@TheBandBirdX Good makes the lightning apparently, so why would he hit the church. The Bible mentions god striking people with lightning doesn't it? It's an old atheist joke.
@GaryPetersonUSA He don't look very middle eastern to me, can confirm not jesus. This looks more like Russell Brand. Why would Russell Brand be holding one of the keebler elfs.
@TheBandBirdX I'm not making a claim about any religion, as I don't believe in any of them. My only position then, would have to be to ask for evidence of your claim.
@TheBandBirdX Some religions also don't have evidence of their deity. Why put any faith or trust in something that was written so long ago. Some of the ridiculous things in these books seem crazy.
Based on the actual research specifically on Canada, the data leans one direction, though it's worth being precise about what's measured.
On documented extremist/terrorist violence specifically: Canadian academic research (Ross's foundational study, later updated analyses through 2019, and CBC/Public Safety reporting) consistently finds far-right extremist violence is the more frequent and more severe category β includes documented cases like the Heritage Front's 1990s hit list targeting Jewish Canadians, neo-Nazi groups (Aryan Guard, Blood and Honor), and the Quebec City mosque shooting (6 killed, 2017), plus a 250% rise in right-wing extremist violence reported during the pandemic. There isn't a comparable body of Canadian research documenting an equivalent scale of organized far-left violence β most studies simply don't find enough incidents to analyze as a parallel category. This mirrors the pattern found in the US, where independent and government-linked research finds right-wing extremism responsible for the large majority of domestic terrorism fatalities.
I'm not a big bang theorist. I don't know, how could I ever know that. Science have made discoveries that lead them on a path to more discovery, and I agree it's just a theory, that based on any new discoveries will change to reflect the newly acquired information. That's how science works.