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April
2, 2008
Letter
to a Secular Nation
by Mike S. Adams, Ph.D.
In
his short book, Letter to a Christian
Nation, Sam Harris begins by talking about the
torrent of hate mail he received in response to his
previous book, The End of Faith. He has this
to say about the worst of it:
The most hostile of these communications have
come from Christians. This is ironic, as Christians
generally imagine that no faith imparts the virtues
of love and forgiveness more effectively than their
own. The truth is that many who claim to be
transformed by Christ's love are deeply, even
murderously, intolerant of criticism.
Such a statement would be alarming to Christians
were there not a fundamental logical error
involved. One way to grasp that error is to imagine
me starting a book with the following:
The most hostile of my communications have
come from homosexuals. This is ironic, as
homosexuals generally imagine that no lifestyle
imparts the virtues of love and tolerance more
effectively than their own. The truth is that many
who claim to be liberated by alternative lifestyles
are deeply, even murderously, intolerant of
criticism.
Of course, all groups fail to live up to their
ideals from time to time -- whether it is
Christians failing to show forgiveness or
homosexuals failing to show tolerance. Some would
rebut my example by claiming I should expect more
hate mail from homosexuals because I criticize that
group disproportionately. Harris, on the other
hand, wrote a book criticizing people of all faiths
with most of the hostile responses coming from
Christians.
That logic is flawed and deeply so.
It should go without saying that - even if all
of the world's religions were, in fact, equally
loving and forgiving - one should still expect more
hostile responses from Christians. This can be
attributed to the rather simple fact that
Christianity is the world's largest religion. And,
of course, in the places where Sam Harris' books
are distributed and read that gap increases
greatly.
That rather obvious truth raises another
question: How many members of the world's second
largest religion (Islam) might be hostile towards
the writings of Sam Harris but for various reasons
are unable to access his writings?
I would suspect that the relative dearth of
public libraries and private bookstores in Islamic
nations would have something to do with the
relatively low response rate from Muslims. I would
also venture a guess that limited email access in
Islamic nations prevents Islamic extremists from
sending hate mail to Sam Harris. He may well get
more hate mail from Muslims in the future but not
until some of the communities in which those
extremists reside actually manage to get indoor
plumbing.
Of course, when the writings of Sam Harris do
become a topic of widespread conversation in the
Islamic world he is more likely to be the target of
a nasty beheading courtesy of Hezbollah than a rude
missive courtesy of Hotmail. And that beheading is
more likely than hate mail to prevent future First
Amendment expression.
Christianity is indeed flawed because of
Christians like me who fail to live up to the
ideals of the religion. But Christianity simply
cannot be characterized as the religion most
hostile to free expression. That contention is
simply absurd.
Sam Harris contends that his primary purpose in
writing Letter to a Christian Nation is to
"arm secularists in our society, who believe that
religion should be kept out of public policy,
against their opponents on the Christian Right."
That is as dishonest a statement as I have read in
quite some time.
Were Harris to seek to preserve the
Establishment Clause by keeping one particular
faith from becoming the "official" state religion
his goals would be laudable. Were he to seek to
keep religion "out of public policy" altogether his
goals would be laughable. But none of this is
relevant because Sam Harris seeks neither of these
outcomes.
Instead, Sam Harris seeks to make Secular
Humanism the "official religion" of each of our
fifty United States. And he seeks to turn our
public schools into houses of worship for the
Secular Humanist religion with compulsory
attendance for children funded with compulsory
offerings by adults.
And he seeks to do so in a decidedly
anti-intellectual manner. I plan to use the next
several columns to respond.
Adams
Archive
©2008 by Mike S. Adams and reprinted with
permission of the author.
Because
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Order
Dr. Adams' Book
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An irreverent, disturbing look at
higher education through the eyes of a
former Leftist radical whose
disillusionment with the politics of
diversity and political correctness turned
him into a "token" campus
Conservative.
Portrayed by the university
administration and mainstream media as a
"flame-thrower," Professor Adams lampoons
sacred cows such as affirmative action,
Gay Pride, cultural sensitivity training,
multi-culturalism, censorship and other
"sins" committed in the name of academic
freedom.
Dr. Mike S. Adams, a professor of
Criminal Justice at the University of
North Carolina at Wilmington, is a regular
contributor to conservative web and print
publications. He recently defended himself
against a charge of libel in a
high-profile free-speech controversy that
landed him on numerous top-ranked national
TV and radio shows, including Rush
Limbaugh, CNN and Hannity &
Colmes.
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Welcome
to the Ivory Tower of Babel: Confessions
of a Conservative College
Professor,
by
Mike S. Adams
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Mike
S. Adams was born in Columbus, Mississippi on
October 30, 1964. While a student at Clear Lake
High School in Houston, TX, his team won the state
5A soccer championship. He graduated from C.L.H.S.
in 1983 with a 1.8 GPA. He was ranked 734 among a
class of 740, largely as a result of flunking
English all four years of high school. After
obtaining an Associate's degree in psychology from
San Jacinto College, he moved on to Mississippi
State University where he joined the Sigma Chi
Fraternity. While living in the fraternity house,
his GPA rose to 3.4, allowing him to finish his
B.A., and then to pursue a Master's in Psychology.
In 1990, he turned down a chance to pursue a PhD in
psychology from the University of Georgia, opting
instead to remain at Mississippi State to study
Sociology/Criminology. This decision was made
entirely on the basis of his reluctance to quit his
night job as member of a musical duo. Playing music
in bars and at fraternity parties and weddings
financed his education. He also played for free
beer.
Upon
getting his doctorate in 1993, Adams, then an
atheist and a Democrat, was hired by UNC-Wilmington
to teach in the criminal justice program. A few
years later, Adams abandoned his atheism and also
became a Republican. He also nearly abandoned
teaching when he took a one-year leave of absence
to study law at UNC-Chapel Hill in 1998. After
returning to teach at UNC-Wilmington, Adams won the
Faculty Member of the Year award (issued by the
Office of the Dean of Students) for the second time
in 2000.
After
his involvement in a well publicized free speech
controversy in the wake of the 911 terror attacks,
Adams became a vocal critic of the diversity
movement in academia. After making appearances on
shows like Hannity and Colmes, the O'Reilly Factor,
and Scarborough Country, Adams was asked to write a
column for the Heritage Foundation's
Townhall.com.
Today
he enjoys the privilege of expressing himself both
as a teacher and a writer. In his spare time, he
loves spending time with his wife, Krysten. He is
also an avid hunter and reader of classic
literature.
Visit his website at http://www.DrAdams.org.
E-mail: adams_mike@hotmail.com
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