Well, as there is nothing all religions agree upon, it's subjective in religions as well. And as I said, I see no religion which does not produce hate towards others. You can easily come to ethical conclusions by philosophy alone, you don't have to fear any higher presence to be able to do that. Human rights are certainly no religious achievement but a humanist one. Our high general moral standards today, which allow for general human rights, freedom of religion, freedom of movement and so on were brought about because of the work of humanist thinkers but in spite of religion.
No, I can assure you, it's not. I see a lot of meaning in my life. A lot more than when religion tried to make me believe I was a worthless sinner capable only of sin and reduced to hoping fervently for absolvement after death.Not to mention that your life and how you live it is meaningless.
No idea what "Christian love" is supposed to be.Another thing you'd miss out on is Christian love (I assume there is something equivalent in Islam and Judaism).
That's your right.I choose to believe that there is something more, and a power wiser than man; plus that the world is designed and not a spectacular but ultimately meaningless and random chance.
Well, there are people campaining for their religion to govern human life. I certainly don't want any religion to govern my life and cut down my freedom, so I am vocally (though not, I think, aggressively) against that. In my opinion, the world would be a much better place if we got rid of religion. I might be wrong on that count, but it would mean that man is even more worthless than religions make him out to be. I'm optimistic that education and a sound grounding in ethical thought without having hate groups like other nationalities or faiths to direct the aggression against would ultimately improve humanity.I can't understand people who aggressively campaign for atheism.