Many people tend to look at programming styles and languages like religions: if you belong to one, you cannot belong to others. But this analogy is another fallacy.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
You cannot belong to anyone else, until you belong to yourself.
We live in a culture where people are constantly telling us how to get what we want, and within that message is, 'You need to be something other than you are.'
I do not belong to any religion. Everything is between God and myself.
If you don't believe you don't belong.
I don't go by my caste, creed or religion. My works speak for me.
The point is that these decisions they've made are partly for your convenience and partly for theirs and partly out of stereotypes that they carry with them from the conventions of the computer field.
One either has to believe in a God who's terribly prejudiced, or disbelieve the teachings of such exclusionary theologies. Religions have taught us that 'we are better than they.'
As a matter of fact, you have deficiencies in all religions, but you have truth in all religions.
It's why you create characters: so you can argue with yourself.
It appears to be in the nature of religion itself to be prejudiced against those who are different.
No opposing quotes found.