Culture Clips – January 23, 2007
Can We Judge Religions?
From 9-11 to this day, callers to
my syndicated radio show have asked: "Is Islam a religion
of violence?" And since 9-11, I have given the same response:
"I don't judge religions; I judge practitioners."
It is easy to dismiss this response
as a politically correct cop-out, but there are good reasons for
this response.
First, in medieval, or even parts
of early modern, Europe many people would have asked, "Is
Christianity a religion of violence?" And 2,000-3,000 years
ago, people might have asked, "Is Judaism a religion of violence?"
Second, the question is often impossible
to answer because religions are almost never unified in their
values (and often not even in their theology). For example, most
evangelical Christians have almost no values in common with fellow
Christians of the National Council of Churches (NCC).
Conservative Protestant Christians
share far more values with traditional Catholics, Orthodox Jews
and Mormons than with fellow Protestant Christians of the NCC.
And liberal Jews (not only secular ones, but many Conservative
and most Reform Jews) share more values with liberal Christians
and liberal atheists than with Orthodox Jews.
So when assessing Christianity or
Judaism, which Christianity and which Judaism are we assessing?
Third, when groups are violent, how
much of their violence is directly caused by their religion —
or by their irreligion? Alongside Hitler (who believed in no religion),
Stalin and Mao were history's greatest mass murderers, and they
were atheists. Could one have asked, "Is atheism a violent
ideology?" As for religious evildoers, did European Christians
who supported the Nazis do so because of, or despite, their religion?
Fourth, even when a group does attribute
its violence to its religion, as in the case of Muslim terrorists,
does that mean the religion itself preaches violence?
Dennis Prager
Townhall
http://www.townhall.com/Columnists/Dennis
Prager/2007/01/23/can_we_judge_religions
--
Are Women Giving Up on Marriage?
Did you know that a majority of American
women now live without husbands? I didn't either, but last week
the New York Times announced it on Page 1: "51% of Women
Are Now Living Without Spouse."
Taken at face value, that's a pretty
disquieting statistic. If society is to flourish and perpetuate
itself, it must uphold marriage as a social ideal — it must raise
boys and girls in a culture that encourages them to eventually
marry a partner of the opposite sex, make stable and loving homes
together, and have children who will one day form successful marriages
of their own. The news that most American women now live without
husbands suggests that society's "ideal" is dwindling
to a minority taste.
"At one end of the age spectrum,
women are marrying later or living with unmarried partners more
often and for longer periods," reporter Sam Roberts notes.
"At the other end, women are living longer as widows and,
after a divorce, are more likely than men to delay remarriage,
sometimes delighting in their newfound freedom."
That delight is voiced by nearly
every woman quoted in the story. "The benefits were completely
unforeseen for me," says a 59-year-old divorcee, "the
free time, the amount of time I get to spend with friends, the
time I have alone, which I value tremendously, the flexibility
in terms of work, travel, and cultural events." Such are
the joys of non marriage, another woman exults, that "every
day is like a present."
Roberts quotes William Frey of the
Brookings Institution, who describes this apparently happy husbandless
majority as "a clear tipping point, reflecting the culmination
of post-1960 trends associated with greater independence and more
flexible lifestyles for women."
Well, maybe. Or maybe not. For when
you try to pin down the numbers, Roberts's startling finding turns
out to depend on some awfully strained definitions.
Jeff Jacoby
Townhall
http://www.townhall.com/Columnists/JeffJacoby/
2007/01/22/are_women_giving_up_on_marriage
--
Lies and Fraud of Roe v. Wade
Ironically, [Robert] Bork admits
that for most of his life he was pro-abortion. But he was not
pro-Roe.
As Bork explained in his best-selling
book, Slouching Towards Gomorrah:
If Bork approved abortion at the
time of Roe v. Wade (he has since come around to a very different
position), why would he oppose the Supreme Court decision that
made abortion legal?
It was because, as a constitutional expert and an originalist,
Robert Bork knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that the U.S. Constitution
in no way encompassed a "right" to abortion.
"I objected to Roe v. Wade the moment it was decided,"
Bork wrote, "not because of any doubts about abortion, but
because the decision was a radical deformation of the Constitution.
The Constitution has nothing to say about abortion, leaving it,
like most subjects, to the judgment and moral sense of the American
people and their elected representatives."
Bork compared Roe to another infamous
ruling: "Roe and the decisions reaffirming it are equal in
their audacity and abuse of judicial office to Dred Scott v. Sanford.
Just as Dred Scott forced a southern pro-slavery position on the
nation, Roe is nothing more than the Supreme Court's imposition
on us of the morality of our cultural elites."
And what, exactly, was the "morality
of our cultural elites"?
Why, "freedom and equality"
of course. But not the kind of "freedom and equality"
the founders valued and fought and died for.
Bork offers a disturbing insight
into the radical feminist-inspired pro-abortion worldview behind
Roe v. Wade. "No amount of discussion, no citation of evidence,
can alter the opinions of radical feminists about abortion,"
Bork states.
Robert Bork
WorldNetDaily
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=53872
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.