Iceland has essentiallly just outlawed religion in its country, without expressly making it illegal to be a holder of some form of deistic assumptions regarding the nature of creation, of being. By a vote of 60-3, Iceland’s legislative body has just passed a law that makes it mandatory for kids’ schools to teach them that science and religion are not compatible, and to be religious is to be fundamentally unsicentific, not rational, and thus not fit for human society, though that last part is the assumption people will most likely form from such an indoctrination of a child’s mind by the state using coercion as the means of pressing their beliefs on others.
So Iceland will become, over the next 2 decades, a laboratory of state atheism for the world to behold. We will watch a nation descend into madness itself as it strips the land and the people of their fundamentally spiritual natures and creates a science fascism that will be far more consuming of free thought and humanity in general than ever the worst of the theologically based tyrannies ever could, or even ever dared.
Watch as the birth rates plummet and the crime rates rise. Watch as the progressive dream for America reflects its ugly nature in the to-be brutalized lives of the Icelanders over the next 20 years, if this brutal experiment even lasts that long.
Iceland is now a nation of keen interest to we here at the Freedomist as we witness the theories of the fascist atheist become real in the lives of human beings now coerced to submit to the cycle of violence that such systems inevitably produce. But who knows, perhaps Iceland will surprise us and show that fascistic atheism can create happiness and prosperity for all, whether they want it or not.
Iceland To Teach Science And Religion Are Incompatible
From www.patheos.com
2021-09-21 14:21:43
Excerpt:
Reykjavik, Iceland – The government of this small North Atlantic country is instructing all kindergarten through 12th-grade teachers to teach that science and religion are inherently incompatible. Students will be instructed that even though a person has religious beliefs and engage in scientific work, that very same person is either doing science and/or religion incorrectly.
The Icelandic legislature recently passed The Science Protection Act (TSPA). The bill passed with a 60-3 vote, and Prime Minister Andrew Karnard signed it into law shortly thereafter.
“This is a great day for our country,” Prime Minister Kanard said. “We will protect future generations from the insidious nature of non-reality-based beliefs.”

