Personally, i don't think so. It's the application. There's a
  "something good" inside of each of the religions: that is part
  of it's power. There's a large dose of pragmatic psychology in
  religions - it goes beyond 'laws' and into daily life issues.
  Secularism has failed so far to be a fully effective replacement
  new religion because it lacks a cohesive system but it's getting
  better at it through the past few centuries. I believe there are
  elements that can lead to bias and elements that can lead to
  understanding in all human "betterment" systems. It's all about
  who is applying it and its effectiveness... mostly on an
  individual basis, but also perhaps institutionally as well.