Mandy wrote:Clearly I do not agree with the above, but at least it shows the opposite view. Note the sentence
"attacks every belief system that rejects science or seeks to control its followers, whether or not it is theistic. "He therefore seems to be calling the majority of people, and societies throughout existence, even ones ruled SOLELY by the rule of law, as "grovelling, abandoned serfs." After all, laws are about controlling people.
Disingenuous. You've conflated a value judgement by the interviewer with a quote by Hitchens about the fallacy of escaping from consciousness.
He would also thus condemn atheists, who group together in a party (which by implication has control over the people in the party).
Note on page 3 the reference to Fascism and communism being atheist, and he is against them.
I do note that on page 3 he argues that Fascism wasn't atheistic, which i agree with. So again that is fallacious.
If you join the army, you are in a chain of command where your "followers" (i.e. juniors) have to follow. Strange he is pro-war.
You can not run an army if juniors don't follow orders.
What Christopher Hitchens, taken to it's logical conclusion, will lead to chaos & anarchy, rule of the gun .. something like Iraq.
Nobody here is defending his politics.
I can't help feeling that Hitchens agenda chimes with Bush's agenda of world domination by a super-power, unchecked capitalism, and might is right. That is much easier to happen when there is no third-party "reference" to morality (rich v. poor, don't covet they neighbour's Etc.) or resistance from religious groups."
Resistance from religious groups? you are kidding right. For the last 2000+ years the establishment churches have taken the side of the wealthy, have exercised greed that would make Dick Cheney blush. And I'm supposed to be grateful for their morality.
Page 3 states :
"The religious impulse, if, shall we say, secularized a bit, is still dangerous: the impulse to worship, the impulse to take things on faith, the impulse to believe in miracles, the impulse to adore and to believe in incarnate good and evil. All these things have dire consequences."
I think it is only human to take things on faith if one desires.
He never said otherwise. The point he was making is that it may be 'human nature' but that it is a dangerous aspect of our makeup and should be rejected.