thedoc wrote:The projection is strong with this one
"These are not the Atheists you're looking for."
There's also the psychological tactic called "deflecting." When the holes in Atheism appear, the Atheists immediately deflect into, "Yeah? Well, you're bad too," instead of justifying their Atheism on its own terms.
But let's suppose we play along. Even if we granted them 100% that you and I were bad people, that would not go one stroke in the direction of justifying Atheism, if Atheism is simply unjustifiable. If Atheism is, say, intellectual, rational, logical, necessary and beneficial, they really ought to be able to show that it is; but in order to escape that undoable task, they "thin out" their beliefs to the point where it is little more than ignorant, non-evidentiary negation of Theism. But while this seems to save them from having to self-justify, Atheism of this sort deprives the world of all objective moral content -- they have nothing at all to say about morality: at least, nothing they can justify rationally from Atheism.
So to cover up the moral bankruptcy of Atheism itself, they accuse all the various religions of being "just as bad." They deflect attention from their own amorality and confusion to the moral character of their perceived "enemies." Ironically, what they fail to notice is that in order to do so at all they've had to "borrow," quite illegitimately, moral criteria from somewhere!

For how can, say, Christianity be "bad," when on every Atheist account, there is
nothing that
can be bad?
This is what the Ethicist I quoted a few messages ago meant when he said they were "playing pretend, and
doing it badly." They don't even try to follow
their own "rules." They can't, because "thin" Atheism is so vacuous it fails to prove even modestly practicable.