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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brumar89 who wrote (998806)2/5/2017 4:52:57 PM
From: J_F_Shepard  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572619
 
However, Karma started falling into atheism when he left for university, “By the time I reached university my love of science led me to a form of atheism called Marxism, which I readily embraced because I felt that it was the world view that was the most compatible with science.” In fact, Karma even had a big soviet flag in his bedroom and would even quote Joseph Stalin! At this time his idea of “God” was simply that science was God. He was too particularly “fond of reading books by atheist authors such as Carl Sagan and Richard Dawkins.”
What a phony story.....he's calling Marxism a form of religion which is BS.......Marxists and Communists banned religions in their countries to get politcal control of it, religions were their biggest competitors.....Europe, especially eastern Europe was controlled by the Catholic Church so they had to be dealt with if politcal change were to take place..... You can't demand a person believe or be an atheist, but you can establish a government that takes power from the religions....hence they closed the churches and formed governments that were secular.....I don't think they ever used the term atheist..... You man Karma was a lonely man looking for friends.... What is particularly interesting is that he says science led him to Christianity????????

Here's what led him to Christianity..........the social scene, he was lonely......

However, Karma admits that “scientific arguments played only very minor role in me becoming a Christian. What played a major role was how I was impacted by the lives of Christians.” As a new graduate student who worked at an institution that did not have many other graduate students Karma found himself experiencing quite a bit of loneliness but “there was one group of people on campus,” he explains, that “wanted to spend time with me. Those people were Christians.”