DealMonkey
Lifer
- Nov 25, 2001
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Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Not really. Liberal policies enacted welfare. Welfare provides a means whereby people can avoid work. The crime rate in that population is higher and therefore liberal policies may cause crime.
All that study did is look at numbers posit a speculation and leave it there for others to swoon over. Did it look at educational or poverty levels? Did it do a comparison at more local levels? Did anyone actually bother to find out if there is a link at all? No, but there is a lot of "religion causes..."
AT is overwhelmingly anti religious. If this were to be applied to a minority the poster would be banned. Since anything anti religion is sanctioned here I tend to poke holes in stupid arguments, and this "study" which merely cites what would normally be considered conjecture at best has no intellectual merit an therefore neither does any declarative statement based on it.
You do realize, that the study doesn't imply cause and effect, rather it simply notes the correlation? Right? So while the study doesn't necessarily prove anything, it simply leaves one wondering as to what the causation might actually be.
However, the results don't say anything about cause and effect, though study researcher Joseph Strayhorn of Drexel University College of Medicine and University of Pittsburgh offers a speculation of the most probable explanation: "We conjecture that religious communities in the U.S. are more successful in discouraging the use of contraception among their teenagers than they are in discouraging sexual intercourse itself."
So that's one theory. You got another/better one?
And by the way, what you term "anti religious" is rather disingenuous, at best. Are we not free to speak as we wish around here, or is religion one of those sacred cows we're not allowed to talk about?
