| | "Religion is being used by the representatives of government and politically constituted groups as a statist tool for the remaking of the modern world. And therein lies the danger."
Here we are 4 years down the road from Chris' article - a good time to take a second look and see how rock-solid his cultural and political observations have proven.
In post 14, Chris develops an excellent summary of the part that pop culture plays as a transmission belt for ideas that will affect the political future - that post is worthy of an article on its own and certainly should be of interest to those of us that want Objectivist ideas to take root.
Note that the Evangelist Rick Warren, who is mentioned in the article for his book that sold 15 million copies, went on to host the first 'debate' between McCain and Obama where they each vied to out-Christian one another. By itself this shows the strength and progression of the connection between the Christian pop culture becoming dominate and driving a political agenda. Altruism will never be happy as just a moral philosophy - it will insist on becoming moral COMMANDMENTS administered by the state.
It was sad to read those replies to his article that took on an unnecessary and unwarranted oppositional tone because they supported the war, hence supported Bush, and failed to see that the war could be looked at as a separate issue from Bush and the merging of religion and state. And certainly the war could be argued as a separate issue from the powerful Christian pop cultural trend and its relation to politics.
In post 24, Chris summarizes the focus of his article where he says, "...that pietist fundamentalism has become a mainstream ideological and cultural force, that Bush has been deeply influenced by it, and that he and his neoconservative advisors have a common belief in the culture- and nation-building enterprise, which can actually undermine the very real war on Islamic terrorists in which the US is currently engaged."
I disagree with Chris, where in post 24 he says, "...Islamic fundamentalism is a "far bigger" and certainly more immediate "threat to freedom than Bush's Republican Party, even with the pietist influence..." My concern is that the loss of key principles whether they are lost by religious influence on American politics, or from the left, say, by a President Obama, are a form of destruction that is worse for the long run than damage done by terrorists. Terrorists can kill people and destroy property - and they terrorize. But only we can destroy our understanding and valuing of liberty, of individual rights. We can recover, as a culture, as a society, as a nation from terrorist destruction. But there is no foundation to build upon, and no path to recovery for us to take, once we have killed that part of America that honors individual rights.
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p.s., It is sad that this very bright and independent thinker no longer posts at ROR.
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