mrswdk wrote:jimboston wrote:Not sure what you mean by "completely secular"... as a majority of citizens in all countries you mention identify with some religious group or another.
These do not sound like religious societies to me.
You used the phrase "completely secular". Now I show you that a majority of these societies identify as having a religion. Most may not practice regularly... that's true in the USA too. So define "completely secular". Cause you say they don't sound religious, but the stats from the links I provided say different.
Can an avowed atheist win an election in these countries?
Would a majority claim "there is no god"?
mrswdk wrote:And all of this still doesn't change the fact that corruption is pretty high in a lot of countries where religion holds significant sway.
That's not a point I argued against.
My argument was for balance... Church -v- State. Not a society where either is dominant.
jimboston wrote:mrswdk wrote:Likewise, there are plenty of countries in which religion has retained a strong influence where corruption is rife (Afghanistan, Iraq, India, the list goes on).
Religion controls Gov't in these countries.
India is a secular state. To give another example: Malaysia. Secular government, heavy influence of religion, prime minister currently embroiled in several enormous corruption/abuse of power scandals.[/quote]
You are proving my point.
mrswdk wrote:Your 'communist USSR/China/North Korea' (lol) analogy was off the mark. The issue with corruption in those countries is not because too few people have found the Lord Jesus - it's because government is not as transparent as it could be, and there exist relatively few checks on use of government power.
Yes... it's not because they lack religion. It's because the Gov't controls everything.
The Gov't has become religion. You are the perfect example with your blind devotion to China!
mrswdk wrote:Just to take the example of China, there are plenty of people in China who are Buddhist, Muslim, worship their ancestors or who are Christian. Much like NZ, Sweden etc., China is a secular country where a significant proportion of the population is religious in some way. There really isn't an kind of significant correlation between religiosity and corruption, much less any causal relationship.
There are a minority of people in China who are religious. For years religion was suppressed. Now religious freedom is growing, along with some democracy and a little less corruption. I see a definite correlation.
BTW... I am done with this argument.
I am now limiting myself to two responses to your trolling.