There is a difference between questioning a belief and using a belief to bash all those who believe it with hasty generalizations and stereotypes.
Oh, I agree.
But you closed a thread for "bashing religion" when it began with a criticism (via parody) of arguments that atheists are thought to use.
So clearly you think "bashing" is more than just a matter of using hasty generalisations and stereotypes.
Further, are you going to consider that people who make hasty generalisations and stereotypes of atheists are equally guilty?
Such as those that tar all atheists as believing God to not exist, for example?
And unlike claims of "flat earth" or UFOs, most religious claims do not claim to have corresponding physical evidence. Demanding that the religious provide physical evidence for non-physical claims is simply demanding them to agree with a reductionist worldview (which they largely do not).
This example would probably be considered trolling, depending on how blatant it is.
But if they don't agree with a reductionist worldview (and even emergentists would fall within this description as well) then they at least should be able to provide detail of what their worldview is beyond "God did it", or anything akin to "God works in mysterious ways".
I am all for exploring the whys and wherefores of peoples' belief (or lack of).
And have learnt much of people in general just from reading threads in this forum.
But the issue to me seems to be when genuine criticism of a position is deemed to be "bashing", purely because it might offend someone's sensibilities rather than through any consideration of what is actually being discussed.
Anyone is free to believe that religious claims are not provable, as few religious people are foolish enough to make such claims.
Too many do, which is part of the issue here (although I see that one such person has recently been perma-banned!!!

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Most religious claims are held to be subjectively true, not objectively so. As much as atheists may not like it, religion is generally no more subject to the criteria of the physical sciences than philosophy. When is the last time you heard anyone demand "proof" from philosophy?
But this is the issue: religion does not allow itself to be criticised the way a philosophical view is.
Everyone knows that a philosophical is rarely supported by science as being the one and only truth on the matter (at best the philosophical view is built around to fill in the gaps of science - either where science does not yet have the answer of where it is not equipped to go), and arguments abound openly, freely and, usually, respectfully.
But with religion it is different: any argument against a religion is too often seen as "bashing".
And I think this is not to do with the criticism levelled against it, but instead perhaps the unwillingness of the religionist to accept that their worldview is a philosophy rather than the unquestionable truth.
It is the element of "scripture", of being sacrosanct that is the issue here, and how calling that into question is seemingly verboten.
If religion was seen as just another philosophy there would be no issue.
Most of these sorts of complaints seem to stem from the fact that the non-religious apply their own worldview to subject matter that expressly rejects their worldview. Things like spirit and soul are not claimed to be physically evident, and religion falls largely into the philosophical branch of metaphysics.
I disagree in as much as the religious too often claim support from scripture that, to them, puts it beyond argument, without stating why it should be treated as such.
If every religionist argument started "I take this on blind faith but..." then there would be no issue.
But they don't.
They claim evidence.
They claim support that is somehow more than just an appeal to authority.
And you call them out on it.
Would you, as moderator on this forum, deem this as "bashing"?
Or are you happy to send any thread that claims their religious view as truth straight to the "free thoughts", "psuedo-science", "parapsychology" or similar, or even straight to the "cess pool"?
It is also not just that the non-religious apply their worldview (although that is often a part) - as that is to put the fault expressly and exclusively at the feet of the non-religious in such cases - but that the religious claim a position that puts them beyond such criticism, and cry foul when people try to criticise.
If the world-view is sound, it should be able to withstand the criticism (and I don't just mean to remain silent but to have a response).
And the grounds on which it stands should be understood by all, not least by the person holding it.
And I also dislike the tone of your post: "Most of
these sorts of complaints..." seems to imply that they should be dismissed lightly.
And it smacks of misunderstanding the issue.