Not entirely....
“There are many red flags in the Harry Potter books. One of these is the role of divination in Book Three (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban): Hogwarts provides a divination course (albeit one that some of the students and faculty find nebulous in authenticity). It is certainly logical that a young student witch or wizard would study divination; the problem is that the practice is expressly forbidden in Deuteronomy. The reference (in Book Three) to the Egyptian wizards and the potential educational value of a visit to Egypt offers an interestingly arcane if youll permit me the word challenge to Christian belief: Hermione comments, Did you see that picture of Ron and his family a week ago? I bet hes learning loads. Im really jealous the ancient Egyptian wizards were fascinating. At home, Christian children are learning a very different story about the Egyptian magicians, in Exodus 7:813, where the Egyptian magicians attempt to demonstrate their powers as superior to those of God as exercised through Moses and Aaron. When the Egyptian magicians react to the transformation of Aarons rod into a serpent by doing the same with their rods, God provides once again, and Aarons rod-serpent swallows theirs. This is a very important story in some faiths, including most conservative Christian sects, and some parents may feel that Hermiones commentary indicates approval of the Egyptian magicians work. It might also concern them that the link indicates similarities between what the Egyptian magicians did and what Harry, Hermione, and Ron are learning to do: these students are, in some ways, the educational heirs to the Egyptian magicians.”
http://www.hbook.com/magazine/articles/2000/may00_gish.asp
“I knew all I needed to know about you when you talked about having seen all 5 movies just to see how the occult was infiltrating America.”
I have watched many movies to learn about the rise of occultism in children's entertainment. 5 movies over 5 years is no big investment.
But there’s no way to win with many here. I’m an ignoramus for not reading the books and a hypocrite for having seen the movies.
No, the problem is you're criticizing the BOOKS based on the MOVIES. If you want to talk about the book, read the book. If you want to talk about the movie, watch the movie. If you'd actually read the books you're talking about, you wouldn't be getting so much flak.