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I suppose it would depend a bit on how we concieved mental illness. If we assume that mental illness occurs once a person can no longer function in society or in their reference group then its a definte maybe. I think within their communities, they find fairly fufilling lives most often. Around like minded people it is quite possible that lifestyles that the mainstream finds strange or in this case most often, backward, can still have a lot of meaning. Admist the backdrop of all of society though they could run into some problems depending on where they were outside of their reference group. There is a lot about fundamentalist beliefs that will often be riducled as it is incompatibale at times with many aspects of the collective conciouness. Still from a strictly economic sense, most could still probably participate, but may be set up for some failure if they were not prepared for a lot of negativity toward their belief system.

So id say it depends on where they are, but potentially yes.

2006-10-26 21:28:55 · answer #1 · answered by blindog23 4 · 0 1

There is no such thing as a Fundamentalist Christian Taliban Preacher.
And Christian Preachers do not cause mental illness, I should know I am one.

2006-10-26 21:28:19 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Listen here.. Huh, Whaa??

2006-10-26 21:25:09 · answer #3 · answered by fe2bsho 3 · 0 1

Maybe you're thinking way too much!!

2006-10-26 21:24:48 · answer #4 · answered by yidlmama 5 · 0 0

what are you saying????

2006-10-26 21:27:42 · answer #5 · answered by ausblue 7 · 0 1

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