I think that there is also a retaliatory bias at play. It isn't just that posters are indifferent or oblivious to other faiths. As they have rarely had much in the way of meaningful interactions with the practitioners of those faiths. There really is such a thing as a Anti Christian sentiment in this community, and it isn't even without justification. Members of small minority groups can hardly afford to be assholes in regards to their faith or world view. Majorities however are just plain chopped full of real fucking assholes. My apologies to the Christians on these forums, but a lot of your fellow worshipers are total dicks.
Where would any person place the majority of their attention. On the group that is harmless, or the group that seems intent on causing trouble, or worse is intent on doing real harm. Not only that, but has inflicted such harm in the past. I don't know that Christians can truly appreciate the oppression that comes out of their religion, but let me put it to you this way. Christians have told people that they deserve to suffer forever. That God gave them a disease to hurt them. They even insist that things belong to their faith, and others should be made to leave. Just imagine how you would feel if someone said those things to you, and you just might understand why some people have a big axe to grind.
It just seems to me that we have a lot of people on these forums with festering resentments, and they find a lot of opportunities to vent their frustrations on the source of their pain. Online they find themselves a fair fight which they don't get in the real world, and they often get themselves some payback. You can't really blame them every time the opportunity presents itself. They are really scratching a itch, and other faiths don't present any kind of an itch. You can't put two mutually antagonistic groups into a room, and not expect them to pull on one another. I mean two groups hell bent on hurting one another. It is a miracle that every discussion doesn't end up in a storm of curse words.







