America As Bizarro Iran

Two months ago, Samuel Alito was approached at a gala by a woman who suggested America's cultural rifts and ideological chasms are too deep and wide to bridge. That indeed, compromise between liberals and conservatives is a lost cause best abandoned. Alito agreed. "One side or the other is going to win," he told the woman. Maybe Americans can find "a way of living together peacefully," but it'll be hard, he said. "There are [fundamental] differences that really can't be compromised." As it tur

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7 thoughts on “America As Bizarro Iran

  1. I think it was Dan Savage who used to refer to the Christian right as the “American Taliban”.

    I’m impressed with Windsor, I’ve always said that you really have no grounds to have an opinion unless you can express the opposing side’s opinion in terms that they themselves would agree with, and she obviously understands very clearly how conservatives see themselves.

    I’ve been through an interesting personal evolution on religion. I was a fairly strong believer until my late teenage years, Craig regularly, until my belief and empiricism got the best of me. I came very quickly to be very opposed To organized religion, and to religion in most forms — I just have a hard time with the idea that this many adults go through life placing stock in an imaginary friend. Later on, as he has went by I happened to be friend), independently, a number of devoutly religious people, everyone of them are truly wonderful human beings, and many of whom actually share my opinions about a lot of things, and I came to see you and some of them that among a lot of the rank and file, religious belief isn’t per se unreasonable, it’s just faith, it has nothing to do with reason either way, it doesn’t agree with reason nor is it counter to it. They just made a choice to put their faith in something. Reason has nothing to do with it and they know that. So for a long time I softened my views a bit, at least towards individuals who held it as a private choice and didn’t try and force it on everybody around them. And I still maintain that every single one of those individuals, themselves, are in many ways some of the best people I know. I do understand, also, the aspects of human nature that might make religious belief so comforting that some people just need it. I believe it was Alan Watts who pointed out that life is lonely and sad and ever-changing, so we have course cook up a fantasy about something that is all-loving and happy and eternally unchanging to deal with it. I don’t need that fantasy myself, but I’m not gonna blame somebody for needing a crutch.

    But these last couple of years, the Christian hegemonists—the American Taliban—are really making me return to my former deeply-felt revulsion towards these people, as a group, with their insistence that we all have to live by what they choose to believe (I am in the camp that says religion is a lifestyle choice, not something religious people are born with) their imaginary friend told them. The same people who scream the loudest about liberty also scream that we all must live under the dominion of a being nobody can see, who, coincidentally, only they can convey orders from. And it’s beginning to negatively bias my opinions of all of them again, even the ones who don’t actively try to force it on anyone else, as I see they still subscribe to the same fallacies that enable so many people to do so much wrong with a clear conscience.

    1. Dammit, Siri! My kingdom for an edit button on comments in this section. That was “prayed regularly” not “Craig regularly”. And “belief in empiricism“ should have been “understanding of empiricism”. I’m sure I don’t need to explain here that science and empiricism aren’t belief systems, in fact they’re exactly the opposite.

      1. And it’s “as time went by I happened to be friend“.

        Oh cripes, as I read this, Siri just made total hash of my dictation in a bunch of places. Please just ignore any sentences that don’t make sense.

    2. Yeah, I went through a similar evolution – grew up in a very religious area and started to realize that it didn’t add up, but have definitely softened my general view of people who choose to believe.

      That being said, it is scary when we see these people adopt a Christian Nationalist mindset. In addition to installing these people in the Supreme Court, it’s the marriage of these Christian Nationalists with the “libertarian” tech/crypto billionaires like Thiel and Musk that really scares me. I didn’t realize until recently that Thiel is an evangelical Christian who describes orthodox Christians as the most independent thinkers in the country. Then you hear Trump courting the “libertarian” techie crypto crowd who somehow think bitcoin will be worth something when the world goes to hell and you’re just left wondering what in the world are these people smoking?

      I think we need to turn the clock on tech back to the 90s and just freeze things there. Maybe the machines in the Matrix had it right after all when they set their simulation to 1999…

  2. I miss when ‘one side or the other’ meant Russia or the United States. Now almost half of the United States would gleefully turn the country over to Putin, before letting Joe have another term.

    Freedom of religion should be reenforced as freedom FROM religion. Religion is not the same as belief.

    A person can believe in a higher power, preferably one that doesn’t look like an old white guy, or even a human, since that is incredibly arrogant.

    While, religion is a cult that got too big, so it’s not socially acceptable to keep calling it a cult. The planet has lots of those and they’re generally more trouble than they’re worth.

  3. “ As though the court’s completely unconcerned with the longer-term ramifications of its decisions, and only cares about this election.”
    The amusing thing to me is they have handed that power to Biden right now. He could throw all 12 of them in Guantánamo the day after the election.

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