An attempt at realism

1

“There’s a number of pieces of evidence which has essentially pushed us off the cliff to say we are considering this an act of terrorism.” (David Bowdich, the F.B.I. assistant director in charge of the Los Angeles office.)

“Pushed us off the cliff.” How telling! Is there any remaining doubt that Obama FBI policy has been pusillanimous denial until denial becomes utterly untenable?

Few, probably, read this blog for real political insight, but here goes anyway: San Bernardino is our Alamo.

  • It exposes the delusion of our constant government pronouncements on the terrorist threat (Bush’s before Obama’s too. We can only hope that behind the stultifying and pacifying lies was a bit more realism).
  • It makes me doubt the efficacy of screening Syrian refugees (though I still tend to think that’s one of the hardest ways for a terrorist to enter the U.S.)
  • It makes me wonder if the many Koranic texts about violent Jihad aren’t themselves a sort of Islamist Terrorist “sleeper cell,” not in any way exegeted into oblivion.

It became much likelier Wednesday that the next President is going to be a Republican, if only because of Republican rhetorical toughness on terrorism and under-restrained immigration. When terror takes center stage, nobody’s paying attention to much else. My own distaste for the whole GOP field today feels more like “isn’t there a pony in this stable somewhere?”

2

We Christians can understand the frustration and anger that motivate such attacks, for the same secularizing forces have been attacking our faith as well.

We are a people who believe in human rights, yet are faced with a religious ideology that has no democratic tradition and a history of forcing submission upon others.

Like the struggle against fascism and communism, we will most likely be engaged in this battle of religious ideology for a generation or two. In all truth we can not claim to know God’s will in everything, so must patiently move forward, fighting for liberty and justice.

For Christians the knowledge that our own country has spread her culture of violence, secularism, greed and immodesty throughout the world, is cause to wonder if it is not God’s judgement that we are experiencing.

When Muslim theologian Ayatollah Baqer al-Sadr has said that, “The world as we know it today is how others shaped it. We have two choices: either to accept it with submission, which means letting Islam die, or to destroy it, so that we can construct a world as Islam requires”, we Christians must wonder what our response should be.

[T]he answer to these jihadist attacks around the world, as well as the ISIS threat to the Western World, begins with us. We must turn back to God as a nation, and repent as a people.

These radical Muslims see themselves as the righteous, charged by their god to purge the world of evildoers, because they do not distinguish between the paganism or the Christianity of the West, precisely because they believe the former to be part of the latter.

(Abbot Tryphon) The italics indicate the parts that are particularly challenging to me.

I’m starting to think there’s no alternative to fighting back physically, even though I know there’s going to be all kinds of innocent civilian casualties inflicted by both sides, deliberately or not, and even though I have so little respect for what we have become and what we will be defending. I just think that when terrorism is contained, in the dotage of my great-grandchildren, there may be some chance of cleaning up the great American cesspool. I’m not sure we’d ever cast off dhimmitude.

If only we would start that turning back to God, in repentance, as a nation, even as we fight. I see little sign of that, which was my hope after 9/11 but which quickly faded.

3

The power of the press in America is a primordial one. It sets the agenda of public discussion, and this sweeping political power is unrestrained by any law. It determines what people will talk and think about — an authority that in other nations is reserved for tyrants, priests, parties and mandarins.

(Theodore White, The Making of the President 1972, via Pat Buchanan) Note that this is not the power to tell people what to think, but the power to tell what to think about. The very power to say “this is news,” tacitly excluding all else as topics of common discussion, is the awesome power and it seems to me that it largely remains. Fox and MSNBC may disagree about X, Y & Z, but they agree that X, Y & Z are the news.

The internet has some slight power to break that, and my own tacit motivation in much of what I write is “could we think and maybe talk about this important topic instead of the commercial crap, toxic entertainments and other ephemera mainstream media tell us are newsworthy? I’m not smart enough to figure it out on my own, but it seems to me that it’s important.” This blog installment is exactly that. 

I’d like us, for instance, to clean up our culture of violence, secularism, greed and immodesty, whereupon we will automatically cease spreading it throughout the world. But that is not the only gripe the traditionalists of the world, including Islamists, have with us.

The mainstream press seems to think that the problem with Islamic terrorism, now officially homegrown or immigrated legally to the U.S., is that someone will be mean (or worse) to one of the many innocent Muslims in the U.S. I’d like for us to return to the past sensible policy of considering religion in immigration policy, since there’s some reason to think that Muslims are not assimilating as well as other immigrants. They adhere to a religion that from its founding refused to co-exist peaceably and equally with other religions when it gains power to make the rules. It will gain power to make the rules if we admit as many highly-fertile Muslims as has Europe (to do the work of the children we’re not ourselves bearing).

I’m not very sanguine about revival of Christendom, either religious or demographic. I do indeed wonder if it is not God’s judgement that we are experiencing. Muslims are aware that American global hegemony is toxic to Islam and will kill it. American Christians — sincere-ish ones — haven’t even figured out that American public schools are toxic to Christianity and were designed to be, replacing it with America Civic Religion that has proven barely worth the pipe bombs to blow it up.

4

In the end, this is not “Hatfields verus McCoys,” with no clarity on “who started it.” Islamism was on the march for centuries before Christendom responded with the Crusades, trying to recover Christian holy sites like Jerusalem. Islamdom has been subdued for centuries, but not really pacified.

Traditional peoples, including those of Islamic countries, have much longer memories (and grudges) than amnesiac Americans, and I fear they’re starting to march again.

* * * * *

“In learning as in traveling and, of course, in lovemaking, all the charm lies in not coming too quickly to the point, but in meandering around for a while.” (Eva Brann)

Some succinct standing advice on recurring themes.

 

“New Immutability” vs. Systemic bias

I happened upon a long Yale Law Journal article on the concept of “immutability” in antidiscrimination law.

It makes some good solid introductory and conclusory points that I’ve been trying to make, with a lot of detailed discussion in between.

First, the question:

Why is it illegal to discriminate on the basis of certain traits, like race or sex, but not others, like experience or beauty? One answer that has been offered in the context of the constitutional guarantee of equal protection is that certain human traits are immutable, meaning they were not chosen. This concept has long endured the scholarly criticism that it is “both over- and underinclusive.” For example, it is permissible to discriminate on the basis of intelligence, which some say is innate, but not religion, which some say can be changed. In response to the argument that sexual orientation might be changed and is therefore undeserving of protection, gay rights advocates have persuaded many courts, perhaps even the Supreme Court, to adopt a different understanding of immutable characteristics. Many courts now ask “not whether a characteristic is strictly unchangeable, but whether the characteristic is a core trait or condition that one cannot or should not be required to abandon.” Or, as another judge put it, “‘immutability’ may describe those traits that are so central to a person’s identity that it would be abhorrent for government to penalize a person for refusing to change them, regardless of how easy that change might be physically.”

(Footnotes omitted throughout) In other words, “immutable” doesn’t really mean “immutable” in the new regime.

So far, so fair.

This indentation is my digression:

I can assure you that religion can change. I’ve changed mine significantly twice as an adult.

But it wasn’t unequivocally a choice. Both times, a change of conviction compelled me to change religion or stand self-accused as a hypocrite. I couldn’t have truly changed religion on demand on economic incitement to change; I only could have hypocritically feigned a change under such duress.

So should there be laws against religious discrimination? I suspect that if antidiscrimination laws were amended to eliminate prohibition of religious discrimination, there would arise pockets of religiously discriminatory businesses (I’m thinking of the kinds of proprietors who thought “Christian Yellow Pages” was a great idea). Frankly and bluntly, I don’t think some weird pockets like that are intolerable.

But I suspect that there would be more: pervasive and systemic discrimination (more about that later) against adherents of a few religions. I don’t think my religious tradition would be systematically disfavored, but that some others would be. For instance, how employable would Scientologists be if the law allowed you to ask “Religion?” on an employment application? I’d be sorely tempted to use “Scientologist” as a proxy for “wacko; likely to end up jumping up and down on my sofa.”

And perhaps we’d become religiously balkanized to an extent that would surprise me. Those considerations seem to warrant keeping bans on religious discrimination in economic life.

End digression.

But the author proceeds, calling this non-immutability “the new immutability,” and demonstrating that

while the new immutability has had success in constitutional litigation for LGBT rights, it is a questionable strategy for reconceptualizing the broader project of equality law. As a normative matter, the new immutability obscures critical questions about why some characteristics ought to be treated equally, offering only the empty assertion that they are fundamental to personhood.

Since I’m not an untenured law professor, I can say what the author probably could not say, even assuming she wanted to: “the new immutability” is a questionable strategy, and insofar as LGBT rights depend on such a fishy concept, LGBT victories are fishy.

In the end, the author suggests the radically old idea that (gasp!) antidiscrimination laws should

target[] systemic forms of bias, rather than the goal of protecting immutable traits …

By systemic biases, I refer to discriminatory practices that are both structural and pervasive. Structural approaches to employment discrimination are concerned with whether institutional practices contribute to unequal opportunity, rather than the guilt or innocence of particular types of victims or perpetrators. Structural accounts of discrimination locate the causes and consequences of inequality in social and institutional practices, arrangements, and systems. They change the focus from individuals and their choices to how workplace structures “contribut[e] to the production or expression of bias.” The structural approach’s focus on the workplace itself as the cause of inequality creates an argument for legal intrusion into the prerogatives of employers. By contrast, immutability arguments look to whether the victims of discrimination, considered as a class or group, deserve protection … Thus, a structural frame would put this Article’s question not as which classes should be protected, but which forms of bias the law should disrupt.

Pervasive forms of bias connect to larger social systems of hierarchy and segregation and contribute to broader problems of inequality. The focus on pervasive biases differentiates a targeted approach from a universal one and provides a limiting principle. Unlike isolated instances of workplace unfairness, pervasive biases substantially limit the opportunities of affected individuals.

(Emphasis added) This idea is radical because it assumes that there needs to be an actual and substantial problem with bias in the (economic) system before we run around passing laws to protect a group that may not need protection. Pop-up workplace bigotry isn’t enough. Religious disapproval that does not manifest itself in hiring, promotion, retention, firing or other economic decisions isn’t enough.

That’s exactly what I’ve been trying to argue for years. That’s what I understood the law to be before it was hijacked by identity politics.

I would add that there needs to be some demonstration of systemic economic bias — meeting a burden of coming forward with some substantial evidence — before a bill gets any legislative thumbs up. I doubt, now as I have for 25 or so years (if not more), that proponents of antidiscrimination laws based on sexual orientation can meet that burden.

Throw in “Transgender” (the T in LGBT) or “gender identity” or whatever the term du jour is, however, and I’m not so sure how that would come out. And I’m not prepared to think through that in public just yet, except to say that like antidiscrimination laws based on sexual orientation, antidiscrimination laws based on gender identity are spookily based on a subjective and self-reported attribute, which seems to me to open some doors for real abuse by, not against, the supposed victims.

UPDATE: Ryan Anderson thinks SOGI (Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity) laws are a very bad idea.

* * * * *

“In learning as in traveling and, of course, in lovemaking, all the charm lies in not coming too quickly to the point, but in meandering around for a while.” (Eva Brann)

Some succinct standing advice on recurring themes.

 

The Righteous Reaction

Sister Vassa, for those not in the know, is an American-born, Anglophone Russian Orthodox nun/scholar/podcaster/blogger living in Vienna. She dispenses bursts of good spiritual advice while deadpanning about her mostly imaginary production assistants and “zillions” of adoring fans.

Saturday’s blog hit me where I live (turn down the volume if you don’t like Little Drummer Boy):

“Now the birth of Jesus the Messiah took place in this way. When his mother Mary had been engaged to Joseph, but before they lived together, she was found to be with child from the Holy Spirit. Her husband Joseph, being a righteous man and not wanting to expose her to public disgrace, planned to dismiss her quietly.” (Mt 1: 18-19)

As I prepare for the upcoming feast of the Lord’s Nativity, let me reflect a bit on Joseph’s surprisingly “quiet” reaction to Mary’s as yet unexplained pregnancy. We see no shock or dismay in this righteous man, who was confronted with a situation that, – let’s say it like it is, – looked very, very bad. And yet all Joseph wanted to do in this situation was: 1. protect Her from public disgrace, and 2. dismiss Her “quietly.” 

So this is a “righteous” reaction to the perceived sin of another human being. Today let me gratefully contemplate Joseph’s humble and quiet discretion, lest I be tempted to display shock and dismay at any perceived amorality or sinful behaviour in my surroundings. My shock and my dismay is neither righteous nor helpful. In fact, when I am judgmental I become utterly incapable of being helpful; when I try to play God’s role of Judge, I close myself off from His grace-filled mercy. I also display an infantile lack of self-knowledge, but I’ll elaborate on that point some other time.

During this Nativity Fast let me abstain from shock and dismay, that I can make my journey toward Bethlehem with a proper focus. Let me “make straight the paths of the Lord” in my own heart, that I may greet Him in the same way He is born, in quietness and humility.

(Italics added)

I assume that protecting from disgrace is not necessarily the order when

  • the disgrace has a victim or victims other than the bad actor; or
  • the disgraceful behavior is already public and others are applauding it.

But gossip about a truly private moral lapse is unwarranted.

* * * * *

“In learning as in traveling and, of course, in lovemaking, all the charm lies in not coming too quickly to the point, but in meandering around for a while.” (Eva Brann)

Some succinct standing advice on recurring themes.

 

The Morning After (no pill)

I continue to be puzzled by the Colorado Springs shootings. (For the record, I’m typing this at 11:11 on 11/28.)

The press has no clue either. No longer dependent on the Police, they have been unable this far to come up with anything on Robert Lewis Dear on their own.

This suggests, does it not, a lone actor? Maybe even a “loner”?

If he had a grudge against Planned Parenthood, why aren’t there bodies of PP employees stacked like cord-wood, and why did this drag out five hours? Why did he shoot a man in a parking lot? And why was he (apparently) sniping at people a quarter-mile away?

The lack of information doesn’t stop the press from publishing, though. What they publish is a mix of speculation about why someone might go shoot up a Planned Parenthood — whereas at this point what we know is that someone went on a shooting spree based in a Planned Parenthood. Only this, and nothing more.

Cast in a prominent role: Those Videos (of Summer and Fall), which videos

  • in English, exposed ghoulish human organ trafficking,
  • in PP-speak, “created a toxic atmosphere.”

The press that I’ve read isn’t particularly tilting toward one language versus the other.

I continue to suspect that the police know more than they’re telling, but the media haven’t turned up anything, either, on the shooter or his background.

Most puzzling. It doesn’t fit any pattern I can recall — or can imagine. Is this truly an act so deranged as to defy Monday-morning quarterbacking?

* * * * *

“In learning as in traveling and, of course, in lovemaking, all the charm lies in not coming too quickly to the point, but in meandering around for a while.” (Eva Brann)

Some succinct standing advice on recurring themes.