Thread:GreyStark/@comment-28288412-20170506220152/@comment-25936766-20170507191955

GreyStark wrote: 1-Mini, suppose a million angels came out of the sky tomorrow, over every major city in the world, smiting unbelievers left and right. How long do you think it would take for people to start way that they were, oh I dunno a combination of mass hallucinations and teams of assassins, or fucking holograms or some shite like that.

2-As for the why not make it a worldwide thing there was a world wide event. The aurora of 1938. Those kids said that if man kind continued to offend God they'd be another war and that this war would be predicted by a great light in the sky. And guess what happened a year before WW2. The Northern lights were seen as far south as Australia.

3-By giving a date and a location you make it easier for things to go wrong. That means that's it's even more notable when it happens. 1-You know nothing, Jon Snow. If millions of angels came out of the heavens and smited everybody, then-atheists would at the least acknowledge that "angels exist", and at most that "there is a god after all".

The reason atheists exist is because there are no arguments or evidence of any sort to think there is a god. The best "arguments" boil down to "I say He exists and is fact because it is". Weird things happen, but they are not concrete evidence of anything.

If an army of angels came out of the sky and smited everyone, that would be evidence, and thus anyone who doesn't believe would be delusional.

2-You are grasping at so many straws, you could make a good scarecrow with them.

I once heard a guy say that "a great wind would mark the arrival of something sinister". Then he farted. Cue 9/11 3 months later. Definitely, that great wind marked the arrival of something sinister. Sound logic, no? Because that's what you're telling me here.

Kids don't know shit of what they say, for starters. You could tell them the sky is the eyeball of a black hole and they would believe it, then tell other people because they don't know shit.

There was a great Aurora in 1938. Cool. But that it happened, has nothing to do with WW2 happening at all.

For starters, these "predictions" sound as fucking vague as possible so that the chances of them being wrong are minimal. "great light in the sky" can easily have been a shooting star, or the freaking sun itself.

And second of all, like Mini said, anyone with a half-functional brain could've seen that WW2 was going to happen.

Let me tell you a thing: When anything can be X, then X is nothing.

3-No, it makes it more ridiculous, more hard to believe, and in this case more easy to be bullshited.

And is completely different from God in the Bible, where if he wanted something, he acted more directly and less vaguely.

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Grey, you're grasping at straws, don't make real counter arguments, and also seem to be painfully gullible of what you find and hear. Say something that can restore my faith in you.