Are atheists communists? Of course not. Some atheists are communists, and communists have been taught to be atheists, but becoming an atheist doesn't affect your politics. Many people who have been classified as atheists have simply been raised under a communist regime. These are atheists by default or convenience, not atheists by conviction, personal experience or logical deduction. They are wide open for conversion, partly because they haven't been exposed to any religions, they have very little natural immunity like children raised in over-clean houses. In contrast atheists in Europe and America tend to be atheists by personal choice. Very few people are forced to be atheists against their will, while they are impressionable. Religious indoctrination of children will, one day, be accepted as the crime against humanity that it is. I regularly get accused of being a communist, this is usually by American Christians. Nobody else seems to be that stupid. They seem to accept the idea that if you are not for capitalist freedom in infinite amounts you are a dangerous subversive who gets his sealed orders from Satan at the KGB (and only the complacent think they've gone away). In America there are three powerful interlocking myths. The first is The Big Lie, the idea that belief in a god (preferably one with Semitic heritage) is a sign of morality, that people who do not share a belief in God are either amoral, immoral or lead by the nose by the scarlet horned goat himself. The second myth is the American Dream, the fantasy that in America, and only in America, anybody make it to the top and become wealthy, even phenomenally wealthy, simply by being prepared to work hard. The corollary of that is the idea that those Americans who are not wealthy obviously haven't worked hard and so don't deserve any sympathy, or welfare, or soup, or spare change. The third myth is that evil communists are planning to take over the world. Communism is real and it was a powerful force in the twentieth century. But much of the force of communism was really a bastardized form of The Great Game, Russia's eternal quest for more territory and an escape from encirclement. To understand this fear just meditate for a few minutes, imagining that you are in Russia, imagine the wider world around you. It is around you. Yes, Russia is surrounded on all sides by potentially hostile powers, but this is simply a product of Russia being so big, covering so great an area that it has more time zones than seems fair. In contrast imagining yourself in America is much more soothing, an open ocean to each side and non-threatening neighbours to the north and south. But then ramp up the paranoia and you start to see the whole western hemisphere in the same way Israel regarded southern Lebanon or the Golan Heights. Many things that were done by dictators in the name of communism were and are thoroughly reprehensible. To call them evil is acceptable usage as long as the word evil is used as an adjective, there is no such thing as evil as a noun. The noun form of evil belongs only in myth and other fiction. Actions can be evil, people can have a high propensity to allow or commit evil acts but there is no such thing as evil people or motivations to act out of evil. The idea of an evil empire is therefore ridiculous. Even Adolf Hitler was not evil. He wanted to achieve great and laudable aims (among others) and was ruthless in his methods. The evil was largely in the ruthlessness. Consider the long term aspirations of Hitler compared to those of Churchill, were they really so very different? Churchill spoke (in his “Finest Hour” speech) of a British Empire lasting a thousand years, is that so very different from a Thousand Year Reich? There were plenty of other nationalist leaders around who thought they had a God-given destiny to lead their country to power, prosperity and a supreme position in the world due to the superiority of its people's genetics. In a way Germany and Japan did the world a favour by showing the moral bankruptcy of this concept as well as the danger to liberty and justice of pursuing it. The downside of the war was the fact that it was justified, which has led Americans in particular to wrongly link the idea of war and justice. World War II was a just war, perhaps the just war, very much the exception rather than the rule. Most wars are fought for bad reasons: greed, aggression, plunder, not for justice and righteous indignation. |
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