For those who latch onto the notion that hate speech is wrong, the concept of God should not be that hard to grasp.
So because I think hate speech is wrong and I approve of my country's hate speech laws, even though they prevent me from venting my anger on certain issues in public, that means that I should "grasp" the "concept" of God?
Some of the most bigoted, prejudiced people I have ever known are the same people who insist they are Christians, yet they see nothing wrong with standing up in public and ranting about how evil gay people are, or writing awful letters to the editor about immigrants, gays, or whichever minority group of people they hate. My
Christian mother once pulled up to a gas station, and the first words out of her mouth to a very shocked teenage attendant were, "Is this gas station owned by white people?"
Hate speech is tied to the notion that it either hurts another person's feelings thousands of miles away, or there is the potential it could result in harmful actions.
Hate speech can be as local as the next door neighbors, if they happen to be "other" than you are.
Hate speech is annoying, but it is a natural way to express ones point of view. Humans who think they can change human nature may think that they can replace God, or even do away with Him, are also faced with the task of eradicating humanity as well.
I'd call inciting people to kill others as more than "annoying."
It's very easy to throw up one's hands and say, "Well, there's this part of the human brain that's still not evolved enough to keep us from violence, hate, selfishness, and lots of other negative stuff, so why fight it?"
The thing is, humans do have the ability to override that. We need to teach ourselves and our descendants to have the will to follow through. And that's not eradicating humanity. I see it as saving humanity.
Some people need a religious figure to give them a kick in the pants to do this. Others manage without that.
Good people have no PR teams.
What were the apostles, if not a PR team?