Some are and some aren't. Being religious or not is not what makes people immoral. It is their own actions. Lots of people who do not follow any religion are very moral, and there are lots of people who do follow a religion but behave immorally.
It varies from person to person. Generally, however, non religious people are not for war.
They are always worried about dieng and not going to heaven, trust me i am non-religious. It's not only non religious people who suffer. But, maybe, if you believe they do, it's because there is no God that look after them, because they do not believe in any God. Also, I think that maybe non religious people THINK they suffer, because they, unlike religious people, do not have a God to trust in. If they did, maybe they would not find their sufferings as difficult and would not claim that 'only non religious people suffer'.
A:If they have been divorced and there is no legal impediment to their remarrying, yes, non-religious people are free to remarry.
No, Andy Six is not religious. He is an Atheist. And Atheists are non-religious people.
A non-religious ceremony. A non-religious ceremony. A non-religious ceremony.
A:The difference is prejudice or pride, depending on the context. Of course, religious and non-religious people are equally capable of being good and equally capable of being bad. But a minority of religious people do not see it like this, believing that religious people are inherently good and non-religious people are inherently bad. That view in itself is bad, or in religious terms, a sin - either the sin of prejudice or the sin of pride. These are sins a non-religious person is unlikely to commit, at least in this comparison.
by getting immoral people to have immoral activites with
A non-religious ceremony. A non-religious ceremony. A non-religious ceremony.
By 1861, it is clear that most people in the Northern non slave US States believe that slavery is immoral. By the same year many not most, of the people in the Southern States believe that slavery is not immoral.
Non religious people view divorce as a legal end to an unsuccessful marriage just the same way that many religious people view it.Non religious people view divorce as a legal end to an unsuccessful marriage just the same way that many religious people view it.Non religious people view divorce as a legal end to an unsuccessful marriage just the same way that many religious people view it.Non religious people view divorce as a legal end to an unsuccessful marriage just the same way that many religious people view it.
i dont know what the answer is hahaaa
A:It is hard to find a reason why non-religious people are less likely to care about the environment, particularly in the face of anecdotal evidence that care for the environment is more likely to be strong among non-religious people. While we can all hold biased positions on this, an objective view that non-religious people are less likely to care about the environment requires provable evidence, and there appears to be none.