It's also worth considering where this stuff comes from instead of ascribing anything the other team says to superstitious fools and their invisible sky man.
Branding people like cattle wasn't invented in modernity. It's infamous Nazi behavior, and the Nazis weren't the first to do it either. It's so old that people centuries ago saw how bad it turns out and put a warning against it in their ancient book.
You don't have to believe in the devil to believe that history repeats and learn a lesson from the people who came before.
I didn’t say any of that. You have no idea what I believe beyond that I don’t buy into the “mark of the beast”. Anything else you read into my comment is something you read in.
That you went straight to comparing my comment to Nazism seems a bit uncharitable.
I'm not comparing your comment to Nazism, I'm comparing universal identity systems to Nazi behavior, because that's what they are. Their primary use, the major thing they do that decentralized credentials systems don't, is to facilitate mass surveillance and authoritarianism.
My point is that this has been understood for a long time, and the people who say "mark of the beast" have a legitimacy to their concern that has been demonstrated throughout history, regardless of whether or not you believe the fine details of the allegory.
I took your particular reply as accusing me of being critical of religiosity-- specifically "...ascribing anything the other team says to superstitious fools and their invisible sky man."
I took your statement about "branding people" as a statement on this perceived accusation that I was speaking unfavorably about religiosity.
Your clarification that your were comparing universal identification to Nazism makes me read your comment in a different light.