Tampilkan postingan dengan label Frederick "Fog" Horne's CyberColumns. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Frederick "Fog" Horne's CyberColumns. Tampilkan semua postingan

Minggu, 26 Agustus 2007

Easier to Hate Than to Love

In the United States right-wing "hate radio" talk shows are alive and well....

...further dividing an already badly divided country, and....

...fueling attacks against gays, Jews, blacks, immigrants, and most anybody else who "isn't like us."

These talk shows provide daily fodder for the more than 600 recognized hate groups in the U.S.

Can it just be a coincidence that violence and murder based on race, religion, sexual orientation or disability have reached a five-year high in the U-S-of-A?

Ironically, a great many of these groups flourish under the Christian banner.

After spending more than fourscore years observing and chronicling human behavior, I'll offer some suggestions.

First, it's very easy to stir up feelings anger and hatred.

Once these emotions are ignited, further fanning the flames is even easier.

Soon, clear thinking and reason seem far less satisfying than venting this anger and hatred, and even striking out with violence...

...especially for the folks who have trouble with clear thinking and reason...

..and especially for people that are sitting on a lot of anger to start with...

...which, of course, includes a few million of the ever-growing-number of our economically disenfranchised.

Early in our nation's history we had mob violence and lynch mobs.

Today, we have contagious anger and "righteous indignation" from talk show hosts...

...who typically wrap their views in super-patriotism and even some aberrant form of Christianity.

Hate is easy...arousing...appealing...and it generates listeners and ratings.

Love is difficult...hard to explicate.

Despite what the originator of Christianity said...God, Guns and Guts

...the very individual that these people profess to follow...

..far too many of these super-Christian, God, guns, and guts people...

...see love as sissy...

...embarrassing...

...not "macho."

And then there is this.

Consider these quotes that you will never hear openly admitted:

"I can only feel better about my own plight by putting down other people."

(Was it Lincoln who said the only way some people can appear taller is by trying to cut other people off at the knees?)

Or, "The only way I can feel adequate is by aligning myself with a group that...

...crusades against some 'inferior,' 'immoral,' or 'evil' entity....

...thus making 'us' feel superior to 'them'...

...and giving me a noble and motivating purpose."

Right-wing religions try to justify their latent anger and jealousies in the name of....

...good verses evil and...

...some god that bears no resemblance to the loving God of any enlightened scriptures.

It is said that hate is not the opposite of love, but rather fear.

It would seem that we need no better evidence than the fear-based right-wing groups we see emerging.


© 2006, Frederick Horne
All Rights Reserved

Broadcasting Promotes Hate?

I just saw a documentary on TV about skinheads, religious-right extremists, and neo-Nazi people.... Doesn't that [publicity] just help their sick cause?


Possibly; but, then again, these broadcasts make the rest of us aware of the dangers of these views. Many people get sucked into these "causes," without knowing what they really represent.

For example, the "charming and charismatic" Rev. H. in Illinois, is a key figure in America's hate community. His church has 70,000 to 80,000 members in 49 states and 28 countries. (We'll not give his full name or the name of the church, since these people tend to sue and harass the "infidels" who expose them.)

The members of this "Christian" church have reportedly shot, knifed or beaten blacks, Jews and Asian-Americans in several states.

I'm not sure if the Rev. H. was one of the subjects of the documentary you saw, but I feel that getting the word out on what this "charismatic church leader" represents is important.

Personally, I have a greater problem with the right-wing conservative radio talk shows broadcast daily on hundreds of radio stations that fan the flames of hatred.

I have gotten e-mails from these people, full of "facts" that simply weren't true.

I've sometimes responded by pointed to very clear evidence contradicting their "facts," in one case including a denial by the very person they quoted.

This apparently doesn't make any difference. They are "right," and anything to the contrary is simply not relevant.

Probably the kindest response I've gotten from my attempts to set the record straight is that they don't wish to hear from me any more. Of course, the old saying, "I've got my mind made up, don't confuse me with the facts," comes immediately to mind.

We've all been taught that religion should espouse love and forgiveness. Unfortunately, today some "religions" preach just the opposite.

I think of the Christian Reconstructionists, who, quoting Deuteronomy, want to re-establish Old Testament laws, and stone to death adulterers and heretics.

Since "adultery" can be in the mind only, and a "heretic" is by definition anyone who doesn't believe as they do, they could justifiably murder almost every person on earth with this belief — while being convinced they were simply doing God's will.

Of course, if you've been reading the news since the 9/11terrorist attack, you know that this view sounds very familiar.

At least television programs such as the one you saw bring such imprudence to light.


© 2006, All Rights Reserved

Hate Radio (and TV)

Hate radio, as Fog calls it, may be creating a lot of hate, but have you considered what some of our esteemed religious leaders are doing to promote the cause of hate? (We'll get to hate TV a moment.)

These people would be the last place anyone should look for any kind of example to our young people.

Here are some examples I picked out of today's paper.

We all heard about Falwell's comments [on 60 Minutes] where he said Mohammed was a terrorist.

That set off riots around the world and removed a lot of doubt around the world on whether this country hates Muslims.

Then there's Pat Roberson who called Mohammed "a robber and a brigand."

If that wasn't enough, he went on to say Islam was "a monumental scam."

This is the same guy who went on TV and blamed 9/11 on abortionists, gays, lesbians, feminists, the ACLU, and People For the American Way.

These guys are starting riots and they have the nerve to point the finger at others.

...What's scary is that they have thousands of followers and rake in millions of dollars to promote their warped views.

Islamic fundamentalists are having a field day with such comments, and it only justifies the causes of the terrorist fringe.

This also makes it very hard for the 1.2 billion peace loving Muslims around the world to try to temper the fundamentalist rhetoric of those who have terrorist tendencies.

But, it's not just right-wing nuts that are setting new lows in religious tolerance.

The Rev. David Benkie, a Lutheran, was condemned by fellow ministers for taking part in a prayer service in Yankee Stadium after 9/11 to pray and sing patriotic songs.

Six pastors from the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod are trying to have him bounced out of his church because he "participated in idolatry by participating with non-Christians."

According to a newspaper account, one of the accusing Rev's said the Rev. Benkie was an "idol worshiper."

Why? Because Benkie appeared on stage with non-Christians while trying to bring people together in prayer and patriotic songs.

Since this involved standing alongside "heretics" and standing in silence as others such as Muslims, Jews, Hindus and Christians of other denominations prayed, he "participated in idolatry," and they want him thrown out of the church.

Hate TV?

This kind of hat speech is not just confined to radio, of course. Many examples could be cited from TV.

For example, according to a tally by three University of Indiana scholars, the very popular Fox News' host, Bill O'Riley, averages 8.88 instances of name calling per minute and one insult every 6.8 seconds.


© 2007, All Rights Reserved


A Naton Founded on Christian Principles?

I get into the most trouble whenever I touch on religious issues in these columns.

Sex comes in a close second, in case you're wondering.

But, what's a few more nasty letters.

I constantly hear Religious-Right types reminding us that this nation must return to the Christian principles of our founding fathers.

People like

  • George Washington
  • Thomas Jefferson
  • John Adams
  • Abraham Lincoln
  • James Madison (considered the author of the U.S. Constitution)

Want to hear what these people really said?


George Washington - "The father of our country"

The United States is in no sense founded upon the Christian doctrine.


Thomas Jefferson* -

I do not find in orthodox Christianity
one redeeming feature. The day will come when the mystical generation of Jesus, by the Supreme Being as his Father, in the womb of a virgin will be classified with the fable of the generation of Minerva in the brain of Jupiter.


Abraham Lincoln -

The Bible is not my book, and Christianity is not my religion. I could never give assent to the long, complicated statements of Christian dogma.


John Adams -

The divinity of Jesus is made a convenient cover for absurdity. Nowhere in the Gospels do we find a precept for Creeds, Confessions, Oaths, Doctrines, and... foolish trumpery that we find in Christianity.


>>" align="absmiddle" border="0">James Madison (considered the author of the U.S. Constitution)-

During almost fifteen centuries has the legal establishment of Christianity been on trial. What has been its fruits? More or less, in all places, pride and indolence in the Clergy, ignorance and severity in the laity; in both superstition, bigotry, and persecution.


And it goes on, but you get the idea.

It would be a bit hard to assume that all this was taken out of context.

And, in case you are wondering, these people were not atheists. Generally speaking, they were people who believed in God and espoused solid ethical principles.

You might wonder why you haven't heard about these views before.

The answer is simple.

In accordance with our predominant Judeo-Christian biases they have simply been — how shall we say this — "overlooked."

Could the Religious Right be equating a belief in God with Christianity?

It would seem that most people in the world believe in God...

...but most people in the world aren't Christians.

One thing sure, when it comes to our founding fathers it would seem that the rhetoric of the Religious Right is based more on wishful thinking than on truth.


Despite the arguments of contemporary preachers of the Religious Right...humanism is neither un-American nor, for that matter un-Christian.

Jefferson, Franklin, and the men who framed the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution were anticlerical Deists.... They created America as an experiment in democracy, freedom and humanism. -Dr. E.C. Johnson

* Thomas Jefferson spent considerable time investigating the Bible and the life of Jesus. He subsequently wrote, The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth, detailing his findings -- findings that differ in major ways with typical Christian beliefs.


© 2005, Frederick Horne

All Rights Reserved

Setting the record straight: I'm Anti-Religious?!

Okay, so you read some of these columns and now you think I'm anti-religious.

Fact is, I'm not anti-religious; I'm just against a good many of the self-proclaimed religious types.

Especially the ones who try to convince me I'm going to hell unless I believe exactly they way they do.

For example, I attended at Church of Christ service once near here...

... and was told, pure and simple, that any person that was not a member of the Church of Christ was destined for hell.

Didn't seem to be any doubt in their minds about that.

Trouble is that today there more than 10,000 different Christian church belief systems out there...

...each one sure that they have the right answer.

So whatever I believe there are probably 9,900 Christian views on why I'm wrong.

With these odds, heaven and hell end up being pretty much a crap shoot.

Fact is it's little wonder with all these different ideas about whose right and whose wrong we've ended up killing more people throughout history in the name of religion than for any other single cause...*

...not to mention the few thousand people we tortured into confessing they were "witches" or "werewolves." (In case you weren't around in the 1600s, we burned them alive to save their souls.)

Sorry, I'm sounding anti-religious again, so I'll get to my point.

Some weeks back I was reading Cherry Lee's stuff here at CyberCollege.** Okay, so it's called Young and Single and I'm pretty over-the-hill; but I am single, so I half qualify.

Most people read her stuff for the sexy parts...but, of course, not me...

...although I can still remember stuff like that.

Anyway, she was talking about a lot of people — young people I assume — warming up to a book called Love Without Conditions — Reflections of the Christ Mind by Paul Ferrini.

Even at my age I try to be hip, so I tried to get a copy.

Couldn't find it anywhere.

No book store in these parts ever heard of it.

Which, of course, made me want it all the more.

Someone finally discovered it did exist and so they ordered it for me. It cost me $12 from some obscure publisher called Heartways Press.

I read it — in very small doses. Pretty radical stuff.

Not for those who don't like to put their Christian values to a real test, or anyone who has a vested interest in "business as usual."

You can be sure it won't catch on with the "God, guns, and guts" crowd.

For those who don't reject the book wholesale after the first chapter or so in favor of the latest serial-killer paperback, the ideas can represent a real time bomb in the way you look at things.

Especially from my perspective of a life full of personal battle scars...

...not to mention a few decades of exposure to the kind of stuff you have to cover in the newspaper business.

After a few decades of that you sort of figure there's got to be a better way of going about this thing called life.

So even if you can't accept all this book has to say right off, it still gives you a lot to think about.

And, by comparison, religion as we now know it looks...

...downright anti-religious.


*This statement has been challenged by readers; some saying that this has to apply to religions other than Christianity. Fact is, Fog was being kind by not pointing specifically to Christianity.

A careful reading of history shows that more people have been murdered in the "cause of Christ" than the combined totals killed by Hitler and Stalin.

The Conquistadors, to cite the worst example, killed 50-million Maya—the greatest genocide the world has ever known—in the name of the man who told us to not only forgive our enemies, but to love them.

**This had to be moved to another site after some instructors and administrators complained that the material on birth control and the prevention of sexual disease was inappropriate for young people.


© 2005, Frederick Horne
All Rights Reserved

God As A Weapon Against Humanity

Since I live next to the ocean on this Florida sand dune...

...I pay particular attention to weather forecasts and the possibility of "acts of God."

So when I read that a well known religious broadcaster, Pat Robertson, said on "The 700 Club"...

...that God may vent His wrath against Orlando, Florida by summoning hurricanes, earthquakes, terrorist bombs "and possibly even a meteor," I took notice.

After all, a good wind could pretty well wipe out...

...me, my cat and my trailer (with the ocean view).

And, come to think of it, an earthquake, a terrorist bomb, or a meteor wouldn't be so good either.

Why would God be so upset with Orlando?

After all, it's conservative and Republican...

...both of which appear to be important for staying on God's good side and getting into heaven — at least according to some who do a lot of talking about these things.

Well, it seems that Robertson feels God could well direct such things this way to get even with Orlando for recently allowing gay groups to put up rainbow flags...

...in support of sexual diversity.

If some flags in Orlando could cause such divine retribution, I sure glad I don't live near San Francisco!

But, come to think of it, they had a big earthquake a few years back.

So I guess that was God's way of getting even with the goings-on there.

But I wonder how Robertson explains school buses on the way to church camp that overturn killing children...

...or bombs that go off in Christian churches?

Maybe one of those children was a latent homosexual...

...or someone in that church was thinking homosexual thoughts.

Okay, so that was beneath even me, but ponder this for a moment:

Do not the bulk of these TV preachers get their power and status (not to mention considerable wealth) from...

...trying to get the rest of us to believe they hold a privileged position with God...

...and possess some sort of divine wisdom?

Once we believe such things, these people can go on to make threats on God's behalf.

...hurricanes, earthquakes, or terrorist bombs.

Maybe there will even be a self-styled terrorist who feels he'll simply be doing God's work by blowing up a building somewhere.

Sort of save Him the trouble.

Once we start believing such stuff, is getting 900 men, women and children to drink cyanide all that hard to believe? (Remember Jonestown?)

Or slaughtering men, women and children (heretics!) in the name of a (loving!) God.(Are you up on your history?)

Pretty extreme rhetoric?

Yes.

But I was in the newspaper business for a few decades and regularly saw such stuff...both here and around the world.

And stuff like this will continue to happen...

...until we really get hold of the central message of all real religions.

It's expressed in many ways, but it all comes down to...

...love your neighbor as yourself...

...even if your neighbor is a different race or sexual orientation....or disagrees with your beliefs...

...(beliefs, incidentally, that have an uncomfortable way of changing over time).

Using God as a weapon against people is a little like the kid who constantly threatens to have his big brother beat up on you...

...unless you do as he says.

In addition to the commandment to place love above all else...

...God gave us an individual mind and an ability to think.

Maybe His plan was to have us use these...

...and not abandon them and blindly follow anyone...

...who is counting on us not to use them

© 2005, Frederick Horne

All Rights Reserved



Christianity and the Murder Rate..

Strange thing about the relationship between religion (specifically Christianity) and murder...

...for the most part the relationship runs in reverse of what you might think...

...at least if you use church attendance as your measure of "religious."


Consider these facts:


Church Attendance Rank

Murder Rate

#1 Louisiana

twice the U.S. average

#2 U.S. Bible Belt

Significantly higher than U.S. average

#3 United States

base line for comparison

#4 Britain

1/6 that of the United States

#5 France

1/7 that of the United States

#6 Australia

1/5 that of the United States

#7 Sweden

1/5 that of the United States

#8 Japan

1/5 that of the United States

With the exception of possibly Italy, Belgium, and Ireland, there are few advanced nations that have high rates of church attendance and low rates of murder. (In the latter case, of course, you have to discount decades of war between Protestants and Catholics.)

Does all this mean that religion — primarily Christianity — causes violence?

No, as Steve Chapman so clearly points out in his recent Slate article (where I stole most of the above data), relationships don't necessary mean causal relationships.

So what does this mean?

First, I have no doubt that Christianity has done tremendous good...


...kept families together

...provided strength and consolation for many people during difficult times

...inspired charitable organizations and causes

...pacified anger and in the process kept quite a few people alive

At the same time we are also faced with the clear reverse relationship between church attendance in most countries and murder — especially in the United States.

Since Christianity espouses peace, forgiveness, and turning the other cheek...

...and assuming that church attendance doesn't somehow work against these central Christian concepts...

...we must look for other related (or reversely-related) factors.

Here are some factors that, statistically, tend to be reversely related to church attendance:

  • educational level
  • economic status
  • social tolerance (acceptance of people that are "different")
  • liberal viewpoints

Makes you wonder about some things, doesn't it?


PS: Since many have asked, it is this type of article that got the response from a couple of my former newspaper editors mentioned in an earlier column, "I don't care if it is true, we can't print it; our readers won't like it and we'll lose subscriptions."


EDITOR'S NOTE: After this was published by "Fog," it was pointed out by a reader that "the Bible belt" contains the highest percentage of two minority groups that are associated with higher than average crime rates.











Sumber:

http://www.cybercollege.com/fog33.htm

© 2006, Frederick Horne
All Rights Reserved