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10 votes
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Mahavir Jayanti 2019: Date, history, significance of the Jain Festival
4 votes -
How doctors and the church conspired to stop an 11-year-old girl from having an abortion after rape
12 votes -
Microsoft accused of being 'complicit' in persecution of one million Muslims after helping China develop sinister AI capabilities
8 votes -
Folau set to be axed: Rugby Australia unable to contact Israel Folau following anti-gay post and intends to terminate his contract
6 votes -
'Trauma is a slow burn': Mormons seek healing as church eases anti-LGBT policy
6 votes -
Indonesia’s Muslim youth find new heroes in Instagram preachers
3 votes -
My country decided that animal sacrifice in the name of religion is constitutional
Another person said that s(he) can't form an opinion because s(he) eats meat, and it is almost the same thing. She feels it's wrong, but at the same time thinks it's prejudice against some...
Another person said that s(he) can't form an opinion because s(he) eats meat, and it is almost the same thing. She feels it's wrong, but at the same time thinks it's prejudice against some religions if we are worried about a couple of animals and continue to kill millions just to eat.
I can agree and disagree with this point, but one thing being wrong doesn't give a pass to other things.
But if we agree that it's constitutional to sacrifice animals, then what certain religions do to women (or any person) should be at the same level.
That's why i disagree at the end. It shouldn't be allowed, period.
The animal being sacrificed didn't chose to be there, nor the human being mistreated.
What are your opinions? Can someone point what i'm thinking wrong here?
PS: Sorry for my poor wording because english is not my first language. I wanted to know the opinion here about morals or what is right or wrong, not the law itself. Of course that any discussion on that is welcome too.
25 votes -
Brunei introduces death by stoning as punishment for gay sex
11 votes -
I'm a Christian doctor and I help women have abortions. Here's how I reconcile that.
5 votes -
How new role models are inspiring young Muslim women to reimagine their lives
3 votes -
We Talked to Muslims in the LGBTQ Community About Standing Up for Queer Youth
7 votes -
[David Matheson, the Mormon] ‘Gay conversion therapist’ comes out: Exclusive interview [to Channel 4]
8 votes -
How the Dalai Lama's dash from Tibet 'changed the concept of Buddhism' forever
8 votes -
Big gods came after the rise of civilisations, not before, finds study using huge historical database
15 votes -
The fall of the caliphate
8 votes -
With sword fights and martial arts, Sikhs in India celebrate annual 'Hola Mohalla' festival
With sword fights and martial arts, Sikhs in India celebrate annual 'Hola Mohalla' festival Hola Mohalla
7 votes -
Stepping into the uncanny, unsettling world of Shen Yun
25 votes -
Rabbis express concern about excesses of Purim celebrations
5 votes -
The art of biblical translation, part two: Modern translators and their tin-ear to the literature of the Hebrew Bible
8 votes -
Jesus warned against men like Cardinal Pell. His message could save the Church.
4 votes -
Cardinal George Pell has been sentenced to six years' jail for sexually abusing two choirboys when he was Catholic archbishop of Melbourne in the 1990s
8 votes -
Dutch Reformed Church forced to allow same-sex marriage
6 votes -
The art of biblical translation, part one: On the eloquence of the King James Version
5 votes -
Kansas Catholic school rejects kindergartner with same-sex parents
6 votes -
Kyoto temple enlists android Buddhist deity to help people
7 votes -
A sports hijab has France debating the Muslim veil, again
10 votes -
Hindu monastic order is reclaiming transgender people’s status in Indian society
9 votes -
United Methodist Church votes to maintain its opposition to same-sex marriage, gay clergy
21 votes -
United Methodist Church to debate LGBTQ clergy and same-sex weddings
8 votes -
Australia’s most senior Catholic cleric, Cardinal George Pell, has been convicted of sexually abusing two choirboys while he was archbishop of Melbourne
17 votes -
Atheists and non-believers could soon receive civil rights protections under Portland law
18 votes -
Pope makes unprecedented move of defrocking ex-cardinal McCarrick over sex abuse
19 votes -
Anglicans bar same-sex spouses from Lambeth Conference
6 votes -
Melbourne Archbishop enlists LGBTI faithful as church tries to reset
7 votes -
Conservative Christian group launches campaign against “Buddhist meditation” in public schools
32 votes -
Ardha Kumbha Mela starts with much fanfare; your guide to the mega event
5 votes -
Inside the secret Facebook war for Mormon hearts and minds - What happens when social media manipulation targets religious faith?
12 votes -
Ellen Page calls out Chris Pratt's church for being "infamously anti-LGBTQ"
16 votes -
Michelangelo’s Sistine splendor, story of a Renaissance icon
4 votes -
God is not male or female, says Archbishop of Canterbury
9 votes -
UAE’s tolerance embraces faiths, runs up against politics
4 votes -
Ex-Jakarta Governor Ahok, jailed for blasphemy, freed
3 votes -
Aberdeenshire church to break away amid gay marriage row
3 votes -
Growing up as a living goddess
12 votes -
Israeli Christians protest artwork depicting Ronald McDonald as ‘McJesus’
9 votes -
Uniting Church to continue to allow same-sex marriages following deciding vote in South Australia
3 votes -
Ukraine: New Orthodox church gains independence from Moscow
Ukraine: new Orthodox church gains independence from Moscow This is a follow-up to this previous article: Ukraine announced the leader of a new national church on Saturday, marking an historic...
Ukraine: new Orthodox church gains independence from Moscow
This is a follow-up to this previous article: Ukraine announced the leader of a new national church on Saturday, marking an historic split from Russia which its leaders see as vital to the country’s security and independence. It seems it wasn't sufficient for the Ukraine Orthodox Church to choose its own leader; its independence (or autocephaly) had to be formally decreed by the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople.
7 votes -
Gutenberg’s Bible: The Real Information Revolution – how one of the greatest advances in human culture also helped divide Christendom
3 votes -
From Mali: A lesson in tolerance
6 votes