NPR sort-of disses euthanasia

May 21, 2015 • 9:30 am

The National Public Radio (NPR) “Health” site has a sad article about a young mother in California terminally ill with scleroderma, and near the end of her life.  It’s going to be a pretty grim death as her lungs first give out, and then her heart.  But the mother, Stephanie Packer, is religious, and has decided against assisted dying because only God has the right to end someone’s life. As the article notes,

 She and husband Brian, 36, are devout Catholics. They agree with their church that doctors should never hasten death.

“We’re a faith-based family,” he says. “God put us here on earth and only God can take us away. And he has a master plan for us, and if suffering is part of that plan, which it seems to be, then so be it.”

That is her choice, though if you’re an unbeliever you’re relieved of the burden of “letting God decide,” and can die when you so choose. But Packer goes further, criticizing a new California bill that allows terminal patients to receive “end of life” medications.

They also believe if California legislation called SB 128 passes, it would create the potential for abuse. Pressure to end one’s life, they fear, could become a dangerous norm, especially in a world defined by high-cost medical care.

Instead of fatal medication, Stephanie says she hopes other terminally ill people consider existing palliative medicine and hospice care.

“Death can be beautiful and peaceful,” she says. “It’s a natural process that should be allowed to happen on its own.” Even, she says, when it poses uncomfortable challenges.

Sadly, as any doctor knows, death isn’t always “beautiful and peaceful” (ALS is one example) and a fair number of people would prefer to take a fatal dose of morphine (often given anyway by concerned doctors) or barbiturates rather than suffer needlessly.  Of course Packer has the right to give her opinion about the bill, but trying to prevent its passage is a way of forcing one’s religious beliefs on those who don’t share them. Not all of us believe in God, and even some believers don’t feel that they have to wait for God to take them.  Further, the “slippery-slope” argument simply hasn’t panned out in states and countries that allow assisted dying.

It’s interesting to compare this story with NPR’s treatment of Brittany Maynard, a 29-year-old woman with incurable brain cancer who moved from California to Oregon so she could end her life when she wanted. (She passed away on November 1 of last year.) After Brittany explained her reasons in the article, NPR decided to give the arguments against assisted dying:

But this is a complicated topic. As The Washington Post reports, just as [Maynard] had support for her decision, there were others who tried to persuade her to live:

“Ira Byock, chief medical officer of the Institute for Human Caring of Providence Health and Services, spoke loudly against the practice.

“‘When doctor-induced death becomes an accepted response to the suffering of dying people, logical extensions grease the slippery slope,’ he wrote in a New York Times op-ed. He cited statistics in Holland, where the practice is permitted, that claim more than 40 people sought and received doctor-assisted death for depression and other mental disorders. ‘Even the psychiatrist who began this practice in the 90′s recently declared the situation had gone “off the rails.”

“‘Moral outrage is appropriate and needed to fix the sorry state of dying in America. Legalizing assisted suicide fixes nothing. The principle that doctors must not kill patients stands.'”

Note that both sides are presented in the article about Brittany Maynard, but only one side, against assisted-dying, in the piece on Stephanie Packer (and the paragraphs right above are basically the end of the piece).

Is this more coddling of faith by NPR? I don’t know, but the journalistic treatment of the two cases is hardly comparable.

h/t: Cindy

Another cowardly university bites the dust: Queen’s Uni in Belfast cancels Charlie Hebdo symposium

April 22, 2015 • 10:00 am

Queen’s University in Belfast was scheduled to hold a conference on June 4 and 5 on the Charlie Hebdo affair. Its title, “Understanding Charlie: New perspectives on contemporary citizenship after Charlie Hebdo Symposium,” shows clearly that it was an academic symposium, but journalists and novelists were also invited to speak; and I gather its aim was to discuss issues about the magazine’s satire and the terrorist attack that killed its writers and cartoonists.

Sadly, Queen’s University has followed many of its peer schools by canceling the symposium. They did so on two grounds: a supposed “security risk” and worries about the University’s “reputation.”

As the Guardian notes:

An email circulated from the vice chancellor’s office to staff earlier this week said: “The vice chancellor at Queen’s University Belfast has made the decision just this morning that he does not wish our symposium to go ahead.
“He is concerned about the security risk for delegates and about the reputation of the university.”

The university, which is based in the south of the city has declined so far to elaborate further on the decision.

Vis-à-vis the “security risk,” what evidence is there that that was the case? Were there threats? If so, why didn’t the university mention them? And even if there were, are we to cancel all conferences where an offended group (you know who they are) threatened violence? To even consider canceling a conference because of “security risk” in Belfast, of all places, is ridiculous. That city has experienced real violence, and has weathered it, making it seem silly to cower before unstated risks that could easily be managed.

The bit about “the reputation of the university” is simply embarrassing. Seriously, how would that have been damaged by this meeting? In my eyes, it would have been enhanced, for the issues raised by the Charlie Hebdo affair are among the most pressing for Western democracies who must deal with an increasing population of Muslims whose religious tenets conflict with Enlightenment values.

What this is really all about, and why the University has really damaged its reputation with the cancellation, is fear. And while perhaps some of those fears involve attacks by Muslim terrorists, it seems to me that its greatest fears are of offending others, including nonviolent Muslims. Instead of being a beacon of free speech, and a symbol of how such speech must be defended against even violent detractors, the Charlie Hebdo issue has become an embarrassment to academics and leftists—something to be avoided at best.

Why? Because Charlie Hebdo, and the whole issue of Muslim terrorism and that faith’s demonization of critics and apostates, as well as its invidious repression of women and gays, puts two characteristics of leftism into direct conflict: our general embrace of Enlightenment values, and a particular one of those values—concern for the oppressed. Muslims are seen as oppressed, a label that many of them encourage, and therefore are heartened when, out of guilt, we jettison the criticism that many of their religious values deserve. When the trope of oppression comes up against free speech, the former seems to win. Guilt, it seems, is stronger than reason.

As Jason Walsh noted, who was scheduled to speak at the conference:

The only conceivable reason this conference would be cancelled is that someone — someone like me, for instance — might say something that might upset someone else. That is what passes for reputational damage today? Back when I was knee-high to a parking meter we called that debate, and isn’t that what the university is all about?
The real reason for the cancellation was given away with the mention of reputation. What damage to Queen’s reputation could have happened, though? That it would develop a reputation for tackling difficult subjects?

 Clearly, the “reputational damage” involved perceived offense, or so I think.

Queens University had no requirement to hold such a conference. But once it planned to, and then called it off, they exercised a form of censorship. (This also goes, by the way, for the revocation of Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s invitation to speak at Brandeis.)

In the end, this kowtowing to “hurt feelings”, and its effect on freedom of speech, will harm us all. It encourages other groups to adopt that tactic to avoid being criticized. Christians are already learning this trick, as are some feminists (see what happened when Christina Hoff Sommers spoke last week at Oberlin College). In the the end, the “hurt feelings” trope will produce a society in which nobody can voice criticism for fear of offending others.  And that kind of society is incompatible with democracy.

Over at his Spectator column, Nick Cohen (whom I’m coming increasingly to admire as a latter-day Orwell) comments on the Queen’s Uni kerfuffle. I’ll leave you to read what he says about that, but I want to highlight what he said about freedom of speech in a talk he gave at King’s College London on Monday. (He says the talk did not go down well!):

The only justification for censoring opinion is when it incites violence. You can use every other weapon a free country gives you to confront speakers you oppose. You can fact check them, mock and undermine them, expose their fallacies and overwhelm their defences. But you cannot ban them. Give up on that principle, and you lay yourself open to every variety of dictator and heresy hunter rigging debates and suppressing contrary opinions.

They seemed to like that. But where, I continued, might the state have got the idea that it was acceptable to ban speakers, who were not advocating violence. The question was so obvious it answered itself. To me, at any rate.

For years the National Union of Students blacklisted feminists because they had once said in frank language that trans-sexual women weren’t real women. In recent months, Oxford University cancelled a debate on abortion because protesters objected to the fact it was being held between two men; officials at London Southbank took down an atheist society’s “flying spaghetti monster” poster because it might cause religious offence; the students union at UCL banned the Nietzsche Club after it put up posters saying “equality is a false God”; and Dundee banned the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children. Meanwhile half the campuses in Britain have banned the Sun. You may be transsexual, God-bothering, pro-abortion, egalitarian, supporter of the Leveson inquiry. But you cannot pretend that any of these individuals, groups or images promoted violence.

Nope, for every one of those incidents of censorship involved “hurt feelings.”

h/t: Coel

The Spectator: Christianity is the foundation of “our” civilization

April 10, 2015 • 1:17 pm

Religious rump-osculation among anglophones isn’t limited to Americans. For a prime example from the other side of the pond, see the new piece by Michael Gove, a British conservative MP, in The Spectator: “Why I’m proud to be a Christian (and Jeremy Paxman should be ashamed)“. (The subtitle is “Despite a tidal wave of prejudice and negativity, faith remains the foundation of our civilisation.”)

Gove’s article can be seen only as a defense against the waning tide of religion in Britain, or as the defensive snarl of a fatally trapped animal. He begins by excoriating Paxman (an ascerbic BBC newsman and interviewer) for making fun of Christianity:

Was it true, Jeremy inquired [of Tony Blair], that he had prayed together with his fellow Christian George W. Bush?

The question was asked in a tone of Old Malvernian hauteur which implied that spending time in religious contemplation was clearly deviant behaviour of the most disgusting kind. Jeremy seemed to be suggesting that it would probably be less scandalous if we discovered the two men had sought relief from the pressures of high office by smoking crack together.

Praying? What kind of people are you?

Well, the kind of people who built our civilisation, founded our democracies, developed our modern ideas of rights and justice, ended slavery, established universal education and who are, even as I write, in the forefront of the fight against poverty, prejudice and ignorance. In a word, Christians.

But to call yourself a Christian in contemporary Britain is to invite pity, condescension or cool dismissal. In a culture that prizes sophistication, non-judgmentalism, irony and detachment, it is to declare yourself intolerant, naive, superstitious and backward.

And yes, it sort of is. It certainly brands you as someone who is superstitious (albeit not necessarily intolerant: after all, this is the UK!), and somewhat backwards in at least what you believe to be true. And of course Christians built a lot of British civilization because everybody was a Christian for the last millennium and a half.  You can’t give Christianity any more credit for that than you can racism, for most of the people who built “our” civilization were racists, classists, and sexists.

Gove then goes on, citing Francis Spufford (see here for my critiques of that man) to defend Christianity, asserting that not all Christians believe in creationism, the afterlife, and “fairly tales.”  But a surprising number of them do, at least if you believe Julian Baggini’s two surveys of churchgoers whose results appeared in the Guardian (see here for some data). Yes, Spufford and Gove may both adhere to Sophisticated Theology™, but the data show that they’re not the rule but the exception. By and large, Christians, including British Christians, do believe in fairy tales.

He then goes on, and I’ll finish here, with the old canard that because Christianity supposedly inspires acts of charity, it is a good thing regardless of its truth, an argument that reader Sastra calls “The Little People Argument” and that Dan Dennett calls “Belief in Belief”

The contrast between the Christianity I see our culture belittle nightly, and the Christianity I see our country benefit from daily, could not be greater.

The reality of Christian mission in today’s churches is a story of thousands of quiet kindnesses. In many of our most disadvantaged communities it is the churches that provide warmth, food, friendship and support for individuals who have fallen on the worst of times. The homeless, those in the grip of alcoholism or drug addiction, individuals with undiagnosed mental health problems and those overwhelmed by multiple crises are all helped — in innumerable ways — by Christians.

Churches provide debt counselling, marriage guidance, childcare, English language lessons, after-school clubs, food banks, emergency accommodation and, sometimes most importantly of all, someone to listen. The lives of most clergy and the thoughts of most churchgoers are not occupied with agonising over sexual morality but with helping others in practical ways — in proving their commitment to Christ through service to others.

That may be so, but right over the North Sea, the countries of Scandinavia and northern Europe have all that, and more. Those countries benefit not from Christianity, but from socialism and secular morality. In other words, you can have the good stuff without the fairy tales? To the West, Ireland, still ridden with Catholicism, prohibits most abortions, still has anti-blasphemy laws on the books, and terrifies its children with threats of hell. Oh, and up North the Catholics and Protestants used to kill each other, but of course that’s all in the past.

The question is this: does Gove believe that the truth claims of Christianity—the existence of Jesus as savior and his resurrection—are true? Does he even care? Or does he think it doesn’t matter so long as a faulty foundation supports a useful superstructure? Apparently so:

Relativism is the orthodoxy of our age. Asserting that any one set of beliefs is more deserving of respect than any other is a sin against the Holy Spirit of Non–Judgmentalism. And proclaiming your adherence to the faith which generations of dead white males used to cow and coerce others is particularly problematic. You stand in the tradition of the Inquisition, the Counter-Reformation, the Jesuits who made South America safe for colonisation, the missionaries who accompanied the imperial exploiters into Africa, the Christian Brothers who presided over forced adoption and the televangelists who keep America safe for capitalism.

But genuine Christian faith — far from making any individual more invincibly convinced of their own righteousness — makes us realise just how flawed and fallible we all are. I am selfish, lazy, greedy, hypocritical, confused, self-deceiving, impatient and weak. And that’s just on a good day. As the Book of Common Prayer puts it, ‘We have followed too much the devices and desires of our own hearts…And there is no health in us.’ [JAC: As Hitchens used to say, “Christianity tells us we are born sick and commanded to be well.”]

Christianity helps us recognise and confront those weaknesses with a resolution — albeit imperfect and fragile — to do better. But more importantly, it encourages us to feel a sense of empathy rather than superiority towards others because we recognise that we are as guilty of selfishness and open to temptation as anyone.

Well, first let’s see Gove’s evidence that Christians really do perform more good acts in Britain than do non-Christians or secularists. What he presents in his piece is simply a string of assertions without evidential support. Absent that data, I’m not prepared to accept Gove’s argument. And even if it were true, the other countries of Europe show that one can have societies healthier than that of the UK, all without the superstition.

And of course Gove conspicuously leaves the U.S. out of his argument.

Nick Kristof osculates the rump of conservative Christianity

April 2, 2015 • 10:04 am

If you write for a newspaper or magazine, there is one sure way to avoid offending anybody, and to appear to the public as an amiable, likable person. And that is to say nice things about religion—even if you’re an atheist. After all, most believers love that stuff, and even a lot of nonbelievers have “belief in belief” and so won’t be affronted. Only petulant naturalists like me will call out someone who, like Francis Collins, publicly enables superstition. And yes, someone has just done it again—and, unsurprisingly, in the pages of the New York Times. Both the Times (which regularly publishes the faith-osculating blather of Tanya Luhrmann) and the New Yorker, which has an obvious policy of never directly criticizing religion, are two of my favorite venues, but both continue to cower before faith. That is a very odd policy for writers who are supposed to respect the truth. But I digress.

In last Sunday’s Times we have the ever-respectful columnist Nicholas Kristof (see here, for instance) affording even more respect to religion—conservative Christianity—in an op-ed called, “A little respect for Dr. Foster.”

Dr. Stephen Foster, it turns out, is an evangelical Christian missionary, but also a surgeon who gives medical help to the afflicted of Angola. Of course that’s a good and selfless thing to do, but Kristof uses it as a springboard to bash atheists who criticize evangelicals. After all, those missionary Christians do good things! As Kristof notes:

Today, among urban Americans and Europeans, “evangelical Christian” is sometimes a synonym for “rube.” In liberal circles, evangelicals constitute one of the few groups that it’s safe to mock openly.

Yet the liberal caricature of evangelicals is incomplete and unfair. I have little in common, politically or theologically, with evangelicals or, while I’m at it, conservative Roman Catholics. But I’ve been truly awed by those I’ve seen in so many remote places, combating illiteracy and warlords, famine and disease, humbly struggling to do the Lord’s work as they see it, and it is offensive to see good people derided.

Is he as awed by secular people who do the same type of good works, and don’t call it “God’s work”?

But, contra Kristof I doubt that good people like Dr. Foster have been derided for their works, although “good people” like Mother Teresa have been rightfully criticized because she didn’t really give much help to those she pulled off the streets of Calcutta, but used the opportunity to evangelize.  Kristof doesn’t seem to recognize the difference between criticizing people and the good things they do on one hand, and criticizing their religious beliefs, which can be harmful, on the other. Those Catholics who give medical aid—well, they’re also evangelizing at the same time, opposing abortion and birth control so that the population gets even larger and more prone to famine and disease. Some Catholics even dishonestly argue that condoms are no preventive for AIDS, guaranteeing that even more people will die. Not to mention, of course, the terror instilled in much of humanity who are taught to fear a nonexistent Hell.

Kristof also notes that one of Foster’s sons got polio while in Africa. I’m curious why the child wasn’t vaccinated.

But Kristof does at least mention that secular organizations render help as well, but adds that out that most of the aid workers he meets are motivated by faith:

Most evangelicals are not, of course, following such a harrowing path, and it’s also true that there are plenty of secular doctors doing heroic work for Doctors Without Borders or Partners in Health. But I must say that a disproportionate share of the aid workers I’ve met in the wildest places over the years, long after anyone sensible had evacuated, have been evangelicals, nuns or priests.

But note that this aid by believers is usually combined with missionizing, so that the aid doesn’t come without some attempts at conversion, or even forcing those seeking aid to attend Christian services. I once knew someone who vetted these organizations in Africa, and she told harrowing stories about the religious hoops the afflicted were forced to jump through for their treatment. Doctors Without Borders does nothing like that.

Would the religious still tender so much medical aid if they were absolutely prohibited from evangelizing or missionizing? Some of them, perhaps, but not nearly so many.

But here is what I want readers to consider—and respond to. It’s the old argument that religious Americans do more good works than do non-religious ones. Now we all know that this by no means either justifies the faith claims of religion, or proves that religion has a net beneficial effect compared to nonbelief. After all, in today’s world atheists do nowhere near the amount of harm caused by believers. But still, consider Kristof’s claim:

Likewise, religious Americans donate more of their incomes to charity, and volunteer more hours, than the nonreligious, according to polls. In the United States and abroad, the safety net of soup kitchens, food pantries and women’s shelters depends heavily on religious donations and volunteers.

Sure, it puzzles me that social conservatives are often personally generous while resisting government programs for needy children, and, yes, evangelicals should overcome any prejudice against gays and lesbians — just as secular liberals should overcome any prejudice against committed Christians struggling to make a difference.

The only response I’ll add to this is that I have a great deal of admiration for the work that Dr. Foster does, and for his altruistic impulses behind it. What I have no admiration for is his superstitious beliefs, or the manifest harm that evangelical Christians do to the world alongside the good they do. (For one thing, just look at the hate bills evangelical Christians are promoting and passing all over the U.S., something that Kristof ignores.)

In my view, Kristof’s claim errs in two ways: he mistakes criticism of religous beliefs with denigration of believers themselves, and he implicitly argues that a world with faith does more good than a world of nonbelief, a claim for which he has no evidence. I would love to see him write a piece on an atheist who practices the same kind of self-sacrificing charity that Dr. Foster does (yes, they exist!), and then say that people shouldn’t bash atheists as heartless heathens.

But I am seriously interested in how readers would respond to Kristof’s article, so please read his short editorial and tender your reaction in the comments.

Obama still refuses to describe Islamic terrorism as “Islamic”

February 20, 2015 • 9:45 am

If you’ve heard the speeches and comments about terrorism that President Obama has issued over the past week, you’ll have noticed an obvious omission: there’s virtually no mention of religion or Islam as a factor in the terrorist acts of individuals or groups like ISIS. When the President does mention religion, he disavows that it has any connection with terrorism, and avers that the supposedly Islamic motivations of terrorists “aren’t really Islamic.” The three-day conference on terrorism that Obama convened this week was called “Countering violent extremism.” The word “religious” might have been inserted before the last word.

After that conference, Obama gave a good example of his circumlocution, which I find not only embarrassing but duplicitous:

“Leading up to this summit, there’s been a fair amount of debate in the press and among pundits about the words we use to describe and frame this challenge, so I want to be very clear about how I see it,” the president said. “Al Qaeda and ISIL and groups like it are desperate for legitimacy. They try to portray themselves as religious leaders, holy warriors in defense of Islam.”

But Mr. Obama said that “we must never accept the premise that they put forward, because it is a lie.” The operatives of Al Qaeda and the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, “are not religious leaders — they’re terrorists,” he said.

The lie here is not from ISIS, but from Obama. This mendacity is starting to anger me, for it’s an obvious avoidance of an obvious cause. ISIS and the murderers in Denmark and Paris are palpably motivated largely—if not solely—by their religious beliefs. They say so!  And ISIS and Al-Qaeda are indeed “holy warriors in defense of Islam,” even if we don’t like how they conceive of Islam or what they’re doing to defend it.

Yet Obama won’t admit it this out of either deference for religion or, as noted below, fear of angering Muslim states that are our allies; and it’s all starting to look pretty ridiculous. The ex-mayor of New York City, Rudy Gulianai, described Obama as “not loving America” because of this avoidance, and while that’s completely stupid, even cooler heads are beginning to fault the President for studiously avoiding the topic of Islam. The criticism has become so pervasive that the New York Times had a front-page article about it yesterday, “Faulted for avoiding ‘Islamic’ labels to describe terrorism, White House cites a strategic logic.”

The problem:

[Obama] and his aides have avoided labeling acts of brutal violence by Al Qaeda, the so-called Islamic State and their allies as “Muslim” terrorism or describing their ideology as “Islamic” or “jihadist.”

With remarkable consistency — including at a high-profile White House meeting this week, “Countering Violent Extremism” — they have favored bland, generic terms over anything that explicitly connects attacks or plots to Islam.

Obama aides say there is a strategic logic to his vocabulary: Labeling noxious beliefs and mass murder as “Islamic” would play right into the hands of terrorists who claim that the United States is at war with Islam itself. The last thing the president should do, they say, is imply that the United States lumps the world’s 1.5 billion Muslims with vicious terrorist groups.

The other reason, of course, is that we don’t want to piss off our Muslim “allies” like Lebanon, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia by supposedly impugning the dominant religion of those nations.

Both reasons seem nonsensical to me. The second can easily be defused if Obama just called such terrorism a manifestation of “a murderous and brutal strain of Islam,” which lets all the non-murderous and non-brutal Muslims off the hook. The first rationale—that if we call ISIS a form of Islamic terrorism it will further inflame them and bring them recruits—is equally ludicrous. ISIS already admits that it’s an Islamic organization. Are we supposed to believe that if Obama states that ISIS is what it admits to being, but then qualifies that by saying that most Muslims deplore its violence, his statement will nevertheless bring a stream of recruits to ISIS and other organizations?

But what is gained by calling a Muslim a Muslim? The critics make these arguments:

But Mr. Obama’s verbal tactics have become a target for a growing chorus of critics who believe the evasive language is a sign that he is failing to look squarely at the threat from militant Islam. The vague phrasing, they say, projects uncertainty and weakness at a time when extremists claiming to fight for Islam threaten America and its interests around the world.

“Part of this is a semantic battle, but it’s a semantic battle that goes to deeper issues,” said Peter Wehner, a veteran of the past three Republican administrations and a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. “Self-deception is not a good idea in politics or international affairs. We’re lying to ourselves, and the world knows it.”

While the most vehement criticism has come from Mr. Obama’s political opponents on the right, a few liberals and former security officials have begun to echo the criticism.

“You cannot defeat an enemy that you do not admit exists,” Michael T. Flynn, a retired Army lieutenant general and director of the Defense Intelligence Agency from 2012 to 2014, told a House hearing last week. “I really, really strongly believe that the American public needs and wants moral, intellectual and really strategic clarity and courage on this threat.”

Akbar Ahmed, chairman of Islamic studies at American University and author of a book on Islam in America, said he supported the Obama administration’s care in avoiding a counterproductive smear of all Muslims. But he said the president sometimes seemed to bring an academic approach to a visceral, highly politicized discussion.

“Obama’s reaching a point where he may have to ditch this almost scholastic position,” Mr. Ahmed said. “He sounds like a distinguished professor in the ivory tower, and he may have to come down into the hurly-burly of politics.”

I also agree that we shouldn’t smear all Muslims in this battle, for most Muslims say they deplore this violence. (I have to add, though, that many who don’t participate in the violence nevertheless seem to celebrate it, as evidenced by celebrations in much of the Arab world after terrorist attacks on the West. It’s only when the Islamic violence hits close to home, as it did with the Egyptian Copts murdered in Libya and the Jordanian pilot burned alive, that these states swing into action.)

Obama has turned into a political Reza Aslan, denying the obvious.

So if we admit that we’re fighting extremist Islam, will that help us defeat them? I’m not sure, though Graeme Wood argues that we can’t defeat an enemy if we don’t understand or admit what’s motivating them. But I do value truth above lies, or at least Obama’s deceptive circumlocutions, and it’s not clear that admitting who we’re fighting, and what they’re fighting for (they want a caliphate, for crying out loud!) will hurt us. Further as Peter Bergen notes in the CNN piece described below, admitting that terrorism has an Islamic cause makes it more urgent for us to press Muslim nations to address that explicitly and criticize the forms of Islam that breed violence and hatred.

And there’s a greater issue: the coddling of religion by refusing to admit that it can spawn horrors like ISIS. If we keep imputing the bad things that religion does to other causes, like colonialism or poverty, we’ll never make progress toward ridding the world of harmful superstition. (And, as I always argue, to rid the world of superstition we must also rid it of the social dysfunction that breeds religion.) It is those on the fence about faith who need to clearly see its consequences, and the more we point out the connection between faith and harmful behavior, the faster we’ll rid the world of those delusions.

*******

Speaking of the supposed nonreligious causes of terrorism, you can read a frank analysis that issue, and of of the religious roots of Islamic terrorism, in an article by CNN national security analyst Peter Bergen: “Nonsense about terrorism’s ‘root causes‘”. After showing that terrorism (and the leadership of organizations like ISIS) is by and large a middle-class operation, not usually driven by poverty or disenfranchisement, Bergen goes after Obama’s duplicity:

So if it’s clearly not deprivation that is driving much Islamist terrorism, what is?

For that we must turn to ideology, specifically religious ideology. And this is where the Obama administration has to perform some pretzel logic. It is careful to explain that the war on ISIS is not a war on Islam and that ISIS’ ideology is a perversion of the religion. Fair enough. But the administration seems uncomfortable with making the connection between Islamist terrorism and ultra-fundamentalist forms of Islam that are intolerant of other religions and of other Muslims who don’t share their views to the letter.

ISIS may be a perversion of Islam, but Islamic it is, just as Christian beliefs about the sanctity of the unborn child explain why some Christian fundamentalists attack abortion clinics and doctors. But, of course, murderous Christian fundamentalists are not killing many thousands of civilians a year. More than 80% of the world’s terrorist attacks take place in five Muslim-majority countries — Afghanistan, Iraq, Nigeria, Pakistan and Syria — and are largely carried out by groups with Islamist beliefs.

. . . The Taliban and other Islamist terrorist groups are not, of course, secular organizations. To treat them as if they were springs from some combination of wishful thinking, PC gone crazy and a failure to accept, in an increasingly secularized era, that some will kill in the name of their god, an all-too-common phenomenon across human history.

Bergen is clear about the implication of this recognition for our foreign policy:

ISIS sees itself as the vanguard army that is bringing back true Islam to the world. This project is of such cosmic importance that they will break any number of eggs to make this omelet, which accounts for their murderous campaign against every ethnic group, religious group and nationality that they perceive as standing in their way. ISIS recruits also believe that we are in the end times, and they are best understood as members of an Islamist apocalyptic death cult.

What does that mean for policy makers? It means that the only truly effective challenges to this reasoning must come from Islamic leaders and scholars who can make the theological case that ISIS is an aberration. This, too, is an Islamic project; it is not a jobs project.

h/t: Brygida

“All this barbarity is sacred”: A Muslim journalist dares to say that ISIS is motivated by religion

February 10, 2015 • 3:00 pm

This video shows a brave man. Why? Because he’s an Egyptian living in Egypt, presumably a Muslim, who is saying The Truth That Must Not Be Said: that ISIS uses explicit justification from the Qur’an and the hadith for its barbarity. The motivation for slaughter, beheadings, and immolation, in other words, comes from Islam.

It’s Ibrahim Eissa, an Egyptian journalist speaking the truth a week ago on al Tahrir (Egyptian) T.V.

Click on the screenshot below, or go here to listen to the video.

I hope he has armed guards. . .

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The transcript:

Ibrahim Issa: Whenever ISIS carries out an act of barbarity, such as decapitations, throat slitting, or the burning of a person alive, as they did today, various sheiks tell you – if they even bother to say anything – that this has nothing to do with Islam, that Islam is not to blame, and whatever. But when the people of ISIS perpetrate slaughter, murder, rape, immolation, and all those barbaric crimes, they say that they are relying on the sharia. They say that this is based on a certain hadith, on a certain Quranic chapter, on a certain saying of Ibn Taymiyyah, or on some historical event. To tell the truth, everything that ISIS says is correct.

. . . This should not come as a surprise to anyone, as a surprise to anyone, and nobody should be shocked by what I am saying. All the evidence and references that ISIS provides to justify its crimes, its barbarity, and its horrifying, criminal, and despicable violence… All the evidence and references that ISIS provides, claiming that they can be found in the books of history, jurisprudence, and law, are, indeed, to be found there, and anyone who says otherwise is lying.

. . . When they kill a person claiming that he is an infidel, when they rape women, when they kill prisoners, and when they slaughter and decapitate people, they say that the Prophet Muhammad said so. Indeed, the Prophet said so! What was the context? The interpretation? That’s a whole different story. None of those [Al-Azhar clerics] who purport to be moderate, and who were told by President Al-Sisi to change the religious discourse, have the courage – not a single grain of courage – to admit that these things are indeed to be found [in Islamic sources] and are [morally] wrong. If it is claimed that a certain companion of the Prophet did this or that, you should respond by saying that he was morally wrong. I would like to see a single Al-Azhar cleric in Egypt have the courage to admit that Abu Bakr burned a man alive. That’s right. He burned Fuja’ah [Al-Sulami]. This is a well-known historical story.

. . . Was Abu Bakr morally wrong to burn that man alive? Nobody dares to say so. So we are left in this vicious circle, and you can expect more barbarity, because all this barbarity is sacred. It is sacred. This barbarity is wrapped in religion. It is immersed in religion. It is all based on religion. Your mission [as a cleric] is to say that while it is part of our religion, the interpretation is wrong. Do not tell people that Islam has nothing to do with this.

I would love to hear what Karen Armstrong or President Obama would say in response.

h/t: Dermot C.

 

Our “Last Word” segment on MSNBC: is ISIS a “true” form of Islam?

February 7, 2015 • 2:40 pm

I can’t bear to watch this: like many people, I can’t stand to see myself on video or television. But I suppose I’ll have to, because when I did this segment with two other guests on Lawrence O’Donnell’s “The Last Word” show on MSNBC, I was in a tiny, soundproof room looking into a camera lens, listening through an earpiece and unable to see the other guests. So this is my chance to see the whole thing. I’m writing this without having watched it. (O’Donnell apparently found me because of my New Republic piece on the issue.)

. . .

Okay, now I’ve watched it. It’s okay, especially because O’Donnell comes down hard on the President’s “pandering to religion,” and also on Obama’s disingenuous avoidance of the word “Muslim” or “Islam” when referring to ISIS. Still, I would have appreciated it if O’Donnell had let the guests talk more, and I’m not just referring to myself. There was potential for a good debate here. Sadly, there wasn’t much time, and all we could do was emit a sound bite or two. In general, we were in agreement, but I thought Nomani was particularly good. Salbi, however, seems to think that the essence of Islam is beneficent, and if she were to admit that ISIS was really a Muslim movement, it would somehow “legitimize” their violence. She also feels that Obama’s waffling is a good strategy for “opening a dialogue” about Islam. Tell that to the Islamic State!

Nevertheless, it’s good that this kind of unpopular criticism gets on the air at all. Thank Ceiling Cat for MSNBC, the palliative for Fox News.  Here are the YouTube notes; I’ve linked to the other guests so you can see their bios:

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell, MSNBC, 2-5-2015, with Professor Jerry Coyne, Zainab Salbi, Asra Nomani.

The right-wing site Newsbusters was predicatably outraged by the segment.

h/t: Matt