So Called RELIGION!

Religion! History! Division?

Throughout history, religion has presented itself as a source of moral guidance and spiritual truth. Yet, beneath this innocent surface lies a tool wielded by the powerful system built on unverifiable claims, designed to divide, control, and suppress. Holy books that contradict one another, prophets who can’t be questioned, and gods who remain silent. These elements ask for blind devotion rather than reason. But what were we? Human? What makes us different was the ability question or rational beings who can reason. Religion, is beyond blindness, is a disrespect to human being itself.

Division happened right in front of humanity, some stayed silent, and some was scared to fight with silence. We been separated, framed and have served our lives to fit to that frame, while that frame wasn’t for us. They were not accepting Jesus to be Jewish so they killed Jewish, they were not accepting the people with darker skin and decided to put them on lower on their “cast systems”, most importantly they created race and become “-ist” to itself. Religion has not only labeled people, it has defined who is worthy and who is not. Through doctrines, holy books, and sermons, it has drawn invisible lines between “believers” and “others,” between the saved and the damned. These divisions have shaped laws, influenced empires, and justified violence for centuries. Under religious authority, entire populations were enslaved, displaced, or exterminated not because of who they were, but because of what they weren’t. Faith was never just a personal belief, it became a political weapon, a social hierarchy, and a moral shield for some of history’s worst atrocities.

Have you ever tried questioning the so-called “believers” about what they actually believe? They speak of God, a supreme being who created the entire universe by simply commanding “be,” and so it became. Then there are the prophets, hand-picked messengers, tasked with spreading divine instructions to the rest of us. And let’s not forget the holy books, supposedly dictated directly by God, outlining how to live a “righteous” life. Not a free life, though. A life of obedience. A life of servitude. A life fit for a good man “a good slave”. Blind faith demands no evidence, no questioning, just loyalty. And in that loyalty, religion finds its greatest strength and its most dangerous power. Once someone accepts that a book is sacred, that a man is a prophet, or that a voice in the sky controls their fate, they become easy to command. They don’t need to understand, they only need to obey. If you think what will happen once, they are going to die, simple, which prophet wins the battle, its followers will be the winners. Oh! And, There are some thinks that they will be reborn to the world. By the way, they call me insane to not believing this drama.


But let’s stop pretending we can’t ask the most obvious question. Does God even exist? Strip away the tradition, the fear, the childhood programming and what are we left with? Stories. Claims. No evidence. No verifiable sign. Just ancient texts written by men, edited by kings, and enforced by institutions with something to gain. We’re told God is everywhere, yet nowhere we can see. We’re told God listens, yet never speaks. We’re told God loves us, yet watches in silence as wars, genocides, and disasters unfold. If this being exists, it hides behind the very doubt it punishes. If it doesn’t, then billions have lived and died obeying a myth, defending a silence, and fearing a void dressed up as divinity. But we call it “God’s plan.” We call it destiny. As if divine intention justifies every horror we can’t explain. A child loses their home in an airstrike “it was meant to be.” A family is buried under rubble “God has a reason.” But let’s be honest: the future of that child didn’t rest in the hands of a god. It rested on the decision of one man, one politician, one general, one drone operator choosing whether or not to send a missile. That’s not divine fate. That’s human power, cloaked in religious language to escape accountability.

In the end, we became perfect believers, but not better humans. We memorized prayers, obeyed commands, defended books, and feared gods. But we forgot how to think, how to question, and how to care beyond the limits of belief. We followed doctrines while ignoring suffering. We praised heaven while destroying earth. If this is what faith looks like unquestioning, divisive, and blind then maybe it’s not humanity that failed religion, but religion that failed humanity.



From Dio, to who dare to question!

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