A heartfelt plea for tolerance  -made by someone with no clue how to  
reverse
the tide. Valuable nonetheless for what it shows happens when a  movement
is allowed to progress with no effective strategy to stop it. Neither  
religious
nor political conservatives have such a strategy and the result is what it  
is.
 
It  isn't just that the Left is intolerant and immoral, it is also a  fact 
that the Right
is ineffective, muddled, and unwilling to do whatever it takes to  become
effective. Why not ?  Best guess: Money comes first and foremost  and
if there is no profit to be made, why bother? That and a  self-defeating
attitude toward science, something which could prove the value of a good 
number of "conservative" positions if the Right was at all comfortable with 
science and willing to do the hard work of necessary research to argue 
its points. But it is not willing to do any such thing and prefers to rely 
on beliefs and "tradition." That has proven to be a perfect  formula
-for failure.
 
Anyone have a better explanation?
 
BR
 
-----------------------------------------------------------
 
 
New Statesman
 
 
 
 
 
 


 
 
 
 


 
 
 




 
 
The new intolerance: will we regret pushing Christians out  of public life? 
In this provocative challenge to the left, the former New  Statesman deputy 
editor Cristina Odone argues that liberalism has become the  new orthodoxy –
 and there is no room for religious believers to  dissent.
By _Cristina Odone_ (http://www.newstatesman.com/writers/cristina_odone)   
Published 14 January 2014 11:12  


 
 
 



 
I couldn’t believe it. I was trying to discuss  traditional marriage – and 
the state was trying to stop me.

Incredible, in a 21st-century European country, but true. I was invited to  
speak at a conference on marriage last summer, to be held at the Law 
Society in  London. The government had just launched a public consultation on 
changing the  law to allow same-sex marriage. The conference was a chance for 
supporters of  traditional marriage to contribute to the debate. The 
participants included a  retired philosophy professor, a representative of the 
Catholic archdiocese of  Westminster, the chairman of the Tory party’s oldest 
pressure group, the Bow  Group, Phillip Blond (another Tory adviser) and 
spokesmen for various Christian  organisations. The title, “One Man. One Woman. 
Making the Case for Marriage for  the Good of Society”, could hardly have 
sounded more sober. I accepted without a  second thought. 
A few days before the conference, someone from Christian Concern, the group 
 which had organised the event, rang me in a panic: the Law Society had 
refused  to let us meet on their premises. The theme was “contrary to our 
diversity  policy”, the society explained in an email to the organisers, “
espousing as it  does an ethos which is opposed to same-sex marriage”. In other 
words, the Law  Society regarded support for heterosexual union, still the 
only legal form of  marriage in Britain, as discriminatory. 
Hurriedly, another venue was found, the Queen Elizabeth II Conference 
Centre  in the heart of London. This publicly owned modern building is named 
after the  supreme governor of the Established Church, and is situated across 
the street  from Westminster Abbey, for nearly a millennium the symbol of 
Christian Britain.  Who could hope for a better venue, in short, to discuss 
what 
the churches still  regard as a sacramental union? 
But with only 24 hours to go before the conference, managers at the QEII  
centre told Christian Concern that the subject it planned to discuss was  “
inappropriate”. The booking was cancelled. When challenged, the QEII centre’s 
 chief executive, Ernest Vincent, cited its diversity policy as reason for 
the  cancellation. A journalist asked for a copy of the diversity policy. 
The centre  refused to provide it. 
By the time I took part in the event, (which had been moved to the basement 
 of a hotel in central London), I felt my rights as a taxpayer, citizen and 
 Christian had been trampled. I began to wonder if I had been the unlucky 
victim  of an isolated incident or was in fact encountering a wider problem. 
I started  to research the issue. 
My findings were shocking: not only Christians, but also Muslims and Jews,  
increasingly feel they are no longer free to express any belief, no matter 
how  deeply felt, that runs counter to the prevailing fashions for 
superficial  “tolerance” and “equality” (terms which no longer bear their 
dictionary meaning  but are part of a political jargon in which only certain 
views, 
and certain  groups, count as legitimate). 
Only 50 years ago, liberals supported “alternative culture”; they manned 
the  barricades in protest against the establishment position on war, race 
and  feminism. Today, liberals abhor any alternative to their credo. No one 
should  offer an opinion that runs against the grain on issues that liberals 
consider  “set in stone”, such as sexuality or the sanctity of life. 
Intolerance is no longer the prerogative of overt racists and other bigots –
  it is state-sanctioned. It is no longer the case that the authorities are 
 impartial on matters of belief, and will intervene to protect the 
interests and  heritage of the weak. When it comes to crushing the rights of 
those 
who dissent  from the new orthodoxy, politicians and bureaucrats alike are in 
the forefront  of the attacks, not the defence. 
I believe that religious liberty is mean­ingless if religious 
subcultures  do not have the right to practise and preach according to their 
beliefs. 
These  views – for example, on abortion, adoption, divorce, marriage, 
promiscuity and  euthanasia – may be unfashionable. They certainly will strike 
many  liberal-minded outsiders as harsh, impractical, outmoded, and 
irrelevant. 
But that is not the point. Adherents of these beliefs should not face  
life-ruining disadvantages. They should not have to close their businesses, as  
happened to the Christian couple who said only married heterosexual couples  
could stay at their bed and breakfast. They should not lose their jobs, 
which  was the case of the registrar who refused to marry gays. When Britain 
was  fighting for its life in the Second World War, it never forced pacifists 
to bear  arms. So why force the closure of a Catholic adoption agency that 
for almost 150  years has placed some of society’s most vulnerable children 
with loving  parents? 
Once a dominant force in western culture, religion has been demoted to, at  
best, an irrelevance; at worst, an offence against the prevailing 
establishment.  For millennia, religion has coloured every aspect of the 
European 
landscape.  Churches were every­where – one for every 200 inhabitants in 
the High Middle  Ages – and oversaw every stage of life: “hatch, match and 
despatch”.  Philanthropists, religious orders and communities built and ran 
schools,  orphanages and hospitals. Belief was so crucial to ordinary people 
that the most  destitute did not question paying tithes to their church. The 
Founding Fathers  crossed an ocean to be free to practise their faith. 
But, as the British poet Geoffrey Hill has written, the continent is “a 
place  full of memorials but no memory”. Church attendance has slumped to less 
than 30  per cent. Only in two Greek Orthodox countries, Cyprus and Greece, 
does the  overwhelming majority of the population attend services regularly 
(98 per cent  and 96 per cent respectively). Europeans may walk in the 
shadow of church spires  but biblical literacy is so unusual today that a 
recent 
survey found that, of  900 representative respondents, 60 per cent couldn’t 
name anything about the  parable of the Good Samaritan, while only 5 per 
cent of people could name all  the Ten Commandments. 
Americans do God in a way that Europeans no longer do: the First Amendment  
guarantees citizens’ right to the “free exercise of religion” – and they 
in turn  choose to exercise their religion in a host of patriotic rituals. 
Their currency  (“In God we trust”, proclaims the dollar bill), the prayer 
before the college  football game and the national anthem: all invoke God, 
and pledge faith in His  powers. “All-American” is synonymous with 
church-going, just as “un-American”  meant the Godless communists. 
The equation – good equals God-fearing, and bad equals atheist – is so 
much  part of the ordinary mindset that when asked in a recent study whether a  
fictional hit-and-run driver was more likely to be a rapist or an atheist, 
most  Americans chose an atheist. It seems preposterous, given this 
scenario, to speak  of an encroaching atheism. Yet stealthily, behind an 
advance 
guard of political  correctness, a new secularism is taking shape. As in 
Europe, it elevates gay  rights, women’s rights and pro-choice principles to 
unassailable values. To  question them is to court censure and worse. 
Can the decline in the social and intellectual standing of faith be 
checked,  or even reversed? Yes. Ironically, believers can learn from those who 
have come  to see themselves as their biggest enemy: gays. 
Think of how successful gay rights activists have been, in both Europe and  
America. Twenty-five years ago, Britain’s first “gay pride” march took 
place in  London. It was a muted affair, remembers the campaigner Ivan Massow, 
which  “struggled to fill half of Kennington Park and a disco tent”. Today, 
the Gay  Pride march is sponsored by the Mayor of London and draws tens of 
thousands,  filling Hyde Park. Prime Minister David Cameron was on hand last 
summer to take  credit for equal marriage reforms which would allow gay 
schoolchildren to “stand  a little bit taller”. The Royal Bank of Scotland was 
in evidence to take credit  for sponsoring high-profile gay awards. 
Everyone, it seemed, wanted to be in on  the act. 
Practising Christians, Jews and Muslims should also step forward into the  
limelight, dismantling prejudices that they must be suspect, lonely, losers. 
 Believers should present themselves as ordinary people, men and women who 
worry  about the price of the weekly shop and the size of the monthly 
mortgage. They  should not appear to be religious zealots or gay-bashers or 
rabid 
pro-lifers.  They should reassure critics that religious people are not a 
race apart – but  just happen to cherish a set of ideals that sometimes places 
them at odds with  the rest. 
Let outsiders see the faithful as a vulnerable group persecuted by right-on 
 and politically correct fanatics who don’t believe in free speech. Let 
them see  believers pushed to the margins of society, in need of protection to 
survive.  Banned, misrepresented, excluded – and all because of their 
religion? Even the  most hardbitten secularist and the most intolerant liberal 
should be offended by  the kind of censorship people of faith are facing today. 
If believers can awaken  a sense of justice in those around them, they may 
have taken a first important  step in reclaiming the west as an area where 
God is welcome. 
 (http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/new-statesman/id400878915?mt=8&ls=1) 
Without a change, the work that faith groups have carried out for millennia –  
charities, hospitals, schools, orphanages – will disappear. Communities will 
no  longer be able to rely on the selfless devotion of evangelists and 
missionaries  who happily shoulder the burden of looking after the unwanted, 
the 
aged, the  poor. Feeling stigmatised and persecuted by the authorities and 
the  establishment, Christians, Muslims and Jews may well become entrenched in 
the  more fundamental shores of their faith. 
Equality is already becoming the one civic virtue universally endorsed;  
equality legislation, the overriding principle of law. In this new scenario,  
yesterday’s victims are today’s victors. Gays and women, among other 
scapegoats  from the past, now triumph over their former persecutors. But they 
have learned  no lesson from their plight. As they promote a one-sided 
tolerance, they act as  if their rights now include this: to have no one 
disagree 
with them. 
This is not the sign of a healthy society. Ordinary citizens should not 
live  in fear of saying or doing “the wrong thing”. Diversity means respecting 
 conscientious objections and making reasonable accommodation to let 
subcultures  survive. Erasing God from the public square, and turning religion 
into a secret  activity between two consenting adults in the privacy of their 
home, leads to  what the poet Seamus Heaney calls the hollowing-out of 
culture. A no-God area  can only sustain a fragile and brittle civilisation, a 
setting worthy of a  broken people. 
The roots of today’s intolerance, however, run deep. Decades of 
totalitarian  regimes instilled suspicion of authority; while the birth of 
ethical 
relativism  taught that everything goes – just not judging others. Religion 
took 
no account  of these historical developments. It was authoritarian, 
judgemental, and  hypocritical to boot. The Ayatollah Khomeini’s fatwa against 
Salman Rushdie and  the terrorist attacks on 11 September 2001 showed Islam was 
guilty certainly of  the first two accusations; the abysmal cover-up by the 
Catholic Church of its  priests’ paedophile abuse exposed it as guilty of 
the third. 
Given the precedents of the past century, westerners today should be  
hard-wired to resist the persecution of religious people. Of course, it would 
be  
blasphemous to compare the hardships of Christians, Muslims and Jews in the 
west  today to the plight of their forebears in totalitarian regimes or to 
their  co-religionists elsewhere, who live in fear for their lives and are 
being  systematically abused and driven from their homes. To be a Christian 
in Iraq,  Egypt or Pakistan, or a Muslim Uighur in Xinjiang, western China, 
or a Buddhist  in occupied Tibet, means routine persecution. A law suit, a 
disciplinary hearing  at work, or even hate speech online or in person can 
seem insignificant by  comparison. But that is no reason not to mind. 
Religion has long been synonymous with authority. This was no bad thing 
when,  for millennia, traditional hierarchies were respected for ensuring that 
the few  at the top protected, organised, and even ensured the livelihood 
of, the many at  the bottom. Bloodthirsty authoritarians from Hitler to Pol 
Pot drove a tank  through this vision: they turned authority into 
authoritarianism. Those who  survived their brutal regimes and those who 
witnessed them 
cherished their  individual liberty, once they regained it, all the more. 
Personal choice became a new morality. Those institutions that stood in its 
 way –the class system, the army, the Church – sparked fierce hostility. 
Hippies,  rock stars, comedians, university students and their professors, 
draft evaders  and military deserters took up arms against the old order. 
Christians, too,  cheered the triumph of liberty but they held back when 
“liberty
” bred the  celebration of the “I”. Christian churches, especially the 
Roman Catholic,  insisted that individuals were not free to do as they wished, 
but bound by  divine laws to obey an invisible God. Birth, marriage, speech, 
sexuality: the  Church had rules and regulations for every area of everyday 
life. 
By the 1960s Vatican insiders felt they must modernise their ancient world 
to  retain some of its inhabitants. Vatican II (1962-65) allowed Pope John 
XXIII,  the pontiff said, to throw open the windows of the Church to let in 
some fresh  air. 
But while he allowed for the translation of Latin prayers and said priests  
could face their congregation during Mass, his encyclical Humanae Vitae  
quashed talk of a new sexual ethics. Self-denial remained a core message. The  
Church would continue to oppose divorce, homosexuality and the Pill as 
grievous  sins. 
The Church saw itself as a rock in the shifting sands of public mores;  
critics saw it as implacable and unbending – and let the world know what they  
thought. “Catholic baiting is the anti-Semitism of the liberals,” the 
priest and  author Andrew Greeley wrote then. These critics drew their own 
inspiration from  a Harvard professor. Joseph Fletcher’s Situation Ethics, 
published in  1966, argued for a new morality where nothing was universally 
right 
or wrong;  context, or situation, was everything. Truth itself became 
subjective – or  truth-for-me, as Fletcher’s critics dubbed it. 
Fletcher’s tabula rasa was exciting. It ushered in a “permissive society”  
whose members felt thoroughly emancipated from Judaeo-Christian ethics. In 
this  way, secularism became allied to a newfangled “liberalism”. Yet even 
its  staunchest opponents could not completely reject the Church. In 
occupied  countries such as Poland and Ireland, the Catholic Church had 
supported 
the  underground opposition against the occupying regime and won, in the 
process,  every patriot’s heart. 
In 1989, however, Ayatollah Khomeini declared a fatwa against Salman 
Rushdie  for his “blasphemous” novel The Satanic Verses. The world recoiled at  
the extraordinary curse from an exotic corner of the world. Then, in quick  
succession, Rushdie had to go into hiding; his Japanese translator was 
killed;  and his Italian and Norwegian publishers were knifed. The west 
understood 
a  terrifying new force had been unleashed: here, in black cloaks and long 
beards,  stood the enemies of free speech. 
It didn’t matter that a long list of leading Muslim writers [What long 
list?  There were few who did any such thing] rushed to declare their support 
for  Rushdie and free speech. For the liberal intelligentsia, the Rushdie 
affair  marked a turning point. They were witnessing one of their own 
persecuted 
by a  sinister authoritarian regime that, in God’s name, opposed everything 
they  believed in. To tolerate this faith was to repudiate hard-won rights 
of free  speech and, above all, equality. 
Atheists seized their chance: shrewdly, they pointed to the ayatollah’s  
quashing of free expression as representative of a religious mindset: 
blasphemy  laws were part of the Judaeo-Christian legacy, too. They went on to 
elide 
 Islamism with all religions; Muslim practices mirrored Christian and 
Jewish  tenets, Islam was just another attempt to deal with the great fairy in 
the  sky. 
The 11 September 2001 attacks gave the secularist campaign to discredit  
religion a whole new impetus. The tragedy reawakened fears of Islam. The  
commentary surrounding the 19 terrorists wove elements of fanaticism and A  
Thousand and One Nights into the inspiration for these gruesome acts. In  fact, 
most of the hijackers and their accomplices could not be considered model  
Muslims; they were alcohol-swigging middle-class youngsters who had hung out 
in  Las Vegas (some with prostitutes there). 
Muslim leaders around the world should have stood as one to condemn the 
acts  of terrorism and distance themselves from the fanatical spirit that had 
sparked  them. More recently, the leaders of the Catholic Church (and to a 
lesser extent  the Anglican one) also failed to condemn the horrific crimes 
committed by  co-religionists. The horror of paedophilia among priests was 
magnified by the  Church’s attempt to cover up the scandal. The hierarchy’s 
reluctance to expose  and punish their clergy discredited the institution – 
among its faithful as well  as its foes. 
For some new foes, such as the late Christopher Hitchens and Richard 
Dawkins,  the Church was not accommodating child abuse, it was child abuse. As  
Dawkins told an audience in Dublin, “horrible as sexual abuse no doubt was, 
the  damage was arguably less than the long-term psychological damage 
inflicted by  bringing the child up as Catholic in the first place”. 
Dawkins hailed the words of a psychologist, Nicholas Humphrey: “Children 
have  a human right not to have their minds crippled by exposure to other 
people’s bad  ideas.” Humphrey, like Dawkins and Hitchens, caricatured religion 
as  superstition and dogma, and its followers as stupid. The new atheists, 
mainly  scientists and authors, saw themselves as truth-seekers. They touted 
their own  false equation without pause – science and religion are locked 
in inevitable and  perennial conflict. They rewrote history to present the 
Enlightenment as a  battle between two mortal enemies: reason v religion. 
The faithful, according to this manipulation of history, stood on the side 
of  obscurantism and ignorance. Believers turned their back on progress, 
rejected  Darwin and hated women. Ranged against them were the forces of good – 
the new  atheists, who shed light on the dark and sinister workings of 
religions. 
With these clever and rational men (they were all men) as guides, ordinary  
folk would find their way to the sunny plateaus of a rational existence. 
Here  men and women, emancipated from the old superstitions, would breathe the 
pure  oxygen of equality and learn that nothing lurked beyond matter. “
Transcendence”,  “spirituality” and “salvation”: atheists would expose these 
concepts as empty  talk, with no bearing on real life. 
In this way the stage was set for a new intolerant  agenda.










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