Media theorist Douglas Rushkoff has written a great essay on the absurdity of belief, pointedly titled Faith = Illness: Why I've had it with religious tolerance.
Here are some excerpts I especially liked:
Maybe I'm just getting old, but I no longer see the real value in being tolerant of other people's beliefs. Sure, when beliefs are relegated to the realm of pure entertainment, they pose no real danger. So, a kid believes U2 is really a supergroup on par with The Beatles or The Who. That's *his* problem, and it doesn't really do a lot of harm to anyone except those of us who still stop by MTV occasionally to see what might be playing.
Actually, I think pretty highly of U2 . . . But carry on!
Like any other public health crisis, the belief in religion must now be treated as a sickness. It is an epidemic, paralyzing our nation's ability to behave in a rational way, and - given our weapons capabilities - posing an increasingly grave threat to the rest of the world.
Finally someone just fucking says it: Belief is a disease that is killing us. No meticulously qualified apologies, no lukewarm caveats, no backtracking. Thank you.
Add to that the more reliable polls finding that 35% of Americans say they are "born again" - a particularly modern phenomenon that came only after the charlatan rabble-rousers during the Great Depression - and you get a picture of a nation hoodwinked into a passive, childlike, yet dogmatic relationship to the myths that were originally written to sustain them, spur their motivation to social justice, and encourage continuing evolution.
[. . .]
But true believers don't have this freedom. Whether it's because they need the Bible to prove a real estate claim in the Middle East, because they don't know how to relate something that didn't really happen, or because they require the threat of an angry super-being who sees all in order behave like good children, true believers - what we now call fundamentalists - are not in a position to appreciate the truth and beauty of the Holy Scriptures. No, the multi-dimensional document we call the Bible is not available to them because, for them, all those stories have to be accepted as historical truth.
Go, Doug!
(Found at Boing Boing.)
U2 - better than The Who by a country mile, but The Beatles are The Beatles. Untouchable.
ReplyDeletePaul
Magnidude--
ReplyDeleteI certainly try not to!
That's not to say I always succeed, but I make a conscious effort to suppress belief, no matter how emotionally attractive the subject is.