or if I donate large amounts of my income to charity because my faith tells me it is the right thing to do? Or to advocate for the poor and the oppressed because my faith tells me it is the right thing to do? Or to marry and have children because my faith tells me it is the best thing to do?
I (of course) can be expected to object to that. The mere presence of someone on your doorstep who wants to tell you about their religion does not necessarily mean they are pushing it. It is when they try to argue with you after you say you don't want to listen (especially if they criticize what you do or don't believe) that they can be pushy.