I have a question related to the discussion at hand :o
I agree that hating all members of a religion is silly, but what about disliking the institution itself? For instance, I have plenty of Catholic family members and friends and I obviously like them, but I really have an aversion to the Catholic church as an institution.
Similarly, I don't personally know any Mormons and I'm sure they're nice, but I really think the whole 'let's donate money to another state's anti-gay hate campaign lol thereby ruining thousands of lives lol' was disgusting.
An institution is an impersonal system of organisation, so I don't really see a problem with disliking it.
Maybe I'm just being grossly unfair but I really don't much like religious institutions, I guess? And while I agree that door-to-door religion salesmen probably have their hearts in the right place, I find it a little hard to remember when they come say hello at nine on a Sunday. I'm always polite and I always end up getting an armful of pamphlets and wish them a good day but there are few things that tick me off more. It just seems rude, I guess. In the same way that I don't think atheism should be forced on anyone, I really wish they'd respect my right to not be saved from armageddon :/
What I would say to that is that they are offering you their religious beliefs rather than forcing them on you. Also, yeah, I think it's a bit inconsiderate to call to people that early on a Sunday, but that's a decision made by individuals, not by groups.
Um, you're being a little hypocritical! You're still making judgement on a whole based on your experience, and as you've said, that's not a good idea. The best thing to do is try to consider the person apart from where their beliefs might come from like VPLJ, I think.
I didn't say that the fact that I've never had problems with Jehovah's Witnesses was the reason I didn't dislike them as a group. I was just saying I've never had problems with them. The reason I don't dislike them as a group is because I think disliking groups of people without considering each individual person in that group is unfair.
And I don't really think about people's religious beliefs at all when I interact with them. Honestly, half the time I forget that my fianceé has a religion, so it's not really foremost on my mind unless someone brings it up.
Though, I mean, if someone's a strict Catholic, I don't feel that guilty about predicting I won't like them? Because being a strict Catholic comes with some things that I really don't like! I'm sure they might be quite kind and nice, just not necessarily someone I'd get on with or stand to be around! Being all "but some of them are nice people!!!" seems less useful than examining why you've disliked all the ones you've met before, and what the really bad thing is (the institution). I would parse 'I don't like Catholic people' as 'I don't like Catholicism' rather than 'I refuse to believe any Catholic person could ever be nice even though I haven't met them all', honestly.
I dunno, I wouldn't feel like I was being fair to a person if I was predicting that I wouldn't like them, since predicting is not that different to prejudging in this context (if there even is a difference in this context). It's kind of like how my English teacher gets annoyed when my friend Orla tells him he's not going to like her essays or tests because he doesn't want to be prejudging them before he gets to read them. Two people could be equally strict Catholics but you could like one and not like the other because one is privately devout and doesn't let his religious beliefs get into his public and personal life while the other is a full-on 24/7 super-Catholic.
People are horrible but a person is nice. I will absolutely say "I don't like Christians". I don't. I like individual Christians well enough, but that's because I know them apart from a general understanding of what they may believe.
But if you like some Christians, then "I don't like Christians" is a false statement. From what I can tell, you don't like the beliefs of Christians, which means "I don't like Christianity" would be a more accurate statement.
I can say with certainty that I won't like a strict Muslim, Christian or Jew for the simple reason that so much of what they believe runs completely contrary to my own beliefs and lifestyle. Why is that a bad thing to admit?
Because a strict X doesn't necessarily let their beliefs be a part of their public or personal life, they could be very private about it. If you knew a Muslic, Christian or Jew who was very strict in the observance of his religion in his private life but didn't let this affect his interactions with people of different beliefs and you let the fact that you knew, privately, his beliefs ran contrary to yours, no offence intended, I would consider you to be the unreasonable person in the situation. The vast majority of people that I know are theistic and I'm antitheistic but I don't let it colour my interaction with the people I know. If a theistic friend of mine started giving me shit for being atheistic even though I had never let it become a thing between us, I would find his actions very unreasonable, just as I would expect anyone to find it unreasonable for me to start giving them shit for being theistic when they keep it out of their relationships with other people.
They may be perfectly personable and reasonable people elsewhere, but if we clash so horribly I'm not going to like them and it's because of their religion.
I think you left out some sentence here, so I'm not going to respond to an incomplete sentence, as that would not contribute to the debate in any way.
It doesn't seem unfair to say "I don't like x" because surely it's usually understood that you mean "I don't like x generally because y, although there are exceptions and I know that not every x will y"?
If you know there are exceptions, why would you make a general statement about people like that? You should judge every person on their own merits, but if you're assuming right away that because of some aspect of their being, you and them will have a problem, then you're prejudging them and almost guaranteeing that you will have a problem with them.