Grimnir Wotansvolk
Banned
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2008
- Messages
- 1,415
As impressed as I've been with the Revolution, particularly the diversity it's attracted, there's still something a little disconcerting lurking here. The warm winds of freedom are being polluted with the distinctly acrid stench of religiosity.
Don't get me wrong, the fact that a few evangelical shepherds have pointed their herds in our direction is fantastic, and I certainly understand the desire for more small-community based relationships, but there's another side to this coin.
When we talk about freedom of the individual and pushing back the damage that collectivism has done to society, the very core of it all is cognitive sovereignty. I can't think of any institution more deeply rooted in collectivism than organized religion. Indeed, the caustic mixture of social conservatism and liberal economics has always sounded the death knell of a nation (Nazi Germany, for example; and before anyone says it: no, Hitler did not endorse secularism). Christianity, specifically, since it was established as Rome's religion, has long been the thing that kept the peasants working and the soldiers fighting, never daring to question the motives of their masters. This is still evident today in the fact that both mainstream democrats and republicans continue to openly endorse Christian values as a model for American living.
Now, consider the rationale behind the desired abolishment of federal education; many of the same rules apply to the church. To me, the idea of terrorizing a child's mind into submission with threats of hellfire and brimstone is infinitely more reprehensible and alarming than feeding them state-approved historical distortion. At the very least, the latter is much easier to dismantle.
Simply believing in a higher power is something I would never seek to deny anyone, but when you force a young, impressionable mind to follow in your footsteps, you've taken the first step towards creating the Orwellian nightmare that we're currently living in.
I'm sure this isn't a popular opinion here, but as an individualist I feel it needs to be said. I don't understand how we can ever achieve true freedom when 75% of the population fervently adheres to moral guidelines which seek to restrict human desires, actions, and thoughts, while utterly failing to take actual questions of human suffering into consideration.
Don't get me wrong, the fact that a few evangelical shepherds have pointed their herds in our direction is fantastic, and I certainly understand the desire for more small-community based relationships, but there's another side to this coin.
When we talk about freedom of the individual and pushing back the damage that collectivism has done to society, the very core of it all is cognitive sovereignty. I can't think of any institution more deeply rooted in collectivism than organized religion. Indeed, the caustic mixture of social conservatism and liberal economics has always sounded the death knell of a nation (Nazi Germany, for example; and before anyone says it: no, Hitler did not endorse secularism). Christianity, specifically, since it was established as Rome's religion, has long been the thing that kept the peasants working and the soldiers fighting, never daring to question the motives of their masters. This is still evident today in the fact that both mainstream democrats and republicans continue to openly endorse Christian values as a model for American living.
Now, consider the rationale behind the desired abolishment of federal education; many of the same rules apply to the church. To me, the idea of terrorizing a child's mind into submission with threats of hellfire and brimstone is infinitely more reprehensible and alarming than feeding them state-approved historical distortion. At the very least, the latter is much easier to dismantle.
Simply believing in a higher power is something I would never seek to deny anyone, but when you force a young, impressionable mind to follow in your footsteps, you've taken the first step towards creating the Orwellian nightmare that we're currently living in.
I'm sure this isn't a popular opinion here, but as an individualist I feel it needs to be said. I don't understand how we can ever achieve true freedom when 75% of the population fervently adheres to moral guidelines which seek to restrict human desires, actions, and thoughts, while utterly failing to take actual questions of human suffering into consideration.