Whether it's on the scale of problems in the middle-east or a single nut-case murdering people in London:
Maybe I'm too mesmerized by the knowledge that one of his victims: Mr Hamidi, was an Afghan national who had managed to flee the Taliban seven years before his murder. It brought back memories of one of the victims of the London bombings who had also escaped from one pan only to find herself in a religiously motivated fire.Paranoid schizophrenic Torto had a hate list of sinners and those that did not follow his Christian faith who he wanted to kill, including homosexuals, gender changing clinics, off licences and nightclubs.
Obviously these individual tragedies pale into insignificance when considered against the widespread grief inflicted upon people who would much rather be allowed to live in peace the world over, but these coincidences really seem to hammer home the all-pervasive nature of divisions generated by different ideologies that claim different knowledge of the same God.
So to the question for debate: Considering the religious undercurrents shaping conflicts around the world today, Is religion an innocent practice that becomes subverted into destructiveness by factions who would use any excuse to impose their will, or is religion the root cause of conflict such that the evening news would be less unpleasant if religion lost its grip on people (regardless of how likely a prospect such a transformation might be).