Edward
Bartender
- Messages
- 25,081
- Location
- London, UK
Then perhaps you are more fortunate in your surroundings
Perhaps if you put down the Guardian you'd have a better view.
The Graun lost me when they started up with articles on men's fashion featuring GBP700 jeans.... I'm sure it does vary between areas... I've just never found it as bad in the vast majority of places as somm seem to think. I live in inner East London, though. [huh]
London is actually much nicer than more provinicial areas of the UK when it comes to drunken idiots. I live in Sheffield, and certainly West Street (one of the main drinking streets) is certainly not a nice place to walk down on a Friday or Saturday night. That said, I do think a lot of the "social degeneracy" talked about by the media is overblown.
The biggest difference I notice is between big cities and countryside. I suppose it's probably true every city has a no-go area, moreso than maybe the sticks, but on the flipside I find the cities far more tolerant of those of us who qualify as "different" in how we look. Back in the day when I used to wear a lot of nail varnish I could very quickly tell a lot about an area with regards to whether I garnered abuse. I once had a particularly vicious torrent of "freak" in Clacton on Sea for daring to wear a leather trenchcoat and a dog collar (among other things... I could have understood if that was all I was wearing. ). Nobody in dear London gives a damn what I wear. I've gone out in full drag on the tube (and believe me, there's no way I could have passed as female) and barely a notice. I love that.
I'm usually the first to complain about the empty-headed consumerism that rules today's society, but lets face it, not everything is necessarily crap today. Maybe the overall sum is pretty crappy, but lets not get carried away about the parts.
Exactly. I'm sure there are exceptions, but I honestly think most of those I have met who fixate on how awful the modern world is wouldn't be happy anywhere (or any time).
This is hyperbole and I live in the most atheist country in the world and I'm Catholic. Sure I get some slack, but I'm hardly persecuted. People think I'm nuts but they do respect my right to be nuts.
The use of the word "persecution" really makes me angry, especially when a] it is so often used by those who feel "persecuted" by any law which would prevent them from discriminating against (or, indeed persecuting) others, and b] when there really are Christians in some parts fo the world today who really are in fear of persecution, including death.
The irreligeous here have a disdain for the religeous that is palpable.
I have seen individual instances of that, but it's far from uniform. I've also seen exactly the same attitudes in vice versa - and moreso.
I think the general cultural hostility to religion is a very new, recent thing -- a backlash against the rise of Evangelicalism. Sixty years ago, modern Evangelicalism held little influence outside the American South -- but since the late 1970s, it's expanded aggressively to the point where a whole generation of people has grown up thinking it's the sole and unchallenged voice of Christianity, and they judge all "religion" by its excesses. As someone who grew up a New England mind-your-own-business Methodist, I simply point out that there's plenty of honest Christianity in the world that has nothing whatsoever to do with those excesses -- and the militant atheist crowd accomplishes nothing constructive by tarring all believers with the same brush.
This is exactly my experience (I think the young people might call it "payback's a bitch", just a shame it hits the "innocent" alike). To be fair, I also see exactly the same thing in reverse. Not every atheist is a Dawkins crusader. The extremes do seem to be much more pronounced in the US than in Europe for the most part. Oddly enough, when you do meet one of the atheist equivalents of Fred Phelps in the UK, likely as not the "evils" of Christianity to which they point are all based on the likes of Phelps and other high-profile, US evangelicals. That and the creationist movement, abortion-clinic bombers, and whatever. Maybe that's just what gets all the press? [huh]
Whatever, always seems to that there is still much to be learned from the bible... not least that when you look at what the authors chose to record of the life of Christ, there's relatively little preaching (most of which boils down to showing people a little love and not judging them), and far more simply hanging out with people, often the rejects of society, and showing them a bit of love. Whatever one's views on the existence or otherwise of the Divine, if we all tried to follow that a bit more, the world would be a nicer place.