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The last I checked, my father was writing a book called What's Destroying America. Maybe he's finished with it, for all I know. He doesn't discuss his book with me, and I'm pretty sure the reason he doesn't is because he thinks I'm one of the people destroying America. To maintain peace in the family, he bites his tongue.
As a dyed-in-the-wool conservative Republican who never misses Bill O'Reilly's show on FOX News, he seems to think that if everyone in the world thought like him and Bill, things would just go a lot smoother. In the name of maintaining peace in the family, I refrain from pointing out to my father that if everyone thought like he and Bill O'Reilly, the two of them would have no one to complain about and they would both be miserable until they found a new hobby.
Personally, I don't think anything is destroying America. She's a tough old girl. Her birth pains were a revolution, her adolescence angst had to be resolved with a civil war, and she's pulled through countless other wars, depression, and civil unrests. Like any well-rounded person, she's changed her opinions about a lot of things as she's gotten older, including women's rights and civil rights, and she's grown more tolerant as she's grown more educated. Books like the one my father is writing don't give her due credit. My father isn't alone in not giving her due credit; a lot of people I encounter seem to think the problems with the world today are because everyone else doesn't see things the way they do.
This isn't just a problem in America; it's a problem everywhere. But since I live in America, that's where I'm best able to observe and comment on it.
I've noticed that that conservatives blame everything on liberals, and liberals blame everything on conservatives. The only thing these two groups agree on is that moderates such as myself can't be trusted. As a moderate, I get to blame everything on the hardcore extremists who can't get along and find common ground (beyond that neither of them can stand the likes of me).
Religious people don't trust non religious people, and the non-religious people blame everything on religion even though greed and lust for power are the more likely suspects. I take particular amusement in the rise of the fundamentalist non-believers who have adopted the more obnoxious attitudes and tactics of the fundamentalist believers for their own uses, and now "witness" their non belief with all the zealotry of the most fanatical hell-fire-and-damnation clerics.
I've heard a lot of right-wing Christians demonize every variety of non-Christian out there from Muslims to atheists. In turn, a lot of people who have either rejected Christianity or only gleaned what they know about it from media depictions, blame this religion (the one I was raised in) for every oppression they come across.
It's okay for them to say, "I can't stand Christians." But if you were substituted the word "Jews" or "Blacks" or "Asians" or "Gays" for the word "Christians," these same people would call you out for being a bigot. They would be right. And you would be right for calling them bigots right back.
I suppose you could say I'm moderate in my religion as well as my politics. I once took an Internet quiz to find out what religion would suit me best, and it turns out I would make a great Liberal Quaker. That was the first I'd heard that Liberal Quakers even exist, but apparently I should find some to mingle with because it sounds like we could be great friends.
I admit I like all kinds of religious folks. That includes not only other Christians, but Jews and Muslims and Hindus and Buddhists and Neo Pagans and Wiccians and those people who just say they're spiritual without committing to one belief system in particular. I also like non-religious folks who don't mind that I have a religion. I like human beings, and humans have all kinds of different ways of seeing things.
I've found that the hateful beliefs that some people chalk up to religion are often just people taking their society's prejudices and cloaking them in religion. These same bigotries exist in non religious people, as well. I once knew an atheist who told me he "couldn't stand faggots" and he hated "most, but not all, blacks." This tells me that bigots come in all creeds, and some come creedless. I've also met plenty of tolerant religious people, despite the rumor that we don't exist.
I think the prism of human belief is interesting and beautiful, and I'm not out to wipe any group of people off the earth. We don't have to agree about everything or even anything, we just have to get along and accept each other's right to disagree.
This goes for politics as well as religion.
It all boils down to having tolerance and respect for each other. If enough people get this through their heads, then nothing can destroy America or the world, because all good people would be willing to stand up for each other, and those who aren't so good wouldn't stand a chance against us.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-08 05:39 am (UTC)Go figga.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-08 02:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-08 03:36 pm (UTC)Enjoy your dad while you can.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-08 04:18 pm (UTC)