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We're Witnessing the Return of Religion as a Principle Cause of Warfare

By Larry Beinhart, AlterNet. Posted December 9, 2008.


Why did faith re-emerge as the driving force in America and in the politics of many Islamic countries?

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"Religious faith will be of the same significance to the 21st century as political ideology was to the 20th century." -- Tony Blair

Mumbai. 9/11. Chechnya. Sectarian violence in Iraq. Somalia. Afghanistan. Nigeria.

The man with the most military power in the history of the world is reported to have said, "I'm driven with a mission from God. God would tell me, 'George, go and fight those terrorists in Afghanistan.' And I did, and then God would tell me, 'George, go and end the tyranny in Iraq ... ' And I did."

It was called a Crusade.

These are the defining events of the new century.

After a brief, semiretirement of a few hundred years, religion has returned as the No. 1 cause of violence, war and death.

So the fundamental national security questions of our time have to be about faith.

What is it about faith that makes people eager to commit suicide so long as it enables them to commit mass murder while they're at it?

What is it about faith that makes world leaders like George Bush and Tony Blair -- with armies, bombers, missiles, artillery and navies -- ignore good advice, abandon good sense and lead their countries to two of the stupidest wars in history? And while they're at it, to radically change the moral positions that their countries adopted just 60 years ago and commit what were then called war crimes: initiating a war of aggression, torture and the failure to provide for the populations of the countries they occupied?

What is it about faith that made it suddenly re-emerge as the driving force in American politics and in the politics of the Islamic countries?

It seems self-evident that God should have become our No. 1 area of study during the last few years. That the government, universities and foundations should have all rushed forward with funds to create programs and recruit students to find out what this God thing is.

The war in Iraq ought to have taught us here in the West two lessons.

We are very, very good at invading countries and smashing their armies, even better than we thought we were. But that doesn't stop suicide bombers. It only encourages them.

The nature of the people who attacked us, and the results of our response to them, make it obvious that understanding fanatical faith is at least as important as developing a reusable hypersonic cruise vehicle, more useful than developing new tactical nuclear weapons. And if we can find a way to reach or to undermine the faith of fanatics, it will be far more economical than invading a series of foreign countries.

But the opposite has happened: billions for bombs! Not a penny for thought! A smart bomb remains as dumb as a brick if the people firing it don't know who to hit or the right reasons to hit them.

God and religion should have become important to us, we, the just plain people. Whether or not our leaders are people of "faith," we really need them to balance their faith with good sense, so they make better decisions.

A serious conversation about faith and how it works should have become one of the leading topics of our national conversation, in the press, on television, in books and in academia, instead of a public parade of politicians on television competing to prove how much faith each of them has.

God, religion, faith, spirituality -- whichever face of the prism we are looking at -- runs like a vertical pillar through all the levels of our lives. Our international policies are fixed largely around this war on terror. Our most volatile domestic political issues -- regulating our sex lives, abortion, birth control, homosexuality, separation of church and state -- are rooted in our religious views. Our social circles, our family structures, our individual lives, our world views, how we live and die, our health and happiness -- are organized around our spiritual views, or lack thereof.

All this, without a serious attempt to find out what religion really is. That's why we need to examine God, faith and religion.

This is the first in a series of essays. Others will include:

  • Looking at God: Belief, Agnosticism, Atheism
  • Belief & False Beliefs
  • Why We Believe in God
  • Why We Believe Enough to Kill & Die
  • What is Spirituality?
  • Morality: What Is It? Where Does It Come From? What Is Its Relation to Religion
  • The Competition Between Monotheisms, Polytheism and Nontheistic Societies

A personal note: I recently wrote a novel, Salvation Boulevard, a mystery-thriller about religion. Narrative fiction has it's own demands. It can only tolerate as much theory and philosophy as moves the story. It was always my intention to use the novel as a way to open the dialogue and explore it further in formats like this.


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See more stories tagged with: politics, violence, religion, faith, christianity, islam

Larry Beinhart is the author of Wag the Dog, The Librarian, and Fog Facts: Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin. His latest book is Salvation Boulevard. Responses can be sent to beinhart@earthlink.net.

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View:
Only One Cause of War
Posted by: Artkansas on Dec 9, 2008 11:42 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A greedy power-hungry moron.

Religion, politics, resources are only an excuse.

Otherwise, human history says that compromise and cooperation are powerful survival tools.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

The most controling way
Posted by: Von on Dec 9, 2008 12:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to manage World masses is thru the food supply. We can live without religions. Food is a necessity for every person on the planet.

Religion can be used to cause divisions

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» RE: The most controling way Posted by: ardoin61
This comment has been removed from the site due to non-compliance with AlterNet's community policies.
» Actually, yes. Posted by: Daer Mi
» A very good point, deleted Posted by: Joshua Holland
"All this, without a serious attempt to find out what religion really is."
Posted by: pelican beak on Dec 9, 2008 1:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'll start the bidding by suggesting that one's religion describes
the premises for the story one sees themself enacting.

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A subject that should only be undertaken by experts!
Posted by: Daer Mi on Dec 9, 2008 3:05 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This author's interpretation of religion as the cause of war displays an ignorance of the relationship between religion and political decisions. There has only ever been one cause of war: economics. Religion is how the people in power motivate the people beneath them to die for resources that would never have significantly benefited them in the first place. The Crusades, which the author brought up as an example of a religious war, was only religious in the respect that Christianity and the glory of martyrdom were used to inspire men to take up arms against people they had no conflict with, while the Church reaped the benefits of new lands and trade. And to suggest that the 9-11 hijackers actually killed themselves for Allah and Bush went to war for religious reasons is to suggest that people in Middle Eastern countries are not suffering horrible economic devestation and oppression due to American foriegn policy, and that this administration didn't go to war for oil. Both are ludicrous. We *know* the motivations for these wars, and, if you do any serious research onto the psychology of terrorists, you will easily discover that terrorists only occur where there is an experience of victimization and absolute hopelessness.

The fact that this author believes religion is the cause for our current wars when there are mountains of evidence to the contrary testifies to just how easily our perceptions of a situation are manipulated when someone throws religion into the picture. Yes, these wars are 'religious wars' in the same way that the Crusades were, in that economics is the engine and religion is the paint job.

As a scholar specializing in the roles of religion, I beg the author to not pursue the proposed essays. To write them and lay them before a relatively uneducated public would reinforce exactly the perception of reality the powers that be want the People to have, and do horrible damage. Instead, expose the use of religion by a secular government to control the People's opinion, instill in them fear on a psychic, irrational level, and guarantee their cooperation. A little psychology, international relations, and history will make this all very clear.

And for god's sake, pick up some Nietzsche, Hume, Kant, and Plato. They left these out of your education for a reason.

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» Derrida? You must be kidding Posted by: pelican beak
From under your rock, we welcome you.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Dec 9, 2008 5:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Belgian Cartoon Jihad.

State backed muslim hit contracts("fatwah") against Rushdie.

The national goal of driving a group of people "into the sea" due to their different religious pottentate.

Genocide in Darfur.

Those only go back a couple of years and decades. Suggest author read more, acquire some exposure to the world we inhabit. It's brutal, nasty, and mostly "faith-based".

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Oh don't worry now. Obama will "take care" of those wacko religious nuts !
Posted by: maxpayne on Dec 9, 2008 9:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ooops, I forgot, he plans to empower Christian boot camps. Luckily, he has an economic disaster to take care of first and he knows America won't like religious boot camps when it hits people hard.

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Return??? It never went away
Posted by: sonofloud on Dec 10, 2008 9:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Organized religion is the single biggest cause of: war, sexism, and homophobia.

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» RE: eturn??? It never went away Posted by: mercury613
Santa Claus for Adults
Posted by: eaanders on Dec 19, 2008 12:59 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think anyone with average intelligence knows that there is no difference between religion, myth, fantasy, superstition, astrology, magic or any other form of thought based solely on belief. People want to believe things are a certain way and there's nothing stopping them from doing so. It's when they try to impose their beliefs, and the consequences of their beliefs, on others that the trouble starts, because reality does not conform to belief, and everyone believes something different. I think Jesse Ventura got it right when he said religion is for weak minded people.

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Usage
Posted by: NathanSchneider on Jan 6, 2009 9:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Shouldn't it be "principal," not "principle," in the title?

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