this post was submitted on 18 May 2024
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Shitty people love indoctrinating children.
Religion, much like many idealogical groups, gives an easy place for assholes to find confirmation of their own shit ideas, and a shield of "righteousness" and "I'm doing it for their own good" to hide behind lest the dying gasps of their withered conscience interrupt them.
There's plenty of secular belief systems along these lines as well. Many racist groups like skinheads, neonazis, and the KKK spread through indoctrination of children (parents passing beliefs to children) and appeals to young people as "the solution" for the confusion and isolation they feel growing up.
I'm Christian, I feel that the ten commandments are some of the best secular life advice the bible has to offer, and this mess is complete and utter unmitigated bullshit.
No if ands or buts, whoever was involved in this clown show of a law deserves to be instantly stripped of any governmental or education system titles or powers and banned from holding any position of power for life.
Any religion, belief system, or idealogical concept worth anything should be capable of standing up on it's own.
Not to start an argument, but I just can't understand how you think it's a fit guide for secular life. Half of the commandments are explicitly religious, and the other half are basic common sense laws that are already encompassed by the Golden Rule that many cultures and religions came up with independently (including the Abrahamic ones elsewhere in their religious texts).
But, to go into more detail (and using the full text, not the abbreviated versions that make it look kinder):
Standard monotheism, nothing to say here. It'd be weird if it weren't here, and it's better than most declarations in that it only applies to that religion's adherents and doesn't explicitly deny the existence of other gods (a note: IIRC the golden calf was created through a miracle and nobody acted as though that was weird, but I'd like if someone more scholarly could chime in).
Funny how the first set of tablets was destroyed when Moses discovered his people losing faith and worshipping an idol, and the replacements he made contained a law specifically against that very uncommon occurrence. Surely that law was in the original tablets as well and not just added as a reaction to those events...
As for the second half, I don't know how anyone could read this, considered the most literal word of god in their religion, and say it's a good basis for morality. Punishing innocent children for their ancestors' actions or beliefs is straight up evil.
It also explicitly states that his love is conditional, something that strongly conflicts with the main modern offshoots of the religion.
Weird how the only commandments specifying something is unforgivable are for things that bruise their deity's ego, but then again the OT god was an incredibly petty tyrant.
I've never really looked into the Sabbath so I'm not going to touch this one. I am mildly annoyed that the justification for their rest day is yet another ego-stroking thing instead of something for the benefit of the people. Imagine how much better things might be if several large religions stressed the importance of breaks for reasons of physical and mental health.
Anyone who had abusive, neglectful, or narcissistic parents could tell you the problem with this one, but I can't fault an insular, patriarchal religion from several millennia ago for trying to keep families together during an especially trying period when thoughts of desertion must have been common.
These are the only ones I have zero problem with. They are also exactly what you'd expect someone to set as law when leading a bunch of people, especially if problems are starting to crop up due to low morale.
Note that all examples here were considered property (morality rules get a pass for things like slavery and owning your wife if they're old enough) so this is technically a repeat of the law against stealing. Or, since it states that coveting is forbidden, it would cover stealing and be an example of thoughtcrime.