376 lines
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376 lines
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*From:THE DRUIDS PROGRESS, Report #6. The DRUIDS PROGRESS is *
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*published seminannually (Gods Willing) and is sent primarily to *
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*the subscribing members of ADF. For Further information write: *
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* ADF, PO Box 1022, Nyack, NY USA 10960-1022 (include a SASE). *
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*All Items acredited to "the Archdruid" have been written by and *
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*are (C) 1990 by P.E.I. Bonewits. All items created by other *
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*parties are (C) 1990 by them. All opinions expressed, save those *
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*specifically attributed to the Board of Trustees, are the opnions *
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*of the individuals expressing them and are Not official ADF *
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*policy. *
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* Reprint Procedure: Neopagan, Druidic, Midievalist and all *
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*cultural publications may reprint any material written by P.E.I. *
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*Bonewits, but his copyright notice must appear in full. If more *
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*than 250 words are excerpeted, one cent per word should be donated *
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*to ADF. *
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**********************************************************************
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CAN WE TRUST "FRIENDLY" FUNDIMENTALISTS?
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by Isaac Bonewits
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"Deeply hath sunk the lesson thou
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hast given and shall not soon depart"
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-- William C. Bryant --
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Neopagan newsletters and journals have recently been publishing articles
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about a religious freedom organization, founded by fundimentalists, that
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has invited Neopagans to join. The response from Neopagans has been, I
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believe, somewhat naive. If we are to survive as Neopagans and accomplish
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our goals, we should improve our understanding of fundimentalism and of
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what a fundamentalist considers religious freedom.
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Throughout this essay I'm going to be referring to "fundamentalists," so
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perhaps I should clarify the term. Let me start, as I so often do, with
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a historical review of the term - on this occasion quoting 'A Handbook
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of Theological Terms' by Van A. Harvey (MacMillan, NY, 1964):
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"Fundamentalism is a name that was attatched to the viewpoint of those who,
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shortly after the turn of the century, resisted all liberal attempts to
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modify orthodox Protestant belief or to question the infallibility of the
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Bible in any respect. The name is derived from a series of tracts published
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between 1912-14 entitled 'The Fundamentals' that aimed at defining and
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defending the essentials of Protestant doctrine. The most important of the
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fundamental doctrines were (1) the inspiration and infallibility of the
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Bible, (2) the doctrine of the Trinity, (3) the virgin birth and deity of
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Christ, (4) the substitutionary theory of the atonement, (5) the bodily
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ressurection, ascention and second coming of Christ (parousia)."
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Since most of these beliefs have been a part of orthodoxy, historians have
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seen the uniqueness of fundamentalism to consist in its violent opposition
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to all beliefs that seem opposed to some teaching of the Bible. In the
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twenties and thirties this opposition was focused particularly on any theory
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of man's origins, especially evolution, that seemed incompatable with the
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account in Genesis. Consequently, fundamentalism tended to be identified
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with blind opposition to all critical inquiry.
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Because of this identification, certain conservative theologians who share
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the above-described beliefs but who think they can be defended in a rational
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manner have tended to shirk the name "fundamentalist" and call themselves
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"evangelical conservatives." They generally oppose the spirit of ecumenism
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and any theology, including neo-Reformed theology, which does not regard the
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Bible as the absolute and infallible rule of faith and practice."
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This term has since been extended by the media to refer to "fundamentalist"
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Jews, Moslems, and even Hindus! In each case, the inference is that some
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people refuse to budge from the most conservative version of their faith
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that is available to them. Non-Christian examples include some Orthodox
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Jews, Shiite Moslems, and Mormons (and some would add Marxists). Christian
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but not Protestant examples would be ultra-conservatives within both Roman
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and Eastern Catholicism.
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For the purposes of this essay, I could simply refer to "ultra-conservative
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monotheists," but "fundamentalists" is somewhat shorter and the modern
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Protestants who call themselves by this term are, in fact, the primary
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threat to our lives and freedom right now. So on those occasions when I
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don't specifically mention it, you may keep in mind all the others mentioned
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in the preceding paragraph.
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The primary emotions driving fundamentalists are an Unholy Trinity of anger,
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hatred and fear: anger that there are other religions in the world (implying
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the possibility that their own fundamentalism might not be the One True Right
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and Only Way after all); hatred of these other faiths and their followers
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for daring to exist; and a deep abiding fear that if these other faiths are
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allowed to continue to existing, they will seduce the fundamentalists'
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membership away. Obviosuly these are a religious expression of other
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psychological factors: the emotional repression involved in being raised as
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a fundamentalist tends to breed anger, hatres and fear towards yourself and
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the world around you.
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Fundamentalism, with its pervasive sense of guilt about most normal physical
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and emotional feelings, and its patriarchal structure wherein the father's
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word is law, creates family atmospheres where emotional, physical and/or
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sexual abuse of children is the rule, not the exception. Such abuse, now
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being publicized thanks to organizations such as Fundamentalists Anonymous
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and various incest survivors' organizations, can't help but create
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personalities in which anger, hatred, and fear towards abusers is redirected
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inwards, creating the guilt and shame so useful for church authorities.
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Later in life, these painful emotions can be redirected again, this time
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towards "safe" targets - people with different religious and moral convictions
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than those your family claims.
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Again, I'm using the term "fundamentalists" very broadly. I've heard similar
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life histories from people raised as Othadox Jews, Mormons, and Jehovah's
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Witnesses - and I can clearly remember the patterns from my own Roman
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Catholic childhood.
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The Unholy Trinity is exhibited in other ways that have affected all of
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Western history: anger towards ambiguity (why can't Mon/Dad/Siblings be
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predictable?); hatred towards women (why didn't Mom protect me?); and a
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generalized fear of the entire world (what awful thing will happen to me
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next?). The resulting emotional turmoil from these factors can't help but
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effect the overall worldview, and thus the religious beliefs and actions,
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of the victims.
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The ancient Hebrews appear to have invented religious genocide : killing the
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priestesses and priests of the competing deties worshipped within their own
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population, then the clergy of all the local tribves. For good measure, they
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also killed the conquered tribe's adults and boys, keeping only the little
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girls whom they could rape and brainwash into the new religion of Yahwehism
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(and their new roles as slaves to men). The history of what became known as
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Judaism is the history of sanctimonious religious terrorism - practiced
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right up to the time when their weapons were taken away from them. While
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they were a conquered people, the Jews believed in religious freedom, but
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whenever they had land again, that freedom vanished for all but themselves.
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Fifteen centuries of Christian oppresion made religious freedom again a
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cherished ideal, but as soon as there was a chance for another Jewish state,
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fundamentalist Jews were quick to oppress the non-fundamentalist Jews and
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the gentiles then in residence. The results have been the current mess
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you can observe on your TV news every night.
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Let's not overlook the history of Islam - another desert monotheism that
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started by committing religious genocide against local Paleopagans and
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which has slaughtered and enslaved non-Moslems ever since. They too have
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promoted the ideal of religious freedom and toleration whenever economic
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or political fortunes have been against them, only to toss those ideals out
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the window when Islam was in power.
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That brings us back to the Christian fundamentalists and a bloody history
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with which most NeoPagans are only too familiar. More men, women, and
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children have been enslaved, tortured, raped, mutilated, and murdered in
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the name of Jesus Christ than in the name of any other deity in recorded
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history. Christians have oppressed Jews, Moslems, Buddhists, Pagans, and
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each other throughout their centuries of power, preaching religious
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intolerance as the word of Jehovah whenever they had the military, political,
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or economic power to make it stick - and preaching brotherhood, peace, and
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toleration when they didn't.
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The irony here is that the various sayings attributed to Christ give
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Christians a choice of behaviors: the Unholy Trinity of anger towards the
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unbelievers, hatred of "sin" (ie. different moral beliefs) and fear "of the
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lord", on the one hand; or peace (from spiritual serenity), love for all
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humanity (as children of the "same" god), and hope for a new world (here
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or in their Heaven). Because of the dualism inherent in monotheism,
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Christian individuals and sects tend to flip-flop between these extremes.
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The Liberals and the oppressed amoung them stress the positive side of
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the Christian message, while the conservatives and those in power stress
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the negative side. The conservatives will sometimes use the positive
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vocabulary when proselytizing, and both the liberals and the conservatives
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routinely describe each other as not being "real" Christians.
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Why should fundamentalists hate us Neopagans more than they do the members
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of all the other Competing religions around these days? Well, all of them
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don't. Most of the Moslems in the world, for example, have never heard of
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us. Their fundamentalists are too busy fighting Christians in Lebanon, Jews
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in Israel/Palestine, Hindus in India, Buddhists in Indonesia, Marxists in
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Afghanistan, authors in England, and liberal Moslems at home, to pay any
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attention to what is in essance a Western religious movement with no
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appreciable prescence in the Middle East. Don't worry, if a Neopagan
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movement starts up ove rthere, the Shiites will be quick to kill the
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participants.
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Most of the fundamentalist Jews aren't paying any attention to Neopaganism
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either. We're just one more non-Jewish religion that their kids are straying
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off to, and we're viewed as a form of craziness rather than evil.
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It's the Christian fundamentalists in whom we inspire the greatest anger,
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hatred, and fear. They denounce Buddhism, Taosim, the New Age, and all other
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competing belief systems, just as they have always done, but seem to save
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their greatest vituperation for occultists in general and Neopagans
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(especially witches) in particular. As most Neopagans know, Christian
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fundamentalists are constantly publishing and broadcasting blasphemies
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against our deities, slanders against our members, and half-truths and
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outright lies about our beliefs and practices. Over and over, they strive to
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convince the general public, the media, and the civil goverments that we are
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devil worshipping murderers, rapists, child abusers, and even cannibals.
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Why? What is it about Neopaganism that makes the Christian fundamentalists
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so desperate that they will stoop to such tactics against us, when they
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don't against the Buddhists or the Hare Krishnas?
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There are a number of theological reasons why fundamentalists of any
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monotheistic persuasion would find Neopaganism disturbing; after all, we
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disagree with them about everything they consider most important (while
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agreeing with a surprising number of liberal montheistic ideas). But so do
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the Buddhists, the Theosophistsm and most of the other "new" religions
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making strong inroads onto the American religious scene. The real reasons
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for fundamentalist attacks on the Neopagan community are, as usual, not
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theological at all.
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We believe in magic - that anyone can learn to do miracles. That makes
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Christ merely a magician, destroying the main body of "evidence" for special
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claims of his divinity and thus for the fundamentalists' special position
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as holders of The Only Truth.
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We believe in pluralism and multiplicity - making is very hard to pin
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down and define, and bringing up dreaded "feminine" ambiguity. Worse, we
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worship goddesses and our women have places of honor and leadership. This
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threatens both the male egos that control fundamentalism and the inherant
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sexism of their way of life, and presents the terrifying danger that
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fundamentalist women might find our religions more attractive than their
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own.
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Perhaps worst of all, those of us who call ourselves Pagans, Druids and
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Witches have deliberately choisen to identify ourselves with the victims
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of conservative monotheism - with the millions upon millions who have
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suffered at their hands down through the centuries. Reincarnation has not
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been officially accepted belief in monotheism for the last thousand years
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or so. Nevertheless, a certain wave of fear must pass over the
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fundamentalists when they realize, however subconsciously, that we just
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might be their victims come back from the grave to haunt them for their
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crimes. And this time when they try to silence us, they will fail.
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But silencing us is something that they must at least attempt - and not
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only because we are a healthy, growing competitor in the marketplace
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of religious ideas. As a pluralistic, decentralized, femmminist, ecological,
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and democratic collection of religions, we represent the future of faith in
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a Third Wave world of ever-increasing change and diversity. Fundamentalists
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know that teh world is changing and that they cannot control the changes.
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They are horrified of the future and anything that reminds them of it.
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Neopaganism combines a ressurrection of old deities that the fundamentalists
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have been taught from childhood were demonic, with a pattern of belief and
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practice that fits in perfectly with the new global culture now emerging.
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The Fundamentalists have no psychological options left. they either have
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to cure themselves of the addictive/obsessive personalities that have made
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them fundamentalists, or (being dualists) try to silence us. Guess which
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tactic they're more likely to choose.
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That's why it came as such a shock to me when I saw my first copy of
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'Religious Freedom Alert'. This is published by an organization called the
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Coalition for Religious Freedom (515 Wythe St., #201, Alexandria, VA 22314),
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founded in 1984 by a number of famous fundamentalists and funded (according
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to reliable sources) by the Unification Church! they seem to have two major
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interests : fighting the Cult Awareness Network (the deprogrammers'
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organization that has been elading the "anti-cult" movement), and fighting
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what they perceive as goverment interference in the practice of religion.
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In pursuit of their battle with CAN, they have contacted numerous minority
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religious organizations - including Neopagan ones - inviting us to join
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CRF. They have even published positive, failry accurate stories in their
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newsletter about Wiccan, Native American, and other non-monotheistic groups.
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Some people in the Neopagan movement have suggested that we should all
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support CRF. I'm in no hurry to do so.
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To begin with, many of the fundamentalists associated with CRF, such as
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Hal Lindsey, have been strongly opposed to minority belief systems, including
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Neopagaism, as long or longer than CAN has been. Apparently it wasn't until
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CAN and its deprogrammers started attacking what they call "Bible-based
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cults" that any of the founders of CRF became interested in the rights of
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small religious groups. I suspect that the rise and amazing growth of the
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Fundamentalists Anonymous movement was another spur.
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Further, it seems that most of CRF's complaints about unconstitutional
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goverment interference with religious practices are actually more about the
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fundamentalists' loss of their traditional - and very unconstitutional -
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privileges. For three hundred years, religious zealots have been shoving
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their theology down our throats, usually with the connivance of the civil
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goverment - where do you think most of our laws about sex, drugs and
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gambling come from? From Blue laws that close stores on Sundays to manditory
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(monotheistic) prayers at graduations, right-wing Christians have dominated
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the public American culture. But over the course of the last few decades
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courts and legislatures have gradually taken away one after another of the
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fundamentalists' special privilages. Organized prayer is no longer
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allowed in schools, evolution is taught in biology classes, landlords can't
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refuse to rent to "sinfully" unwed couples, etc. - all of which upsets the
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people at CRF terribly.
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'Religious Freedom Alert' tends to be a very schizophrenic publication. Much
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of it consists of press clippings about legal cases involving homeschoolers
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who want to teach their kids from the Bible instead of from state-mandated
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(secular) textbooks, stories about conflicts between rights of religious
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and nonreligious people of various persuasions, and denunciations of CAN
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and other anti-cult activists. Much of this material is of interest to
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anyone concerned with religious freedom. But then there are the editorials:
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most of them are typical fundamentalist complaints that the existance of
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rights for secular people (including the right not to be subjected to
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fundamentalist opinions) violates their rights as spreaders of the Gospel.
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Every once in a while there is an editorial that actually deals in a
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straightforward way with the complexities of freedom in a pluralistic
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society (there was relatively good one in the May 89 issue about the Great
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Satanic Conspiracy nonsense).
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Yet they've also written editorials on which they argue that the seperation
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of church and state is itself a violation of the first admendment freedom of
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religion clause - that they have the right to use the goverment to promote
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Christianity as long as they aren't pushing any particular denomination of
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it. A recent editorial attacked the ACLU for its pro-seperation stand, despite
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the fact that the ACLU has done more to fight for freedom of religion than
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any other group in American History.
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there are huge differences in attitudes and agendas amoung the organizers of
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CRF and/or there is some severe dishonesty going on. I suspect that CRF is
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just another example of the phenomenon I mentioned earlier - the habit that
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conservative monotheists have of being sweet and reasonable whenever they
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are out of power. I don't believe that the majority of the membership of
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the Coalition for Religious Freedom really wants religious freedom anymore
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than the members of the Cult Awareness Network do.
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I think the CRF woudl prefer that America was a fundimentalist theocracy in
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which they would have every one of their old privilages back, and a number
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of new opnes as well (with only Christians eligible to vote, run for office,
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or teach in the schools, for example). No matter how friendly, reasonable
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and ecumenical they may be acting now towards non-Christian groups, on the
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day they decide they don't need us anymore they will cheerfully rip our
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throats out.
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Does that sound paranoid? Perhaps. But remember - we know their track
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record. Fundamentalists have never supported religius freedom for anyone
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but themselves except as a temporary tactic. The folks at CRF are going
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to have to be a lot more convincing if they expect us to be able to trust
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them. I suppose they could start by publishing an apology for and retraction
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of all the lies that the fundamentalists have published and bradcast about
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us over the years, signed by all the members of tehir executive committee
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and board of advisors - some of whom have told those lies. I'm not going
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to hold my breathe. In the meantime you can send them $15 for a subscription,
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but I wouldn't advocate becoming a member or sending any adidtional donations.
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Fortunately, those of us in the Neopagan community who are looking for
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religious freedom groups to join do have some trustworthy alternatives to
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the CRF. There's always People for the American Way (2000 M St. NW, #400,
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Washington DC 20036). This group has pluralistic, femminist, and democratic
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biases far more in keeping with Neopaganism than CRF. in fact, PAW is
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dedicated to removing the fundamentalists' special privilages that CRF is so
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anxious to hang on to.
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Also worthwhile is 'The Freedom Writer', a newsletter published by
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ex-fundamentalist minister Skipp Porteous (Box 589, Great Barrington, MS
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01230; membership is $20 year, subscription by donation). This publication
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focuses on the activities of religious right, exposing fradulent ministers,
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anti-Semitism, censorship cmapaigns, etc. There are also frequent news
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clipping about civil liberties victories. Those of you who were once
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fundimentalists might also be interested in his other publication 'Walk
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Away'.
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For keeping tabs on trends throughout the American religious scene, I can
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recommend 'Religion Watch' (Box 652, N. Bellmore, NY 11710, $15 year). The
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editor, Richard P. Cimino, does an excellant job of neutrally reporting
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trends in both mainstream and minority religious movements, and would
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apprecaite receiving copies of Pagan publications and pamphlets.
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Of course, for civil liberties activisim in general, there is no beating
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the American Civil Liberties Union. I'm a card carrying member and proud
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of it (even if that does mean I can never be elected President).
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Controversial as the ACLU is, and disgusting as some of their clients have
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been ove rthe years, they remain the largest and most effective defense
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against all those forces (including the fundamentalists) who would discard
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our Bill of Rights.
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There's a group called Americans for Religious Liberty (Box 6656, SIlver
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Spring MD 20906), founded as a front for the Humanist Society, but I can't
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recommend them. The Humanist Society is an association for atheists,
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agnostics and scientolators - people who sneer at all religions equally.
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If you can put up with the kind of folks who run sleazy "debunking" groups
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to attack psychics and parapsychologists, you might find ARL worth
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investigating. Ask them about their platform in which they advocate keeping
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"pseudoscience" as well as religion out of the public schools.
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If Neopagans are going to support civil liberties and anti-discrimination
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groups, which I obviously think we should, then we should be selective in
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our choice of allies. It's usually the fundimentalists themselves who
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oppress our civil liberties. We'll be much better off setting up our own
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groups, or supporting organizations that are genuinely neutral in matters
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of religious belief. I don't think that we can or should trust "friendly"
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fundamentalists. After all, deeply hath sunk the lesson they have given and
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shall not soon depart.
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#30
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