• @ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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    1563 months ago

    So today I drove five hours to see the eclipse, had a tire blow out, didn’t see the eclipse because of thick clouds, and got stuck in traffic for hours on the way back. (I’m still not home.) But at least I haven’t been shot by maniac, yet.

  • @tal@lemmy.today
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    953 months ago

    God told her to because of the eclipse

    When the Creator tells you to do something like that, you want to get it in writing just in case the judge has a different theological take on the matter.

    • sylver_dragon
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      233 months ago

      After these things God tested Abraham and said to him, “Abraham!” And he said, “Here I am.” He said, “Take your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains of which I shall tell you.”
      –Genesis 22:1-2

      Ya, Yahweh is a bit of a dick.

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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      3 months ago

      Moses needed to get “Don’t kill people” written in stone but these folks just believe anything they hear

    • @jkrtn@lemmy.ml
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      43 months ago

      Blind obedience to god telling you to murder someone, no matter how dear they are to you, is one of the most highly praised actions in the Abrahamic canon.

  • Steve
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    913 months ago

    If you liked “Florida Man”, you’re gonna love “Florida Woman”

      • @tal@lemmy.today
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        83 months ago

        Yeah, I mean, the divine commandment kind of places her in a difficult position. God doesn’t have a lot of tolerance of people that don’t do what He wants them to.

        Genesis 38:6-10

        Judah got a wife for Er, his firstborn, and her name was Tamar. But Er, Judah’s firstborn, was wicked in the Lord’s sight; so the Lord put him to death.

        Then Judah said to Onan, “Sleep with your brother’s wife and fulfill your duty to her as a brother-in-law to raise up offspring for your brother.”  But Onan knew that the child would not be his; so whenever he slept with his brother’s wife, he spilled his semen on the ground to keep from providing offspring for his brother.  What he did was wicked in the Lord’s sight; so the Lord put him to death also.

        • FuglyDuck
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          3 months ago

          there was also that time that Elisha, when a certain king came to him to; basically, cast auguries. (oh yeah, that’s not wish craft when a prophet does it, huh?) so he tell this king… who god doesn’t really like anyhow… to shoot an arrow out the window. “Oh good. you’ll defeat that one asshole. now, take up a bundle of arrows. hit the ground.”

          Of course, the king, being used to weird rituals and stuff, strikes the ground 3 times. (what’s not mentioned is why- 3 is a holy number. You see it in all sorts of places in semetic religions.)

          So elisha says to him, “You idiot, you should have struck the ground more times. five or six, at least. Now… you’ll beat that other asshole 3 times, but you won’t defeat him totally. so, you know. He’s gonna come back.”

          so, basically, god decided to let the israelites suffer under some douchenozzle’s rule because… his prophet couldn’t give clear instructions and the king went for symbolism over maximum effort…

          • @Soggy@lemmy.world
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            13 months ago

            It’s dumb that this story got turned into an anti-masturbation edict. Onan was pulling out because he wanted his brother’s inheritance, he was punished for his greed.

      • A Phlaming Phoenix
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        93 months ago

        The ICD-11 definition for delusion clearly defines religion, but then commits special pleading to excuse religious belief.

    • @Fedizen@lemmy.world
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      183 months ago

      mental health treatment in america is to grab a gun, wave it at people then drown in your addiction of choice. This woman chose “religious conspiracy bullshit”

    • Chaotic Entropy
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      43 months ago

      If anything, there is anti treatment. Organisations are waiting and ready to exploit your mental illness at every turn.

      • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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        23 months ago

        Oh maximizing addictions and false logic are the best ways to make money though. Who the fuck cares if it’s bad for the poors. It will never affect the god holy rich who are above it all.

  • @njm1314@lemmy.world
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    503 months ago

    It’s so weird that they freaked out this much over just this Eclipse. There was an eclipse last year and I didn’t hear a peep from these people.

    • @wildcardology@lemmy.world
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      373 months ago

      Maybe because last year they didn’t have Marjorie Taylor-Greene tell them that earthquakes and eclipse are a warning from god?

    • peopleproblems
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      113 months ago

      I think it’s because giant singing and man-eating plants are a real concern.

      • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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        33 months ago

        Every 6 months really. They just happen in places people aren’t a lot of the time. Heck next year north America will get another eclipse… But you’d have to travel to northern Canada in early spring to see it and it doesn’t sound nearly as fun a vacation spot as Mexico I bet to the chasers.

  • Jubei Kibagami
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    303 months ago

    If you go on YouTube and look up videos of the eclipse yesterday, you’ll see a ton of videos about why the eclipse marks the beginning of the end of the world. Just pure and total insanity or people taking advantage of that insanity. You might be surprised but you probably won’t be because you know in your heart that we’re just that far gone now.

    • @Asafum@feddit.nl
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      153 months ago

      This is why I literally groaned when I read another post on lemmy about LLMs using YouTube to learn from…

      Ffs do we want these things to be unhinged conspiracy theorist Nazi replicators? I can’t think of a worse data set to use than YouTube… Maybe 4chan, but I don’t doubt that’s already been scraped.

    • Yeah I was going to say this is what overpopulation looks like. Then I remembered the witch trials in the 1600s and thought there’s plenty more crazy shit people have done. There’s more people now and arguably less crazy shit. Stuff like this is always going to happen though, human condition. Still horrible, we’ve got lots of work to do as a species.

    • Chaotic Entropy
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      23 months ago

      Feels like 1 step forward 2 steps back with this whole “civilisation” thing.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      13 months ago

      the eclipse marks the beginning of the end of the world

      I mean, we gotta mark the Beginning of the End somewhere, right? Might as well be during an eclipse.

  • @LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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    273 months ago

    Organised religion is a cancer of the mind.

    Those of us who grew up without it literally can’t imagine scenarios like this, though I’ve heard disturbing things from people who seem otherwise sane that make me understand what drives some to do these things. When you’ve internalised fables of good vs evil and that’s how you define reality, it’s a small step to think you have to commit atrocities to save the innocent. You don’t have to have a very divergent mentality to convince yourself of this.

    We will all be better off when the vast majority of people give up these fables and begin to live in the real world.

    • @braxy29@lemmy.world
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      123 months ago

      friend, just reading the headline - this isn’t organized religion at work, this is psychosis. she could have said the Care Bears told her to do it - same thing.

      • @LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        Psychosis PLUS organised religion. That’s my point, friend. Psychosis alone is a tragedy we should work to address as a society. But many of these stories would not end in senseless violence if there weren’t an underlying system of fantastical belief that bolstered people’s delusions and convinced them their delusions were divinely inspired.

        • @braxy29@lemmy.world
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          43 months ago

          if you have been close to or worked with psychotic people, you might recognize they don’t necessarily need religion to come to fantastical conclusions and potentially act on them. i mean, maybe the radio told her. or the coffee pot. or the person who lives in the walls. or the cat.

          fwiw, i’m not a massive defender of religion (nor especially a hater). i just think it’s a mistake to blame religion for what is sometimes organic disease of the brain (among various possible causes).

          • @LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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            33 months ago

            This bullshit has convinced non-psychotic people to commit atrocities. It’s not a leap to think it convinces actually psychotic people their delusions are true. Especially when they say so themselves.

          • @Olhonestjim@lemmy.world
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            13 months ago

            No, but if you have a person without glaring mental health issues, adding religion can put them in a state of mind very similar to madness.

    • @Pogbom@lemmy.world
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      83 months ago

      Ehh I dunno… I’m as atheist as anyone with an IQ above 60, but I think religion is just a convenient scapegoat for mental illness here. I’m pretty sure someone who shoots strangers on the highway would have done it in a world without religion too, and they would say it’s a different mystical force that made them do it. I don’t think Christianity actually moved this person to do this.

      • @LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        73 months ago

        Religion isn’t a scapegoat, and it has nothing to do with IQ. Very smart people are roped into it, and that’s what I mean by it being a social cancer.

        Very smart people are raised with stories that they take as reality – that supplant their ability to judge reality for what it is – and it at best colours how they interpret everything for the rest of their lives, and at worst amplifies and gives focus to mental conditions they already have.

        Religion is a warped lens through which people are forced to see reality from such a young age, they are incapable of seeing actual reality, and in some cases it just amplifies the otherwise mild mental illness they’d likely have had already.

        Without it, some people would already have been disturbed, but with it those people are given a purpose for their delusions.

          • @LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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            13 months ago

            I’m not ignoring that.

            My point is that religion is uniquely capable of taking the delusions of the mentally ill and nurturing them into violence.

            Even for the mentally stable, it often leads to fantasy. But when mental illness and religion coincide, people who would otherwise be relatively benign in their delusions very easily become convinced their delusions are divine and their violent instincts are justified by scripture. It happens so often, we need to begin acknowledging it.

            • @braxy29@lemmy.world
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              23 months ago

              i think religion is one of many things which can weaponise mental illness. i also think, in a world without religion, some people would still hear voices and feel compelled to do terrible or dangerous things as a result.

              • @LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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                3 months ago

                Of course there would still be people like that. What I’m saying is there are exponentially more people like that when they’ve been raised from birth to believe in nonsense that warps their sense of right and wrong.

                Take the story of Chad and Lori Daybell. She was a normal, successful woman who wasn’t a psychopath. She fell in with a pastor who convinced her of extreme religious ideals, after which they murdered their own children in a misguided belief they’d be safer in heaven than on earth.

                I can list examples like that until the cows come home. Normal people who have become convinced to commit atrocities after being drawn into religion to extremes. It’s a psychological virus that can infect anyone. Most large-scale wars have a religious basis. All the biggest genocides have been committed in the name of religion. The best and fastest way to control people and warp their reality is to make them believe in a god.

                We’re better than this.

                • @aesthelete@lemmy.world
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                  3 months ago

                  Take the story of Chad and Lori Daybell. She was a normal, successful woman who wasn’t a psychopath. She fell in with a pastor who convinced her of extreme religious ideals, after which they murdered their own children in a misguided belief they’d be safer in heaven than on earth.

                  Your re-telling of Chad and Lori Daybell sounds too tidy to be true. It’s like the first fifteen minutes of a horror movie with a completely happy, care-free life and then she bumps into a pastor and that chance encounter did her in.

                  Like sure, she poison pilled herself on religion partially but the whole “they were a normal couple” dream-scape section of the 48 hours special you’re narrating here is the type of thing that constantly has me talking at the TV when those nuance-bereft junk piles are playing at my house.

                  She was obviously fucked up before she met the guy, just like a lot of cult followers are fucked up before they seek the guidance of their “guy”.

                  Some people are fucked up from birth, some become fucked up later, and some are varying degrees of fucked up…but people are messy and it’s not like they all used to be a happy go-lucky adventurer like you until they took one religion to the knee.

                  I think people get the relationship inverted. Many people become religious to fill whatever gap they had in the first place. Many people become cult-leaders because they were already sick in the head.

              • @aesthelete@lemmy.world
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                03 months ago

                i also think, in a world without religion, some people would still hear voices and feel compelled to do terrible or dangerous things as a result.

                Religion is just a creation of man. I would argue that we have the relationship inverted and that we have religion partially because people heard voices and felt compelled to do terrible or dangerous things as a result.

                • @braxy29@lemmy.world
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                  13 months ago

                  i don’t necessarily disagree with you; neither would Julian Jaynes. i’m just not going to blame organized religion for something (hearing compelling voices) that would exist with or without it.

      • @kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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        I think religion is just a convenient scapegoat for mental illness here.

        It acts more as a place for mental illness to be hidden, camoflauged, or accepted as devotion or prophecy.

        When someone’s delusions overlap with what a church accepts as their ancient prophets’ experience, that illness doesn’t get proper treatment.

        • @lennybird@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Yep it muddies the waters that distinguish what is rational from irrational. Like a dark damp festering basement, it gives mold a place to fester and grow.

          Welcome to a place where you don’t need logic; you just need this magical thing called “faith.” Such mainstream religions were just the most successful cults.

          • @aesthelete@lemmy.world
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            23 months ago

            Welcome to a place where you don’t need logic; you just need this magical thing called “faith.” Such mainstream religions were just the most successful cults.

            People generally aren’t all or even mostly rational or logical. It’s difficult even for people with deep science or technical backgrounds to think in a structured way for long periods of time.

            Even if you got most people off of organized religion they’d be on some other bullshit.

            Evidence for that is actually all around us too. Organized religion is seeing more and more people walk away from it, but people remain just as full of shit as they were in church.

            • @lennybird@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              To your last point I don’t know if I see that. Most of the religious nutjobs - organized or free of association - seem predominantly concentrated among right-wing circles. See the rising Christian nationalists for instance. Those who are walking away from religious faith tend to be more on the left side of the spectrum and ironically far more adherent to the teachings of Jesus in his best of image.

              • @aesthelete@lemmy.world
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                It’s not one side or another of the political spectrum that’s full of shit, it’s people in general.

                I have easily encountered just as many anti vax crackpots for instance coming from the left as from the right.

                • @lennybird@lemmy.world
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                  3 months ago

                  That is complete and total bullshit and any reputable statistics survey can prove it.

                  Let’s not bOtH sIdeS this with absurd anecdotes.

    • @werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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      Agreed. I was raised Catholic but I rebelled every step of the way and GTFO as soon as I could. Yeah angels will get you stuff like this.

  • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    253 months ago

    Take a society with no mental health assistance and then pepper it with tons of religious fervor. It’s a recipe for disaster.

    I’m in the middle of the first episode of the third season of the podcast Long Shadow. This one is going to be about mass shootings. Looks like they haven’t added it to their website yet, but both of the prior seasons were excellent so I expect this to be more of the same.

    https://longlead.com/article/long-shadow

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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      63 months ago

      Take a society with no mental health assistance and then pepper it with tons of religious fervor.

      Then add in a whooole lotta guns

  • Flying Squid
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    3 months ago

    In 1976, Larry Cohen made a film called “God Told Me To,” where random people commit murders in the name of God. The movie explains it as (spoiler alert) the influence of aliens, but apparently such a thing doesn’t actually need science fiction explanations.

    Edit: Also, we live in what was the path of totality in Indiana and watched the eclipse in a park. When we came home, my daughter saw a bunch of people in a church parking lot doing some post-eclipse bowing down in prayer (I missed it) and she thought it was hilarious.

    • NoSpiritAnimal
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      143 months ago

      “I fell to my knees in that Aldi parking lot” is a popular meme on instagram currently, due to a sighting of Christians welcoming the end times in an Aldi parking lot.

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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      23 months ago

      I watched a video yesterday about the whole history of TimeCube.com, and it had the same sorts of patterns we see in online radicalization today. Someone with an untreated mental illness posted regularly on a website, and was egged on by people who thought it was funny. Then some kid who also has an untreated mental illness sees it and takes it seriously. Then that kid does something horrific because of it. (In TimeCube’s case the kid jumped in front of a train after meeting the old guy and being rebuffed.)