Humanity learns to create “fictions” that bind us all together. Which are truly human, or not? The outcomes they generate matter.

See material below on free speech as illustrated by comedian Leonarda Jonie, and the comments of Gad Saad, Ira Glasser, and others on this critical element in freedom and liberal democracy.

Also, a recap of the historical descent of Islam from Ebionite Jewish Christianity (Islam shares the same basic themes of its mother religion). My point is in response to Bill Maher’s arguments that Christianity is superior to Islam in terms of moderating impulses to intolerance and violence.

Yes, that is true in the modern era (notably last few centuries), but was not true across the past two millennia when Paul’s “Christ-ianity” (as distinguished from Jesus’ “Q Wisdom Sayings” message) was significantly responsible for inciting and validating repeated eruptions of mass-death (i.e. the Crusades, Inquisitions and persecution of heretics and witches, etc.). And where was the moderation of intolerance and violence in the past century when the “apocalyptic millennial” themes of Paul’s Christ myth drove Marxist and Nazi mass-death outbreaks, and continue to drive the climate apocalypse crusade and its Net Zero decarbonization madness.

This site has repeatedly posted the good historical research on these things (i.e. Richard Landes’ “Heaven on Earth: The Varieties of the Millennial Experience”, Arthur Herman’s “The Idea of Decline in Western History”, Arthur Mendel’s “Vision and Violence”, David Redles’ “Hitler’s Millennial Reich”, etc.).

See also below the vindication and celebration of violence today as the means to a better future (the Mangione and Kirk incidents)- i.e. “Suffering through contemporary ‘madness of crowds’ eruptions”. And other stuff.

Themes to unite Sapiens around (the best of a “force” propelling us toward a humane future), Wendell Krossa

Yuval Harari in “Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind” notes that from 70,000 to 30,000 years ago our species Homo sapiens went through the Cognitive Revolution where we discovered new ways of thinking and communicating. We created language that enabled us to communicate meaning. The humans of that period learned to communicate more than just information about the physical world around them. They also learned to imagine and communicate fictitious things that do not exist at all and to do so “collectively”.

During this era of the Cognitive Revolution, legends, myths, gods and religions appeared for the first time. And “This ability to speak about fictions is the most unique feature of Sapiens language” (p.27). This ability has continued into the modern era as along with religious fictions we have learned to create “fictious” ideologies, scientific theories, and visions of the future. It should be noted however, that the core themes of our “fictions” often consistently remain the same.

Harari is setting the stage for understanding how early humans were able to move beyond small groups of essentially extended families to live cooperatively in much larger groups, eventually in empires and states of millions of people. He suggests the secret to this “urbanization” transition was “the appearance of fiction. Large numbers of strangers can cooperate successfully by believing in common myths… Any large-scale human cooperation- whether a modern state, a medieval church, an ancient city, or an archaic tribe- is rooted in common myths that exist only in people’s collective imaginations”, (p.30).

He includes such “fictions” as limited liability companies (“legal fictions”), religious systems, systems of laws, nation states, etc.

He continues, “Much of history revolves around this question: how does one convince millions of people to believe particular stories about gods, or nations, or limited liability companies? Yet when it succeeds, it gives Sapiens immense power, because it enables millions of strangers to cooperate and work towards common goals… An imagined reality is something that everyone believes in, and as long as this communal belief persists, the imagined reality exerts force in the world”, (p.35).

This leads to the question of what story would function as a truly “humane force” to carry/propel us cooperatively toward a more humane future? What features/myths/beliefs would operate best to do so?

My proposal for a set of alternative features to what we have inherited from the past:

Humanity’s worst ideas, better alternatives” (Old story themes, new story alternatives).

http://www.wendellkrossa.com/?p=9533

The identification and rejection of inherited bad ideas, now long embedded as archetypes of the collective unconscious, is a first necessary step to undergo, the “death” side of the “death/rebirth” process, the “disintegration” side of the “disintegration/re-integration” process. We emerge from these experiences/processes, hopefully, with new insights and narrative themes that affirm the better impulses of our natures, that affirm our human spirit and self.

I would choose themes that arouse deeply and intuitively felt impulses from the common human spirit in us, what many of us felt, for example, when Erika Kirk stated in regard to her husband’s murderer, “I forgive you”. She was struggling with the precept of Jesus to “love your enemy”. I would have counseled her to wait a while before struggling with that, till some of the pain had subsided, if it ever does (i.e. the conclusion of the dentist whose wife and daughters were brutally murdered that “Whoever created the idea of ‘closure’ was a fool”). But nonetheless, Erika’s statement reduced many of us to tears. We get it Erika, what you were trying to say and do. That precept of Jesus pushes us all to think of what love really means, what it really means to try to be truly and fully human.

Narratives/stories that hold our societies together

The current meta-narratives holding our liberal democracy states together constitute a hodge podge of the principles, systems of law, and representative institutions of Classic Liberalism. But these generally successful experiments in cooperative liberal democracy are under constant assault by residual bad ideas in the religious traditions and ideologies held by many in these same nation states.

The forces at work to undermine liberal democracy come from both sides of our population divides- i.e. a complex of “bad religious ideas” are held and promoted on the right or conservative side, inciting many toward advocacy for theocracy-type narratives and policies applied to whole societies, and thereby crossing the boundary between state and religion. Similarly bad ideas are held on the left or “liberal” side, but in “secularized” versions, with the left/liberal side having now become highly “illiberal” and pushing more for revived collectivism approaches.

We need constant re-affirmation of the basic principles of liberal democracy to keep us all oriented to the fundamental things that we can all agree on. Principles, systems of common law, and representative institutions that serve the people and protect the rights and freedoms of all individuals, equally.

Carr’s wisdom sayings– Carr showing Malice on the Platinum rule

Comedian Jimmy Carr was interviewed by podcaster/comedian Michael Malice and Carr mentioned the ‘golden rule’ but then added his “Platinum rule” that urges to “treat yourself just like you treat others”. He said, “I bet a lot of people don’t do that.”

I post this in response to someone’s question about the pop-psychology maxim that “we need to love ourselves before we can properly love others”.

Another ‘Carr-ism’ is that “disposition is more important than position”. He said, “You carry your disposition with you everywhere”. Meaning, your temperament/character is more important than your job.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H3FwqPkPSHE

“Bot farms” inflaming issues from outside

Good point by Joe Rogan on overseas bot farms, whether Russian, Chinese, Iranian, or others. Rogan says they jump on any issue in liberal democracies with false accounts that are not real people and seek to inflame both sides on any given issue. They stir hatred and outrage to divide people.

And these bots can be an unlimited number of false persons that are posing as citizens of the liberal democracies on either side. But they are not real voices, not real people, says Rogan. This is all part of the “long-game” goal of outside regimes to manipulate and indoctrinate citizens of liberal democracies, the stated long-game approach of regimes such as China’s to bring down liberal democracy in order to replace it with the totalitarian approach favored by people like former WEF leader Claus Schwab.

As Rogan notes, they push people into a “fever pitch of culture war that they have to win”, with their righteous side conquering and destroying the evil other side. How little we are aware of this foreign interference, of how insidious it is. AI enables it to be all the more insidious now.

It’s helpful to keep this info from Rogan in the back of our minds as another possible contributing factor to the hysterical outrage that we are all observing in public over varied issues that divide our societies. Part of what Jimmy Dore noted long ago, that- “We are the most propagandized people and we don’t know it”.

“Joe Rogan Experience #2382 – Andrew Santino”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6djZKYdz5ig

The Kirk assassination

Note the Jimmy Dore clip below. Another “conspiracy theory” nut thing? After JFK, RFK, Martin Luther King, two attempts on Trump, well, what are we to think anymore?

This crazy stuff… I think of Mike Benz (two appearances on Joe Rogan this past year or so) and the behind-the-scenes complex infrastructure to propagandize publics and control narratives in order to control the minds of citizens. Good researchers like Benz continue to uncover this stuff.

“Weird Details About the Charlie Kirk Assassination”, JRE clips

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UY-FREo1JMM

And this from Jimmy Dore… Not affirming anything, just presenting some alternative information. What is going on?

“CLEAR EVIDENCE Charlie Kirk Was Shot From The Back!”, The Jimmy Dore Show, Sept. 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8rqLG0j12lE

Back to meta-narrative issues, Wendell Krossa

This central Jesus message below from “Q Wisdom Sayings” (“the closest that we get to what the man actually taught”) offers one of the best sets of ideals/principles/precepts to undergird liberal democracy. The core Jesus themes counter, for example, the horrifically destructive apocalyptic myth because (1) a non-retaliatory God (“no more eye for eye but love enemies because God does not retaliate but loves enemies”), such a God will not destroy the world with the ultimate act of retaliation in apocalyptic destruction of all. That teaching gets the Ultimate Ideal of deity right, presenting the singularly most humane Cohering Center for human narratives- a God who does not engage “eye for eye” justice.

Just an insert to say- Donald Trump should (as he jokingly suggested at the Charlie Kirk memorial service) listen to Erika Kirk and others on “love your enemy”. Hating others is just too exhausting an emotion to indulge over any length of time. It deforms consciousness and life. And it leads to bad responses in life. “Petty vindictiveness” has been a consistent stain on Trump’s otherwise successful and impressive life.

The Jesus message below also counters (2) the impulse to domination with advocacy for the inclusion of all equally, evident in his comment that God treats all equally the same, with “sun and rain given to all without discrimination”. All, both good and bad, get the same generosity and love. Add here the comment of Jesus that we should not lord over others but instead serve others.

And the core Jesus message counters (3) the idea of justice as some version of punitive destruction. Again, rejecting “eye for eye” justice with unlimited forgiveness in the precept to “love your enemies”. Common sense qualifies that precept with the responsibility to hold everyone accountable for their behavior, including imprisoning violent people. But they must still be treated humanely when incarcerated. As Leo Tolstoy said, there is never any situation where we don’t treat everyone with love. That is the basic obligation of being fundamentally human.

This Jesus message is best expressed in Classic Liberal or liberal democracy systems that protect the equal rights and freedoms of all, with government elites/bureaucrats clear that “they serve the people who are sovereign”.

This Western approach to organizing society stands explicitly and unequivocally against all forms of collectivism, whether Marxist communism, Robert Owen communalism, or the varied iterations of social democracy/Democratic socialism, all the “same continuum” versions of collectivist organizing of societies where self-deluded ”enlightened elites” (i.e. those who believe that they know how best to run other’s lives) undermine the freedoms of individuals by subjecting them to such collectivism, claiming that they do it “for the people, or on behalf of the people… For the greater or common good”. With these self-deceiving validations, they endlessly centralize power, notably in Western societies through taxation and regulation schemes that render people less free, less self-determining, less in control of their own lives.

There is no better body of ideals than the Jesus summary below. If the Jesus material is kept clean from the deforming Christ mythology of Paul- i.e. the features of tribalism (true believers saved, unbelievers damned), domination (Lord Jesus ruling with a rod of iron), and punitive destruction (apocalypse, Hell), then there is no comparable body of sayings that gets us to the essence of being human, to the supreme reach of love, and to the best of theology. The Jesus insights overturn all religious traditions with their primitive theologies of conditional deity and related religious conditions.

The Jesus message summarized below, points to living on the highest plane of being human, pointing us toward the realm of heroes who conquer their dark triad impulses to live as truly human. That is conquering evil in the real battle of life, being successful in the authentic hero’s quest that is the inner battle against the real enemy and monster inside all of us- i.e. our inherited animal impulses that, when indulged, render us inhuman/subhuman/nonhuman.

(A reposting) Summary of Historical Jesus’ core message: Wendell Krossa

Subtitle: How to end cycles of retaliatory violence, how to courageously initiate peace in societies….

Again, this is not prescriptive for criminal justice systems to adopt some form of a dogmatic pacifist approach that does not work in the face of evil. States and their criminal justice systems are obligated, first and foremost, to restrain violent people in order to protect all citizens from assaults, whether foreign or domestic. De-criminalization and de-carceration policies, especially as applied to violent people, do not work. Add also, that the Jesus precepts are not prescriptive for operating a business or running a national economy.

Take this advice of Historical Jesus as more about how we maintain our own humanity as we go about the dirty work of dealing with the nasty offenders.

These statements have more to do with how victims may freely choose to respond to offenders in the multi-varied incidents and relationships of life. Its very much an individual freedom of choice issue. People who have suffered horrific abuse from offenders should never be pushed to engage the issues of forgiveness or “love the enemy”, until perhaps they feel more able to engage such issues later, and if presented as fundamentally helpful in some way to resolving their personal traumas.

As the father of a brutally murdered girl said years later- I chose to forgive, not for the sake of the offender but for the sake of my murdered daughter, now in a better place, who would have wanted me to do so. She would not have wanted me to spend the rest of my life darkened by hatred and bitterness. And that would have ruined the lives of my other children.

Just a mental gimmick? No, such “intention” to forgive (while not feeling mushy or fuzzy toward offenders) effects profound outcomes on the mental/emotional state of the one doing it.

Or consider the mother who argued in court against the death penalty for her son’s murderer so as to spare the murderer’s mom the same pain of loss that she suffered. That expresses an unbelievable ability to empathize beyond one’s personal pain to try to alleviate the potential suffering of another person. She had nothing to do with the killer of her son.

Other points:

These principles/precepts below shape how we think, perceive, how we then feel and are motivated. They impact our intentions, our thinking and responding to offenders, our motivations and intentions to reject inhumane responses and choose more humane responses.

Forgiveness, and an unconditional approach to offenders, works at the individual level and at-scale in societies. Note, for example, Nelson Mandela employing his unconditional love approach toward former enemies and thereby defusing a potential civil war in South Africa (Richard Stengel in “Mandela’s Way”). Compare that with the descent into brutal tribal justice in Rwanda and Serbia around the same time. Mandela also affirmed, at a personal level, that unconditional treatment of enemies “brought out the best in others and turned enemies into friends”. Not all, but most.

But it takes exceptional courage to be the initiator in breaking natural eye for eye retaliatory cycles to start things moving in better directions, especially when prevailing views of “justice” validate eye for eye. The breakers of such cycles may even be vilified as “weak, gutless, spineless, cowardly, pussies, etc.”

Again, these are not primarily precepts about how we should feel toward offenders but how we should act, how we should respond and treat them.

The guiding ideals/precepts of Historical Jesus:

Note how this message below is framed. It presents a list of behavioral responses, actions. Then concludes that if you do this you will be just like God. Meaning, these human responses/behaviors show what God is like. Its very much a statement of ethics and theology- insight on the actual nature/character of God. Behavior based on similar belief.

The statements:

“Give to everyone who asks you, and if anyone takes what belongs to you, do not demand it back. Do to others as you would have them do to you. If you love only those who love you, what credit is that to you? Everyone finds it easy to love those who love them. And if you do good to those who are good to you, what credit is that to you? Everyone can do that. And if you lend to those from whom you expect repayment, what credit is that to you? Most will lend to others, expecting to be repaid in full.

“But do something more heroic, more humane. (Live on a higher plane of human experience, push into the realm of heroism). Do not retaliate against your offenders/enemies with ‘eye for eye’ justice. Instead, love your enemies, do good to them, and lend to them without expecting to get anything back. Then you will be just like God because God does not retaliate against God’s enemies. God does not mete out eye for eye justice. Instead, God is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked. God causes the sun to rise on the evil and the good and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. Be unconditionally loving, just as your God is unconditionally loving”. (My paraphrase of Luke 6:32-36 or Matthew 5:38-48.)

This can be summarized in this single statement: “Love your enemy because God does”.

Example of non-retaliatory, unconditional love: The Prodigal Father story in Luke 15:11-31.

The Father (representing God) did not demand a sacrifice, restitution, payment, apology, or anything else before forgiving, fully accepting, and loving the wasteful son.

The above statement and illustration by Jesus overturn the highly conditional Christian religion and Paul’s Christ mythology. Paul, along with the rest of the New Testament, preached a retaliatory God who demanded full payment and punishment of all sin in a blood sacrifice of atonement before he would forgive, accept, and ultimately love anyone.

Added Notes:

What it means to be human, Wendell Krossa

The Jesus message provides some of the best insights and themes on what it means to be fully human, authentically human, and nothing more potently so than his central ideal of unconditional love. And this takes us to the foundational meaning of the cosmos, life, human civilization, and personal human story.

When we don’t get the core theme in Historical Jesus’ message clear- i.e. the lodestar central ideal of unconditional love (the supreme guiding ideal for thought, emotions, motivations, and responses/behavior)- then we face the tendency to succumb to the tribalism pathology of viewing ourselves as unquestioningly, unchallengeable righteous heroes battling irredeemably evil enemies. Yes, there are issues in life that are clearly “right versus wrong” and we do engage battles for the side that we view as right. But we should do so with caution that we do not engage such issues to the extent of hating and destroying differing others as actual “enemies”. It is always critical to remember that the “enemy” is still and always our family.

As Joseph Campbell and Leo Tolstoy reminded us, we are always under the fundamental obligation to “love our enemies”.

Joseph Campbell:

“For love is exactly as strong as life. And when life produces what the intellect names evil, we may enter into righteous battle, contending ‘from loyalty of heart’: however, if the principle of love (Christ’s “Love your enemies”) is lost thereby, our humanity too will be lost. ‘Man’, in the words of the American novelist Hawthorne, ‘must not disclaim his brotherhood even with the guiltiest’” (Myths To Live By).

Leo Tolstoy:

“The whole trouble lies in that people think that there are conditions excluding the necessity of love in their intercourse with man, but such conditions do not exist. Things may be treated without love; one may chop wood, make bricks, forge iron without love, but one can no more deal with people without love than one can handle bees without care” (Resurrection).

Note: It’s all about ultimate freedom, Wendell Krossa

Once we get clear the profound difference between Jesus and Paul’s Christ then we open ourselves to the greatest potential liberation movement in history, i.e. liberation from the “threat theology” that has been a fundamental curse on humanity across history- darkening and enslaving human consciousness and life with the great lie that God was behind the natural world, punishing people for their imperfection, with the added threat of future destruction (i.e. return to chaos with life ending in apocalypse, the great fear of the ancients) and afterlife harm in hell.

This mythology (better psychopathology) has cursed billions with added fear, anxiety, shame and guilt, despair, depression, nihilism, and violence. (See research of psychologist Harold Ellens and psychotherapist Zenon Lotufo in “Cruel God, Kind God”, among other sources.)

I am talking about liberation in the depths of human subconscious from the long deeply-embedded archetypes constructed by our ancestors to embody and validate their primitive thinking, archetypes that continue to influence many moderns to embrace the same old set of core themes today in our religious traditions and in the “secularized” versions of contemporary ideologies like Marxism, Nazism, and environmental alarmism.

(Insert: Kristian Niemietz’s conclusion in “Socialism: The Failed Idea That Never Dies”, that “Emotional satisfaction, not rational thinking, and despite contrary evidence, dominates our choice in beliefs.” That is how many respond to the archetypes of our collective unconscious. Just unconsciously embracing new versions of the same old bad ideas, like the many today who unquestioningly accept the climate apocalypse narrative, against evidence to the contrary.)

Threat theology has been best termed the “monster God” theology that has incited and validated humanity’s worst impulses to retaliate and harm others. Threat theology is behind the fundamental belief in “salvation through destruction” (as in Marxist violent revolution, or environmental alarmist calls to purge civilization of industrial societies based on fossil fuels).

The core threat of monster deity is still the cohering center of the religious narratives of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam… all tightly related religions that have shared a historically descending trajectory of the same set of core themes. Add of course, the Hellenism influence on Judaism and Christianity (see Bob Brinsmead essays below) and the recognition that all three Western religions share the same fundamental themes, pushes us to end the defensive tribalism of “my religion is better than yours”.

And yes, Christianity gets a pat on the back for including the “Q Wisdom Sayings” message of Historical Jesus, something Islam did not include that would have helped to moderate the impulse to violent retaliation against unbelievers. But Christianity also needs the slap on the wrist for “burying that diamond” message of Jesus under Paul’s Christ myth- the conclusion of Thomas Jefferson and Leo Tolstoy that Paul’s Christ distorts and deforms the core themes and message of Jesus.

Historical Jesus broke completely free of threat theology with his “stunning new theology of a non-retaliatory God” (James Robinson’s conclusion from “Q Wisdom Sayings” gospel research- a subgenre of the “Search for Historical Jesus”). I would state that “stunning new theology” is better understood in his statement that God was unconditional love. Period. Jesus went to the core issue in human narratives and thought, the Cohering Center that is deity- the ultimate reality, ideal, and authority- and transformed that entirely.

He overturned entirely all threat theology and offered humanity a stunning new way to think of Ultimate Reality, a new Ultimate Ideal to transform consciousness, narratives, emotions, motivations, responses/behavior- all of reality and life.

And that unconditional God pushes all of us to rethink justice as some form of eye for eye retaliation. It pushes us to “love our enemies” as the fundamental precept to guide ethics, emotion, motivation, and response/behavior in our lives.

My point? Open yourself to ultimate liberation, the final great liberation offered to humanity, profound liberation at the depths of human consciousness/subconscious, liberation of the human spirit, mind, emotions, and all life. Liberation that only the truth of an unconditionally loving God can give. It affirms a sense of ultimate safety for all, no matter our failure to live as heroically human in this life (i.e. ultimate “heroism” evident/expressed in those loving their enemies).

A preface note to the “recap” below:

Just to add to this above comment- “all tightly related religions that have shared a historically descending trajectory of the same set of core themes.”

A note for emphasis: While there are obviously the common features in Christianity and Islam that are listed below, the core commonality between religions like Christianity and Islam is the belief in a wrathful God who promises violent destruction through apocalypse and hell. That “Cohering Center” of these religions undergirds and validates all else in their narratives- i.e. the demanded conditions for unquestioning belief, submission to religious authorities, and faithful religious practise (fulfill rituals, payments, religious lifestyle, and promotion of the religion- i.e. seek converts, etc.).

And as I noted just above when people make comparisons between Christianity and Islam- “Christianity gets a pat on the back for including the “Q Wisdom Sayings” message of Historical Jesus, something Islam did not include that would have helped to moderate the tribal impulse to violent retaliation against unbelievers.”

This is a critically important point- The “diamond” insights of Historical Jesus (Thomas Jefferson’s term) embody the potent counter to the prominent features of Paul’s Christ myth, features that have long functioned to incite, guide, and validate people’s worst impulses to harm others- i.e. features such as angry deity judging (see Paul’s letter to Romans, Thessalonians), God/Christ tribally excluding unbelievers (again, affirmed throughout Paul’s New Testament letters), God/Christ demanding submission (Lord Christ ruling with a rod of iron), and God/Christ promising violent destruction (Romans, Revelation), etc.

The “stunning new theology” of Jesus (his new image of God) rejected judgment, tribal exclusion (sun and rain given to all alike), submission (do not lord over others), and violent destruction (no “eye for eye” retaliation), etc.

Muhammad missed the powerful benefits of Jesus’ “Q Wisdom Sayings” when he did not include that material in his new religion. He certainly would have heard about it as he listened to his spiritual mentor, the Ebionite priest Waraqa (a Jewish Christian), as he expounded from the Gospel to the Hebrews (the early version of Matthew’s gospel). And most certainly Waraqa would have taught Muhammad the similar content of Matthew’s gospel.

It helps to inform ourselves of the good research of the Jesus Seminar and especially the research on “Q Wisdom Sayings” in order to clearly grasp the profound differences between the messages of Historical Jesus and Paul’s contrary Christology, an embodiment of Hellenism. Most helpful are the essays of Bob Brinsmead on this:

“The Historical Jesus: What the Scholars are Saying”

https://bobbrinsmead.com/the-historical-jesus-what-the-scholars-are-saying/

“The Doctrine of Christ and the Triumph of Hellenism”

https://bobbrinsmead.com/the-doctrine-of-christ-and-the-triump-of-hellenism/

Here’s a little recap of something posted earlier on this site… Wendell Krossa

I saw a video clip of Bill Maher arguing that Islam was worse than Christianity for issues like intolerance and violence. He seems unaware of the actual history of these religions and that Islam is the direct offspring of Jewish Christianity or the early “Jewish Jesus” movement that was contrary to Paul’s Hellenist Christ-ianity. Another name for the Jewish Jesus movement was Ebionism (Ebionites). These- the Jewish Jesus movement and Paul’s Christ-ianity- were two dominant and entirely contrary movements in early Christianity.

The Jewish Jesus people, or Ebionites, believed that Jesus was a prophet blessed of God but not God himself. And their movement held that Jesus said nothing about being a sacrifice for sin. That was the distortion of Jesus (a sacrifice for sin) that Paul introduced in his new Christ-ianity religion (not really “new” in that it embraced the themes of ancient Hellenism- see Helmut Koester’s “History, Culture, and Religion of the Hellenistic Age”).

We see intimations of the conflict between Paul and the Jesus movement in the New Testament. The Jewish Jesus movement was oriented to Jesus’ actual Q Wisdom Sayings message, hence also called the Q Wisdom movement. Paul’s Christ-ianity was a Hellenist movement set in direct conflict with that actual movement of Jesus.

The Jewish movement was led by Jesus’ brother James, and Jesus’ friend/follower Peter. Note how intensely Paul hated the Jesus Q Wisdom movement. He goes after its leaders, James and Peter, in statements such as Galatians 1:8-9, where he curses them with damnation. Paul also intolerantly condemned and vilified the Q Wisdom movement of Jesus in 1 Corinthians, mocking and dismissing it as “worldly wisdom”.

The Jewish followers of Jesus viewed Paul’s Christ-ianity as heretical, just as the Old Testament prophets protested the sacrifice industry and its priesthood as heretical. They stated things like, “What makes you think I want all your sacrifices?” says the LORD. “I am sick of your burnt offerings of rams and the fat of fattened cattle. I get no pleasure from the blood of bulls and lambs and goats…. For in the day that I brought them out of the land of Egypt, I did not speak to your fathers or command them concerning burnt offerings and sacrifices”, and other similar statements in Amos, Jeremiah, Isaiah, etc.

But the victors in battles get to state who is about truth and who is about error, so Paul’s Christ-ianity ended demonizing the Jewish Jesus movement as heresy and persecuting them till they were scattered. Some of those Ebionites fled to the Arabian Peninsula where they established congregations/synagogues that persisted over subsequent centuries, even up to around 600 CE when Muhammad emerges in Mecca.

How Islam was created as a version of Jewish Christianity/Ebionism (one source- Joseph Azzi’s “The Priest and the Prophet”):

Muhammad’s first wife was Khadija. Her cousin in Mecca was Waraqa, the priest of a local Ebionite congregation. Waraqa then become the spiritual mentor of Muhammad and taught him all that he knew about God and religion.

The Ebionites, again, viewed Jesus as just a prophet of God, not divine himself. And they did not believe that he was a sacrifice for sin. Ebionites also embraced water purification rites and practices, and did not eat pork.

Scholars say that Waraqa taught using the gospel to the Hebrews, an early version of Matthew’s gospel, which he also had translated. He used those books, among others, to instruct Muhammad.

Note in Matthew the pattern of stating that those who rejected Jesus’ miracles were then damned to hell, to being cast out into outer darkness where there was weeping and gnashing of teeth (a favorite statement of Matthew’s). Then note in the Quran that very same pattern of claiming that those who reject the message and the messenger (i.e. Muhammad) will be cast into hell, into the fire from which there is no escape. Such warnings are on almost every page of the Quran. Exact replicas of Matthew’s archetypal statements.

So also in Islam we find the practices of water purification and not eating pork.

Interesting that as Muhammad copies and borrows what Waraqa is teaching him from the gospel of the Hebrews and Matthew’s gospel, Muhammad claims that he is getting this teaching as visions in a cave, so as to frame his ideas as revelations directly from God. No, he was actually just embracing the core themes of Waraqa’s Jewish Christianity. And that enrages Islamic theologians today to admit that.

So c’mon Bill Maher, enough of the “Islam is worse than Christianity” stuff. Both share the same core themes, just as all the other historical descendants of such ideas do today, both religious and “secular/ideological”. Just as you do Bill, with your climate apocalypse nonsense. No different from the core themes of Islam and Christianity, though you claim to be “non-religious”. Ya right. Read Richard Landes, Arthur Herman, Arthur Mendel, David Redles and others, who have done good homework revealing that all these religions, along with contemporary secular variants like Marxism, Nazism, and environmental alarmism, always replicate the very same apocalyptic millennial themes and the larger complex of related bad ideas that that this site posts regularly.

There is nothing new under the sun. And why are we all fighting and killing one another when so many of us believe exactly the same core narrative themes?

How many, view themselves today as “secular, humanist, materialist/atheist even”, yet go about mouthing the very same primitive themes of all past religious traditions, just framed in what they believe to be new “secular/ideological” versions, with new terminology, definitions, etc.

Getting a clear grip on the profound difference between the core themes of Historical Jesus and Paul’s Christ myth will help to expose such confusion.

Note:

I guess the point in this is how we succumb even in the modern age to the most primitive and barbaric ideas and then wonder why we continue to suffer through endless eruptions of the “madness of crowds”, as in repeated Marxist revolutions (the same old collectivism now framed in “Far-left Woke Progressivism”), Nazi horrors, and now environmental alarmism crusades (climate apocalypse hysteria) that propose to ruin our societies with salvation schemes like Net Zero, banning the fossil fuels that provide the very energy driving our civilization and providing the 6000 “fossil fuel derivatives” that grant us the many benefits of our much improved human condition.

AI Overview presents this on Ebionism (I am not affirming all this. See Bob Brinsmead’s essays on this)

“Ebionism was an early Jewish Christian movement in the first few centuries CE that viewed Jesus as a human Messiah and prophet, not God, insisting on strict adherence to Jewish law, such as circumcision and dietary rules. They rejected Jesus’ divine nature and virgin birth, believed he was adopted as God’s son due to his perfect righteousness, and revered James the Just, the brother of Jesus, as his true successor. Ebionites also rejected Paul the Apostle as an apostate and used a version of the Gospel of Matthew that excluded the virgin birth narrative.”

Key Characteristics of Ebionism

• Messianic Jesus:

They affirmed Jesus as the promised Jewish Messiah and prophet but rejected the common Christian belief in his divinity.

• Human Messiah:

They believed Jesus was a human being, the natural son of Joseph and Mary, who became God’s son at his baptism through his perfect obedience to the Law of Moses.

• Adherence to Jewish Law:

The Ebionites, meaning “the poor ones” in Hebrew, placed great importance on following the Jewish law, which included circumcision, keeping a kosher diet, and observing the Sabbath.

• Rejection of Pauline Theology:

They saw Paul as a false apostle who had abandoned Jewish tradition and law.

• Veneration of James the Just:

They revered James, the brother of Jesus, as the true successor to Jesus’ ministry, not Peter.

• Gospel of the Ebionites:

They utilized a specific version of the Gospel of Matthew that did not include the virgin birth or genealogy of Jesus.

Relationship to Early Jewish Christianity

• Continuation of Jewish Roots:

Ebionism represents a form of Jewish Christianity that emphasized keeping Jewish identity and traditions central to Christian belief.

• A Reaction to the Gentile Mission:

Some scholars suggest their theology was a response to the law-free Gentile mission of early Christianity, emphasizing the continuing relevance of the Law for believers.

Decline

• Orthodox Pressure:

The Ebionites eventually declined as Christian orthodoxy was established, with some choosing to return to Judaism and others integrating into more mainstream forms of Christianity.

(End of AI Overview statements)

Doing what comedians should do, Wendell Krossa

I’ve come across this comedian Leonarda Jonie, who is a striking example of what comedy should do in society to keep the door of free speech open for all. Comedians can effectively fulfill this function by purposefully saying offensive things. They are not seriously proposing such things but just stating them in ways that make us all laugh at those things. And in so doing, they may upset many people, even outrage them (people not understanding what is going on will often angrily stomp out). But that is what freedom of speech must be about. All of us have to tolerate what we may feel is the offensive speech of others or we all lose freedom by permitting some to censor speech that offends, that upsets them.

This is happening broadly today across our liberal democracies where under the guise of “online harm” bills, and related laws (Internet “content moderation” legislation), some are trying to censor, ban, silence, even criminalize the “offensive” speech of others as “harmful, dangerous disinformation”, etc. This is done with virtue-signaling claims that they are protecting children or minorities from “hate speech” or “speech as violence”.

But the problem is that with “concept creep” and ill-defined boundaries, these proposals are abused in allowing some to go after the speech of their political opponents or even after comedians for making jokes. That is a dangerous opening to totalitarianism that is now occurring in Britain, Germany, Canada, Australia, Brazil, and elsewhere.

So listen to Leonarda Jonie and feel uncomfortable if you will, but get what she is doing, along with others, in keeping her foot in the door of free speech that others are trying to shut. And I am not affirming all her positions on varied issues, but just pointing to her for illustrating the critical role of comedians in keeping speech free, even offensive speech. Here’s a sample…

“Leonarda Jonie: Uncensored, LIVE in Houston, TX”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E7U6j7Crg1k

A good summary of the basic issues around free speech is presented by Ira Glasser (former ACLU director) on Joe Rogan, especially in the first hour of this interview:

“Joe Rogan Experience #1595 – Ira Glasser”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=1rM8mWhgIl0

And this Saad truth:

“The Untold Angle of Charlie Kirk’s Assassination (THE SAAD TRUTH_1907)”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rgnFir7SKvM

I’ve added some illustrative points to what Saad is saying in this link…

Good points in this from Gad Saad, a sort of social psychologist, that the battle for freedom never ends because in every generation there are those wanting to take it away. I would add that alarmists assaulting free speech use claims of “emergencies” that render the normal protocols of democracy too slow, hence they demand emergency measures to save whatever they claim is under dire, existential threat (i.e. “threats to democracy”, “harmful hate speech”, “imminent apocalypse”, etc.).

Saad illustrates the nature of the threat to speech with the time that he went to Los Angeles as a Jew to speak to some group on the issue of free speech. The threats to his life from those wanting to deny him that freedom were so serious that he needed a phalanx of body-guards for protection from being assaulted or killed. That is the craziness of the era that we are living through where it has become dangerous just to talk about a basic human right and freedom. And this threat to freedom comes from within our liberal democracies.

Suffering through contemporary “madness of crowds” eruptions, Wendell Krossa

We have the insane trend today, unleashed among too many of our fellow citizens, of glorifying violence as the valid response or solution when upset about some issue, violence as justified for settling disagreements over ideas/policies, etc. How much do certain ideas/beliefs in our public meta-narratives (religious and secular/ideological) contribute to feeding and validating violent responses to disagreements?

I think, for example, of the Luigi Mangione incident, and how some have tried to reframe his horrific act of violence against an innocent person as heroic protest. Add here the many celebrating the murder of Charlie Kirk.

I would suggest that such glorification of violence derives ultimately from primitive beliefs in “salvation by destruction”, as for example in apocalyptic millennial mythology. Human sacrifice is a similar ancient belief, that “the murder of the right people can make the future better”. That belief was epitomized in the myth of innocent Jesus sent to be a sacrifice for sin. The “sacrifice of Christ” mythology derives from the same fundamental idea of “salvation through destruction”.

We saw the historical outcomes of this thinking in the apocalyptic millennialism that has been identified and exposed as a driving influence behind Marxist revolutionary violence over the past century, also behind the Nazi commitment to purge “evil, corrupting people” (their demonization and dehumanization of the Jews) as necessary to clear the way to their millennial paradise in the Third Reich. This pathological mythology is illustrated in the New Testament book of Revelation.

These beliefs have long dominated human narratives providing incitement, guidance, and validation for human emotions, motivations, and responses/behaviors. Note psychologist Harold Ellens comments on this just below.

We are seeing this primitive belief in salvation through destruction again now in the contemporary ideology that we must purge the corrupt industrial civilization of the West in order to restore the lost paradise of a more wilderness world, as in environmental apocalyptic alarmism lunacy.

The validation and celebration of violence as salvific in some way blinds many to the barbarity and horror of what they are actually doing. We saw this in the wake of the murder of the health CEO by Mangione. Even comedian Bill Burr, during an interview, celebrated that barbarity with his shout “Free Luigi”, just as many others have exhibited the same thoughtless insanity in celebrating the murder of Charlie Kirk.

We can trace such beliefs back to other fundamental core religious themes such the mythology of an angry God who solves problems with violence. As Harold Ellens warns, that view of deity- the ultimate human Ideal and Authority- then validates our use of violence to solve problems.

You can’t read this from Ellens and Lotufo often enough:

Zenon Lotufo (in “Cruel God, Kind God”) notes “the pathological nature of mainstream orthodox theology and popular religious ideation”.

He says, “One type of religiosity is entirely built around the assumption or basic belief, and correspondent fear, that God is cruel or even sadistic… The associated metaphors to this image are ‘monarch’ and ‘judge’. Its distinctive doctrine is ‘penal satisfaction’. I call it ‘Cruel God Christianity’… Its consequences are fear, guilt, shame, and impoverished personalities. All these things are fully coherent with and dependent on a cruel and vengeful God image… (He is referring to the basic features of Paul’s Christ myth)

“(This image results) in the inhibition of the full development of personality… The doctrine of penal satisfaction implies an image of God as wrathful and vengeful, resulting in exposing God’s followers to guilt, shame, and resentment… These ideas permeate Western culture and inevitably influence those who live in this culture…

“Beliefs do exert much more influence over our lives than simple ideas… ideas can also, in the psychological sphere, generate ‘dynamis’, or mobilize energy… (they) may result, for instance, in fanaticism and violence, or… may also produce anxiety and inhibitions that hinder the full manifestation of the capacities of a person…

“The image of God can be seen as a basic belief or scheme, and as such it is never questioned…

“Basic cultural beliefs are so important, especially in a dominant widespread culture, because they have the same properties as individual basic beliefs, that is, they are not perceived as questionable. The reader may object that “God”, considered a basic belief in our culture, is rejected or questioned by a large number of people today. Yet the fact is that the idea of God that those people reject is almost never questioned. In other words, their critique assumes there is no alternative way of conceiving God except the one that they perceive through the lens of their culture. So, taking into account the kind of image of God that prevails in Western culture- a ‘monster God’… such rejection is understandable…

“There is in Western culture a psychological archetype, a metaphor that has to do with the image of a violent and wrathful God (see Romans, Revelation). Crystallized in Anselm’s juridical atonement theory, this image represents God sufficiently disturbed by the sinfulness of humanity that God had only two options: destroy us or substitute a sacrifice to pay for our sins. He did the latter. He killed Christ.

“Ellens goes on by stating that the crucifixion, a hugely violent act of infanticide or child sacrifice, has been disguised by Christian conservative theologians as a ‘remarkable act of grace’. Such a metaphor of an angry God, who cannot forgive unless appeased by a bloody sacrifice, has been ‘right at the center of the Master Story of the Western world for the last 2,000 years. And the unavoidable consequence for the human mind is a strong tendency to use violence’.

“’With that kind of metaphor at our center, and associated with the essential behavior of God, how could we possibly hold, in the deep structure of our unconscious motivations, any other notion of ultimate solutions to ultimate questions or crises than violence- human solutions that are equivalent to God’s kind of violence’…

“Hence, in our culture we have a powerful element that impels us to violence, a Cruel God Image… that also contributes to guilt, shame, and the impoverishment of personality…”.

As Harold Ellens says, “If your God uses force, then so may you, to get your way against your ‘enemies’”.

Myths of angry Deity demanding violent blood sacrifice for salvation belongs to a complex of archetypal themes still dominant in our world religions and now also embraced in our main ideological narratives (secularized mythology), archetypal themes that have to be rejected and replaced because we know better now the harmful influence that they exert on human minds and lives.

The Jesus message does this with an unconditional theology, a stunning new image of a God who is non-tribal, non-dominating, nonviolent, nonretaliatory. Love in the truest sense. With a God who is unconditional love, the God of Jesus who rejected eye for eye retaliation and urged us to “love your enemies”, you cannot validate retaliatory violence for solving problems.

The Jesus message is basically advocating for how we can grow the fuck up and act as mature people, settling our differences nonviolently, democratically, like mature adults.

Again, I would emphasize that all of our major Western religious traditions embrace these fundamental ideas/beliefs above, of a deity who affirms violence as the means for achieving salvation. This is true of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.

Thankfully, many affiliated with these religions have learned to moderate themselves by focusing on the good material in their traditions and ignoring and downplaying the nastier stuff. However, enough zealously devoted true believers remain in these traditions, along with other fringe types in our societies, that take such ideas/beliefs seriously and that makes it critical that we challenge and expose such themes in our meta-narratives and offer better alternatives to replace them, more humane themes to frame the archetypes of our shared meta-stories.

See “Humanity’s worst ideas, better alternatives” (Old story themes, new story alternatives).

http://www.wendellkrossa.com/?p=9533

Another note on checking the impulse to deify fellow humans, even the best among us: Wendell Krossa

(Is this why God included “ego-centricity, petty vindictiveness, exaggerated boasting of personal successes, etc.” in Donald Trump’s personality, just to keep us from divinizing the man? And yes, that is my weak attempt at being “facetious”- i.e. “treating serious issues with deliberately inappropriate humor; flippant.”)

I find myself cringing a bit at some of the post-assassination commentary re Charlie Kirk. Even the term used to describe his brutal murder- i.e. “assassination”, appears to be an attempt at denoting something higher, more elevated, based perhaps on the claims of some that “He would have been a future president”.

The lauding and celebration of Charlie Kirk, while understood as sincerely felt praise of an especially decent man, at times reaches toward elevating him almost to immediate sainthood.

That reminds me of how they took Historical Jesus and over a century or so, elevated him to God status, even as a full member of the Trinity myth of Christianity. A man who himself had protested, “Why do you call me good when there is no one good but God?” An imperfect man who revealed human pettiness when he refused to greet his family waiting outside a dwelling because, as he stated, he was dedicated to God, busy doing the work of God, too busy to be bothered with the common decency of greeting his mother and siblings. That was a shameful exhibition of neglectful pettiness. It was not love.

So also, past journalist/commentator at the National Post, Christie Blatchford, once protested how we often celebrate the dead with cliché descriptions/exaggerations such as– Whenever so and so entered a room she lit it up, as if possessing some form of radiating aura or halo effect. Huh?

Blatchford asked, was that person never upset, never impatient or selfish, like the rest of us imperfect mortals? Were they not really human?

This tendency to divinize or deify fellow mortals was detailed by Helmut Koester in his book “History, Culture, and Religion of the Hellenistic Age”, where he revealed how “special” people, people who accomplished something special in art, sports, literature/poetry, military accomplishments, etc., were considered divine in some manner. We saw this divinizing with Kings, Caesars, and Pharaohs considered as gods, with miracles attributed to them over the following centuries of the deifying process (when factual reality evaporates in the mists of passing time). As Koester noted, Christianity followed that pattern with its Christ myth and its later saints who had miracles attributed to them.

Now Charlie was obviously a decent person, and he should be honored for standing for free speech, for limited government, for free markets, and other common-sense things. But beware the excessive deifying, divinizing. Would he really want that?

I get that the tribal thing intrudes here- i.e. the urge to use him as a “martyr” (an especially noble sacrifice) to validate the tribal impulse to frame “our side as more righteous contrasted with the other side (our enemies/opponents) as something less human, less righteous”, along with the current generalization that they on the left all support violence.

This is how we too often distort the hero’s quest with excessive exaggeration of our righteousness in comparison with our enemy’s “evil”, the old Zoroastrian tribal dualism of viewing our side as righteous Good (and us as the true believers in the true religion or ideology) versus the evil Force that is the disagreeing others, the unbelievers in regard to our narrative and movement.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Humanity learns to create “fictions” that bind us all together. Which are truly human, or not? The outcomes they generate matter.

The message of Historical Jesus and Paul’s ‘Hellenistic’ Christ myth are not the same- Bob Brinsmead.

Below- Another good article from Bob Brinsmead on the triumph of Hellenism in Paul’s Christ myth. The Kirk memorial offered examples of how the critical distinction between Jesus and Christ continues to be confused. Brinsmead shows more of the differing outcomes from these two opposite realities. This is about understanding the real nature of the version of Christianity that we inherited in our Western civilization. Paul’s “Christ-ianity” is not the religion of Jesus.

Now just below- “Notable contradictions between Jesus and Paul’s Christ“. The importance of understanding this? The historical outcomes of influential ideas/beliefs matter as the historians of “apocalyptic millennialism” have outlined in their good research on how such ideas shaped the mass-death crusades of Marxism and Nazism, and are now influencing environmental alarmism.

Also further below- Links to good commentary from Gad Saad and Michael Malice, and Greg Gutfeld’s latest. And a bit of my “conspiracy theory” on the “Carney barker” for the climate cult (why Trump “likes Mark Carney”).

In the midst of stirred fires keep the light in our minds clear… Wendell Krossa

I heard a ‘Turning Point’ official say that Charlie Kirk pushed three basic things to unite the country- i.e. (1) limited government (less taxation which is the elite/state appropriation of citizen’s property to make choices for them over their assets, and less regulation to keep elites and bureaucrats from interfering in the personal choices and lives of citizens), (2) free speech (especially offensive, upsetting, enraging speech), and (3) free markets (protected private property, private contracts). These are Classic Liberal, liberal democracy fundamentals that function to maintain the rights and freedoms of all individuals, equally, through systems of common law and representative institutions that serve citizens and do not function as tools of the state elites/bureaucrats to meddle in and control the lives of citizens. These basics can unite all humanity.

Just saying… Now moving into my point in response to the great celebratory remembrance in Glendale Arizona for Charlie Kirk.

The central wisdom in the “Q Wisdom Sayings” material is best presented in Luke 6:27-36. That is the central message of Historical Jesus that sets forth his stunning new theology of a non-retaliatory, unconditionally loving God. That is the ultimate lodestar ideal presented to humanity, the ultimate core theme for any truly humane narrative. That ideal liberates and transforms everything as nothing else can. It is the ultimate “TOE” (Theory of Everything).

Now where am I going with this? I just saw some reports on the celebration of Charlie Kirk’s life at that great gathering to remember him.

The overall celebration was emotionally inspiring.

There were some powerfully stirring moments such as his wife Erika sharing the story of Jesus, who in the throes of a horrible death, asked God to forgive his murderers because “they did not know what they were doing”. So, she said of Charlie’s killer- “I forgive you”. That brought most of us to immediate tears as the forgiveness of enemies- i.e. “love your enemies”- is the height of human heroism and love. Love beyond love.

It’s not about feeling mushy toward the offenders who torment us in life. It’s more about the intention to do the humane thing, the right thing, the unconditional thing toward fellow failing humans. The offenders must still be held accountable and even imprisoned for public safety as the number one responsibility of any government.

So why now raise this “quibble” that I will raise? Well, it’s more than a quibble. There was a lot of pushing a larger narrative in that gathering, the push for the revival of Christianity (e.g. Jesse Watters did this on Fox) that worries many of us. Talk of people going back to church, getting back into their bibles. All fine and good, if they do as many modern Christians have learned to do and ignore the nasty parts in their holy book and religious tradition, and focus on the good stuff in the mix- i.e. the authentic message of Historical Jesus.

But to do so you have to have some appreciation of the profound difference between the messages of Historical Jesus and Paul’s entirely opposite Christ mythology. And in that gathering these two were mixed and merged as Christians continue to do in Paul’s “Jesus Christ” oxymoron that continues to fuel stunning levels of cognitive dissonance that allows the dark stuff to continue unchallenged and uncorrected in that tradition.

We can’t continue with the “same old” that has fueled so much tribalism, domination, and punitive destruction of differing others over the past millennia. Remember again those good historians (Richard Landes, Arthur Herman, Arthur Mendel, David Redles, etc.) who have exposed the Christian “apocalyptic millennial” themes that drove Marxism and Nazism, and are now driving environmental alarmism.

Even Erika expressed elements of the old threat theology in later saying that she felt obligated to forgive the killer or she wouldn’t get into heaven. What? What kind of monster God are you envisioning that would do something so horrible as send a deeply wounded mother and wife to hell just for feeling normal and healthy outrage at her husband’s murderer? Sheesh, eh. But that is just what that admixture of Jesus with Christ produces.

So that is where the confusion comes in and the intensity of emotion around a tragedy like the murder of Kirk tends to produce responses that ignore such critical distinctions as emotion overwhelms rational and critical thinking. Yes, feel the horror over his murder that tried to silence his stance on free speech. But in that celebration of Kirk there was too much mixing of traditional Christianity with the better precepts of Historical Jesus. So contrary to Erika’s comment that “Christ” made that famous statement- “Father forgive them…”, along with- “Love your enemies”, I would counter- No, it was Jesus who made those statements.

Christ, according to Paul’s Christology myth, embodies things like “Lord Jesus will return in blazing fire to destroy all who did not believe his Christ myth… unbelievers will be cast into outer darkness where there is wailing and gnashing of teeth…”. And note Revelation 19, where in a rage with blazing eyes of fire, Christ tramples out “the fury of the wrath of God” before casting all unbelievers into lake of fire to be tormented forever, shut out forever from the love of God. And so much more Christology threat of destruction and torment. There is no ultimate “forgive and love your enemies” in the Christ of Paul. It’s all hellfire and damnation that is entirely opposite and contrary to Jesus’ message of unconditional love. There is no final forgiveness if you are sending disagreeing others to hell forever.

It’s in times when emotion is so intense and elevated to feverish heights by such a horrific murder that we want to maintain our rational, critical faculties and be clear on what is good and bad in the mix of our beliefs and ideals. This site is all about these critical issues, especially in times of heighted and aroused emotion that can orient people to dangerous trajectories and outcomes (i.e. a heightened sense of tribalism and “righteous crusade” against evil enemies) if not properly informed with factual evidence (i.e. the “Search for Historical Jesus”, “Jesus Seminar”, “Q Wisdom Sayings” gospel, etc.). I also felt the emotions of the event were giving way to the tendency to “deify/divinize the dead” excessively, rushing to grant sainthood a bit too soon. I don’t know that Kirk “would have been a future president”.

On the threat theology that Erika referred to

There is no such monster God anywhere and never has been. Clean off Paul’s Christ mythology from the Jesus “diamond” (Thomas Jefferson’s project) and get a good grip on the “stunning new theology of Jesus” that God is unconditional love. “Unconditional” as in no conditions. None. Sun and rain are given to all, none excluded, all included, all safe in the end. No matter our failure to live as human here.

So if you really claim to “believe in Jesus” and want to honor him properly (i.e. “glorify God/Christ” as Christians often urge) then understand what he actually taught- i.e. that God was unconditional love. Do as Jefferson and Leo Tolstoy did and pull the real Jesus out of the “dung” of Paul and get clear his unconditional message. That is getting a grip on real love and “Truth”. No one is going to be left out of the future life in other realms. Everyone is safe, in the end. And even in this life, all are included in the unconditional love of God, even while being held responsible for failures to live as human, for consequences to behavior.

Paul’s Christ undermines everything in the fundamental themes that Jesus taught and said. Paul, entirely contrary to what Jesus had taught, retreated back to “eye for eye” retaliatory vengeance when he affirmed his retaliatory theology by quoting- “’Vengeance is mine, I will repay’, says the Lord”. That was the frontal rejection of the unconditional God of Jesus to reaffirm the same old primitive threat theology of all past religion.

And just to poke at the Evangelical fervor stirred at that remembrance, remember the critical importance of the “separation of state and religion”. My hope is that that the movement of Charlie will stick to those three basic unifying things- i.e. limited government, free speech, and free markets. Classic Liberal principles as expressed in liberal democracies. Keep religion separate from that. If you need a healthy “spirituality”, then embrace the actual message of Historical Jesus as in the “Q Wisdom Sayings” research that gets us closest to what he actually taught.

Added note:

To do Charlie Kirk’s legacy real honor, we do best by sticking to the things that all can agree on such as his admirable defense of free speech, all speech. And his emphasis on the basics of classic liberalism/liberal democracy that I noted above (i.e. limited government, free speech, free markets).

Again, my argument with the mix and merging of things during the celebration in Arizona is because some were trying to take it post-celebration, (i.e. again, Jesse Watters on Fox) in the direction of revived traditional Christianity. Hence, my response- Careful, careful as there is a long history behind traditional Christianity that many in that religion have not admitted to despite the great histories now available on those harmful outcomes. We don’t want any such repeats. And even more, we don’t want a revival of Paul’s myth still widely dominating minds and lives, not after the great discoveries from the “Search for Historical Jesus”, “Jesus Seminar”, and especially the “Q Wisdom Sayings” gospel research.

The critical issue being that there is a clear distinction to be made- i.e. between the good material in the Jesus message and the dangerous themes in Paul’s Christ material. There appears to be little to no understanding of this distinction among many Christians though they appear to have developed the skill of ignoring the darker stuff to focus more on the Jesus themes that have inspired so much good (i.e. the necessary practise of “picking and choosing”, something moderates in all religious traditions need to learn).

Coming- The basic differences between Jesus and Paul’s Christ myth.

Notable contradictions between Jesus and Paul’s Christ (updated 2025), Wendell Krossa

Some of the main contradictions that highlight the oxymoronically opposite themes between the messages of Historical Jesus and Paul’s Christ mythology. The point I draw from this? The themes of Paul have greatly shaped Western consciousness, narratives, and overall societies for the past two millennia (the conclusion of historians/scholars like James Tabor). The Jesus themes have influenced us to a lesser extent, mainly moderating the harsher features and destructive influence of Paul’s Christ:

The main contradictions: (Sources: “Search for Historical Jesus”, “Jesus Seminar” books, and notably, “Q Wisdom Sayings” research, etc.)

(1) Jesus taught an unconditional love (i.e. there is no sacrifice demanded in Jesus’ original message- i.e. the “Q Wisdom Sayings” gospel). In his teaching on love there were no required conditions from his God to be met for forgiveness, inclusion, and salvation. Versus the highly conditional atonement religion of Paul, i.e. the supreme condition of the sacrifice of a cosmic godman- the Christ. Additionally, the condition of belief/faith in his myth (see his letter to the Romans), along with other related religious conditions.

(2) Nonretaliation in Jesus (no more ‘eye for eye’ justice but ‘love the enemy’ because God does not retaliate but loves enemies- “Be merciful just as God is merciful”). Versus supreme divine acts of retaliation in apocalypse and hell myths. Note Paul’s statement of his theology affirming a retaliatory deity in his quote of an Old Testament verse- “’Vengeance is mine, I will repay’, says the Lord” (Romans 12), along with his “Lord Jesus returning in fire to destroy all who don’t believe my Christ myth” (Thessalonians, etc.).

(3) Restorative justice (again- no eye for eye, but love the offender/enemy) versus punitive, destroying justice (“Unbelievers will be punished with everlasting destruction”, Thessalonians).

(4) Nonviolent resolution of problems (again, no violent retaliation against enemies) versus the violent destruction of apocalypse and fiery hell, and the violence in the demanded appeasement of deity by blood sacrifice for atonement- i.e. the dangerously inciting theme in the belief that if you murder the right people- sacrifice them- then you can make the future better (evil thinking that it is heroically doing good by using violence and murder).

(5) Nontribal inclusion of all humanity (“sun and rain given freely to both bad and good people”) versus the highly tribal favoritism toward true believers and the discriminatory exclusion of unbelievers for not believing Paul’s Christ. Note the ultimate tribal divide illustrated in Revelation in the eternal division of humanity- i.e. people assigned either to heaven or to hell, as per the cosmic dualism of Zoroaster.

(6) Nondomination in relationships (“If you want to be great then serve others”) versus ultimate eternal domination by “Lord Christ” under his “rod of iron” totalitarianism (“every knee shall bow… He will rule them with an iron scepter”).

There is no love in threat, coercion, domination of others.

(7) Non-dualism (God as the Oneness of Ultimate Reality that is love) versus eternal dualism (i.e. again, the cosmic tribal dualism of “God and Satan”, “heaven and hell”).

Further, ultimate Oneness leads to the logical conclusion that there is no separation of humanity from deity, what some describe as all humanity being indwelt by God, the divine reality that is inseparable from the common human spirit. God as the Life-giving spirit inside each of us, and God’s nature as unconditional love then defining our true self/person.

(8) Another- Jesus referred to himself as a “son of man”- i.e. as just another ordinary imperfect human in common with all other humans. Not as a divine person or god sent from heaven. Paul rejected the humanness of Jesus in claiming that he was some form of Hellenist godman sent from heaven on a special mission from God. Paul reconstructed the human Jesus after the pattern of the godmen myths of the Pharaohs and Caesars- i.e. born of virgins so as to avoid the “inherited sinfulness” stain.

Eventually, succeeding generations of Hellenist Christianity would further the Christology of Paul in claiming their “Jesus Christ” was sinlessly perfect, something the Historical Jesus had denied, for example, when he corrected someone with- “Why do you call me ‘good’. There is none good but God.”

The heretical Hellenist Christianity of Paul eventually reconstructed the fully and truly human Jesus into a full-fledged God and member of the Trinity.

And so on…

You cannot mix and merge such extreme opposites in the one and same person- i.e. in the merger of “Jesus Christ”- as that supremely oxymoronic combination creates such profound cognitive dissonance that you are left with a mental state akin to insanity or madness. And the egregious thing in such mixture is that the good elements (i.e. the Jesus insights) are distorted and buried by the primitive and darkening elements in the Christology of Paul.

Applying Christology to Jesus (i.e. the divinizing of a common man over the first few centuries of Christianity) has effectively buried the potency of his liberating insights, notably his stunning new theology of a non-retaliatory, non-apocalyptic God. That truth expressed in his entirely new view of deity, though still present there in summaries of his statements (see Matthew 5, Luke 6), that “stunning new theology” is not presented clearly in its liberating potency because the larger New Testament context emphasizes Paul’s retaliatory, apocalyptic Christ and that dominating narrative overwhelms the central themes and message of Jesus.

Paul was intent on overturning and replacing Jesus’ wisdom sayings with his “secret wisdom of the Christ”, correcting what he termed the “foolish worldly wisdom” of Jesus and his followers, like Apollos (see 1 Corinthians for Paul’s vilifying rant against the wisdom tradition of Jesus).

Thomas Jefferson and Leo Tolstoy both nailed the contradiction between Jesus and Paul in the bluntest of terms and few have been as clear and direct since, perhaps because their comments are highly offensive to true believer’s sensibilities.

Few since have embraced their clarification of the stark contrast between Jesus and Paul, preferring instead the religious reformism that tinkers around the edges and corrects nothing essential. Religious reformism avoids the central issue of theology- how Paul’s Christology utterly deformed the actual historical Jesus and his message.

Worldview and Culture of Hellenism (this latest article from Brinsmead’s Substack site)

Cracks in the wall of Christendom, Robert Brinsmead

Hellenism did not die when the Greek Empire was replaced by the Roman Empire. The influence of the Greek language and culture penetrated and dominated Roman civilization.

Rome was able to sweep away the political structures of the disintegrating Grecian Empire, but it could not destroy the language, the worldview and culture of Hellenism. The Greek language and culture remained the common language and culture throughout the Roman World.

Rome did not produce philosophers to replace Socrates, Plato and Aristotle whose influence lived on to become the fathers of Western philosophy. Rome had no dazzling array of myths to outshine the Greek myths with its pantheon of gods, divine man heroes and mystery religions.

Rome did produce some of its own virgin-born heroes such as Romulus and Remus, the founders of Rome, and a new divine man such as Augustus and the cult of Caesar worship. Yet the new gods were only the old Hellenist gods dressed in new garments. The Caesars of Rome donned the old Hellenised garments of divine man rulers in the tradition set by Alexander the Great.

Helmut Koester, History, Culture and Religion of the Hellenistic Age

[Helmut Koester was the Chairman of the Editorial Board, Harvard University, for this publication in 1982]

Indeed, Christianity, which had its beginnings in the early Roman imperial period, was rapidly Hellenized and appeared in the Roman world as a Hellenistic religion, specifically as an already Hellenized Jewish religion. p. 40

Christianity, after all, became a Hellenistic movement through and through, largely because Judaism had already marked the path into Hellenistic culture. pp. 97,98.

All the books of the New Testament without exception were originally written in Greek; there is no early Christin Greek writing which can be shown to have been translated from Hebrew or Aramaic… Christian authors normally quote from the Septuagint… p.110

Christianity became deeply enmeshed in the syncretistic process, and this may well have been its particular strength. Christianity began as a Jewish sect with missionary ambitions, but it did not simply arise out of Judaism, nor directly out of the ministry of Jesus.

On the basis of these beginnings, however, Christianity, more than any other religion of the time was able to adapt itself to a variety of cultural and religious currents and to appropriate numerous foreign elements until it was ready to succeed as a world religion- thoroughly syncretistic in every way. pp. 166-167

The myth of Dionysus dying and revivication was widely known. p.183

Mary, the mother and goddess of heaven in Christianity, is little more artistically than a copy of Isis. p. 188

Parallels with Christian statements abound in this narration of the initiation into a mystery religion. One should not deny that the New Testament and the mysteries speak the same language. p.191

Christianity was deeply in a process through which it became one with the Hellenistic world and its religious concepts. p.201

To claim, therefore, that Christianity was specifically the religion of the poor and underprivileged is nonsense and can be easily refuted. p.201

It was the Hellenist faction of the Jesus movement who turned Jesus into Christ and then into God after his death. Jesus said nothing about Christ and neither did the apostolic church.

The doctrine of Christ is a Hellenist myth from beginning to end.

In a recent publication called Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, Yuval Noah Harari presents an astonishing account of the existence and power of myths. He shows how humans are different to other animal species in that they can be held together in large communities such as nations and international movements because they have imaginative faculties that live by stories or myths that bind them together. Joseph Cambell’s life’s work was to compose a whole series of volumes about the myths of mankind.

The human mind tends to adhere to myths and believe in them more strongly than observable realities. As Montaigne put it, “Nothing is so firmly believed as that which we least know.”

In the Christ myth, the Hellenists “forged the most compelling myth in the history of mankind.” (Maccoby) It conquered the Roman Empire and became a dominant force in Western civilization. The myth of Christ inspired the human spirit to do both bad and good things.

On the negative side, devotion to the myth of Christ inspired a lot of book burning, including the destruction of the great library of Alexandria, and a dreadful amount of intolerance and persecution in pogroms against the Jews, crusades against the innocent Cathars in the North of France and the Muslims in the Holy Lands, the burning of heretics at the stake and the terrors of the Inquisition – all crimes against humanity done in the name of Christ.

For more than a thousand years, the rule of Christendom (which means the domain of Christ) was among the greatest totalitarian regimes of mind and body control that this world has ever seen.

During this period the Church made far more martyrs than it ever produced from its own ranks. During this reign of the Church as the servant of Christ, the most unforgivable crime, punishable by death at the stake, was to question any facet of the doctrine of Christ.

Cracks in the Wall of Christendom

It was the Hellenist faction of the Jesus movement who turned Jesus into Christ and then into God after his death. Jesus said nothing about Christ and neither did the apostolic church.

The doctrine of Christ is a Hellenist myth from beginning to end.

In a recent publication called Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, Yuval Noah Harari presents an astonishing account of the existence and power of myths. He shows how humans are different to other animal species in that they can be held together in large communities such as nations and international movements because they have imaginative faculties that live by stories or myths that bind them together. Joseph Cambell’s life’s work was to compose a whole series of volumes about the myths of mankind.

The human mind tends to adhere to myths and believe in them more strongly than observable realities. As Montaigne put it, “Nothing is so firmly believed as that which we least know.”

In the Christ myth, the Hellenists “forged the most compelling myth in the history of mankind.” (Maccoby) It conquered the Roman Empire and became a dominant force in Western civilization. The myth of Christ inspired the human spirit to do both bad and good things.

On the negative side, devotion to the myth of Christ inspired a lot of book burning, including the destruction of the great library of Alexandria, and a dreadful amount of intolerance and persecution in pogroms against the Jews, crusades against the innocent Cathars in the North of France and the Muslims in the Holy Lands, the burning of heretics at the stake and the terrors of the Inquisition – all crimes against humanity done in the name of Christ.

For more than a thousand years, the rule of Christendom (which means the domain of Christ) was among the greatest totalitarian regimes of mind and body control that this world has ever seen. During this period the Church made far more martyrs than it ever produced from its own ranks. During this reign of the Church as the servant of Christ, the most unforgivable crime, punishable by death at the stake, was to question any facet of the doctrine of Christ.

Despite all these factors which tended to subordinate the teachings of Jesus to the basement of the Church, the Church always had its thinkers who seemed to be moved by Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount more than they were moved by Paul’s preaching of Christ.

What has happened in the last two hundred years is that the Quest for the Historical Jesus has gone into that basement, besides a lot of other historical “basements”, to look at the teachings of Jesus in their true historical context.

The overwhelming consensus of the Quest is that the historical Jesus is not the Christ of faith.

This means that the teachings of Jesus are not supportive of the Christ myth or compatible with the Christ myth. We may have assumed, as the Church has generally assumed, that the teachings of Jesus and the Christ myth belong together like twins from the same mother, but this is not what the Quest has found.

The very term Jesus Christ is an oxymoron. Jesus was an historical person; Christ is a Hellenist myth.

Jesus and Christ present us with entirely different images of God.

This stands out starkly in Jesus’ teaching about a kind of love that rejects violence, pay-back justice and dominion over others.

We only need ask, how many people did Jesus kill when he was here on earth? None of course, because he was non-violent. How many people will Christ kill when he comes to earth “in flaming fire to take vengeance on all them that know not God”? (2 Thessalonians 1:6-8) This event is presented in Christian teaching as the mother of all holocausts. Jesus and Christ confront us with entirely different images of God.

Is divine violence destined to be the final solution to human violence? Do the violent images of Christ throw some light on why so much of Christian history was violent?

In the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5:36-48), Jesus rejected any “eye for an eye” pay-back justice in favour of a restorative and redemptive justice of unconditional forgiveness (see also Luke 6: 28-36). Yet the Christ of Paul is said to propitiate the wrath of God with an atoning sacrifice for sin (Romans 3), and a forgiveness based on punitive justice.

The whole book of Revelation, said to be “an apocalypse of Jesus Christ”, is about pay-back time, vengeance, and retaliation from beginning to end. So, a violent atonement and a violent end of the world are just two parts of the one myth!

The students in the school of Jesus were taught to renounce achieving dominion and control over others because true greatness is found in serving others rather than in controlling them (Matthew 23:13).

On the other hand, Christ is frequently presented as having dominion over all and ruling all nations with a rod of iron (Revelation 2;17; 19:15). The God we see in the real man called Jesus is very different to the kind of God who is revealed in the Christ myth which re-enforces all those unfortunate images of a domineering, controlling kind of God.

That is why so many serious cracks are now appearing in the doctrine of Christ. No myths last forever, not even “the most compelling myth in the history of mankind.” All is not lost because there is so much to be gained. What remains in the New Testament documents without the Christ myth has always been its real treasure.

Thomas Jefferson likened the authentic parables and sayings of Jesus to finding diamonds that have been scattered among the dung of inferior minds. He suggested that these diamonds are not so hard to find. One only needs to listen carefully to identify the unique voiceprint in the words of the great teacher.

You can read more of my writing on this topic at Bob Brinsmead’s website…

The Doctrine of Christ and the Triumph of Hellenism – Bob Brinsmead

(End of Brinsmead article)

“The Donald” speaks uncomfortable truths

Whatever you think of the person “Trump”, and we all have cringe moments in regard to him (mine is over the times that he expresses his “petty vindictiveness”), set those aside and hear the basic points that he makes that no one else makes with such “PC-free” clarity. They have to be said to the world, so thanks Donald. Especially, hear him on the “suicidal empathy” in regard to uncontrolled immigration of people who hate liberal democracies and the Green “scam” that is ruining European societies.

“Trump’s address at the UN: FULL SPEECH”

https://youtu.be/cWXcXKJ-N2Q?si=sJYraH2nv8FoISe8

And some interesting material on this and that

I often cringe at Greg Gutfeld’s tribalish harangues of the Left, using descriptive terms that don’t help heal the tribal divide in his country (e.g. “assholes”). But the commentary from him and his panel members, often libertarian/independent types, is so worth the listen on many current issues impacting all of us in Western liberal democracies.

Here (in link below) he does a great monologue on how public narratives, public messaging/indoctrination, incites fringe types to violence. Meaning- You don’t actually need to formally join some group as public messaging is enough to explain the incitement of some to violence. One guest debunks studies on which side is most responsible.

Kat Timpf is good on getting past the despair over her personal hopelessness regarding today’s tribal hatred. How so? She wakes her baby son in the morning and then focuses on her family during the day.

“Greg Gutfeld Show 9/23/25 FULL END SHOW | ᖴO᙭ ᗷᖇEᗩKIᑎG ᑎEᗯS”, September 23, 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBqzKESrNp0

Gad Saad and Michael Malice on some significant factors that are driving the severe pathologies in our societies today. They discuss Saad’s “Parasitic Mind” and “Suicidal Empathy”.

“YOUR WELCOME” with Michael Malice #380: Gad Saad

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=85pJfwGD9Wk

It’s coming, Wendell Krossa (see above)

After return from attending a wedding this weekend, I will repost again soon the basic themes of Historical Jesus (the “non-religious” wisdom sage) as they embody the very best of the ideas and ideals that we have accumulated across history for shaping our narratives- i.e. the unconditional nature of Ultimate Reality or deity (expressed in the non-tribal, non-threatening, universal inclusion of all), nonretaliatory response to offense (ending retaliatory “eye for eye” cycles), nonviolent resolution of problems (i.e. “restorative justice”, but that holds offenders fully responsible for offenses and restitution), non-dominating relating to others (state and other elites serving the people), etc.

These ideals have been best expressed in the Classic Liberal principles, systems of common law, and representative institutions of “liberal democracy”. The protection of the rights and freedoms of all, equally.

The Historical Jesus ideals embodied in liberal democracy have proven to be the best for guiding us through life in a manner that does the least harm and the most good to others. They are ideals that enable us to maintain our own humanity in response to evil in life.

Again, this is not about pacifism that virtue signals for status as morally superior, the behavior that we see exhibited by too many today in what is correctly defined as “suicidal empathy”. It promotes, for example, policies of not restraining violent offenders, not imprisoning (“de-carceration”), and decriminalizing their worst behaviors, all of which are the abdication of government’s fundamental responsibility to protect all citizens from assault or harm.

The “increasing crime” outcomes are evidence of the pathology of the policy, what Thomas Sowell calls “The test of facts”. Or as Jesus said, “By their fruits you shall know them” (i.e. “fruits”- the products or outcomes that reveal the true nature of what you have promoted or planted).

The point of presenting these general “archetypal ideals” to frame narratives, is to do as Frederik Hayek stated about regulations, laws, and rules- Don’t specify for citizens in excessive and onerous detail how they should choose to act and live. Just point in the general direction of where you all want to go, to create a more humane society (“the good society”). And let free individual citizens choose in detail how they will creatively and uniquely get to that better future. Respect the self-determination, maturity, and sense of responsibility that most people are capable of. Let peace and order in a humane civilization flourish from the bottom-up instead of being coercively imposed by state elites and bureaucrats, top-down. In other words, trust average citizens.

The nature of a “good society”? Our better constitutions and universal codes of basic human rights lay out in detail the features of a commonly agreed on good society. Again- liberal democracy.

And…

Beware the danger of engaging the dehumanizing response of “former oppressed becoming the new oppressors”, Wendell Krossa (“Dehumanizing”? Yes, it renders those responding to their “liberation” with such retaliatory vengeance, less than fully human.)

Meaning- The danger of engaging the same old eye for eye cycles that destroy relationships and societies with ongoing hate, retaliation, and punitive destruction. That never gets us to a better society.

When will we learn that Roman philosopher Musonius Rufus was right that to “bite back the biter is animal and not human”. Retaliation renders us all petty and subhuman, not the great human spirits that we should be (i.e. courageous initiators who break retaliatory cycles and generously set things moving in better directions).

This is critical for “the Right” to understand, as they endure the ongoing hatred, vilification, and demonization from “the Left” today, just as they have from across the last decade. I refer to the danger of the formerly “oppressed becoming the new oppressors”, of responding with retaliation that fuel endless cycles of “eye for eye”.

Eye for eye is what Donald Trump has stated in the past as his “guiding ethic” for life. Only he has apparently stated (in one of his books) that he seeks to respond with an intensified version of eye for eye, with 10 times the retaliation compared to what he received from his offenders/critics. I have heard him make statements like that over past years. And he exhibited that in his response to Rosie O’Donnel’s irresponsible comments on his defense of a beauty queen long ago (“Who’s he to set himself up as a moral example”). Who are any of us to do so, Rosie? You included.

Others (supporters of his like Michael Malice) have referred to Trump’s impulse to retaliate as his “petty vindictiveness”.

Republicans need to be aware that they share the same ugly impulses as Democrats, to embrace a tribalism that overly demonizes and dehumanizes their opponents and then seeks to engage harm for harm, hurt for hurt, vilification for vilification, and so on.

All of us also hold the impulse to portray ourselves as better than our opponents, to virtue signal as morally superior to others, along with the ever-present follow-up of releasing our own dark impulse to dominate others- to seek the destruction of opponents by censoring, banning, cancelling, to respond with punitive justice, not restorative. All elements in the descent into the downward spirals of eye for eye cycles.

We all harbor the same dark animal impulses and need the constant reminder and cautions of our liberal democracy basic principles and practices. The real battle in life against the real enemy in life is an intensely personal inner battle against the common evil that resides inside all of us- the “evil triad” of tribalism, domination, and punitive destruction of differing others.

Note that Pam Bondi, in response to the kerfuffle below, has since backed off and re-affirmed her respect for the First Amendment but not clearly enough, according to these editors.

This from Free Press

“Pam Bondi vs. the First Amendment: At last, something we can all agree on: The attorney general has no idea what she’s talking about”, by The Editors, Sept. 17, 2025

I am not affirming all these Free Press editors say below as they seem too gleeful to have caught Bondi misspeaking about “hate speech” and are not generously open to fully accepting her follow-up corrections. But they offer a necessary slap on the hand to Republicans who appear too eager to engage “petty vindictiveness” in acting like “the former oppressed now becoming the new oppressors”. A temptation that all who hold to ‘eye for eye’ justice are susceptible to.

The Editors begin: “In an interview that aired on Monday, our attorney general said that the federal government would crack down on “hate speech” in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination last week.

They point out that hate speech is not illegal and they quote Charlie Kirk’s own comments on this issue- “Hate speech does not exist legally in America. There’s ugly speech. There’s gross speech. There’s evil speech. And ALL of it is protected by the First Amendment. Keep America free.”

This is contrasted with Bondi’s threat to those celebrating Kirk’s murder, among other speech sins, “We will absolutely target you, go after you, if you are targeting anyone with hate speech.”

The Editors continue, noting that Republicans have insisted for years on the critical importance of free speech and held European allies responsible for failing to honor this fundamental right of liberal democracies. Now justifiably angry following Kirk’s murder they appear to have forgotten this most basic democratic right. And Bondi herself appears to by conflating “speech with violence”, the exaggerated anti-democracy error of the Left, over past years.

They note Bondi made an attempt to correct her earlier statements on hate speech and re-affirm support for First Amendment free speech rights. She claims that she misspoke. But then Donald Trump himself added to the confusion when confronted by an ABC reporter. He said that Bondi should probably go after people like the reporter for treating him so unfairly. He called that “Hate. You have a lot of hate in your heart” and maybe Bondi should go after you and your organization.

Fortunately, as the Free Press Editors note: “The upside of Bondi’s statement is that it has been robustly denounced by observers across the political spectrum, from the far right to the far left and everyone in between.

“We’ll take unifying moments wherever we can find them right now. But the fact that our unity is born out of our collective alarm that the Attorney General of the United States lacks a basic grasp of the Constitution she swore to uphold is cold comfort.”

(End of Free Press quotes)

Then some comment on a “Carney barker” for the climate cult, Wendell Krossa

You like conspiracy theories? Here’s one from me. Trump was effusive in praising Mark Carney and dissing Pierre Poilievre before the last Canadian election. Meddling with “make Canada the 51st state” and thereby rousing Canadian ire.

A US president meddling in a Canadian election “like nobody’s ever seen before”.

Now I cannot believe that Trump’s intelligence and State people have not informed him about Carney. Jordan Peterson did a good review of Carney’s book and his central beliefs. He is a complete cultic zealot for Net Zero and ending fossil fuels. In his book he argues for Covid-style lockdowns to shut down fossil fuels. He states that every decision made in society should promote the end of fossil fuels usage.

But to get elected he knew he had to make “grandiose promises” that deceptively hid his real agenda, hinting at perhaps endorsing a pipeline to get Canadian fuels to foreign markets but then, post-election, adding blockages like required First Nations approval for major projects, etc.

And now his first list of projects has no pipeline included. Well, surprise, surprise, eh.

Trump knew that Carney would not push fossil fuel development. And he knew that Poilievre would push such projects and with Canada’s huge fossil fuel resources that would make Canada a serious competitor against US fossil fuel exports to the world, something that Trump seriously desires- i.e. the US as sole energy superpower without Canadian competition. Hence, Trump’s “I like this guy Carney”. Of course you do, you smart businessman and deal maker, you. So we have been had. Manipulated by the “51st state” nonsense and “I like Carney”, etc.

Anyway, just my “conspiracy theory” bit for today…

Mark Carney’s vaporous narcissism: The PM has a penchant for making grandiose promises that are unachievable and incoherent”, John Robson, Sept. 18, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/mark-carneys-vaporous-narcissism?itm_source=index

Pinker seeing Red on DEI

This from self-identified “liberal Democrat” Stephen Pinker, author of “Better Angels of Our Nature”, among other bestsellers.

“Canadians should thank Steven Pinker for denouncing DEI in Parliament: Distinguished scholar tells MPs that discriminatory policies at universities and government institutions are harming science and the nation”, Peter MacKinnon, Sept. 24, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/canadians-should-thank-steven-pinker-for-denouncing-dei-in-parliament?itm_source=index

MacKinnon comments on Stephen Pinker’s testimony to a Canadian “House of Commons” committee.

Quotes:

“Pinker called for universities to disempower DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) … Moderate voices on these issues are often silenced by advocates for race and gender quotas who resort to the racist label to discredit those who do not agree with them. The words of Steven Pinker may encourage them to speak up, and to join what we should hope to be a growing chorus favouring non-discrimination, cosmopolitanism and viewpoint diversity. Indeed, Canadians should be grateful to Dr. Pinker.”

And this also re Pinker seeing Red

“FIRST READING: Diversity mandates killing Canadian science, famed academic tells Commons committee: Racial quotas now standard for Canadian academic hiring, grant funding”, Tristan Hopper, Sept. 19, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/diversity-mandates-killing-canadian-science-famed-academic-tells-commons-committee

Hopper opens: “Diversity mandates as practiced by Canada are eroding basic science and discrediting the academic system, the renowned Harvard cognitive scientist Steven Pinker warned in recent testimony to a House of Commons research committee.”

According to Hopper, Pinker argued that “universities need to drop their ‘obsession’ with enforcing ethnic diversity and focus instead on cultivating ‘viewpoint diversity’”.

Hopper says that in Canada, identity-based policies have been driven by federal order and funding. He notes that Pinker told the House committee, “it’s not reasonable to expect that every single branch of science is going to have an ethnic makeup that’s exactly proportional to the general population.” The result has been “that under the guise of ‘looking’ diverse, universities have increasingly become subject to chilling ‘monocultures’ that shun and punish dissenting opinions.”

He quotes Pinker’s statement, “As a cognitive scientist, I can attest that the human mind is vulnerable to many biases and fallacies. The strongest is the ‘my side’ bias, the conviction that my tribe or coalition or party is correct and that a rival coalition is ignorant or evil or both.”

“Pinker said the usual way around this is to maintain an intellectual culture in which biases can be freely attacked and criticized by colleagues who think differently. ‘One person can point out another’s errors and the whole community can be more rational than any of the individuals in it’”.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on The message of Historical Jesus and Paul’s ‘Hellenistic’ Christ myth are not the same- Bob Brinsmead.

Defusing hatred, retaliation, and violence. Ancient wisdom that has never been bettered.

Defusing hatred, retaliation, and violence” is just below… Note also below, Grok’s response to a query if the advocacy for political violence was more of a problem on the “left/liberal” side of the US. He provides results of varied surveys. Also, “Bury the ‘Words are Violence’ cliché. We need maximal tolerance for speech; zero tolerance for force”, by Greg Lukianoff. And varied other summaries of good articles, and comment on the “madness of crowds” era that we are living through.

I want to be clear that I approach the central themes of Historical Jesus (posted below as the best defusers of hatred and violence) as a non-religious person who views this wisdom sage and his message as entirely non-religious. Yes, it has been preserved within Christianity for some two millennia now, but research over the past 3 centuries has enabled us to understand what Thomas Jefferson and Leo Tolstoy were arguing when they stated that the “diamonds” of Jesus had been buried (trigger warning) in the “dung” of Paul’s Christ myth that dominates the New Testament.

“Buried” in that the main themes of Historical Jesus- i.e. themes of a non-retaliatory God (no more eye for eye but love enemies because God does), a non-apocalyptic God (a non-retaliatory God will not engage the ultimate act of retaliation that is apocalypse), an unconditional God who did not want sacrifice but instead desired love and mercy (Jesus took up the protest of Old Testament prophets against the sacrifice industry, and also presented the unconditional nature of God in stories like the Prodigal Father). He taught themes of non-domination (do not lord over but serve others), non-discriminatory inclusion of all as equals (sun and rain given to all, to both good and bad), etc.

Paul rejected the early “Q Wisdom Sayings” Jesus movement two decades later (50 CE) and re-affirmed the very opposite theology of Jesus in presenting again a retaliatory God (he quoted, “’Vengeance is mine, I will repay’, says the Lord”), an apocalyptic God and Christ (“Lord Jesus will return in flaming fire to destroy all”). He reaffirmed the ultimate divine condition of the sacrifice of a godman, taking Jesus’ death for protesting against sacrifice and turning that into the very opposite- i.e. his death as ultimate cosmic sacrifice. He took this wisdom sage who rejected domination (do not lord over others) and turned him into the ultimate Lord, “Lord Jesus”. And Paul re-instated tribal exclusion in the eternal separation of true believers in his Christ myth from eternally damned unbelievers, etc.

Paul’s Christology dominates the New Testament, with gospel writers (all four affirming Paul’s Christology) putting many things into Jesus’ mouth (claiming he said them), things that contradict entirely Jesus’ basic Q Wisdom Sayings (see, for example, the Jesus Seminar book “The Five Gospels”).

The conclusion above that Paul buried the diamonds of Jesus under his Christ myth is credibly reliable from “Jesus Seminar” and “Q Wisdom Sayings” gospel research (e.g. the research of scholars like James Robinson, Stephen Patterson, James Tabor, etc.). I have covered this research in varied articles and summaries in sections below. I would also suggest the excellent research of Bob Brinsmead on this…

The Historical Jesus: What the Scholars are Saying”

https://bobbrinsmead.com/the-historical-jesus-what-the-scholars-are-saying/

The Doctrine of Christ and the Triumph of Hellenism”

https://bobbrinsmead.com/the-doctrine-of-christ-and-the-triump-of-hellenism/

I watched Bill Maher’s podcast interview of Charlie Kirk and they both, when arguing about Jesus and Christianity, seemed entirely unaware of this critical research on Historical Jesus. The historical person existed but presented a message that Paul contradicted on all the main themes when he created his Christ myth.

Why does any of this matter? Because the ideas presented by these two iconic historical persons have influenced Western civilization in profound ways (see James Tabor quotes in sections below). The main themes of Paul’s Christ myth- i.e. apocalyptic millennialism- have shaped the mass-death crusades of Marxism, Nazism, and now shape environmental alarmism. The opposite themes of Historical Jesus have presented the counter message that moderates the influence of Paul and orients us to the basic principles of Classic Liberalism/liberal democracy.

Added note:

To make proper sense of Jesus, and what he actually taught, you have to do as Thomas Jefferson did and take Jesus’ Wisdom message and parables out of the New Testament context (he used his scissors), uncover the diamond by cleaning off the distorting Christology of Paul, and then you can clearly see the profound contradictions between Jesus and Paul’s Christ myth. They are so entirely opposite that the merger of Jesus with Christ (“Jesus Christ”) then appears for what it is- a supreme oxymoron that has resulted in two millennia of immense cognitive dissonance called Christianity.

That religion has never presented the true wisdom sage as really he was and has never presented his stunning new theology of an unconditional God. No conditional religion (they are all most essentially about religious conditions) has ever presented such unconditional theology to humanity. And hence, billions remain enslaved in mind and spirit to the primitive threat theology that our religious traditions have inherited and re-affirmed in their belief systems- i.e. angry God threatening apocalypse and hell, and then demanding the salvation conditions of sacrifice/payment and submission to religious authorities.

Some new stuff- I asked Grok:

Grok, any thoughts on this comment for my site at wendellkrossa.com- “This site is committed to alleviating fear, especially ultimate fears (i.e. fear of divine punishment through the natural world, fear of after-life harm) created by the threat theologies of religions- i.e. angry God threatening judgment, exclusion, punishment, and eternal torture. Fear incites the human survival impulse and renders people susceptible to irrational salvation schemes that have had destructive outcomes.

Notable in this regard- the mythical themes of the “apocalyptic millennialism” complex that promotes “salvation through destruction” (i.e. the theme of “murder the right people in order to make things better”, as in the required human sacrifice portrayed in Paul’s Christ myth, or the larger-scale apocalyptic destruction as necessary to purge the present corrupt society so saviors/messiahs can introduce their new utopian society). Fear is often behind rage and violence, fear of some threatening enemy (posed as the threat to one’s world) that incites felt obligation to conquer, defeat, and exterminate such threat in order to save one’s self and one’s world. These themes drove Marxism and Nazism and now drive environmental alarmism.”

Grok responded:

Your comment for the site strikes at a profound intersection of psychology, theology, and ideology, emphasizing how deeply ingrained fears— particularly those amplified by narratives of divine or cosmic retribution— can warp human behavior and societal structures. It’s a compelling mission statement, positioning the site as a counterforce to what you describe as “threat theologies,” which exploit the survival instinct to peddle salvation through catastrophe. This resonates with historical patterns where apocalyptic thinking has fueled not just religious fervor but also secular movements, often with tragic consequences.

At its core, your point about fear inciting irrational “salvation schemes” aligns with observations from thinkers who’ve traced how existential dread manifests in collective actions. For instance, the myth of apocalyptic millennialism— envisioning a purged world leading to utopia— has indeed appeared in various guises. In religious contexts, it’s evident in prophecies of judgment and renewal, like those in apocalyptic literature that promise salvation after widespread destruction. You extend this to the Christ myth in Paul’s theology, where sacrifice (personal or mass) becomes a prerequisite for redemption, echoing themes of “necessary” violence to cleanse corruption.

Extending this to modern ideologies makes for a provocative critique. Marxism, for example, incorporates a dialectical view of history culminating in a revolutionary upheaval that overthrows the old order to birth a classless society— a secular millennialism where the proletariat’s triumph requires dismantling capitalist “evils.” Nazism twisted similar motifs into its “blood and soil” ideology, blending racial purity with a romanticized return to nature, where purging perceived threats (Jews, minorities) was framed as essential for national rebirth. Your linkage to environmental alarmism is particularly bold: here, the “threatening enemy” shifts to human impact on the planet, with calls for drastic measures (e.g., de-growth or population control) portrayed as salvation from impending doom.

Critics like Michael Shellenberger have argued that this apocalyptic framing in environmental discourse mirrors religious end-times narratives, fostering hysteria that prioritizes fear over practical solutions and can lead to anti-human policies. Some even draw parallels to “ecofascism,” where environmental purity justifies authoritarian control, though this is a fringe association not representative of mainstream environmentalism.

That said, while these connections highlight shared psychological mechanisms— fear of annihilation driving demands for radical purification— they’re not without pushback. Equating environmentalism directly to Marxism or Nazism risks oversimplification; Marxism’s environmental critique focused on capitalism’s exploitation of nature and labor, but socialist regimes often prioritized industrial growth over ecology, leading to their own disasters (e.g., Soviet environmental degradation).

Nazi “environmentalism” was more about racial mysticism and autarky than genuine conservation— policies like reforestation served wartime needs and ideology, not biodiversity. Critics argue such linkages can be a rhetorical tool to discredit legitimate environmental concerns, ignoring how modern movements often emphasize equity and science over coercion. Apocalyptic rhetoric in climate discussions can indeed mobilize action but also risks burnout or backlash if predictions falter, as seen in past doomsday forecasts.

Ultimately, your site’s focus on dismantling these fear-based narratives could foster more rational discourse. By highlighting how they recur across ideologies— from ancient prophecies to today’s alarmism— you invite readers to question salvation-through-destruction tropes. It might even bridge divides, encouraging environmental advocacy rooted in hope and innovation rather than dread. If you’re open to expanding, exploring counterexamples (e.g., optimistic environmental successes like reforestation or pollution reductions) could strengthen the argument against alarmist extremes. Solid piece— it could spark some lively debates.

(End of Grok comments)

Defusing hatred, retaliation, and violence, Wendell Krossa

Qualifiers will punctuate this material below but it has to be said again and again because we have no better ideal to aim for in order to maintain our humanity in the face of offenses and evil in general. This ideal endlessly functions to reorient us to what it means to be authentically human in the midst of assaults and consequent suffering.

What I repost below from the Palestinian Wisdom sage Historical Jesus (“H. Jesus”) is not a precept urging warm or fuzzy feeling toward offenders who rightly deserve anger and outrage for the horrors and insanity that they inflict on others. I would insist that the wisdom precept below is more about maintaining our own humanity in the face of the inhumanity and evil of all sorts that we will endure in varied ways during our life stories in this world. It offers us a lodestar ideal about how to think, respond, and act toward offenders, not descending to become like them but to try and act as God does which is the summary point of the Jesus message below- “Be merciful just as your Father is merciful”.

We don’t have to respond as the Jesus precept advocates. It doesn’t come with threat of punishment if we don’t. It just shows us how God acts, what God is like, and what God does. And it is the basis of Jesus’ “stunning new theology of a non-retaliatory God” that overturned entirely all religious theology of what God was like. It pointed to a stunning new image of deity that no religion has ever communicated to humanity. A stunning new understanding of love and hence the ideal for human ethics/behavior. Most religions, including Christianity, still refuse to fully acknowledge this new theology of Jesus and continue to bury his “diamonds” (Thomas Jefferson, Leo Tolstoy) in the theologies that they have inherited and copied from past primitive mythologies.

There is simply no better ideal anywhere in human history or human narratives to remind us who we are, or who we should try to become, and how we should act if we want to “tower in stature as maturely human”, as the heroes of our own stories.

More qualifiers: The unconditional ideal presented by H. Jesus is not a call to back down from advocacy for our personal beliefs, to become silent on our differing positions on varied issues just to de-escalate someone else’s intolerance and create a false environment of peace that gives the bully dominance. It is not a call to relinquish the vigorous defense of what we believe is right or true.

I take it more as a potent approach to defusing the hatred that wants to incite a similar hatred in response and fuel ugly “eye for eye” spirals of hatred, of violence for violence, of coercion and force for force, etc. And the fact that approaches oriented to unconditional work at a personal scale and national scale is evident in that Nelson Mandela was able to defuse the push of his colleagues for retaliatory civil war in South Africa, while at the same time similar situations of tribal hatred in Rwanda and Serbia, that chose eye for eye responses, descended into the horror of mass-death outcomes. See, for example, Richard Stengel’s statements on this in his biography of Mandela, “Mandela’s Way: Lessons on Life, Love, and Courage”.

Obviously, when situations reach the level of actual attack we are responsible to respond to such assault and defeat the violent attackers in order to protect ourselves and others. That is why we support police and military to fulfil the number one responsibility of government to protect citizens from assault, to arrest and imprison violent people. So unconditional does not counter such fundamental responsibilities. It is not the advocacy for pacifism in the face of violence. It is not a call to abandon common sense as we see in US cities releasing repeat violent offenders or decriminalizing crimes out of some “suicidal empathy” that may be more “virtue signaling for status as morally superior” to one’s opponents.

I take it more as attitudinal or intentional advice- to not yield to hatred, but to eventually come to some recognition and pity for the failure of the offending other to act as human. And then to not be like the offender in response but to hold to the intention to act differently, to act better and to show a better way in response, that will have more chance for success over the long-term to resolve differences and defuse “eye for eye” trajectories that just lead to endless war/conflicts.

As Mandela said of his approach of unconditional love for opponents- “It turns enemies into friends and brings out the best in others”. Not all, but most. Obviously, psychopathy or mental illness change the formula/mixture in the equation of how to respond, etc.

So rather than outright rejection of this precept, I offer it as something critical to wrestle with, just as Simon Wiesenthal did in his books after surviving the Nazi death camps, losing his family to that murderous hatred, and spending the remainder of his life hunting down Nazis. He urged fellow Jews, who suffered in the Holocaust, to not take hateful vengeance against their Nazi tormentors, to “not be like them” in retaliating with similar violence. Note especially his dealing with the Jewish father who wanted to kill the Nazi soldier who had murdered his young son.

Moving along… Here is my point:

There is a way out of the darkness of the current time where hatred has been unleashed too constantly across the public, in news media, social media, etc. The endless petty name calling, vilifying differing others, excessively demonizing, dehumanizing those who disagree with us, with follow-up efforts to destroy reputations, character, careers. What is this urge to make instant harsh judgments and condemnations on the comments, and even just the words that are spoken by differing others, that do not resonate familiarly with our narratives, that upset us, disturb us, make us uncomfortable, even anger us. Why do we then follow with excessively harsh demands for punishment, censoring, banning from public spaces, and then demand cancelling, even criminalizing of the differing others? What is all this obvious stirring of tribal hatred toward differing others?

How do we crush the hatred that drives this judgment, condemnation, and ultimately too often results in the insanity of violence?

Insert on an epitome example: The insanity of the intensifying tribal hatred is most evident all day long in the media spewing of their hatred of and constant vilification of Donald Trump, demonizing, dehumanizing everything that he says and does (I see this in the daily news article titles on MSN homepage Canada). And this is not a defense of all that he says and does, as I am in disagreement with him on varied things, notably his unseemly tendency to “petty vindictiveness”. But overall, there is something pathological in the constancy and intensity of the public hatred for him.

There is a pathology in the refusal of many to recognize the basic humanity of disagreeing others, like Trump.

Getting right to the point:

We were told thousands of years ago how to defuse this inhumane madness of retaliatory hatred and violence. What the ancient sages told us is still the premier feature defining authentic love- i.e. unconditional “love for our enemies.”

There are other definitions of love that are less shocking to our conventional senses and traditional views of “justice”, that are less disturbing to such orthodoxy. That do not in a full-frontal manner feel like a shove or direct punch in the face to long-established views. That give us escape clauses to still retaliate in some similar manner to the one offending or assaulting us, that permit us to hit back in some way and we can still validate such response as proper “justice”.

The adjective “unconditional” has the impact of appearing to advocate for abandoning millennia of “common-sense” on justice and replace that with silly Kumbayah-like pacifism. Unfortunately, for those of us willing to at least wrestle with understanding this ideal, many around us just react to the ideal as impractical for real life and take its meaning directly to the nonsensical extreme of pacifism in the face of violence and evil.

But then why do most of us intuitively respect and honor the Mandelas of life for what they exhibit? We sense that they are doing what all of us should be doing.

Again, unconditional pushes us to consider what Simon Wiesenthal did as he wrestled with “Justice, Not Vengeance” and asked readers if he had done the right thing in refusing to offer forgiveness to the dying young SS man who wanted to confess his taking part in atrocities toward Jews (“The Sunflower: On the Possibilities and Limits of Forgiveness”).

Note- I add the feature of “unconditional” to the Jesus’ statement “love your enemies” because it is clearly implied in the total context of his message below, and in his illustrations such as the story of the Prodigal Father. I add also further defining features like “universal inclusiveness”, noting that there are no discriminatory exceptions of anyone in his statement that God generously gives “sun and rain to both good and bad people”.

And what does the “unconditional love of enemies” mean in terms of forgiveness, in terms of tolerance of the slowness of others to change their behavior, and the generosity and mercy to offer “second/third/fourth/etc.” chances to reform, develop, and grow? What does “love your enemy” mean in terms of respect for the basic humanity of offending and differing others, no matter their offenses and the disagreements, or in terms of the fundamental obligation to treat all as family (i.e. recognizing the human oneness thing)? And what does it mean in terms of holding all fully responsible for behavior and outcomes- i.e. the obligation to restrain and imprison violent people in order to protect all others? And the responsibility to make full restitution?

Joseph Campbell on recognizing our oneness, even with enemies: “For love is exactly as strong as life. And when life produces what the intellect names evil, we may enter into righteous battle, contending ‘from loyalty of heart’: however, if the principle of love (Jesus’ “Love your enemies”) is lost thereby, our humanity too will be lost. ‘Man’, in the words of the American novelist Hawthorne, ‘must not disclaim his brotherhood even with the guiltiest’” (Myths To Live By).

Note in Campbell’s advice the recommendation to remember our oneness (“brotherhood”) with all others, something affirmed by the “Mitochondrial Eve” hypothesis that states all humans on Earth today are descendants of an East African woman. Add the discovery of “quantum entanglement” that affirms an underlying fundamental oneness to all reality. And then the NDE revelations of our fundamental oneness.

And critical, when thinking of this unconditional response to offense and violence, is consideration of the victim’s viewpoints on this. It is very interesting how some victims deal with tragedy and pain. I think of one mother whose son was brutally murdered by some thug and yet she found the way to think through and past her personal agony to argue in court against the death penalty for her son’s murderer. She argued against it, not for the sake of the murderer, but because she did not want his mother to suffer the same horror that she had to endure at the loss of a son.

That is empathy beyond heroism. Add the father who decided to “forgive” his young daughter’s murderer, not for that man’s sake, but so as to liberate himself from the hatred and bitterness that would harm his other children subsequent to that offense against their family.

Or “The Forgiven” in South Africa (movie on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission), and many similar stories where victims find some reason for embracing these different responses to violence. Others hold the hope that the offenders can be rehabilitated in some way.

Moving on…

This precept to “love our enemy” defines, more than any comparable precept, what it means to think and behave as truly human. It argues that we should consider that anything less is subhuman, even inhuman. As Bob Brinsmead has noted- Anything less is not authentic love. Certainly, similar retaliation in response to offenses committed is not fully human. It is considered anti-human, even animal, by some. Listen to the Roman sage Musonius Rufus of the first century AD- “To bite back the biter is animal and not human”. Think of angry dogs in the street.

This precept to love your enemy goes way back before Jesus, to the Akkadian father, who told his son,

“Do not return evil to your adversary; requite with kindness the one who does evil to you, maintain justice for your enemy, be friendly to your enemy. Give food to eat, beer to drink, grant what is requested, provide for and treat with honor. At this one’s god takes pleasure.”

Returning to my opening point- The way out the present darkness is not through perpetuating “eye for eye” cycles. That retaliatory response has always furthered the descent into more darkness and hatred, and then even violence. Retaliatory vengeance renders us all petty and subhuman.

Yes, “Justice”, as holding offenders responsible, including restraining/imprisoning the violent to protect others, this is obligatory to any common-sense love.

And it takes those among us with great spirits and great courage to initiate and break the natural descent into “eye for eye” cycles by choosing to be the first to take things in entirely new directions with forgiveness, de-escalating anger, calming things down. The self-sacrifice of courageous spirits to break such cycles may be misunderstood, misconstrued, and mislabeled as “weakness, backing down, being a pussy, letting others walk all over one, etc.” So be it. But subsequent history, legacy, will prove such an approach to have worked better to lessen violence.

Again, yes, we hold all people responsible for behavior and consequences, including restraint and imprisonment of the violent. I hesitate at times to even make these balancing qualifiers lest I lessen the blunt impact that the unconditional feature may have on some that will lead them to choose to freely take this precept somewhere unconventional, even pacifist-like in the face of violence.

I see it as a freedom of choice issue, not an across-the-board demand for all in all situations of offenses. That is the point of the generous vineyard owner story of Jesus. He argued with the pissed all-day workers that it was his money to do with as he chose. Matthew 20- “Don’t I have the right to do what I want with my own money? Or are you envious because I am generous?”.

We all need the constant reaffirmation of love as our ultimate common responsibility to one another. As Leo Tolstoy said, “The whole trouble lies in that people think that there are conditions excluding the necessity of love in their intercourse with man, but such conditions do not exist. Things may be treated without love; one may chop wood, make bricks, forge iron without love, but one can no more deal with people without love than one can handle bees without care.”

Love, especially “love of enemy”, is the authentic expression of our true self, our essential human spirit in its oneness with the “Ultimate Unconditional Love” that is God (the oneness or unity thing). This version of love offers the most potency in enabling us to defuse our darker inherited impulses to tribal hatred, lust for vengeance, and the urge to humiliate and destroy differing others.

Listen, for an example, to this governor of Utah and his uplifting call to be something better, to heed the words and behavior of Charlie Kirk…

“FULL UPDATE: Arrest made in fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk”, CityNews, Sept. 12, 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JsyCoHOSTjc

The full statement of Historical Jesus on what it means to love with no conditions.

Loving all unconditionally, even enemies, is how we tower in stature as ‘maturely human’, conquering the real enemy and monster that is inside each of us- i.e. our inherited animal drives to tribalism, domination, and retaliatory destruction of differing others.

Unconditional love is the “weapon from the wise man” that enables us to fight and conquer the real enemy in life, in the real battle of life, the real Hero’s Quest that is an inner battle inside each individual heart.

As a non-religious person who views Historical Jesus as an entirely non-religious person with a non-religious message, I view these wisdom sayings just below, with Thomas Jefferson, as the “diamonds of Jesus” that were buried in the larger New Testament context that distorted them with Paul’s retaliatory theology.

Jesus’ core message:

“Give to everyone who asks you, and if anyone takes what belongs to you, do not demand it back. Do to others as you would have them do to you. If you love only those who love you, what credit is that to you? Everyone finds it easy to love those who love them. And if you do good to those who are good to you, what credit is that to you? Everyone can do that. And if you lend to those from whom you expect repayment, what credit is that to you? Most will lend to others, expecting to be repaid in full.

“But do something more heroic, more humane. (Live on a higher plane of human experience). Do not retaliate against your offenders/enemies with ‘eye for eye’ justice. Instead, love your enemies, do good to them, and lend to them without expecting to get anything back. Then you will be just like God because God does not retaliate against God’s enemies. God does not mete out eye for eye justice. Instead, God is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked. God causes the sun to rise on the evil and the good and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. Be unconditionally loving, just as your God is unconditionally loving”. (My paraphrase of Luke 6:32-36 or Matthew 5:38-48.)

This can be summarized in this single statement: “Love your enemy because God does”.

Prime example of non-retaliatory, unconditional love: The Prodigal Father story in Luke 15:11-31.

The Father (representing God) did not demand a sacrifice, restitution, payment, apology, or anything else before forgiving, fully accepting, and loving the wasteful son. Again, this is not to affirm general policies of pacifism in the face of violence or not holding others responsible for behavior and its consequences. There is always the primary responsibility of government to protect all citizens from violence, meaning the restraint and imprisonment of repeat violent offenders. This is more about the individual freedom of choice in how people want to respond to and treat their offenders.

Added note:

I am with Tyrus (independent, libertarian) who stated that he was not a religious person (and disagreed with Charlie Kirk on that issue) but he admired Kirk for his approach and treatment of those who disagreed with him, as in the defense of competing ideas, his patience in listening to those who mistreated him, calling him names and yet he still gave them the mike to voice their different views because he believed so passionately in such liberal democratic things as free speech.

Others on this Gutfeld panel speak passionately of the man, and note that after his murder there was no rioting, no burning of stores, and no abuse of police, etc. Very different from what we saw after the death of George Floyd, and other similar deaths on the left side. Interesting to consider.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b4jWntgYsIc

“Gutfeld! 9/12/25 Greg Gutfeld FULL END SHOW”, ᗷᖇEᗩKIᑎG ᑎEᗯS Tᖇᑌᗰᑭ September 12, 2025

“Transcript – America This Week, September 12, 2025: “The Assassination of Charlie Kirk, and a New Age of Political Violence”: Recalling the rising level of incivility and rage surrounding the horrific assassination of Charlie Kirk, a symbol of political dialogue. Also, the conventions of Conan Doyle’s detective novel”, Matt Taibbi, Walter Kirn, Sept. 13, 2025

https://www.racket.news/p/america-this-week-september-12-2025-b66

Interesting points from these two this week:

They note that Charlie Kirk was a young person doing what universities in the past were supposed to do, encourage open debate over differing ideas, in a civil manner. Kirk, they recount, did exactly that “sitting back in his chair, listening, engaged” and then suddenly he was shot. And then, say Taibbi and Kirn “the dehumanization of this person before he had even left the earth, truly, literally, was for me,,. the most terrifying aspect of the whole thing.”

They note that Kirk was not rude, abrasive, or profane. He “(did) one thing that a lot of these others don’t do quite so well, which is, listen. The guy is a good listener.” And they add, he was a gentle soul.

“This person, whose lane was discussion, and as you said, the old school way of the sort of right-wing conservative radio person was to bark over you and not give you a chance to answer. And I’ve been in some of those discussions and been very frustrated. That’s not what he did. As you say, he listened…”

Then they note that many commentators have responded to his death, blaming Kirk for his own death because of his “hate speech”.

“But that trope has been revived quite a lot lately. Also, there’s a thing that Dow did in that clip that has become incredibly common and drives me up a wall as a journalist. It’s referring to hateful acts and hateful speech and not telling you which ones.

“What do you mean ‘hateful acts, hateful speech’? It’s saying, ‘Well, measured against Trump’s lies, which lies? Which ones?’ That has become a shorthand thing that happens all the time now. And look, we all understand that cable news is a job where you have to take up a lot of time with discussion, and maybe you don’t always have the facts at hand, but if you’re going to use an inflammatory word, if you’re going to call it, say somebody is guilty of hate speech, you got to quote them. You got to make it clear what you’re talking about exactly.

“Walter Kirn: Well, and they invented the category too, let’s remember, so they get to use it at will and flexibly. And by that, I mean places like MSNBC mean by hatred something that’s almost technical compared to what you and I mean by it. You, and I mean violent emotion, powered by loathing. On MSNBC, hate speech can be merely being against some movement or political idea or not signing on with the transgender orthodoxies, for example.

“Matt Taibbi: I think that’s the thing that he’s most commonly pilloried for as… Most often when they talk about hate speech, it’s because he won’t say that a trans woman is a woman, right? Or he talks about keeping men out of women’s bathrooms, that kind of thing.”

Meaning that the smear “hate speech”, much like “racist, fascist, Nazi”, is just thrown at opponents without specifying exactly what they mean or which statements are referred to.

Kirn then expresses his frustration at the state of affairs today:

“You want to blame the victim, go to hell. You want to dehumanize them or somehow cast their death as righteous judgment on their political opinions, go to hell. You want to believe that this is a both sides thing, well, for the moment go to hell because it’s not. It seems to be a war on this populist surge in American politics. If you want also to believe that there are simple morals to be driven from, to be derived from it, that you can apply, go to hell too.”

Taibbi talks about the eruption of nihilistic violence today that scares people and discusses the general environment that incites such violence. They quote Clay Travis on this:

“Riley is so brave, and I am so glad that she is speaking out, and so many people are, but let me hammer something home here. I am sick and I am tired of hearing people say, like Barack Obama did, like Hillary Clinton did. “Oh, we condemn this violence.” Guess what? You can’t call the President of the United States for 10 years, Adolf Hitler. And you can’t say that he’s a fascist dictator. And you can’t say that anyone who voted for Trump or advocated for him like you, me, Riley and Charlie Kirk are Nazis.

“And then when someone tries to kill us, you can’t suddenly say, “Oh, we condemn this violence.” You caused it. Look at me right now. You caused this. When you tell people that someone is Hitler, you are telling crazy people go kill them. I am sick of pretending that that is anything other than what they’re doing. That guy in West Palm Beach, what did he say? He was killing Trump because he believed Trump was Hitler. This is what they do. All right. This left-wing violence, it’s out of control.”

(End of Taibbi/Kirn discussion.)

A short one from Brit Konstantin Kisin (Independent) on issues like the dehumanization of political opponents as “Nazis, fascists” over the past 10 years, and what that does to people in the general population. Plus a good one on the point that no one expected this would be followed with riots, looting, burning cities, and more violence (after the assassination of Charlie Kirk). But we all saw what happened when there was a death on the other side, says Konstantin. Interesting point.

He says that if we are told and we believe that “Fascists/Nazis” are in power then we are all validated in using force to fight them, commenting on the shift toward violence on the left today.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w5YHR4Zz-rs

“These People Have Blood On Their Hands” – Konstantin Kisin of “Triggernometry”

“Thinking About Charlie Kirk”, Theo Von

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eA6enA1wWSU

Theo is not a religious guy and says that he does not agree with Charlie Kirk’s views on varied things but he admires Kirk’s courage to go talk with people and defend free speech. Here Theo tries to express what he feels about Kirk’s murder.

I think what Theo is trying to express is similar to what many of us are feeling. Though we are not religious and would disagree with Charlie Kirk on religious issues, among other things, we sense that he was a decent man, a good man, who just wanted to discuss all sorts of things with differing others in a respectful, civil manner. Not shouting angrily over others, refusing to let the others share their points without interruption. Not raging at one another like angry kids in a sandbox argument.

Charlie is like the many Christians that we all know. Kind, gentle people, good people trying to do the right thing, like most of us. I know these people as members of my family, and as friends. Even though I have left Christianity, they still talk to me, we laugh together, share views on all sorts of things, and they tell me that they pray for me. Just really good people that I respect, valued friends that are a pleasure to know and communicate with.

The fact that Charlie Kirk was a person like that, makes his murder all the more painful to most of us. And as Theo says, he feels “scared” now that there are hateful people out there who won’t come up and speak civilly to you, but from a distance will vent that hate in violence, and murderous destruction.

There are too many such people today. And as many are trying to understand- What drives them to such hatred and violence against differing others?

This Email from a friend, responding to some article that I posted on this site honoring free speech advocates like Charlie Kirk:

He said,

“Kirk was killed by a befuddled young man who had found him not extreme-right enough. This was fascist on fascist, and the left had nothing to do with it. As an American leftist, I fully support the First Amendment, even when the protected speech is repellent to me, as it was every time Kirk opened his mouth. Killing him served only bad purposes. Kirk was enriching himself spewing hate, Christian nationalism, etc. He was a repellent schmuck, but his death has in some people’s eyes made him a martyr. As for the Second Amendment, it never stood in the way of gun laws until fascists on the US Supreme Court misinterpreted it. I regard it as obsolete and I favor gun restrictions at least as strict as, say, those in Canada. But the strictest laws probably could not keep a bolt-action hunting rifle out of an assassin’s hands.”

My response:

“_____, I position as Independent/Classic Liberal and with you fully support First Amendment speech freedom similar to positions of those like Ira Glasser, former ACLU director. Tolerance even for offensive speech. I am not very familiar with Charlie Kirk except from varied clips and comments of others and it appears that he was not a “repellent schmuck” but actually quite civil except for minor exceptions. And appears to have defended free speech rights for all and treated opponents quite civilly. “Spewing hate”. Not sure about that.

“And I would affirm what many say today that there has been a shift on the Left over past years in the US toward an extremist Woke Progressivism that has become too hateful and hysterically demonizes and dehumanizes disagreeing others (the endless smears of “Hitler, fascist, dictator, Nazis, racists, etc.”), even intolerant toward those on its own side just for holding unorthodox ideas and words that don’t toe the leftist elite’s narratives. We see this in media daily. Hence, the environment for fringe types to find incitement and validation for violence. And actually, too much direct advocacy of such violence. Yes, from the left. I think, for example, of comments by Joy Reid and others on this.

“While both sides have the extremist factions to guard against, the predominance of dangerous extremism today appears to be coming from the left (I put up an article that noted surveys on this- the growing support from Democrats for censorship of opponents and political violence). Consider that over past years there has been a predominance of leftist narrative ideology shaping mainstream media, and that same dominance in much of state institutions/agencies, certainly leftist domination of higher education, with the majority of censorship from that side as the Twitter Files exposed. So also Russiagate (trying to overturn a democratic election), Hunter Biden laptop coverup with push of the “Russian disinformation” lie that influenced an election, and so much other “threat to democracy”, a charge that leftists constantly project onto opponents.

“Some good sources on all this- former State Dept. guy Mike Benz in both his appearances on Joe Rogan, and others. Also, note how many solid Democrats/”leftists” have had to leave that side due to its shift too far left into extremist Woke Progressivism dominated by DEI. Joe Rogan, RFK, Tulsi Gabbard, Musk, even Maher, and on and on…”

“I forgot to add that “leftists/liberals” (all previously life-long Democrats) like Matt Taibbi, Walter Kirn, Michael Shellenberger, give some of the best information and balanced takes on all this in their “Substack/Public/etc.” forums, probably the best of independent news media today.”

(End of post)

What’s this “eye for eye” stuff going on now? I thought the man stood for free speech.

https://nationalpost.com/news/world/charlie-kirk-supporters-targeting-critics?tbref=hp

“Charlie Kirk supporters leading campaign to have people punished for mocking his death: Teachers, firefighters, federal workers and military personnel among those targeted for their public comments, with some losing their jobs”, National Post, Sept. 14, 2025

This is just one example: “Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered members of the military to identify colleagues who mocked or celebrated Kirk’s death.”

Do you really think Kirk would want this? Apparently, he sat and calmly listened to opponents, even when they berated him with ugly smears, and answered politely. He thought that free speech had to be tolerated and protected, not punished. No matter how offensive. What about continuing his project? Doing what he fought for.

The National post on campus fear and silenced majorities: Who’s your bully now?

Backed by a majority of “leftist woke progressive” professors a tiny minority of threatening activists (0.4% in Canada) bully majorities into fearful silence. Where in this is the “inclusion, diversity, and equality” (not “equity”)? Is this training future generations to understand and defend a free and liberal society?

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/nearly-half-of-all-canadian-university-students-are-actively-hiding-their-real-beliefs-survey?itm_source=index

“Nearly half of all Canadian university students are actively hiding their real beliefs: survey. The survey by Aristotle Foundation also finds that students with conservative views now outnumber those with liberal views”, Tristan Hopper, Sept.3, 2025

“Liberals basically feel free to say anything they want on any subject, regardless of consequences — that’s not an overstatement — while moderates and conservatives and libertarians feel like they have to radically self-censor, if they want to avoid consequences for their beliefs,” wrote David Hunt, research director for the Aristotle Foundation, in an email to the National Post.

“He added, ‘we knew students were self-censoring and that some students felt their views weren’t welcome in class discussions … but the data was even more damning than expected’.”

And… Lorrie Goldstein: “Liberal bias in Canadian universities is a fact, study says

https://torontosun.com/opinion/columnists/goldstein-liberal-bias-in-canadian-universities-is-a-fact-study

“73% of academics sampled from 40 top-ranked Canadian universities identified as left-wing, 4% as right-wing.”

This does not sound at all like a man who is constantly smeared and vilified as “Hitler, fascist, racist, dictator, etc.

Could it be the media has been lying to us about Trump the Orange Monster?

In this article, Conrad Black provides some insight into how President Trump responded on hearing that Charlie Kirk had been assassinated. Black was present in the Oval Office as Trump and J.D. Vance first heard of and commented on the murder.

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/conrad-black-i-was-with-trump-when-charlie-kirk-died-he-grieved-like-a-leader?itm_source=index

“I was with Trump when Charlie Kirk died. He grieved like a leader: The president had no thoughts except charity for the bereaved and concern for the country”, Conrad Black, Sept. 14, 2025
Here is what Black observed in the Oval Office as Trump and Vance responded to the news of Charlie Kirk’s murder.

“We were shortly joined by the vice president, J.D. Vance, known even by me to be a close friend Charlie Kirk. He was reporting on the initial results of the investigation. My offer to excuse myself was declined and there followed a surrealistic and unforgettable scene: the president and vice president lamented their deceased friend and I was likely almost as improbable a third party as could be found to participate in such an exchange. In the circumstances, I only commented when my opinion was asked.

“Especially in the light of ungenerous imputations of motives to both men in their public remarks in ensuing days. I would be remiss not to emphasize that neither the president nor the vice president expressed any sentiment except sorrow at the death of their friend and sympathy for his wife and family and close associates, and calm, deep concern at the extent of violence in the country.

“There was not a vengeful or partisan word or even an ill-tempered one. Both men were absolutely exemplary and in fact somewhat inspiring in their sole preoccupation with the horribly premature and violent death of a talented friend and supporter, and their shared concern at the frequency of recourse to political violence in America and much of the western world.

“The only reference to the immediate political implications of this tragic event was by me when I said that this was such a ghastly episode it might have a salutary effect in sobering public discourse and discouraging violence. This elicited a noncommittal response.

“All Americans, whatever their political leanings, should be reassured that the two holders of the national offices of the United States, in a poignant hour of great sacrifice and sadness, had no thoughts except charity for the bereaved and concern for the country. It was my sad privilege to be a witness to this and the completely spontaneous tastefulness and generosity of the thoughts of the president and vice president did not reduce but somewhat ameliorated the deep sadness of the occasion.”

Also, this observation of Black as he had earlier waited in an outer room to see the President:

“As I was arriving at the White House visitors’ entrance I saw on my mobile phone that Charlie Kirk had been wounded in an assassination attempt. I did not really know him and was only generally conversant with his Turning Point movement and from the initial wording of the bulletin I hopefully assumed that he would recover. There was no sign of alarm as I sat in the outer anteroom with a number of distinguished fellow visitors including a prominent senator and the well-known economist Arthur Laffer…

“Although I had been a number of times to the White House before, it was in groups and in reception rooms. Here it was possible to see how the private office functioned and it was clear the president’s staff is devoted to him personally and that he, unlike some holders of great offices that I have known, is unfailingly polite to staff.

Compare Black’s comment on Trump’s treatment of staff to reports of Kamala Harris’s treatment of her staff:

“Vice-President Harris has an abnormally high staff turnover rate”

https://www.reddit.com/r/AskALiberal/comments/1f26zdz/vicepresident_harris_has_an_abnormally_high_staff/

Quote from article: “She would routinely berate and cuss out her staff, and that the office environment around her was, quite frankly, a toxic hellhole.”

So also with Joe Biden…

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/02/07/when-it-comes-mistreatment-workers-biden-fails-his-own-test/

https://www.thetimes.com/world/us-world/article/joe-bidens-four-letter-temper-tantrums-leave-staff-shaken-w7kslh9tn

Now who’s your real monsters?

Celebrating the murder of Charlie Kirk

Tim Dillon spends the opening minutes of his podcast commenting on people who are celebrating the murder of Charlie Kirk. As he says, he had substantive disagreements with Kirk (Dillon is a gay man) but he still could not celebrate another person’s murder- the father of young children. Dillon says Kirk was a decent man willing to sit and discuss differing views with others.

Dillon tries to reason with such people that something is profoundly wrong if they can express delight in Kirk’s assassination.

I would suggest that is the deforming power of our narratives. If we dehumanize differing others as “Nazis, fascists, racists, etc.”, then we can make ourselves feel justified in the destruction/extermination of such people. Much like the relief that most of us embrace due to the Allies defeating the actual Nazis in WW2. Maybe not gleeful celebration but gratefulness that such a scourge was ended.

But this man was not a Nazi. Those celebrating Kirk’s murder illustrates the outcome of the relentless smearing of the differing others among us as evil monsters. The smearing of others as “Nazis, fascists, racists” has been so consistent over the past 10 years that many minds among us have been entirely deformed and now see violence as necessary to stop their fellow citizens from expressing their “dangerous” views that differ.

“The silencing of Charlie Kirk”, The Tim Dillon Show, number 461

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OsWRClaBYI4

As Dillon says, I would never want any of the people I disagree with to die, to be shot in front of their children, as Charlie Kirk was.

And this…

This now the increasing reality in the US… I think of even comedian Bill Burr shouting “Free Mangione” during an interview.

As others have noted, the term “Hate speech” is now used by too many to define any who disagree with Woke Progressive views (DEI, trans ideology, etc.), including fellow liberals. This “concept creep” on the term “hate speech” now includes the disagreeing political/social views of opponents. And this loosening of hate speech limits now drives the censorship laws in Europe that liberals/leftists there want to implement worldwide. Including the arrest and imprisoning of those who express differing opinions online (differing from government approved opinions/speech), as is now happening at increasing rates in Britain (30 a day, 12,000 a year) and other places (Germany, Brazil, etc.).

https://nypost.com/2025/08/19/world-news/uk-free-speech-struggle-30-arrests-a-day-censorship/

“Bob Vylan responds to Charlie Kirk’s assassination with ‘rest in piss’ comment during his show: Bob Vylan made inflammatory remarks at Amsterdam concert after Kirk was gunned down at Utah university”, David Spector, Sept. 15, 2025

https://www.foxnews.com/media/bob-vylan-responds-charlie-kirks-assassination-rest-piss-comment-during-his-show

Quotes from article:

“’Assassination culture is spreading on the left. Forty-eight percent of liberals say it would be at least somewhat justified to murder Elon Musk. Fifty-five percent said the same about Donald Trump’, Kirk wrote in a post April 7, 2025.

“The conservative activist linked to a poll suggesting a massive cultural shift occurred after Luigi Mangione allegedly gunned down UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.

“After Kirk’s assassination, many on the left appeared to celebrate that attack, or imply that he had it coming due to his conservative views.

“Ex-MSNBC analyst Matthew Dowd called Kirk ‘one of the most divisive, especially divisive younger figures’ upon learning of his murder, and said he was constantly pushing ‘hate speech’.”

(End of quotes)

What has happened to “liberal” that once meant the protection of the rights and freedoms of all, equally? As in the “Classic Liberal” principles, systems of common law, and representative institutions of liberal democracy?

Many on the left are pushing back, arguing that we should judge people as individuals not as collectives. To do what Martin Luther King did. But it has become undeniable that the use of political violence has become somewhat more pronounced on what is known as the political “left” in our liberal democracies. And as many have noted for comparison, after Kirk’s murder there have been no riots, looting, burning of stores and police stations, as we saw following George Floyd’s death. The BLM leadership was, by self-admission, Marxist.

I asked Grok to check this:

’Assassination culture is spreading on the left. Forty-eight percent of liberals say it would be at least somewhat justified to murder Elon Musk. Fifty-five percent said the same about Donald Trump’, Kirk wrote in a post April 7, 2025. Grok, is this advocacy for political violence a more serious problem on the left?

Grok responded:

The quote you provided is accurate and comes from a post by Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) on X (formerly Twitter) dated April 7, 2025. In it, he references a poll from the Network Contagion Research Institute (NCRI), a nonpartisan research group focused on online extremism and misinformation. The post included an image of the poll graphic and expanded on concerns about left-wing protest culture contributing to violence.

Fact-Checking the Specific Claim

The NCRI poll in question, titled “Assassination Culture Brief,” was based on a survey of 1,264 U.S. adults conducted via Prime Panels (a market research platform) and weighted to match Census demographics on age, gender, race/ethnicity, education, and party ID from Pew Research. Respondents self-identified their ideology (e.g., far left, liberal, slightly liberal for “left-of-center”; slightly conservative, conservative, far right for “right-of-center”). The survey measured attitudes toward political violence using a 1-7 scale (1 = “not at all justified,” 7 = “completely justified”), with scores of 2-7 indicating “at least somewhat justified.”

Key results for the questions on murdering high-profile figures (paraphrased as assessing justification for such acts):

• Elon Musk: Overall, 31% of respondents said it was at least somewhat justified. Among left-of-center respondents, 50% said so (including 11% who rated it “completely justified”). Right-of-center support was lower (exact figure not broken out, but implied by the overall average).

• Donald Trump: Overall, 38% said at least somewhat justified. Among left-of-center, 56% (including 14% “completely justified”). Again, lower among right-of-center.

(Note: Kirk’s post rounded to 48% and 55%, likely due to slight variations in categorization or reporting, but the underlying data aligns closely.) The poll also found correlations between support for such violence and factors like left-wing authoritarianism (a psychological scale measuring dogmatic progressive views), heavy use of platforms like Bluesky, and tolerance for property destruction (e.g., 40% overall said destroying a Tesla dealership in protest was at least somewhat acceptable). NCRI argued this reflects a broader “normalization” of assassination rhetoric online, amplified post-2024 events like assassination attempts on Trump.

Is Advocacy for Political Violence More Serious on the Left?

This is a subjective question, but we can evaluate it based on available polling data from 2024-2025, which tracks attitudes toward political violence (e.g., justification for violence to achieve goals, celebrating opponents’ deaths, or specific acts). Overall, majorities of Americans across the spectrum reject political violence—typically 70-80% say it’s “never justified”—and actual incidents remain rare (fewer than 2% of people report personally engaging in or planning it). However, support for it in the abstract has ticked up slightly since 2020, driven by polarization, and recent data shows partisan asymmetries.

Here’s a summary of key recent polls comparing liberals/Democrats vs. conservatives/Republicans:

Poll/Source Date Key Question/Findings Democrats/Liberals Republicans/Conservatives
NCRI Assassination Culture Brief (1,264 adults) Early 2025 (exact date not specified) Justification for murdering Trump or Musk (at least somewhat) 56% (Trump), 50% (Musk) Lower (overall avg. pulls it down; ~20-30% implied)

YouGov (for Newsweek) (2,623 adults) Sept. 11, 2025 Violence justified to achieve political goals? 14% say yes (72% never) 6% say yes (81% never)

YouGov (post-Kirk assassination) (sample size not specified in summary) Sept. 2025 Acceptable to celebrate death of opposed public figure? 11% say usually/always (71% unacceptable) 6% say usually/always (89% unacceptable)

PRRI American Values Survey (5,000+ voters) Oct. 2024 (updated 2025 analysis) True patriots may need violence to save country? 15% agree overall; Dems lower (~10%) 23% agree overall; Reps higher (~30%), especially among Christian nationalists (33%)

States United Democracy Center (national sample) June 2024 (tracked to 2025) Political violence a major problem? Support for it rising? 45% see as major problem; ~10% justify in some cases Similar overall, but Reps more likely to justify against “threats to democracy” (e.g., 20% in subsets)

General trend from multiple polls (e.g., NPR/Ipsos, Visual Capitalist)

2024-2025 Violence ever justified for political goals? 11-14% say sometimes; higher among younger libs (18-29: ~20%) 6-11% say sometimes; higher among older cons in 2024 data

• Trends favoring higher left-leaning support: The NCRI poll highlights stark asymmetry for violence against right-leaning figures like Musk and Trump, tying it to online rhetoric (e.g., Bluesky posts glorifying assassins). The September 2025 YouGov poll—conducted right after Charlie Kirk’s assassination—shows Democrats twice as likely as Republicans to justify violence or celebrate deaths. Experts like Peter Loge (George Washington University) note that while support is low, it’s often higher among liberals for “progressive” causes (e.g., anti-corporate or anti-Trump actions), and younger demographics (more liberal) are 2-3x more tolerant. Post-2024 election data also shows left-leaning protests (e.g., against deportations or Gaza policy) correlating with more permissive attitudes toward disruption.

• Trends favoring higher right-leaning support: Earlier 2024 PRRI data showed Republicans more supportive of violence to “save the country” (e.g., 23% vs. 15% for Dems), especially among white Christian nationalists (a right-leaning group). 2022-2023 polls (e.g., from Psychology Today citing PRRI) had Republicans at 40% supporting violence vs. 23% Democrats, linked to election denialism and Jan. 6 rhetoric. Right-wing violence has been more lethal in recent years (e.g., FBI data: 75% of extremist murders 2010-2023 from right-wing sources), though left-wing incidents (e.g., property damage in protests) are more frequent but less deadly.

• Overall context: Support remains marginal (under 15% in most cases), but it’s bidirectional and fueled by echo chambers—liberals overestimate right-wing violence (75% see it as bigger issue), conservatives the opposite (66%). Experts (e.g., in Politico and Washington Post analyses) emphasize that both sides’ media ecosystems amplify threats, but the left’s recent uptick in polls may stem from frustration over 2024 outcomes and figures like Musk/Trump symbolizing opposition. No side has a monopoly, but for advocacy targeting specific conservative icons, the data leans toward it being more pronounced on the left in 2025.

In short, while political violence advocacy is a bipartisan concern with low but rising tolerance, recent evidence (especially the NCRI and post-Kirk polls) suggests it’s manifesting more acutely on the left for high-profile cases like those Kirk highlighted. Addressing it requires leaders on both sides to condemn it unequivocally, as polls show that reduces support across the board.

(End of Grok quotes)

The beginning of all healthy and proper human development and growth depends on first admitting where there are problems, responsibly acknowledging the nature of problems, not dismissing, downplaying, or denying them.

Joe Rogan makes an interesting point on the “bot farms” that are financed by foreign states like China that pretend to be fellow citizens in, for example, the US population and though bots try to sow discord between groups/people. They try to incite outrage, hatred, and fighting among liberal democracy citizens. Some of the hatred and fighting is organic, from smaller minorities says Rogan, but a lot is this outside influence trying to disrupt and ruin liberal democracies. Rogan notes reports on this:

“Joe Rogan Experience #2378 – Charlie Sheen”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sRj5pxG2JPk&t=2237s

And these on bot farms…

https://www.npr.org/2024/07/09/g-s1-9010/russia-bot-farm-ai-disinformation

https://www.fastcompany.com/91321143/bot-farms-social-media-manipulation

More on the freedom file.

Good on the “Brandenburg standard” as defining free speech limits.

Agreed that the right is now embracing “eye for eye” retaliation in seeking exposure, threat, and criminalization of the offensive speech of those celebrating Kirks murder.

This from below: “The response on the political right has been no less dangerous: the urge to answer a murder with censorship or official punishment of vile speech.”

And that is what the author notes below that will damage free speech which is fundamental to all freedom.

Bury the ‘Words are Violence’ cliché. We need maximal tolerance for speech; zero tolerance for force”, Greg Lukianoff, 2025

https://www.thefp.com/p/bury-the-words-are-violence-cliche?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

“TEACH STUDENTS THAT OBJECTIONABLE SPEECH IS VIOLENCE AND YOU INVITE THEM TO SEE THEIR OWN AGGRESSION AS SELF-DEFENSE,” WRITES GREG LUKIANOFF.

Lukianoff notes that news of Charlie Kirk’s assassination sparked many to celebrate, claiming it was karma payback for his spreading “hate, racism, misinformation, bigotry… reap what you sow”. They claimed that Kirk deserved to die for his words, but Lukianoff says that they have forgotten a crucial distinction that words are not violence and he has warned for years “that equating words with violence erases the bright line liberal societies drew after centuries of bloodshed. The law draws this line with precision. Advocacy, even vile advocacy, remains protected unless it is intended and likely to produce imminent lawless action. That’s the Brandenburg standard, and it exists because the alternative is to let the powerful decide which ideas are allowed.”

He continues, stating that a bedrock principle underlying the First Amendment is that government may not prohibit speech that some people find offensive because such a principle is a safety valve of pluralism. Unfortunately, university campuses have been eroding such critical distinctions and now tell students that offensive ideas are “harm”, “silence is violence”, and “speech can be literally’ violence.”

He says that “Teach students that objectionable speech is violence and you invite them to see their own aggression as self-defense. This is the bloody fallacy we just witnessed: Accept the premise that rhetoric is a physical attack and you hand extremists a moral permission slip to answer speech with force. “

He then details surveys that show many students now believe that it is valid to use coercion and violence to stop speech they disagree with. He illustrates with a variety of actual incidents where students have used aggression to shut down speakers, destroyed property, to now using violence against someone they did not like.

He moves on to note that the response on the political right has been similarly dangerous in urging censorship and punishment of the vile speech of opponents after the Kirk murder. We now hear of people being reprimanded, suspended, and even losing jobs over such speech. This retaliation further acts to chill free speech public debate.

How to respond to the speech that offends us? “The lesson we must relearn: Ugly speech is answered with more speech, not legal process. Investigate true threats and incitement under settled law; otherwise, keep the public square open.”

Lukianoff repeats his argument that we must reject the “words are violence” cliché. Further, he says that we must restore the atmosphere of universities as places to vigorously debate dangerous ideas and exercise maximum tolerance for speech with zero tolerance for force. Then, do not reward disruption of speech but discipline those who do so. And encourage the bravery to do what Charlie Kirk did- to talk to people, argue your ideas, listen to others.

He concludes:

“Free speech is not merely a favor for our friends— it is the best nonviolent technology humans have for solving our conflicts. To honor a man who died while speaking, don’t gag his enemies or canonize his ideas. Rebuild a culture that says no idea is so sacred it can’t be challenged and no person so despised they can be murdered in cold blood for speaking. Highest tolerance for speech. Zero tolerance for violence.”

Keep the line bright. Civilization depends on it.

And this on universities failing on so many issues critical to preparing students who will affirm, promote, and protect the Classic Liberal principles, systems of law, and representative institutions that undergird liberal democracy and maintain the rights and freedoms of all, equally.

“FIRST READING: How Canadian universities became cheering sections for political violence: Multiple Canadian professors took to social media to cheer the public murder of U.S. political commentator Charlie Kirk”, Tristan Hopper, Sept. 15, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/how-canadian-universities-became-cheering-sections-for-political-violence?itm_source=index

He opens, “When a wave of Canadian figures took to social media this week to publicly celebrate the assassination of U.S. political commentator Charlie Kirk, it shouldn’t have been all that surprising that a disproportionate number of them worked in academia.”

He explains, “Kirk was murdered at a university while engaging in a very university-like activity: Peacefully debating students who disagreed with him. Nevertheless, calls for the act to be repeated were loudest among those whose workplace was a university.”

He then gives examples of vile expressions of celebration by varied professors at different universities. He notes the similar celebration of Hamas over previous years. And the urging of repeated acts of “anticolonial resistance.”

Hopper adds that “This is all occurring on campuses where rising numbers of Canadian students are reporting discomfort with the extremism around them, and are actively censoring their own views to avoid sanction at the hands of faculty or administrators….

“’Liberals basically feel free to say anything they want on any subject, regardless of consequences — that’s not an overstatement — while moderates and conservatives and libertarians feel like they have to radically self-censor, if they want to avoid consequences for their beliefs,’ the foundation’s research director David Hunt told the National Post.”

This article is valuable for understanding media (news and social media), public narratives, how propagandizing people works, and the influence of ideas on human beings, what outcomes are likely. This illustrates the dangerous consequences when some in a society are demonized and dehumanized as a dangerous threat to the society.

“Charlie Kirk murder an example of how cancel culture leads to violence: When elites work to exclude certain viewpoints, when they brand voices as too extreme to be heard, they create the conditions for violence”, Christopher Dummitt, Sept. 16, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/charlie-kirk-murder-an-example-of-how-cancel-culture-leads-to-violence?itm_source=opinion

Dummitt begins noting the reactions to the murder of Charlie Kirk by politicians and media forums. He then says “In Canada especially there is a jarring irony. Many of the same politicians and commentators now denouncing violence have spent years working to marginalize voices like Kirk’s.”

He says that not just the “left” but also the “mushy middle” has portrayed Kirk and Canadian conservative equivalents as “too extreme, too dangerous for legitimate political debate.” He gives several examples of Canadian politicians who have demonized conservative voices and tried to criminalize their speech. That criminalization happened under Trudeau’s government with an “online harms bill” that that would label conservative information as “misinformation”. Meaning- information that liberals disagreed with, information that, for example, challenged immigration policy, that challenged trans ideology, and the gender transformation of young people, etc.

Dummitt says that “many of those now solemnly decrying political violence are the same people who worked to exclude and discredit figures like Kirk. They consistently presented conservative viewpoints as too radical to be considered, casting their advocates as unsafe or illegitimate. In sociological terms, they “othered” them, treating them as outside the bounds of acceptable discourse.”

In another National Post article, David Cayley shows how former PM Trudeau did this with the 2022 trucker’s protest. Cayley says, “They were not treated as an emergent public with something important to say. Instead, they were treated as an invading army, and, finally, as a grave threat to national security. ‘These people,’ Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said, are ‘often racists’ and ‘misogynists’ who ‘don’t believe in science’ and who hold ‘unacceptable opinions’.”

From- “How CBC botched coverage of the Freedom Convoy: At no point, did the CBC acknowledge the protest as a political phenomenon that deserved to be carefully examined”, Sept. 16, 2025.

Dummitt continues, stating how Canadian liberals warned of the danger of conservative ideas but did not explain exactly which ideas and why they were dangerous.

“Stories about alleged racism or transphobia often omit the actual words supposedly at issue, justified by the claim that quoting them would ‘revictimize’ marginalized groups. The result is that conservative perspectives are swept aside under a cloud of insinuation.”

Conservative ideas were smeared as “alt-right”. “Once labelled, their ideas can be ignored without engagement. It is reputation destruction by association, a form of ad hominem that saves elites from having to reckon with the arguments themselves.”

Dummitt concludes: “When political and media elites work to exclude certain viewpoints, when they brand voices as too extreme or unsafe to be heard, they help create the conditions for violence. They construct a climate in which an unstable individual can come to believe that silencing an opponent by force is justified.”

He says, of such extremism, that those who narrow the range of acceptable debate fuel polarization, exclusion, and extremism. They create an environment where opposing voices are marginalized as “dangerous extremism” and that can produce deadly consequences.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Defusing hatred, retaliation, and violence. Ancient wisdom that has never been bettered.

What you believe shapes what you become

Richard Landes (“Heaven On Earth”) has traced the trajectory of apocalyptic millennial movements. Apocalyptic millennialism promotes the narrative that is fundamental to the ideologies of Marxists/leftists. Landes noted that when an apocalyptic millennial movement begins to fail then disillusioned followers of the movement become desperate and double down, much like Tim Walz stated a while back at a rally, “We Democrats have to double down on Woke”. Some even make the shift to the “exterminate or be exterminated” phase. They move to desperate measures. Anything now goes to save the crusade, to keep it going. We are also seeing this “doubling down” in desperation with the climate alarmism crusade.

Note the article below reporting on surveys showing political violence may be a “bothsideism” issue, with perhaps a shift to the left recently.

This latest from Michael Shellenberger:

Left’s Dehumanization Of MAGA Behind Rising Support For Violence: Decrying Charlie Kirk’s assassination isn’t enough”, Michael Shellenberger, Alex Gutentag, Sep 11, 2025

https://www.public.news/p/lefts-dehumanization-of-maga-behind

Shellenberger and Gutentag, along with others, argue that the dehumanization/demonization of conservatives over past decades as “far-right, Nazis, fascists” has produced the current climate that legitimizes and validates violence against such people.

“The environment that led to Kirk’s death was created by the Left in its decades-long demonization and dehumanization of conservatives. For 80 years, schools, universities, and the media have used Hitler, Nazism, and fascism as symbols of ultimate evil. To call someone a “Nazi,” “fascist,” or “far-Right,” is therefore to imply that they are part of this evil, and like the historical Nazis, must be eliminated. Over the last 10 years, not just the radical Left but the mainstream news media, including the New York Times, and mainstream Democrats like Newsom, repeatedly characterized Trump and his supporters as Hitler-adjacent fascists. The New Republic openly depicted Trump as Hitler.”

They add that this was part of a deliberate dehumanization campaign and progressives who believe that opponents like Kirk are a dangerous threat to democracy now feel justified in killing such evil threats. The authors say that the Left hates Kirk for challenging their beliefs on gender, race, and feminism.

“The Left cannot tolerate these challenges to its worldview, so it resorts to censorship and silencing.” And those who cannot be censored must now be eliminated by assassination.

Shellenberger and Gutentag conclude: “It’s simply not good enough for Democratic politicians like Newsom and news media outlets like the New York Times, who spent the last decade dehumanizing millions of their fellow citizens, including Trump and Kirk, to simply say that they shouldn’t be killed. If they truly oppose political violence, they should apologize for their relentless false accusations of racism and bigotry, and they should try to make amends by humanizing conservatives. The media, Democrats, and the wider Left must stop portraying MAGA supporters, who have Christian, nationalist, and conservative views, as equivalent to Nazis and fascists through the use of loaded terms like ‘far-Right’.”

Along with ceasing the dehumanization of opponents as ultimate evil, leftists need to stop the demonization Western civilization as corrupt and evil.

(End of Shellenberger/Gutentag article)

And this comment from “Efferous”:

“The single biggest facilitator in all of it is the leftist media. They’ve profited for decades on controlling and steering the narrative with little or no consequence to themselves.”

Insert: I appreciate the effort made by Jimmy Kimmel, among many others, to decry violence following the senseless murder of Charlie Kirk.

He said, “Instead of the angry finger-pointing, can we just for one day agree that it is horrible and monstrous to shoot another human?… On behalf of my family, we send love to the Kirks and to all the children, parents and innocents who fall victim to senseless gun violence.”

Yes, not “finger-pointing”, but we should constantly be trying to understand the main contributing factors to violence across history, why it constantly erupts among us, what feeds it, what things incite and validate our worst impulses to resort to violence toward one another.

This site is committed to understanding and explaining such things as the narrative themes that have been uncovered as the main contributing influences to some of the worst outbreaks of violence across past millennia, notably in the last century in the mass-death crusades of Marxism, Nazism, and now environmental alarmism.

Bad ideas/beliefs have been exposed for inciting and validating the unleashing of tribal hatred against differing others, for inciting/validating the impulse to crush, vanquish, and dominate the differing other, and for inciting and validating the impulse to vengefully destroy the differing other that we demonize and dehumanize as an evil threat to our world and therefore to “save the world” we must exterminate that threat.

We know better today the psychopathologies behind violence. It is our responsibility to respond, to make the changes required, and show that we will take the actions necessary to lessen and remove the curse of violence from our societies.

This on the spread of support for assassination culture:

“The left embraces the ‘assassination culture’ that Charlie Kirk warned about: Progressives are celebrating his murder all over social media”, Michael Murphy, Sep 11, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/michael-murphy-the-left-embraces-the-assassination-culture-that-charlie-kirk-warned-about?itm_source=index

Murphy says that Charlie Kirk grasped that point that “If people cannot debate differences of opinion in a civil and robust manner, violence has, throughout history and with alarming speed, shown itself to be the logical next step.” And he was murdered for the crime of “encouraging open debate”.

Murphy notes that there are many on the left who have “for years hysterically demonized mainstream conservatives as ‘literal Nazis’.” And most people have been taught from childhood that the only appropriate response to Nazis is uncompromising force to crush and eliminate.

He continues, showing reports that state a growing number of Americans now think that political murder is justified, “More than half of left-leaning respondents agreed it would be at least ‘somewhat justified’ to kill Donald Trump, while 48 per cent said the same for Elon Musk.”

Kirk had said just months ago, “Assassination culture is spreading on the left… This is the natural outgrowth of left-wing protest culture tolerating violence and mayhem for years on end. The cowardice of local prosecutors and school officials have turned the left into a ticking time bomb.”

Murphy adds, “Progressive lawmakers and unruly activists have, wittingly or otherwise, created a culture of permissiveness around political violence,” and he notes how left-wing activists swooned over Luigi Mangione after he murdered a health insurance CEO.

He then states that the growing acceptance of political assassination by leftists is “the last gasp of an ‘ancien régime’ trying to claw back legitimacy through violence.”

Murphy concludes: “Those who promiscuously accuse others of Nazism while excusing murder are neither kind nor compassionate. They are engineering a culture of political violence. Beneath the nose piercings and the “trauma” and the university degrees, they are modern-day brownshirts.”

“Michael Murphy is a journalist based in London. He writes for the Daily Telegraph and presented the documentary ‘Ireland is full! Anti-immigration backlash in Ireland’. You can follow him on X: @michaelmurph_y.”

The battle for freedom never ceases, Wendell Krossa

The assault on liberal democracy freedom comes from varied places today. There is the Islamic immigration where a significant percentage of migrating people hate liberal democracies, and as stated by one spokesperson in Britain, “We are coming, not to take part, but to take over” with hopes of turning Western liberal democracies into Islamic theocracies. See the report below on the Muslim Brotherhood statement of this project to overturn liberal democracy. This illustrates the failures of “multi-culturalism” policies that do not insist that immigrants embrace the principles of liberal democracy.

And there is the “red” element in the loose “red/green” cooperation, again noted in articles below. Statements by Chinese leadership of their “long game” approach to bringing down Western liberal democracy by such projects as “the long march through the institutions”, infiltrating universities to indoctrinate new generations of Western youth. And they have succeeded with, for example, some 50%-plus of US youth now preferring socialism as the way to organize society. Add the success of majority support for Marxist candidate Mamdani in the New York mayor race.

The response of all who value freedom? Make clear Thomas Sowell’s “test of facts”. The outcomes of the differing approaches to organizing human societies. Teach your children well. Tell them of the past century and the 24 failed socialist experiments that led to the murder of over 100 million people and destroyed every society that it touched. Look carefully at one of the latest experiments of Marxism/socialism in Venezuela, a resource-rich country that was once one of the wealthiest on the planet.

Hugo Chavez promised that his experiment in socialism would be different, as socialists repeatedly promise after every failed experiment. The next one will be different. We just need another chance to prove that our approach is the best. See Kristian Niemietz’s history of these 24 repeated failures over the past century in “Socialism: The Failed Idea That Never Dies”.

And tell your children of the successes of liberal democracy based on Classic Liberal principles, systems of common law, and representative institutions. How it led to billions lifted out of poverty and provided the environment for free people to create all that we value in life today- i.e. lessening violence, improved human well-being, and the ability to care for nature (with ever-increasing wealth) as never before in history.

Encourage your children to read these good sources:

Arthur Herman’s “The Idea of Decline in Western History” and “The Cave and the Light: Plato versus Aristotle, and the Struggle for the Soul of Western Civilization”, Joshua Muravchik’s “Heaven on Earth: The Rise and Fall of Socialism”, Richard Landes’ “Heaven On Earth: The Varieties of the Millennial Experience”, Arthur Mendel’s “Vision and Violence”, Daniel Hannan’s “Inventing Freedom”, Julian Simon’s “Ultimate Resource”, and so much more comparative research on which approach to organizing human society accomplishes “the most good for the most people”.

Added note: Responsibility for what we promote in public. There are good ideas and there are bad ideas.

The narrative themes that we promote have a powerful influence on people in real life. Bad narrative themes incite and validate our worst impulses, notably the evil triad of tribalism, domination, and vengeful destruction of differing and competing others. We know exactly which ideas/themes these are.

Or narrative themes can counter these animal impulses (i.e. non-retaliation, non-violence, love your enemy) with ideas/themes that inspire and affirm our better angels.

This is fact and has been outlined carefully by historians like Riichard Landes, Arthur Mendel, David Redles, Arthur Herman, and others. They detail with historical evidence how bad ideas/beliefs have incited too much bad behavior among people. And get this- the bad ideas they uncover are “religious ideas”. These ideas (notably, “apocalyptic millennialism”) incited and validated the Marxist and Nazi mass-death crusades across the last century and now shape the environmental alarmism crusade.

This has all been documented with careful historical detail. See the sources listed just above.

We are all responsible for the themes that we embrace and promote in public. Our narrative themes impact/influence real people, especially those susceptible to literalism and extremism, pushing them toward actual violence.

Some have noted this with the transgender activist movement whose members have been told that they are victims suffering genocidal assault and so must act with desperate measures to save their world.

This article reports on surveys that show both right and left are likely to turn to violence to “save our country”.

“Charlie Kirk was a private citizen. His assassination puts us all in peril: May we all live long enough to see a world in which politics matter far less”, J. D. Tuccille, Sept. 12, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/j-d-tuccille-charlie-kirk-was-a-private-citizen-his-assassination-puts-us-all-in-peril?itm_source=opinion

Quotes from article:

“Charlie Kirk’s whole role was to debate and persuade young people through his Turning Point USA organization. He was shot at Utah Valley University while speaking at a Prove Me Wrong event that allowed his opponents to challenge him and discuss differences of opinion. The only harm he could have done was by voicing his beliefs and, perhaps, changing some minds. That is, Kirk was almost certainly assassinated for no other reason than that his murderer disagreed with his ideas…

“Over the years, political violence has targeted people and property associated with both the political left and the political right. More recently, researchers worked from the assumption that the right is more likely to turn to force than the left. Polling in April 2024 by PBS NewsHour/NPR/Marist found that one in five “U.S. adults believe Americans may have to resort to violence to get their own country back on track.” That sentiment was held by 28 per cent of Republicans, 18 per cent of independents, and 12 per cent of Democrats, supporting the received wisdom. But a lot can change in a few months.

“Since that poll, we’ve seen numerous violent incidents, an election that overturned control of the White House, and growing political frustration. Something seemed to shift in the American psyche…

“Surveying attendees at progressive demonstrations in Washington, D.C., American University’s Professor Dana R. Fisher found a surprising number — 33 per cent of those at the People’s March in January and 35 per cent at the Stand Up for Science rally in March – thought “Americans may have to resort to violence in order to save our country.” She commented, “Left-leaning Americans participating in peaceful, legally permitted demonstrations are starting to believe that political violence will be necessary to save America.”…

“After the assassination of Brian Thompson, The Network Contagion Research Institute and the Rutgers University Social Perception Lab reported “widespread justification for lethal violence — including assassination — among younger, highly online, and ideologically left-aligned users.” The report warned, “online normalization of political violence may increasingly translate into offline action.”

“Nobody has found evidence that the right has become less violent, but the assassination of Kirk is further evidence that the left is at least as prone to use force if not more so.”

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on What you believe shapes what you become

Affirming “the stunning new theology” of the wisdom sage- Love at the core of all reality, “Love creates all that is…”

In the interview below of Douglas Murray (link provided) please note Murray’s good advice to those, especially young people, inspired by Charlie Kirk, to not give way to the temptation to respond with vengeance or similar violence, but to emulate what Kirk did and respond with common decency and courtesy to opponents/disagreeing others, even those screaming abuse. Murray’s point- don’t succumb to the temptation to sink down and meet opponents on their terms with similar hatred and violence. He notes that right up till he was shot, Kirk was arguing that we need to explore ideas, to talk, discuss, and debate civilly, without violence.

Here is the Murray interview: “Douglas Murray and Rita Panahi respond to Charlie Kirk assassination”, Sky News Australia, Sept. 10, 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gxcrcv1MVvQ

Rubin it in (as in “rubbing in”), Wendell Krossa

Good comment in this report (The Rubin Report- the podcast of a Classic Liberal) on how “the left” has politicized crime to fit their narrative that “racializes everything”. This appears driven by the motivation to smear opponents nonstop with the “racist” pejorative, to affirm the leftist narrative of the intolerable “evil” of all who disagree. That has resulted in the current mainstream media commentary that any concern for crime is racism, especially where skin differences are involved (i.e. the Charlotte stabbing of a Ukrainian immigrant).

Rubin notes that the left projects onto their opponents on the right that they are “politicizing crime”. We have seen this endless projection from Democrats over past years. (And to “leftie” friends and readers, this is not picking on one side only. If similar threat was emanating from the right in a significant manner, I, as fiercely independent and Classic Liberal, would jump on that also. It’s just that many on the left side- Democrats, those formerly identifying as “liberal”- are now mainly exhibiting this madness.)

The pathology of “projection” is where people refuse to acknowledge their own faults, and in some irresponsible state of denial, they deflect or redirect their guilt by projecting their faults onto others, usually their “enemies”. They exhibit what Jesus cautioned against- to not judge and condemn others for a “speck” in their eye, when you have a “beam” in your own eye. Only a Karl Jung could sort out what this is about, probably something to do with one’s own “Shadow” and the felt need to respond to that inner monstrosity and project it out onto others. You know- the “subconscious” stuff Jung was on about.

Rubin says the constant projecting of their far worse failures onto their opponents, and demonizing them as “the evil ones destroying democracy”, is why trust in “Woke Progressive” mainstream media has collapsed. Mainstream media are no longer doing journalism but have shifted to become the propaganda arm for the now far-left Woke Democratic Party.

In response, the millions of people that have left mainstream media, including many Democrats, have now shifted to alternative podcast news forums.

Just an insert: Note in this interview of Douglas Murray, his comment that it is the left that constantly talks about the “hatred” on the right when it is actually their hatred projected out to those disagreeing others. He adds, that where, from the Conservative side, you will get the view that others are wrong but not evil, whereas from the left the narrative is that disagreeing others are irredeemably “evil”, followed with dangerous dehumanization of those disagreeing others. Murray notes that Kirk stated, for example, that there are two sexes, male and female. A statement of fact that those on the left now call “hate speech… speech as violence”. Murray says that such statements-of-fact used to be allowed and respected in America. He says that it has become a terrible situation today in America and the West that such statements of obvious truth, held by millions, are today smeared as “hate speech”.

Note, Rita Panahi opens this interview with a clip of Charlie Kirk arguing for open debate and free speech, and not resorting to violence.

“Douglas Murray and Rita Panahi respond to Charlie Kirk assassination”, Sky News Australia, Sept. 10, 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gxcrcv1MVvQ

Continuing with Rubin Report…

Rubin repeats his good points on how Democrats racialize most everything today, even when it’s not about race but about the crime that has been committed. He says the issue with the Ukrainian lady killed on the subway is about criminal justice policies that release violent offenders repeatedly to further harm others. That is the failure of a deformed version of compassion that virtue-signals for moral status, and the outcomes of such policies result in horrific harm to others. Gad Saad defines such left-wing compassion as “suicidal empathy”.

The Charlotte train murder also brings up the larger public issue of race, or should we say the new racism- “Woke racism” (John McWhorter). And no matter the crime committed against whom, skin color now determines who is the victim and the victimizer. Hence, the repeated Democratic siding with violent offenders because they are black or brown, and denying or downplaying harm done to whites because they are condemned to “victimizer” status based on skin color. It is a simple-minded tribal dualism that has resulted in the absurdity that we see daily on mainstream media of guilty white elites (self-inflicted guilt over the past racism of their forebears) defending violent criminals and ignoring, downplaying, or outright denying the harm committed against white victims.

Such is the new discrimination validated by the victim/victimizer categories of neo-collectivism. No different from traditional Marxism that divides humanity into only two classes- one all good and the other all evil.

So today we have from the left the narrative of the evil of whites as all oppressors (“there is no form of being white that is good”). This message is repeatedly pushed by neo-racists like Joy Reid, Sonny Hostin, and similar others. How does such messaging in public impact fringe types and mentally unbalanced people? How are people in minority communities responding to narratives that tell them that they are being assaulted by “Hitler, Nazis, fascists, dictators” and must act to defend selves from such oppression and assault?

Add, for example, Nancy Pelosi years ago urging people to make her political opponent’s lives miserable. Or Joy Reid stating that they, Far-left Woke Democrats, must now resort to the same violence that was used by Kyle Rittenhouse on the other side. Fighting fire with fire. Eye for eye vengeance.

This podcast by Rubin is useful for illustrating how we position ourselves within our own versions of the “hero’s quest”, a story of good versus evil that is framed by Zoroaster’s cosmic dualism that posits an unchallengeable Good versus an unsalvageable Evil that must be conquered, eliminated, destroyed. We are urged to be heroes who go forth to engage a righteous battle of good warriors fighting evil enemies that must be vanquished, even exterminated, in order to save something under existential threat.

When we position ourselves as the good guys nobly fighting a righteous battle against irredeemably evil enemies, whom we must exterminate, the tendency is then to demonize our opponents as excessively and irredeemably evil. Righteous heroes/saviors feel the need to dehumanize entirely their enemies as necessary to validate why they must destroy them. And be “righteous” in doing so. Again, that pathology of “killing the right people” as required to attain a better future.

In such situations of intense oppositional and tribal dualism we cannot admit the destructive outcomes of our policies (i.e. recidivism violence from repeatedly released violent offenders) as that would challenge us to question our positions and such doubt would weaken our narrative as noble heroes on the righteous or “just” side of issues. Many view such reflection as threatening to their very identity and that becomes a survival issue, hence desperate defensiveness against any challenge or questioning.

Further, we are impelled by our fundamental need to virtue signal for moral status in society, to frame ourselves as the superior compassionate heroes. Hence, the denial of any harmful outcomes of our salvation schemes.

We cannot admit to ourselves that our narrative and policies may actually embody and exhibit “salvation through destruction”.

Self-convinced righteous saviors refuse to undermine their views of the battle of good against evil and consider that maybe they are the ones actually promoting evil (though projecting such onto their opponents). My point- These features from larger narrative themes and frameworks can deform our personal outlooks and render us irrational and in denial of factual outcomes. Thomas Sowell wisely argued for all of us to rationally consider “the test of facts” on the outcomes to policies that any of us promote.

Further, many today are probing the psychopathology behind the leftwing madness that has been unleashed today, the impulses to intensified tribalism, to domination of others, and then to destroy the disagreeing other (Michael Shellenberger, Matt Taibbi and Walter Kirn are among the more helpful probers in this regard). We watch mainstream media daily demonize and dehumanize disagreeing others with exaggerated portrayals of opponents as threats to life, threats to democracy and hence deserving censorship (purveyors of “dangerous disinformation” because they disagree with Far-left Woke Progressivism). We have endured past years of the left banning disagreeing others from social media, cancelling those “evil others” by ruining reputations and careers, and even criminalizing. This criminalization of opponents continues (even accelerating) in formerly liberal democracies like Britain. What psychopathology drives all this?

It is the outcome of endlessly smearing differing others with the worst possible pejoratives as “Nazis, Hitler, racists, fascists”. This has divided citizens of the same country and intensified feelings of tribal hatred with the consequent outcome of an eruption of “anti-DEI” mania from those claiming DEI as their supreme ideal. People now, mainly on the far-left, promote (1) the exclusion of differing others (even family, with refusal to share meals), they (2) reject diversity now as “evil” (those daring to disagree with Woke Progressivism), and (3) refuse to treat differing others as equals.

Again, noting the projection pathology, we have a new racism, a new discrimination, from the very people who claim moral superiority as the great social justice warriors battling racism. They now promote Woke Racism where all issues are racialized, even concern over crime. Brian Stelter epitomized this recently. See just the first minute or so of this video clip- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JnpjUlvQ6Ak

Note: On this site, my own probing of the psychopathology driving the above issues, covered by Rubin, considers the core narrative themes (i.e. “bad religious ideas”) that validate our worst inherited impulses to tribalism, domination, and punitive destruction of differing others/enemies.

Added point to this Rubin Report:

The policies enacted in Democrat-run cities over past years (i.e. de-carceration, decriminalization of crimes, etc.) are not the logical or common-sense outcome of holding an unconditional ideal. They are not the sole required application of restorative justice approaches. Democrat polices tend to embrace a deformity of some kind of pacifist extremism with “moral suasion” features that do not work in a world with varied elements such as psychopathy, mental illness (e.g. untreated schizophrenia among homeless), and people unable or unwilling to control their worst impulses.

We all have to beware of yielding to an irresponsible lack of common sense when confronting repeat violent offenders, that too often results in harm to innocent people because of our priority concern to “virtue signal for moral superiority status” against our “enemies”.

The Rubin Report:

Charlie Kirk notices something in the Charlotte stabbing that most are afraid to admit”, The Rubin Report, Sept. 9, 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w3-bOlqL0mM

My question for Grok re the fact that it is a small percentage of people who commit most of the violent crimes. My point would be criminal justice reform that did not imprison nonviolent offenders but put in programs that include paying restitution to victims. Again, the number one priority of government to protect citizens from physical assault. And again, I am not agreeing with all that Grok comes back with.

Grok responded:

It’s a well-documented pattern that a small fraction of individuals is responsible for a disproportionate share of violent crime. Data from criminology studies, like those based on arrest records or longitudinal cohort analyses, often show that roughly 5-10% of offenders account for 50% or more of violent incidents in a given area. This holds across contexts— urban, suburban, or rural— and is consistent with things like the Pareto principle applied to crime.

The reasons are complex but often tie back to a mix of socioeconomic factors, psychological traits, and environmental influences. Repeat offenders tend to cluster in high-risk groups: people with prior convictions, exposure to trauma, substance abuse issues, or those stuck in cycles of poverty and gang involvement. For example, studies on urban violence in the U.S. point to gang-affiliated individuals, often less than 1% of a city’s population, driving a huge chunk of homicides and aggravated assaults.

This concentration suggests targeted interventions— like focused deterrence programs or cognitive behavioral therapy for at-risk groups— can be effective without broad overreach. But it also raises tough questions about balancing prevention with civil liberties, since profiling or over-policing can spiral into bigger problems. The flip side is that ignoring the pattern risks letting a small group destabilize entire communities. It’s a messy problem with no clean fix.

Further question for Grok:

What about elements like psychopathology, mental illness, no cash bail, decriminalization of serious crimes, refusal to fulfill the number one priority of government to protect citizens from assault, extremist pacifism in face of violence (releasing repeat violent offenders), impulse to virtue signal for status as morally superior, refusal to acknowledge harmful outcomes of lax policies, etc.

Grok answered:

You’re digging into a thorny mix of factors that tie into the concentration of violent crime among a small group. Let’s break it down, keeping it tight and grounded.

Psychopathology and Mental Illness: Certain disorders, like antisocial personality disorder or severe untreated schizophrenia, are overrepresented among repeat violent offenders. Studies suggest about 15-20% of incarcerated populations have serious mental health issues, compared to 4-5% in the general population. Impulse control disorders and psychopathy (marked by lack of empathy) are particularly linked to recidivism. But not all mentally ill people are violent— stigma clouds this. The issue is when untreated conditions intersect with other risk factors like substance abuse or social instability.

No Cash Bail: The push to eliminate cash bail aims to address inequities, as poorer defendants often can’t pay and stay jailed pre-trial. Critics argue it lets repeat offenders back out too easily, citing cases where released individuals reoffend violently. Data’s mixed: a 2021 study in New Jersey (post-bail reform) showed no clear spike in violent crime, but high-profile cases in places like New York fuel skepticism. It’s a trade-off— fairness versus risk of recidivism— and outcomes depend on how well alternatives like risk assessments or supervision are implemented.

Decriminalization of Serious Crimes: Decriminalizing certain offenses (e.g., drug possession or low-level theft) aims to reduce prison overcrowding and focus on rehabilitation. But when it’s perceived as leniency for serious violent crimes, public trust erodes. For example, some argue California’s Prop 47 (2014), which reduced penalties for some property crimes, indirectly fueled rises in violent crime by emboldening offenders. Evidence is inconclusive— FBI crime stats show no direct causation— but perception of “soft on crime” policies drives backlash.

Government’s Priority to Protect Citizens: The social contract hinges on governments prioritizing public safety. Critics of lax policies argue that failing to detain or punish repeat violent offenders undermines this. For instance, a 2022 report from Chicago showed 55% of homicides were committed by individuals with prior arrests, often released due to prosecutorial discretion or plea deals. When governments prioritize other goals— like reform or equity— over enforcement, it can feel like a betrayal of that core duty, especially in high-crime areas.

Extremist Pacifism and Releasing Repeat Offenders: Policies that lean heavily on non-punitive measures, like releasing repeat violent offenders to avoid incarceration, can backfire. A 2020 study in Philadelphia found that 30% of violent offenders released early under reform policies reoffended within a year. The intent— reducing harm from over-incarceration— clashes with the reality that a small group (those 5-10% repeat offenders) drives most violence. Ignoring their patterns risks public safety.

Virtue Signaling and Refusal to Acknowledge Harmful Outcomes: Some argue that policymakers or activists push lenient reforms to signal moral superiority, prioritizing ideology over outcomes. This can manifest as dismissing data on recidivism or crime spikes to avoid admitting policy failures. For example, progressive DAs in cities like San Francisco or Los Angeles have faced recalls for being seen as ignoring victims’ needs. It’s a feedback loop: denying harmful outcomes fuels distrust, which blocks honest debate about fixes.

The core issue is balance. Over-incarceration breeds its own problems— broken communities, cycles of poverty— but under-enforcement lets a small, dangerous group wreak havoc. Data-driven policies targeting high-risk offenders (e.g., focused deterrence or mental health courts) could bridge the gap, but they need political will and public buy-in. Instead, we often get polarized shouting matches. Messy, as I said.

Charlie Kirk: Honoring a good man, Wendell Krossa

With so many millions of others, and as Greg Gutfeld said just earlier on “The Five”, people have recently criticized the statement- “Thoughts and prayers. But I will say it anyway”. We are with you, Greg. He was responding to the murder of Charlie Kirk, a notable contemporary defender of basic human values, Classic Liberal/Conservative values, like the critical importance of free speech in civil discourse. A man to be honored for his courage in taking the risk to speak out in the face of serious threats. My prayers, with so many others, for his wife and children.

I position more as Independent, not affiliated with either side of the right/left social divide. But I find Classic Liberal values now often defended more by moderate Conservatives like Charlie Kirk. I feel a kindred affinity to such voices and honor them.

Kirk was exceptionally courageous to go right into the center of the sectors of our societies where freedom has been frontally assaulted, in universities and colleges that have become indoctrination centers for “far-left woke progressivism” with its DEI pathology that tribally divides people according to skin color in the new “Woke Racism”, a new variant of the old Marxist oppressed/oppressor divide.

Hopefully, a younger generation of independent, Conservative students will take inspiration from Charlie Kirk’s courageous sacrifice to consider what their legacy will be, something that Jordan Peterson asked people in all walks of life to consider. Did you take a stand for freedom when it mattered most, in the face of threats to freedom?

And do so, not with the hatred and bullying aggression that we see so commonly from the Woke Progressive movement, an authoritarianism that vilifies, smears, censors, bans, and criminalizes all who disagree. That is no longer any form of “liberal”. It has become highly illiberal. Many on that side, authentic liberals, still possessed of common-sense, people like Joe Rogan, Michael Shellenberger, Matt Taibbi, Elon Musk, RFK, Tulsi Gabbard, and others, have felt obligated to leave the formal Democratic party because it moved so far left into the neo-collectivism of Woke Progressivism. And turned dangerously totalitarian.

And this has to be considered: The extremist violence that we witnessed today against Charlie Kirk is undeniably incited, in part, by public voicing of tribal hatred on media, endlessly smearing opponents as “Hitler, racists, Nazis, fascists” who threaten the end of democracy, the end of the world. The constant exaggeration of the evil of disagreeing others, demonizing, dehumanizing them as too dangerous to allow to exist, because they are “existential” dangers and threats. How does such narrative, beaten daily into public consciousness, impact fringe types?

Consider also other background noise- We have had multiple decades now of the madness, the hysterical exaggeration of imminent apocalyptic from natural climate change, another strain of “end of world” lunacy from the left. Such alarmism arouses some of the worst impulses in people to take desperate measures for survival.

You keep beating varied versions of hysterical exaggeration of threats into populations and you will incite the fringe, unbalanced types to take you seriously and to act to become, what they delusionally believe will make them the “heroic saviors of your imagined threatened world”, embracing the deformed version of the hero’s quest to engage “a righteous battle against evil” that is informed by the demented fallacy of “salvation through destruction”. One strain in this pathology is the belief that if you kill the right people, you can achieve a better world.

When you arouse people’s survival impulse with distorting exaggerations and lies of your world under existential threat, that fear-mongering renders many susceptible to irrational violence to save something that you have convinced them is under such dire threat.

That is why this site goes after these consciousness-deforming, personality-deforming ideas like apocalyptic.

It is at these times when hatred has vented its ugly spirit in violence toward disagreeing, different others that we need to watch our own natural impulses to respond with similar hatred and vengeance, and we must hold tight to that ultimate identity marker of a true human spirit- to “love our enemy”. Not to feel fuzzy or warm toward such people and their horrific acts of brutality, but to hold fast the intention to maintain our own humanity, to responsibly hold offenders fully accountable (arresting, imprisoning), but not to enter into eye for eye spirals downward that render all of us petty/inhuman and destroy our societies.

These incidents test all of us. And we want the best forms of inspiration to continue out of the example and sacrifice of Charlie Kirk.

Charlie Kirk was reviled by the left because he was effective: He spread his ideas with debate, not might”, Jamie Sarkonak, Sep 10, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/jamie-sarkonak-charlie-kirk-was-reviled-by-the-left-because-he-was-effective?itm_source=index

Sarkonak rightly draws the line of connection between public narratives/speech and the responses/actions of some individuals. He says, “it’s impossible not to make any connection to politics and the growing wave of societal derangement. This is one of the American right’s top conservative influencers, struck by a bullet after years of the progressive left preaching about revolution, about words being violence and about President Donald Trump being the second coming of Hitler.”

He notes that Kirk had a sharp and humorous approach to debates. He “argued against illegal immigration, transgenderism, COVID vaccine mandates, critical race theory, feminism, affirmative action, abortion, soft-on-crime policy, drag queen story hour events for children and a whole lot more. You will find no shortage of “fascist” accusations on Reddit and elsewhere, but Kirk was actually the epitome of old-school classical liberalism. He used argument, not might, to push his ideas into the world — ideas that could get regular folk fired or faced with academic discipline back in 2020. He didn’t evade debate either, instead making it his bread-and-butter format, even taking the discourse to hostile spaces.”

I would agree that in his essential spirit and approach to free speech he was “Classic Liberal”. And that was the problem, the threat to the left and its crusade for domination and control.

As Sarkonak continues, “This is not acceptable to large swaths of the left, who see anything remotely conservative as a step towards a new era of Nazi rule. Many of them, to some degree, have been radicalized into confusing classical liberalism with fascism. They see debate as a threat, mere ideas as viruses to be stopped, and thus opt for deplatforming instead of reason as their primary culture war tactic. The stakes are so high to some that violence is the answer.”

The author’s conclusion: “Whether it’s delusional individuals acting alone or an organized mass, it’s all taking place within the same increasingly sadistic ecosystem that validates the paranoia of society’s worst. In this growing trend of political violence, Charlie Kirk is its latest casualty.”

National Post

This also from National Post

“Who was Charlie Kirk? What to know about the conservative activist assassinated in Utah: ‘Legendary’ Charlie Kirk was lauded by Donald Trump for understanding young Americans”, Stewart Lewis, Sep 10, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/news/world/who-was-charlie-kirk-the-assassinated-conservative-activist?itm_source=index

Key points in article: “Kirk, 31, was the founder and president of Turning Point USA…. The organization is described as ‘a national student movement dedicated to identifying, organizing, and empowering young people to promote the principles of free markets, and limited government.’”

What Kirk faced on campuses- “According to Deseret News, more than 6,000 people signed a petition asking Utah State University to bar Kirk from coming to its campus.”

He was not without controversy- “In January 2024, he came under fire for stating on the podcast: “If I see a Black pilot, I’m gonna be like ‘boy, I hope he is qualified.’” Those comments prompted strong responses from many, including Black pilots.”

Feel the Ideal, the theology, Wendell Krossa

This site expends ongoing effort to communicate the stunning new unconditional theology of Historical Jesus, as contrasted with Paul’s rejection of this message and his retreat to tribal, dominating, punitive, and retaliatory deity in his Christ myth that “buried” the central theme/theology of Jesus (Thomas Jefferson and Leo Tolstoy’s conclusion).

The modern NDE (Near-Death Experience) movement comes closest to communicating the nature of the Jesus theology of “unconditional” with detailed accounts. This goes beyond words, descriptions, definitions to give a “feel” for what Historical Jesus was pointing to with his unconditional theology.

Note on the judgment issue that the life review is about self-judgment, what some call “the worst form of judgment”, something that no system of human justice/judgment can impose as potently as we do to ourselves.

“The greatest emphasis of this experience is LOVE. You are so totally engulfed with a love that does not exist in our physical world. No matter how deep a love you feel for your children, it does not compare with this love. This love is the purest, truest, deepest, totally unconditional love that you could ever imagine. It knocks your socks off. When you receive this love, it is not comprehended with your mind. It is FELT by your soul. And that immense feeling of this perfect love shoots straight to your heart, a feeling that you experience. It can bring your soul to its knees. It is totally overwhelming in the best way imaginable.” From the NDE account of “Bobbie”.

“Each one of us is loved deeply and unconditionally by a totally loving God.”

“There is no judgment in (the next life). There is no punishment, no reward. We judge ourselves. In the life review we feel the effects of our actions on all others that we have encountered. Their feelings become our own.” (The experience of empathy- i.e. feeling what others feel- in reviewing all that we have said and done and the self-judgment and learning that emerges from that.)

“I felt the presence of pure love. This is very hard to describe. Everything made sense: God exists, God is love, we are love, and love creates all that is… I was surrounded by pure love. I was warm and comforted.”

“Love was everywhere. It permeated the afterlife. It was incredible.”

“I knew the being I met was composed in its very atoms of a substance I can only call love and that substance created, or was a force or power, like electricity here. Love is the only word I have.”

“It was total love. Everything is love.”

“I felt pure love and tenderness and the feeling of safety.”

“Everything was love. Love is the root of all… Love is everything.”

“Love was everywhere. I felt it through and through.”

“During the experience everything was love. I was love. The Light was love. It was awesome.”

Why bother with expounding these ideas and related issues like outcomes across history? Because what we place at the center of our narratives as the ultimate Ideal and authority, powerfully influences how we think, feel, how we are motivated, and then how we behave in life. We become just like the God that we believe in.

Look around at what varying good and bad ideas are doing to people across our world. How ideas in narratives motivate and validate the differing responses/behaviors of people, for great good or great evil.

This from Robert D. Brinsmead’s Substack robertdbrinsmead@substack.com

This MAN and the Christian Religion are Not Compatible, ROBERT D. BRINSMEAD SEP 9, 2025

The Status of Jesus re-examined in the previous substacks stripped away the ancient myths about dying and rising gods. ‘What is left?’ The answer: “Just a truly human Jesus – a man who refused any titles except the self-effacing ‘son of man’ which simply meant the human one.”

This real Jesus of history was no soft pushover. He was the greatest debunker of religious hierarchies and traditions, the greatest desacralizer of holy places, times, people, rituals, priests, and things that this world has ever seen. The religious establishment hurriedly condemned him to death for blasphemy, while the secular powers executed him for sedition.

That the Christian Church could claim to represent him and carry on his work is an amazing historical irony. It’s like having the old Soviet Union bureaucracy posing as the heir of Adam Smith’s laisse faire capitalism.

The Christian religion built up an elaborate theological edifice. It formed religious orders, hierarchies, rituals, calendars, and creeds that were utterly at odds with the whole life and teachings of the historical Jesus.

And throughout its history, anyone who exhibited anything of the irreverent iconoclasm or freedom of Jesus was systematically condemned, burned alive, tortured, slaughtered, banished, or cast out.

Of course, there is a better side to the Christian movement. Buried beneath its layers of myths, it did preserve something of the history and the spirit of the original man. And the movement has also produced scholars courageous enough to engage in honest historical and literary criticism despite those disapproving big sticks hanging over their heads.

For two hundred years, literary researchers have investigated the puzzling problem of the tension between the Jesus of history (pre-Easter) and the Jesus of the Christian religion (post-Easter). As the research has continued, the crack in the wall dividing the man and the myth has become a yawning chasm.

This is recognized by an increasing number of scholars, both Catholic and Protestant. A very readable Catholic example is Alfred Nolan’s Jesus Before Christianity and Michael Morwood’s Tomorrow’s Catholic: Understanding God and Jesus in a New Millennium. Marcus Borg’s Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time is an excellent example from a Protestant scholar.

Joshua ben Adam Not Jesus ben Parthenos

In order to maintain the distinction between the historical man and the religious icon, we shall call the former Joshua ben Adam and the latter Jesus ben Parthenos.

The Hebrew name given to this historical figure was Yashua, whose Anglicized form is Joshua. Since Joshua preferred to call himself son of man or son of Adam (which means the same thing) his name was in truth Joshua ben Adam.

When the name Yashua was first Grecianized, then Latinized, and finally Anglicized it became Jesus. Since Christian storytelling depicted him as the Virgin-born, he can quite correctly be called Jesus ben Parthenos, that is, Jesus, son of the Virgin.

Jesus ben Parthenos was the foundation of that great system of religious absolutism known as Christianity. What an elaborate edifice of thought control it became, presided over by a suitably elaborate hierarchy of suitably frocked holy men who could defend the Chalcedonian formula of the hypostatic union of divine and human in one person! Or how God was three persons but not three Gods.

How the Holy Spirit proceeded from the Father and the Son, and not the Father only. How wine became the real blood of Christ sacramentally but not physically. Are we justified before God by a righteousness imputare or efficare?

Is saving faith formed with charity before it justifies or after it justifies?. Is predestination only directed toward the elect (single) or toward the non-elect also (double)? These are just a few of the big theological issues.

We won’t distract ourselves now with minor issues such as the transmission of original sin through sex, the distinction between venial and mortal sin, or distinctions between the intermediate state and the final judgment, and so on. There is enough here that has kept legions of theologians employed for centuries, defining the faith and labelling heretics.

Christianity was not a hundred years old before it was swept up in a contagion of celibacy. A veritable tidal wave of monasteries and nunnery continued unabated for centuries. This was all inspired by the religious devotion to Jesus ben Parthenos, the celibate son of a sexless mother.

The systematic denigration of women and human sexuality among the so-called “early fathers” of the church, down to the time of Augustine in the fourth century, was absolutely appalling. In the mind of Julian, it was all attributable to that “pale Galilean”, whom he lamented, had conquered the world.

It is rationally possible to see a clear line of connection between Jesus ben Parthenos and the great world religion which was founded in his name. But there is no rational link between Joshua ben Adam and the foregoing religious paraphernalia.

He is no more at home in this Christian “temple” than he was in that Jewish temple when his blazing rage sent the furniture and the money counters flying in all directions. Joshua ben Adam is incompatible with religious hierarchicalism, monasticism, creedalism, and washing up the blood of heretics from the floor of the church. You’d have to be joking!

(End of Bob’s Substack post)

Some good points made in this from National Post:

“24 years after 9/11, the West’s on the verge of falling to terrorist ideology: Back then, the free world looked at al-Qaida with revulsion; now, Hamas murderers are feted in the streets”, Sheryl Saperia, Sep 11, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/24-years-after-9-11-the-wests-on-the-verge-of-falling-to-terrorist-ideology?itm_source=index

Saperia begins, noting that several decades ago there was less debate about what was evil and how to confront it. But this has all changed now. Today in Canada, “pro-Palestinian” demonstrations in Canada proudly bear terrorist symbols… mobs gather outside synagogues, Jewish restaurants and MPs’ homes with impunity… cultural institutions cancel Israeli stories…”

She notes the public advocacy today for terrorist groups where people chant- “God is the Greatest, Death to America, Death to Israel, Curse be upon the Jews, Victory to Islam.”

And there is little pushback from mainstream society. She says that “Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan warned, societies can define deviancy down. Behaviour once shocking becomes normalized, eroding moral sensitivity and resolve. Standards drop, permissiveness broadens, and we learn to accept that which we once rejected.”

She continues, “This erosion of boundaries is not accidental. It has been accelerated by the so-called red–green alliance. Though otherwise divergent in their worldviews, the radical left (red) and Islamist movements (green) converge in their hostility towards western democracy, Israel and Jews.”

These apparently disparate groups form loose cooperations to achieve the same end of overturning liberal democracy through extremist crusades, even violence.

“Together, they serve as both drivers and enablers: mobilizing disruptive protests, while also feeding intellectual and cultural justifications that normalize extremism.”

She advocates a response that clearly defines and pushes back against extremist violence and intimidation, that re-affirms liberal democracy principles, laws, and institutions.

“Canada should thus adopt the following definition for extremism: the promotion of ideologies rooted in violence, hatred or intolerance that aim to: (1) negate or destroy the fundamental rights and freedoms of others; (2) undermine, overturn or replace Canada’s democratic institutions and constitutional framework; or (3) create a permissive environment for others to achieve these aims through ideology, coercion or manipulation…

“Our civic institutions, political leaders and cultural voices must reassert that Canada stands for the rule of law, the sanctity of individual rights and the rejection of mob violence. Without these boundaries, moral confusion will continue to erode the foundations of our democracy.”

National Post

“Sheryl Saperia is CEO of Secure Canada, a non-profit organization founded by Canadian 9/11 victim families, whose mission is to combat terrorism and extremism and strengthen Canada’s national security and democracy.”

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Affirming “the stunning new theology” of the wisdom sage- Love at the core of all reality, “Love creates all that is…”

Grok on the “long march through the institutions”, and now a majority of young voters choose socialism.

See new material below- “More on the freedom file”, comment on the two fundamental approaches to organizing human societies across history- collectivism versus free individuals. And some good points from Joe Rogan’s recent interview of Tim Dillon.

Don’t miss the National Post report on the threat the Muslim Brotherhood now poses to Canada as part of its grand worldwide program to “eliminate and destroy western civilization from within and ‘sabotage’ its miserable house by their hands and the hands of the believers (Muslims) so that it is eliminated and God’s religion (Islam) is made victorious over all other religions.”

As a British Muslim leader stated re Muslim migration to Western liberal democracies, “We are not here to take part but to take over”. He grinned as he stated that. This concerns current immigration issues and failed policies of multi-culturalism that do not ensure that migrants embrace liberal democracy values and practises.

Being aware of the ongoing assaults on our liberal democracies:

Some interesting polls on the majority of young voters leaning left/socialist now.

Heartland/Rasmussen Poll: 53% of Young Voters Want a Socialist to Win the 2028 Presidential Election, 76% Want Government to Nationalize Major U.S. Industries”, Justin Haskins, Christopher Talgo, Sept. 4, 2025

https://heartland.org/opinion/heartland-rasmussen-poll-53-of-young-voters-want-a-socialist-to-win-the-2028-presidential-election-76-want-government-to-nationalize-major-u-s-industries/?utm_

Notes from article:

“53% of likely voters aged 18-39 said they would “like to see a democratic socialist candidate win the 2028 presidential election.”

“76% said they “somewhat” or “strongly” agree that “Major Industries like health care, energy, and big tech should be nationalized to give more control and equity to the people.”

And…

53% of likely voters under 40 want socialist for president in 2028: Rasmussen poll

48 percent of white voters, 64 percent of black voters, 62 percent of Hispanic voters, and 52 percent of other minority voters under 40 said they would want a socialist candidate to win.

https://thepostmillennial.com/53-of-likely-voters-under-40-want-socialist-for-president-in-2028-rasmussen-poll?utm_

Also…

“Socialism Is Resonating With America’s Youth”, The Heartland Institute, Sept. 5, 2025

https://redstate.com/heartlandinstitute/2025/09/05/socialism-is-resonating-with-americas-youth-n2193606?utm_s

Quotes:

“Despite its abysmal record of sowing poverty, misery, death, and envy in every place it has been implemented, socialism is gaining traction with young Americans.

“According to a new poll conducted by Rasmussen Reports and The Heartland Institute, more than half of likely voters age 18 to 39 “would like to see a democratic socialist win the 2028 presidential election.”

“Moreover, as the poll shows, nearly 80 percent of young likely voters think that ‘major industries like health care, energy, and big tech should be nationalized to give more control and equity to the people.’”

The author suggests the problem entails two parts, (1) the American education system has failed to teach students the truth of socialism’s horrific history (due to the domination of education by socialist educators) and (2) many youth today have not had great opportunities in a healthy free-market system.

(See full article at link above)

Grok, comment on these polls showing many young voters leaning far left now and the possible relation to “the long march through the institutions”.

“53% of likely voters under 40 want socialist for president in 2028: Rasmussen poll Provide evidence of the success of a long march through the institutions by socialism/Marxism?”

For example:

https://hungarianreview.com/article/20200515_the_long_march_through_the_institutions_douglas_murray_s_book_on_our_civilization_and_its_discontents/

Grok’ response:

Verification of the Rasmussen Poll Claim

Yes, a recent Rasmussen Reports poll, conducted in partnership with the Heartland Institute, indicates that 53% of likely U.S. voters aged 18-39 would like to see a democratic socialist candidate win the 2028 presidential election. The survey, released around September 4, 2025, involved 2,500 likely voters and also found that 27% of this age group opposed the idea, while 20% were unsure. Additionally, 76% of these younger voters supported government nationalization of major U.S. industries, and 50% viewed socialism favorably overall.

This contrasts with older demographics, where support for socialism drops significantly—for instance, only 27% of voters aged 40-64 and 20% of those 65+ favor it. The poll has been widely discussed on platforms like X and conservative outlets, often linked to concerns about economic indicators and educational influences on younger generations. However, an earlier Rasmussen poll from May 2025 showed broader rejection of socialism, with 71% of all voters preferring a free-market economy, highlighting a generational divide.

Evidence of the Success of the “Long March Through the Institutions” by Socialism/Marxism

The “long march through the institutions” is a strategy attributed to Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci in the 1920s-1930s and popularized by German socialist activist Rudi Dutschke in 1967. It advocates for gradual infiltration and transformation of key societal institutions— such as education, media, government, and culture— to achieve socialist or Marxist goals without direct revolution, focusing on cultural hegemony rather than immediate economic upheaval.

Influenced by thinkers like Herbert Marcuse of the Frankfurt School, it emphasizes “entryism”—entering institutions to subvert them from within. Proponents and critics alike argue this approach has seen notable success, particularly in Western societies, by shifting cultural norms toward progressive, identity-based politics often labeled as “Cultural Marxism.” Below, I’ll outline evidence from a range of sources, including conservative critiques, historical analyses, and discussions on X, representing both supportive and skeptical viewpoints.

1. Historical and Theoretical Foundations and Claimed Successes

• Origins and Implementation: Gramsci’s ideas, developed during his imprisonment under Mussolini, emphasized a “war of position” to build counter-hegemony in civil society, contrasting with Leninist “war of maneuver.” By the 1960s, New Left figures like Dutschke adapted this for post-WWII Europe, targeting universities and media. Critics argue this “silent revolution” began even earlier, with Marxist influences in U.S. politics dating back to exchanges between Karl Marx and American figures in the 19th century, accelerating under FDR.

• Evidence of Institutional Capture: Sources claim success in education, where curricula in social sciences and humanities have shifted toward anti-capitalist, multicultural narratives, promoting victimhood and identity politics. For example, the Heritage Foundation highlights how Critical Theory (a neo-Marxist framework) has influenced U.S. policies on race, gender, and equity, leading to changes in corporate diversity programs and government initiatives. A 2022 Institute of Economic Affairs report describes this as a “long march” crystallizing in the 1960s but rooted in earlier socialist efforts, resulting in widespread adoption of progressive policies in Europe and the U.S.

2. Specific Examples of Alleged Success

• Education and Media: Conservative analyses point to the dominance of left-leaning ideologies in universities, where “bullying tactics” enforce dogmas, as noted in discussions of Marcuse and Foucault’s influence on viewing society through power dynamics. On X, users describe this as “institutional capture” via Cultural Marxism, turning proletarian-focused revolutions into cultural ones after realizing workers leaned conservative. Public schools are cited as “indoctrination centers” contributing to generational shifts, like the poll you mentioned.

• Politics and Culture: The strategy’s success is evident in the mainstreaming of identity politics (e.g., intersectionality in LGBTQ+ and racial justice movements), which some argue has captured corporations and governments, imposing “virtue signaling” and suppressing dissent. A 2023 New York Magazine piece notes how this narrative has even influenced right-wing theories, with figures like Christopher Rufo and Ron DeSantis framing it as leftist control over culture. X discussions highlight its “Achilles’ heel”—overreach making it appear as top-down imposition rather than grassroots.

• Broader Societal Shifts: Pro-Marxist historical examples, like the Paris Commune of 1871, are invoked as early inspirations, though its failure underscored the need for ruthless institutional control. Modern critiques, such as a 2020 American Mind article, argue the march began in the 1970s and has sold Marxism through combined cultural and economic lenses. However, setbacks are noted, like recent pushback against “woke” policies, suggesting the march has “tripped up” in areas like corporate backlash.

3. Counterarguments and Skepticism

• While many conservative sources celebrate the strategy’s success as a threat to liberty, others, like a Stack Exchange politics discussion, view it as more of a “permanent conflict” than total victory, with ongoing resistance. Progressive viewpoints often dismiss “Cultural Marxism” as a conspiracy theory, arguing changes stem from organic social progress rather than orchestrated Marxism. On X, some frame it as a long-term plan akin to George Soros’ influence, contrasting with violent revolutions.

Regarding the article you linked from the Hungarian Review (May 2020), it reviews Douglas Murray’s “The Madness of Crowds,” portraying the long march as a successful Gramscian tactic that has subverted institutions through identity politics, education, and media, leading to suppressed free speech and imposed dogmas on gender, race, and sexuality. It aligns with broader claims of cultural hegemony replacing economic Marxism.

Overall, evidence suggests the strategy has achieved partial success in reshaping cultural discourse, but its extent is debated, with biases evident in partisan sources—conservatives often amplify it as a dire threat, while left-leaning ones downplay it as myth.

(End of Grok’s comments)

More on the freedom file, Wendell Krossa

Historian Arthur Herman (“The Cave and the Light: Plato versus Aristotle and the struggle for the soul of Western civilization”), among others, traces the struggle across human history between the two basic approaches to organizing human societies- i.e. varied forms of collectivism where individuals are subjected to dominating/controlling elites (the “elite/commoner” divide of societies), versus the approach that elevates free and equal individuals and where state elites/bureaucrats actually “serve” the free and equal citizens.

That Jesus thing- “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their high officials exercise authority over them. Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first must be your slave— just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve” (Matthew 20). Contrast this with Paul’s “Lord Jesus” mythology, rejecting the actual teaching of the wisdom sage Jesus to create a new archetype of domination and control. Add Paul’s statements on wives being subject to husbands, and slaves being subject to masters, as well as all citizens being subject to governments (Romans 13).

Other helpful histories of socialism/collectivism versus free individuals, are Joshua Muravchik’s “Heaven On Earth: The rise, fall, and afterlife of socialism”, Daniel Hannan’s “Inventing Freedom: How the English-speaking peoples made the modern world”, and Kristian Niemietz’s “Socialism: The failed idea that never dies”, etc.

The central issue in regard to socialism versus the free individual approaches to organizing human societies is the freedom and self-determination of the individual versus control by powerholding elites.

Socialism is fundamentally a form of collectivism where individuals are subjected to a collective that is framed/disguised in terms of an organizational approach for “greater or common good”. And the state elites running the collective claim that they do so “for the people, on behalf of the people”.

How has that worked out in all of the 24 socialist experiments around the world over the past century or so?

From Niemietz’s “Socialism: The Failed Idea That Never Dies”

“Socialism in the sense which self-identified democratic socialists define it… a democratized economic planned collectively by ‘the people’, has never been achieved anywhere and could not be achieved. Economic planning can only ever be done in a technocratic, elitist fashion, and it requires an extreme concentration of power in the hands of the state. It cannot ‘empower’ ordinary workers. It can only ever empower bureaucratic elites.”

Exactly. When you centralize power in the state elites/bureaucrats who have to run the collective “on behalf of the people” that denies the freedom of choice to individuals. The counter to this deformity, and inevitable ruin of freedom, is to disperse power to citizens through liberal democracies that protect the rights and freedoms of all individuals, equally. This is accomplished with systems of common law and representative institutions where public bureaucrats are obligated to “serve the people” (individual free citizens) as sovereign.

Two critical policies in this regard are (1) decreased taxation (returning individual choice over income/assets to individuals) and (2) decreased regulation (returning choice in myriad areas- political/social- to individual citizens, less government intervention in individual’s lives).

As Niemietz details in his excellent “Socialism: The failed idea that never dies”, every socialist experiment promises to be the one that finally succeeds but then ends like all the previous others in totalitarianism disaster and ruin of societies. Note Venezuela that began with the Chavez promise to be different from past failures but followed the same old patterns.

After each successive failure socialists claim, “That was not true socialism. We need another one to show that it is the best way to organize society”. I heard my Marxist professors at Simon Fraser University say exactly this in the late 80s as the Soviet Union collapsed. And where are the collectivist zealots who ran down to Venezuela to praise Chavismo? Sean Penn, Oliver Stone, Naom Chomsky, Jimmy Carter, Kevin Spacey, etc.?

All now silent. After 24 repeated experiments over the past century or so. Who said what about doing the same thing again and again, after it fails each time?

As Niemietz notes, when socialists are asked what they would do differently the next time, they have no response because they will not/can not abandon the fundamental socialist principle/practise of centralizing power in the state elites who have to run the collective, “On behalf of the people”.

Individual citizens are inevitably denied individual freedoms and rights as they are subjected to the collective and its state elites.

It always reduces to the same old “elite/commoner” divide of societies.

Protected individual freedom and rights now have a proven history of unleashing human motivation to create products and services that vastly improve the human condition for all humanity, while also protecting nature. Set that history in comparison to the trail of ruin that inevitably results from socialist experiments.

Note: In “social democracy” or “democratic socialism” versions, any success stems from the democratic element, not from the socialist element in the mix. Socialist “nationalization” projects result inevitably in the ruin of societies (“Nationalization” is the process of transforming privately-owned assets into public assets, state appropriation of the “means of production”, taking ownership of businesses). Note, for example, Mitterrand’s coalition approach (socialists/Communists) that nationalized varied elements of French society when they took power in 1980, nationalization that tanked the French economy within the year. See details in Muravchik’s history of socialism.

Others have commented on the loosely affiliated Green/Red cooperation between Islamicists and Marxists, noting that neo-Marxists today have joined protests throughout the Western nations with Islamists who share the same end goal of the destruction of liberal democracy to be replaced by theocracy or by collectivist totalitarianism. Hence, the contemporary Russian/Iranian/Chinese military and economic cooperation. Also, the joining of forces in those Western anti-Semitism protests.

These apparently diverse state actors (Russia, China, Iran) are driven by the same dominant mythical theme of “salvation through destruction”.

This report on Iran’s long-term goal- Attacks in Australia illustrating the larger goal of the destruction of Western liberal democracy civilization.

“Iran’s proxy war on Jews is an all-out attack on Western civilization. Australia gets it: The fundamental bigotry that is Jew-hatred has not significantly changed over the millennia, but this manifestation wears a different face”, Victoria Coates, Sept. 7, 2025

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/irans-proxy-war-jews-attack-western-civilization-australia

Quotes:

The author notes that the Australian government has evidence “the Islamic Republican Guard Corps were behind domestic antisemitic incidents after the October 7, 2023, Hamas terrorist attacks on Israel.”

This evidence contradicts the mainstream media narrative that Oct. 7 was “desperate Palestinians radicalized by the Israeli occupation of their land.” If that narrative was true then, contends the Australian government, “why would the Iranian regime be trying to foment violence against Jews some 7,600 miles away?”

The author concludes the driving force behind Oct.7, along with protests and anti-Semitic attacks across Western liberal democracies, is the same old “fundamental bigotry of Jew-hatred” that has not changed across past millennia. It just puts on a different face today, that of the “anti-Western civilization” project.

“The goal of modern antisemitism is to eradicate Western civilization.”

The route to destroy Western civilization is moving through direct attacks to eliminate Israel (the “little Satan”), then attack the US (the “great Satan”), and then all of Western civilization. All represent “an insufferable blasphemy that cannot be accommodated or tolerated, but must be destroyed.”

The author argues that the current Iranian jihad is not about the Palestinians. “Their adherents are only “useful idiots” in the real battle to destroy the civilization that inspired all three countries (Australia, Israel, America). “

Coates notes that Western governments are trying to create moral equivalency between Israel and the Palestinians where Hamas is elevated to a negotiating partner and the central issue is the demand for a Palestinian state. She says this misses the real issue because “the Palestinians are not the point and never were. They are an Iranian vehicle to gain traction in the strongholds of the West — vibrant democracies such as America, Australia and Israel — and destroy them from within by encouraging the ancient hatred that is antisemitism.”

Black is not dark on Trump’s foibles, peccadilloes, and only has one minor quibble with the man, Wendell Krossa

The “quibble”? Black notes in the link below the “ego-centricity” of Trump, what some call “narcissism” (perhaps a bit too harsh?). I have always cringed at Donald Trump’s varied expressions of “petty vindictiveness”. That is not true of all his responses to critics, but only the odd time when some of his name-calling goes overboard, especially when he belittles the intelligence or looks of others (i.e. “ad hominem” attacks- an argument or reaction directed against a person rather than the position they are maintaining).

That is simply unbecoming of someone who wants to be considered “great”. It’s an annoying stain on an otherwise admirable life of accomplishment and it diminishes this man of surprising common sense on so many critical business/economic issues that benefit both Americans and people worldwide. He is an undeniably smart man (also on social issues), something that opponents just cannot bring themselves to acknowledge as they nurse a stunning level of hatred for Trump that erupts in endless vilification to demonize and destroy the man.

Trump’s guiding ethic of retaliating with, not just “eye for eye” but 10 times as hard, does not help to solve disagreements and unify a tribally divided country.

I would add that this pointing out of fallibilities is not to pick on Trump as all of us suffer this same impulse to retaliate when offended and it renders all of us petty when we give vent to it in situations personal and small, or in larger public settings.

Others like Bill Maher note that there is a striking difference between Trump the private person and his “crazy” public presentation. Despite some apparent softening toward Trump, Maher continues to vent his own Trump Derangement Syndrome.

Others have also affirmed that in private Trump is courteous, generous, praises others, is warm and friendly, even self-deprecating at times, listens well, has a great sense of humor, exhibits real empathy with other’s suffering, is willing to learn, etc. Andrew Shulz asked him (pre-election interview): Why can’t you show your softer personal side publicly? Trump shrugged in response,” I don’t know?” Shulz was probing him on the point of- Why the public displays that seem so contrary to who you really are?

Note particularly the empathy of the man as he courageously tries to stop wars and end domestic violence at a scale few have ever done before.

Anyway, this from Black:

“The derangement over Trump marches on”, Conrad Black, Sept. 6, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/conrad-black-the-derangement-over-trump-marches-on?itm_source=opinion

Quotes:

Black references the media commentator Andrew Coyne as an intelligent man but with the “mental affliction which is caused by the lawful elevation of Donald J. Trump to the office of President of the United States twice”. Black says that Coyne’s recent column in a Canadian newspaper is “demented rubbish”.

He quotes Coyne’s hysterical exaggeration of the imagined evil that is Trump, which mimics the same hysteria we see daily in US mainstream media. Coyne wrote that, “the dictatorship of Donald Trump is no longer a theoretical possibility or even a distant probability. It is an imminent reality… That Mr. Trump is bent on making himself dictator is no longer in doubt.”

As Black concludes re Coyne, “Almost every sentence is untrue, though Andrew, in his hatred of Trump, is in a delirium.”

He continues, contradicting Coyne’s assessment of Trump, stating, “I’ve known him (Trump) for many years, socially and as a business associate, I know him to be courteous, entertaining, and a loyal friend.”

However, Black acknowledges his quibble point, “I agree with Andrew and others that some manifestations of Trump’s egocentricity are unattractive, even in an office which requires anyone who aspires to it to have a mighty and indomitable ego.”

But his quibble does not diminish his recognition of the many good things that Trump has done for the US and the world.

“No one has ever been so severely and illegally obstructed as president and as a presidential candidate as he has, and he has become a considerable president in reorienting the country club Republican Party of the Bushes, McCain and Romney, to crack the Democratic fiefdoms of working class and ethnic minority votes, and in producing and broadening prosperity, shaping up the Western Alliance, ending the invasion of the United States by illegal immigrants, attacking the forces of wokeness in the universities, forcefully reducing crime rates, drastically reducing the fiscal and trade deficits, attracting in seven months nearly $15 trillion of new investment to the United States, destroying the Iranian nuclear military program and evicting men from girls’ sports and requiring mature approvals of trans-gender changes. This will not be undone by venomous and ignorant piffle from the media, especially the Trump-deranged and chronically bigoted Canadian media.”

He adds: “Trump has a clear mandate to deport illegal immigrants. Year by year, Trump has expelled far fewer than those deported by President Barack Obama.”

Further, Trump has accomplished all that Black lists above, against opposition that few others have had to endure.

“Trump has prevailed against overwhelming media opposition, was heavily outspent in last year’s election, faced utterly spurious indictments, and was even given insufficient security protection against potential assassins in his campaign.”

National Post

Some repeated material. Why? It is beyond critical to understanding and resolving varied issues today, like the recurrence of violence between groups/states.

Why the ongoing focus here on apocalyptic? Because it has been “the most violent and destructive idea in history” (Arthur Mendel). It drove (and still drives) the Marxism “apocalyptic millennial” crusade. It drove Nazism and now drives environmental alarmism, notably in its climate crisis version.

Apocalyptic continues to dominate human meta-narratives, both religious and secular. And look at Hollywood story-telling and the movie industry obsession with apocalypse.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_apocalyptic_films

Further, look at a generation of anxiety-ridden children whose minds have been abused and traumatised with “eco-anxiety”, having been told that the world is ending before they become adults.

Consider also the world’s number one illness- depression. Julian Simon (“Ultimate Resource”) had bought into environmental alarmism and was “clinically depressed” (his own words in his autobiography). Then he decided to look at the evidence on the state of the world for himself. After thoroughly researching the best data on all the major indicators of the world (i.e. forests, agricultural soils, ocean species, land species, etc.) he discovered that while there were still problems to solve everywhere, humanity was doing well in learning from past mistakes and now doing much better in caring for the natural world while also improving the human condition.

Simon discovered that life was not declining toward a worsening state but was improving over the long-term. Seeing the evidence for himself, Simon said that his depression left and never returned.

My point– The meta-narratives of our societies, both religious and secular, impact our personal consciousness and personal worldviews. Panicked alarmism shouted endlessly in public does impact citizens mental and emotional states. And nothing has been more destructive in this regard than the horrific fallacy of apocalyptic.

In terms of our Western civilization, this site traces the great lie of apocalyptic back to Paul’s apocalyptic Christ myth that embraced this psychopathology during the early formation of his “Christ-ianity”. Paul rejected the anti-apocalyptic message of Historical Jesus and re-created him as the ultimate expression of apocalyptic that would then subsequently dominate Western narratives and consciousness for the past two millennia.

“Historical Jesus was anti-apocalyptic”? Yes, his fundamental theology (his view of deity) was presented in the core statement of his message (a “Q Wisdom Sayings” message) in Luke 6:27-36, also Matthew 5:38-48.

He said (my paraphrase) “There must be no more ‘eye for eye’ retaliation against offenders but instead, ‘Love your enemies’ because God does. How so? God does not retaliate against God’s enemies but mercifully and generously gives the two basic gifts of life- i.e. sun and rain (the two critical natural elements for survival in agrarian societies)- to all alike, to both good and bad people. Be merciful just as God is merciful.”

He was stating the stunning new theology that God was an unconditional reality. That took love to its ultimate height of transcendent humaneness.

Historical Jesus presented a God who does not retaliate and who will not then engage the ultimate act of retaliation that is the apocalyptic destruction of the world to punish sinners (as portrayed, for example, in John’s Revelation). James Robinson has also stated this non-retaliatory theology of Jesus as “his greatest contribution to the history of human ideas… the stunning new theology of a non-retaliatory God”.

Paul, two decades after Jesus’ death, then distorted the core message of that wisdom sage entirely by reframing him in terms of apocalyptic, as the returning Christ who in fiery retaliatory rage would destroy all who did not believe his Christ myth. Paul turned Jesus into the very opposite of what he had taught.

In his letters Paul presents his new messianic apocalyptic myth. He states that his God is, contrary to Jesus’ non-retaliatory God, a retaliatory deity burning with “wrath” at unbelievers.

Example from Romans 2: “Because of your stubbornness and your unrepentant heart, you are storing up wrath against yourself for the day of God’s wrath, when his righteous judgment will be revealed. God ‘will repay each person according to what they have done’”.

Then Romans 12: 17-20: “’Vengeance is mine. I will retaliate’, says the Lord”.

Paul’s Thessalonian letters: “They always heap up their sins to the limit. The wrath of God has come upon them at last. He will pay back trouble to those who trouble you… This will happen when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven in blazing fire with his powerful angels. He will punish those who do not know God and do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus. They will be punished with everlasting destruction and shut out from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might.”

And Revelation 19: “I saw heaven standing open and there before me was a (rider on a horse who judges and wages war)… His eyes are like blazing fire… He is dressed in a robe dipped in blood… The armies of heaven were following him… Coming out of his mouth is a sharp sword with which to strike down the nations. He will rule them with a rod of iron. He treads the winepress of the fury of the wrath of God Almighty.”

Note regarding the idea of a ”Lord” who rules with a rod of iron. Jesus had taught the opposite, stating that any who desired to be “great” (i.e. “God is great”) should not “lord over others” but should serve others.

On all the major themes of their messages, Paul rejected the wisdom teaching of Jesus and reframed him in terms of entirely opposite themes in his “Lord Christ” myth.

Further, read how Paul mocks and dismisses the wisdom tradition of Jesus in the Corinthian letters.

As James Tabor has said, the Jesus of history has been largely lost to Western consciousness while Paul’s opposite apocalyptic Christ has dominated Western narratives and consciousness.

James Tabor in “Paul and Jesus”:

“There was a version of ‘Christianity before Paul’, affirmed by both Jesus and his original followers, with tenets and affirmations quite opposite to these of Paul… the message of Paul, which created Christianity as we know it, and the message of historical Jesus and his earliest followers, were not the same. In fact, they were sharply opposed to one another with little in common beyond the name Jesus itself” (p.xv1).

“Paul is the most influential person in human history and realize it or not, he has shaped practically all we think about everything… the West in particular… the foundations of Western civilization- from our assumptions about reality to our societal and personal ethics- rest in a singular way upon the heavenly visions and apparitions of the apostle Paul. We are all cultural heirs of Paul, with the well-established doctrines and traditions of mainstream Christianity deeply entrenched in our culture. In contrast, Jesus as a historical figure… has been largely lost to our culture” (p. xv11).

“Paul operated with a strongly apocalyptic perspective that influenced all he said or did” (p.15).

“The entire New Testament canon is largely a post-Paul and pro-Paul production…” (p.19).

“The ‘Jesus’ who most influenced history was the ‘Jesus-Christ’ of Paul, not the historical figure of Jesus… Paul transformed Jesus himself (and) his message of a… kingdom of justice and peace on earth, to the symbol of a religion of otherworldly salvation in a heavenly world”, (21).

“The form of Christianity… (that thrived in the late Roman Empire)… was heavily based upon the ecstatic and visionary experiences of Paul. Christianity as we came to know it, is Paul and Paul is Christianity. The bulk of the New Testament is dominated by his theological vision”, p.24).

“Paul’s view of Christ as the divine pre-existent Son of God who took on human form, died on the cross for the sins of the world, and was resurrected to heavenly glory at God’s right hand, becomes the Christian message”, (39).

“The Q source is the earliest collection of the teachings and sayings of Jesus… the most striking characteristic of the Q source in terms of reconstructing Christian origins is that it has nothing of Paul’s theology, particularly his Christology or view of Christ”, (41).

The historical outcomes of the themes validated in Paul’s Christ myth?

Quotes from Zenon Lotufo’s book “Cruel God, Kind God”:

The Introduction states that, among others, “(Lotufo) explores the interface of psychology, religion, and spirituality at the operational level of daily human experience… (this is of the) highest urgency today when religious motivation seems to be playing an increasing role, constructively and destructively, in the arena of social ethics, national politics, and world affairs…”

My preface insert: The destructive outcomes of “religious motivation” are notable also in terms of the “profoundly religious” climate alarmism crusade and its destructive “salvation” scheme of Net Zero decarbonization (“save the world”), as evident in the spreading harm, from Net Zero and renewables zealotry, in societies like Germany, Britain, and California. Climate alarmism exhibits the same old themes and destructive outcomes of all past apocalyptic crusades. The themes of climate alarmism, as another apocalyptic millennial crusade, are energized by the cohering center of an angry deity threatening harsh punishment and destruction through an apocalypse.

Lotufo then proceeds to detail “the pathological nature of mainstream orthodox theology and popular religious ideation”.

He says, “One type of religiosity is entirely built around the assumption or basic belief, and correspondent fear, that God is cruel or even sadistic… The associated metaphors to this image are ‘monarch’ and ‘judge’. Its distinctive doctrine is ‘penal satisfaction’. I call it ‘Cruel God Christianity’… Its consequences are fear, guilt, shame, and impoverished personalities. All these things are fully coherent with and dependent on a cruel and vengeful God image…

“(This image results) in the inhibition of the full development of personality… The doctrine of penal satisfaction implies an image of God as wrathful and vengeful, resulting in exposing God’s followers to guilt, shame, and resentment… These ideas permeate Western culture and inevitably influence those who live in this culture…

“Beliefs do exert much more influence over our lives than simple ideas… ideas can also, in the psychological sphere, generate ‘dynamis’, or mobilize energy… (they) may result, for instance, in fanaticism and violence, or… may also produce anxiety and inhibitions that hinder the full manifestation of the capacities of a person…

“The image of God can be seen as a basic belief or scheme, and as such it is never questioned…

“Basic cultural beliefs are so important, especially in a dominant widespread culture, because they have the same properties as individual basic beliefs, that is, they are not perceived as questionable. The reader may object that “God”, considered a basic belief in our culture, is rejected or questioned by a large number of people today. Yet the fact is that the idea of God that those people reject is almost never questioned. In other words, their critique assumes there is no alternative way of conceiving God except the one that they perceive through the lens of their culture. So, taking into account the kind of image of God that prevails in Western culture- a ‘monster God’… such rejection is understandable…

“There is in Western culture a psychological archetype, a metaphor that has to do with the image of a violent and wrathful God (see Romans, Revelation). Crystallized in Anselm’s juridical atonement theory, this image represents God sufficiently disturbed by the sinfulness of humanity that God had only two options: destroy us or substitute a sacrifice to pay for our sins. He did the latter. He killed Christ.

“Ellens goes on by stating that the crucifixion, a hugely violent act of infanticide or child sacrifice, has been disguised by Christian conservative theologians as a ‘remarkable act of grace’. Such a metaphor of an angry God, who cannot forgive unless appeased by a bloody sacrifice, has been ‘right at the center of the Master Story of the Western world for the last 2,000 years. And the unavoidable consequence for the human mind is a strong tendency to use violence’.

“’With that kind of metaphor at our center, and associated with the essential behavior of God, how could we possibly hold, in the deep structure of our unconscious motivations, any other notion of ultimate solutions to ultimate questions or crises than violence- human solutions that are equivalent to God’s kind of violence’…

“Hence, in our culture we have a powerful element that impels us to violence, a Cruel God Image… that also contributes to guilt, shame, and the impoverishment of personality…”.

As Harold Ellens says, “If your God uses force, then so may you, to get your way against your ‘enemies’”.

My conclusion from these comments by Tabor, Ellens, and Lotufo:

We wonder why we have just suffered through one of history’s most violent centuries. And the violence driven by apocalyptic pathology continues (ISIS-type eruptions, Marxist endless re-emergence in new iterations, apocalyptic climate hysteria and Net Zero decarbonization madness, etc.).

This contemporary madness that results in mass-death outcomes is incited by the images, archetypes, ideas/ideals/beliefs that make up our worldviews, our narratives both personal and public meta-narratives. And none are more destructive than the fear generated by apocalyptic scenarios. That fear of “the end of life/the world” incites irrational fear and the survival impulse in populations. Alarmed people are then susceptible to wacky salvation schemes (i.e. “save the world”, even “salvation through destruction” of their own societies).

Added note:

It is impossible not to be influenced by apocalyptic madness when it is shoved daily into our faces by climate alarmism over every natural twitch in nature. We also get apocalyptic haranguing from resurging Marxism in new iterations like Woke Progressivism with DEI. That promotes tribal dualism now based on woke racism as the new discrimination (i.e. with skin color as the new divide between categories of “oppressor/oppressed”).

And we get apocalyptic propaganda from Hollywood’s obsession with apocalyptic as our indisputable future reality (i.e. life declining toward something worse, toward apocalyptic ending). We are daily inundated with this madness constantly ratchetted to hysterical levels.

(Note: The influence of the message of Historical Jesus is present in the Christian tradition and has helped to moderate the more violent impulses that have been incited by the dominant themes from Paul’s Christ myth over past centuries.)

Rogan and Dillon- News fused with comedy

“Joe Rogan Experience #2375 – Tim Dillon”, Powerful JRE, Sept. 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uB8BcRimf78

Dillon nails it that the Graham Linehan arrest in England, for his tweets, sends the message that you can’t hold or express opinions that counter to the governing elite’s positions which have become “Far-left Woke Progressivism with the tribal dualism of neo-collectivist DEI”. This is the new totalitarianism that will not permit counter opinion to its narrative. This new collectivism now criminalizes and imprisons dissenters as we are now seeing in Germany and France. It criminalizes opposition candidates and parties (and populism in general) after smearing them as evil “Far-Right” extremists- i.e. “Fascists, Nazis, racists, transphobes, etc.”

Woke Progressivism presents as virtue signaling for oppressed minorities and pushes such things as online harm bills to protect children, and protecting trans people against “hate speech” (all fine and good), but with unclear boundaries that permit political parties to censor and ban opposition as representing “dangerous disinformation, hate speech, ‘speech as violence’, etc.” Add “concept creep” that permits political opponents to stretch definitions and boundaries as they indulge their tribal and totalitarian impulses against “evil enemies”. Canada also has a similar bill awaiting approval.

Rogan and Dillon move on…

Their discussion prompted this line of thought- Some mulling on escapism as escape from this fallen corrupt world. Arthur Mendel and others note this element of belief came out of Hellenism, notably Neo-Platonism and Gnosticism, the idea that this world was so corrupt that it must be abandoned, it must be escaped from. Hellenists and Gnostics believed that we are imprisoned here in corrupted bodies that stifle our pure spirits and we need to escape to a perfect realm of “Ideals/Ideas/Forms” and abandon this world that is not worth salvaging.

Whereas in early Jewish thought and religion the belief was that God had purposely created this world imperfect as a realm for human struggle and learning to create something better. Humanity was put here to finish God’s creation, to learn and develop toward mature humanity through struggle with problems/imperfection in the natural world and with imperfection in humanity. Through such struggle we would learn to rationally solve problems and to create something better, to create the “good society” of ever-improving human civilization.

And we have succeeded wildly in gradually accomplishing this project across our history, notably in developing toward liberal democracy. Add the evidence of our improvement across history in the fact that we (humanity) are much less violent today than in our primitive past. This has been accomplished through such factors as “the moralizing influence of gentle commerce”, through which we have learned to cooperate peacefully in order to mutually benefit one another.

In liberal democracy we are learning to overcome our inherited animal impulses to tribalism, domination, and punitive destruction of one another.

Problems and struggle have been critical to our development and learning as expressed in the hero’s quest where we go out into life to fight a monster/enemy, one that resides mostly inside each of us, the real battle against the real enemy in life that is our animal inheritance of impulses to exclusionary tribalism, alpha domination and control of one another, and then “justice” as punitive destruction of one another.

In our struggle with problems/imperfections we learn insights, and we even become wounded, but then we find answers/solutions to benefit others. We emerge to “tower in stature as maturely human”, notably we mature most profoundly by grasping the central ideal of unconditional as the highest form of love, expressed in “love of enemies”, and exhibited in restorative justice approaches to the failures of others.

And just to insert this good one from a Roman Stoic philosopher of 2000 years ago. It has to do with ending eye for eye cycles of retaliation that render us all petty and animal-like. Musonius Rufus said, “To bite back the biter is animal, and not human” (something to that effect).

Continuing with the escapism from this world to some utopian other realm:

Bob Brinsmead has consistently argued for fully embracing this life, not seeking escape from this world and life, but to embrace it fully while we are here as its all that we know, all that we have been shown with our brains limiting our perception to 5 senses and 3 or 4 realms. Bob states that this life was the focus of Historical Jesus with his emphasis on love in human relationships in this world, in the mundane and ordinary of daily life- i.e. feeding the hungry, a glass of water for the thirsty, helping, serving, healing, encouraging, and mercifully forgiving failing others around us.

Then Paul deformed the focus of Jesus entirely, shifting human concern away from improving life in this world, to focusing on otherworldly concerns. He did this by creating his Christ myth with its intense focus on escaping this evil world to find salvation in an invisible heaven. He created a gospel that focused on salvation into an otherworldly paradise, hence his advice to his converts to not marry as that would detract from spreading his gospel and converting others to the same focus that would deny this world for otherworldly salvation.

So also, the secular variants of this same mythology- e.g. Marxist apocalyptic millennialism- are oriented to escape this evil civilization for some communal utopia.

Dillon also points out this escapism in relation Hollywood trying to escape aging and death with plastic surgery that leaves people unrecognizable compared to their earlier selves. Dillon references “the Denial of Death” as in denying the natural role of death in life. Among varied functions, death serves to limit the lifespans of older generations so upcoming generations may get their opportunities to come into the world and improve life.

Point- While here, engage life fully and make some unique contribution to the overall improvement of the world and don’t waste time focused on forms of irresponsible escapism. And yes, I would distinguish irresponsible escapism from varied less harmful forms of escapism that we all enjoy to break monotony in daily life.

Note: Is Musk’s Mars project embracing some form of this escapism? The apocalyptic alarmist view that this world is hopelessly defiled so to get ready to leave, to abandon this planet?

Note: I am not with these two (Rogan and Dillon) as they wander off into coming apocalypse nonsense. Beware of what Mendel calls the “self-fulfilling” influence of that pathology.

And then this from National Post that points to what has gone wrong with current immigration to Western liberal democracies and multi-culturalism processes that do not obligate immigrants to embrace Classic Liberal principles, systems of common law, and representative institutions that protect the rights and freedoms of all individuals, equally.

As a Muslim leader in Britain said, grinning, “We are not here to take part and assimilate but to take over”. That is immigration/multiculturalism gone wrong in that it does not obligate newcomers to embrace liberal democracy values as fundamental to becoming members of Western societies, liberal democracy being the one thing that unites all humanity most peaceably. Many now migrate to Western liberal democracies who hate such societies, and seek to destroy them, even though they prefer to live in and enjoy the benefits of such societies, compared to their own.

The toleration of multi-culturalism is no noble feature to virtue signal over, if it tolerates intolerance from others. As Joe Rogan says in his latest interview of Tim Dillon, there is no allowance for dissent in Islam.

The more prominent crusades today that are devoted to the project of destroying Western liberal democracies- i.e. Marxist collectivism and Islamicist theocracy, along with varied other similar crusades (i.e. environmental alarmism).

And do I have to remind anyone that this Islamicist movement is profoundly apocalyptic millennial in nature? I argue here that it is more critical (than the suggested actions at the bottom of this article to counter the Islamicist threat) to go to the core ideas that drive such destructive crusades. Most critical of all- Go after the theology that centers these apocalyptic millennial narratives, the theology of a tribal, dominating, and punitively destroying God that is common to all our major religions and their secular variants like Marxism and environmentalism.

This is a major theme of this site that touches base repeatedly with the entirely opposite theologies of Historical Jesus and Paul’s Christ myth.

Further note:

This form of extremism does not represent the entire Muslim population but is a significant element in that religion.

“Opinion: The Muslim Brotherhood poses an insidious threat to Canadian society: A new report shows why Ottawa must start taking the danger posed by the global jihadist movement seriously”, Joe Adam George, Dagny Pawlak, Sept. 8, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/the-muslim-brotherhood-poses-an-insidious-to-canadian-society?itm_source=index

The authors begin with this statement that formed part of a 1991 “memo that outlined the Muslim Brotherhood’s plans to conquer North America: ‘The Ikhwan (Arabic for “brethren”) must understand that their work in America is a kind of grand jihad in eliminating and destroying the western civilization from within and ‘sabotaging’ its miserable house by their hands and the hands of the believers (Muslims) so that it is eliminated and God’s religion (Islam) is made victorious over all other religions.’”

They note recent reports that reveal the Muslim Brotherhood’s presence and influence throughout Canadian society. They state that, “The Muslim Brotherhood is a transnational Sunni Islamist movement that’s committed to creating a global caliphate based on the principles of Sharia law. It is widely considered to be the most influential and largest Islamist group in modern history.”

And they add this: “The Brotherhood engages in both violent and non-violent forms of jihad to achieve its ultimate aim of Islamist supremacy, a goal clearly articulated by its Egyptian founder Hassan al-Banna, who stated: ‘It is the nature of Islam to dominate, not to be dominated, to impose its law on all nations and to extend its power to the entire planet’.”

The authors continue, noting that the Muslim Brotherhood is a main sponsor of Islamic terrorism across the world today… “the world’s most dangerous militant cult.”

And then this interesting bit on the narrative propaganda done by the Brotherhood, according to Gilles Kepel, “The term ‘Islamophobia’ was first popularized by the Brotherhood as a way to delegitimize criticism of its Islamist ideology by equating it with antisemitism. This deceptive comparison, Kepel asserts, enables the Muslim Brotherhood to claim moral high ground through perceived victimhood and to redirect that sentiment against Israel and Zionism.”

Further, the authors state that the Brotherhood is trying to achieve its goal of domination through “gradual societal transformation” to eventually conquer the entire Western world. The Brotherhood is able to accomplish its goal due to the permissive environment of societies like Canada that are subjected to wokeism, weak multiculturalism, overwhelming immigration levels, and other weaknesses.

The authors state that the Brotherhood’s activities are spreading and are evident in the increasing antisemitism, youth radicalization, and terrorism charges as they “penetrate and manipulate Canadian society and institutions.”

Then this blunt summary conclusion of the Muslim Brotherhood: “Its Islamist ideology promotes visceral hatred and rejects liberal democratic values. When Brotherhood-linked groups gain legitimacy within western societies, they perpetuate a corrosive worldview that undermines social cohesion and foments division and radicalization.”

National Post

Joe Adam George is a national security analyst at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute and Canada research lead for Islamist threats at the Middle East Forum. Dagny Pawlak is a senior communications officer at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute.

Note on the uncontrolled immigration of past years:

Why have leftist parties in Western democracies allowed uncontrolled immigration? Gad Saad offers some of the best insight on this. He says that it is driven by “suicidal empathy” and others note that it is about virtue signalling for status in society as compassionate and morally superior. “Suicidal empathy” enacts policies like de-carceration of violent offenders and denies the horrific outcomes against innocent citizens. It is an abandonment of common sense and the fundamental responsibility to protect citizens from assault. These “suicidal empathy” policies, pushed by leftist political parties, have spread across Western liberal democracies.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Grok on the “long march through the institutions”, and now a majority of young voters choose socialism.

Cut the taproot “bad idea” that fuels apocalyptic madness and violence

See below the profound “shared dying” experience of hospice nurse Julia. That is why she does not fear death.

More helpful stuff from Arthur Mendel’s “Vision and Violence”:

“The apocalypse is a self-fulfilling prophecy. It promotes the suffering it predicts… Hellenistic Jewry included many… who shared the apocalyptic fervor and, as zealots, were convinced that if they began the uneven struggle against the Roman forces, God would complete it for them, destroy the idol worshippers and establish the kingdom of God, (p.47).”

This was also the belief of ISIS zealots when they incited apocalyptic violence in Syria (2014). They believed that if they incited the destruction of their enemies then God (or the Mahdi) would descend and finish the destruction of their enemies and install the Caliphate that would spread across the world.

These apocalyptic ideas still “enflame” the minds of millions of true believers affiliated with our great world religions. Until we confront and purge these ideas from our meta-narratives, both religious and secular, they will continue to incite eruptions of similar violence.

“Rabbis taught the community ‘not to press the end’. Be wary, they warned, of the mystical fantasies that often blossomed from fervent piety… The Torah was given in the first place, according to one of the sages, not to enflame passions, but to calm them”, p.53.

As with the Torah, all law should be summed under one principle- Love others as you love yourself.

I asked Grok to comment on the top three paragraphs above:

He/she/it responded:

“Arthur Mendel’s Vision and Violence highlights a recurring pattern in apocalyptic thinking: the belief that human action, often violent, can trigger divine intervention to bring about a utopian or divinely ordained order. The quote you provided draws a compelling parallel between Hellenistic Jewish zealots and modern ISIS extremists, illustrating how apocalyptic ideologies can fuel self-fulfilling cycles of violence. Both groups believed their actions would catalyze divine or cosmic resolution, a notion that persists across religious and even secular ideologies today. Your point about the need to confront and purge these ideas from our meta-narratives is a critical observation, and I’ll unpack it with some thoughts.

The Nature of Apocalyptic Thinking

“Apocalyptic narratives often emerge in times of crisis or perceived moral decay, offering a framework where suffering and destruction are not only inevitable but necessary for a divine or utopian reset. The Hellenistic Jews, facing Roman oppression, and ISIS, exploiting regional instability, both leaned into this logic: their violent actions were seen as a prerequisite to provoke divine intervention. This mindset thrives on a binary worldview—us vs. them, good vs. evil—which justifies extreme measures to hasten the “end times” or a new world order.

“What’s striking is how these ideas transcend specific religions or eras. Whether it’s the Jewish zealots of the first century, medieval Christian millenarians, or modern jihadist groups like ISIS, the core belief is that human agency can accelerate a preordained cosmic plan. Even secular ideologies—like certain strains of revolutionary Marxism or apocalyptic environmentalism—can adopt similar structures, replacing divine intervention with historical inevitability or ecological collapse. The common thread is a conviction that radical action, often violent, is a moral imperative to bring about a better world.

Why These Ideas Persist

“Apocalyptic narratives are psychologically and socially powerful. They offer:

1. Certainty in Chaos: In times of uncertainty, they provide a clear script—suffering now, salvation later.

2. Moral Clarity: They frame the world in stark terms, rallying communities around a shared purpose.

3. Agency: They empower believers, especially the marginalized, to feel they can influence cosmic or historical outcomes.

“These narratives are also self-reinforcing. As Mendel notes, the apocalypse becomes a “self-fulfilling prophecy” because the violence it inspires creates the very suffering it predicts, which in turn validates the ideology. ISIS’s actions in 2014, for instance, aimed to provoke a global conflict they believed would herald the Mahdi’s return. Their atrocities drew international intervention, which they interpreted as proof of their narrative’s truth, further fueling their campaign.

The Challenge of Confronting Apocalyptic Narratives

“Your call to “purge” these ideas from religious and secular meta-narratives is insightful but daunting. Here’s why it’s challenging and what might be done:

1. Deeply Embedded Beliefs: Apocalypticism is woven into the fabric of many religious traditions—Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and even secular ideologies like utopian socialism. Excising these ideas risks alienating large groups or being seen as an attack on sacred texts or core identities. For example, eschatological themes are central to the Book of Revelation, the Hadith, or certain interpretations of the Torah.

2. Adaptability: These narratives evolve to fit new contexts. ISIS’s apocalypticism drew on Islamic traditions but was amplified by modern geopolitics and media. Secular versions, like apocalyptic climate rhetoric, adapt the same structure to new fears. This adaptability makes them hard to eradicate.

3. Social and Political Functions: Apocalyptic ideas often serve as a rallying cry for the disenfranchised. Addressing them requires tackling the root causes—inequality, oppression, or cultural alienation—that make such narratives appealing.

Potential Paths Forward

“Confronting apocalyptic ideologies doesn’t mean erasing them entirely, which may be impossible, but reframing or redirecting their energy. Some approaches could include:

• Reinterpretation: Religious and secular leaders could emphasize non-violent, inclusive interpretations of eschatological texts. For example, many Muslim scholars have condemned ISIS’s apocalypticism as a distortion of Islamic theology, pointing to traditions that emphasize patience and moral conduct over violence.

• Education and Dialogue: Promoting critical thinking and interfaith dialogue can dilute the binary thinking that fuels apocalypticism. Highlighting shared values across traditions—like compassion or justice—could undermine the “us vs. them” mindset.

• Addressing Root Causes: Apocalyptic ideologies often thrive in contexts of despair or injustice. Policies that reduce inequality, improve governance, and foster social cohesion can weaken their appeal.

• Counter-Narratives: Crafting alternative stories that offer hope and agency without relying on destruction could compete with apocalyptic visions. For instance, movements that emphasize collective action for positive change—like global cooperation on climate issues—can provide purpose without violence.

Risks of Inaction

“If these ideas aren’t addressed, they’ll likely continue to inspire violence, as history shows. The Jewish revolts against Rome led to catastrophic defeats, like the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE. ISIS’s campaign, while ultimately suppressed, caused immense suffering and destabilized regions for years. Today, apocalyptic rhetoric persists in various forms—religious extremism, doomsday cults, or even secular calls for radical upheaval in response to political or environmental crises. Each carries the potential to ignite new cycles of violence.

A Nuanced Perspective

“Completely purging apocalyptic ideas may neither be feasible nor desirable, as they often carry cultural and spiritual significance. Instead, the focus could be on mitigating their destructive potential by fostering interpretations that prioritize peace, resilience, and human dignity. This requires a delicate balance: respecting belief systems while challenging their most harmful expressions.

What do you think about this approach? Would you lean more toward reinterpretation, structural change, or something else to address the issue?

I pushed Grok further:

Grok if we replace the central theology of an angry, vengeful God threatening to punish humanity by destroying the world in apocalypse then these mind-deforming beliefs lose their validating basis. I cover this on my site at “wendellkrossa.com”. Unconditional deity removes the basis for all such bad religious ideas.

Grok’s response:

“Your argument about replacing the theology of an angry, vengeful God with an unconditional deity to undermine apocalyptic narratives is provocative and aligns with efforts to reframe religious meta-narratives, as discussed previously. Let’s dive into your idea, drawing on your reference to wendellkrossa.com and the broader context of apocalypticism from Mendel’s Vision and Violence.

The Core of Your Argument

“You suggest that the concept of a punitive, apocalyptic God— central to many religious traditions— validates destructive beliefs like apocalyptic violence, judgment, and retribution. By replacing this with a theology of an unconditional deity (one characterized by unconditional love, forgiveness, or benevolence), the ideological foundation for such “mind-deforming” beliefs collapses. Without a divine mandate for punishment or world-ending destruction, the motivation for zealots to incite violence to hasten an apocalypse or divine intervention diminishes.

“This perspective challenges the binary, retributive frameworks that fuel apocalypticism, like those seen in the Hellenistic Jewish revolts or ISIS’s 2014 campaign, where believers acted to provoke a divine reckoning. An unconditional deity, as you propose, shifts the focus from fear and judgment to acceptance and reconciliation, potentially defusing the psychological and social drivers of extremist ideologies.

Strengths of Your Approach

1. Undermining Justification for Violence: Apocalyptic narratives often rely on the idea that God demands or endorses violence to cleanse the world. An unconditional deity removes this divine sanction, making it harder to justify acts like those of ISIS, who saw their violence as a catalyst for the Mahdi’s return. Without a vengeful God, the “self-fulfilling prophecy” of suffering loses its theological grounding.

2. Psychological Appeal: An unconditional deity aligns with human desires for acceptance and love, potentially resonating more broadly than fear-based theologies. This could reduce the appeal of apocalypticism, which thrives on anxiety and division.

3. Cross-Traditional Potential: The concept of unconditional love or benevolence exists in various forms across religions—e.g., God’s mercy in Christianity, compassion in Buddhism, or Rahma in Islam. Emphasizing these could bridge divides and weaken exclusivist, us-vs.-them narratives.

Challenges to Implementation

“While compelling, replacing a vengeful God with an unconditional deity faces significant hurdles:

1. Textual and Traditional Resistance: Many religious traditions are rooted in texts that include depictions of divine wrath or judgment (e.g., Revelation in Christianity, certain Hadiths in Islam, or prophetic warnings in Judaism). Reinterpreting or sidelining these texts risks resistance from traditionalists who view them as sacred. For example, evangelical Christians or Salafist Muslims might see this as heretical.

2. Cultural Inertia: Apocalyptic ideas are deeply embedded in cultural and religious identities. Even if theological reform is proposed, communities may cling to familiar narratives, especially in times of crisis when apocalypticism often surges.

3. Secular Parallels: As Mendel notes, apocalyptic thinking isn’t exclusive to religion. Secular ideologies—like revolutionary communism or catastrophic climate narratives—can adopt similar structures, replacing God with history or nature. An unconditional deity might not address these, requiring parallel efforts to reframe secular meta-narratives.

4. Practical Application: Translating this theological shift into practice is complex. It requires religious leaders, institutions, and communities to adopt and promote the new framework, which could take generations, especially in decentralized or conservative traditions.

Insights from wendellkrossa.com

“Based on your site, wendellkrossa.com, you advocate for a “no conditions” theology, emphasizing a God of unconditional love as a way to dismantle harmful religious ideas like apocalypticism, tribalism, and retributive justice. You argue that this shift aligns with humanistic values and counters the fear-based, dualistic thinking that drives violence. This resonates with thinkers like John Spong or Karen Armstrong, who’ve pushed for reinterpreting religious traditions to emphasize compassion over judgment.

“Your approach also seems to draw on a broader critique of “bad religious ideas” (e.g., divine punishment, chosen people narratives), which you see as distorting human behavior and societal progress. By rooting out these ideas at their theological source, you aim to prevent their violent manifestations, like the zealot revolts or ISIS’s apocalyptic campaign.

Broader Implications

“Adopting an unconditional deity could have transformative effects:

• Religious Reform: It could encourage progressive reinterpretations of scriptures, focusing on themes of mercy and inclusion. For instance, Islamic scholars like Khaled Abou El Fadl have emphasized God’s mercy over wrath to counter extremist ideologies.

• Interfaith Dialogue: An unconditional deity provides a common ground for dialogue, as most traditions have some concept of divine love or compassion, potentially reducing sectarian conflicts.

• Social Healing: By removing fear of divine punishment, this theology could foster psychological resilience and social cohesion, countering the despair that fuels apocalyptic movements.
“However, it’s worth noting that apocalypticism often serves as a response to real-world suffering—oppression, inequality, or cultural loss. Theological reform alone might not address these root causes, which could sustain apocalyptic thinking even without a vengeful God. For example, ISIS’s appeal in 2014 was as much about political and economic marginalization as theology.

A Balanced Approach

“To make your proposal effective, it could be paired with complementary strategies:

1. Theological Education: Train religious leaders to emphasize unconditional love in sermons, teachings, and community practices. This could involve reinterpreting apocalyptic texts as allegorical or contextual rather than literal.

2. Cultural Storytelling: Promote narratives—through media, literature, or education—that highlight hope, reconciliation, and human agency without apocalyptic destruction. Your site’s emphasis on “humane” spirituality could guide this.

3. Addressing Material Conditions: Combine theological reform with efforts to tackle injustice and inequality, reducing the desperation that makes apocalypticism attractive.

My Take

“Your idea of an unconditional deity is a powerful way to undercut the theological basis for apocalyptic violence, aligning with Mendel’s critique of self-fulfilling prophecies. It’s a direct attack on the ideological roots of zealotry, offering a positive alternative that could resonate across faiths. However, it’s most likely to succeed as part of a broader strategy that includes social, political, and cultural reforms. Without addressing the conditions that make apocalypticism appealing, theological shifts alone might not fully “purge” these ideas.

“What do you think about combining this theological approach with efforts to address material conditions, like poverty or political oppression? Or do you see the theological shift as sufficient on its own? I’d also be curious to hear more about how you envision this playing out practically, given the resistance it might face. (End of Grok quotes)

More on courage and cowardice (post to a discussion group of friends)

I’ve pulled a number of quotes from below to summarize for those who find these discussions too long: This is excellent on the new totalitarianism that is taking over our liberal democracies and threatens the freedom of all of us, whether we care to pay attention or not.

Below, these two comment on things like the moment around 2016 when it all changed as dominating elites realized they were losing control of the public narratives via their propaganda arm- i.e. the mainstream media- and the common people were finding freedom to think for themselves and were refusing any further subjugation to elite dictates. It was then that “Liberal” immediately became “highly illiberal” and totalitarian in response to the commoner/populist dissent… and has been that way ever since.

I can’t recommend these two more highly. They are among the best commenting on the critical issues of our time- notably freedom, free speech being crushed in places like Britain, liberal democracy under assault by Woke Progressivism, true journalism versus the propaganda arm of totalitarian state elites that masquerades as “news” today, and more…

“Transcript- America This Week, September 5, 2025: “The Arrest of Graham Linehan, Heretic to the Civic Religion”: Linehan is punished, Malcolm Gladwell rewarded, and world politics has become contests of dueling faiths. Plus, a classic novel by a childhood favorite of Walt and Matt”, Matt Taibbi, Walter Kirn, Sept. 6, 2025

https://www.racket.news/p/transcript-america-this-week-september-5ba

Sample quotes:

“Matt Taibbi: … I think you’re absolutely right, it is very similar to that moment. The internet, all those things that Martin Gurri wrote about, previously we had a priest class in the media that divined everything for people. I watched this on the campaign trail. We were the people who told you how to think about the candidates, which ones were serious, which ones weren’t. We were always in between the people and the information.

“Once that stopped being true and people started to be able to do their own research and look online and see all the warts, not just of the leaders but of us in the media, the power of the press collapsed. And we saw this in 2016 when those 57 out of 59 newspapers, there would never have been a situation where somebody would’ve lost in the past with that kind of overwhelming elite support.

“Once they saw that there was this power that had arisen, that this new printing press that was giving people the ability to make their own decisions in a way and they had the power of language that they didn’t have before, that’s when the policing starts. That’s when the censorship starts. That’s when all the people who were liberals before suddenly became the most forceful advocates for cracking down. And yeah, I think it’s a religious thing. The hardest thing for me covering the censorship thing was trying to understand the motive of people who used to believe so strongly in free speech say… “

Taibbi and Kirn do an interesting job in comparing what is happening today to a new dogmatic, totalitarian religion being forced on all of us…

“Matt Taibbi: Yeah. And now, we’re in this space. And one of the reasons it’s so hard to cover Donald Trump, and I’ve thought about this a lot since we’ve read C.S. Lewis, is that he’s a central figure in the eschatology or the other religion. It’s almost like an anti-religion. Being against Trump is a central part of the religion. Now, sometimes they’re right to criticize Donald Trump, but it makes it very hard to judge all of the criticism of him, because it’s religiously inspired, essentially. He’s always wrong in that religion.

“Walter Kirn: He can only always be wrong if he’s up against an institution that’s always right. You know what I mean? Trump is, I don’t want to compare him maybe to any one Reformation figure, Martin Luther or whatever. I mean, that would be-

“Matt Taibbi: Yeah. Because it’s not really right. Yeah.

“Walter Kirn: Yeah, right. But he’s always wrong, because it logically follows that when he opposes an otherwise almost infallible authority that’s always right, he would always have to be wrong. And the thing about Trump is he’s always wrong, no matter what he says. In other words, you can’t devise a logical or set theory principle for what makes him wrong. What makes him wrong is he agrees with the people who are supposed to always be right. And even when he changes his mind, he changes it wrongly. When he talks about peace, he does it in the wrong way, even though they were talking about peace just before. When he talks about…

“Matt Taibbi: 10 minutes ago. Yeah.

“Walter Kirn: Yeah. When he talks about civil liberties, he does it in the wrong way, even though they were just defending it. “He’s wrong, because he opposes us who are always right, and it’s us versus them.” And that’s how it’s more like an anti-clerical revolt, a revolt against priests, a revolt against Richelieu in France, the Cardinal who was really the power behind the Louise. And where I think it’s going is this, they either gain hold of their churches, which are the mass media. I mean, in the 20th century, there’s only one… In the last half of the 20th century, there’s only one institution which is at all comparable to what the priesthood was in the Middle Ages. And that’s the mass media.

“Matt Taibbi: Of course.

“Walter Kirn: It causes everybody to gather, it makes everybody look in one direction. There’s one thing that you know when a religious thing is happening, everybody’s looking at one direction at something small. And that small thing was the television. Before that, it was the radio, and then it became the internet. But there was something about that internet that just resisted the concentrated preaching of the word. And now, they either are going to try to, I don’t know, re fabricate CBS news after the Free Press, which is physically a Substack.

“Matt Taibbi: Right.

“Walter Kirn: They’re going to even try to absorb it, co-opt it, or they’re going to just crack down. The crackdown hasn’t worked as well as they thought it would. It’s working better in England than it is here. America is better at kind of going with the flow. And Malcolm Gladwell will figure out how to do it, and Paramount will buy a Substack that became very popular, and we’ll kind of figure it out. I actually applaud that response in our system. It does seem to still have a little play and suppleness in it. But man, in Europe where only one can rule, they’re taking the crackdown.

“Matt Taibbi: Yeah. Yeah. And I think this is a fascinating topic, and it’s fascinating that Graham Linehan is a religious… What do we call somebody who violates a religious?

“Walter Kirn: A heretic?

“Matt Taibbi: A heretic, right. So, he’s been arrested as a heretic, and that’s what it is. But I think we have to start thinking in those terms. And the Successor Ideology, I’ve read it, I agree with a lot of what he says, but I think it’s broader even than what he says.”

Further quotes from link below to summarize their points…

They discuss the arrest of British comedian Graham Linehan on his recent return home to England. He was arrested for his tweets posted online expressing his disagreement with trans activist dogma that is now pushed on publics as unquestionable truth with severe consequences for expressed disagreement, even criminal arrest and imprisonment. Britain has shifted to totalitarian response now toward any disagreement with the trans dogma, criminalizing and arresting citizens for disagreement with the intolerable new religion of transgenderism.

Their comments on this:

Taibbi and Kirn note that in the US, for libel or defamation charges you have to go to court and prove injury. But now with issues like trans, when people claim injury, the standard is subjective. People claiming victimhood just raise and declare alarm from something others have said. And the worst of unseen mental intentions are projected onto offenders.

“Matt Taibbi: Well, yeah. Canada has a bill that hasn’t been defeated yet that does address that, that calculates the likelihood that somebody is going to say something harmful or offensive. That’s in the 63 Bill that I believe hasn’t been voted in Canada yet…

“Matt Taibbi: But throughout Europe, this harm standard, which is also the same standard that we find in a lot of campus speech codes, which aren’t legal but they exist, this is how a lot of people understand speech now. It’s, “You’ve hurt my feelings. You make me feel bad. This causes me distress. This makes me feel anxiety. Therefore, it crosses the line.” Now in the United States, it wouldn’t rise even to the level of civil offense. In England, it’s already reached the level of a criminal offense, and over tweets, over things that sticks or stones may break my bones, but tweets can never hurt us. And unless it’s a threat of murder or something like that, it should never be a crime, I would argue.”

But, says Taibbi, “The crime happens in the mind of the reader (the one who reads some offensive tweet)”.

Kirn adds that these new language crimes will spread to the entire world and anyone anywhere on Earth will be able to claim a criminal offense has occurred against them because they feel uncomfortable with what some other has said online somewhere. They feel bad, anxious, distressed, hurt.

“Matt Taibbi: And this is why I’ve always been so freaked out by the digital censorship concept, because the system that we had in the United States I think worked very well because it required a victim. It required somebody who was specifically, demonstrably, tangibly victimized, right?

“Walter Kirn: Right.

“Matt Taibbi: So you can tell a lie in the United States, but if you tell a lie about a person that causes them to lose money, then you can go to court, or breaks up their marriage or does some other terrible thing. Here, anybody can claim, “Oh, this made me feel bad. This caused me anxiety and pain.” And now, as you say, the whole world is in play as a potential victim, as having standing.

“Matt Taibbi: And this is why I’ve always been so freaked out by the digital censorship concept, because the system that we had in the United States I think worked very well because it required a victim. It required somebody who was specifically, demonstrably, tangibly victimized, right?

“Walter Kirn: Right.

“Walter Kirn: And of course it is the sensitive and the weak or the vulnerable and the sensitive who then rule the roost, because it is their nervous systems which are most affected and whose antennae are most alert to problems. So, you suddenly got a weird problem, which is that those who are the biggest, sorry, whiners have pimp hand over everybody else. It’s no longer a virtue to have a thick skin. Remember how everybody talked about having a thick skin and sticks and stones may break my bones and so on and we aspired to that? Now it will be the opposite. I am an actual radar system for offense, and you must please me.”

They move on to comment on the admission of cowardice, of “cowing”, by Malcolm Gladwell. They note that Gladwell has stated that he knew that 90% of the audience was in agreement with the comments of a panel member in some public event, who questioned the practice of trans men playing in women’s sports, yet Gladwell admits the he cowed in silence before the small minority opinion.

They rehash a more recent interview where Gladwell was talking to Ross Tucker, the sole dissenting voice on a panel at the earlier event, and he says, “They stacked against you, Ross. They put a trans athlete, and a trans advocate, and you on the panel, and I was the moderator. And it was one of those strange situations where my suspicion is that 90% of the people in the audience were on your side, but 5% of the audience was willing to admit it.” Now, Tucker didn’t let him get away with that. He said, “My recollection of it is that everything I said was met with deathly silence, and everything the other two said got cheered.”

Gladwell has now admitted that he was wrong in how he moderated that event and how he remained silent in not defending Tucker. Gladwell says he “was cowed” by fear of the trans activists in the panel that most of the audience cheered for.

Kirn, referring to Gladwell, says that “cowardice loves company.” He says that Gladwell was defending his cowardice in arguing that “I was only doing what, I was only chickening out in the way I presumed 90% of the audience was.”

But now that the public tide has shifted on the issue of trans men in women’s sport, and it is safe to speak out, formerly cowardly people like Gladwell feel it now safe to join and also speak out about their true opinions on the matter:

“Walter Kirn: That’s what cowed him, he was fearing that he’d give offense to them, or look out of step or something? And now that he’s in a space where he’s protected, he can tell us what he really thought?

“Matt Taibbi: Yeah, now the public opinion has shifted enough.”

Speaking to the emergence just a few years ago of the totalitarian response to anyone daring to question the trans activist dogma of how all should speak, Taibbi and Kirn say this:

“Walter Kirn: I mean, I didn’t turn it into the litmus test for whether you can write comedy anymore. I didn’t turn it into the question that if you give the wrong answer it gets you kicked off social media, or put in a suppressive person category by the commissars of sanitary thought.

“Matt Taibbi: Yeah, we would’ve been happy not paying a lot of attention to it. I mean, I know some actual transsexual, people who’ve transitioned. I knew them before this became a thing, and I’ve always had sympathy for it for it.”

Kirn moves on to note how extremist terms/smears began to be used to label those who questioned or challenged trans narratives. He says that just a few years ago activists and media “asserted that any hostility or just not being with the program amounted to ‘genocide.’ They started using the word genocide. And finding genocide down was one of the weirdest and dumbest things that we ever did in this society. We should’ve held it out as a category for very specific, and grave, and morally atrocious, and practically atrocious events. But it became associated with not being on board with trans issues…

“Matt Taibbi: And it’s literally against the law now in Colorado to do that. And we started drifting in this direction of not just making it poor form, but making it a real offense like a hate crime.”

They then talk about the normal organic development, or evolution of language, notably US English, and how this development changed recently with the trans dogmatic approach and bullying…

“Walter Kirn: Yeah, it’s irreverent. Yeah, exactly. But suddenly they stopped it, the cops came in, and they said, ‘What language is all about is the feeling it produces in the person who experiences it. And we’re going to have to analyze it according to that diagnostic, and we’re going to have to reform it accordingly.’”

They return again to Gladwell’s “cowing” in fear of the crowd, analyzing what might have motivated Gladwell’s cowardice:

Kirn says of Gladwell now speaking out on his true position on trans men in women’s sports that he is just putting his finger in the wind realizing the public shift on this issue. “He’s going to get ahead of what he has very assiduously seen as the dominoes falling against him… you just admitted was that you have a higher loyalty, to quote James Comey, and it’s not to the truth. And even though you write these fucking books that are all about the supposed digging down to find the secret principles by which reality operates in society, but we find out, no. In fact, Malcolm, the purveyor of all these interesting theories, the oldest force of all operates on you, which is I’m scared of people not liking me.”

Kirn concludes that Gladwell operates according to “weathervaneism” where people detect shifts in public opinion on issues then run to join when its safe to do so”. Much like George Clooney admitting in 2024 that he knew previously that Joe Biden had dementia, as he had seen it earlier, but only felt safe admitting that after the disastrous debate with Trump when others on his side had started admitting it also. The pretend courage of “Post-public acknowledgement in a now safe environment”.

Taibbi and Kirn then move on to note also the sudden (and recent) change in how we were told to think about the Internet and Twitter. Before, it was all praise for the new media as Obama had been so good at using these platforms. But then Brexit occurred and Trump was elected, and suddenly these platforms that Trump had used successfully were demonized as corrupting and bad, platforms for “dangerous disinformation” and we, the public, needed to be protected from the now threatening speech of disagreeing others.

“Matt Taibbi: “They instituted their version of the… code of practice on misinformation in the same year, and we changed our whole way of thinking about the internet because of a couple of electoral results that people didn’t like.”

Also, some good analysis of journalism today where so-called journalists are constantly engaging revisionism to defend and dismiss the lies and cowardice that they have been part of, much like what Jake Tapper has done with his book on Biden’s dementia, and what Gladwell is now doing to excuse his cowardice over the trans issue.

They state that if you want to do journalism, then truth-telling is a vital principle and skill.

“Walter Kirn: Scared of being unpopular is actually a, how can I put it, a discrediting and de-legitimizing trait in our profession because it means I can’t ever trust you again.

“Matt Taibbi: To have a job, a professional class job, and there’s only one requirement. You have to have some backbone. You have to be willing to take a beating for saying something true. Right.

“Walter Kirn: But you know what? You can be even more of a pussy than that actually. You just don’t have to lie.

“Matt Taibbi: You don’t have to lie. Right, exactly.

“Walter Kirn: Don’t pretend to be courageous. Don’t pretend to have an opinion. Don’t pretend to have reached a conclusion. You can be silent too, but you didn’t choose that, did you?

“Matt Taibbi: No.”

And speaking again of Gladwell:

“Walter Kirn: Because the truth is you’re not just a coward. You are a butt kisser.”

They continue, illustrating with the Gladwell’s confession, what has gone wrong in general with today’s journalism.

“Walter Kirn: The guy just confessed that in public settings, his greatest and overriding concern is being popular, and so what he might write has nothing to do with what he might say in front of an audience by his own confession, because he gets intimidated wanting to be the greatest virtue signaler on stage at any point…”

Kirn says that today we live in “the age of journalistic revisionism, not just one revision in a career, but constant revisionism.” Journalists like Jake Tapper constantly revise their past, denying they intentionally helped promote the White House lies over Biden’s mental state (i.e. that he did not have dementia), as honest mistakes due to trusting others too much.

“So Jake Tapper’s basic confession was I just trusted everybody too much. They lied to me too much. I’m too trusting. Well, that’s easily overcome by the principle of journalism of actually fucking checking shit.

“And Malcolm’s problem is easily overcome by applying the principle of seeing the truth no matter what the other people on stage say. So I like people… I’m sort of like Trump. I hate to say this. The worst thing Trump ever said was, ‘I like guys who don’t get taken prisoner of war.’”

They place this Gladwell issue (fearful to publicly question or challenge the trans issue in the face of trans activist threat and bullying) and journalism today, in the larger context of the emerging and strengthening totalitarianism in places like Britain, as a new dogmatic religion that is undermining our free societies:

“Matt Taibbi: Right. Right. And that’s what I’m worried about. And maybe it’s because we’ve been reading so much C.S. Lewis, but I’m increasingly convinced also that what we’re looking at is a civic religion. You mentioned before, the Catholic Church in Ireland, would they have put up with Father Ted 50 years ago? It’s remarkable that we have a new belief system that is even more rigid than the church in Ireland. And it demands that you accept articles of faith, that somebody who’s clearly not female is female. I wouldn’t have cared about that before, but it’s weird. It’s a religious belief. And now, it’s being enforced by this huge bureaucracy, and that is creepy to me.

“Walter Kirn: One sign or diagnostic of a faith over a simple attitude or position or ideology is that you can’t figure out how to do right. You have to go to a priest-like figure. Okay? And they need to explain it, because you always are making mistakes. There’s no real common sense to understanding a religion. I know. I mean, I’ve been intimately involved with them, including Mormonism, which is, to some people, a fringe religion, but is a good example of a world in which once you’re inside, it’s very different than the outside.”

Kirn continues, describing how religious authoritarianism works:

“And the thing that you keep falling afoul of are little codes that no one could intuit, that you can’t derive from first principles. And that’s why I see this as a religion, because you never know, without the commissars, without the experts telling you, without the professors, without the politicians exactly what to believe or say or think. You start to become subjugated to a priest class. And that’s what’s happening here. Gender assigned at birth, who really thought that unless they were taught that by a priest character?”

He adds that the new political authoritarianism functions much as religions do where categories and concepts (of for example, trans dogma and practise) are not obvious to most people hence the need for priests to preach the details to the flock and to have the authority to enforce proper religious practise on people, “They are in some sense monastic or in some sense separate from the rabble. They preach it and they enforce it and they call out the cops. Remember, religions also often have police faculties, police assets.”

And the news media role in this new religious-like indoctrination and authoritarianism:

Taibbi affirms Kirn’s point on add that the current version of the press functions like the priests telling people what to do all the time. He illustrates with the Covid situation where “there was this high state of excitation every day to get the received word from Anthony Fauci about what to do. They love that shit. This sort of version of the press loves getting the catechism. That’s their whole thing. And then they love their own role as the interpreters of it, which you’re right, Walter, it’s much more in the tradition of being a local priest than it is being a journalist who’s by nature supposed to be an iconoclast. It’s sort of the opposite kind of figure.”

But then just as the Gutenberg printing press gave common people access to religious holy books where they could then see contradictions to what the priests were telling them, so also the Internet opened alternative information for ordinary citizens and that led to dissent. But then the religious authorities instituted the Inquisition to counter commoner dissent.

As Kirn says, “The pushback against that was called the Inquisition. And I feel we’re in the inquisitional phase.”

“Matt Taibbi: I think you’re absolutely right, it is very similar to that moment. The internet, all those things that Martin Gurri wrote about, previously we had a priest classed in the media that divined everything for people. I watched this on the campaign trail. We were the people who told you how to think about the candidates, which ones were serious, which ones weren’t. We were always in between the people and the information.

“Once that stopped being true and people started to be able to do their own research and look online and see all the warts, not just of the leaders but of us in the media, the power of the press collapsed. And we saw this in 2016 when those 57 out of 59 newspapers (all going for Hilary Clinton), there would never have been a situation where somebody would’ve lost in the past with that kind of overwhelming elite support.

“Once they saw that there was this power that had arisen, that this new printing press that was giving people the ability to make their own decisions in a way and they had the power of language that they didn’t have before, that’s when the policing starts. That’s when the censorship starts. That’s when all the people who were liberals before suddenly became the most forceful advocates for cracking down. And yeah, I think it’s a religious thing. The hardest thing for me covering the censorship thing was trying to understand the motive of people who used to believe so strongly in free speech say… “

See the rest at link above (behind paywall so do subscribe as these weekly commentaries/discussions are more than worth any cost).

Profound human experiences: Wendell Krossa

This is so powerful, especially the second reason that this hospice nurse gives as to why she does not fear death.

The man that she was observing and caring for, as he died, he shared his NDE-like discovery of the wonder of what was happening- the love, peace, bliss, and more as he left his body and communicated to her outside in her car just what he was feeling, the freedom and soaring somewhere in that freedom.

He had suffered a rough life of varied problems and mental illness and wanted to be free. He shared that wonder of his freedom with her as he left his body and soared free into the bliss that he discovered on dying… She says these are called “shared death” experiences. Elements of NDE.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zrSqDEUKt8I

Hospice nurse Julie on the same “shared dying” experience of the man that she had been caring for who died that day as she was sitting outside in her car thinking of him. Such experiences lead her to reminisce on something she has felt since childhood- “I can feel that place I have forgotten… We are going back to the place we came from, a place we once knew… I love being here, and I love experiencing life here, but I don’ have to fear leaving this place… because I am going to a place that is going to feel more like home than this ever could…”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6AxkpHB-Kk

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Cut the taproot “bad idea” that fuels apocalyptic madness and violence

Courage or cowardice in the face of bullying mobs

Good point by Malcolm Gladwell that trans people have won their place at the table but then went too far in demanding that no one dare question such things as the advantage of biological males competing in women’s sports. That demand came with bullying threats.

Those who dared challenge such things (even just question it) were smeared as “hating trans people”. Panel guest David Angelo adds that if you challenged the trans activist’s dogma they would “destroy your career”. Apply that across many issues.

Gutfeld and panel discuss how many people remained silent due to fear of being smeared, vilified, ostracized, and cancelled during outbreaks of bullying hysteria over past years- i.e. fearful to publicly challenge the Russia Collusion lie, Covid lies, Biden’s mental state, biological males in female sports, the climate crisis narrative, etc.

They discuss those who, contrary to Gladwell’s cowardice, had the courage to speak out and pay the cost of public backlash from bullying extremists. Gladwell admits that he knew better but remained silent out of fear. He was “cowed”.

“Gutfeld! 9/5/25 Greg Gutfeld Full End Show, Breaking News Today, September 5, 2025”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0o35tidvEZ8

More comments and links below on this issue of cowardice and courage in the face of threatening mobs. We continue to live through these “madness of crowds” episodes of varied forms- i.e. climate hysteria, Far-left Woke Progressive censorship and authoritarianism (arresting citizens for online comments that upset others), etc.

More on the courage and cowardice front:

“A void of moral courage at the very heart of the Liberal party (Canada): The fact that 80% of the Liberal caucus didn’t sign a letter denouncing antisemitism speaks volumes”, Avi Benlolo, Sept. 5, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/a-void-of-moral-courage-at-the-very-heart-of-the-liberal-party?itm_source=index

Quotes:

“Leadership in the fight against antisemitism is measured not by words, but by action. This week, Quebec MP Anthony Housefather and 31 of his Liberal colleagues signed a statement on “the deplorable rise of antisemitism in Canada.”

“It was a clear, moral and necessary acknowledgement of the hatred that is endangering Jewish-Canadians. The statement recognized that a Jewish woman was stabbed in Ottawa solely because she was Jewish; that synagogues, schools and Jewish-owned businesses are under threat; that monuments have been defaced; and that this reality has become chillingly normalized in our country.

“It drew a link between October 7 and the rising tide of antisemitism, while also pointing to statistics showing that the Jewish community, representing just one per cent of the Canadian population, is the target of 70 per cent of hate crimes. The MPs are correct: antisemitism is a spreading plague that demands action.

“And yet, the deafening silence in response spoke louder than the statement itself. Out of 169 Liberal members of Parliament, only 31 joined Housefather in signing the statement. Of those, at least five are Jewish….”

See also below- “Mendel continues the past historical development of the apocalyptic mythology that has since dominantly shaped Western narratives, consciousness, and civilization across the past two millennia.”

Here is a fascinating discussion of evolutionary psychology by two experts in the discipline:

“Dr. Geoffrey Miller- Evolutionary Psychology, Human Mating, and Academic Life (The Saad Truth- 1887), Gad Saad, Sept. 2, 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OguFPVCDzxI

These two touch on some very interesting ideas from evolutionary psychology that expose where Woke Progressivism has violated fundamental human nature in pursuit of unrealistic utopian visions. This has been evident in the Cracker Barrel and Budweiser false steps (“Go woke, go broke”) that cost those companies severely as they shifted toward woke ideals in their advertising, ideals that normal people react against due to natural human psychology.

Miller and Saad say that is the result of letting elite “empathy signalling” political views dominate advertising. The “educated” elites shaping the advertising, missed entirely what their customer base wanted in reality, as evolutionary psychology input could have warned them. You can tell women, for example, that they must embrace feminized versions of men, but you are violating basic human nature in doing that and it will fail, even with so-identified “liberal progressive” women. Romance novels will give you more insight into what all women naturally desire in men. What has been demonized as “toxic masculinity”.

Also, they offer some interesting comment on Thomas Sowell’s “unconstrained vision”, the idea of parents telling their children that they can become anything they desire. That is simply a “false hope” that can be very damaging to children who may then invest excessive time and resources in pursuit of some occupation or goal that they can never attain.

Aristotle is known for originating empirical science by observing actual nature to see what is happening and then making conclusions from that evidence. Climate cult alarmists have not learned how to do that yet. Not even the “leading expert” scientists.

Ideologically/politically shaped climate models, that grossly exaggerate the human contribution all out of touch with natural reality, take precedence over empirical evidence. Hence, the fraudulent apocalyptic narrative of “climate crisis” that has cost humanity trillions of wasted dollars and significantly damaged Western societies, harming the poorest people the most (i.e. needlessly inflated energy costs that spread inflation to the 6000 “fossil fuel derivative” products that our societies depend on).

“No evidence climate change has accelerated sea level rise, finds first global study of real world data: Drawing on 100 years of data, the authors found an average rise of just 1.5mm per year”, Michael Shellenberger, Sept. 2, 2025

https://www.public.news/p/no-evidence-climate-change-has-accelerated

Shellenberger opens:

“For over a quarter-century the world’s leading climate scientists and news media have warned that human-caused climate change has doubled the rate of sea level rise and is thus putting civilization in grave danger. “We will see at least four feet of sea level rise and possibly ten by the end of the century,” wrote The New York Times’ David Wallace-Wells in 2019. “The oceans we know won’t survive climate change,” claimed The Atlantic that same year. The author, Robinson Meyer, quoted estimates by Princeton University’s Michael Oppenheimer that sea levels would rise by more than 34 inches by 2100.”

He notes that those exaggerated claims have all been proven false by the first global study of “sea level rise data rather than on models extrapolating from assumptions.” The study is “A Global Perspective on Local Sea Level Changes,” by Hessel Voortman, a Dutch engineer, and Rob de Vos, a researcher.

These two researchers discovered that “The average rate of sea level rise in 2020 is (only) around 1.5 mm/year (15 cm per century),” and “This is significantly lower than the 3 to 4 mm/year often reported by climate scientists in scientific literature and the media.”

They conclude that, “Headlines about sea level rise have been catastrophic for decades.”

To assist understanding of why some exaggerate the threat of looming apocalyptic disaster (catastrophize natural events and rhythms in the world) add here sociologist David Altheide’s “Creating Fear: News and the construction of crisis”. Altheide notes that proclamations of catastrophe gains followers and income. And remember the totalitarian’s formula of “Fear=control”, so well expressed by H. L. Mencken:

“The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by an endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary”, In Defense of Women.

Shellenberger notes the same incentive in climate alarmism: “The same incentives behind climate alarmism were at work when it came to sea level rise. Journalists and scientists have an incentive to exaggerate the effects of climate change to attract attention, readers, and funding.”

He continues, “At the same time, it’s notable that the error when it came to sea level came from exaggerating its size, which is similar to the scientific exaggerations on other issues in recent years, including on atolls, glaciers, ice loss, and coral reefs.”

His conclusion: “The IPCC and the news media have become increasingly politicized and alarmist”. Welcome to apocalyptic exaggeration, alarmism, and hysteria, known formally in historical research as the phenomenon of “Madness of crowds”.

These from Taibbi. I strongly recommend subscribing to Taibbi’s Substack- “Racket News”. He and Walter Kirn do the excellent summary of major issues of our day on their “America This Week”.

On the ‘Ersatz Religion’ of Transhumanism: Interview with Dr. Aaron Kheriaty: One of the Covid-19 pandemic’s most suppressed voices speaks on the conflict between the transhumanist project and human nature”, Matt Taibbi, Sept. 2, 2025

https://www.racket.news/p/on-the-ersatz-religion-of-transhumanism

Quotes from this Taibbi article:

“Oxford’s Nick Bostrum described transhumanism as the rejection of the traditional idea that the “human condition” is static, and that science and technology may be embraced to welcome in a “dazzling landscape of radical possibilities, ranging from unlimited bliss to the extinction of intelligent life”… A precondition for any and all these beliefs, however, is the idea that human nature is neither fixed nor worth preserving…”

“Aaron Kheriaty: I’ve had an interest in transhumanism, I would say, for a few years, just philosophically on a low level. Entry-level forms of transhumanism basically involve questions about the use of medical technologies for so-called human enhancement. So, that’s a bioethics question…”

“Aaron Kheriaty: That’s right. If you take transhumanism far enough, you get to the point where essentially there is no such thing as a human nature or a healthy, well-working human body that would be normative. The idea is that we’re just raw biological material. We’re a blank slate that you can refashion or remake with whatever technologies we’re capable of developing…. what we have instead is raw biological material that can be hacked and upgraded and the hardware is potentially infinitely malleable…”

“The first philosopher in the Western tradition to deny that there was such a thing as human nature was Karl Marx… The foundation of Marx’s philosophy was a radical rejection of any form of dependence. And he thought basically that mankind as a whole was a blank slate that we could radically refashion, but we did that by refashioning society…”

“Look at any of the totalitarianisms of the 20th century. Not only did they fail to achieve their stated aims, they produced the exact opposite of what they aimed for. I worry that transhumanism would do the same thing. Not only would it fail to create superhumans or super happy humans, I worry that it would produce an increase in human misery.”

And this also from Taibbi:

The War on Humanity: The belief that humanity can be transcended, once a dream, is demanding acceptance as fact, with tragic consequences”, Matt Taibbi, Sept. 2, 2025

https://www.racket.news/p/the-war-on-humanity

Quotes from article:

“transhumanism arises from the groins of transgenderism…”

“… impieties to the transhumanist religion have risen to become arrestable offenses in an increasingly censorious West. Some of the stern new police tactics are pitched as responses to the increased threat of right-wing populism, but it seems more in reaction to the public’s refusal to accept doctrinal dictates…”

“If you’re like me (or comedian Louis C.K., below) and you wondered in the past about the outsized amount of ink and activist attention paid to transgender issues, you’ve probably by now realized the topic carries a political imperative beyond the rights of a small “marginalized” community…”

“When activists successfully lobbied Americans to accept gay rights, they stressed research that showed people are born with same-sex inclinations. The trans issue was presented differently. Activists demanded the general public revise its understanding of biology, even the idea that “male” and “female” exist (a form of disinformation called “sex essentialism,” they said).”

(End of Taibbi article quotes)

This Is What It’s Like to Spend Your Life in Prison | NYT Opinion”, The New York Times

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=chpgT_VTEjE

Men imprisoned for life without parole tell their stories of how they have changed and are no longer the young men who made destructive mistakes harming others. This video clip points to “Second Look” reforms for those lifers who have transformed themselves and have already served a major portion of their sentences. Many have made significant changes in their lives.

If people are concerned that they might harm others on release, if they are able to access the “Second Look” programs, the clip points out that of those released, less than 3% are rearrested and frequently for technicalities and not violent crimes.

One of the inmates asks- Where does the rehabilitation process end? Does it have a goal somewhere, sometime, that shows that it has succeeded and the person is safe to return to freedom and make a contribution to society?

Good points raised by these men. And of course, to balance this, there are the victim’s statements and concerns. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDxOF4MMic4

More from Arthur Mendel’s “Vision and Violence”

Mendel continues the past historical development of the apocalyptic mythology that has since dominantly shaped Western narratives, consciousness, and civilization across the past two millennia. He quotes varied Gospel verses that threaten violence through “unquenchable fire, eternal burning” as punishments for sinners.

He says, “Denunciation of the existing world and its sinners as too corrupt for repair and their condemnation to total destruction is the first principle of apocalyptic theory and practise. The second is an absolute certainty that his just retribution and accompanying world transmutation are imminent” (p.41, Vision and Violence).

“With the old world annihilated, all things would be made new again. Rebirth, a new creation, ex nihilo… the new creation would go far beyond mere social transformation- all the way back to Eden” (p.43).

He asks what force and who could make all this catastrophic upheaval happen?

“Only absolute certainty of deliverance for the pure and vengeance against those who had flourished in sin could inspire the ecstatic martyrdom and justify the sanctimonious cruelty that are the hallmarks of all apocalyptic upheavals.” He goes on to state that the necessary force to make all this happen was illustrated in the gospel accounts of miracles- “God and his Son can and will make all things new, novum ex nihilo (out of nothing)”, p.43.

Mendel then concludes this chapter on the development of the basic ideas of apocalypse, “The Apocalypse was now complete and ready to begin its long and violent career in our history. For, whether explicitly religious, as were the medieval and early modern messianic movements, or implicitly so, as were their secular revolutionary successors, all apocalyptic movements thereafter mirrored the original model. For all of them, the existing society is beyond repair, too corrupt for reforms and doomed to complete annihilation… the outcome has always been the exact opposite of that promised- not millennial liberation but authoritarian domination” (p. 44). Think- The outcomes of the apocalyptic crusades of Marxism, Nazism, and now environmental alarmism as in “climate crisis apocalyptic”.

Ongoing assaults on free speech/liberal democracy, Wendell Krossa

Jordan Peterson once asked his podcast audience what they wanted their life story to be, their legacy to their family. Would it be one of courage and paying the cost for speaking out against, for example, assaults on freedom of speech, or would their story be one of cowardice and fear of paying some cost, Wendell Krossa

This edition of Megyn Kelly’s podcast:

“Arrested for posts, Epstein victims speak, and sick Trump health reax, with Ungar-Sargon and Lukianoff”, Megyn Kelly, Sept. 3, 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9Y3bRLLUsE

The background to this podcast discussion relates to what others have also commented on- i.e. that a small minority of extremist activists (notably trans) have elevated their feelings as the dominant criterion for evaluating what is good and bad in our societies, what is to be considered righteous or evil, what should be permitted or made illegal, even criminalized. The dominant criterion that these extremist activists demand for all others is their personal feelings of upset, feeling uncomfortable, feeling offended, and outraged at the words, comments, even the jokes of disagreeing others.

There is no diversity, equality, or inclusion (DEI) allowed when their feelings are the dominant criterion for all others. These activists are angered and outraged that others disagree with their views and their minority outrage has cowed politicians, CEOs of major corporations, and mainstream media who love to virtue signal for moral status as defenders of these outraged few. Consequently, mainstream media have abandoned the defense of liberal democracy to become the propaganda arm for these tyrants.

No one in our liberal democracies, in general, deny the same equal rights and freedoms to such minority groups. They have won the battle for such diversity, equality and inclusion (note “equality”, not equity). But not satisfied with that win, activists among them have shifted to demanding that all others must view the world exactly as they do and use only the terms/words that they demand all should use. Or else.

Minority activists have shifted from earlier activism, to gain equal rights and freedoms, toward extremist stances that basically amount to “the hell with the rights and freedoms of all others”. They too often now take the position of “the formerly oppressed becoming the new oppressors”. Eye for eye discrimination as “justice”. There is no progress in human societies when that is the outcome. Look at Nelson Mandela courageously breaking such cycles by “setting aside his feelings of hatred” as he left prison (his words) to work for an inclusive South Africa. Illustration from his personal life- He included his former prison guards in his presidential security detail. That is a generous and great human spirit.

Extremist activists are unleashing a totalitarian spirit that has become an assault on the basic freedoms of all. They are actively undermining and deforming our liberal democracies. It is stunning how this totalitarian extremism, in all its varied expressions, has emerged to dominate now in Germany with banning of opposition parties and in the UK where comedians are arrested for what the ruling party claims is offensive speech. This is insanity and headed in a very dangerous direction for all.

Matt Taibbi below gives an example of the cowardice in media, in regard to these issues, as one well-known writer has admitted that he was cowed by the screaming bullies on the far-left Woke Progressive side of our societies.

Another example of cowardice in the face of more general left-wing bullying was John Cena dropping submissively to his knees to beg forgiveness from the CCP authoritarians in Beijing who tolerate no dissent on any issue. He mistakenly, he claimed, acknowledged that Taiwan was an independent country. He then gave us an unbelievable display of cringe cowardice in the face of totalitarian bullying. The Hollywood film industry has also repeatedly exhibited that same cowering cowardice in the face of Chinese threats over what they might portray in movies that will upset the CCP bullies. So also sports such as the NBA have chosen silence over defense of freedom when facing possible outrage from the same bullies.

Throughout our societies we hear more and more now of people who have been terrified into silence by bullying minorities. See the report below on Canadian university campuses where most students remain silent in the face of mobs that block access, vilify with smears, threaten the ruin of lives and careers, totalitarian minorities who protest and ban authentic “diversity, equality, and inclusion”.

A quote from that report below: “A tiny minority of threatening activists (0.4%) bully majorities into fearful silence.”

And this exhibits the real scandal of “collusion with the communist regimes in China/Russia”. A common McCarthyite smear that many Democrats have levelled against opponents over past years.

What about the collusion of cowing to the mobs on campuses and elsewhere that hate liberal democracy and are trying to replace it with authoritarian socialism? Mobs consisting of an interesting mixture of “anti-Semitics” and far-left Woke Progressives, among others, that share a common project to overthrow liberal democracy.

Moving on…

Kelly, like Taibbi, plays the comments of Malcolm Gladwell where he now admits that a few years back he was cowed into silence by trans activist bullying, and has now seen the error of his ways.

In all this we are watching the spirit of totalitarianism being unleashed in our liberal democracy societies in insidious ways under the disguise of protecting minorities/children from harm (online harm bills). While that concern is legitimate, these bills come (intentionally?) with unclear boundaries that permit far-left woke politicians to go after, silence, and outright ban opposition. That has happened in France and Germany. And now we see the ongoing arrest of citizens in the UK for online comments. As Kelly’s guest comments, we saw this perversion of common sense when the victims of the mass-rape scandal in Britain were threatened and silenced while the state and police went easy on the perpetrators.

Matt Taibbi on similar topics:

“The UK earns status as a censorship state: The arrest of Graham Linehan for his tweets is one of many examples that show the country should not be treated as a free one”, Greg Collard, Sept. 3, 2025

https://www.racket.news/p/the-uk-earns-status-as-a-censorship

See also this from Taibbi on his Substack site- Racket News.

“Malcolm Gladwell conquers Mt. Suck: What a world: Comedian Graham Linehan is arrested in England for telling truths Bestselling author Malcolm Gladwell was rewarded for concealing”, Matt Taibbi, Sept. 3, 2025

And this on some willing to now admit that they were “cowed” and remained silent.

Waking up from the Woke fog. Yes, as Cosh notes below, many went crazy but then the precursor was decades of climate hysteria madness, abandonment of basic science for irrational apocalyptic mythology, or better psychopathology that deforms human minds and personalities entirely, then spreads to entire societies. That myth (apocalyptic) has driven billions crazy for millennia now.

“Malcolm Gladwell awakens from the transgender fog: The bestselling author regrets not pushing back against those who insisted that trans-identifying males belong in female sport”, Colby Cosh, Sept. 4, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/colby-cosh-malcolm-gladwell-awakens-from-the-transgender-fog?itm_source=opinion

Cosh begins: “A question that is about to break like a tsunami over social media: wait, did Malcolm Gladwell really say that? On Tuesday, the renowned Ontarian journalist, podcaster and former youth track star appeared on the Real Science of Sport podcast, and you would have to say he immediately established a hell of a pace….”

Cosh says that Gladwell moderated a conference discussion with sports scientist Ross Tucker in 2022 on the “inclusion of transgender athletes in women’s athletic competitions”. He says that Tucker had argued that the inclusion of transgender athletes with “biological-male physical advantages” was fundamentally “incorrigible and incompatible with the entire concept of a women’s competition.”

Cosh continues, noting that the panel had been stacked against Tucker’s position and the audience reacted with “deathly silence” to his points but cheered the others arguing against Tucker. Gladwell knew what was happening, acknowledges that if that panel was replayed today it would run in exactly the opposite direction. Today, there “would be, I suspect, near-unanimity in the room that trans athletes have no place in the female category. I don’t think there’s any question.”

Gladwell remained silent during that 2022 panel and now states to Tucker, “I’m ashamed of my performance at that panel… because I share your position a hundred per cent, and I was cowed.”

Cosh adds, “Gladwell — who, remember, was a genuinely elite 1,500-metre and mile track competitor as a teenager — then spent about 10 minutes talking with Tucker about the plain preposterousness of allowing biological men and boys to compete in women’s and girls’ sport. He emphasized his own cowardice in a way that has already infuriated some commentators who upheld the sane position all along.”

Cosh notes Gladwell’s rethinking of his past cowardice as due to the “now-receding moral mania surrounding trans athletes.” He adds that Gladwell says, “I think in retrospect we will look back on the COVID period as a period of profound cultural destabilization. I think we all went crazy…. It was a crazy period! … And what we’ve done is, we’ve, in some sense, returned to normal.”

Cosh concludes: “Some critics will find “COVID drove everybody crazy” to be an insufficient or superficial excuse, despite the self-evident element of accuracy in it, and some of those people, of course, actually did stand up against a moral stampede while it was still in progress.”

My added comments- Some did speak out early on in the face of recently erupting “madness of crowds” episodes of hysteria (i.e. whether climate crisis lunacy, Covid insanity, or other issues) and these courageous spirits suffered greatly, being publicly vilified, censored, and banned from public forums and spaces, even losing jobs and careers. Now that the public tide has turned, it takes less courage to come out of the closet of fear and join the public shift to sanity.

A “pissed off” Gad Saad adds his input on the Solomon Asch experiment

Things Pissing Me Off – Malcom Gladwell, Coldplay, and Other Degenerates (THE SAAD TRUTH_1888)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pbjGnvzmXQs

“AI Overview

“The Solomon Asch conformity experiments, conducted in the 1950s, showed how powerfully social pressure can influence individuals, demonstrating that people are willing to give incorrect answers to conform to a group’s obviously wrong consensus. In the classic “line test,” participants would judge the length of lines alongside several confederates (actors) who were instructed to give wrong answers, leading a significant portion of the real participants to conform to the incorrect majority.’

And then- The National post on campus fear and silenced majorities:

Backed by too many “far-left woke progressive” professors (surveys have shown roughly 90%-plus of professorships are liberal/leftist) a tiny minority of threatening activists (0.4% in Canada) bully majorities into fearful silence. Where is inclusion, diversity, and equality in this? Is this training future generations to understand and defend a free and liberal society?

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/nearly-half-of-all-canadian-university-students-are-actively-hiding-their-real-beliefs-survey?itm_source=index

“Nearly half of all Canadian university students are actively hiding their real beliefs: survey. The survey by Aristotle Foundation also finds that students with conservative views now outnumber those with liberal views”, Tristan Hopper, Sept.3, 2025

And this on a once proud “worker’s party of Canada”, that has now become the party of woke extremists.

Exemplifying the same lunacy of “Go woke, go broke” that the Democratic Party in the US is following down to rejection by a majority of Americans, descending to low double-digit support numbers, so the NDP (New Democrat Party) in Canada has been on the same downward trajectory to oblivion.

There is a locked-in dogmatism exhibited by true believers in Woke. Note, for example, that refusing to acknowledge the majority rejection of Woke Progressive extremism, Kamala Harris’s VP choice, Tim Walz, has said recently, that they must double down on Woke Progressiveness (and get those tampons back in boy’s bathrooms).

“AI Overview:

“A “cis man” is a man whose gender identity aligns with the sex he was assigned at birth. The term “cis” comes from Latin and is a prefix meaning “on the same side,” used in contrast to “trans” (meaning “on the opposite side”). This term distinguishes cis men from trans men, who were assigned female at birth but identify as men.”

“The NDP is here to rescue us from ‘cis’ men: Identity obsessed rules for leadership race show the party has learned nothing”, Adam Pankratz, Sept. 3, 2025

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/adam-pankratz-the-ndp-is-here-to-rescue-us-from-cis-men?itm_source=index

Quotes from Pankratz article:

“The NDP have begun their leadership race and apparently wish to confirm to Canadians that they have learned absolutely nothing from their electoral flogging earlier this year. The language and rules for the campaign are emblematic of an organization so beholden to the deranged ideology of identity politics that even being reduced to seven seats in the House of Commons isn’t enough to change course. It is their apparent desire to make sure that there is no comeback from the abyss, no second chance, as they drive their own brand even further into the mud.”

Nominations for party leadership must be limited (not over 50%) from cis men and many must be from “equity-seeking groups… and racialized members, Indigenous members, members of the LGBTQIA2S+ community, and persons living with disabilities.”

Pankratz says the former party of the working class is now “definitively the party of identity politics and grievance culture” and the message is that they must be even more radical.

He says the current lunacy arrived with recent party leader Jagmeet Singh who degraded the formerly respected worker’s party by aligning with and supporting Justin Trudeau’s Liberals in minority power as they destroyed the country.

“The current NDP is a frail carcass of grievance, extremism and zealotry which bears no resemblance to its respectable past.”

My added comments on the above lunacy:

This minority unleashing of the totalitarianism impulse is why this site goes after the ideas driving this lunacy that undermine our hard fought for and won liberal democracies, none more important as driving forces than the religious themes that have been uncovered behind Marxism, Nazism, and are now evident as driving environmental alarmism- i.e. the “apocalyptic millennial” themes of Paul’s Christ myth that have most dominantly shaped Western narratives, both religious and secular. These themes have dominated human consciousness, emotions, motivations, and behaviors across two millennia and have resulted in mass-death/mass-harm to our societies.

As a guest interviewed by Matt Taibbi said regarding the emerging dominance of the anti-human “transhuman” movement (born out of the transgender crusade):

“Aaron Kheriaty: I think there is something there, but I would prioritize a change in ideas and a change in philosophical outlook as the primary driving force.”

The ideas/ideals/beliefs that we embrace in our worldviews powerfully shape all in our minds and lives.

And some interesting comment on DNA

Here (only 13 mins) is Stephen Meyer (PhD in philosophy of science) at his best on the discovery of coded information in DNA and the conclusion that coded information is a “mind product”, not the produce of blind, random material processes. This traces the Crick Watson discovery in 1953 and following discoveries. I am not with Meyer where he takes his conclusions to the Christian God, but with him when he leaves it at some transcendent Mind. He does better on that general conclusion.

In this, he shows the incredible complexity of cells and DNA’s role in directing material processes that build material things. His point is that the materialist explanation (that of “philosophical materialists”) does not explain what is actually going on. Chemical processes do not do what philosophical materialists want them to explain. They do not code information. Overall, “Chemistry does not move in a life-friendly direction”.

Meyer says that Darwin actually helped him sort out this “origin of life” question, and that it was assisted by Mind. He says that Darwin argued for reasoning from “the most likely cause of a given effect that we see today”, his point on “inference to the best explanation”. Meaning, we conclude a cause that best explains the thing in question. From that argument in Darwin, Meyer reasoned to “What is the cause today that produces digital information?” It can only be Mind or Intelligence that produces information in digital or alphabetic form. It always comes from a mind, not from a material process (certainly not an undirected, random material process).

“Why DNA points to a Mind behind the universe”, Stephen Meyer.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KEIfsQjVB14

This from Gutfeld: on the decline in liberal democracies as people assaulting freedom are “exploiting empathy”, letting people into our societies who hate liberal democracy, invade and take over.

“Greg Gutfeld show 9/4/25 Full End Show, Fox breaking news, Sept. 4, 2025”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CfMMKBwa0cU

Gutfeld comments on the fact that British police make up to 30 arrests a day (12,000 arrests a year) of people making online comments that cause “annoyance, inconvenience, and anxiety” for others who complain. This, while the grooming gangs that have mass-raped thousands of children are allowed to flourish. Police and politicians, says Gutfeld, turned a blind eye to the raping gangs of Muslim immigrants out of fear of being labelled “Islamophobic”. And instead, they went after those trying to expose that mass crime.

Gutfeld adds that you can rape women, but you can’t insult the rapist. He then notes a woman in Germany who was given a harsher sentence than a convicted rapist for calling the rapist a “disgraceful rapist pig”. Germany will also jail people for calling someone an “idiot”.

He comments on migrant riots and the recent Canadian home invasion incident where the home-owner was charged for defending himself against the intruder. He also played the video clip of Toronto police advising citizens to leave their car keys at the front door of their homes for thieves, in order to dissuade them from breaking into homes to find the keys.

Again, this all is so entirely stunningly crazy, especially coming from countries like Britain that birthed the Classic Liberal freedom that gave the West its liberal democracies.

Gutfeld makes the point that we do not just accept the decline of our liberal democracies but must fight back to preserve critical rights such as free speech. Kat Timpf adds that while generally the “slippery sliding slope” argument is overly used in relation to the decline of Europe, it is proving true that if you don’t act to prevent it, decline in rights and freedoms will happen.

She adds that we must, for example, defend the “hate speech” rights of others, not agreeing with their speech but with their right to say it. If we don’t, if we take that right away, then who decides what does or doesn’t count as hate speech? And that has been abused as the Twitter Files revealed, where one party used the intelligence agencies to silence the political speech of their political opponents. Rob Schneider adds that you end letting the most sensitive members determine what all others can say.

Schneider also made a good point that much comedy today is no longer funny because it coms from a place of hatred of the others being made fun of (i.e. Alex Baldwin’s Trump impersonation). Schneider uses the contrary example of Dana Carvey’s George Bush portrayal that came from a place of fun and respect, not hatred.

Black commentator Tyrus adds that Robert Downey’s portrayal of a fellow black brother in “Tropical Thunder” was the funniest thing he has watched because it was not from hate.

As Tyrus said, referring to a black comedian in white face who recently mocked NASCAR fans as rednecks, “We (blacks) did not want people portraying us with hatred in the past and we don’t want our side doing that to others now.”

Matt on the move toward increasing online censorship in European liberal democracies (“Online Safety Act” policies, or to fight “disinformation”) and the pressure on the US to follow that censorship and criminalization of speech. He notes the problem the First Amendment has posed for pro-censorship types- “Seeing John Kerry last fall talk to the WEF about the difficulty the First Amendment posed in “hammering [disinformation] out of existence” heightened worries. The one thing everyone in the “anti-disinformation” universe seemed to agree on is that the First Amendment was a unique pain in the ass of global enforcement.”

“What is the bigger threat to free speech, Europe, or Donald Trump’s America? Thoughts after a challenging discussion with Freddie Sayers of Britain’s Unherd”, Matt Taibbi, Sept. 5, 2025

https://www.racket.news/p/what-is-the-bigger-threat-to-free

Quotes from below:

“On Tuesday morning, a day after Father Ted writer and comedian Graham Linehan was arrested at Heathrow airport for three tweets deemed transphobic, I spoke with Freddie Sayers of the U.K.-based Unherd, in an interview released yesterday. For the unfamiliar, Unherd has been a stalwart, often lonely defender of free expression in a post-Brexit era that saw significant shifts in British attitudes. Freddie’s site responded to the Linehan story in characteristic fashion: “The Shameful Arrest of Graham Linehan.”…

“The BBC similarly wondered what Musk’s “curious fixation” was with Britain, noting that one of the 30-odd daily arrests in England ended in “a three-month jail sentence for a person who posted a meme along with the caption ‘let’s [expletive] riot’” last year. British state media could equally have cited a case of 40-year-old David Wootton, convicted for going to a Halloween party dressed as suicide bomber Salman Abedi, or the Derbyshire student who called someone a “Polish twat,” or the Bedfordshire resident arrested for saying being “pansexual” was “not a thing,” or dozens of other preposterous cases.

“There haven’t been releases of scary surveillance video of “kidnapped” Halloween partiers, which makes one wonder why the American press is willing to embrace Khalil as a speech martyr but not Julian Assange or Linehan or the retired German army sergeant arrested for calling Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck a Schwachkopf, which apparently translates as “dunderhead” or “moron.”

“In the U.K., these dumb arrests are inevitable because the law under which Linehan was detained, for instance, is based on whether or not the complainant felt “alarm” or “abuse.” Like many American campus speech codes, it’s a harm standard where injury doesn’t have to be proven, just asserted. Instituting a criminal law in the U.S. using that concept would be a radical step for us, but less so in Europe, which has been moving in that direction for a while.”

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Grok’s take on this site, and more probing of the ideas that evil uses to masquerade as good.

More below on the human shift from “gradualism” as the approach to improving life and society (i.e. the democratic processes of liberal democracy), to the approach of “instantaneous violent transformation” through destructive revolution as we have seen in Marxist/socialist crusades. And more in relation to Mendel’s comments on human agency- People doing the work of the gods, notably by initiating apocalyptic violence in the hope that God or some Savior will descend to finish the work of apocalyptic millennialism. These beliefs motivated the ISIS eruption of violence in Syria in 2014. As the military guy warned, we can crush these outbreaks with force but they will continue to erupt until we go after the ideas that fuel them. That is a project of this site.

And further comment below illustrating the common belief in “salvation through destruction”, the essential theme of apocalyptic millennial mythology that has driven the “profoundly religious” crusades of Marxism, Nazism, and now drives environmental alarmism in its latest iteration- “climate crisis apocalyptic”.

Lest visitors assume the author is an outsider throwing stones (all this pointing out of the dark/dangerous side of fundamental religious themes):

I am a former Evangelical Christian who, as a slow learner over past decades, has come to understand that the real battle of good against evil takes place inside each of us (Solzhenitsyn’s good point).

The real battle, against the real enemy/monster in life, is the intensely personal “hero’s quest” struggle of our human self and spirit against our animal inheritance, the animal evident in our “evil triad” impulses to (1) tribalism (“us versus them” thinking that denies the essential oneness of humanity), (2) domination (our tendency to moral superiority and devaluation of differing others, with consequent effort to dominate and control the “evil” other “for their good”), and (3) the punitive treatment of differing others (denying imperfect, failing others the same mercy that we wish for ourselves, leaning into “justice” as severely punitive, not restorative).

I asked Grok a curiosity question: Grok could you summarize the points and arguments that Wendell Krossa presents online (i.e. at wendellkrossa.com).

(Note the highlighted/bolded words, phrases, and sentences/paragraphs, aside from Grok’s titles, are my revisions/additions to Grok’s summarizing comments below.)

Grok responded:

Overview of Wendell Krossa’s Key Themes and Philosophies

Wendell Krossa’s website (wendellkrossa.com) features a series of blog posts and essays that critically examine religious and ideological narratives, emphasizing their psychological and societal impacts. His work draws on historical, psychological, and philosophical sources to advocate for a humanist perspective rooted in unconditional love and gradual societal improvement. Recurring topics include the deformation of human personality by “threat theology,” the contrast between the teachings of Historical Jesus and Paul’s Christ myth, critiques of environmental alarmism, and defenses of liberal democracy against totalitarian impulses. He often references thinkers like Thomas Jefferson, Leo Tolstoy, Julian Simon, and psychologists such as Harold Ellens and Zenon Lotufo to support his views.

(Along with many other sources such as the research of historians Arthur Herman, Richard Landes, Arthur Mendel, David Redles, etc. And sites that post research of leading climate scientists like Richard Lindzen, William Happer, etc.- at for example, “co2coalition.org”, “Wattsupwiththat.com”, and others.)

Central Arguments and Points

1. Critique of Apocalyptic Mythology and Millennialism:

o Krossa argues that apocalyptic narratives— prevalent in both religious (e.g., Christianity, Islam) and secular ideologies (e.g., Marxism, Nazism, climate alarmism)— instill fear, anxiety, shame, guilt, despair, and nihilism, ultimately driving violence and mass-death movements. These ideas stem from ancient roots like Zoroastrian dualism and promote a “salvation through destruction” framework, where perceived enemies must be purged to make room for the installation of utopia.

o He traces their historical development, noting how they deform the “hero’s quest” by externalizing inner struggles against animal impulses (e.g., tribalism, domination) into battles against “evil” others, as warned by figures like Solzhenitsyn (i.e. The real battle of ‘good against evil’ is not the outer struggle of class against class but an inner battle of our better human impulses against our inherited animal impulses to tribalism, domination of others, and punitive destruction of “enemies”).

o Apocalyptic thinking distorts reality by emphasizing decline and imminent collapse, ignoring evidence of human progress and improvement over time.

2. Contrast Between Historical Jesus and Paul’s Christ Myth:

o A core argument is that the “Historical Jesus” (based on Q Wisdom Sayings in Matthew and Luke) presented a revolutionary theology of a non-retaliatory, unconditionally loving God, who rejected punitive justice, blood sacrifice, and domination in favor of restorative justice, universal inclusion, and “love your enemies.”

o In contrast, Paul’s Christ myth reverts to primitive themes of an angry deity demanding atonement, embedding apocalyptic elements that have dominated Western consciousness for two millennia and validated violence.

o Krossa views Jesus’ message as a “diamond” buried by Paul (Thomas Jefferson and Leo Tolstoy’s term), aligning with Near-Death Experiences (NDEs) that describe God as inexpressible unconditional love, inseparable from the human spirit.

3. The “Evil Triad” and Bad Religious Ideas:

o Krossa identifies an “evil triad” of tribalism (true believers vs. damned unbelievers), domination (submission to deities/religious authorities), and punitive destruction as inherited animal impulses incited and validated by bad religious ideas.

o These ideas, common across Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, incite bad behavior by appealing to ultimate authorities (ultimate religious ideals), leading to historical atrocities. He calls for responsibility in addressing their damage and promotes unconditional forgiveness over retribution.

4. Environmental and Anti-Humanism Critiques:

o He challenges environmental alarmism as a secular apocalyptic crusade, driven by panic-mongering and failed predictions, which demands destructive policies like decarbonization while ignoring CO2’s benefits for life and vegetation.

o Krossa counters anti-humanist myths of human fallenness and degeneration, arguing that humanity has improved life through creativity and compassion, not ruined an original paradise. He cites declining heatwave deaths and the greater risks from cold as evidence against alarmist claims (among many other facts presented by atmospheric physicists like Richard Lindzen and William Happer on, for example, the now “saturated” warming influence of CO2).

5. Defense of Liberal Democracy and Gradualism:

o Krossa advocates for gradual improvement via liberal democracy, which protects individual freedoms and fosters cooperative democratic problem-solving, as opposed to violent, instantaneous transformations in the apocalyptic ideologies of Marxism and environmental alarmism.

o He critiques totalitarian impulses in modern contexts, such as government overreach, censorship, and Woke Progressivism in countries like Canada, Brazil, and Germany, linking them to domination themes and he urges a return to Classic Liberal principles of liberal democracies.

6. Spiritual and Humanist Alternatives:

o Emphasizing unconditional love as the “cohering center” of narratives, Krossa promotes serving others over subservience, drawing from Jesus’ parables (e.g., Prodigal Father, vineyard owner) and NDEs to affirm a non-religious, humane view of reality.

o He argues that beliefs shape behavior, with “sick gods” (punitive deities) making people sick, while unconditional perspectives orient toward humane ideals and counter pathologies like depression.

Major Posts and Essays

Krossa’s content is primarily in uncategorized blog posts, often engaging with AI like Grok for dialogue. Key examples include:

• Threat Theology Deforms Human Personality: Explores how apocalyptic theology incites violence, contrasting Jesus’ non-retaliatory love with Paul’s Christ myth that affirms retaliatory vengeance and apocalyptic destruction of unbelievers and advocating gradualism versus the “instantaneous violent purification” of the society-destroying revolutions that we have seen repeatedly from Marxism, and now see unfolding in the climate alarmism crusade with its Net Zero decarbonization.

• “Me and Research Assistant Grok on ‘Bad Religious Ideas’”: Examines root causes of violence in persistent myths like original paradise and apocalyptic destruction across religious and secular narratives.

• Plato’s Contribution to Bad Theology: Critiques Plato’s influence on depreciating the material world, linking it to Paul’s theology. Also, Plato’s affirmation of enlightened elites- i.e. “Philosopher Kings”- dominating commoners, a theme Paul re-affirms in his reframing, and consequent profound distortion, of the anti-domination Jesus (“Do not lord over others but instead serve others”) as “Lord Jesus” who exercises eternal “rod of iron” domination over all.

• NDEs Affirm Historical Jesus: Uses NDEs to support unconditional love, critiquing climate alarmism and totalitarian trends.

Overall, Krossa’s work pushes for rethinking inherited myths to foster a more positive, evidence-based view of humanity and the world, rejecting fear-driven narratives in favor of unconditional humanism. (But not some version of “unconditional humanism” that shifts toward the irresponsibility of dogmatic pacifism in the face of violence/evil as evident now in “de-carceration of violent offenders, no-cash bail, decriminalization of violent offenses”, etc. I understand such policy responses as having more to do with the “virtue-signaling for social status of moral superiority”, a form of “suicidal empathy” that favors the feelings and rights of offenders over victims.

The priority responsibility of any form of justice, and the most fundamental of government responsibilities, is to protect innocent people from violence. The emphasis on “unconditional humanism” is about aiming for the highest of human ideals that show us how to maintain our own humanity in the face of evil by treating all offenders/enemies humanely, while holding them fully responsible for their behavior, as in some of the better restorative justice initiatives.)

Note comments two sections below from Arthur Mendel’s “Vision and Violence”- How people over past millennia shifted from engaging “gradualism” to improve life and attain the “good society”, making the shift to embrace “violent instantaneous purification” to attain the immediate installation of some utopian state (i.e. embracing the core narrative theme of “salvation through destruction”), Wendell Krossa

The shift unfolded (traced, for example, below by Arthur Mendel), beginning in ancient Judaism and then progressing into its ultimate expression in Paul’s Christ myth, the violent apocalyptic destroyer as portrayed in Paul’s letters to the Thessalonians, or John’s Revelation. This hyper-iconic myth of apocalyptic destruction, as necessary to purge the old and clear the way for the new, has dominated Western narratives and consciousness for two millennia.

Paul’s Christ has been a critical factor in re-affirming the primitive archetypes of human subconscious that influence subsequent generations to endlessly embrace new narratives of apocalyptic millennialism, in both religious and secular/ideological versions.

The presence of primitive religious themes driving apocalyptic millennial destruction in contemporary “secular” crusades (i.e. Marxism, environmental alarmism) has been traced and outlined by historians like Arthur Herman (“The Idea of Decline in Western History”), Richard Landes (“Heaven On Earth: The Varieties of the Millennial Experience”), Arthur Mendel (“Vision and Violence”), and David Redles (“Hitler’s Millennial Reich: Apocalyptic belief and the Search for Salvation”).

Most notably, this primitive theme of salvation through violent destruction, through immediate purging of some “evil enemy”, through destroying the imagined existing corrupted society, or through purging some other designated threat to life (i.e. CO2, fossil fuels), and the related demand for immediately installed salvation/utopia, this profoundly destructive theme of salvation through violent destruction has found expression in the varied iterations of Marxist collectivism, including its latest version in Far-left Woke Progressivism now loosely aligned (in a “strange bedfellows” cooperation) with Islamicist extremists, both seeking to overthrow Western liberal democracies. The older Marxist versions also continue to shape crusades like Chinese Communism, though, as Grok notes, in a more gradualist “long march through Western institutions”.

The outcomes of this deeply rooted psychopathology of salvation through destruction has been the mass-death crusades of last century, apocalyptic millennial crusades that are continuing in this century- whether apocalyptic climate crisis hysteria, neo-collectivism of Woke Progressivism, and never-dying Islamist extremism.

We have long had the proper response/alternative to salvation by destruction, a response that affirms the gradualism of liberal democracy/democratic liberalism where all citizens have protected rights and freedoms, equally. Liberal democracy is the embodiment of Classic Liberal principles, systems of common law, and representative institutions.

The counter response (to salvation by destruction) of a Palestinian wisdom sage:

The potent response of Historical Jesus, to the long history of seeking salvation through destruction, went directly to the most fundamental root idea- i.e. the nature of the ultimate reality that functions as the cohering center of human narratives, whether religious or secular/ideological. I am referring to the wisdom sayings insight of the Historical Jesus on theology, his insight that has been rejected and profoundly distorted and buried in Paul’s Christ myth.

Jesus had earlier (two decades before Paul’s construction of the Christ myth) rejected the embodiment of “violent destruction” in humanity’s ultimate ideal and authority- deity.

Jesus had stated that, to the contrary, there was no such God advocating violent destruction but there was only love, stunningly inexpressible no conditions love, at the core of reality. His statement of that “stunning new theology” was made in the “Q Wisdom Sayings” message that has been isolated by scholars/historians/theologians involved in the now centuries-long “Search for Historical Jesus”.

The outcome of this search is the general recognition that Historical Jesus is someone entirely opposite to the distortion of him in Paul’s Christ, and his new religion of Christ-ianity.

The historical lines of descent have fed outcomes of entirely contrary offspring narratives. One has fed into the line that descends to liberal democracy, and the other has fed into the line that descends to elite domination and the totalitarianism of modern collectivism. Historians like Arthur Herman have helped in tracing the descent of such ideas in “The Cave and the Light: Plato versus Aristotle, and the struggle for the soul of Western civilization”.

Bob Brinsmead adds valuable information on the development of Paul’s Christ myth in early Christianity as a profound deformation of Jesus and his message (i.e. Greek Hellenism shaping Paul’s Christ myth).

Brinsmead expands on these arguments with his two essays:

“The Historical Jesus: What the Scholars are Saying”

https://bobbrinsmead.com/the-historical-jesus-what-the-scholars-are-saying/

“The Doctrine of Christ and the Triumph of Hellenism”

https://bobbrinsmead.com/the-doctrine-of-christ-and-the-triump-of-hellenism/

Understanding these ideas/themes/beliefs that shape our narratives is critical because the eventual outcomes are either hugely beneficial (liberal democracy) or devastatingly destructive (Marxist collectivism or theocratic totalitarianism as in Islamicist extremism). This has to do with how archetypal ideas influence human thought, emotion, motivation, and response/behavior. The “behaviors based on similar validating beliefs”, a coupling that emerged from early human consciousness and the human impulse for meaning and purpose. The result- the history of human mythologies, religions, secular ideologies, science, etc.

The egregious shame, in relation to the psychopathologies above, is that we have had the alternative of Historical Jesus for 2 millennia. It is now highly irresponsible to continue ignoring the impact that the primitive ideas, still protected in our major religious traditions, have had on modern narratives, consciousness, and life. As the military guy said, you can crush the eruptions of ISIS-like violence with military force, but such eruptions will continue until you go after the core ideas that fuel them. Unfortunately, many affiliated with the great religious traditions refuse to go after the core ideas/features that incite and validate so much violence (i.e. the violent God at the center), preferring to tinker around the periphery of their traditions with minor reformism efforts.

Hence, the “diamonds” of Historical Jesus remain buried in the “dung” (Thomas Jefferson’s term) of Paul’s deforming/distorting Christology.

Insert: This site argues that the core themes of all the major world religions and their secular ideological offspring are fundamentally the same. See the list of bad ideas in sections below:

“The complex of “bad religious ideas” that have darkened and enslaved human minds from the beginning”

Note: The origins of the Jesus stunning new theology originate further back in the statement of the Old Testament prophets who claimed that God did not want sacrifice. There were beginning to challenge the root psychopathology behind the sacrifice industry- i.e. the primitive mythologies of angry God demanding the violent murder of innocent victims (human and animal sacrifices) as necessary for appeasement and salvation (i.e. the myth of kill the right people as necessary to save yourself and attain a better future). Such barbaric myths are at the heart of the belief in “salvation through destruction”, achieving a utopian future through violent revolution and the destruction of contemporary societies that exist.

However, the prophets did not make the full break into daylight on these themes. They did not get to full understanding of the profoundly unconditional nature of deity and left distorting features in the larger context- i.e. deity continuing the tribal exclusion of unbelievers/enemies, divine domination, ultimate judgment, etc. It took the Jesus full breakthrough on unconditional God to get it all finally right- i.e. his core statement that there must be “no more eye for eye retaliation, but instead- ‘Love your enemies because God does’. How so? God does not retaliate but loves God’s enemies by generously giving sun and rain (the two critical elements to survival in agrarian society) to all alike, to both good and bad people.” Universal forgiveness and inclusion of all. Unlimited mercy and generosity toward all, even enemies.

Further to the other comment by Mendel below on the origins of the shift from “gradualism” in societal progress, to “instantaneous violent transformation”: Wendell Krossa

As Mendel noted, in early Hebrew religion there was the strain of myth that God initiated the creation of the world and people were then subsequently created and assigned the job of finishing God’s work of creation.

People were to work at improving themselves and all life in order to eventually achieve the aim of “good society”. People were to do the work of God in caring for the world, to gradually improve the world through struggle with obstacles. Humanity was to gradually learn to use faculties like their developing and evolving reason to solve problems, to learn to cooperate to make life better for all.

The theme of human agency on behalf of God continued in the later shift to belief in the sudden violent transformation of life and society. Whereas in the past, God had intervened (suddenly, violently) at times to punish enemies or to punish backsliding Jews, so in the shift to “instantaneous violent transformation” views, it was up to the agents of God, people, to now do the destroying work of God against enemies, to abruptly change society.

We saw this element of human agency, in place of God intervening, in the ISIS eruption in Syria (2014) where ISIS fanatics believed that they had to act as the agents of God to destroy the old society and bring in the new kingdom of their God. They had to spark the apocalyptic destruction by acting to initiate the killing of God’s enemies- the infidels. They had to begin the destruction of the old corrupted, evil system and then God would descend, or the Mahdi would come, and finish the work they started. God would intervene to install the good society, the utopian Caliphate.

This type of thinking that people are the assigned agents of God, to work on behalf of God, is part of the larger strain of primitive mythology that humanity was “created to serve the gods, to do the work of the gods, to feed the gods.” To be the agents, the representatives of the gods. None have deformed this idea more than priesthoods and self-proclaimed religious authorities affirming the core myths of “salvation through apocalyptic destruction”, myths that continue to dominate Christianity, Jewish apocalyptic, and Islam.

Notes on previous topics:

Further comment illustrating the belief in “salvation through destruction” (previously outlined by Arthur Mendel in sections below). More probing of evil that masquerades as good, that frames itself as heroism in a great battle of good against differing others as evil enemies that must be exterminated in order to clear the way to install one’s alternative “good society” (i.e. some version of utopian millennial paradise).

Harold Ellens described the self-delusion involved in how evil disguises itself, presents itself, as goodness:

“There is in Western culture a psychological archetype, a metaphor that has to do with the image of a violent and wrathful God (see Romans, Revelation). Crystallized in Anselm’s juridical atonement theory, this image represents God sufficiently disturbed by the sinfulness of humanity that God had only two options: destroy us or substitute a sacrifice to pay for our sins. He did the latter. He killed Christ.

“Ellens goes on by stating that the crucifixion, a hugely violent act of infanticide or child sacrifice, has been disguised by Christian conservative theologians as a ‘remarkable act of grace’. Such a metaphor of an angry God, who cannot forgive unless appeased by a bloody sacrifice, has been ‘right at the center of the Master Story of the Western world for the last 2,000 years. And the unavoidable consequence for the human mind is a strong tendency to use violence’.

“’With that kind of metaphor at our center, and associated with the essential behavior of God, how could we possibly hold, in the deep structure of our unconscious motivations, any other notion of ultimate solutions to ultimate questions or crises than violence- human solutions that are equivalent to God’s kind of violence’…” (End of Ellens quotes).

And this from the apocalyptic millennial scholars/historians who have done impressive homework on the religious ideas that drove Marxism, Nazism, and now drive environmental alarmism in its latest “madness of crowds” eruption- the “climate crisis” hysteria, making it, along with Marxism and Nazism, a “profoundly religious crusade”.

First, some paraphrased comment on points in David Redles’ “Hitler’s Millennial Reich: Apocalyptic belief and the search for salvation”:

Hitler, his Nazi colleagues, and regular Germans, repeatedly voiced their belief in salvation through destruction, the view of “death and rebirth” in the life of a society. They understood that Germany was facing a historically unique and unprecedented “turning point” that would first need to descend into apocalyptic destruction before becoming a form of millennial salvation. It would be a “death of one age and a rebirth into a new age… out of the collapse of civilization there is rebirth (and this) is a significant and recurrent element of Nazi millennialism. For many Nazis, the death of their world necessitated the birth of a new world. According to Hitler, it was the Nazis’ mission to help finish off the dying old world so that the new age could be born”, p. 47.

A friend of Hitler said that the Nazi leadership had to seize the mission where there would be “overthrow, demolition, destruction by force”, p. 48.

Redles further notes that historians misunderstood Hitler’s statements that the world was ending and that he and the Nazis must rejuvenate the world by causing unrest. It was not nihilism but “the central point that Hitler… saw destruction as potentially regenerative, hastening the birth of the millennial Third Reich”, p. 48.

The theme of salvation through destruction was also applied by Nazis to personal death and rebirth as in “a psychological transformation that occurs when a new construction of reality replaces one that has collapsed”. Nazi propagandist, Goebbels, explained it thus, “Distress is the path to happiness. Disintegration and dissolution do not mean perishing but rather ascension and opening”, p. 49. Others added that “in disaster the seed of the coming redemption is contained, and in death the seed of the coming life”.

Note the Nazi appeal to religious imagery in their defense and explanation of apocalyptic destruction as necessary to prepare the way for the introduction of the millennial paradise.

Nazis go on to present themselves as heroic warriors in a great battle to bring forth the New Age of the Third Reich and that they are affirmed in their battles by supernatural Providence and led by the Messianic Hitler.

Salvation through destruction is in the same religious vein of thought as “suffering is redemptive”. Arthur Mendel notes this theme in ideas like “martyrdom is victory”, the birth of a spiritual self is through assault on the physical self. Or suffering as payment for sin, suffering achieves the redemption/regaining of one’s former innocence and divine blessing. He adds, “And since the harsher the suffering the sooner the salvation, the worse became the better”, (p. 37, Vision and Violence).

Mendel acknowledges that the Christian bible has been a source of solace and hope for people. But, he says, there is another side to the bible that has contributed to apocalyptic violence. “It was through Christianity that the Apocalypse became a part of our culture”, with its emphasis on suffering to purify the world and necessary to attain utopian goals. He points out the biblical message that the coming of the kingdom of God demands “the liquidation of humanity and the destruction of the world”.

He emphasizes the Christian influence on modern era mass-death crusades like Marxism, Nazism, and environmental alarmism, “The initial religious model of apocalyptic transmutation became the pattern and inspiration for the later secular-revolutionary versions… The potential for such violence inherent in the original vision is most apparent in Revelation. Virtually the whole of that text is an account of the violence, devastation, suffering, and death necessary to purge the world and clear the way for the pure and perfect Kingdom”, p. 38-39.

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Threat theology deforms human personality, drives people crazy, even to acts of violence

Further below- Threat theology, as in apocalyptic mythology, deforms human personality with (1) fear, (2) anxiety, (3) shame, (4) guilt (i.e. ‘bad to the bone’ people blamed for causing the decline of life toward apocalyptic ending, God angry at humanity for ruining paradise), (5) despair (catastrophe looming as in climate change alarmism, the end of life imminent so why have children, why grow up into a doomed world), (6) depression, (7) nihilism, and (8) violence.

The apocalyptic theology of an angry deity who threatens to violently end the world, dominates world religions and secular ideologies. And we wonder why it drives so many people crazy, even to committing horrific acts of nihilistic violence?

Also below- The impact of pathological ideas like “salvation through destruction, achieving a better world by killing the right people”.

Notes: Many are questioning what happened with the shooting in Minneapolis, Minnesota where a crazed man fired on a group of praying children in a Catholic church. People are asking- What motivated that man? Others below comment on meta-narrative themes promoted in public and the impacts on fringe people (e.g. the Megyn Kelly interview of Matt Walsh).

And comment on the domination impulse that drove the creation of apocalyptic mythology. The earliest elites constructed the “Fear=control” formula still used today by wannabe totalitarians.

The varied strains in developing apocalyptic mythology, Wendell Krossa

“Instantaneous transformation/purification”: The historical development of one of history’s most dangerous and destructive ideas- i.e. the apocalyptic myth that continues to dominate public meta-narratives, both religious and secular. This mythical fallacy continues to incite and validate violence today. It drove Marxist revolutions, Nazi Holocaust insanity, and now fuels the climate alarmism crusade to radically overturn and eliminate our fossil-fueled civilization. And its splattered all over far-left Woke Progressivism. It also deforms major strains of narrative beliefs on the conservative right.

Arthur Mendel opens his book “Vision and Violence” with some comment on the state of the world today (i.e. technological advances making mass-violence a greater threat). He points to the dangerous influence of apocalyptic in this context, especially its feature of “violent social transmutation” as the strategy for purging the existing “evil society” and achieving the “good society” (the utopian element). Apocalyptic promotes “salvation through mass-death destruction”. Again, we saw that (and still see it) played out in recent Marxist revolutions (note the “recent” Venezuela), and in the Nazi holocaust.

Salvation through destruction is now pushed in “climate crisis apocalyptic”. Apocalyptic advocates the destruction of what exists, the “corrupted evil society”, in order to open the way for the purified new society, the collectivist utopia. In its environmentalist version it promotes the purging of “evil fossil fuel-based” society in order to achieve transmutation/transformation into the good society of Green energy.

Mendel says, “As for the existing evil society and its sinful oppressors, they would be justly punished in the catastrophic destruction needed to sweep away the old and make room for the new… emphasis on the terrible violence that will accomplish the miraculous transmutation.”

This from the ‘Introduction’ to Mendel’s “Vision and Violence”:

“The prophecy of universal devastation…. Tens of thousands of nuclear warheads controlled by leaders still strongly influenced by two of the most powerful apocalyptic movements in history- Christianity and Bolshevism- make that prophecy disturbingly realistic, especially given the current worldwide revival of fundamentalism.”

“Violent social transmutation, of the kind that characterized late medieval religious millennial upheavals and modern secular ideological revolutions, is the strategy of those who are committed to a swift and total realization of the ideal (of achieving the “good society”) and who are not constrained by doubts about the maximalist ends and means”, (End of Mendel quotes).

Adding to the destructive influence of apocalyptic in Christianity and Marxism, is the same apocalyptic strain in Islam and the belief of a significant minority there that if they incite the final Armageddon battle against their evil enemies then their God (and/or the Mahda) will descend to finish the destruction for them and then install their “millennial utopia” (the Caliphate) across the Earth. This vision drove the ISIS eruption of violence in Syria (2014) and it still simmers throughout extremist factions of Islam (the 15% approving/affirming violent jihad), awaiting the next opportunity to erupt again. The same old “Salvation through destruction”.

The same apocalyptic mythology shapes environmental alarmism and its belief that the present industrial/technological civilization, and its material consumers, is the great evil enemy that must be purged from the world by “violent social transmutation” in order to achieve the good society- the millennial vision and hope.

Far-left Woke Progressivism (with its DEI “Woke Racism”, joined with “climate crisis” apocalyptic) is just another gussied up front for the older Marxist version of this basic belief system.

Here below is an outline of Mendel tracing out the historical development of apocalyptic in the Judeo-Christian tradition. He presents the varied themes that contributed differing features to the final potently destructive version of this mythology. Mendel’s unique contribution is revealing the shift in ancient Hebrew religion from a worldview of this planet as our home to denigrating this world as too corrupted and in need of either abandonment or radical violent renewal/renovation.

The original Hebrews were not concerned with some spiritual realm, but were focused on living here in this material world and improving life in this world, gradually working to achieve the good society of peace, justice, freedom material well being. All by “gradualism”- the gradual evolving struggle of humanity to improve this life and world.

Mendel then shows how the Jews shifted away from that original worldview to, along with the Greeks/Hellenists, despising this world as corrupted, evil, and to be abandoned for a more perfect spiritual world, outside of this world.

Mendel notes the Israelites tried to maintain their original concern for life in this material world, initially not embracing the Hellenistic and Gnostic emphasis on full rejection of this world as too corrupted and hence needing to be abandoned for otherworldly existence in some perfect realm.

The Hebrew belief was then adjusted further across subsequent history, shifting, with input from Hellenism and Gnosticism, to a view of immediate violent transformation of life as necessary to attain a utopian society, but in this physical world. This was the rejection of former “gradualism” for violent revolutionary transformation of society (Mendel uses the term- “transmutation”). It was a shift that viewed progress to the good society through instantaneous purification, through instantaneous coercive and violent purging that would enable the attainment of perfection now. It was a rejection of democratic gradualism, and it revealed the impatience with the slow processes of daily mundane and ordinary struggle to improve oneself and society. It was the impatient demand for perfection right now, for utopia. An impossible desire to fulfill.

How the shift from gradualism to “violent instantaneous purification” unfolded:

Mendel begins his tracing of the shift from gradualism to violent transmutation noting the original Old Testament view that humanity was created and assigned to live in this world and to improve themselves gradually over time, to “sufficiently control the ‘evil inclinations’ in human nature (in order) to establish the good society of peace, freedom, justice, and material well-being”. Progress toward a good society was focused here on Earth, (p.11).

The Hebrews believed that God gave such things as laws on ethics to help humanity achieve the goal of a good society. And the harsher elements of life, obstacles, were viewed as necessary for people to labor against as part of the gradual development toward something better. The achievement of a good society was to be by gradual evolution, to struggle against suffering, to go on an adventure of attaining dominion of the world by gradual refinement of things like reason. The project in this world was to carry on and complete the work of God’s creation, to engage the long-term process of “moral repair” in this material/physical world.

“Such, in essence, is the Hebrew bible’s gradualist project and its assumptions. Made in the image of God, man has freedom, reason, and conscience to undertake the repair and completion of the world”, to attain the good society (p.17). “It was assumed the realization of these ideals lay in the future and could only be achieved slowly…. There was no role for apocalyptic-revolutionary violence in this vision” (p.18).

Mendel traces other developing features of apocalyptic in the Old Testament, noting for example:

“The phrase ‘Day of the Lord’ would be used to mean what it would later mean in the Apocalypse, a time- perhaps today- when God chose to destroy the sinner and reward the saved remnant as compensation for their unjust suffering. With this, we are already well on our way to one of the distinguishing features of religious and secular apocalyptic movements: the radical division between the sinners and the saved, with the saved assigned the duty to execute the judgment of God… against the sinners” (p.23).

Add here the element of God sometimes, though still in the process of historical gradualism, intervening with horrible judgments to punish the oppressors of the Israelites, or to punish the backsliding Israelites themselves.

Mendel is outlining the history of developing features in human belief systems that reveal the shift away from the original Jewish gradualist vision, of humans who are slowly improving life as they seek to achieve a better future society, and now shifting toward a vision of immediate divine intervention to instantaneously transform life from a present corrupted state, to instantly installed utopian perfection. This shift in thinking will eventually embrace the hope in a violent revolution to purge the existing corrupt society in order to open the way to instantaneously install the new.

He adds other details on the Greek and Hebrew shift away from viewing this world as home where early people held no interest in another metaphysical world. That view was eventually challenged and rejected due to the experience of decline in Greek culture and society where “This world was no longer a pleasant home and the search for another begins”. This becomes clear in the philosophy of Plato who separates the material world from a transcendent world of “pure, timeless, immaterial, unchanging perfection… a world of divine spirit, mind, Idea, Ideal, Light…the authentic Reality”.

In contrast, while here in this world, Plato taught that we are imprisoned in our bodies and absent from our true home in another perfect realm.

He notes that Gnosticism also played a role in the development of apocalyptic, adding the view that “the material and spiritual realms were radically separated” and “the trapped soul could get back to its true home in the spirit world by gnosis (knowledge), by becoming aware that its authentic home was in the spirit world where it was born but was trapped in a body in this material world” (p.27).

Also, in the Gnostic worldview, a “messenger is sent from above, a Prince by his Father the King, to bring the liberating knowledge/gnosis and lead the trapped souls back home” (p.27). The messenger/savior frees trapped souls by teaching them who they truly are, how they got caught in bodies, and how by purity and detachment they can go home again. This points to a coming Savior to deliver humanity from its suffering in this world.

There is a growing sense among early Hebrews/Jews of the corruption of the world and the suffering that entails, hence the longing to be freed of this corrupted world of pain and suffering.

“Much of this was to become part of the apocalyptic despair and withdrawal. There are several aspects of Hellenistic Gnosticism that are especially important in comparing it with the apocalyptic vision: its attitude toward the body and sexuality, its predictions concerning the future of the physical world and the place of violence in its expectations. For the Gnostics the world of flesh, and other matter, reeks of darkness, pain, falsity, corruption, and all other evils… Only one human passion was right and pure- the yearning to detach oneself from that corruption, withdraw inward to the inner soul itself, and thereby begin the return homeward to the realm of the spirit” (p.29). This world of the Devil could not be redeemed and purified.

In that progression in early human thinking, violence was not yet a paramount concern. The view was not about destroying the world but just abandoning it for something better outside this world.

“The gnostic and Jewish apocalyptic worldviews differed on this central issue of violence- the destruction of this sinful temporal world in the belief that another ideal world would replace it” (p.29).

The Hellenistic Jews, suffering defeat and subjugation under the Romans, had reason to escape their sorry world but they found another answer that permitted them to remain loyal to this divinely created, earthly world, as in their original (Jewish) vision of this world as home to be improved gradually over history.

Their solution, says Mendel, “Change, at once, the existing, natural, physical, temporal world into the good society of peace, justice and material abundance that had long been their ideal” (p.31). And it would no longer be humanity bringing the change gradually toward the good society by the struggle with improving themselves and life.

It would be God intervening to effect “world transformation swiftly completely and at any time” (p.3).

This feature of instantaneous transformation was not entirely new to Jewish understanding.

“As for the existing evil society and its sinful oppressors, they would be justly punished in the catastrophic destruction needed to sweep away the old and make room for the new, the kind of violence that God had often previously used to punish both the enemies of the Israelites, and (at times) the backsliding Israelites themselves. Neo-Platonists and Gnostics could achieve their aims immediately by simply abandoning the world and society. Destruction was superfluous. Those committed to the world and society who similarly wanted to realize their ideals at once could only do so by violent transmutation” (p.31).

“The result was an outpouring of apocalyptic themes in the popular Jewish literature of the time, particularly in the so-called Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha works (Book of Enoch, etc.). Considered together, these works present all the essentials of the apocalyptic pattern: total rejection of the present world; absolute faith in the imminence of an ideal divine kingdom of the saved; certainty that a divinely sent messiah will bring this salvation; and- the key feature generally missing in Neo-Platonist and Gnostic works- emphasis on the terrible violence that will accomplish the miraculous transmutation” (p.31).

“The apocalypse reached its final form in the most influential of all Hellenistic Jewish apocalyptic works- the Christian gospels, together with the accompanying texts, particularly Paul’s writings and John’s Revelations. The Judeo-Christian gospels differed from other Jewish apocalyptic works of the time, however, in two basic ways. First, they told the story of a Messiah who had already come rather than one whose arrival, while imminent, still lay in the future. Second, they moved Jewish apocalyptic thought and expectations much closer to Gnosticism. Most Jewish apocalyptic expectations remained far more attached to the natural, physical, temporal world” (p.32).

Take Mendel’s points and relate them, as his colleagues Richard Landes and David Redles also do in their books, to current secular apocalyptic crusades like Marxism and environmentalism. These apocalyptic crusades embrace the rejection of gradualism through liberal democracy and embrace the view of world transformation through immediate violent revolution, to attain the good society through terrible violence that will accomplish the goal of immediate “transmutation… instantaneous purification…”, salvation through violent destruction that purges the existing “evil” society and achieves the pure, utopian millennial kingdom.

Add here the apocalyptic feature of “imminent” apocalypse that further intensifies the urgency for “instantaneous purification” because, in the view of apocalyptic true believers, there is no time for the gradualism of liberal democracy when the existential threat of looming apocalypse demands that they “save the world” right now.

Landes notes also the important point that people committed to apocalyptic are at their most dangerous when it becomes publicly obvious that their prophecies are wrong and their crusade is failing. Disillusioned, and desperate to keep their crusade going, they then become most dangerous and double down on their prophecies and threats, even shifting to the dangerous phase of “exterminate or be exterminated”. We see this now in the fading Net Zero decarbonization crusade with the increasingly hysterical claims of the lead prophets (e.g. the comments of an increasingly angry Al Gore) that the “end is nigh”, nigher than ever before.

As with all comment here, I encourage the recognition that we have the alternative to the despair and nihilism of apocalyptic. We have had the insight of Historical Jesus for two millennia now- i.e. his stunning new theology that God is no conditions love, a non-apocalyptic God, a non-violent God. Jesus’ new theology stated there must be no more eye for eye retaliation but instead we must love our enemies because God does. God does not retaliate but generously loves God’s enemies, as evident in that God gives sun and rain to all alike, to both good and bad people.

As “Q Wisdom Sayings” scholar James Robinson has stated, Jesus presented a “stunning new theology of a non-retaliatory God and that was his greatest contribution to the history of human ideas”. Here is a summary of Jesus’ non-retaliatory theology from Luke 6:

“Do not retaliate against your offenders/enemies with ‘eye for eye’ justice. Instead, love your enemies, do good to them, and lend to them without expecting to get anything back. Then you will be just like God because God does not retaliate against God’s enemies. God does not mete out eye for eye justice. Instead, God is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked. God causes the sun to rise on the evil and the good and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. Be unconditionally loving, just as your God is unconditionally loving”.

My “theological” logic: A non-retaliatory God will not retaliate in the greatest of all “eye for eye” responses- i.e. the apocalyptic destruction of the world to punish sinners as portrayed in John’s Revelation. God has nothing to do with the perverse and barbaric mythology of apocalyptic.

Paul, to the contrary, rejected the non-retaliatory, non-apocalyptic theology of Jesus and re-affirmed the primitive belief in a retaliating deity. He stated that in Romans 12:17-20, affirming his theology with this Old Testament quote, “’Vengeance is mine. I will retaliate’, says the Lord”. Paul continued his affirmation of retaliatory, apocalyptic theology in his Christ myth, stating- “Lord Jesus will return in flaming fire to destroy all who do not believe my Christ gospel” (his Thessalonian letters).

Added note:

We also have (developed over the past few centuries) the contemporary gradualism alternative to violent instantaneous transformation of society. We have the principles, systems of law, and representative institutions of Liberal Democracy, as expressed in our liberal democracies, with their gradual processes of improvement through the protection of the freedoms and rights of all citizens, equally. Mendel concludes his book with good comment on this.

You doubt the domination of apocalyptic in contemporary narratives? Check this on Hollywood story-telling:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_apocalyptic_films

A list of alternative themes for narratives: “Humanity’s worst ideas, better alternatives (Old Story themes, New Story alternatives),” Wendell Krossa

http://www.wendellkrossa.com/?p=9533

We have a complete set of alternatives to the list of bad ideas posted in sections below, including the feature of a stunning new Cohering Center (i.e. God), the most critically influential idea of all that has long functioned as Ultimate Ideal, Ultimate Authority.

See the longer version of this list at the link above.

Old narrative themes, better alternatives (short version), Wendell Krossa

1. Old story myth: The idea of deity as a judgmental, punitive, and destroying reality. Contemporary “secular” versions of judgmental, punitive deity include “Vengeful Gaia, angry Planet/Mother Earth, retributive Universe, and payback karma”.

Alternative: The stunning new theology of deity as a no conditions reality (the God of “no conditions love” presented by Historical Jesus). There is no threat from an unconditional God, no judgment, no exclusion of anyone, and no ultimate punishment or destruction. All are safe- in the end.

2. Old story myth: The idea of a perfect beginning (Eden) and a God obsessed with perfection, enraged at the loss of perfection, demanding punishment of imperfection, demanding atonement (sacrifice/payment) to remedy imperfection, and further demanding violent purging of all imperfection as the route to restore the lost utopia of perfection.

Alternative: The world was purposefully created as originally imperfect in order to serve as an arena for human struggle, learning, and development. God has no problem with imperfection in life and in humanity. Imperfection (problems, struggle) is essential to human development and maturing. Others include the argument that there can be no such reality as authentic goodness without its opposite- i.e. evil/imperfection (meaning- authentic freedom of choice for good as contrasted with freedom to choose for evil). Good cannot exist alone or be known and experienced without a contrasting reality.

The point? The dualism of good and evil belongs only to this temporary material realm. There is no ultimate dualism of good and evil where we all came from. There is only the “Oneness” of divine love.

This is not to excuse, diminish, or defend any form of evil. From our five-senses and four-dimensional perspective we rightly feel outrage at evil and engage battles against varied forms of evil. This is critical to our gradual development as maturing humans. But if we are open to embrace some speculation on the reason for the existence of evil, these insights may help us to maintain our humanity during our righteous battles against evil in this world.

As Joseph Campbell argued, in this life we are all just “actors on God’s stage”, engaging oppositional roles in a temporary realm of dualism to provide one another with contrasting life experiences. We must not forget that our “enemies” are still our family in the end as we all share in the Ultimate Oneness of love. Yes, this is metaphysical speculation. But what might be a better alternative to explain evil? The ultimate tribal division of humanity? Eternal cosmic dualism (i.e. true believers/unbelievers forever, eternal heaven and hell), versus an ultimate return to our original “oneness”?

(Insert: Put this speculation on metaphysical realities in context with the Jewish OT belief that we are placed in this world to gradually improve ourselves and life in the here and now of the material reality. This ought to be our focus throughout our lives. Mendel’s comments on this are helpful.)

3. Old story myth: Humanity began as a more perfect species (the myth of primitive people as pure and noble hunter gatherers, i.e. “Adam/Eve”, “Enki” in Dilmun). But those original people became corrupted/sinful (i.e. the myth of the “Fall of mankind”). That myth has led to persistent anti-humanism- i.e. blaming humanity for all the imperfections and suffering in the world.

Alternative: Humanity emerged from the brutality of animal reality to gradually become more humane across history (a long-term trajectory of humanity rising/improving, not “falling” into a trajectory of degeneration/decline).

4. Old story myth: The long-term trajectory of all life declines from an original paradise (again, the past was better). After the “Fall”, the overall trajectory of life has been degenerating toward something worse.

Alternative: The long-term trajectory of life does not decline but overall rises/improves toward something ever better (i.e. more complex, organized, advanced).

5. Old story myth: The belief that natural disasters, disease, accidents, human cruelty, and death are expressions of divine punishment, and that humanity deserves punishment.

Alternative: While there are natural consequences all through life, there is no punitive, destroying deity behind the imperfections and natural consequences of life. That has more to do with the “natural freedom” of all the elements of our world.

6. Old story Myth: The belief that humanity has been rejected by the Creator and we must be reconciled via blood sacrifice/suffering.

Alternative: No one has ever been rejected by the unconditional Love at the core of reality. No one has ever been separated from God (see number 17 below). Ultimate Love does not demand appeasement/payment/atonement or suffering as punishment for sin and as required to restore a supposedly severed/ruptured relationship with God. No such separation of humanity from God has ever happened. As King David stated in Psalm 139:

“Where can I go from your Spirit? Where can I flee from your presence? If I go up to the heavens, you are there; if I make my bed in the depths, you are there. If I rise on the wings of the dawn, if I settle on the far side of the sea, even there your hand will guide me, your right hand will hold me fast.”

There is no place that we can hide from or escape from the presence of a loving God.

7. Old story myth: The idea of a cosmic dualism between Good and Evil (i.e. God versus Satan) expressed in human dualisms (tribes of good people versus their enemies- the bad/evil people). Ultimate Good versus Evil validates our inherited animal impulse to tribalism- to view ourselves in opposition to differing or disagreeing others. This is not to deny there is actual evil to be opposed in life, but to challenge the impulse to view differing others as “evil enemies”, others who are equal members of the same one human family.

Alternative: There is a fundamental Oneness at the core of all, and we share that oneness. We all belong equally to the one human family and equally share the ultimate eternal Oneness that is God. Dualism (good versus evil) is an element of our temporal experience in this material world.

8. Old story myth: The belief in a looming apocalypse as the final judgment, the ultimate punishment of wrong, and the final destruction of all things. The final return to chaos.

Alternative: There are problems all through the world but there is no looming threat of final divine destruction and ending. Apocalypse is a great fraud and lie. There will be no apocalypse as in the religious version of divine intervention to punish humanity and destroy the world (i.e. as, for example, in the New Testament book of Revelation).

9. Old story myth: The always “imminent” element in apocalyptic demands urgent action to save something, even the use of coercive violence to effect “instantaneous transformation”. (Arthur Mendel, in “Vision and Violence”, details the difference between the approaches of totalitarian “instantaneous transformation” and democratic “gradualism”.)

Alternative: While unexpected worldwide catastrophes could still happen, there is no “imminent end of days” on the horizon, inciting the urgency to “save the world”. Rather, life improves through gradual democratic processes as creative humanity cooperatively solves problems.

10. Old story myth: The demand for a salvation plan, a required sacrifice or atonement (debt payment, punishment).

Alternative: Unconditional deity does not demand sacrifice, atonement, payment, or punishment as required for appeasement. Deity loves unconditionally.

Additionally, this comment from Bob Brinsmead:

“The area often touched on superficially and skirted around like a root out of the dry ground is the matter of the anti-sacrificial movement launched by John the Baptist and brought to a head by the very issue that led directly to the death of Jesus. This is the matter of the real nature of Jesus’ temple protest. This was always destined to become the central issue of all Jesus research. No one disputes that Jesus died. If the temple event is seen as Jesus carrying forward the anti-sacrifice mission of his cousin John, then Jesus has to be seen as utterly against the whole religious idea that a sacrifice, an act of violent blood-letting to make an atonement for sin, should ever be required for reconciliation with God or with one another.

“This would mean that the Christian religion was founded on a false interpretation of the meaning of the death of Jesus, and it was out of this grave misunderstanding, that the whole edifice of its Christology arose– the Christology of a divine, virgin born and absolutely sinless man by whom God supposedly defeats evil by an act of apocalyptic violence, first in the Christ event and finally in a holocaust at the end of the world.

“Or to put it more simply, Jesus died protesting at the temple, the place where sacrifices were offered, affirming that God requires no sacrifice (no blood-letting violence) to put us right with God; yet the Christian religion turned the death of Jesus into God’s supreme sacrifice to put us right with God. Rightly understood, point 9 resolves the issue of point 8, that is, whether the historical Jesus was an apocalyptic Jesus or a sapiential (i.e. wisdom) Jesus.” Bob Brinsmead

11. Old story myth: The belief that retribution or payback is true “justice” (i.e. eye for eye, hurt for hurt, humiliation for humiliation, punishment for punishment). This is based on the primitive belief in the “holiness” of God and that any human sin is an offense against that holiness, an offense against God’s honor. Consequently, God’s “offended honor” must be re-affirmed and restored through punishing offenders. This pathology is expressed in such barbaric practices as “honor killings”.

Alternative: Unconditional love keeps no record of wrongs, forgives freely and without limit. And yes, there are natural consequences to bad behavior in this world (i.e. incarceration of violent people in order to protect others), but all justice should be humanely restorative/rehabilitative in response to human failure.

12. Old story myth: The belief in after-life judgment, exclusion, punishment, and destruction (i.e. hell). This pathology adds unnecessary sting to the natural human fear of death.

Alternative: Unconditional love does not threaten ultimate judgment, exclusion, punishment, or destruction.

13. Old story myth: The idea of a “hero” messiah who will use superior force to overthrow enemies, purge the world of wrong, and install a promised utopia.

Alternative: A God of authentic love does not intervene with overwhelming force that overrides human freedom and choice. It is up to maturing humanity to make the world a better place through long-term gradualism processes that respect the freedom of others who differ. Freedom and love are inextricably united. You cannot have one without the other.

14. Old story myth: The fallacy of biblicism- the belief that religious holy books are more special and authoritative than ordinary human literature, and the related fallacy that people are obligated to live according to the holy book as the revealed will, law, or specially inspired word of God.

Alternative: We evaluate all human writing according to basic criteria of right and wrong, good and bad, humane or inhumane. Holy books, written by fallible people like ourselves, are not exempted from this basic process of discernment/evaluation.

15. Old story myth: The idea of God as King, Ruler, Lord, or Judge. This myth promotes the idea that God relates to humanity in domination/submission forms of relating. This is based on the primitive idea that humans were “created to serve the gods”. Ideas of divine domination have long been used to validate human forms of domination over others (i.e. the “divine right of kings, authority of priesthoods”).

Alternative: There is no domination/subservience relationship of humanity to God. True greatness is to relate horizontally to all as equals. The “greatness” of God is to relate to all as free equals, and not to “lord over” others.

16. Old story myth: The idea that humanity is obligated to know, serve, or have a relationship with an invisible reality (deity), that we are to give primary loyalty to something metaphysical that is separate from and above people.

Alternative: Our primary loyalty is to love and serve real people around us. Their needs, here and now, take priority in life. Loyalty to realities that are placed above people (laws, institutions, or higher authorities) has always resulted in the neglect or abuse of people.

17. Old story myth: The perception that God is silent or absent during the horrors of life (i.e. “Where was God during the Holocaust?”). This myth of absent deity is based on the primitive belief that God is a sky deity (dwelling in heaven above, separate from humanity), a deity that descends to intervene in life and change circumstances, to override natural law in order to save or protect people.

Alternative: There has never been a Sky God up above in some heaven. The reality we call “God” has always been incarnated equally in all humanity. Hence, God has always been immediately present in all human suffering and is intimately present in all human raging and struggle against evil. God is inseparable from the human spirit in all of us and is expressed in all human action to prevent evil, to solve problems, and to improve life. We are the embodiments/incarnations of God in this world, and nothing saves us except our choices and actions to oppose wrong and to help one another, to make life better in this world.

18. Old story myth: The fallacy of “limited good” and the belief that too many people are consuming too much of Earth’s resources, and hence world resources are being exhausted.

Alternative: More people on Earth means more creative minds to solve problems. More consumption means more wealth creation to solve problems and enable us to make life better- i.e. enable us to improve the human condition and protect the natural world at the same time. Evidence affirms that human improvement and environmental improvement have been the dual outcomes of more people on Earth enjoying the good life. See “Population Bombed” by Desrochers and Szurmak, “Ultimate Resource” by Julian Simon, “Humanprogress.org”, and related studies.

Further, we are not exhausting Earth’s resources. With the emergence of some apparent resource scarcity, humanity through improving technology then works to discover more reserves of those scarce resources or makes the shift to alternative resources. There is a superabundance of resources in our world. Note also the “dematerialization” trend in modern advanced societies (the ongoing trend of less material inputs per person, economies of scale with increasing urbanization, etc.)

Add your own to a list of bad ideas and better alternatives.

Added note to Old Story themes: “Holiness” mythology

One of the more common responses from religious people to the idea of God as no conditions love is that God is also holy and just and therefore must punish all wrong. God’s honor is tarnished by the wrongdoing of people so he must be just (exhibit strict eye for eye retaliation) and punish all sin in order to fully satisfy retributive justice. God cannot just freely forgive and love. Holiness in God takes precedence over love, forgiveness, mercy.

This divine holiness myth exhibits an element of barbaric primitivism at its worst. How so? It is the very same reasoning that is behind practices like “honor killing”.

People in varied cultures today still reason that, for example, a daughter embracing modern habits has dishonored her family and their traditional culture. So the dishonored males are required to punish the “evil” daughter in order to restore their tarnished honor. Holiness theology is embracing this very same primitive reasoning that wrongs must be punished thoroughly and severely, or justice and honor are not restored properly.

I would counter that unconditional forgiveness and love is the true glory of God, the highest goodness and love. Authentic goodness and love will just forgive without demanding payment or righting of wrongs first.

The holiness feature in theology affirms the myth of God obsessed with perfection and punishing imperfection, hence the creation of a supporting complex of myths- i.e. original paradise/Eden (perfect creation), Fall of humanity and ruin of paradise (loss of perfection), and the subsequent need for an atonement (sacrifice/payment/punishment) in order to restore the lost perfection.

See full version of “Humanity’s worst ideas, better alternatives” (Old story themes, new story alternatives) at

http://www.wendellkrossa.com/?p=9533

Some big background themes in our meta-narratives, both religious and secular, Wendell Krossa

Consider:

How does an idea like “salvation through destruction” work on human minds? How do you think such ideas work in human minds to provide incitement, guidance, and validation for extremists to act similarly? Consider again, that such beliefs have been revealed as driving violent Marxist revolutions. Giving true believers the sense of becoming heroes in a righteous crusade against evil enemies that threaten the world.

“Salvation by destruction” is the perverse belief that we achieve the “good society” by violent revolution. A related theme/belief is that we attain salvation by murdering the right people (i.e. the sacrifice of a Jesus to gain salvation, utopia/heaven, the Nazi slaughter of Jews to “save Germany”).

These ideas/themes/beliefs dominate the metanarratives of our societies- both religious and secular.

Note also the widespread cheering for Luigi Mangione after he killed the CEO of UnitedHealthcare. Even the comedian Bill Burr shouted during an interview, “Free Mangione”.

https://www.ctvnews.ca/world/article/killing-of-unitedhealthcare-ceo-has-inspired-followers-prosecutors-say/

Mangione acted on that very belief that if you kill the right people, that is the means to achieve the better society, to achieve salvation.

Consider how the indoctrination of humanity with these common religious ideas over millennia can impact human consciousness, emotions, motivations, and then responses/actions. Note again psychologist Harold Ellen’s comments on this, below.

This post to a discussion group, Wendell Krossa

Note in the link below Matt Walsh’s point that public narratives/themes that validate violence against disagreeing others, do incite and validate mentally unbalanced people and extremist types to act accordingly:

Ignore Kelly’s tendency to go somewhat tribally harsh on her opponents (i.e. on Democrats, the left) and her tendency to use overly harsh and vilifying terms to describe those opponents (e.g. “assholes”). More to the point- around the 5 minute and 30 second mark she discusses with Matt Walsh, a noted commentator on social issues, the trans issues that dominate much of today’s public debates and disagreements. Walsh’s comments get to some critical issues regarding the trans movement…

“Media ignores shooter reality, Megyn reveals Lively subpoena, w/Walsh, Eiglish, Geragos, Holloway”, The Megyn Kelly Show, Aug. 28, 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASCMG8YrgHc

Set aside the tribal element in so many of these issues (partisan divides between conservative/liberal) and note Walsh’s comment that there is a narrative being pushed to people who are already subject to delusions, mental extremism, and dangerous behaviors.

That narrative validates their view of themselves as oppressed victims. They are constantly told by activists and media that there is a “genocide” against them, and they must defend themselves. Hence, their right to use violence to defend themselves against those they view as threatening attackers, against evil enemies that threaten them. So, to defend themselves, as victims, they must act with legitimate force. That narrative is pushed all over in public media.

And even more, many of these extremist types seeking validation to use violence against others, picture themselves as engaging heroically in some righteous crusade against irredeemable evil that must be eliminated, exterminated to “save the world”.

What do you think the constant media obsession with demonizing opposition leadership and followers as “Nazis, fascists, Hitler, dictator, etc.”, what do you think that does in the minds of extremist types?

Also of interest, Walsh shares notes from the shooter’s manifesto confessing his regret for being brainwashed about the trans issue and wishing that he had not fallen for that, among other confessions. He states his refusal to cut his hair as that would be an embarrassing admission of defeat, etc.

Added note: Someone the other day noted that most of us have no problem with trans people and their freedoms and rights to do what they feel is good for them. They are equals among us, also. But the problem arises when activists demand that we must agree to use only certain words/terms that they approve and they threaten and bully the rest of us for not doing so as they demand (i.e. bullying by censoring, banning, cancelling, ruining lives and careers, shaming and smearing as evil transphobes, etc., even criminalizing).
(End of post)

Note how psychologist Harold Ellens explains this impact of ideas/beliefs on human behavior (posted once again)-

The full quotes of Ellens from Lotufo’s book “Cruel God, Kind God”:

The Introduction states that, among others, “(Lotufo) explores the interface of psychology, religion, and spirituality at the operational level of daily human experience… (this is of the) highest urgency today when religious motivation seems to be playing an increasing role, constructively and destructively, in the arena of social ethics, national politics, and world affairs…”

My insert: The destructive outcomes of “religious motivation” are notable also in terms of the “profoundly religious” climate alarmism crusade and its destructive “salvation” scheme of Net Zero decarbonization (“save the world”), as evident in the spreading harm, from Net Zero and renewables zealotry, in societies like Germany, Britain, and California. Climate alarmism exhibits the same old themes and destructive outcomes of all past apocalyptic crusades. The themes of climate alarmism, as another apocalyptic millennial crusade, are energized by the cohering central theme of an angry deity threatening harsh punishment and destruction through an apocalypse.

Lotufo then notes “the pathological nature of mainstream orthodox theology and popular religious ideation”.

He says, “One type of religiosity is entirely built around the assumption or basic belief, and correspondent fear, that God is cruel or even sadistic… The associated metaphors to this image are ‘monarch’ and ‘judge’. Its distinctive doctrine is ‘penal satisfaction’. I call it ‘Cruel God Christianity’… Its consequences are fear, guilt, shame, and impoverished personalities. All these things are fully coherent with and dependent on a cruel and vengeful God image…

“(This image results) in the inhibition of the full development of personality… The doctrine of penal satisfaction implies an image of God as wrathful and vengeful, resulting in exposing God’s followers to guilt, shame, and resentment… These ideas permeate Western culture and inevitably influence those who live in this culture…

“Beliefs do exert much more influence over our lives than simple ideas… ideas can also, in the psychological sphere, generate ‘dynamis’, or mobilize energy… (they) may result, for instance, in fanaticism and violence, or… may also produce anxiety and inhibitions that hinder the full manifestation of the capacities of a person…

“The image of God can be seen as a basic belief or scheme, and as such it is never questioned…

“Basic cultural beliefs are so important, especially in a dominant widespread culture, because they have the same properties as individual basic beliefs, that is, they are not perceived as questionable. The reader may object that “God”, considered a basic belief in our culture, is rejected or questioned by a large number of people today. Yet the fact is that the idea of God that those people reject is almost never questioned. In other words, their critique assumes there is no alternative way of conceiving God except the one that they perceive through the lens of their culture. So, taking into account the kind of image of God that prevails in Western culture- a ‘monster God’… such rejection is understandable…

“There is in Western culture a psychological archetype, a metaphor that has to do with the image of a violent and wrathful God (see Romans, Revelation). Crystallized in Anselm’s juridical atonement theory, this image represents God sufficiently disturbed by the sinfulness of humanity that God had only two options: destroy us or substitute a sacrifice to pay for our sins. He did the latter. He killed Christ.

“Ellens goes on by stating that the crucifixion, a hugely violent act of infanticide or child sacrifice, has been disguised by Christian conservative theologians as a ‘remarkable act of grace’. Such a metaphor of an angry God, who cannot forgive unless appeased by a bloody sacrifice, has been ‘right at the center of the Master Story of the Western world for the last 2,000 years. And the unavoidable consequence for the human mind is a strong tendency to use violence’.

“’With that kind of metaphor at our center, and associated with the essential behavior of God, how could we possibly hold, in the deep structure of our unconscious motivations, any other notion of ultimate solutions to ultimate questions or crises than violence- human solutions that are equivalent to God’s kind of violence’…

“Hence, in our culture we have a powerful element that impels us to violence, a Cruel God Image… that also contributes to guilt, shame, and the impoverishment of personality…”.

As Harold Ellens says, “If your God uses force, then so may you, to get your way against your ‘enemies’”.

Add also the personality-deforming themes of (1) excluding tribalism (true believers favored and “saved”, versus unbelievers who are rejected and destroyed), (2) domination (deity as dominating Lord, Ruler, King that validates human forms of domination- state leaders, priesthoods, controlling fathers…), and (3) ultimate violent destruction of the differing others (apocalypse, hell)… such themes, sacralized in deity as ultimate ideals and authority, then serve to re-enforce the same features and related behaviors in the adherents of such belief systems.

A brief history of a critical driver behind apocalyptic mythmaking, Wendell Krossa

The “Fear=control” formula in the domination and control practises of elites.

To understand more of what was driving early people to create monstrously destructive myths like apocalyptic, consider the emergence of the elite/commoner divide at the very beginning of the human adventure with consciousness. John Pfeifer probed those first shaman who took fellow tribe members down into those dark caves (e.g. Lascaux, France) to scare them with “anamorphic” art (painted animals appear to move in flickering candlelight) and claimed to know the secrets to the invisible realm of spirits. See his “Explosion: An inquiry into the origins of art and religion”.

Those first shaman, when they elevated themselves above others as the first elites in human societies, they were unleashing their impulse to domination (the alpha thing that we have all inherited from our animal past). They used the fear of “threat theology” (i.e. beliefs in angry spirits threatening harm or death) to control others and to push their irrational salvation schemes on fellow tribals, even though the salvation schemes would ruin lives with wasted time, energy, and resources (i.e. sacrificed animals and food for the gods).

“The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by an endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary”, H. L. Mencken, “In Defense of Women”.

I try to understand the fundamental drivers in people, like the impulse to dominate and the related use of threat/fear to achieve control of others. This too often destructive pathology is why I go after Paul’s apocalyptic Christ myth, where he epitomized threat theology for Western narratives and consciousness. His “Lord Jesus” has nothing to do with the actual person Jesus who rejected “lording over others for serving others”.

Historical Jesus was an early ‘liberal democracy’ guy, advocating self-determination for all. Instead of making people subservient followers, after healing them, he oriented them to self-help (“Your faith healed you, not me”) and urged others to return to independence (“Go return to your own life”). Bob Brinsmead, for one, doubts that Jesus ever made followers. He certainly did not start another religion of true believers. And what about the bishops and other religious authorities that Paul created for his churches? The non-religious, non-domination Jesus would have none of that.

The early shaman’s creation of threatening deity was the projection of their own base impulse to dominate onto greater reality, onto ultimate reality. They then used the mythology they constructed to threaten their fellow tribe members with tales of spirits/gods expressing their anger at people through natural disasters, disease, accidents, and predatory cruelty (animal and human). The monstrous mythology of angry deity threatening to kill and destroy, incited the survival impulse in people, rendering them susceptible to salvation that demanded costly sacrifices and offerings.

The early shamanic system eventually became the priesthood and sacrifice industry of larger states, the early great civilizations in Sumeria, India, Egypt, and South America, among other places, where priests controlled the distribution of societal resources.

The domination of the priesthoods was evident in the Temples built on ziggurats (raised platforms) at the center of those states. In the early priesthood system, where leaders were combinations of kings/priests, the commoners were obligated to bring their produce to the central temples for redistribution. See, for example, “The first great civilizations: Life in Mesopotamia, the Indus Valley and Egypt. The history of human society”, Jacquetta Hawkes.

The shaman/priests buttressed their validation of elite domination with myths that “people were created to serve the gods” (i.e. provide food/offerings, do the work of the gods, make sacrifices) and that they, the priests that were self-appointed to represent the gods, were divinely authorized to rule the societies, to tell the commoners the will, demands/laws, and words of the gods. The elite priesthood would mediate the will of deity to the common people.

Such mythology would be refined over subsequent millennia in variations like the “Philosopher Kings” of Plato. More enlightened and divinely-favored elites dominating/controlling commoners. Telling the unenlightened masses how to dispose of their property.

Other safe-guards that were created to maintain elite domination included prohibitions/taboos to not question the belief systems of the authorities. Entire systems of subsidiary threats were added to hold the developing religious systems together and thereby to have a backing authority to maintain the elite domination over populations. Prohibitions against questioning what priests claimed were divinely-inspired beliefs, given directly to them by deity. Such heresy would eventually become punishable by horrific death (i.e. crucifixion, burning at the stake, and medieval tortures, etc.). Unbelief was labelled an unforgiveable sin, as being “deceived by the devil” and putting one on the wide highway to hell.

Creative minds, driven to dominate others, created endless versions of threat theology themes and buttressing guards to affirm their control. Apocalyptic has played a critical role in the “Fear=control” formula and its use by elites. Just consider what we have been through with climate apocalypse and decarbonization/Net Zero madness.

The destructive pathology that I’ve outlined above has long darkened and enslaved human consciousness and unnecessarily burdened life and societies and culminating in the modern era of mass-death crusades and entire ruin of major societies (China under Mao, Russia under Stalin and subsequent Communism, Germany under the Nazis, Venezuela under Chavismo and friends, and more).

Hence, my repeated advocacy here for liberal democracy that protects the freedoms and rights of every individual, equally. Backed by new narrative themes that take seriously the liberating insights of sages like Historical Jesus.

A central project of this site is to go after the domination impulse and consequent elite domination and control of commoners, and to go after the ideas/myths that support elite domination.

There are few more important to consider in fighting the domination impulse than Historical Jesus. He cut the taproot feeding the urge to dominate- i.e. the theology of God as Lord, King, Ruler and humanity obligated to serve the “lording over others” God, via servitude to priesthoods and religious authorities. Jesus went after the theology that had long validated elite domination of commoners. He went after the ultimate ideals, the theology, that had long affirmed this base animal impulse.

Jesus straightforward denied the reality of a threatening God who dominated people. He said that true greatness (“God is great”) was not in lording over others but in serving others. If God was great, then God would not lord over anyone but would serve all.

Jesus fought and died for such ideas, protesting the entire sacrifice industry and the God at core of that- the threatening deity who demanded subservience and obedience. He most effectively rejected the domination impulse and rejected the affirming ideas behind elite domination of commoners.

There is nothing more egregiously insidious to grasp than the fact that Paul took the ultimate anti-domination crusader, the ultimate liberator- i.e. Historical Jesus- and turned him into the ultimate Dominator- “Lord Jesus”- who would exercise ultimate totalitarian (“rod of iron”) rule forever over all people.

The extreme opposite nature of these two and their messages- Jesus versus the Christ- is incredibly mind-blowing to consider.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Threat theology deforms human personality, drives people crazy, even to acts of violence

Me and research assistant Grok on the “bad religious ideas” complex that still dominates major narratives, religious and “secular/ideological”

This site probes the root contributing factors to the endless eruptions of crowd madness and violence, specifically the narrative themes that incite, guide, and validate such madness. To quote my friend Bob Brinsmead, “It’s the narrative, stupid”. We know the familiar complex of themes that panic-mongering apocalyptic prophets have used across past millennia to scare people, to incite fear that generates irrational states of mind (i.e. aroused survival impulse and longing for “saviors” bringing salvation) that then render people susceptible to manipulation and control by fear-mongering elites.

H. L. Mencken stated it as well as anyone, “The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by an endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary”.

I would add- “The whole aim of practical religion”.

The myths in the list below are still the dominant themes, across the world, in our religious traditions, both Western and Eastern religions- i.e. Gods angry at people for ruining an original paradise that they created, subsequently threatening punishment, destruction, chaos, and death, and even after-life torture in hells, demanding the tribal embrace of the “true religion” to find salvation, etc. In our contemporary era, our so-imagined “secular ideologies” have embraced the very same themes. Historians have detailed this “secularization” of religious ideas with evidence on the themes that drove Marxism, Nazism, and are now driving environmental alarmism, the three most dominant “madness of crowds” eruptions over the past century that have produced mass-death outcomes.

We are all responsible for the consequences of the ideas that we embrace to frame our narratives. We are responsible for the related policies that arise from and are guided by such ideas. And we are responsible for the outcomes of these ideas in our societies.

It is the most basic element in human responsibility- i.e. to make ourselves aware of our role in contributing to something harmful, to understand why something is harmful (i.e. contributing factors like beliefs that incite and validate certain behaviors), and to then cease contributing to the harm. To engage alternative narratives that contribute to good in our societies (as in inciting, guiding, and validating the better angels of human nature).

After multiple millennia of experience, and evidence of outcomes, there is no excuse for denying the influence that bad ideas have had validating bad human behavior. We should be fully aware by now of how these ancient mythical themes, listed below, deform human personality, deform thinking, emotions, motivations, and responses/behaviors. It is our fundamental responsibility to inform ourselves as to why certain dominant ideas in our narratives have been so consistently and repeatedly destructive. As the military guy said after the defeat of ISIS in Syria- “You can defeat such violence with military force. But until you go after the ideas that drive such violence, you will only see repeated episodes.”

See also below Grok’s responses to my list of the “bad ideas” complex that have shaped all human narratives across history, both religious and “secular/ideological”.

The original “bad religious ideas” complex of themes that our ancestors constructed to shape their narratives, Wendell Krossa

Intro note: The ancients badly messed up theology at the beginning of human mythmaking and too many of us still hold, even today, to the psychopathology that they constructed. Paul immortalized the worst of the primitivism of our ancestors in his Christ myth and that is how the original bad ideas were brought into our Western civilization, narratives, and consciousness. Paul and his Christ myth have been an overwhelmingly prominent influence on Western minds (see James Tabor’s comments on this in “Paul and Jesus”). This is not to deny the better features in Paul’s merger of Jesus with his Christ myth, but to note that such mergers of good and bad themes tend to result in the deforming/weakening of the better features in the mix. I side with Thomas Jefferson and Leo Tolstoy that in Paul’s Christ the “diamonds of Jesus have been buried” by the darker features of the Christ.

Most important to note, Paul’s Christ has been mainly responsible for bringing the fallacy of apocalyptic into Western civilization to continue its destructive impacts on human personality and society.

The ideas/beliefs in the list below are as old as the primitive minds of our ancestors who were just emerging out of animal existence and who constructed the first mythologies. So be careful of any back-patting of yourself about being a modern liberated “secular materialist, even atheist”. You are profoundly shaped by the same “Homo-religiosus” impulse as the rest of the human family, known also as the primal impulse for meaning.

Our ancestors felt their primal urge to meaning and purpose, and in response they began to explain the world around them with myths. Their mythologies expressed the dominant impulses that shaped their primitive existence- shaped how they thought, what they felt, what motivated them, and consequently how they responded to events, how they acted. The most prominent impulses that shaped their primitive existence included the impulse to tribalism, the urge to dominate others, and the impulse to destroy differing others that they viewed as threats (i.e. exterminate competition). They even created gods (ultimate ideals and authorities) to embody such basic impulses/features.

In the list below I have included some of the more prominent ideas/myths that our ancestors constructed (Grok adds a few more in his take).

Critical to emphasize in the mix of bad ideas was the construction of early theories of ultimate ideals and authority- i.e. Ultimate Reality. The ancients created the first images of “God” to hold their complex of mythical ideas together, the cohering Center that would function as the ultimate Authority to validate all the rest. In doing that, they initiated “theology” (i.e. human ideas and images of God) to form the heart of all mythology and the eventual religions that would emerge out of their earlier mythologies.

And with deity eventually viewed as “immutable”, the original complexes of mythical ideas have persisted down through history to continue to dominate world religions today. And because few dare to question the most foundational of all ideas/beliefs- i.e. deity- hence, we find the persistence of the same old images across world religions, and even embedded in our “secular ideologies”. Psychologist Harold Ellens explained this phenomenon and its effects/outcomes on human personality and behavior.

Note Ellen’s point that few, if any, dare to question the image of God that our cultures have inherited. My argument is that Historical Jesus did exactly that- he challenged and rejected the dominant image of God that prevailed in his time and offered a stunning new image of deity as non-retaliatory, no conditions love, an image that would have transformed human belief systems entirely. But Paul emerged two decades later to confront the stunning new theology of Jesus, overturn it, and re-instate traditional theology of wrathful, vengeful deity to dominate his Christ myth and new Christian religion. Paul buried the innovative theology of Jesus in the same old mythology of all previous history.

Ellens’ quotes from Zenon Lotufo’s “Cruel God, Kind God”:

“Beliefs… generate ‘dynamis’, or mobilize energy… (they) may result, for instance, in fanaticism and violence, or… may also produce anxiety and inhibitions that hinder the full manifestation of the capacities of a person…

“The image of God can be seen as a basic belief or scheme, and as such it is never questioned…

“Basic cultural beliefs are so important, especially in a dominant widespread culture, because they have the same properties as individual basic beliefs, that is, they are not perceived as questionable. The reader may object that “God”, considered a basic belief in our culture, is rejected or questioned by a large number of people today. Yet the fact is that the idea of God that those people reject is almost never questioned. In other words, their critique assumes there is no alternative way of conceiving God except the one that they perceive through the lens of their culture. So, taking into account the kind of image of God that prevails in Western culture- a ‘monster God’… such rejection is understandable…

“There is in Western culture a psychological archetype, a metaphor that has to do with the image of a violent and wrathful God (see Romans, Revelation). Crystallized in Anselm’s juridical atonement theory, this image represents God sufficiently disturbed by the sinfulness of humanity that God had only two options: destroy us or substitute a sacrifice to pay for our sins. He did the latter. He killed Christ.

“Ellens goes on by stating that the crucifixion, a hugely violent act of infanticide or child sacrifice, has been disguised by Christian conservative theologians as a ‘remarkable act of grace’. Such a metaphor of an angry God, who cannot forgive unless appeased by a bloody sacrifice, has been ‘right at the center of the Master Story of the Western world for the last 2,000 years. And the unavoidable consequence for the human mind is a strong tendency to use violence’.

“’With that kind of metaphor at our center, and associated with the essential behavior of God, how could we possibly hold, in the deep structure of our unconscious motivations, any other notion of ultimate solutions to ultimate questions or crises than violence- human solutions that are equivalent to God’s kind of violence’…

“Hence, in our culture we have a powerful element that impels us to violence, a Cruel God Image… that also contributes to guilt, shame, and the impoverishment of personality…”.

As Harold Ellens says, “If your God uses force, then so may you, to get your way against your ‘enemies’”.

Just a note that the ideas/myths/beliefs that have shaped Christianity predate that religion by millennia. Christianity borrowed from all that went before, just as all movements do, whether religious or “secular/ideological”. Research has revealed the influence that Zoroastrian mythology, ancient Judaism (notably Jewish apocalyptic), Hellenism, and other strains of mythology, have had on Paul’s Christ myth and religion.

The dominant themes of world religions, and subsequent contemporary “secular/ideological” belief systems, trace back to the very beginning of human curiosity and endeavors to explain reality and life. Hence, the problems of Christianity mirror the problems of all humanity and all human stories. Again, the “bad ideas” in Christianity are everywhere embedded in both in religious and secular/ideological systems of belief.

So “bad ideas inciting and validating bad behavior” is a worldwide and history-long problem. As Joseph Campbell noted- “People have believed the same primitive myths across all history and across all the cultures of the world”. The “bad ideas” pathology is not isolated to any one group as worse than others. All human narratives share variations of the same complex of common themes.

The complex of “bad religious ideas” that have darkened and enslaved human minds from the beginning (updated, revised), Wendell Krossa

These ideas from our primitive past have framed the narratives of humanity across history, inciting endless eruptions of “madness of crowds” alarmism, consequent irrationality and hysteria that have pushed people to embrace “salvation” schemes that destroy societies as necessary to save what alarmed people believe is their threatened world. The utopian promise of “Salvation through destruction”.

Don’t dismiss these ideas below out of hand as primitive residual religious fallacies that have nothing to do with contemporary worldviews. Historians/scholars have revealed that most people continue to hold these core themes in their worldviews/narratives. These themes dominate the narratives of the major world religions that some 85% of humanity are affiliated with. They dominate the widely believed “climate crisis” narratives, just as they frame socialist/Marxist narratives (see Grok’s research on this below). And they also shape the worldviews of the remaining 15% of humanity that claim “unaffiliated” status in regard to world religions, but still hold some version of “spiritual but not religious”.

(Insert: The former PEW “World Religion Survey” showed that 85% of the world population affiliated with a major religion. Apparently, that has now declined to some 75% of the world population affiliated with a major world religion.)

The foundational plank in the complex of ideas that we have inherited from our primitive past is (1) the myth that the past was better, that it was a golden age, an original paradise world.

This most fundamental mythical fallacy promotes reminiscent longing for something that never existed. Psychology speaks to this “rosy retrospection” fallacy of recalling the past more positively than it actually was. See, for example, paleo-geological histories of the origins and development of our Earth. They expose this foundational fallacy in religious traditions that the past was better, that life started in some paradisal state like Sumerian Dilmun or Hebrew Eden, or the modern environmentalism version that the past paradise was a wilderness world with few humans to engage, corrupt and defile pure/pristine Mother Nature.

Read any geological history of Earth to see the brutally uninhabitable conditions of the early Earth. There was no paradise in the past.

Prehistorian John Pfeiffer (“Explosion: An inquiry into the origins of art and religion”) suggests that the belief in an original golden age on Earth may have emerged around 100,000 years ago. That prompted me to look at conditions on Earth around that time. I would suggest that perhaps the fallacy of original paradisal world began as our ancestors experienced the rapid ending of the Eemian interglacial of some 130-115,000 years ago. Research reveals that previous interglacial was some 8 degrees C. warmer than our current Holocene interglacial. A paradisal warm period that would have enhanced human survival.

https://co2coalition.org/facts/the-last-interglacial-was-8c-14f-warmer-than-today/#:~:text=The%20results%20revealed%20that%20the,%C2%B0F)%20warmer%20than%20today.

Some studies suggest the “Eemian” interglacial may have ended abruptly, over just a few centuries, or even just decades. Our ancestors, even with their much shorter lifespans (20-30ish years) would have remembered the better past as the previous warmer climate that made survival easier.

See for example: https://www.esd.ornl.gov/projects/qen/transit.html

“The time span of the past few million years has been punctuated by many rapid climate transitions, most of them on time scales of centuries to decades or even less. The most detailed information is available for the Younger Dryas-to-Holocene stepwise change around 11,500 years ago, which seems to have occurred over a few decades. The speed of this change is probably representative of similar but less well-studied climate transitions during the last few hundred thousand years. These include sudden cold events (Heinrich events/stadials), warm events (Interstadials) and the beginning and ending of long warm phases, such as the Eemian interglacial.”

(2) The second prominent bad religious idea is the myth that early pure humans committed an original error and subsequently became corrupted and thereby ruined the imagined original paradise world. If the past was better, then what happened? Well, blame humanity.

Thus begins the long history of anti-humanism, the mythology of essential human corruption, fallenness, sinfulness. Humans are labelled as the destroyers of good, destroyers of the pristine natural world.

And we are an easy target. Our developing consciousness, even in the ancient past, left us with an intense sense of our own imperfection and that we consequently deserved blame, we deserved punishment. Any basic awareness of ourselves as imperfectly human, any basic honesty about our less-than-pristine nature as fallible humans, will open us to be the easy targets of guilt, shame, and self-blame.

(Insert: I distinguish between a healthy awareness of our imperfections and the natural accompanying guilt/shame that pushes us to engage further self-improvement. I separate that from the excessive guilt/shame that arises from the religious fallacies of, for example, angry God threatening to punish human imperfection with apocalyptic destruction of the world and eternal torment in hellfire. That perverse mythology engenders unhealthy guilt and shame that deforms human personality.)

The myth that early humans ruined the original paradise world sparked the long history of the fallacy of humanity as destroyer of nature.

Related to this, early people, feeling their own impulse to retaliate against the offenses of others, then projected that base retaliatory impulse onto deity, thereby constructing the fallacy of God as a punitive Judge who would respond harshly to human failure. These varied lines of thought would coalesce in the myth of a God who was angry with fallen humans for the offense of ruining his originally perfect creation.

It was then believed that the pissed deity punished people through the varied harmful elements of the natural world, through the world that he had created perfect but they had ruined. Consequently, humanity then had to suffer the consequences of a ruined natural world with its harsh elements of natural disasters, disease, accident, and predatory cruelty, both animal and human.

Guilty people embraced the myth that they were divinely cursed and that suffering the harsh elements of the natural world was their justly deserved fate. Our ancestors felt that they were “bad to the bone” and justly deserved the divine retribution expressed throughout early mythologies.

Further bad ideas were constructed around the myth of an original fall of humanity- i.e. that fallen people were “created to serve the gods, to do the work of the gods, to feed the gods”. Fallen humans deserved servitude. Hence, we see the demand for submission to authority- i.e. fallen, corrupted people, too darkened by sin to know what is good for them, must be dominated by gods and their elite priesthoods. They must be led by dominating elites appointed by God to lord over the ignorant commoners who don’t know what is good for themselves. Is this line of thinking perhaps behind Plato’s “philosopher kings” as the elites who, as specially enlightened and divinely blessed people, should dominate and control societies?

Continuing with the fallacy of divine punishment exhibited through the “ruined” world…

The Christian bible (in the first book- Genesis) presents the ancient Hebrew version of this mythology of human corruption and consequent punishment through the imperfections of a fallen world.

Note these initial themes in Genesis 1-3:

First, the biblical God establishes tribal hatred, jealousy, antagonism, and conflict between groups (i.e. Zoroastrian cosmic dualism replicated in human tribal oppositions)- “I will put enmity between you and the woman and between your offspring and hers.”

The biblical emphasis on conflict between groups of people illustrates how ancient mythology deforms the hero’s quest. Conflict with differing others (the “evil other”) misdirects the hero’s quest away from an inner battle with our own worst impulses as our real enemy/monster. It directs our sense of something bad, that has to be opposed and conquered, outward toward other imperfect humans as the enemies/monsters to be fought and defeated.

Alexander Solzhenitsyn challenged the long-held perception that the human struggle of good against evil was a battle between differing groups/classes of people. Paraphrasing Solzhenitsyn’s comments that the real battle of good against evil runs down the center of every human heart, I would affirm that the real battle of good against evil is a battle that must be fought inside every human heart, a battle against the “evil triad” that is inside each one of us, against our real enemy- i.e. our inheritance of animal impulses to tribalism, domination, and punitive destruction of differing others.

Continuing with the Genesis affirmation of primitive mythical themes, deity then promised suffering and pain through the imperfections of a ruined world as punishment for original sin- “I will make your pains in childbearing very severe; with painful labor you will give birth to children. Cursed is the ground because of you; through painful toil you will eat food from it all the days of your life. It will produce thorns and thistles for you, and you will eat the plants of the field. By the sweat of your brow, you will eat your food.”

Add also, the Genesis affirmation of domination in human relationships- “Your desire will be for your husband, and he will rule over you.” So began the biblical validation of patriarchal domination. Paul (or whoever wrote Ephesians) continued that validation of domination/subservience in relationships- “Wives, submit yourselves to your own husbands, slaves submit to your masters.” He also added the directive for all to submit to governments as appointed by God (Romans 13).

Additional notes on fallen humanity mythology:

The fallacy of an original paradise ruined by early people generates the natural felt need to correct the original wrong that humans have caused, to rebalance the consequently unbalanced scales of cosmic justice. This sense of rebalancing unbalanced justice, of correcting wrongs with retributive punishment, has long undergirded human perspective on the nature of justice.

Blaming humanity for ruining the world, based on the fallacy of original perfection, adds and intensifies the burden of unnecessary guilt and shame in addition to the general sense of shame/guilt that most people already suffer due to the awareness of their own imperfection along with the imperfections of their world.

The mythology of humanity as corrupter of perfection, is an original element in building the case for anti-humanism in human narratives, a psychopathology that has deformed human consciousness for millennia, adding to the burden of human fear, anxiety, despair, depression, nihilism, and more.

This fallacy of an original “fall into sin” became a prominent theme in the mythologies of cultures across the world- i.e. that early humans had made an original mistake, committed an error/sin that angered the gods and brought an end to a previous paradise world. We find this fallacy promoted in the Sumerian myth of Dilmun where Enki ate the 8 forbidden plants and ruined that original paradise. We see this in the Eden myth where Adam and Eve corrupted paradise and were punished by God who then cursed life with suffering through the imperfections of a subsequently ruined world.

Thus began the mythologies of fallen, sinful humanity angering the God, who as creator of perfection and upholder of justice, must then punish bad people for their sin. This psychopathology is further affirmed with associated ideas of deity behind all the elements of the natural world- i.e. gods of storm and thunder, gods of sun and drought, gods of varied animal species, gods of trees, gods of streams, and so on.

And because the varied elements of nature are often harmful and destructive- i.e. natural disasters, disease, accidents, predatory cruelty- it was then obviously logical for primitive minds to conclude that the gods were angry with people’s sins and manifesting that punitive anger through such harmful elements of nature.

That misread of the natural world as exhibiting divine vengeance and anger, then led to affirming these features in deity- i.e. wrath/anger, retaliatory/punitive justice, vengeance, etc. These features, attributed to deity, and affirmed by primitive belief in justice as naturally retaliatory/retributive, then logically resulted in the portrayal of deity as righteously demanding appeasement/atonement. The development of that “threat theology”, based on natural world imperfections, became the basis for later development of salvation schemes that demanded sacrifice, payment, payback.

I heard a version of the human ruin of paradise and consequent divine punishment from Manobo friends in Mindanao. They said that, in their mythology, an original Manobo girl was pounding rice and raised her pounding stick too high, hit heaven and thereby upset the gods, who then sealed off the formerly open door of heaven. That was the original sin that ruined paradise in Manobo mythology. Every culture across the world has its own version of bad people ruining a formerly paradise world.

No single book has more potently blown away the fallacy of a better past, and life subsequently declining, along with the fallacy of humans as corrupt destroyers of paradise, than Julian Simon’s “Ultimate Resource”. His data are now dated but his principles for determining “the true state of life” on Earth are as informative and useful as when first published. Numerous subsequent researchers have continued to affirm his ideas, principles and conclusions. See, for example, “Humanprogress.org”. Greg Easterbrook also presents some interesting comment on the human contribution to improving an originally imperfect natural world (“A Moment On The Earth”). Another good follow-up to Simon is Desrocher and Szurmak’s “Population Bombed”.

And to hone my point here, quoting Bob Brinsmead, the real story of humanity is not “how far we have fallen”, but how amazingly we have risen and improved across the millennia. The true story of humanity should focus on the rise of our species out of a brutal animal past to become “the wonder of being human”, the creators of an ever-improving world. Further, see the evidence of our long-term improvement as set forth in the research of James Payne’s “History of Force”, or Stephen Pinker’s follow-up to Payne’s research in “The Better Angels of Our Nature”, along with similar research. As Julian Simon concluded, the evidence on the true state of life shows that we are “more creators than destroyers”.

We have never been a fallen, corrupted species but we have always been a rising, improving, and progressing species and our inherent goodness continues to develop, grow, and express itself in the evidence of our improving all life on Earth. We don’t need reality-distorting religious versions of “salvation” because, across history, we have been learning how to save ourselves and all life on Earth.

Continuing with a bit more on the fallacy of divine anger manifested through the destructive elements of nature: And then came the pathology of “sacrifice”…

It was logically obvious to our primitive ancestors that the divine anger they believed was coming at them through the natural world must be appeased. Appeasing angry deities was critical to their survival. That fed the innovation of some early creative mind to make sacrifices, both human and animal, to appease divine anger and thereby obtain blessings/favors from the gods (i.e. offerings to the gods to obtain the benefits of sun, rain, food). The logic behind sacrifice? Some suggest that it had to do with substitution- “A life for a life, blood for blood”. Take this innocent life as payment for my guilt and thereby spare my life.

A contemporary tribal man (Manobo) explained it to me this way- “We offer the blood of the animal, and the god eats that and is then satisfied and will not eat our souls” (i.e. will not punish us via sickness or accident). Something eaten in place of us, that then functions to spare us. Built on the belief that wrongs must be made right by some form of equal retribution/retaliation. Eye for eye, pain for pain, death for death, etc.

Or perhaps the origin of sacrifice has to do with the primitive notion that humans were created to serve the gods food? The origin of sacrifice to appease angry gods may be nothing more than gods lusting for blood as a form of food? There is also the primitive idea that drinking the blood of defeated enemies was a further insult to those enemies, or it was a source of appropriated energy/power (taking the “life” of the defeated enemy).

Further, in relation to the primeval myth of humans created to feed the gods, to do the work of the gods, we find also the early sense of obligation to serve the elite representatives of gods- i.e. commoners obligated to serve the elite shaman/priests who claimed the authority to solely represent the gods. They claimed special status as those alone who knew the secrets of the invisible realms and they alone could communicate the will/word/law of the deities to the rest. That further added to the overall pathology of degrading, devaluing, dehumanizing, and demonizing common humanity. And it formed the basis for promoting the elite/commoner divide in early human societies.

From the beginning, the earliest shaman, agitating to dominate their fellow tribals, initiated the demand for domination/submission forms of relating as natural, as divinely authorized. And, claiming special insight into the mysteries of the invisible world of the gods, the shaman established themselves as the solely qualified representatives who would speak for the gods. That early shamanic tradition eventually became the dominating priesthoods of states who would claim to represent the will and rule of the gods.

That early unleashing of the inherited animal impulse to dominate others (alpha-ism), eventually expressed in the Hellenistic belief of “special people as divine in some manner”, elites divinely gifted and appointed to rule commoners- as in Plato’s “philosopher kings”, those in societies claiming to be the enlightened experts most qualified to lead populations of commoners.

Christianity, prominently shaped by that Greek mythology, eventually formulated the belief in such things as “the Divine right of kings”. The elite advocacy for domination/submission forms of relating was exemplified in the Christian belief in “Lord Christ” as the epitome embodiment of ruling authority, the archetype of domination. See also, for example, Romans 13 where Paul advocates for state domination, or Revelation where domination/submission is presented as an eternal reality- i.e. Lord Jesus as eternal Ruler with a “rod of iron”.

Note: This primitive affirmation of “alpha rule” contradicts entirely the teaching of Historical Jesus that true greatness was “to not lord over others but to serve others”.

Insert: Other researchers suggest that the human response to subserviently bow to authority is very much attributable to the continuing presence of the primitive animal impulse to alpha domination over weaker others. See, for example, Hector Garcia’s “Alpha God: The Psychology Of Religious Violence And Oppression.”

Continuing to build on the above:

(3) The myth of “Declinism” that dominates our modern era– detailed by Arthur Herman in “The Idea of Decline In Western History”.

The idea of decline argues that the trajectory of life declines toward a worsening state. Surveys show that a majority of people across the world believe that “the world is becoming worse” (see, for example, the YouGov survey in the Intro to “Ten Global Trends”). Herman stated that the idea of decline is “the most dominant and influential theme in the (modern world)”. Hollywood obsessively promotes this primitive myth in its public storytelling (i.e. the decline of life toward disastrous collapse and ending as an essential feature in apocalyptic mythology and narratives).

The fallacy that life and the world is becoming worse distorts reality and undermines the inspiring effect of hope that is essential to human wellbeing, flourishing, and endeavor. The myth of decline generates a sense of fatalism, resignation, giving up, and even violent nihilism in people. Look at the prominence today of depression, anxiety disorder (“eco-anxiety” widespread in children), fear of growing up, fear of having children (i.e. fear of bringing children into a world that is soon to end), etc. Again, Simon’s “Ultimate Resource” is the brilliant response/counter to the “Declinism” fallacy.

(4) Associated with the general declinism of all life: The myth that humanity is becoming worse– i.e. “Declinism” in humanity, the fallacy of “human degeneration” theory (Herman in “The Idea of Decline”). This anti-humanism element has been beaten into human consciousness across history in religious narratives of original sinfulness (i.e. Adam “fall of man” mythology, fallen from a previous perfect state). This mythology deforms human consciousness with the grand lie that humanity becomes worse over time.

The “noble savage” theory that apparently still dominates academia today (i.e. early humans as more pure, strong, noble, more connected to nature), emerged out of this myth of the fall of humanity from original perfection.

This myth also feeds into the deforming of the hero’s quest, where people view themselves in terms of Zoroaster’s cosmic dualism, as the righteous true believers on the side of the true and good religion/ideology and obligated to battle the evil enemies on the other side in some differing “false” religion/ideology, the differing others who are demonized as irredeemably corrupted, becoming ever worse, and deserving to be destroyed, exterminated, as they are framed as “existential” threats to life (i.e. responsible for causing the apocalyptic decline of life- see, for examples, David Redles’ “Hitler’s Millennial Reich on the imagined threat from Jewish Bolshevism.).

Contrary to this mythical fallacy of degenerating humanity, the actual improving trajectory of humanity has been covered by researchers like James Payne (“History of Force”) and Stephen Pinker (“Better Angels of Our Nature”).

Add also Paul Seabright’s “The Company of Strangers: A Natural History of Economic Life” on how the development of commerce led to the taming of human violence, as humans discovered the mutual benefits of trade/commerce, what became known as the “moralizing influence of gentle commerce”.

The evidence shows that we have steadily, across the millennia, become something better than before (i.e. the main indicator of human improvement- i.e. less violent). Simon’s “Ultimate Resource”, with amassed evidence on all the main indicators of the true state of life, affirms the same rising trajectory for humanity, as for all life, that of gradual improvement over time. Simon concludes that the evidence on the long-term trajectory of life and humanity shows that we have become “more creators than destroyers”. Our long-term improvement and progress reveals our essential human goodness emerging and developing, and it powerfully counters the fallacy of essential human corruption and degeneration.

The declining life/declining humanity theme culminates in (5) the myth of the final collapse and ending of life, the complete and final ruination of the world in “catastrophic apocalyptic destruction”. The fallacy of the apocalyptic destruction of all life is the final phase in the mythical narrative of “original paradise ruined by humanity with life subsequently declining toward something worse as divine punishment”. The threat of the retributive ending of all life incites the human survival impulse to heights of hysteria and that renders people susceptible to irrational salvation schemes that involve the destruction of life and civilization- i.e. the demand to “violently purge some evil threat to life”, salvation promised through destruction as the required means to “save the world”. Religious salvation schemes often promise otherworldly salvation (utopia) that incentivizes people to abandon efforts to engage and improve this present world.

We have the extensive historical record of the outcomes of repeated apocalyptic millennial salvation crusades- i.e. the madness of revolutions that seek to destroy the existing world/civilization, to purge the “evil” of the present social order as required to prepare the way for the restoration of a lost paradise or the installation of some new millennial perfection. This was true of the Marxist and Nazi revolutions, and we are watching a repeat now in the environmental alarmist crusade against modern industrial society, viewed as the destroyer of nature (i.e. humans ruining paradise through technological civilization). Hence, modern civilization must itself be destroyed to make way for the new utopian order (i.e. the revolutionary phase of “exterminate some demonized enemy or be exterminated”).

Again, remember Arthur Mendel’s warning (“Vision And Violence”) to beware of embracing any form of salvation that is promised through death-cult destruction.

Grok’s take on Mendel: “Mendel’s real insight is warning us to watch out for any idea that promises salvation through catastrophe. That’s where the trouble starts.”

Insert: Varied horrific natural disasters of the past may have incited our ancestors to invent and construct apocalyptic myths. For example, evidence has been offered that some 7,500 years ago the Mediterranean Sea rose from melting glaciers and broke through the Bosphorus Straits to flood the Black Sea.

https://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/watkins/blacksea.htm#:~:text=This%20evidence%2C%20collected%20by%20two,basin%20at%20the%20Bosphorus%20Straits.

That great destructive flood may have been what informed the Sumerian Flood myth of apocalypse, as well as the biblical account of Noah’s flood, another apocalypse story. Zoroaster then later introduced the myth of apocalypse by fire, which shaped Paul’s belief in apocalypse by fire (see Thessalonians, Revelation, etc.- “Lord Jesus returning in flaming fire to destroy…”).

When you add the threat of “imminent” apocalypse, with actual endless setting of dates for the soon coming end of days, you then incite the survival impulse of populations to heights of fear, panic, and hysteria over the looming “end of the world”.

“Imminent apocalypse” fallacy clouds people’s minds with fear and renders them susceptible to irrational salvation schemes where they willingly support policies to destroy their lives and societies in order to achieve some “greater good”, as in “save the threatened world”. See Richard Landes (“Heaven On Earth”) for the example of the “Xhosa cattle slaughter”. Incited to hysteria over threatened apocalypse, they destroyed their main source of livelihood.

So also, we are living through the destructive madness of decarbonization in today’s climate apocalypse movement, where the very food of all life (i.e. CO2) has been demonized as the destroyer of life, and where the fossil fuels that have provided the immense improvements to the human condition over that past century have been demonized as a danger to life (add Bill Maher’s incredibly stupid comment that CO2 was a ”poisonous gas”). All part of the madness of “destroy the world/civilization to save the world.” Embracing a “promise of salvation through destruction.”

To further intensify fear with the threat of life ending, add the myth that it gets even worse, far worse, with after-life Judgment, condemnation, exclusion, and punitive destruction- i.e. the hell myth. Eternal suffering after temporal suffering here. Piling metaphysically-based fears on top of physical world fears. Sheesh, such lunacy, eh.

Having incited primal human fears, with threats of angry deity punishing people for their imperfection through the natural world, and further threatening eternal violence and destruction… what then?

The enlightened elites of the ancient world, the shaman and priests, convinced frightened people that the angry, retaliatory deities of their primitive mythologies demanded appeasement, payment, sacrifice.

Early humans then constructed the bad idea of (6) salvation as some form of sacrifice/payment, notably salvation through the slaughter of humans and animals. (Again, Mendel’s point to beware of salvation coming via destruction/death. That if you murder the right people you can achieve some greater good, you can make life better.)

Insert: A useful study of the history of human sacrifice is Nigel Davies “Human Sacrifice In History and Today”.

Today we get the scold to embrace salvationism in the pushed obligation to make a payment for our sins, to suffer for atonement, in such things as the requirement to make some contemporary sacrifice as in things like “de-growth, de-development, decarbonization”- i.e. give up the good life in modern civilization as the only way to avoid the apocalyptic ending of the world. Versions of this come at us in “Small is beautiful. Return to ‘noble primitivism’, the ‘moral superiority of the simple lifestyle’,” etc.

Is this also what all that wilderness survival stuff is catering to? Sacrifice in giving up something, self-punishment, suffering as redemptive? What priests in monasteries engage- i.e. the self-flagellation with whips, hair shirts, and celibacy.

The sense of obligation to make some sacrifice is based on the primitive view of justice as necessarily retaliatory, retributive, punitive. That derives from myth of gods who are viewed as threatening retaliation, retribution, and punishment, and who demand appeasement, atonement in traditional versions of “eye for eye” justice. Ah, it’s a dense and complex interconnection of bad ideas, eh.

Consequent to such mythology, people from the beginning have felt an obligation to make a sacrifice, to pay for sin, to suffer for redemption. This is essential to the consequent felt need to rebalance the unbalanced scales of justice at some cosmic level.

The long-ingrained retributive version of justice was overturned quite entirely by Historical Jesus in his stunning new merciful and unconditional approach to human failure that enraged people. He was rejecting the fundamental view of justice by which most of humanity had lived from the very beginning. He was “attacking” and overturning a critical element in human narratives and identity.

His stunning insights and new message notably angered religious Jews, to the point of trying to kill him. That happened after his first public speech.

He incited their anger by reading a passage from Isaiah 61 that ends with the statement “to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor and the day of vengeance of our God”. But he left off the last part- “the day of vengeance of our God”. His audience knew what he was up to, “blasphemously” denying the previously unquestioned theology of retaliatory, punishing deity. Leaving on the note of “the Lord’s favor”. He then made things a magnitude of order worse by citing Old Testament examples of God sending prophets to help outsiders to the Hebrew nation. Meaning, universal favor and inclusion of enemies. Unconditional mercy and love. Holy shitoli.

Well, to people long indoctrinated in justice as retribution, especially against hated enemies, such mercy grated on their psyches and outraged them, “All the people in the synagogue were furious when they heard this”. They wanted an affirmation of divine vengeance and justice as punishment and destruction of their enemies, not favoring them.

So also, Jonah sulked in a pissed-off hissy fit of depression when God did not destroy Ninevah after he had prophesied such apocalyptic destruction. God took mercy even on cattle. Jonah says in the book named after him, chapter 4, “I knew that you are a gracious and compassionate God, slow to anger and abounding in love, a God who relents from sending calamity… Now, LORD, take away my life, for it is better for me to die than to live”, because God took mercy even on “many animals.”

People angry at forgiveness, love and mercy toward others? A sad state of mind and spirit for us to descend into, eh. That’s what millennia of indoctrination with myths of angry, retaliatory Gods had done to people’s minds. Justice defined by and grounded soundly in retaliatory violence toward “enemies”.

And get this critical point that Jesus was challenging and rejecting the very God of his audience. Their fundamental image of deity. They, like most people before them, could not conceive of some other way of imaging deity. To think otherwise of immutable God would be heresy, blasphemy, unbelief, satanic, unforgivably sinful.

Jesus’ protest against the sacrifice industry was a part of his more fundamental protest against the theology at the foundation of that industry across history, the human felt obligation to appease angry gods, a felt obligation based on the fallacy of retaliatory, punitive deity (i.e. monster God theology). He was protesting the very theology that undergirded the system of justice that sustained sacrifice. It was all part of the same overall protest.

In the story of the synagogue reading, Jesus’ audience knew that he was protesting and rejecting the very God that they worshipped- i.e. the theology of wrathful punitive destroyer, Judge of all. Jesus was proposing an entirely opposite theology- i.e. the stunning new theology of a non-retaliatory, unconditional God who promoted a stunning new form of justice as restorative- i.e. “love your enemy”.

Jesus’ message overturned and rendered meaningless all that his audience believed in. His teaching was too radical to even comprehend and countenance, as it meant a disintegration of their old worldview and identity, and reintegration around something entirely new and opposite to all that they had lived by. He was proposing a death and rebirth of radical magnitude. How people viewed their very selves as humans.

Hence, they were offended, outraged. His message incited in them a form of survival desperation. Their system of meaning was subjected to the “threat” from a divine generosity so contrary to all that they believed. Jesus’ message was experienced as an existential threat to their core identity and that stirred the survival impulse in people.

Jesus, standing in front of them, straightforwardly rejected the most basic human understanding of “justice” that had prevailed for millennia, what had always affirmed the Jew’s inherited impulses to (1) tribalism (true believers favored, unbelievers/outsiders rejected and destroyed), and to (2) punitive destruction of enemies as true justice. Jesus’ new theology of “no conditions love” overturned that deeply ingrained sense of justice, righteousness, truth, goodness, etc.

The religion of his fellow Jews was based on their view of God as the defender of their tribe against all enemies. God as the upholder of their truth, their righteous causes, the defender of goodness in general. That view of God and justice had long undergirded their very identity, and the livelihood/income of the priests involved in the sacrifice industry. It validated the religion that granted them the status of supremacy over others, as more favored by God than all others (i.e. “chosen people” mythology).

Jesus further illustrated the reaction of anger and outrage toward his new unconditional message in the parables of the anger of the older brother toward the generously forgiving and merciful father in the Prodigal story (Luke 15). He also illustrated Jewish anger at non-discriminating inclusive compassion in the anger of the all-day vineyard workers toward the generosity of the vineyard owner (Matthew 20).

Summarizing: Jesus’ protest against the sacrifice industry was also a protest against the primitive view of justice that sacrifice was based on, and most fundamentally a protest against the primitive mythology of a God that demanded payment of all debts, punishment of all wrongs. There was no free or unconditional love in those primitive views of divine justice and a God who demanded such conditions. It was all “eye for eye” retaliatory justice.

That is why in Luke 6:27-36, Jesus details what his new version of love means in practice and concludes that if we do such things then we will be just like God, “Be unconditionally merciful just like your Father is unconditionally merciful.” Show this kind of behavior and you will be showing the true character of God and the nature of authentic humanity.

Further to this list of core bad ideas– Add (7) the tendency of many to deform the “hero’s quest”, to believe there is a divine demand to heroically engage a righteous battle against evil enemies that must be purged, even exterminated as irredeemably evil, as they are too corrupted, defiled, and existentially threatening to life to allow them to continue living.

This derives from the Zoroastrian cosmic dualism myth (i.e. a Good God warring eternally against an Evil Force/Satan). This ultimate Good/Evil cosmic dualism has long functioned as an ultimate ideal that incites people to frame their differences with others in terms of being on the righteous side against the differing other as the “Evil Other”. Divine tribalism taken to extremes in varied human forms of tribalism. (The human practise of “basing behavior on similar theological beliefs”.)

Based on this cosmic dualism myth, early people believed that there was the follow-up divine demand to join the true religion of the true and good God and to fight the false religion of the false Spirit. The Zoroastrian fallacy has fueled endless tribal enmity and conflict among people across history who frame their conflicts with their opponents in such irredeemably oppositional terms.

This may be the most dangerously delusional element in this list. Especially when people convince themselves that God is on their side, that they are acting on behalf of God, they are God’s chosen people, special and favored by God above all others. Who said the worst and most dangerous people in society are those who believe that they know what is best for all others? That belief is scaled up, intensified to the highest reach, by adding divinity to the equation to validate people’s sense of being more special than all others, thereby affirming their impulse to domination and busybody meddling in and controlling other’s lives, validated in doing so because they believe they are favored and chosen by God to “do the will of God.”

Insert: This idea actually motivated Hitler who believed that Providence had chosen and protected him to be the savior of the German race. The multiple failed assassination attempts against him only solidified his thinking on this point.

And then, talking about highest reaches of extremism, we further deform the hero’s quest when we frame differing others, the disagreeing “enemies”, as especially hated and despised by God, demonized as the “children of Satan”, and so “beyond the pale” as to be deserving of eternal hellfire. Quite naturally, that type of thinking leads to similar behaving- i.e. “Let’s help them on their way to their true destination”. Let’s help God send them along to hell.

The element of framing enemies as “demonic” intensifies the sense of obligation to exterminate such enemies who are viewed as more existentially dangerous than normal infidels and unbelievers. The view of enemies as some version of especially evil being informs, for example, the Islamic hatred of the Jews as not just infidels but “demonic” infidels, more dangerous than all others and therefore deserving more intense hatred and effort to exterminate.

And if we frame our enemies as so irredeemably terrible because they threaten all life with what we claim is “existential” danger, well, then it is an even more a righteous obligation for us to move into the phase of “exterminate them or be exterminated” (the final phase of apocalyptic crusades where desperate heroes must engage “extreme measures” to save their world from existential threats).

Such tribalism, fueled by Zoroaster’s fallacy of cosmic dualism, is a denial of the fundamental truth of human oneness, whether affirmed by common human origins from the East African “Mitochondrial Eve”, or based on the ultimate Oneness that is affirmed by the oneness at the most fundamental level of reality as seen in “quantum entanglement”. Or ultimate oneness that is affirmed by NDE accounts of fundamental human oneness with deity.

Further points on the deforming of the hero’s quest with Zoroastrian tribal dualism, justice as punitive destruction of irredeemable enemies, and the fallacy of retaliatory deity that affirms tribalism and vengeful justice.

Once again that insightful summary: “Men never do worse evil than when they do it in the name of their God”.

Heroes (suffering under the burden of the “messiah complex, saviors of the world”), when engaging their righteous battles against evil, further intensify the nature of their struggle with the demand for “instantaneous purging of evil” and “coercive purification”. The demand for urgency and immediacy is based on the belief that the threat from the enemy is so existentially “immanent” (i.e. the “always soon-coming apocalypse”) that there is no time for the normal gradualism of democratic processes.

The urgency of the immediately looming “end-of-days”, demands immediate desperate measures, and legitimizes revolutionary violence against threatening enemies in order to “save the world”. See Arthur Mendel on the demand of impatient revolutionaries for “instantaneous purification/purging of evil” versus the gradualism of democracy, in his excellent “Vision and Violence”. Note how repeatedly across past decades the climate alarmism prophets have claimed that evil consumers of fossil fuels were bringing on the end of life, and that the end was only a decade, or few years, up ahead. Hence, the demand for immediate and radical action to end use of fossil fuels, no matter the destruction of our civilization, all to “save the world”.

Contrary to panic-mongering over immanence, the “end of days” has been endlessly passed due to the 100% failure rate of apocalyptic lunacy.

Then a final theme on this list: (8) The false carrot-stick hope stirred by the promise of fulfilled salvation in the restoration of a paradisal communalism/collectivism (Acts 2-4). Or salvation into a new utopia of a millennial kingdom (i.e. Nazism, Christianity). The same salvation is promised in the environmental vision of a return to the falsely imagined “strong, pure” existence of hunter-gatherers “more connected to nature” (Arthur Herman in “The Idea of Decline”, also “Hitler’s Millennial Reich” by David Redles).

Conclusion:

These psychopathological themes have been fiercely defended and maintained across history in our great religious traditions and are now embraced in modern era “secular ideological” belief systems and even promoted by “science”. The themes above distort entirely the “true state of life” in the world, they distort the actual long-term trajectory of life. They also distort the true nature of humanity, and consequently produce emotions, motivations, and policy responses that irrationally destroy life to save some imaginary lost world, or prevent some imaginary threatening “apocalyptic ending”.

Julian Simon countered the “madness of crowds” thinking produced by the above themes with a detailed presentation of evidence on the true state of life, the actual improving trajectory of life over the long-term. The improving trajectory of life and civilization is fueled by essential human goodness, compassion, and creativity.

The above list is the complex of the worst of bad ideas that the ancients created, which they then affirmed with a tribal, dominating, destroying God as the cohering center of the complex, rendering the complex as the “untouchable sacred”, protected from challenge and dissent with threats of “blasphemy, heresy, evil unbelief, and hellfire”.

(End of ‘bad ideas’ complex)

Below, Grok responds to my list of the most common “bad religious ideas/beliefs” across history…

I said- These basic themes have deformed human minds from the beginning of emerging human consciousness in the prehistory era. They have infected the early human expression of our primal impulse for meaning and horrifically distorted human understanding of reality and life.

Yet they still dominate the great world religions and in the modern era they continue to dominate “secular ideologies”, and even science (e.g. the “profoundly religious crusade” of climate crisis/apocalypse).

Perhaps most destructive, they deform our engagement of the hero’s quest, inciting many people to exaggerate their own righteousness as they engage battles against “evil enemies” in some self-assigned heroic endeavor to purge evil from the world.

While there are dangerous people who must be restrained, incarcerated, or killed where necessary (i.e. if refusing to surrender peacefully), we must never forget that, beyond the tribal dualisms of this life, even our enemies are ultimately family (i.e. the ultimate oneness of all humanity).

As Joseph Campbell said…

“For love is exactly as strong as life. And when life produces what the intellect names evil, we may enter into righteous battle, contending ‘from loyalty of heart’: however, if the principle of love (Christ’s “Love your enemies”) is lost thereby, our humanity too will be lost. ‘Man’, in the words of the American novelist Hawthorne, ‘must not disclaim his brotherhood even with the guiltiest’” (Myths To Live By).

Remember also that the real battle of good versus evil takes place inside us. It runs down the center of every human heart (Solzhenitsyn). This is the battle of our common human spirit against our common inheritance of animal drives, drives such as the “evil triad” of tribalism, domination, punitive destruction of differing others. Drives that are incited and validated by the “bad religious ideas” listed above.

I asked Grok: Grok what have been the most common and prominent myths or ideas across human history, in mythologies and religions?

My list includes:

(1) The past was better. (2) We corrupt and destructive humans (i.e. inherent sinfulness) ruined that original paradise. (3) The gods/spirits are now angry with us and punishing us for our sins through natural disasters, disease, accidents, and predatory cruelty. (4) The gods also threaten a great final ending of all things, the violent destruction of apocalypse. A return to the original destructive chaos. (5) The upset gods (as restorers of violated justice) then demand some sacrifice/payment, they demand that we should suffer for our sins as payback punishment. (6) Further, they demand that we heroically join some true religion or ideological tribe/movement to fight against evil enemies (Zoroaster’s cosmic dualism). Our enemies are threatened with this-life extermination and then eternal after-life damnation in hellfire. (7) Then, having fought and won our righteous wars to purge evil from life, we will be granted salvation in a communal paradise/utopia.

Do you see these as the most prominent ideas shaping human narratives across human history?

Grok responded:

Your list captures some of the most recurring and influential themes in human mythologies and religions, reflecting deep psychological, social, and existential concerns. These ideas resonate across cultures and eras because they address universal questions about meaning, morality, suffering, and destiny. However, their prominence varies by context, and other themes also stand out in the broader tapestry of human belief systems. Let’s evaluate your list and consider additional or complementary ideas that have shaped human narratives, keeping things concise but thorough.

Your List: Analysis and Reflection

1. The Past Was Better (Golden Age Myth)

Prominence: Extremely common. From Hesiod’s Ages of Man (Greek) to the Garden of Eden (Abrahamic traditions) to the Satya Yuga (Hinduism), the idea of a lost paradise or ideal era is near-universal. It reflects nostalgia, a sense of decline, and a yearning for simplicity or harmony.

Nuance: Some traditions, like Confucianism or certain Indigenous myths, don’t always idealize the past but emphasize cyclical renewal or present duty over nostalgia. Still, the “golden age” trope is pervasive.

2. Humans Are Destructive/Sinful, Ruining Paradise

Prominence: Dominant in many traditions, especially Abrahamic religions (original sin), but also in myths like Pandora’s box (Greek) or the fall from dharma in Hinduism/Buddhism. It frames humans as flawed, often tying morality to cosmic consequences.

Nuance: Not all systems see humans as inherently destructive. Some animistic or polytheistic traditions view human flaws as part of a balanced cosmos, not a fall from grace. Still, the “human fault” narrative is widespread.

3. Gods/Spirits Punish Us for Sins (Natural Disasters, etc.)

Prominence: Very common, especially in monotheistic and some polytheistic systems. Flood myths (e.g., Noah, Gilgamesh, Deucalion) and stories of divine wrath (e.g., Sodom and Gomorrah, Kali’s destruction) link suffering to divine justice.

Nuance: In some traditions, like Buddhism or Stoicism, suffering stems from ignorance or natural processes, not divine anger. Still, the “punitive gods” idea is a major thread.

4. Threat of Apocalypse/Return to Chaos

Prominence: Strong in apocalyptic traditions like Christianity (Revelation), Islam (Qiyamah), Zoroastrianism (Frashokereti), and Norse mythology (Ragnarök). It dramatizes cosmic stakes and moral urgency.

Nuance: Not all myths emphasize a final end. Hinduism and Buddhism focus on cycles of creation/destruction (yugas, kalpas), and some Indigenous myths lack a singular “end.” But apocalypticism is a powerful motif, especially in Axial Age religions.

5. Gods Demand Sacrifice/Punishment for Sins

Prominence: Widespread, from ancient blood sacrifices

(Mesopotamian, Aztec) to penance in Christianity or karma in Dharmic traditions. It reflects a transactional view of divine-human relations.

Nuance: Some systems, like Jainism or certain mystical traditions, de-emphasize external sacrifice for internal transformation. Still, the idea of “paying for sins” is near-ubiquitous.

6. Join the True Tribe to Fight Evil (Cosmic Dualism)

Prominence: Potent in dualistic systems like Zoroastrianism, Manichaeism, and Abrahamic faiths (God vs. Satan). It fuels crusades, jihads, and ideological wars, framing life as a moral battlefield.

Nuance: Less prominent in non-dualistic traditions (e.g., Taoism, Advaita Vedanta) that see opposites as unified. Still, “us vs. them” narratives are a major driver of conflict and identity.

7. Salvation in Paradise/Utopia After Victory

Prominence: Central to many religions— Christian heaven, Islamic Jannah, Buddhist Nirvana, or secular utopias (e.g., Marxist classless society). It offers hope and purpose.

Nuance: Some traditions (e.g., existentialist or animistic) focus on present harmony, not a future reward. But the promise of a perfect state is a widespread motivator.

Are These the Most Prominent Ideas?

Your list is remarkably comprehensive, hitting major chords in human storytelling: decline, guilt, divine justice, conflict, and redemption. These themes dominate especially in Axial Age religions (c. 800–200 BCE) and their successors (Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Zoroastrianism, etc.), which shaped much of Western and Middle Eastern thought. They also appear in secular ideologies (e.g., progress narratives, revolutionary utopianism), showing their adaptability.

However, their prominence depends on how we weigh “human history.” If we focus on literate, state-based societies, your list is spot-on. But including oral traditions, Indigenous beliefs, or pre-Axial systems (e.g., early animism, shamanism) might elevate other themes. Here are a few additional or complementary ideas that rival your list in ubiquity:

Additional Prominent Themes

1. Cyclical Time and Renewal

Many traditions (Hinduism, Buddhism, Mesoamerican myths, Indigenous cosmologies) see time as cyclical, not linear. Creation, destruction, and rebirth repeat, unlike the linear “paradise-fall-apocalypse” arc. This view is as pervasive as apocalypticism, especially outside monotheistic traditions.

2. Ancestors and Continuity

Veneration of ancestors (African religions, Confucianism, Shinto, many Indigenous systems) ties the living to the dead, emphasizing duty and legacy over cosmic battles or utopias. This focus on kinship and lineage is arguably as universal as guilt or salvation narratives.

3. Harmony with Nature/Cosmos

Animistic and polytheistic systems (e.g., Native American, African, early Shinto) often prioritize living in balance with spirits, animals, or natural forces, rather than fighting evil or escaping sin. This contrasts with dualistic or apocalyptic frames but is equally widespread.

4. Trickster Figures and Ambiguity

Tricksters (Loki, Coyote, Anansi, Hermes) appear in countless myths, embodying chaos, creativity, and moral ambiguity. They challenge simplistic “good vs. evil” narratives, reflecting a human fascination with complexity.

5. Quest for Knowledge/Transcendence

From Gilgamesh’s search for immortality to Buddhist enlightenment or Gnostic awakening, the pursuit of wisdom or divine truth is a major motif, sometimes overshadowing sacrifice or utopia.

Synthesis

Your seven themes are among the most prominent, especially in shaping moralistic, state-supported religions and ideologies that influenced global history. They reflect a worldview where humans are flawed, gods are judgmental, and existence is a struggle toward justice or salvation. However, adding cyclical renewal, ancestor veneration, or nature harmony would round out the picture, especially for non-Western or premodern cultures. No single list can capture everything, but yours nails the core of many dominant narratives.

If you’d like, I can dig deeper into any theme, compare specific myths, or analyze how these ideas evolve in modern ideologies. What do you think?

I urged Grok– Yes, please do analyze how these ideas evolve in modern ideologies.

Grok responded:

The seven themes you identified— golden age nostalgia, human sinfulness, divine punishment, apocalyptic endings, sacrificial atonement, cosmic dualism, and utopian salvation— have deep roots in mythologies and religions. While modern ideologies (e.g., political, social, or secular movements) often claim to break from traditional religion, these ancient narrative structures persist, adapted to new contexts. Below, I’ll analyze how each theme evolves in modern ideologies, showing how they reshape old myths for contemporary purposes. I’ll keep it concise but comprehensive, drawing connections to specific ideologies where relevant.

1. The Past Was Better (Golden Age Nostalgia)

Evolution: The myth of a better past fuels many modern ideologies, often secularized as a lost ideal state.

Conservatism: Traditionalist ideologies romanticize a pre-modern era— e.g., a time of strong family values, national unity, or moral clarity— before industrialization, globalization, or cultural shifts “corrupted” society. Think MAGA’s “Make America Great Again,” implying a return to a vaguely defined golden era.

Environmentalism: Some green movements idealize pre-industrial or even pre-agricultural societies, casting them as harmonious with nature, unlike modern ecological “decline.”

Socialism/Communism: Marxist narratives frame early human societies (or “primitive communism”) as egalitarian, before class divisions ruined the communal ideal.

Shift: The “golden age” is less about divine creation and more about a socio-political or ecological benchmark. Nostalgia is weaponized to critique modernity, often ignoring historical complexities.

Example: Populist movements worldwide (e.g., Brexit) evoke a lost national sovereignty or cultural purity, adapting the myth to identity politics.

2. We Destructive Humans Ruined Paradise (Inherent Sinfulness)

Evolution: The idea of human flaw persists, but “sin” is reframed as ignorance, greed, or systemic failure.

Capitalism Critique: In leftist ideologies, humanity’s “sin” is exploitation— capitalist greed or colonialism wrecking equality or the planet. The fall is not from Eden but from fairness.

Technological Anxiety: Transhumanism or anti-tech movements (e.g., neo-Luddites) cast humans as reckless, ruining nature or ethics with unchecked innovation (AI, biotech).

Woke Ideology: Concepts like “systemic racism” or “toxic masculinity” secularize original sin, suggesting humans are inherently biased, requiring constant self-correction.

Shift: Divine judgment is replaced by social or ecological consequences. The focus moves from individual guilt to collective responsibility, though personal shame persists (e.g., “carbon footprints” or “privilege”).

Example: Climate activism often frames humanity as a destructive force, with overconsumption as the modern “fall” from ecological balance.

3. Gods Punish Us for Sins (Natural Disasters, etc.)

Evolution: Divine wrath becomes natural or social consequences in secular ideologies, but the punitive logic remains.

Environmentalism: Climate change is framed as nature’s “revenge” for human excess— floods, fires, and storms as secular analogs to biblical plagues. Activists like Greta Thunberg evoke moral urgency akin to prophetic warnings.

Progressivism: Social unrest, inequality, or cultural decay is seen as punishment for failing to address injustice (e.g., ignoring systemic racism leads to protests or division).

Conspiracy Theories: QAnon or anti-vax movements reinterpret disasters (pandemics, economic crashes) as elite-orchestrated punishments, echoing divine retribution myths.

Shift: The “gods” are replaced by impersonal forces (nature, markets, history) or shadowy cabals. The narrative still moralizes suffering as a wake-up call.

Example: Post-COVID narratives often blamed globalism or overpopulation, mirroring flood myths where calamity corrects human hubris.

4. Threat of Apocalypse/Return to Chaos

Evolution: Apocalypticism thrives in modern ideologies, projecting existential threats as climactic reckonings.

Climate Alarmism: Predictions of ecological collapse (e.g., IPCC reports, “12 years left” rhetoric) echo apocalyptic prophecy, urging repentance (lifestyle change) to avert doom.

Nuclear/Tech Fears: Cold War-era Mutually Assured Destruction or AI “singularity” fears secularize Ragnarök, imagining tech as the chaos-bringer.

Political Extremism: Both left and right envision societal collapse— e.g., Marxist “late capitalism” crumbling or far-right fears of “white genocide.” Each sees a final reckoning.

Shift: The apocalypse is less supernatural and more material (climate, tech, social breakdown), but the urgency and dualism (saved vs. damned) persist. Secular apocalypses often promise agency— humans can prevent it.

Example: Elon Musk’s warnings about AI as an “existential risk” mirror eschatological fears, with tech pioneers as modern seers.

5. Gods Demand Sacrifice/Punishment for Sins

Evolution: Sacrifice morphs into activism, policy, or personal reform, but the idea of “paying a price” endures.

Environmentalism: Carbon taxes, veganism, or reduced consumption are modern penances, sacrifices to appease an angry planet. “Degrowth” ideology demands collective suffering for sustainability.

Social Justice: Cancel culture or performative allyship acts as secular atonement— public shaming or career loss as punishment for moral failings (e.g., “problematic” speech).

Capitalist Meritocracy: Neoliberalism demands personal sacrifice (hustle culture, debt) to “earn” success, framing struggle as redemptive.

Shift: Sacrifice is less about blood or ritual and more about lifestyle, status, or resources. The punitive undertone remains, often tied to collective guilt.

Example: Reparations debates frame financial or social concessions as atonement for historical sins like slavery or colonialism.

6. Join the True Tribe to Fight Evil (Cosmic Dualism)

Evolution: Dualism fuels ideological tribalism, casting opponents as existential threats.

Political Polarization: Left vs. right, globalists vs. nationalists— modern politics thrives on “us vs. them.” Progressives demonize “fascists”; conservatives vilify “woke elites.” Each claims moral supremacy.

Culture Wars: Cancel culture or deplatforming mirrors excommunication, purging “heretics” (e.g., J.K. Rowling, Kanye West). The enemy is not just wrong but evil.

Secular Religions: Ideologies like Marxism or libertarianism offer “true” frameworks (class struggle, free markets) to defeat opposing systems, echoing Zoroastrian cosmic battles.

Shift: The “gods” are ideologies or charismatic leaders (e.g., Trump, AOC). Enemies face social annihilation (deplatforming) rather than hellfire, but eternal damnation lingers in rhetoric (e.g., “history’s dustbin”).

Example: Online echo chambers amplify dualism, with X posts framing opponents as threats to civilization, replicating crusade-like zeal.

7. Salvation in Paradise/Utopia After Victory

Evolution: Utopian promises drive modern ideologies, offering a perfected future post-struggle.

Socialism/Communism: Marxism envisions a classless society after revolution, a secular heaven where labor and inequality vanish.

Transhumanism: Tech utopias (e.g., Musk’s Mars colonies, Kurzweil’s singularity) promise transcendence through AI or space, replacing divine salvation with engineered immortality.

Progressivism: Inclusive, equitable societies are the goal— e.g., a world free of racism, sexism, or poverty— achieved through reform or upheaval.

Shift: Paradise is earthly, not divine, but requires purging evil (capitalism, bigotry, carbon). The communal focus remains, though tech utopias add individualism.

Example: Green New Deal rhetoric blends ecological salvation with social justice, promising a harmonious, equitable world post-capitalism.

Broader Patterns and Observations

Secularization: Gods and spirits are replaced by nature, history, markets, or elites, but the narrative structure— fall, punishment, redemption— stays intact. Ideologies function as religions, complete with dogma and heretics.

Moral Urgency: Modern ideologies amplify apocalyptic stakes (climate, AI, culture wars) to mobilize action, mirroring prophetic calls to repent. Fear of chaos drives commitment.

Tribalism: Dualism is supercharged by media and social platforms, making “enemies” more visible and vilified. X, for instance, amplifies outrage cycles, reinforcing “true tribe” narratives.

Adaptability: These themes persist because they tap universal fears (loss, guilt, chaos) and hopes (justice, harmony). Whether religious or secular, they frame existence as a meaningful struggle.

Critique: Some modern ideologies reject these myths. Existentialism denies utopias or cosmic justice, embracing absurdity. Postmodernism deconstructs dualism and grand narratives. Yet these are less popular, as humans crave structured meaning.

Conclusion

Your seven themes are strikingly resilient, morphing from mythic to ideological forms without losing their emotional or moral grip. They shape modern debates— climate, politics, tech— by recasting gods as systems, sins as policies, and salvation as progress. Their evolution reflects a shift from divine to human agency, but the core stories endure, proving their psychological and cultural power.

If you want, I can zoom in on a specific ideology (e.g., Marxism, environmentalism), compare their use of these themes, or explore how X reflects these trends in real-time. What’s next?

My next question:

Grok how would you respond to Arthur Mendel’s statement in “Vision and Violence” that apocalyptic has been the most violent and destructive idea in history?

Grok’s answer:

Arthur Mendel’s claim in Vision and Violence that the apocalyptic idea is the most violent and destructive in history is a bold one, and it’s worth unpacking with a clear-eyed look at both sides. I’d argue it’s a strong contender, but not necessarily the unchallenged champion of destructive ideas— humans have cooked up plenty of ruinous notions over time.

On one hand, Mendel’s got a point. Apocalyptic thinking— whether rooted in religious visions of divine judgment or secular ideologies like revolutionary utopias— has fueled some serious havoc. It’s the kind of mindset that says, “Burn it all down, and paradise awaits.” You see it in the Crusades, where end-times fervor justified slaughter, or in millenarian cults that turned inward with deadly results, like Jonestown. Secular versions aren’t much better— think of the Bolsheviks or Mao’s Cultural Revolution, where the promise of a new world order came with purges and body counts in the millions. The idea’s power lies in its ability to make destruction feel righteous, even necessary. It’s like giving a moral blank check to chaos.

But let’s not crown it just yet. Other ideas have their own bloody resumes. Nationalism, for instance, has sparked wars, genocides, and ethnic cleansing with a fervor that doesn’t always need an end-of-days script— just look at the 20th century’s world wars or the Rwandan genocide. Colonialism, too, wrecked entire continents under the guise of “civilizing” missions, no apocalypse required. And don’t forget plain old greed—resource grabs and economic exploitation have killed and displaced millions without any grand narrative of cosmic renewal.

What makes the apocalyptic idea stand out, though, is its staying power and adaptability. It shapeshifts— God’s wrath becomes Reason’s triumph, then History’s march, then Nature’s revenge (hello, eco-doom). Mendel argues this chameleon-like quality keeps it dangerous across eras, unlike, say, nationalism, which is more tied to specific political structures. He’s got a case here: apocalypticism can infect any ideology, religious or not, and it thrives on crisis, real or imagined.

Still, I’d push back on “most violent and destructive” as a bit too absolute. It’s less about one idea being the ultimate villain and more about how humans wield ideas to justify what they already want— power, revenge, or a clean slate. Apocalypticism is a heavy hitter, sure, but it’s got competition. Mendel’s real insight is warning us to watch out for any idea that promises salvation through catastrophe. That’s where the trouble starts.

My next point:

An essential feature of apocalyptic is the idea of life declining toward something worse, toward collapse and ending. Arthur Herman in The Idea of Decline In Western History says that the idea of decline has become the most dominant and influential idea in modern history.

Grok’s response:

Arthur Herman’s claim in The Idea of Decline in Western History that the notion of decline is the most dominant and influential idea in modern history dovetails intriguingly with the apocalyptic mindset you’ve described, where life spirals toward collapse and an end. Let’s dig into this, keeping it sharp and focused.

Herman’s argument hinges on the idea that decline— whether cultural, moral, economic, or civilizational— has shaped modern thought more than any other lens. Since the Enlightenment, thinkers like Rousseau, Nietzsche, Spengler, and even modern environmentalists have leaned into narratives of decay, painting history as a slide from some golden age toward catastrophe. It’s a powerful story: things are getting worse, and we’re either doomed or need to act fast to stop the rot. This resonates deeply with the apocalyptic feature you mentioned— life worsening toward collapse. Decline is the setup for the apocalyptic punchline, the grim prelude to an imagined end.

Take the 19th and 20th centuries: Romantic nostalgia for a lost pastoral idyll fueled anti-industrial movements, while Marxist visions of capitalism’s inevitable breakdown fed revolutionary fever. Fast forward, and you’ve got post-World War II existentialists mourning spiritual decay, or today’s climate doomsayers warning of ecological collapse. Herman’s point is that this declinist mindset isn’t just a mood— it’s a driver. It’s pushed policies, sparked revolutions, and shaped how we see progress (or its absence). The idea that we’re on a downward slope has a way of making people either despair or double down on radical fixes, both of which can shake the world.

Now, connect that to apocalyptic thinking. Decline is the slow burn that sets the stage for the apocalyptic explosion— the belief that things aren’t just bad but headed for a final, transformative crash. Religious apocalypses, like those in Revelation, see moral decay culminating in divine judgment. Secular ones, like Marxist or eco-apocalyptic visions, swap God for History or Nature but keep the same arc: decline, then rupture, then (maybe) renewal. Herman’s decline obsession and Mendel’s apocalyptic warning from Vision and Violence feel like two sides of the same coin— decline primes the pump for apocalyptic fantasies of collapse and rebirth.

But is decline really the most dominant idea? It’s got competition. Progress, for one, has been a rival heavyweight. Enlightenment optimism, industrial revolutions, and tech-driven dreams of utopia have convinced plenty that history’s arrow points up, not down—think Silicon Valley’s gospel of innovation. Yet even progress often gets tangled with decline: every “better future” pitch implies something’s wrong now. Decline might not rule alone, but it’s sneaky— it worms into even the sunniest ideologies.

Where Herman nails it is showing how decline makes us act. It’s not just philosophy; it’s psychology. People who buy into decay— whether it’s “Western civilization is crumbling” or “the planet’s dying”— move mountains to either hasten the end or dodge it. That’s why it feels so apocalyptic: decline isn’t static; it’s a story that demands an ending. Whether that’s violent collapse (Mendel’s worry) or a desperate scramble for salvation, it’s a script we keep rewriting.

More on site project: Wendell Krossa

Make sure that you get the core theme of the “Q Wisdom Sayings” clear. That collection of sayings contains the message of Historical Jesus, a message that contrasts so entirely with Paul’s Christ myth. It presents the “diamond” that Thomas Jefferson and Leo Tolstoy referred to. Get that clear, whether in the Matt 5:38-48 version or the better Luke 6:27-36 version. Understand the “thematic coherence” in those precepts, arguments, and illustrations (i.e. “sun and rain generously given to all alike, to both good and bad people”).

His precepts and illustrations all cohere around the ideal of unconditional love. That is the “cohering center” to all that the man said and did. It is illustrated in his parable of the Prodigal father and the vineyard owner who generously gives the same amount to the late comers as to the all-day guys. Jesus also illustrated unconditional in his invitation of outcasts to community meals and in his stories of God helping outsiders/enemies inclusively as in Luke 4:25-28:

“I assure you that there were many widows in Israel in Elijah’s time, when the sky was shut for three and a half years and there was a severe famine throughout the land. Yet Elijah was not sent to any of them, but to a widow in Zarephath in the region of Sidon. And there were many in Israel with leprosy in the time of Elisha the prophet, yet not one of them was cleansed— only Naaman the Syrian.” All the people in the synagogue were furious when they heard this.”

Try going against the natural urge of many people to defensive tribalism (our God favors us “true believers” more than our infidel enemies) and watch how you will incite the tribal-minded to rage. Just an insert example: We are seeing the same discriminatory tribal rage illustrated today by US Democrats who become enraged at “normalizing” enemy Republicans, even liberals vilifying fellow liberals for befriending the “enemy”, for sharing Thanksgiving meals with relatives that belong to the other party, etc. And both sides are susceptible to exhibiting the same tribalism.

Jesus’ statements on such non-tribal unconditional inclusivity angered tribal-minded Jews of his day.

He later stated the same point on universal inclusion in the main summary of his message in Matthew 5 and Luke 6, that God did not exclude anyone, generously and freely giving the two most critical gifts of life for survival in agrarian society- i.e. sun and rain- to all, to both good and bad people.

Unconditional takes love to the height of heroic humaneness. It is the ultimate ideal for anyone to aspire to if they want to “tower in stature as maturely human” like a Mandela. And of course, we embrace and engage such an ideal with a healthy dose of common sense. It does not mean the pacifist treatment of violent people (i.e. de-carceration, no criminal prosecution, no cash bail, etc.) because the priority responsibility of love is to protect the innocent from harm, meaning the restraint and incarceration of violent people in order to protect the public.

Unconditional is the ideal that orients us to the best in humanity, that inspires our better impulses. Until we wrestle with this Mother of all ideals, we are missing the critical point of our existence on this planet, a central feature to the meaning and purpose of human life and story- i.e. We are here to learn what love is and how to love.

Some of best “spiritual” insight on this comes from the NDE movement accounts where people tell us that they have experienced an amazing presence of God, the Creator and Sustainer of all, as inexpressible unconditional love. That is exactly the central point in the message of Jesus, in his “stunning new theology” that was his “greatest contribution to the history of human ideas” (James Robinson).

Unconditional defines Ultimate Reality more truthfully than anything else. There is no more accurate definition of Ultimate Goodness or Love than unconditional. It is the absolute height of what human or humane means. If God is ultimate Good then God is not just love but is unconditional love. We all get this intuitively from our experience in families, with spouses and friends, etc. Nothing is more human than to treat one another unconditionally.

And because God is the creating/sustaining basis of all reality, then that love defines the fundamental nature of an authentic TOE. And therefore unconditional is the central feature to wrestle with in response to our primal impulse to meaning and purpose.

Unconditional better than any ideal we have discovered shows us how to maintain our humanity in the face of offenses from others, in the face of evil in life, showing us how to do the least harm and the most good as we navigate our stories throughout our lives in this world.

Further, to the contrary, try to engage the evidence presented by the historians that I repeatedly reference here (Herman, Landes, Mendel Redles, etc.) that the apocalyptic millennial ideas epitomized in Paul’s Christ, ideas that have long been the dominant archetypes in human subconsciousness, ideas that have shaped belief systems across history, ideas that still dominate in our world religions and modern-era secular ideologies even today, these apocalyptic millennial ideas were behind the mass-death crusades of the past century- notably Marxism/Socialism and Nazism.

They are ideas that incite our worst impulses to tribalism, domination, and destruction of differing others (salvation/millennial utopia achieved through revolutionary destruction of the “corrupt” society/civilization that exists).

I have repeatedly noted how such ideas work in human minds, quoting these excellent statements of psychologists like Harold Ellens and psychotherapist Zenon Lotufo, as posted in “Cruel God, Kind God”:

“There is in Western culture a psychological archetype, a metaphor that has to do with the image of a violent and wrathful God (see Romans, Revelation). Crystallized in Anselm’s juridical atonement theory, this image represents God sufficiently disturbed by the sinfulness of humanity that God had only two options: destroy us or substitute a sacrifice to pay for our sins. He did the latter. He killed Christ.

“Ellens goes on by stating that the crucifixion, a hugely violent act of infanticide or child sacrifice, has been disguised by Christian conservative theologians as a ‘remarkable act of grace’. Such a metaphor of an angry God, who cannot forgive unless appeased by a bloody sacrifice, has been ‘right at the center of the Master Story of the Western world for the last 2,000 years. And the unavoidable consequence for the human mind is a strong tendency to use violence’.

“’With that kind of metaphor at our center, and associated with the essential behavior of God, how could we possibly hold, in the deep structure of our unconscious motivations, any other notion of ultimate solutions to ultimate questions or crises than violence- human solutions that are equivalent to God’s kind of violence’…

“Hence, in our culture we have a powerful element that impels us to violence, a Cruel God Image… that also contributes to guilt, shame, and the impoverishment of personality…”.

As Harold Ellens says, “If your God uses force, then so may you, to get your way against your ‘enemies’”.

This affirms Bob Brinsmead’s point that “We become just like the God that we believe in”. If your God uses violence, then so may you. This expresses well how the common “behavior based on similar belief” coupling has worked across human history. That coupling arises from our impulse to meaning and purpose, an impulse that drives us to find ideas/ideals/beliefs that validate how we think, feel, are motivated, and then act. We all want to know and feel that we are fulfilling the reason for our existence on this planet. That we are acting just like our Creator intended. So, inspired by our meaning impulse to understand and explain, we project out ideas to define the ultimate reality that is our Source, and too often we project subhuman features that then operate in return to incite and validate the subhuman in us.

I relate these points to the pathological image of deity that Paul embraced and presented in his Christ myth- the image of a God who is (1) tribal (favoring true believers, damning/destroying unbelievers), (2) a God who embodies domination (deity as “Lord, King, Ruler” with humans created to serve deity, a serving mediated through subservience to priesthoods claiming to be divinely appointed representatives of God), and (3) a God who metes out punitive destruction as “justice” (i.e. salvation through the destruction of apocalypse and hell).

Such an archetypal image of deity incites and validates the inherited and similar impulses in people to (1) tribalism (framed around Zoroaster’s cosmic dualism of good versus evil, true religion versus false religion), to (2) domination (elites divinely appointed to rule and control commoners), and to (3) justice as punitive destruction through endless “eye for eye” cycles, and more. (I use my “evil triad” to summarize whatever complex of bad impulses/ideas that others might include.)

Fortunately, we have alternative ideas/beliefs to counter this pathology of inherited animal impulses and related bad ideas, alternatives that orient us toward trajectories that take us to a more humane future. We have ideals that bring out the best in us- i.e. ideals of non-discriminatory inclusion of all, non-domination in relationships, and restorative justice treatment of offenders/enemies.

These ideals are best expressed and protected in liberal democracies where the principles, systems of law, and representative institutions of Classic Liberalism exist to protect the freedoms and rights of all citizens, equally.

More to come on this….

Some recent Brinsmead quotes from his Substack…

“Man in God’s image: The Hebrew Man made in God’s image versus the Hellenist God made in Man’s image”, Robert Brinsmead, Aug. 26, 2025

“The very first chapter in the Hebrew scriptures declared that God made man – both male and female – in the image of God (Genesis 1:26-7).

“This amazing statement existed at the heart of the Hebrew faith. It means that every human person is infinitely precious, created equal and able to reflect a likeness to the God the Father of all mankind.

“The statement that mankind bears the image of God also implies that the prime locus of divine revelation is not found in religious dogma or books.

“As Thomas Sheehan puts it, “God has disappeared into humanity and can be found nowhere else.” Elijah the prophet could not find God in an earthquake, a great fire or a mighty wind, but in a quiet human voice enquiring after his wellbeing.

“As Victor Hugo put it in his Les Miserables, “To love another person is to see the face of God”…

“Or as the poet Alexander Pope put it, “Know then thyself, presume not God to scan; The proper study of mankind is Man”.

“The focus of the Jesus movement in the first twenty years was the presence of the kingdom of God in the here and now.

“The focus of the Jesus movement in the first twenty-year period (after the departure of Jesus) was on the “kingdom of God”.

“The movement gathered around the belief that Jesus, the “son of man”, the human one, preached with urgency and intensity the need to establish God’s reign on earth. This movement was a way of life and was radical in its embrace of the preaching of Jesus.

“It seems highly likely, from what scripture scholarship can ascertain, that in this twenty-year period Jesus was considered by members of the movement to be a Jewish prophetical figure.

“As in the preaching of Jesus, there is no evidence that the movement was concerned with access to the heavenly realms.

“The concern was to change the world. The focus was on the preaching a way of life that would express the Divine Presence in human living and loving…”

See full comment at “robertbrinsmead@substack.com”.

Post to discussion group:

This from below (Shrier is an expert on psychotherapy issues)- “Involvement in goal-oriented activities that lure them out of their own minds and force them to think about something, anything, other than themselves.”

The now deceased physician to the former Queen, Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, used to urge depressed patients to stop focusing on their problems, stop even praying about their problems as that intensified and magnified the problems. Better, he urged, get involved in helping others solve their problems and that will lessen your own problems that depress you.

His advice wisely understood the natural impulse of love to focus on the other, to deny oneself in order to help others, to fulfil the healing function of love to serve. And that focus on helping others gave people a potent sense of purpose and fulfilment that lessened the debilitating effects of too much self-focus, especially on personal problems.

“Stop asking kids if they’re depressed: Children are wildly suggestible. Ask a kid repeatedly if she might be mentally ill— and she just might decide that she is”, Abigail Shrier

https://www.thefp.com/p/abigail-shrier-stop-asking-kids-if?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

Shrier begins noting a state’s law (Illinois) making annual mental-health screenings for all public school children in third to twelfth grades. She warns that this is funneling far too many American children into the mental-health pipeline who don’t have debilitating mental disorders.

She says, “I published ‘Bad Therapy’, an investigation into the surge in adolescent mental-health diagnoses and psychiatric prescription drug use. Many young people without serious mental illness nonetheless spend years languishing with a diagnosis, alternately cursing it and embracing it, believing they have a broken brain, convincing themselves that their struggles are insurmountable because of the disorder’s constraints. They meet regularly with a therapist or school counselor on whom they become increasingly reliant, losing a sense of efficacy, unable to navigate on their own even minor setbacks and interpersonal conflicts. They begin courses of antidepressants that carry all kinds of side effects—suppressed libido, fatigue, the muffling of all emotion, and even an increase in depression. Antianxiety drugs and the stimulants given to kids diagnosed with ADHD are both addictive and ubiquitously abused.”

And this tragic outcome, she says, often begins with “a simple mental health survey.”

“Kids are wildly suggestible, especially where psychiatric symptoms are concerned. Ask a kid repeatedly if he might be depressed— how about now? Are you sure? And he just might decide that he is.”

She notes the social contagion effect that many children are susceptible to:

“Introduce ‘gender dysphoria’ into a peer group, and a swath of seventh grade girls are likely to decide they were born in the wrong body. Introduce ‘testing anxiety’ or ‘social phobia,’ or ‘suicidality’ to them, and many teens are likely to decide: I have that, too. There is a reason clinicians keep anorexia patients from socializing unsupervised in a hospital ward; anorexia is profoundly socially contagious… Most kids who screen positive will have transient problems, not mental disorder. Mislabeling stigmatizes and subjects them to unnecessary treatments…”

“A certain amount of anxiety and low mood is not only a normal part of every life, they are almost a signal feature of adolescence… Handing a mental diagnosis to a child or teen— even if accurate— is an enormously consequential event. It can change the way a young person sees himself, create limitations for what he believes he can achieve, encourage treatment dependency on a therapist, and empty out his sense of agency— that he can, on his own, achieve his goals and improve his life.”

Shrier concludes that adolescent mental health “has leaped off a cliff… The nonstop diagnosis and treatment of American kids hasn’t made a dent in the prevalence of mental illness; the two have risen in parallel…

“The vast majority of our kids and teens are not mentally ill. But they are lonely, worried, scared, and bummed out. Schools ought to supply them with reliable bolsters to the human spirit: high expectations. Greater independence and responsibility. Far, far less screen time. More recess. Exercise. Art. Music. Involvement in goal-oriented activities that lure them out of their own minds and force them to think about something, anything, other than themselves.”

Note: This site takes the position, somewhat noted by Brinsmead above, that all of humanity has been incarnated by God, a deity that is profoundly unconditional love, inexpressibly and transcendently so. And that indwelling, present God is inseparable from our human spirit, our human self (the “oneness” thing). Meaning that our most essential nature as human is to love. We are love in our essential self or human spirit. Embracing behavior that is authentically loving is then how we fulfill our purpose and find meaning in life. That is the powerful antidote to pathologies like depression. This is not to deny forms of mental illness that benefit from good psychotherapy or medical treatment, but to add this potently healing factor of self-denying love to the mix of treatments.

By the way also: This gets to the essence of liberal democracy principles and institutions. State elites and bureaucrats should function to serve free and equal citizens, not dominate and control them (such as via excessive taxation and regulations). Where there is no such protected freedom and individual rights, there is no love. The inseparable relationship of love and freedom. Hence (a touch more theology here), if “God is love” then God does not dominate and control others. There is God/Christ as “Lord, King, Ruler” and still God/Christ as love.

Charles Templeton (Billy Graham’s former colleague) weighed in on this issue in his illustration of someone demanding to be the center of attention, demanding constant praise of his greatness, and demanding full control in all situations. That, said Templeton, is an “Idi Amin” monster.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Me and research assistant Grok on the “bad religious ideas” complex that still dominates major narratives, religious and “secular/ideological”

Bringing in “big gun” Thomas Jefferson on the Jesus/Christ contradictions- what themes affirm liberal democracy

New material below on the Jefferson/Tolstoy project to distinguish between the two most prominent and influential archetypes in Western narratives, consciousness, and civilization. Historical Jesus versus Paul’s Christ myth.

This from “The Rubin Report”

“My Red Pill Moment, Blaming Boomers and the New Addictions: Dr. Drew Pinsky”, Dave Rubin, Aug. 23, 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KLWYgdL4ZUc

(My rough paraphrase of Pinsky’s comments to Rubin): Some interesting comment in this by Pinsky on how the growing emphasis on the individual in modern history (over past few centuries) produced a related pathology of excessive narcissism. He refers to a survey in the 90s where children were asked what they wanted to become. The survey found that, even before the widespread use of the internet phenomenon, most children did not want some traditional occupation but rather they wanted to “become famous”. This took top spot in the survey.

Pinsky points to how this modern narcissism became such a dominant phenomenon and with it there arose a tendency to hysterically exaggerate the faults of others, to project one’s own faults onto others, and to signal that “I am more caring than you”. That is virtue signalling for status as more caring than others who disagree with one. He sees this tendency to hysterically exaggerate the faults of others (differing others as a threat to all life) in the “Trump Derangement Syndrome”, where disagreeing others are demonized and exaggerated as death-dealing evil. “You are killing people” is a common charge now levelled at differing others, and this charge of killing others is projected with hysterical exaggeration.

Pinsky emphasizes that this exaggeration and hysteria is coming from the Left today- i.e. that if you disagree with me then everybody is going to die because you are such a threat with your policies that differ from mine. “You are going to kill people”. This has been a constant by the Left- that “You are going to kill people… People are going to die”. It is gross exaggeration and hysteria that is projected onto differing others.

He gives the example with Covid hysteria- “If you disagree with masks, vaccines, then you are killing people”. There was apocalyptic-scale hysteria over such disagreements. We also see the same exaggerated hysteria in disagreements over climate alarmism. If you express skepticism to the alarmist narrative then the world will end, all will die.

Pinsky adds that the organizing principle on the Left is now- “I care more than you do” and that is “a specific narcissistic principle” of virtue signalling more compassion (virtue signalling for moral status above others, as Jordan Peterson also points out). This signalling then feeds into “suicidal or toxic empathy” that is polluted with narcissism. This pathology enacts destructive policies such as banning police and prisons (e.g. Zohran Mamdani in New York) with the result of letting violent people go free to further harm others. But no matter the personal history of crime, the dangerously violent criminals get priority empathy over the citizens that they then further harm because the criminals are viewed as permanent victims of past injustices. They get priority empathy.

Narcissists have two big signalling needs, says Pinsky- “I exist, and I am better than you. I care more than you and you, with your different policies, are going to kill people.” Narcissists nurse the felt need to demonize and dehumanize differing others as threatening enemies that are so bad that the narcissists reason that they can use violence to get rid of them. They are justified in using coercion because their cause is righteous and is saving the world.

If you disagree with me then you are just not caring like me, but you are horrible and a threat, a danger to life and you need to be banned from society. This is the hysteria element that takes things to apocalyptic-scale, just as we are told daily by “news” media that every normal warm event in summer now signals the apocalyptic end of the world.

Pinsky repeatedly notes the projection element in all this- Look at the policies that came out of the suicidal empathy that forced vaccines on entire populations and pushed lockdowns that destroyed children’s lives. There were increased suicides that came out of lockdowns with people losing jobs and businesses, mass panic that actually hurt people, yet the people pushing such policies projected any caused harm onto those who differed from them and challenged their hysteria.

And more…

Taking up the Jefferson project: Pulling the “diamond” out of the “dung” and cleaning it off, Wendell Krossa

I am touching base with some of the “big guns” who constructed liberal democracy in the US- i.e. the approach to organizing human society that we value more than life today. Millions having died to defend the rights and freedoms of all individuals that are protected by Classic Liberalism principles, systems of common law, and representative institutions. Thomas Jefferson was among those who helped construct the basic features of liberal democracy for our contemporary Western civilization. I am intrigued by what influenced the thinking of men like Jefferson. It appears the teaching of Historical Jesus was significant to Jefferson, but only as contrasted with the lesser “dung” material of Paul and his New Testament Christology.

I don’t know if Jefferson had read the early German theologians who started the “Search for Historical Jesus” in the early 1700s. That search arose out of the Enlightenment as people, with growing evidence on the early formation of Christianity, began to more critically reflect on that inherited religious tradition. Scholars/historians/theologians began to challenge the biblical accounts of Jesus, recognizing that while the person existed and had presented a unique message and theology, other material in the gospels, that was also attributed to him contradicted his central themes.

Jefferson was among the early notables who saw this.

Extract from a letter- ‘Thomas Jefferson to John Adams’”

https://tjrs.monticello.org/letter/297

“We must reduce our volume to the simple evangelists, select, even from them, the very words only of Jesus … there will be found remaining the most sublime and benevolent code of morals which has ever been offered to man. I have performed this operation for my own use, by cutting verse by verse out of the printed book, and arranging, the matter which is evidently his, and which is as easily distinguishable as diamonds in a dunghill.”

And this by Marilyn Mellowes:

https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/religion/jesus/jefferson.html

“The White House, Washington, D.C. 1804.

“Thomas Jefferson was frustrated. It was not the burdens of office that bothered him. It was his Bible.

“Jefferson was convinced that the authentic words of Jesus written in the New Testament had been contaminated. Early Christians, overly eager to make their religion appealing to the pagans, had obscured the words of Jesus with the philosophy of the ancient Greeks and the teachings of Plato. These “Platonists” had thoroughly muddled Jesus’ original message.

“Jefferson assured his friend and rival, John Adams, that the authentic words of Jesus were still there. The task, as he put it, was one of abstracting what is really his from the rubbish in which it is buried, easily distinguished by its lustre from the dross of his biographers, and as separate from that as the diamond from the dung hill…

“Jefferson discovered a Jesus who was a great Teacher of Common Sense. His message was the morality of absolute love and service. Its authenticity was not dependent upon the dogma of the Trinity or even the claim that Jesus was uniquely inspired by God. Jefferson saw Jesus as a man, of illegitimate birth, of a benevolent heart, (and an) enthusiastic mind, who set out without pretensions of divinity, ended in believing them, and was punished capitally for sedition by being gibbeted according to the Roman law.”

Then…

“AI Overview

“Thomas Jefferson referred to the Apostle Paul as the “first corrupter of the doctrines of Jesus” and a “dupe and impostor” in a letter to William Short in 1820. Jefferson believed that Paul’s writings introduced corruptions and interpolations into Jesus’ original teachings.”

AI Overview adds this:

• “Corrupter of the doctrines of Jesus”:

Jefferson believed that Paul was the primary source of the deviations from Jesus’ original teachings.

• “Dupe and impostor”:

He saw Paul as being misled and, in turn, misleading others about the true nature of Jesus’ message.

• “Interpolations”:

Jefferson specifically identified Paul’s works as containing “palpable interpolations and falsifications” of Jesus’ message.

Jefferson did not elaborate fully on the main themes of the “dung” context (i.e. the New Testament) that was dominated by the Christology or Christ myth of Paul. We now have almost three centuries of research from “The Search for Historical Jesus”, decades of the “Jesus Seminar” (since 1985) and “Q Wisdom Sayings” research that give us enough detailed information to conclude what actually was the message of Jesus, as contrasted with Paul’s Christ myth. As New Testament scholars/historians state, Q is the closest that we get to the actual message of Historical Jesus (see posting below on the Luke 6:27-36 and Matthew 5:38-48 versions of his main message).

We know from Q that Jesus presented “the stunning new theology of a nonretaliatory and unconditional God” (my paraphrase of a comment by James Robinson, adding the unconditional features). And there is “thematic coherence” to much of what Jesus taught (precepts and parables), affirmed by his personal treatment of others.

Jefferson responded to the teaching of Jesus somewhat intuitively, based on his sense of humanity or humaneness. He refused to kowtow to the claimed “divine inspiration” of religious holy books like the Bible, or bow to threat and coercion by religious authority.

I would offer that Jefferson’s commentary on the actual teaching/message of Jesus, as different from Paul’s Christ myth, is just as important as any of his work in helping to create the framework of ideas and principles for the great liberal democracy that is the US. His arguments regarding the teaching of Jesus, deal with the fundamental ideas/themes that shape authentic democracy and a truly humane society.

In the Jesus message we find the notable themes of (1) the nontribal inclusion of all, equally (i.e. sun and rain given generously to all, to both good and bad people). There is no tribal divide between true believers who are favored, versus unbelievers who are excluded. It takes no great leap of assumption to see how this non-discriminatory inclusivity would influence Jefferson to promote equal rights for all. And yes, the great English liberty authors would also feed his thought on these issues.

Inserts:

Grok noted this (Did the English liberty authors influence Thomas Jefferson?):

“Yes, English liberty authors significantly influenced Thomas Jefferson. Thinkers like John Locke, Algernon Sidney, and the radical Whigs shaped his views on natural rights, government by consent, and the right to resist tyranny. Locke’s Second Treatise of Government was particularly pivotal, with its ideas of life, liberty, and property echoing in Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence. Sidney’s Discourses Concerning Government reinforced notions of republicanism and resistance to arbitrary power, which resonated in Jefferson’s advocacy for revolution. The radical Whigs, through works like Cato’s Letters, emphasized limited government and individual freedoms, aligning with Jefferson’s vision of a democratic republic. These influences are evident in his writings, especially the Declaration’s assertion that governments derive “just powers from the consent of the governed.”

Grok adds this in response to- Did the teaching of Historical Jesus influence Thomas Jefferson?:

“The teachings of the Historical Jesus influenced Thomas Jefferson, but in a specific and nuanced way, shaped by Jefferson’s rationalist and deist worldview. Jefferson admired the moral teachings of Jesus as found in the Gospels, viewing them as a profound ethical framework emphasizing compassion, forgiveness, and universal love. However, he rejected the supernatural elements, miracles, and divinity claims associated with Jesus, which he saw as later corruptions by the Church.

“Jefferson created the Jefferson Bible (formally titled The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth), a personal project where he extracted Jesus’ moral teachings from the New Testament, removing miracles, resurrection narratives, and anything he deemed inconsistent with reason. He described Jesus’ teachings as “the most sublime and benevolent code of morals which has ever been offered to man.” This reflects the influence of Jesus’ ethical principles, like the Golden Rule and love for one’s neighbor, on Jefferson’s philosophy.

“While Jefferson’s political writings, like the Declaration of Independence, don’t directly cite Jesus, his emphasis on universal human rights and equality aligns with the moral egalitarianism he drew from Jesus’ teachings, filtered through his Enlightenment perspective. Unlike the English liberty authors (e.g., Locke, Sidney), who directly shaped his political theory, the Historical Jesus influenced Jefferson’s personal moral framework, which indirectly informed his vision of a just society.” (End of Grok comments)

Continuing with the Jesus themes that Jefferson took inspiration from in his own pushback against the elite/commoner divide that has cursed humanity from the beginning:

Jesus presented one of history’s earliest and clearest arguments against domination by elites when he stated,

“You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones exercise authority over them. It shall not be so among you. But whoever would be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be your slave, even as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve”, (Matthew 20: 25-28).

This statement of Jesus would help affirm across subsequent history that government institutions, government leaders and bureaucrats should function as the “servants of the people” (government of, by, and for the people), thereby overturning the history-long curse of elites dominating or controlling commoners. Hence, if religious believers like to repeat the phrase “God is great”, then Jesus filled out the meaning of that greatness as serving, not lording over others.

Yet Paul, perversely, then turned the common man and wisdom sage Jesus into “Lord Jesus”, the ultimate totalitarian who would rule with “a rod of iron” now and eternally as per the vision of John in Revelation.

As the quotes re Jefferson above said, “Jefferson saw Paul’s works as containing ‘palpable interpolations and falsifications’ of Jesus’ message… Paul was the primary source of the deviations from Jesus’ original teachings… Paul’s writings introduced corruptions and interpolations into Jesus’ original teachings…”, and so on.

Further, take Jesus’ central ethical principle of nonretaliatory, nonpunitive, non-vengeful justice, expressed in the statement- “Let there be no more ‘eye for eye’ retaliation but instead, love your enemies because God does, as seen in God generously giving the two basic elements for survival in agrarian society- i.e. sun and rain for crops- to everyone, both good and bad.”

There is nothing in this precept of advocacy for justice as “vengeful, righteous war to destroy enemies”. Such precepts challenge the common practise of punitive justice and orient us to restorative justice where possible.

Jefferson embraced Historical Jesus, as someone who contrasted entirely with Paul’s Christ myth, at a time when Western civilization had long been dominated by Paul and the Christ myth.

Here again is James Tabor’s points on the dominant influence of Paul over our Western narratives and societies across the past two millennia (from “Paul and Jesus”):

“There was a version of ‘Christianity before Paul’, affirmed by both Jesus and his original followers, with tenets and affirmations quite opposite to these of Paul… the message of Paul, which created Christianity as we know it, and the message of historical Jesus and his earliest followers, were not the same. In fact, they were sharply opposed to one another with little in common beyond the name Jesus itself” (p.xv1).

“Paul is the most influential person in human history and realize it or not, he has shaped practically all we think about everything… the West in particular… the foundations of Western civilization- from our assumptions about reality to our societal and personal ethics- rest in a singular way upon the heavenly visions and apparitions of the apostle Paul. We are all cultural heirs of Paul, with the well-established doctrines and traditions of mainstream Christianity deeply entrenched in our culture. In contrast, Jesus as a historical figure… has been largely lost to our culture” (p. xv11).

“Paul operated with a strongly apocalyptic perspective that influenced all he said or did” (p.15).

“The entire New Testament canon is largely a post-Paul and pro-Paul production…” (p.19).

“The ‘Jesus’ who most influenced history was the ‘Jesus-Christ’ of Paul, not the historical figure of Jesus… Paul transformed Jesus himself (and) his message of a… kingdom of justice and peace on earth, to the symbol of a religion of otherworldly salvation in a heavenly world”, (21).

“The form of Christianity… (that thrived in the late Roman Empire)… was heavily based upon the ecstatic and visionary experiences of Paul. Christianity as we came to know it, is Paul and Paul is Christianity. The bulk of the New Testament is dominated by his theological vision”, p.24).

“Paul’s view of Christ as the divine pre-existent Son of God who took on human form, died on the cross for the sins of the world, and was resurrected to heavenly glory at God’s right hand becomes the Christian message”, (39).

“The Q source is the earliest collection of the teachings and sayings of Jesus… the most striking characteristic of the Q source in terms of reconstructing Christian origins is that it has nothing of Paul’s theology, particularly his Christology or view of Christ”, (41).

For Jefferson to challenge and reject the Christology of Paul as deforming the message of Jesus took great courage and a mental perceptiveness that saw clearly the contradictions between Historical Jesus and the Christ myth.

Outcomes, consequences… Bad ideas influence bad behavior.

We have an abundance of good evidence now from historians on the outcomes of Paul’s main Christ themes, notably in fueling last century’s mass-death crusades. Consider the evidence on how potently Paul’s “apocalyptic millennial Christ myth” has shaped all that we think and do. The darker pathologies in Paul’s Christ- i.e. the elements of apocalyptic, millennialism, messianism, as outlined by David Redles further below- fueled the madness and totalitarianism of Marxism and Nazism, and now drive environmental alarmism.

These ideas in Paul’s Christology have contributed to the endless perversion of the hero’s quest as engaging a great righteous battle against evil enemies/monsters that must be vanquished, dominated, and destroyed/exterminated as too evil to be permitted to continue living. They are framed as such a threat to life, with their irredeemable impurity and evil, that they will incite God to intervene with the apocalyptic destruction of all life as necessary to purge such evil from the world and thereby save the world (i.e. much like the same theme expressed in relation to the Genesis Flood myth). In such mythology, salvation must come through violent revolutionary destruction of a threatening enemy- “The Evil Other”. That evil must be purged from life in order to save life, to “save the world”.

Insert on viewing the hero’s quest as an obligation to engage a great battle against evil enemies/monsters. This has often been framed in terms of Zoroaster’s cosmic dualism of Good fighting Evil, and the divine demand to heroically join the “good religion” (i.e. become true believers) and fight the evil that is differing others/enemies.

I often reference Solzhenitsyn (paraphrasing his points) who urged that heroic engagement of a battle against evil should be more focused on the inner battle as the real battle of life, a battle against the real enemy in life- i.e. the inherited animal that is in all of us.

AI Overview

“Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s famous statement, found in The Gulag Archipelago, asserts that the fundamental battle between good and evil does not exist between states, classes, or parties, but rather runs “right through every human heart— and through all human hearts”. This means that each individual contains both good and evil, making moral choice and internal struggle the true domain of this conflict, rather than an external, easily identifiable enemy.”

I would add to Solzhenitsyn’s more general statement on good and evil, and the inner personal battle as the real battle of life, that the real “evil” that we must fight consists of our inherited animal impulses to tribalism, domination, and punitive destruction of differing others- i.e. the “evil triad” of animal impulses. That is the real enemy/monster that we all must face and conquer.

Add here to emphasize the inner personal battle against evil, the comments of Historical Jesus, such as- “Why judge the speck in other’s eyes when you have a beam in yours?” Get yourself sorted out first.

“Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye? How can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when all the time there is a plank in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye”, Matthew 7.

Continuing with the evidence on how Paul’s Christ themes have influenced modern mass-death crusades….

As repeated often here, take a look at what historians/scholars have uncovered on how devastating Christian themes when used to incite, guide, and validate the mass-death in Marxism, Nazism, and now are used to fuel similar destruction through environmental alarmism.

Sources: Arthur Herman’s “The Idea of Decline in Western History”, Richard Landes’ “Heaven On Earth: Varieties of the Millennial Experience”, Arthur Mendel’s “Vision and Violence”, David Redles’ “Hitler’s Millennial Reich: Apocalyptic belief and the search for Salvation”, among others.

I affirm with “big gun” Jefferson that Paul’s “dung” themes distort and bury the diamond message of Jesus. I go particularly hard on Paul over his advocacy of ultimate divine domination, eternal lording over others. There is no “God is great” in his pathology of “Lord Jesus”. It is eternal slavery of the unimaginably worst kind, absolutely totalitarian in mind, emotion, spirit, all life in whatever future realms exist. The New Testament advocates such enslavement in the varied other statements attributed to Paul that urge women to submit to their husbands, slaves to submit to their masters, and all to submit to government authorities as divinely appointed. Paul (and his Lord Christ) was no Jeffersonian advocacy for true liberal democracy.

Remember here also in the mix, the primitive myth that “humans were created to serve the gods”, to feed the gods and do their work. In religious narratives the human submission to gods as “Lords, Kings, Rulers” was to be mediated through human subjection to priesthoods and religious authorities, and their endless religious conditions to control all of life.

Insert: Many NDE accounts are not clear on such issues as individual human freedom from domination by others. One that does offer some comment on this issue of freedom and equality in other realms is Natalie Sudman’s “The Application of Impossible Things”, her account of being blown up by an IED in Iraq and subsequent NDE. She talks of her experience of no coercion in where she went. No “lording over others” Jesus.

Continuing…

And then add to the above, the overall summarizing theme (“thematic coherence” again) in Paul’s Christ myth that salvation comes through murder and destruction. Pardon that blunt summary. Kind of like Jefferson’s “dung” term. In Paul’s atonement theory there is the murder of the “right people” in human sacrifice as the basic condition for salvation, as the way to make things right or better. And then the mass murder and purging of all evil people from the world in the apocalyptic destruction of all enemies, as portrayed in Revelation. Again, note how these themes fueled the Marxist and Nazi crusades of last century. Destroy some enemy- i.e. Jewish Bolshevik, capitalist- in order to clear the way for salvation into an imagined utopian millennium. The historians noted above state how Hitler eventually portrayed himself as the violent Christ of Revelation who had to enact the great final battle of extermination (the true Armageddon) to purge the world of the great evil of Jewish Bolshevism. Such themes resonated with German minds long shaped by such Christian myths.

More on the Jefferson project…

Another critical element in the Jefferson project to distinguish between the messages of Paul and Jesus, is the basic theology or image of God. Jesus presented his stunning new theology of a non-retaliatory, unconditionally loving God. Never before heard of in history. The nature of God goes right to the core or foundation of salvation/atonement mythology. Paul’s theology promotes the belief in an angry God demanding blood sacrifice for appeasement (see the repeated phrase “wrath of God” in Paul’s letter to the Romans). The angry God of Paul demands full payment, full punishment of sins through violent human sacrifice.

Jesus declares there is no such God. Never had been. His new theology of non-retaliatory, unconditional God was a seditious threat to the priesthood that maintained its authority over the bloody sacrifice industry based on the myth of a wrathful God who demanded violent sacrifice as substitutionary punishment of all wrongs.

Centuries before Jesus there had been varied Old Testament prophetic intimations of a different theology, that of a God who did not want the condition of sacrifice but instead desired mercy, compassion, and love (e.g. Hosea, Jeremiah, Isaiah, Micah, etc.). However, that prophetic initiation of theological innovation was short-circuited and buried by the priesthood that became dominant over Jewish religion.

Later, early Jewish Christians stated that the OT priesthood and sacrifice industry was a heresy that had corrupted Jewish religion.

This example of prophetic anti-sacrifice theology in Jeremiah 7:

“Thus says the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel: ‘I did not speak to your fathers or command them concerning burnt offerings and sacrifices’.”

Or Hosea 6:

“I desire steadfast love and not sacrifice.”

However, these statements are lodged in contexts that include contradicting themes of judgment, punishment, and exclusion of unbelievers. The prophets had not yet thought their way to a clear theology of a non-retaliatory and unconditional deity.

In Jesus’ new theology and message there was no confusion about the unconditional nature of God. His main teaching and parables presented “thematic coherence” on the issue of unconditional, as does his inclusive and forgiving behavior toward outsiders, offenders, enemies.

I repeat my summary paraphrase of the central theme of his teaching- “Let there be no more ‘eye for eye’ retaliation but instead, love your enemies because God does, as evident in God generously giving the two basic elements for survival in agrarian society- i.e. sun and rain for crops- to everyone, both good and bad.” Add the same message in Luke 6:27-36 and you get the essential nature of the God of Jesus as non-retaliatory mercy and unconditional love toward all.

Barely two decades after his murder by the Romans, (a murder incited by the priests), we find Paul in his earliest letters to the Thessalonians re-establishing the theology of an angry God who threatens punishment/destruction of unbelievers. There is nothing of non-retaliatory, unconditional love in Paul’s theology, just the promise of ultimate “eye for eye” in the vengeful and destructive retaliation of apocalypse and eternal hell.

“Lord Jesus will return in blazing fire (“trampling out the fury of the wrath of God”) to destroy those who did not believe the Christ myth… They will be punished with everlasting destruction and shut out from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might” (see his Thessalonian letters).

And in a more formal statement in Romans 12: 17-20, Paul quotes an Old Testament verse to affirm his theology of a vengeful God, “’Vengeance is mine, I will retaliate’, says the Lord”.

These entirely contrary statements of theology highlight the distinct contrast between Jesus and Paul’s Christ on the most fundamental element in their belief systems- deity. The above statements of Paul illustrate how his “dung” distorts and buries the “diamonds” of Jesus. You cannot merge and combine these entirely opposite theologies, messages.

Paul then, throughout his Romans letter, re-affirms the highly conditional nature of his God with the details of demanded sacrifice to appease the wrath of his God.

In the construction of his atonement theology Paul did something profoundly egregious. He outright rejected the new theology of Jesus and reaffirmed traditional threat theology themes of angry deity demanding punitive vengeance against all human sin by means of blood sacrifice. He reaffirmed the darkest themes from the long history of religious belief- i.e. human sacrifice, child sacrifice. He re-established the foundational myth behind the demand for salvation through blood sacrifice, the myth of angry God demanding such barbarity.

Harold Ellens expresses well the true nature of Paul’s atonement theory (quoted in Zenon Lotufo’s “Cruel God, Kind God”):

“There is in Western culture a psychological archetype, a metaphor that has to do with the image of a violent and wrathful God (see Romans, Revelation). Crystallized in Anselm’s juridical atonement theory, this image represents God sufficiently disturbed by the sinfulness of humanity that God had only two options: destroy us or substitute a sacrifice to pay for our sins. He did the latter. He killed Christ.

“Ellens goes on by stating that the crucifixion, a hugely violent act of infanticide or child sacrifice, has been disguised by Christian conservative theologians as a ‘remarkable act of grace’. Such a metaphor of an angry God, who cannot forgive unless appeased by a bloody sacrifice, has been ‘right at the center of the Master Story of the Western world for the last 2,000 years. And the unavoidable consequence for the human mind is a strong tendency to use violence’.”

And Paul took the theme of blood sacrifice to new heights of cosmic reality, creating the ultimate archetypal myth. He reshaped the anti-sacrifice Jesus into the ultimate sacrifice, the cosmic sacrifice of a godman, a divinely instituted and universal sacrifice for all humanity and for all history.

And to the contrary, according to the revolutionary message of Historical Jesus, there had never been any such God demanding blood sacrifice. God had always been a stunningly non-retaliatory, unconditionally loving God. There never was an angry God who demanded sacrifice, payment, or retaliatory punishment. That stunning new theology would have liberated human minds, spirits, and lives as nothing ever before. But that “diamond” message (Jefferson, Tolstoy) has been buried by the Christ myth for two millennia.

Marinate a bit on the egregious nature of how Paul’s reshaped Jesus and his message.

The historical person, the wisdom sage, in an outburst of frustrated anger, openly protested the sacrifice industry in Jerusalem, overturning the tables of those selling sacrificial sheep, oxen, and other animals that visiting Jews were obligated to buy at the entrance to the temple during Passover (a Jewish remembrance of blood sacrifice to avert divine wrath and punishment).

AI Overview:

“In the Bible, Passover (Pesach in Hebrew) is a major Jewish festival commemorating the Israelites’ liberation from slavery in Egypt, as recounted in the Book of Exodus. It is a time to remember God’s protection of the Israelites during the tenth plague, where the firstborn of the Egyptians were killed, but the Israelites were “passed over” due to the blood of a lamb on their doorposts.”

The leading priests in Jerusalem knew very well what he was protesting. They had no doubt heard of his new theology of a non-retaliatory, unconditional God that overturned entirely their mythology of wrathful deity demanding sacrifice. They understood the threat Jesus posed to their narrative, to their occupation/livelihood, to their authority and power over the population, and to their very existence.

So, they had him put to death for those reasons. Fundamentally for protesting their sacrifice industry.

Paul then, in one of history’s most audacious projects of distortion, turned that death of Jesus as a protest against sacrifice into the ultimate Sacrifice. Paul reframed the profoundly “anti-sacrifice” message of the man Jesus into his profoundly “pro-sacrifice” myth about the man. There is no more profound contradiction in religious history than that between these entire opposites.

My beef with Paul and his vengeful, destroying Christ includes that fact that the outcome of his perverse distortion of Jesus is that he short-circuited and buried the potential greatest liberation movement in history- i.e. the liberation of human narratives and consciousness from threat theology that had darkened and enslaved billions to unnecessary fear (angry Creator threatening destruction and death), anxiety, shame/guilt (i.e. humanity as evil and deserving punishment, destruction via natural world elements and future apocalyptic ending), despair, depression, nihilism, and violence.

Further, the new Jesus theology would have overturned the main archetypes of the subconscious that have long validated our worst impulses to tribalism, domination, and punitive destruction of differing others. Archetypes as in the Old Narrative themes of deity that is tribal, dominating lord/King, and punitive destruction as “justice”, etc.

Old story themes, New story alternatives:

http://www.wendellkrossa.com/?p=9533

I would like to give a nod to Paul on some good points he appeared to make here and there in his letters, like an intimation of equality between sexes, ethnicities, and social statuses, in Galatians (3:28). But then he overwhelms such things with the Christ myth that establishes overwhelming inequality at universal and eternal cosmic scale- i.e. true believers saved into bliss and unbelievers damned to eternal torture in fire (the Thessalonian, Roman letters, etc.). Sheesh, Paul. You fucked up on what matters most. Those core ideas/beliefs/themes.

It is critical to recognize the stunning difference in themes and messages between these two and the outcomes of their entirely opposite themes across history. It is highly irresponsible to continue the oxymoronic merger that exists in “Jesus Christ”, a merger that undermines, distorts, and buries the priceless Jesus themes. The diamonds.

I have made my own summaries of the main differences between Jesus and Paul’s Christ myth.

Main contradictions between Jesus and Christ (updated 2025), Wendell Krossa

Some of the main contradictions that highlight the oxymoronically opposite themes between the messages of Historical Jesus and Paul’s Christ mythology. The point I draw from this? The themes of Paul have shaped Western consciousness, narratives, and overall societies for the past two millennia (conclusion of historians/scholars like James Tabor). The Jesus themes have influenced us to a lesser extent, mainly moderating the harsher features and destructive influence of Paul’s Christ:

(1) Unconditional love (i.e. no sacrifice demanded in Jesus’ original message- i.e. the “Q Wisdom Sayings” gospel). Versus the highly conditional atonement religion of Paul (i.e. the supreme condition of the sacrifice of a cosmic godman- the Christ).

(2) Nonretaliation in Jesus (no more ‘eye for eye’ justice but ‘love the enemy’ because God does not retaliate but loves enemies- “Be merciful just as God is merciful”). Versus supreme divine retaliation in apocalypse and hell myths. Note Paul’s theology affirming a supremely retaliatory deity- “’Vengeance is mine, I will repay’, says the Lord” (Romans 12), and his “Lord Jesus returning in fire to destroy all who don’t believe Paul’s Christ myth” (Thessalonians).

(3) Restorative justice (again- no eye for eye, but love the offender) versus punitive, destroying justice (“They will be punished with everlasting destruction”, Thessalonians) .

(4) Nonviolent resolution of problems (again, no violent retaliation against enemies) versus the violent destruction of apocalypse and fiery hell, and the violent appeasement of deity by blood sacrifice for atonement.

(5) Nontribal inclusion of all humanity (“sun and rain given freely to both bad and good people”) versus the highly tribal favoritism toward true believers and the discriminatory exclusion of unbelievers for not believing Paul’s Christ. Note the ultimate tribal divide illustrated in Revelation in the eternal division of humanity- i.e. people assigned either to heaven or to hell, as per the cosmic dualism of Zoroaster.

(6) Nondomination in relationships (“If you want to be great then serve others”) versus ultimate eternal domination by Lord Christ under his “rod of iron” totalitarianism (“every knee shall bow… He will rule them with an iron scepter”).

(7) Non-dualism (God as the Oneness of Ultimate Reality that is love) versus eternal dualism (i.e. again, the cosmic dualism of “God and Satan”, “heaven and hell”). Further, ultimate Oneness leads to the conclusion there is no separation of humanity from deity, what some describe as all humanity being indwelt by God, as a reality that is inseparable from the common human spirit. God as the Life-giving spirit inside each of us, and God’s nature as unconditional love defining our true self/person.

And so on…

You cannot mix and merge such extreme opposites in the one and same person- i.e. in the merger of “Jesus Christ”- as that supremely oxymoronic combination creates such profound cognitive dissonance that you are left with a mental state akin to insanity or madness. And the egregious thing in such mixture is that the good elements (i.e. the Jesus insights) are distorted and buried by the primitive and darkening elements in the Christology of Paul.

Applying Christology to Jesus (i.e. the divinizing of a common man over the first few centuries of Christianity) has effectively buried the potency of his liberating insights, notably his stunning new theology of a non-retaliatory, non-apocalyptic God. That truth expressed in his entirely new view of deity, though still present there in summaries of his statements (see Matthew 5, Luke 6), that “stunning new theology” is not presented clearly in its liberating potency because the larger New Testament context emphasizes Paul’s retaliatory, apocalyptic Christ and that overwhelms the central themes of Jesus.

Paul was intent on overturning and replacing Jesus’ wisdom sayings with his “secret wisdom of the Christ”, correcting the “foolish worldly wisdom” of Jesus and his followers, like Apollos (see 1 Corinthians for Paul’s vilifying rant against the wisdom tradition of Jesus).

Thomas Jefferson and Leo Tolstoy both nailed the contradiction between Jesus and Paul in the bluntest of terms and few have been as clear and direct since, perhaps because their comments are highly offensive to true believer’s sensibilities.

Few since have embraced their clarification of the stark contrast between Jesus and Paul, preferring instead the religious reformism that tinkers around the edges and gets nothing done, that avoids the central issue of theology- how Paul’s Christology deformed Jesus and his message.

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