Sunday, September 10, 2017
Equivalencism
In the past, I've taken a couple of stabs at this subtopic of the Problem of the Problem (where the primary problem is, of course, Islam, and the secondary problem is the West's persisting, maddening myopia to that primary problem). The two essays are:
The Fruit Salad of Equivalencism
and
Christians and Muslims: Apples and Oranges?
In those essays, I covered a lot of ground on this subtopic of Equivalencism, but it seems necessary to lay down some general guidelines about it.
First, I remind the reader what Equivalencism is: It is my term for the tendency to respond to the problem of Islam by dragging all other religions (usually evil white Christianity, of course) into the discussion, to be corralled together as all approximately equally problematic. This, needless to say, pertains only for those who consider that Islam is problematic at all. Years ago, I may have thanked Allah for such small favors; but I've grown weary of the maddeningly incremental learning curve on this problem by mainstream Westerners.
So we don't cut the Equivalencists slack just because they concede that Islam is a problem at all. Why are we so unforgiving? Not only because Islam is at least 1,000 times worse than any other religion or ideology on the planet (and 1,000 is very generous -- more like a million times worse); but more importantly because its worseness threatens the very survival of our civilization.
Why would a reasonably intelligent person think Islam is "not much worse" than all other religions (especially evil white Christianity, of course), when the evidence indicates the contrary to a staggering degree? Not just to a modest or slight degree, but to a monstrously astronomic degree of disparity. Even worse, why would millions upon millions of Westerners routinely and persistently manifest this Equivalencist spasm?
I've been down this road before, many a time. The reader could take a look at my essay Quantum Ignorance, for example, or dozens of others that try to answer, or at least plumb, this question.
What I've surmised is that it's not a conspiracy theory that answers the question; nor is it stupidity (since millions who think this way are reasonably, relatively intelligent), nor greed (since it is not plausible that millions who think this way would knowingly betray their civilization for money).
What's left? I can't say for sure, other than it is, as I've said more times than I care to count, a cultural development of a change in worldview throughout the West, based upon an aberrant elevation of politically correct multiculturalism to a degree no longer reasonable. Since this is not a conspiracy theory, and since this cannot explained by mass stupidity or greed, it must be an organic development out of the West itself.
I suppose all suicides -- whether individual, communal, or civilizational -- are such. Organic developments out of the self.
How can we reverse this disastrous train wreck unfolding before our eyes in slow-Mo? Well, one way I can say for sure how not to reverse it is to fail to see it for what it is. Congrats to the two Mainstreams -- the broadly diffuse Western Mainstream and the microscopic, struggling Counter-Jihad Mainstream -- for not only failing to see it for what it is, but for feeling smug about that failure.
I think the reason for equivalency, as you call it, is that vast numbers are unreligious, completely uninterested and largely uninformed about religion, and thus look at it in the same way that racists look at black people: 'they all look alike.'
ReplyDeleteOne can be an atheist and still find the claim of equivalency ridiculous -- just consider Sam Harris. Of course, there is a small particle of truth to equivalency, as there is a small particle of truth to almost any statement, enough of a particle so that those who are uninformed about different religions can equate them with one another. The people guilty of this attitude toward religion can of course be educated and intelligent in other parts of their lives.
Even if we were to assume that atheists are correct and there is no God, however, it is foolish to assume that all religions have equivalently nefarious social consequences. The teachings of Christ are infinitely more socially benign than the teachings of Muhammad, for example. People can only deny this by resolutely looking away from both doctrine and social history. Furthermore, what a difference between the Buddhist tradition that if you meet the Buddha on the road, you should kill him, whereas Muhammad's traditions agree that anyone who leaves Islam should be killed!