Meet An Atheist

The thoughts and rants of a proud member of one of the worlds most maligned and slandered groups.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Report: Big Three Faiths and Religious Extremism

A report by the thinktank EastWest Institute indicates that religious extremist have much in common. We atheists already knew this. It also indicates that the threat from Muslim extremism is a much larger threat than from Christianity or Judaism.



Religious Extremist in 3 Faiths Share Views

By Claudia Parsons Wed Jun 13, 5:49 PM ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Violent Muslim, Christian and Jewish extremists invoke the same rhetoric of "good" and "evil" and the best way to fight them is to tackle the problems that drive people to extremism, according to a report obtained by Reuters.


It said extremists from each of the three faiths often have tangible grievances -- social, economic or political -- but they invoke religion to recruit followers and to justify breaking the law, including killing civilians and members of their own faith.

The report was commissioned by security think tank EastWest Institute ahead of a conference on Thursday in New York titled "Towards a Common Response: New Thinking Against Violent Extremism and Radicalization." The report will be updated and published after the conference.

The authors compared ideologies, recruitment tactics and responses to violent religious extremists in three places -- Muslims in Britain, Jews in

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Israel and Christians in the United States.

"What is striking ... is the similarity of the worldview and the rationale for violence," the report said.

It said that while Muslims were often perceived by the West as "the principal perpetrators of terrorist activity," there are violent extremists of other faiths. Always focusing on Muslim extremists alienates mainstream Muslims, it said.

The report said it was important to examine the root causes of violence by those of different faiths, without prejudice.

"It is, in each situation, a case of 'us' versus 'them,"' it said. "That God did not intend for civilization to take its current shape; and that the state had failed the righteous and genuine members of that nation, and therefore God's law supersedes man's law."

COMMON WORLDVIEW

This worldview was common to ultranationalist Jews, like Yigal Amir, who killed Israeli Prime Minister

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Yitzhak Rabin in 1995, to U.S. groups like Christian Identity, which is linked to white supremacist groups, and to other Christian groups that attacked abortion providers, it said.

"Extremists should never be dismissed simply as evil," said the report. "Trying to engage in a competition with religious extremists over who can offer a simpler answer to complex problems will be a losing proposition every time."

Harvard University lecturer Jessica Stern, the conference's keynote speaker, spent five years interviewing extremists for her 2003 book "Terror in the Name of God: Why Religious Militants Kill."

She said it was dangerous for U.S.

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President George W. Bush to use terms such as "crusade" or "ridding the world of evil."

"It really is falling into the same trap that these terrorists fall into, black and white thinking," Stern told Reuters on Wednesday. "It's very exciting to extremists to hear an American president talking that way."

Stern said to compare violent extremists from the three faiths was not to suggest that the threat was the same.

"These are not equivalent," she said. "The problems arising from Christian or Jewish extremism are not threatening to the world in the same way as Muslim extremism is."

Conference organizers say their aim is to develop a nonpartisan strategy to combat religious extremism.

The guest list includes representatives of the State Department,

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Homeland Security, the New York Police Department and the U.N. missions of Israel,

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Iraq, Britain and the Organization of the Islamic Conference.




6 Comments:

At 6/15/2007 8:17 AM, Kelly Gorski said...

I, too, live in the Bible Belt. In fact, I'm pretty sure I'm on the buckle. I'm also an atheist. I just wanted to say I love your blog. Thanks for the great articles.

 
At 6/18/2007 1:20 AM, Alan said...

Thanks Kelly.

You can't be on the buckle as I grew up about 30 miles west of Spartanburg which was the the Buckle if I am not mistaken at that time. Perhaps it is slowly moving toward Jersualem or something?

 
At 6/18/2007 11:31 AM, Kelly Gorski said...

Touche.

 
At 6/18/2007 11:31 AM, Kelly Gorski said...

Actually, touché. :)

 
At 7/02/2007 11:28 PM, Will said...

ok, alan. i'm not even computer saavy so i can't figure out any other way to send this to you, which sucks because i know i'm going to catch some flak for this.
i understand a distrust of religion, i completely agree that organized religion is a dangerous illution to reality. but i don't know how you can be so bitter about it. it seems to me, from what i've read in your blogs, that you generally take a more scientific approach to religion, for which i can only agree with you half way.
science is the baby of logic and thus is better at explaining our world than any religion can. the only problem is, you can't put science and religion together, they're apples and oranges man.
science is rooted in fact, and religion is (as i am sure you know) most definatly not. so how can you use linear thinking to decribe a complete abstraction?
instead, to explain away religion, i turn to logic's eccentric brother, philosophy (particularly socrates). you need to fight fire with fire. if you really want to turn heads and wake up a few minds, it's easier to "convert" others with abstract counter thought than cold hard facts (if they were swayed by them at all in the first place, then they wouldn't be zealots, would they).
and here's my final thought, the whole reason i started this rant, being critical is one thing. but fighting about it makes you no better than them. so what if they're wrong? does it stop you from going about your life? they'll figure it out when they die and thats it. i've been in the catholic school system my whole life and was even a sunday schooler and youth group kid until i figured out the truth. and from what i've seen of the true believers is that...they need it. it is thier bread and butter, if they didn't have a person to believe in and a person to love them always, then they would be lost, suicidal, they would not have that filler to keep them all warm and gooey inside. thats my other sure fire way to save a few minds, acceptance and love.
sorry about all this, i've been reading a lot of atheist blogs and yours gave me the impression that you were not an anti-religious extremist, so i just had to lay some discussion points on you. if you or anyone wants to comment back to me my email is kessler.will@gmail, but please dont send me hate mail, i'll just block you
dream of the future
-will

 
At 7/02/2007 11:32 PM, Will said...

oh, and PS i agree with kelly, your blog does rock

 

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