punkofnice, I agree with your statement of "... people have wasted too much time with this religion and god nonsense". I also think it is a pity and I strongly wish human society to would abandon it. Consider the following extreme example of religious-like thinking and superstitious thinking.
Yesterday a person whom I have personally known for at least four years tried to convince me that the Earth is a plane in the sense of being flat. He said it is not a sphere and not existing out in space. I asked him if he thinks it is a least a round in the sense of being a circle (since it casts a circular shadow on the moon) and I asked him if he thinks it is at least a planet. In reply he stressed the distinction of the word "plane" not ending in the letter "t' (as in the word "planet"). Furthermore, he asked me if anyone has ever proven the Earth is a sphere by means of directly physically measuring the alleged curvature of the Earth. He offered me a small handout, which he wrote, promoting the flat Earth idea (and I suspect it had a link to website about the topic). In prior conversations he told me he has a health problem caused by his genetics which he says requires him (in order to have optimal health) to have a diet that is nearly 100% meat.
In a prior conversation he told me he used to be a Mormon (and was briefly an atheist after ceasing to be a Mormon; I first met him when he was an atheist) and that he believes in immortal life and that some kind of God exists (but not the biblical God). Soon after he ceased being an atheist he tried to convince me (using scientific knowledge about brainwaves and energy) that the consciousness (soul) of humans continues to exist after the human body dies; he also tried to convince me to stop being an atheist. Though he now believes in evolution (at least to some extent) he is convinced that extraterrestrial beings created Humans by genetically modifying life (apes or australopithecines?) which had had already existed on Earth, and I think I recall him saying the aliens made humans to serve as slaves to the aliens (to mine for something which they needed and I think he said it was for gold). He said that the ancient humans thought the extraterrestrial aliens were gods, and I think he has spoken of those aliens as the creators. Furthermore, he says the story in the Sci-Fi movie called "Prometheus" is very close to the fact of how humans came into existence.
He has also told me the following: some people on Earth are reptilians - including Hillary Clinton; humans are not contributing in a major way to climate change (and global warming) and that no drastic dangerous climate change is taking place and that rising levels of CO2 in Earth's atmosphere are not going to be a danger; he believes that a number of UFO sightings are of actual extraterrestrial spacecraft; he says the aliens believe in pantheism, but he doesn't seem to believe in pantheism.
He voted for Trump in 2016 and back in 2016 he tried to convince me to vote for Trump.
He also voted for Trump in 2020, but he is socially liberal and uses marijuana. One time at his home he showed me a vaporizer he used and I think one time he offered some marijuana to me (if so I declined the offer). I think he is fiscally conservative and a libertarian Republican. One time he showed me a portion of a pistol and invited me to touch it (I refused to do so).
Despite not being convinced of climate change (in the sense of it being a dangerous trend), he likes electric cars and when I saw him yesterday he was showing me his Chevrolet Volt all-electric battery powered car which he bought used. I think he said he bought it when it had about 100,000 miles on it. He said it has a 200,000 mile warranty on the battery pack, but that the manufacturers of electric cars don't know how long the battery packs will last, and that it might last 300,000 miles. He mentioned that buying a used electric car that is a certain number of years old is more cost effective in the long run than buying a gasoline powered car. When it comes to electric cars I also like them (compared to fossil fuel combustion engine cars) but I have yet to own one.