Nice reply Kavelj22
...which is definitely incorrect/inappropriate and has no logic explanation.
Well, I'm an atheist and I agree with your conclusion but I think the way you say it is a little dismissive!
About morals; it wasn't directly derivated from adopting relegious beliefs, as the human being is a social creature who need to live in communities for several reasons, so need to establish a moral system for community management. We can observe this clearly with mammiferous amimals leaving in groups/communities like apes or lions or even lambs (also birds), those animals have morals or whatever you may call it but it can be defined as a conventional system to manage relationships between troop members, which is the same role of morals for human communities, without believing in supernatural powers.
Love it! Yes, moral behaviour exists to manage relationships in a community. Note also that any belief system or ideology that draws people together can have the same effect of managing relationships in the community. All these can have a positive effect irrespective of the truth of any underlying existential claims - it is only necessary that people believe the claim, not that the claim itself is true.
Strange to hear this from an atheist! It means religion book like the Bible that completely teaches morality has helped human than any form of societal teaching we have through governments and another form of society we have without such a good book like the Bible.
Do you dismiss the entire history of secular moral philosophy from the last 3000 years? The idea that any book "completely teaches morality" shows a distinct lack of appreciation of the complexity of moral discourse.
This Golden rule resolved most of the societal problem we have"do unto others as you will like them to do unto you", If we follow that simple rule we should have peace on earth.
The golden rule is a very powerful general idea indeed, but it's not without its criticisms. For example, what motivates others may differ from what motivates you - the golden rule as you state it relies on the general idea that the way you like to be treated is the way others like to be treated. This works for the majority of people but it's not a universal rule and fails miserably for outlying personalities.