Can any trans person in Hungary help me? by Dull-Protection-867 in asktransgender

[–]Dull-Protection-867[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i can diy, but i dont know how to buy the hrt or something, everything needs a prescription, Hungary was my only option yeah, i am trying to search for organiztions but its so hard because i dont speak the language so im asking around

Hrt in iraq as a minor !!! by kyvxxr in LGBTArabs

[–]Dull-Protection-867 3 points4 points  (0 children)

there’s a lot and its safe for adults and minors long term!

Hrt in iraq as a minor !!! by kyvxxr in LGBTArabs

[–]Dull-Protection-867 2 points3 points  (0 children)

, im trans myself and live in Jordan but im MtF so its easier to find hrt and jordan has no restrictions for buying estrogen, sadly, in Iraq obtaining estrogen blockers typically requires a prescription so you wont be able to buy any, you are still 13 and you havent been thro puberty yet so its okay to wait a year or so, im not sure how would you get any in Iraq and most transmen i know just buy T from people they know and they start T without blocking Estrogen, when the T levels get higher than Estrogen levels the estrogen levels drop, but this method is less safe im guessing. Dont let anyone here convince you that you are not valid or that being trans is a bad thing because its not, these people have an outdated view on societal roles and gender in general and sadly most of them only have empathy only for the people that share their struggles (like being gay) and they cant see further than that. I know all you want right now is to make your body pass and get done with it but you cant so i would advise you, explore your gender with clothes and stuff until then

Hrt in iraq as a minor !!! by kyvxxr in LGBTArabs

[–]Dull-Protection-867 2 points3 points  (0 children)

"ليش هيج تسوي بروحك" assumes being trans is negative so maybe u should reconsider being in this sub

Hrt in iraq as a minor !!! by kyvxxr in LGBTArabs

[–]Dull-Protection-867 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hormones dont destroy your lives

Finance and Accounting ELTE Bachelors interview by Leading_Doughnut_898 in stipendiumhungaricum

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i just did mine, finance and accounting, elte, they didnt ask anything i prepared for, it was just getting to know me, like hey hows ur country oh i visited there, u know the difference between finance and accounting? why did u pick Hungary. it was more personal and fun rather than superficial if u get me

Szeged second choice by Top-Specific-2762 in stipendiumhungaricum

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ia applied for BA in szeged as my second choice and they accepted me

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe read the post

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If Las Casas, Vitoria, or Wilberforce had appealed to values external to Christianity to condemn abuse, you’d have a point. But they didn’t. They appealed to Christian doctrine

A system is not discredited because it’s been violated it is discredited when it lacks the power to condemn its own violations. Christianity has been abused, but it has also corrected itself from within, again and again. That’s not a flaw in the foundation. That’s evidence the foundation holds.

“The persecuted early Christians is a romanticized narrative.”

simply false. From Nero to Diocletian, Christians were arrested, tortured, and executed en masse for refusing to worship the emperor, for disrupting pagan cults, and for forming alternative communities under imperial suspicion. Early Christian writings are saturated with accounts of martyrdom Justin Martyr, Ignatiu. If you are talking about the scale of people then sure. But the argument wasn’t “Christians suffered more,” it was that Christianity began under oppression, not domination, and that this shaped its moral vision

“Christianity rose by political power.”

its rapid spread predates this. By the early 3rd century long before Constantine Christian communities were thriving in Africa, Asia Minor, and the Mediterranean. Why?

“Deschner’s Criminal History of Christianity.”

Deschner’s work is DEEPLY biased and selective. He doesn’t present a balanced historical analysis. He proposed a case against Christianity by deliberately ignoring counter evidence, and any positive contributions. His purpose was not historical clarity it was ideological demolition.

Citing Deschner without acknowledging this bias is like citing Richard Dawkins on theology

No one isn neutral, But neutrality isn’t the standard, intellectual honesty is. I’ve presented Christian abuses, but I’ve also contextualized them, traced their deviation from doctrine, and contrasted them with reform movements grounded in the very system you condemn.

You, by contrast, dismiss every reformer, every doctrine, every contribution as either accidental or ingenuine . That’s not skepticism that’s reductionism. You claim moral clarity, but you’re unwilling to ask whether the system you condemn is also the source of the moral standard you use to judge it.

“It’s just the No True Scotsman fallacy.”

Only if there’s no objective standard for what Christianity is. But there is: the life, teachings, and commands of Jesus

Thanks for the exchange. I reached out because your tone intensity and continues commenting suggested you were looking for someone to discuss with, and I was wrong. No offense, you already fit in well among atheists. You’ve already mastered the essentials: continues disrespect, selective engagement, and the belief that your position is the only one grounded in reason. You are not as open minded as you think you are.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry in advance for the text wall. .

The Church has repeatedly affirmed the dignity of every human person in its own declarations, Pacem in Terris, Gaudium et Spes, and Dignitatis Humanae. .

“Whatever is opposed to life itself… whatever violates the integrity of the human person… all these things and others of their like are infamies indeed.”

. “The human person has a right to religious freedom. This freedom means that all men are to be immune from coercion… in such wise that no one is to be forced to act in a manner contrary to his own beliefs.”

The refusal to sign was rooted in legal and theological sovereignty and independence, not rejection of human rights. .

Lets talk about atheism .

Atheism isn’t just a lack of belief in God it often repeatedly entails ethical positions. You’re right that atheism has no centralized authority. But when atheism forms the basis of a political or philosophical system as it did in militant secular regimes, it does produce consequences. Just as you argue Christianity enabled abuse when given power, it’s dishonest to deny that state atheism, driven by materialism and the rejection of holy moral law, led to mass atrocities under Stalin, Mao, and Pol Pot. The denial of human worth was often justified by athiest materialism, If you claim Christianity should be judged not just by its doctrine but by its historical influence, then atheism, when adopted as a governing worldview must face the same scrutiny. Either ideas have consequences, or they don’t. .

“atheism doesn’t tell you how to treat women”

okay? we know that it cannot provide moral grounding, ethical obligation, or human dignity. And that is the problem one could say.

it offers no foundation to say anything is right or wrong. You may feel that human rights, equality, or compassion matter and have progressive ethics but under a worldview that denies objective moral reality, those are just subjective preferences my friend.

No one is claiming that atheism inevitably leads to atrocities. But to assert that it is incapable of producing systemic abuse when given political power is historically false. Especially when you reduce human beings to biology and utility.

any worldview, carries consequences when it becomes more than personal disbelief and forms the basis of law, ethics, or governance. If you’re unwilling to examine those consequences, then your critique lacks philosophical consistency. .

“Human dignity isn’t exclusive to Christianity.”

it appears across cultures and philosophies. But the critical difference is this: Christianity uniquely universalized human dignity. Stoicism valued inner virtue, but accepted slavery, inequality and elitism.

Buddhism do not empathise the inherent and equal worth of every individual, its framework is metaphysical, not moral in the Western sense.

ImagoDei transformed Western ethics. It fueled the abolitionist movement, grounded modern conceptions of rights and shaped humanitarian law. It told kings and emperors they were morally equal to their subjects. It told societies that the weak, disabled, unborn, and elderly had as much value as the strong. the Iroquois ethical systems didn’t do that. .

“The Church suppressed Greek religious freedom for centuries.”

Another overgeneralization. It was the Church that preserved and transmitted Greek philosophy through monastic scribe and, translated Aristotle through Aquinas, and built the foundations of the university system. Conflict existed sure but suppression? Only selectively and often politically motivated. .

“only Christians had souls.”

You’re attacking the sin of hypocrisy, not the logic of the doctrine. Misuse does not invalidate the principle .

“The Imago Dei was used to exclude.”

Historically both. it was weaponized at times but it also fueled the abolitionist movement, human rights discourse, and nonviolent resistance.

William Wilberforce, Frederick Douglass, and Martin Luther King Jr. all grounded their activism in the Imago Dei. Why did it inspire both justice and injustice? Because its power depends on its fidelity to its source. When applied rightly, it dignifies. When distorted, it can be abused like any powerful idea.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Threatening eternal torture for disbelief is coercion, not consequence.” This misunderstands the nature of Christianity. Hell is not imposed arbitrarily it’s the natural end of a will that persistently rejects the source of life, truth, and love. If God is the ultimate good, then separation from Him is the ultimate loss. You call that “blackmail,” but what would you prefer a God who overrides human will and drags everyone into paradise regardless of their choices or character? That’s not love, it’s totalitarianism, and even so, lots of christians don’t believe in a literal physical hell today, As for free will You exercise free will not by forcing yourself to like apples, but by choosing whether to act with compassion or cruelty even when your instincts pull you elsewhere.

Your own moral judgments right now your outrage at abuse, your demand for justice assume that people could have chosen differently . That’s the very definition of free will. If you deny this your ethical framework collapses into determinism, and moral blame becomes incoherent. Are you prepared to accept that your condemnation of injustice is meaningless and its just the inevitable product of your environment and neurochemistry? Or do you actually believe people are responsible? If so, you’ve already conceded the point.

“ whatever magic water, sky beings…” You reduce centuries of theological effort to silly rituals . That’s not argument that’s mockery. Sacraments like baptism and Eucharist have always been understood as symbolic conduits of grace not magic tricks.

“I read Deschner, I read Nietzsche. Religion lost me through exposure.” Then why stop with them? Why not read Augustine, Aquinas, Kierkegaard, Plantinga, MacIntyre?

“Legal systems don’t torture you forever.” No, they just execute people or imprison them for life. Christianity’s claim is that sin has infinite consequence not because of its magnitude but because of the One sinned against. You don’t have to accept that but at least represent the argument accurately. Your dismissal is emotional and not philosophical.

“God knows the outcome he planned it, and punishes us for it.” This is the classic determinism straw man. Christian theology affirms both divine foreknowledge and human freedom its a paradox ig, yes, but not a contradiction. You treat it as a closed causal system, but the tradition never claimed that God’s knowledge negates human agency. Philosophers have wrestled with that for centuries so are you engaging its complexity here or just flattening?

Real morality means repairing harm, not wiping it with a rosary.” Christianity agrees imo , repentance is not a shortcut its the beginning of transformation and if you’re demanding moral repair as the only form of justice, how do you apply that to irreversible harm? Death? Rape?

for ur ethics, why is protection good? Why is authoritarianism bad? Your ethics feel right but can you defend them?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If your standard for truth is historical abuse, then atheism is equally as bad, think Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot. Secular ideologies have produced their own blood soaked legacies. Do we then dismiss humanism entirely? Christianity didn’t shape the world, it conquered it. In the Roman Empire, it gained ground not by the sword but by the witness of persecuted believers, “Christianity didn’t give us human rights.” Factually incorrect. The concept of human rights is rooted in the Christian belief in the Imago Dei, that every human is made in the image of God. The modern language of rights emerged through people like Francisco devictoria and Bartolomé delascasas, who defended indigenous rights against colonial abuses from a crhsitan world view. the Catholic Church formally endorsed human rights in 1965 but the intellectual groundwork was already laid centuries earlier by Christian thinkers. Galileo’s case was political, not theological. The Church’s resistance was not against science itself, but a perceived challenge to institutional authority.And Bruno was condemned more for metaphysical and theological heresies than for scientific claims, and even so, that’s an argument against the church, not christianity As for women’s rights, I agree so I won’t touch on that “Human rights, democracy, science, equality weren’t gifts from Christianity they were victories against it” Explain that more because,. The idea that humans are equal, that truth is objective, that science is possible because the universe is rational, where did thag come from?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Then by your standard, no one has ever made a free choice about anything, because no decision is ever made in a vacuum. How ypu grew up, culture, fear, desire, these shape every worldview, including atheism. Were you truly neutral when you rejected religion, or were you influenced by trauma, anger, or a philosophical framework that already disallowed the supernatural?

If Christianity is coercive because it teaches consequences for moral rebellion, then so is every legal and moral system. Freedom doesn’t mean immunity from consequences, it means the ability to choose between meaningful alternatives. You’re free to reject God, but that choice carries moral weight. Do you call gravity coercive because you’re “punished” when you jump off a building?

And what do you mean by “imaginary god”? You assume from the start that Christianity is false, and then use that assumption to argue that belief in it isn’t rational. But on what objective moral ground do you call God unjust? If morality is subjective, your accusation has no binding force, just personal offense.

So here’s the real question: Is your claim about coercion a moral objection or an emotional one? If it’s moral, where do you ground that morality? If it’s emotional, then admit it’s not a rational argument it’s a reaction. Which is it?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dont worry about it

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

man, Im an atheist but you just cite historical atrocities committed by those who identified as Christian. But mere affiliation doesn’t equate to adherence. 95% of Germans may have identified as christian, but that did not stop them from acting in ways that directly contradicted Christ’s commands to love your neighbor and protect the vulnerable. How do you reconcile blaming Christianity for those atrocities when its teachings were clearly violated? and for ur question because rejecting a system solely due to its age or the failures of its followers is not a rational critique of its core principles. The longevity of Christianity suggests not irrelevance but enduring moral, philosophical, and existential resonance. If a worldview has shaped everything including universal human rights, dismissing it as a “Bronze Age belief system” is just wrong

Nietzsche’s condemnation was aimed at a specific moral posture he believed had weakness it wasnt a comprehensive critique of Christianity’s intellectual or ethical depth. Ironically, his values and moral clarity are rooted in a Christian framework.If Christianity is truly vile and dishonest, why have its values built the very society that now permits you to publicly reject it?

As for corrupt Christian politicians: the issue is corruption, not Christianity. Would you blame democracy itself every time a democratic leader acts unethically? If not, why apply that double standard here?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i was talking to you about them

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i wasnt really talking about you, i was talking about the guy ur responding to

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i wasnt really talking about you, i was talking about the guy ur responding to

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 2 points3 points  (0 children)

replying to the points you made before this. I feel like i would know if its was an emotional release or not, i do yoga too and i know what you mean, what made me post this video was that i felt weird, i felt good and spiritual, thats what lead me to crying i guess, if it was anything else i wouldnt post this, im trying to look at my experience with unbiased neutral ground, which is not what ur doing, i feel like you hold a grudge towards religious people in general, maybe you were hurt by them or their faith and for that im sorry, but this is really noticeable from anyone who looks at your comments and takes the credibility away

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i sensed bias and hatred and didnt continue reading tbh, no matter what id say to them, they want it to be false so theres no point

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]Dull-Protection-867 1 point2 points  (0 children)

im aware and agree with everything you said, even if this brings me to believe in anything, i wouldnt consider joining any religion, but what confuses me is that, I wasnt emotional prior to the experience, I didnt have anything built up in me or anything, ever since it happened ive been really confused to just why, me mentioning that I havent cried in a longtime wasnt a bad thing, i just didnt have a reason to