The Judas Race: America’s Wars and Organized Religion
Somewhere; We'll find a new way of living (Song lyric)
By John Kozy
Global Research, August 27, 2013
Region: USA
Theme: US NATO War Agenda
Americans stamp
“In God we trust” on money. Pray tell?, what do they trust God to do? And has
anyone ever checked to see if He/She/It is doing it or even ever has?
Certainly, Americans do not expect He/Her/It to bring victory in battle. The
outcome of America’s wars since the end of WWII has not been especially
favorable; yet war is a frequent and normal American activity (see list)
in spite of James Madison’s warning:
“Of all the enemies to public
liberty war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded because it comprises and
develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of armies; from these
proceed debts and taxes … known instruments for bringing the many under the
domination of the few.… No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of
continual warfare.”
But America is not alone. In the Encyclopedia
of Wars, Phillips and Axelrod present a comprehensive list of 1,763 wars.
Many of these wars have religious aspects.
Warfare and organized religion have
arisen together; the ability to fight wars is part of any tribal structure that
is capable of supporting concerted, large-scale enterprises.
In the ancient world, each city
state had its own ruling and protecting god. Warfare between these cities was
conceived of as warfare between the cities’ gods. People, like ants, lived for
the sake of the tribe.
Although America calls itself a
“secular” nation, claiming to “trust in God” is a throwback to earlier eras in
human history. Is this God in whom we trust supposed to be our protector? Is
the War on Terror a religious, a holy war, a bellum sacrum, a war
between gods? Is it a cultural war? In spite of all the denials, this war could
very easily be called the Ninth Crusade. European wars against Muslims have
always have always been cultural about expelling Islam from the “Holy Land,”
where, in fact, nothing is holy, These wars are battles between incompatible
cultures. Why is this war on terror different? In fact, the U.N.’s placement in
of Israel in Palestine could have been just another attempt to attain the goal
denied to the West’s warfare, and the West’s defense of Israel, just another
attempt to hold on to the conquests of the Eight Days War. Trouble is, its not
working out very well. Instead of conquering the region, we have converted it
into a perpetual battlefield.
When societies were small and
principally tribal, protecting the city was synonymous with protecting its
people. The destruction of the city could very well result in the tribe’s
annihilation, but today’s societies (nations) come and go, often entailing much
killing, without that consequence. Their tribal diversity makes that
impossible. For instance, the Republic of Vietnam vanished at the end of the
Vietnamese War but the people who survived the war live on. The claim that
Israel has a right to secure borders when the even United states lacks them is
ludicrous. America’s insecure borders are legion as any border guard will tell
you.
In the Southern United States where
church fires are frequent, it is held that the building’s destruction doesn’t
affect the church itself which, it is also claimed, is its congregation, its
people. Modern nation states are much more like congregations than tribes. Why
haven’t nation states come to be thought of as these churches are; as their
peoples, not their territories? Is America a land mass in North America or is
it the people, its citizens? This ambiguity is revealing. When we send
Americans to war to defend America, exactly what are we defending? Certainly
not those we send. Are we merely killing our own people? To preserve a nation
without preserving its people seems to be nonsensical unless some people are
the protected while others are the protectors, which might very well be the
case. Do some of us exist for the sake of others?
Since 1095, Christians was been at
war with Muslims. Westerners fought and essentially lost the Crusades. They
fought the Ottoman Empire. The Nigerian Civil War, the Second Sudanese Civil
War, the Lebanese Civil War, the wars against the Palestinians, the revolution
in Iran that installed the Shah, the wars in Iraq, and Afghanistan and the
killing in Pakistan, Syria, Lebanon. Egypt, Libya, Yemen, and parts of North
Africa. All have been religious wars by Western “Christians” against Moslems
trying to reorganize the world’s societies to conform to western standards.
Many pro-westerners would ask,
what’s wrong with that? The answer is it’s inhumane. Western society has its virtues,
many of which are being destroyed in this attempt to bring about institutional
homogeny. Will you have any freedoms when one way is the only way? But wasn’t
America said to be founded on individuality?
America’s decline is well-known to
any astute person. Fareed Zakaria wrote a article
about it for Time Magazine in 2011. He asks, “Are America’s Best Days Behind
Us?”, and writes, “most Americans operate on the assumption that the U.S. is
still No. 1. But is it? . . . our 15-year-olds rank 17th in the world in
science and 25th in math. We rank 12th among developed countries in college
graduation . . . . We come in 79th in elementary-school enrollment. Our
infrastructure is ranked 23rd in the world. . . . American health numbers are
stunning for a rich country: . . . we’re 27th in life expectancy, 18th in
diabetes and first in obesity. . . .”
What is America best at? America
has the most guns, the most crime among rich countries, the highest
incarceration rate and the largest total prison population, the largest amount
of debt, the largest economy (which merely means Americans buy more stuff than
other people), and the most powerful military. And, Oh, yes: “The United States
has produced most of the greatest movies that the world has ever seen.” Isn’t
that wonderful? Aren’t you proud to be an American? Don’t you want the whole
world to be like us?
The sad thing is that Islam also
has its faults, but, of course, Muslims don’t think so. To them, Islam is the
way of life given to mankind by Allah. Therefore it is a perfect way of life,
with no error, since Allah has no faults.
But Islam is authoritarian, its
people have no rights, civil or human, and it is deterministic since the individual’s
sole purpose is to identify and carry out God’s plan. A person is merely a cog
in God’s machine.
So the human race’s prospects for
the outcome of this war are dismal. Neither Islam nor Western “Christianity”
nor any religiously based proposal will rescue us. Only humanism will. Trusting
in God is futile. God no longer lurks on Olympus. What needs to be defended is
not a country or even wealth; it is the Earth’s environment and the human race
itself.
The West is in a mad dash to
accumulate the emptiness of its pantheon. Everything is measured in terms of
money, but money has no natural value. Its value is entirely artificial. It
shelters nothing, sates no hungry stomach, relieves no suffering. All it does
is buy things that the real producers of wealth, the generic people, make, the
people without whom no society could succeed. Rid the world of financiers and
the electricity still will come on. Rid the world of electrical workers and the
bankers cannot function, which indicates that Western Society is not organic.
It is an amalgamation of analytic elements which barely work together because
it has no humane goal. This society accumulates money, somewhat as a game, that
has no use for it when it is accumulated. Billionaires who acquire fortunes come
and go. Little good is done with their money. It’s just thirty more pieced of
silver. Those that have some sense of charity set up foundations to search for
worthy causes to give their money to while overlooking the needs staring them
in the face.
Andrew Carnegie built Americans
local libraries. It was thought to be a wonderful ilea, but these libraries
failed to make Americans into better people. Others funded transactional
charities to enhance their family’s stature. Still others search for ways to
fund promising discoveries. None has ever enhanced human life substantially,
Mr. Gates, the cure for cancer may never be found, Charity promises no results.
Balzac writes that, behind every
fortune lies a great crime. It is worse. Being acquired for no human goal,
fortunes are acquired by insane people just to the fun of it. Their fortunes
guarantee them nothing. They die no older than the rest of us, diseases don’t
bypass them, their children often turn out bad, their marriages fail. Balzac
also is right when he writes, if there is a scheme worthy of our kind it is
that of transforming human beings into moral persons. Unless the welfare of
each individual human becomes the concern of the human race, the human race
will choke on its wealth and perish, and if life on Earth survives, it will
murmur “good riddance.”
John Kozy
is a retired professor of philosophy and logic who writes on social, political,
and economic issues. After serving in the U.S. Army during the Korean War, he
spent 20 years as a university professor and another 20 years working as a
writer. He has published a textbook in formal logic commercially, in academic
journals and a small number of commercial magazines, and has written a number
of guest editorials for newspapers. His on-line pieces can be found on http://www.jkozy.com/ and he can be emailed
from that site’s homepage.
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