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Chris Hedges: Fundamentalism Kills

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-26-11 06:55 AM
Original message
Chris Hedges: Fundamentalism Kills
from Truthdig:




Fundamentalism Kills

Posted on Jul 26, 2011
By Chris Hedges


The gravest threat we face from terrorism, as the killings in Norway by Anders Behring Breivik underscore, comes not from the Islamic world but the radical Christian right and the secular fundamentalists who propagate the bigoted, hateful caricatures of observant Muslims and those defined as our internal enemies. The caricature and fear are spread as diligently by the Christian right as they are by atheists such as Sam Harris and Christopher Hitchens. Our religious and secular fundamentalists all peddle the same racist filth and intolerance that infected Breivik. This filth has poisoned and degraded our civil discourse. The looming economic and environmental collapse will provide sparks and tinder to transform this coarse language of fundamentalist hatred into, I fear, the murderous rampages experienced by Norway. I worry more about the Anders Breiviks than the Mohammed Attas.

The battle under way in America is not between religion and science. It is not between those who embrace the rational and those who believe in biblical myth. It is not between Western civilization and Islam. The blustering televangelists and the New Atheists, the television pundits and our vaunted Middle East specialists and experts, are all part of our vast, simplistic culture of mindless entertainment. They are in show business. They cannot afford complexity. Religion and science, facts and lies, truth and fiction, are the least of their concerns. They trade insults and clichés like cartoon characters. They don masks. One wears the mask of religion. One wears the mask of science. One wears the mask of journalism. One wears the mask of the terrorism expert. They jab back and forth in predictable sound bites. It is a sterile and useless debate between bizarre subsets of American culture. Some use the scientific theory of evolution to explain the behavior and rules for complex social and political systems, and others insist that the six-day creation story in Genesis is a factual account. The danger we face is not in the quarrel between religion advocates and evolution advocates, but in the widespread mental habit of fundamentalism itself.

We live in a fundamentalist culture. Our utopian visions of inevitable human progress, obsession with endless consumption, and fetish for power and unlimited growth are fed by illusions that are as dangerous as fantasies about the Second Coming. These beliefs are the newest expression of the infatuation with the apocalypse, one first articulated to Western culture by the early church. This apocalyptic vision was as central to the murderous beliefs of the French Jacobins, the Russian Bolsheviks and the German fascists as it was to the early Christians. The historian Arnold Toynbee argues that racism in Anglo-American culture was given a special virulence after the publication of the King James Bible. The concept of “the chosen people” was quickly adopted, he wrote, by British and American imperialists. It fed the disease of white supremacy. It gave them the moral sanction to dominate and destroy other races, from the Native Americans to those on the subcontinent.

Our secular and religious fundamentalists come out of this twisted yearning for the apocalypse and belief in the “chosen people.” They advocate, in the language of religion and scientific rationalism, the divine right of our domination, the clash of civilizations. They assure us that we are headed into the broad, uplifting world of universal democracy and a global free market once we sign on for the subjugation and extermination of those who oppose us. They insist—as the fascists and the communists did—that this call for a new world is based on reason, factual evidence and science or divine will. But schemes for universal human advancement, no matter what language is used to justify them, are always mythic. They are designed to satisfy a yearning for meaning and purpose. They give the proponents of these myths the status of soothsayers and prophets. And, when acted upon, they fill the Earth with mass graves, bombed cities, widespread misery and penal colonies. The extent of this fundamentalism is evident in the strident utterances of the Christian right as well as those of the so-called New Atheists. ..........(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/fundamentalism_kills_20110726/



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HereSince1628 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-26-11 07:04 AM
Response to Original message
1. Wasn't this a premise of the BBC's "Power of Nightmares"
as presented in episode 1? As I remember it the authors of that documentary saw Neocons and Islamic militants as clashing fundamentalists.
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immoderate Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-26-11 10:37 AM
Response to Original message
2. Hedges is full of shit here.
What "secular fundamentalists" have a "twisted yearning for the apocalypse?"
It's a false equivalency. Reality is not the same as fantasy.


--imm
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GillesDeleuze Donating Member (841 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-26-11 10:46 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. Unless he's referring a specific breed of NEOCON, then, yeah, thats bullshit.
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MisterP Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-26-11 02:30 PM
Response to Original message
4. going to Islamophobia Watch, you can see that Breivik's rants aren't "extremist"
at all: they're very broadly shared
just ask Muslim French schoolgirls how tolerant laïcité is when it's defending "true European culture"
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