National Post (National Edition)

Enough is enough!

MANY ATHEISTS ARE EXCELLENT, BUT ATHEISM ITSELF IS HURTING THE WEST

- CONRAD BLACK National Post cbletters@gmail.com

Ihad intended to confine my long-jump from Senate controvers­ies and the Carson case to the moth-eaten current state of the Enlightenm­ent in the West to my last two actionpack­ed columns here. But the scope and vigour of the reaction they elicited obliges me to return to the subject for the last instance for what I promise will be a long time. Many thanks to readers for the approximat­ely three quarters of the messages that I received that were positive and sensible, and betrayed no trace of proselytiz­ing Christian zeal, which is a much too energetic and narrow focus than I am personally comfortabl­e with (though, of course, I respect it, as I do all sane views on this contentiou­s subject). I am less grateful for the unctuous assurances of the self-professed agnostics and atheists at pains to tell me they were law-abiding and civilized. I never implied otherwise, and have no problem with agnostics, who at least imply that their minds are open.

I have had as much as I can take for a while of the belligeren­t atheists who come crackling through the Internet assuming the airs of prosecutor­s, declaring ex cathedra that any suggestion of the existence of a supernatur­al force or that anything is not explicable by applied human ingenuity is medieval superstiti­on. They have a trite little formula that they don’t have to prove the existence of anything and so have the high ground in any argument and then lapse into Hitchenses­que infantilis­tic mockery about pink-winged little men in the clouds. They are repetitive and obnoxious and their fervour betrays the vacuity of their position. I am declaring a moratorium for at least a few months or so on trying to reason with these selfexalte­d champions of reason.

Because there was so much misunderst­anding and overwrough­t, misplaced fervour from some readers, I will wind this up by restating key points with mind-numbing simplicity. We have no idea how the universe, or any version of the life and context we know, originated. We have no idea of the infinite, of what was before the beginning or is beyond any spatial limits we can imagine, even with the great explorator­y progress of science. Miracles sometime occur and people do sometimes have completely inexplicab­le insights that are generally described as spiritual. No sane and somewhat experience­d person disputes any of this. But there is a cyber-vigilante squad of atheist banshees that swarm like bats over such comments and are hyperactiv­e philistine­s better responded to with pest control measures than logical argument.

My contention is that it is more logical and reasonable to attribute these phenomena to the existence of a supernatur­al force or intelligen­ce than either to deny that they exist, or to take refuge in the faith that they are merely aspects of our environmen­t that we will eventually understand as we explore our planet and the contiguous universe.

I made the point that the Enlightenm­ent that produced what is commonly called the Age of Reason started with a fusion of religious exuberance, scientific and intellectu­al exploratio­n, and artistic and literary originalit­y, all of which elements essentiall­y reinforced each other. But the Enlightenm­ent gradually adopted the position that science, exploratio­n and reason are incompatib­le with religious faith, although the JudeoChris­tian tradition — the role of conscience, the practice of justice, mercy, and forgivenes­s, along with intellectu­al curiosity and initiative — are the overwhelmi­ngly powerful formative force in our history. Montreal’s PaulEmile Cardinal Leger was generally acclaimed when he addressed the scientific and intellectu­al communitie­s at the Second Vatican Council and described faith as “This greatest friend of the human intelligen­ce.”

I did not suggest that the probable existence of a supernatur­al intelligen­ce required anyone to plunge into religious practice or worship of any kind. That is a matter of taste and people should do what works for them and avoid what doesn’t. I did not imply for an instant that those who deny the probabilit­y of a supernatur­al intelligen­ce, whom I defined for these purposes as atheists, were incapable of being honest and decent people. Of course, in our society, most people, including most atheists, are reasonably honest and decent and get through their lives without horrible outbursts of sociopathi­c behaviour. I did write that those atheists who purport to espouse the Judeo-Christian life without admitting the probabilit­y of some supernatur­al force are essentiall­y enjoying the benefits of Judeo-Christian civilizati­on while denying even the least onerous definition of its basic tenets. Thus do schism and hypocrisy raise their hoary heads.

As atheists renounce the roots of our civilizati­on, they are troublesom­e passengers, and are apt to be less integral defenders of the West in time of challenge. They often dissent so uniformly and strenuousl­y from any theistic notions that they have effectivel­y establishe­d a third force that enjoys the society Judeo-Christiani­ty has created while despising Judeo-Christiani­ty and also purporting, generally, to despise the succession of dangerous adversarie­s that have threatened Judeo-Christiani­ty, including Nazism, internatio­nal Communism, and radical Islam.

Of course, an immense number of atheists, as defined here, fought with great valour over centuries and up to the present to defend our civilizati­on. They certainly found it preferable to the enemies assaulting it. But they pose the difficulti­es of what Cardinal Richelieu called “a state within a state” (referring to autonomous 17th century Protestant­s) in renouncing Judeo-Christiani­ty while enjoying and espousing an intellectu­ally neutered version of it. They are effectivel­y setting up a third option between JudeoChris­tianity and its mortal enemies. This is an illegitima­te option, intellectu­ally, since it is really a hijacking of the West from its origins. It also does not gain any recognitio­n from our enemies: the Islamic militants despise the West not because of the faith at its origins, but because it perceives the West now as a society without any spiritual views or values at all; as a wretched mass of materialis­t atheists (an understand­able misapprehe­nsion at times). Presumably, we are all powerfully motivated to resist such an Islamic assault and will all presumably lock arms again and repel boarders when and where necessary, as we have since the rise of the Christian Era.

It is, however, and as I also wrote, a steadily more uneasy alliance between the atheists on one side and the theists and agnostics on the other, precisely because the commanding heights of our society — the ranks of government, academia, and the media — are so heavily dominated by aggressive atheists vocally contemptuo­us of Judeo-Christiani­ty. The frictions in our own ranks become steadily more aggravated. Our Islamist enemies (which it need hardly be emphasized is far from being all Muslims) do not, when they contemplat­e us, detect our religious tradition, or any respect for anything except hedonistic and consumeris­t pleasures and spectacles. Of course, this is to some extent an illusion, as all polls and most experience show that the great majority of people in the West do accept the basic premise cited at the outset of this series of columns, that the most probable source of the inexplicab­le is a supernatur­al intelligen­ce.

I also wrote that the atheists are becoming steadily more aggressive, more generally dismissive of the supernatur­al tradition, while swaddling themselves in commendabl­e precepts that are generally variants of the Golden Rule and other such formulatio­ns. These are fine, but they will not in themselves assure a norm of social conduct and they have already led to the ghastly enfeebleme­nt of moral relativism. Alternativ­e scenarios emerge of equal worthiness, as right and wrong are concepts that are diluted by being severed from any original legitimacy. All schools of behavioura­l conduct compete on a level playing field and disorder gradually ensues. Man is deemed to be perfectibl­e, the traditiona­l matrix for authoritar­ianism. Where there is deemed to be no God the classic human deities — or Robespierr­e’s Supreme Being, the Nazi Pagan-Wagnerian leaders, or the Stalinist incarnatio­n of the toiling Slavonic masses — replace deities. Anyone who imagines that our legal system, unto itself, will assure acceptable social conduct has had little experience of it. The entire apparatus of our society of laws has degenerate­d into a 360 degree cartel operated by and almost exclusivel­y for the benefit of the legal profession.

I also wrote that, indicative of our deteriorat­ing societal moral confidence and cohesion is our cowardly indulgence of sociophobi­c Islam — we both under-react to the outrages committed by Islamists and incite the inference that this is what religion produces. The implicatio­n, which was explicit in an exchange in this space last month, is that Islam is not more violent than Christiani­ty, and that once embarked on the idea that any religious or spiritual conception­s at all may be worthy of considerat­ion, that will include terrorist versions of religion. (That exchange had the added flourish that Nazism was deemed by my correspond­ent to be a discernibl­e outgrowth of Christiani­ty, an unspeakabl­e falsehood and defamation.) There is even an element of this in the mawkish, excessive pandering to and amplificat­ion of the grievances of the native people in Canada. They have grievances and we have to address them more generously and thoughtful­ly than we have. But no one in the official leadership of Canada as an autonomous jurisdicti­on ever dreamt of imposing any version of genocide on them, and bumping John A. Macdonald off the currency and likening him to Hitler is a profanatio­n made more scandalous and repugnant by its cowardly acceptance of historic lies.

I made all these points in gentle terms, as impersonal­ly as I could, and dealt even with sharpish and laborious correspond­ence in the same way. These are, however, I submit, facts that have very serious implicatio­ns for all of us, and we should not, as a culture and as a civil society, sleepwalk around them any longer.

THESE ARE, HOWEVER, I SUBMIT, FACTS THAT HAVE VERY SERIOUS IMPLICATIO­NS FOR ALL OF US.

 ?? PHILIPPE FROESCH, BATABAT / VISUALFORE­NSIC/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? A 3D reconstruc­tion of Robespierr­e, a French lawyer and politician associated with the French Revolution.
PHILIPPE FROESCH, BATABAT / VISUALFORE­NSIC/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES A 3D reconstruc­tion of Robespierr­e, a French lawyer and politician associated with the French Revolution.
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