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Why should I respect these oppressive religions?
Anything which can be deemed "religious" is no longer allowed to be a subject of discussion at the UN – and almost everything is deemed religious. Roy Brown of the International Humanist and Ethical Union has tried to raise topics like the stoning of women accused of adultery or child marriage. The Egyptian delegate stood up to announce discussion of shariah "will not happen" and "Islam will not be crucified in this council" – and Brown was ordered to be silent. Of course, the first victims of locking down free speech about Islam with the imprimatur of the UN are ordinary Muslims.
Here is a random smattering of events that have taken place in the past week in countries that demanded this change. In Nigeria, divorced women are routinely thrown out of their homes and left destitute, unable to see their children, so a large group of them wanted to stage a protest – but the Shariah police declared it was "un-Islamic" and the marchers would be beaten and whipped. In Saudi Arabia, the country's most senior government-approved cleric said it was perfectly acceptable for old men to marry 10-year-old girls, and those who disagree should be silenced. In Egypt, a 27-year-old Muslim blogger Abdel Rahman was seized, jailed and tortured for arguing for a reformed Islam that does not enforce shariah.
To the people who demand respect for Muslim culture, I ask: which Muslim culture? Those women's, those children's, this blogger's – or their oppressors'?
As the secular campaigner Austin Darcy puts it: "The ultimate aim of this effort is not to protect the feelings of Muslims, but to protect illiberal Islamic states from charges of human rights abuse, and to silence the voices of internal dissidents calling for more secular government and freedom."
Those of us who passionately support the UN should be the most outraged by this.
Underpinning these "reforms" is a notion seeping even into democratic societies – that atheism and doubt are akin to racism. Today, whenever a religious belief is criticised, its adherents immediately claim they are the victims of "prejudice" – and their outrage is increasingly being backed by laws.
All people deserve respect, but not all ideas do. I don't respect the idea that a man was born of a virgin, walked on water and rose from the dead. I don't respect the idea that we should follow a "Prophet" who at the age of 53 had sex with a nine-year old girl, and ordered the murder of whole villages of Jews because they wouldn't follow him.
I don't respect the idea that the West Bank was handed to Jews by God and the Palestinians should be bombed or bullied into surrendering it. I don't respect the idea that we may have lived before as goats, and could live again as woodlice. This is not because of "prejudice" or "ignorance", but because there is no evidence for these claims. They belong to the childhood of our species, and will in time look as preposterous as believing in Zeus or Thor or Baal.
When you demand "respect", you are demanding we lie to you. I have too much real respect for you as a human being to engage in that charade.
But why are religious sensitivities so much more likely to provoke demands for censorship than, say, political sensitivities? The answer lies in the nature of faith. If my views are challenged I can, in the end, check them against reality. If you deregulate markets, will they collapse? If you increase carbon dioxide emissions, does the climate become destabilised? If my views are wrong, I can correct them; if they are right, I am soothed.
But when the religious are challenged, there is no evidence for them to consult. By definition, if you have faith, you are choosing to believe in the absence of evidence. Nobody has "faith" that fire hurts, or Australia exists; they know it, based on proof. But it is psychologically painful to be confronted with the fact that your core beliefs are based on thin air, or on the empty shells of revelation or contorted parodies of reason. It's easier to demand the source of the pesky doubt be silenced.
But a free society cannot be structured to soothe the hardcore faithful. It is based on a deal. You have an absolute right to voice your beliefs – but the price is that I too have a right to respond as I wish. Neither of us can set aside the rules and demand to be protected from offence.
Yet this idea – at the heart of the Universal Declaration – is being lost. To the right, it thwacks into apologists for religious censorship; to the left, it dissolves in multiculturalism. The hijacking of the UN Special Rapporteur by religious fanatics should jolt us into rescuing the simple, battered idea disintegrating in the middle: the equal, indivisible human right to speak freely.
11 Answers
- 9 years ago
Being of a bohemian mindset, I believe people should be able to believe whatever they want, and voice their beliefs without consequence whether you believe in God or not... But now I have a question: If you went hiking in the woods and came across a nice clean well kept cottage stocked with food, would you think the cottage got there by chance? Or would you think the cottage "evolved" from the rocks and dirt on ground into a house? No somebody had to build it and supply it with food. Or if I just took a couple of gears and metal and tied them to a granade and threw it in the air, would the "bang" produce a rolex? No, because you don't get order and precision from chaos. Some in the scientific community are willing to consider the idea of Intelligent Design because there is PROOF of Intelligent Design. Now whether you want to put faith in a bang of chaos that produces order, or in evolution even though it's been a long time and nothing or nobody else seems to be evolving...any...more... Or whatever you want to believe, that's your business. But I don't think it's fair to say that people who have faith don't have any proof for what they believe in.
Source(s): The universe, our solar system, our Earth, our bodies, etc... - 9 years ago
I always thought the UN was flawed, but could sometimes be useful, eg in some of its peace-keeping operations. They have even had committees set up to deal with human rights issues, headed by people who have committed terrible abuses. There is a lot of corruption in UN aid organisations as well.
But maybe you shouldn't throw the baby out with the bathwater. There is bad faith but also good faith. I pray for the end of a certain unpeaceful religion at times, when I hear of vile terrorist activities.
It is hard though dealing with a world where frankly many people are not very nice. I do most of my "fighting the good fight" through trying to show why bad ideas are bad, and hoping to influence some, but mostly I fall back on prayer to overcome the really bad things. In a small way I hope to set an example, but in one's own strength one doesn't have much strength.
- ?Lv 69 years ago
What you fail to recognize is this saliant fact. Since the all-out attack upon the existence of God began some 100 years ago there has been a steady downward spiral in the morality and ethics of mankind. Instead of there being less exploitation of women and children sexually since the inception of the internet, there has been an explosion in this type of behavior globally. Why? Are we not yet evolving intellectually? Ever since American school systems booted out daily times of silent prayer incidence rates of disrespect of people and property have steadily risen. Ethics no longer is of utmost importance inpersonal conduct. Morality is considered to be old fashioned and outdated, a thing of the past. Enlightenment supposedly was to create people who would be tolerant of others, non aggressive, and peace-loving. None of that has materialized to date, in fact, the opposite has been occuring on a regular basis. We now have intolerance of differing ideas within the field of science, immorality runs rampant within society and government at all levels, and unethical behavior is becoming predominant and considered as being "normal."
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- Miz TLv 79 years ago
Is there a question in there somewhere? A real question, not a rhetorical one?
We take things on faith all the time. I've worked all my life, and nobody ever gave me a paycheck up front--I worked on faith that the pay would come after the work was done. I take it on faith that you will drive your car on your side of the highway and not run head-on into me. I have faith that if I dial 9-1-1, an emergency team will come from somewhere to take care of my emergency. Probably the one thing that we all take on faith is when our life's partner says, "I will love you until I die." If he or she is not dead yet, do you believe that? With no absolute proof either way?
I agree in the main with your essay. There is a tremendous amount of injustice in the world today and we all have to maintain vigilance and be willing to fight for what's right. Believing that we might someday have a world without injustice, though, if we work long and hard enough--that we have to take on faith.
- ?Lv 69 years ago
To paint all religions with the paint brush Islam uses is wrong. Call it Islam's lack of free speech not something else.
- Anonymous9 years ago
Most people aren't even going to read all that, let alone address all of the 467 points you make.
- Anonymous9 years ago
i think you are making a whole lot of judgements here when i dont believe tha we should be judging others at all...especially entire religions and governments.