Posted on 04/01/2005 10:23:56 PM PST by goldstategop
The tragic case of Terri Schiavo writes a new chapter in the ongoing American saga that is often titled the culture war. Its no longer just about a so-called right to life. The Christian right insists that its about a culture of life. Theyve been waving that slogan around for years. Now mainstream America is getting used to it. Those of us who actively oppose the Christian right had better get used it, too. Were going to be hearing a lot about this culture of life from now on.
Culture of LIFE? we ask, with justified outrage. These same people who claim to be the guardians of life are the first to demand the death penalty for murderers, indiscriminate bombing for Afghanis, Iraqis, and anyone else they don't like, etc., etc. The hypocrisy is so blatant, it hardly seems worth spelling out the details.
When they talk about a culture of life, though, the right-wingers are trying to tell us that were missing the point. The debate is not about life, its about CULTURE. Everyone agrees that life is good. But the United States is split by a deep cultural divide about what makes a life good. Once we bring that divide into focus, the culture of life side begins to look a bit more logically consistent. And those of us who oppose them begin to see more clearly just where the lines need to be drawn.
Underneath the debate about the end of life, we find the same issue that underlies the debates about abortion, stem cell research, gay marriage, and all the other hot-button social issues of the day. The basic question that ties together all these issues is one that is all too rarely addressed or even spoken: How should we acquire our moral values? It may sound like the stuff of a college philosophy course. But its really the stuff of the headlines about the late Terri Schiavo and all the other battlegrounds of the culture war.
On one side are the religious and social (no, they arent all religious) conservatives who wave the culture of life banner. Basically, they are people who are afraid of uncertainty, ambiguity, and change in the realm of moral values. Their position is simple:
moral values must be universal, timeless, unchanging truths
we should receive them from religious traditions or authority figures
once we get fixed truths, we should stick with them, no matter what A society that doesnt believe all this is in great danger, they warn. Why? Listen to a delightful story told by George W. Bushs friend Richard Land, who heads the Southern Baptist Convention. Land recalled what his wife said when Bill Clinton became president: She said, The people that were sitting around [in the 60s] in Volkswagen vans, smoking pot with peace symbols on their vans and hanging around their necks, are running the country now, aren't they? I said, Yes, they are. Basically, it breaks down to this enormous fault line. On one side of this fault line, you have people who have a traditional view of morality: Some things are always right; some things are always wrong; and if you accept a society in which that's not true, then anything becomes possible.
Thats just what thrilled those people sitting around in Volkswagen vans, smoking pot with peace symbols. Anything becomes possible -- even a world of peace and love.
For the right-wingers, though, the idea that anything is possible is terrifying. Their culture of life is really a culture of fear. They believe that human nature is basically selfish, competitive, and aggressive, If anything is possible, who can predict what crime or evil will happen next? How can anyone feel safe? The world would be spinning out of control. We need fixed rules that come from unquestionable authority. Thats the only way to keep us all from running amok.
You cant get that kind of certainty if you leave the rules up to human choice, the conservatives insist. People are flip-flops. They change their minds to suit their whims. They think with their hormones. They do all sorts of dangerous things, if we let them. Thats why we have to agree with our president, who says: The right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness is not a personal opinion, but an eternal truth. Thats why we need to believe in an eternal higher authority.
From this very abstract point, its an easy step to the impassioned defense of Terri Schiavos life. Who gets to decide when someone dies. Is it the flip-flop human mind? Or is it the eternal will of the ultimate unquestionable authority, the good Lord Himself? For a conservative, thats a no-brainer. Once you let the human mind decide when people die -- or which fetuses come to term and which dont -- anything is indeed possible. The world feels like its spinning out of control. Its hard enough already for most people to feel they have any control over their lives. A world with no eternal authorities might make it feel impossible.
Of course, a world where some eternal authority tells us all what to do is not exactly what the Founding Fathers had in mind, as far as many of us can tell. We believe that a nation built on freedom has to free the mind to discover moral values for itself. That means moral values will indeed be different at different times and in different places. People will disagree. There will be conflicts. That is unavoidable.
So why not make a virtue out of necessity? Why not embrace the conflict as a sign of a healthy, creative diversity in society? We trust that people who have their basic human needs met can learn to get along reasonably. The problem is not human nature. Its a society with skewed priorities that denies so many people their basic needs.
But if we trust the free mind to find the truth, we have to consider all points of view -- even the culture of life. Do they have a persuasive point to make? To figure it out for yourself, you might want to take a college philosophy course, or three or four. Youll have to start way back with Plato and Aristotle. Great minds have been wrestling with this one for thousands of years, and they havent come to any consensus yet. Either side might be right.
But thats just what the right-wingers cant admit. Its the might be right that scares them and drives them nuts. They need a MUST be right to feel safe, to feel that their own lives are under even minimal control.
We cant let them inscribe their fear-driven beliefs onto our laws. No compromise on that one. And we ought to encourage them to join us in a civil discussion about the issue. All the while, though, it wont hurt to remember that they are frightened and hurting.
We also have to continue the agonizing discussion about the specific issues concerning the end of life. Now that technology can keep people alive almost indefinitely, we are in a brave new world with no simple clear-cut direction ahead. The disability rights movement rightly reminds us how easily the masters of technology can get control over us if we are not vigilant. The advocates of individual liberty and death with dignity rightly remind us that we can keep our individual right to our own death as well as life only if we are vigilant. There are no easy answers here, either.
We cant carry on that debate constructively, though, until we first disentangle it from the great cultural debate about how we get our moral values. Perhaps that clarification would move us all a small step beyond our fears.
(Denny Crane: "Sometimes you can only look for answers from God and failing that... and Fox News".)
What a toon.
(Denny Crane: "Sometimes you can only look for answers from God and failing that... and Fox News".)
(Denny Crane: "Sometimes you can only look for answers from God and failing that... and Fox News".)
This guys a maroon.
L
These same people who claim to be the guardians of life are the first to demand the death penalty for murderers,
Uh, no. The pro-lifers routinely gather at couthouses and prisons to protest executions, to my own chagrin. Get a new research assistant.
indiscriminate bombing for Afghanis, Iraqis, and anyone else they don't like, etc., etc.
No one demands the "indiscriminate bombing" of anyone. You have tenure? Put down the crack pipe.
The hypocrisy is so blatant, it hardly seems worth spelling out the details.
ie. you can't spell it out, so you weasel out with this evasiveness. I don't believe you are a teacher.
That's right! Why doesn't he get it? It's about protecting the innocent and punishing the guilty.
...and anyone else they don't like, etc., etc.
That's nonsense.
And other new-age, Scientology rot...
They believe that human nature is basically selfish, competitive, and aggressive, If anything is possible, who can predict what crime or evil will happen next? How can anyone feel safe? The world would be spinning out of control. We need fixed rules that come from unquestionable authority. Thats the only way to keep us all from running amok.I have no problem with that. The peace-and-love crowd showed us what the alternative looks like, and it's not pretty.You cant get that kind of certainty if you leave the rules up to human choice, the conservatives insist. People are flip-flops. They change their minds to suit their whims. They think with their hormones. They do all sorts of dangerous things, if we let them. Thats why we have to agree with our president, who says: The right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness is not a personal opinion, but an eternal truth. Thats why we need to believe in an eternal higher authority.
You are so full of S**t IT SMELLS THROUGH MY PC SCREEN.
The author is a jackass. The culture of fear belongs to the left--fear of God.
So much hypocrisy and stupidity, in one article; where to start...?
The "light of death" is going to get thrown into a lake of fire.
People who are truly at peace with their Maker don't fear death.
You scored a direct hit on the nail head. Punishing the guilty and protecting the innocent is precisely what it is about. The libs view all as equal or same. Their sameness argument extends to all people, cultures, and civilizations. They lack the mental capacity to see the distinct differences. There is good and bad--very striking differences for those who understand the concepts. All can be explained when one realizes "liberalism is a mental disorder."
Yes, and the Maker is of life, not death.
These same people who claim to be the guardians of life are the first to demand the death penalty for murderers, indiscriminate bombing for Afghanis, Iraqis, and anyone else they don't like, etc., etc.
As is true of most Liberal males, Ira Chirnus has completely missed the point on why American men react the way we do to abortion, the death penalty, warfare, and the State ordered execution of Terri Schiavo.
One of the basic survival instincts passed down to us since the beginning of time is the inborn drive for the male of our species to protect our women and our children, if necessary, at the cost of our own lives. Without this instinctive drive to protect our women and children at all costs, we would be not just non-humans we would have become extinct eons ago.
It is because of this innate drive to protect our women and children that we do what is necessary to eliminate any threat that might come their way, and to eliminate this threat we do not hesitate to execute murderers or wage war. It is also the reason that we loathe abortion, and it is the reason we unhesitatingly came to the aid of Terri Schiavo.
Furthermore, when it comes time to elect our leaders, we look for the candidate whom we believe will assist us in an inborn drive to protect our women and children that many of our fellow countrymen are incapable of comprehending. Recently, a California Governor referred to such men(?) as Ira Chernus as Girly Men, but I find that insulting to the females of our species.
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