Hey beastie,
Is my atheist bias blinding me?
Nope. In fact, from reading what you post on this board, I think you are one of the most moderate (in the good sense of the word) and fair atheists I've come across. You don't just look at believers as a bunch of mindless idiots, but you do take religion to task as it should be. As a Christian, I see no fault in your doing this, and I honestly agree with you.
Would this current world-mess have occured without religion as a vehicle of manipulation?
Only one thing I could think of, and I think that this goes hand in hand with religion a lot of times: money. Other than that, I don't see any other motivation.
Could any other type of paradigm have that power?
Again, the love of money being the root of all evil, though I think there are a few more roots out there. Religion in and of itself, devoid of individual spirituality and completely focused on keeping up with the group is another root.
I believe in Jesus Christ, but I don't see much out there in mainstream Christianity that impresses me. I grew up being told I was going to hell, and I believed that. I see people who will smile in your face because that's "the Christian thing to do", but will gossip behind your back. My mom was on a rant this weekend about "church people". I don't ever want to be identified along with such folks, but having the word "evangelical" alongside other labels within my personal Christianity doesn't make that very simple.
I think a lot of people in this world are very frightened, and instead of realizing that we all have to leave here someday and to make each day count, they look to God to solve all their problems. The wisest thing I was ever told was the cliché that God helps those who help themselves. Not by exacerbating problems in the Middle East in order to bring on Armageddon (terrorize Iraq yet pamper Israel), not by focusing on being "God's chosen people", to the detriment of everyone who doesn't believe like you, not by shutting every non-Christian out of meaninful life (and worship) in the U.S. We need to help ourselves by seeing the humanity inherent in each individual, and for Christians by really and carefully reading their Bibles (Romans 2:14 provides a bit of a glimpse into how God deals with those who speak different "faith languages"), not just picking folks to condemn. The lack of understanding of what the Bible really says (it takes more than just a cursory read, it takes a lot of study as I have come to learn, or else you DO misunderstand), is what has driven many Christians to fundamentalism. That and reading everything literally. True Bible scholars aren't in agreement on every aspect of this book, not to mention how it was compiled. To act like God wrote it is dangerous and absurd, and that attitude is what is causing this country to be swept away by legalism wrongly called "Christian values". Makes me sick, to be honest.
Think about what you do when you do something religiously. Today, we are doing our religion religiously. Nuclear threat, terrorism, disease, not to mention the ever prevalent cultural differences that we've always faced, trying to somehow come to a place of peace on a rock where everyone is so different (and that's the beautiful thing, if people could just stop acting like spooked animals, sheesh!), all these things have people turning to God as if he's some sort of parent who shows favors. That is hardly the case.