Actually, scratch that -- the persistence of the Creationism model is another needle in the pincushion of socially-fashionable/politically-marketable ignorance. This is a powerful reminder on the dire necessity for distinction between belief and empiricism.
I should be clear - I don't like this because I want religion to adapt, not become popular. What I don't want is religion to make "pretend" changes, attach itself to science/progress, to attach itself to social movements, etc.
However, the reality is that it will happen... The big picture strategy is that I want the ardent believers, like Peduy, to fight these associations tooth and claw. This means that their religion becomes subject to adaption - change, or perish. This eliminates the crowding out effect that monolithic (in terms of belief

) religions have. Religion, from my perspective, is a social device. It doesn't guide society, it emerges from society. The problem is that when it pretends to be more - as in, it becomes political, when it starts integrating into movements - it crowds out the natural emergent belief systems. This means that religion becomes society, the society becomes rigid and the society becomes inferior - the rate of adaptation changes. You can see it somewhat in the US and the lashback with science.
So, what I want to see is a religion for the times. I want religion to
adapt it's moral principles, not survive on the coat tails of popular movements. If religion does not, then it should fade away, replaced with new religions that are more adaptable. But adaptable does not mean embracing science or some such, of course, but... a better, stronger framework than basing our knowledge - our guide to moral behavior, from what we knew thousands of years ago.
Hell, I would love to see a green "religion" that put forth that we are stewards of the world and the universe, because we are a part of it and the outcome of not assuming that role is to be replaced, through extinction, by others that will.
But handing over the keys to a green movement with "god tells us to"? I just hope that it never turns into "too many humans, and God tells us to...". Sends me to the hills, I tell you.
This is an interesting point. I've long questioned the whole green movement and the political push towards it is so strong, it leaves me extremely suspicious. It truly is becoming a religious movement. It has its heretics, its leaders, its followers, its misinformation and tendency to combat any skepticism or criticism with vicious attacks that don't combat the criticism but the one offering the different point of view.
Yup, I hate that too, heh.
Now, granted, with the evidence I have seen, I believe in climate change. However, the exact same evidence shows
horrendously long trends. The impact will be severe, in terms of entropy... but again, over very long periods, as in centuries.
This tells me that yes, we should do something, as a species. And individually we don't have much incentive to. But what should be done should be looked at from a 50-year+ perspective. The fanaticism gets in the way of solving the problem.
So, given my perspective, the absolute last thing I want is actual religious fervor attached to it.
You're a fan of tangible reality and I can get behind that too. Part of that reality, wether we like it or not is that there already exsist strong constituencies for every position, beyond our endorsement of their motivations.
You are, of course, correct. I probably should of quoted someone else

I don't disagree with anything you say, exactly, but I think we differ in the way we view the overall situation (which I didn't point out in my previous post).
Perhaps I should say that I don't like seeing an entire segment of the population motivated for reasons that would disrupt the cost/benefit and risk measurements of a tangible problem, in this particular case.