Um, a bit of clarification for rameseytheii... I wasn't talking about belief as the religious identity of the individual, I was talking about any belief in general, such as the belief that there's nothing wrong with homosexuality.
Since there are certain values which can be shown to be true rationally, and don't need a Holy Book in order to be true, I think you are jumping way overboard with that last statement. To equate atheism with complete subjectivity is just bad logick. Belief in itself does not make something good - otherwise, it would be good for the Muslim world to assassinate Salman Rushdie; it would be good for them to practice female circumcision; it would be good for the Amerikan religious to criminalize homosexuality and a host of other things that the Holy Scrit holds as wrong - all because those people believe it to be right.
No! Stand up for rational values, values that may be present in holy books, but that can be just as real outside of them.
I was never talking specifically about atheism/other religion. And "Belief in itself does not..." was exactly what I (thought I was) implying and warning against. But the problem is, the muslim world, or at least a considerable part of it, -is- convinced that murdering Salaman Rushdie would be good, and they just won't let themselves be convinced otherwise.
The troubling question is... are there any truly universal rational values?
There is nothing either good or bad but thinking makes it so.
-William Shakespeare. 
Good or bad? Possibly. Right or wrong? Hardly.
Good or bad is indeed individual, because the final evaluation is always done by the individual who acted. If someone else tries to evaluate, their view the individual either will, or will not accept.
Right or wrong, however, starts taking other people and facts on the ground into the equation.
Example: Hiroshima. Obviously, it's a bad thing to kill a score of civillians. At the same time, it was obviously the right thing to do - it ended the war with the least total number of casualities, even civillian. Plus, responsibility comes into play big time, too - you have definitely more responsibility to your soldiers, who would have died in scores, had the US invaded Japan, than to the enemy.
By the way, W. R., I still didn't get an answer to that rocket launcher question I asked earlier. Does that mean you don't have an answer you'd be willing to post?
Wrong and right are concepts created by/for man. All animals on this planet kill to live. Some animals kill to mate.
Are these animals wrong? Yes, no....
Irrelevant.
The answer to the question is based solely on the beliefs of who ever answers it.
And at it's basic core, regardless of how many manifesto you post, belief is irrational.
It varies from person to person, culture to culture, society to society.
Given that belief is irrational, to say one belief is better or worse than another is irrational because one if speaking from the frame of one's beliefs ie an irrational one.
The only real truths, one could say, are life and death. And on a personal level even death is a bit out there (no references).
At the end of the day, all we really have are irrationalities and tendency to push them on to other people.
Now excuse meh while ah go cut mah wrists 
The pointlessness of it all!!!!!!!! 
On the next 24.....beep....beep.....beep...beep....
The animal example is a bad one. Animals lack will. Right and wrong are related to will, so it's indeed irrelevant, but not because the beliefs of the answering person, rather because right and wrong cannot be applied to acts that lack the conscious will to act.
"Given that belief is irrational, to say one belief is better or worse than another is irrational because one if speaking from the frame of one's beliefs ie an irrational one." Again, it's a matter of good/bad vs. right/wrong. As far as beliefs about good and bad go - I agree. Right or wrong, though, can be measured to how benefiting they are to the sum of individuals involved...
Right and wrong, even if created by man and for man, contain the keyword FOR.
[Experiment: think (crude, but maybe illustrative) maths: set S of individuals involved (let's name this set "Immediate Society"), action A and effect e, which falls into <-1;1> interval. To each individual I
n of the set S, ascribe e
n, which says how benefiting the action is to the individual. Let's say -1 is murder, +1 is saving life. Now, to each I
n there is a coeficient of responsibility r > 0, by which you multiply e
n. Now, an average of all the e
n x r
n gives how benefiting to society S action A is. The one with the highest benefit is the right one.

What say you?]
Let's accept that belief is irrational... But what is there when you decide, besides belief?
The realities are life and death. Is that enough?
Dunno. Meh is a bit worried.
