If I had to pick just one, and I don't believe that I do (don't take direction well, I'm afraid), I would pick Shinto. Pretty and unobtrusive little shrines, mostly outdoors, appropriate to the blessings asked or thanked for, and no social or government stigma attached to attendance or lack thereof. Actually, no government function at all, no socially controlling dogma, and no exclusive use (dad likes me best) clause.
But it isn't what we want that matters, it is the truth that matters.
If a cliff exists and someone is walking towards it; Is it the truth that matters or is it their preference that matters? Do you think the cliff will disappear if they don't like cliffs?
'Truth' has nothing to do with religion. Truth is all about empirical proof, as in 'beyond a shadow of a doubt'. Religion is not interested in truth... religion by definition is interested in 'faith'. Faith is believing in something in spite of your valid doubts.
Thank (insert your preferred Deity here) that your assigned jury is instructed to base their decision on 'truth' rather than 'faith'.
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