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BEWARE THE RED HEIFER: How religious nutballs could start World War III
Antiwar.com ^ | April 15, 2002 | Justin Raimondo

Posted on 04/15/2002 10:18:54 AM PDT by H.R. Gross

Behind the Headlines
by Justin Raimondo
Antiwar.com

April 15, 2002

BEWARE THE RED HEIFER
How religious nutballs could start World War III

While the American secretary of state shuttles back and forth between Yasser Arafat and Ariel Sharon, trying desperately to cobble together a) a ceasefire, and b) some basis for a settlement of the world’s most tiresome perpetual crisis, it behooves us to examine the issue of … the red heifer.

Say what?

You heard me, I said the red heifer….

IMPOSSIBLE – YET IT HAPPENED!

When I was a lad, my favorite feature of the Sunday comics was something called “Impossible! – Yet It Happened!” Stories of haunted ghost ships, three-headed babies, and frogs mysteriously raining down from the heavens, odd occurrences chronicled in the classic style of Charles Fort and breathlessly described in lurid prose under the tantalizing headline: Impossible? Yet It Happened! It seemed to me to be a trope for the irrationality of the world I was beginning to enter, a sign that the society of adults wasn’t all it was cracked up to be: after if, if it’s impossible, then it couldn’t have happened – right?

Wrong! To confirm this fact, we need only look at the most significant recent development in the Middle East, and, no, I don’t mean the intifada, or Colin Powell’s visit, or the suicide bombings, or any of that other stuff: I’m talking about the recent birth of a red heifer on a farm in Israel. Why is this so important? The answer is to be found in a fascinating piece by Rod Dreher in National Review Online, “Red Heifer Days,” which recounts the theological significance of this event – and it’s ominous implications for the future of the region:

“Could this little calf born last month in Israel bring about Armageddon? The concept would have struck many people as absurd the last time such a calf was born, in 1997, and probably makes most readers laugh today. Big mistake: Never underestimate the power of religious faith to shape events, especially in the Holy Land. Especially right now.”

THE ESCHATOLOGICAL FACTOR

It all has to do with eschatology, a religious conception of the Final Days of mankind, a scenario mapped out by three of the world’s major religions in very similar (and specific) detail. The focus is on the Temple Mount – the site of Ariel Sharon’s provocative visit that set off the current intifada, and also site of the First Temple of the Hebrews. Destroyed by King Nebuchadnezzar,, and then again by the Romans, according to Jewish traditionalists the Third Temple will be built by the Messiah, who will be not only king of Israel but also high priest of the rebuilt Temple. To the Muslim Palestinians, and their co-religionists worldwide, this is the site of the Dome of the Rock, a Muslim shrine, the sacred al-Aqsa mosque, and the place where Mohammed mounted a fine Arabian horse and galloped straight up to heaven. A large number of Christian fundamentalists have also imbued this spot with millennialist import: according to this “dispensationalist” view, Jesus Christ will return to earth to do battle on the plain of Armageddon and triumph over the Antichrist only after the building of the Third Temple. Dreher cites Gershom Gorenberg, whose book, End of Days: Fundamentalism and the Struggle for the Temple Mount, describes the apocalyptic intersection of religion and politics both in Israel and the US:

“What happens at that one spot, more than anywhere else, quickens expectations of the End in three religions. And at that spot, the danger of provoking catastrophe is greatest.”

I hate to tell you this, but the danger just got much greater. Now, as for that red heifer….

OUR NUTBALLS, AND THEIRS

The key thing to remember, in all this mythological murk, is that no religious Jew is allowed to set foot on the Temple Mount, for fear of desecrating the sacred ground. In any case, the Temple can only be reconstructed when the Messiah returns to save his people, and, so far, no Messiah, and no Third Temple. But not all Israelis are willing to assume such a passive stance, tradition or no tradition. Ever since Israel came into possession of old Jerusalem, in 1967, a fanatical group of Israeli nationalists have tried to kick-start the eschatological machinery, plotting the destruction of the Muslim shrines and busily constructing the various ritual objects for use in the rebuilt Temple. These Israeli nutballs have forged a natural alliance with our Christian nutballs, who have their own theological rationale for hurrying Apocalypse along. They are dispensationalists, who believe – among other things – that the colonization of the Holy Land by the children of Israel signals the second coming of Christ: the efforts of these “Christian Zionists” account for the uncritical support for Israel among many “born again” Christian conservatives.

PROVOKING ARMAGEDDON

Okay, so now we get to the part about the red heifer: it turns out that, although no religious Jew is allowed on the Temple Mount, there’s a loophole – it’s okay if he or she is first purified in the ashes of a pure red heifer. These creatures are exceedingly rare. One was born a couple of years ago, in Israel, but it soon began sprouting white hairs on its tail and was deemed insufficiently pure by the rabbinical authorities. Ah, but science found a way around the fickleness of God’s creation, and through the modern miracle of genetic engineering – and funding provided by “Christian Zionists” in America – a red heifer has been bred, and pronounced pure. As Dreher points out, the world media covered this as a joke, but in reality the red heifer is the theological and political equivalent of a suitcase nuke waiting to go off. Dreher cites Richard Landes, a professor of history at Boston University and director of the Center for Millennial Studies:

“These kinds of circumstances are exactly what people are waiting for. We could be starting a war. If this is a real red heifer, and strict Orthodox rabbis have declared her worthy of sacrifice, then a lot of Jews in Israel will take that as a sign that a new phase of history is about to begin. The Muslims are ready for jihad anyway, so if you have Jews up there doing sacrifices, talk about a red flag in front of a charging bull.”

Rod Dreher, by the way, is the only writer I know of to catch the significance of this red heifer business, because the media tends to not take religion seriously, and yet I can’t help thinking that he perhaps unintentionally underscores another overlooked reality: that the problem of fundamentalism is not limited to the Arab world. The Islamic brand brought down the World Trade Center, but the Judeo-Christian varieties may succeed in starting World War III.

We have heard much about the evils of “moral equivalence” in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. The former, we are told, are superstitious terrorists, whose fanatical mindset makes the perfect receptacle for the hatching of murderous plots, while the Israelis are Westernized democrats, ensconced, just like us in, in a secularized consumer culture. But Dreher points to the existence and growing influence of Jewish fundamentalists, fanatics on the order of Al Qaeda, who could well spark an all-out Arab-Israeli war. Citing Professor Landes, he writes:

“’It’s entirely conceivable that this [red heifer] could trigger a new round of attempts to blow up the Dome of the Rock.’ This is something the Israeli security forces have long been vigilant against. But with their attentions drawn elsewhere by the war with the Palestinians, it’s possible that a radical group could slip the net. And it’s possible that religious extremists elements within the Israeli army could help them.”

EVEN IF…

As Colin Powell shuttles back and forth between Sharon and Arafat, I can’t help but think of that red heifer, growing fat and glossy under the ministrations of its deluded creators. Even if the US somehow succeeded in forging a “peace plan,” even if President Bush actually had the guts to stand up to Sharon and say: “Enough – or else!” Even if, somehow, the nutball tendencies among the Palestinians could be minimized or at least contained – even then, it seems, the cause of peace in the Holy Land is utterly doomed. For what happens at the end of three years, when the red heifer grows old enough to sacrifice, and its ashes can be used for purposes of ritual purification? At that point, the locus of religious conflict in the world could well see yet another Israeli invasion, this time prompted by an upsurge of religious fanaticism married to a virulent ultra-nationalism – precisely the forces that want to propel the Satanic Benjamin Netanyahu and his nutball followers into power.

HISTORY AND IRONY

Sharon knows full well that if he accedes to the demands of the Americans, Netanyahu, the ultra-hardliner, is bound to succeed him. The irony of US intervention, in brokering a “peace plan,” is the unintended consequence of a burgeoning religious supremacism in Israeli politics, one with the power to undo all the good work of American diplomacy.

A DANGEROUS HERESY

What, then, is the solution? The widespread idea that it is the task of American diplomacy to come up with a solution to all or even some of the world’s most intractable problems is precisely where US foreign policy has gone wrong since the days of the Founders. It is a dangerous heresy promulgated by cold warriors trained in the European tradition of realpolitik that the earth is our chessboard, and we must always be making or planning a move: this troublesome activism has been the cause of much misery in the world, and much social and economic dislocation in this country. It is responsible for the policy of perpetual war pursued in modern times by our rulers in Washington, and eventually it will be our undoing. For what can Colin Powell do against the red heifer? Against this improbable creature, the whole architecture of US policy in the Middle East could be laid low, and that is a humbling thought – or at least it ought to be.

INGRATITUDE, THY NAME IS ‘ISRAEL’

You’ll recall that the big reason for US involvement has been to clear the decks for an all-out attack on Iraq. Hey, but wait a minute – with all this talk of Saddam’s alleged “weapons of mass destruction,” the image one gets is of the Iraqi ruler raining missiles down on, say, Brooklyn. But he hasn’t got anything even close to that kind of range: now that the Iraqis and the Saudis have kissed and made up, his only possible target is Israel. We are begging Sharon to please lay off the Palestinians so we can do Israel the favor of taking out a deadly threat to its continued existence. And still, Sharon says no.

GO, COLIN, GO!

Since US tax dollars have funded the colonization and humiliation of a people, the Palestinians, the American secretary of state has a moral responsibility to see that they get a break, and a fair deal. Powell seems admirably committed to that, and he is more than living up to the role implicitly ascribed to him in this space as the conscience of the Bush administration. As such, he faces a powerful and vocal interventionist claque, reflexively pro-Sharon (actually, pro-Netanyahu), and highly influential in the Republican party. It’s one man against the War Party, a truly heroic struggle on Powell’s part, and, so far, he’s proving himself to be at least the equal of his adversaries. More power to him – as long as he sees that the only rational long-term strategy for the US in the Middle East is an exit strategy.

A FUTURE SCENARIO, CIRCA 3002

Our Israel-centric foreign policy, which has alienated the entire Arab world, Muslim and Christian alike, must go. The urgency of this reorientation is underscored by the Israeli government’s intransigence. We need to extricate ourselves from this volatile region, which seems cursed by some special blight, and a likely target of divine anger or some kind of retribution that can’t be long in coming. For all the good intentions, the diplomatic phrases, the talk of “peace” and “justice,” are as nothing when they come up against the awful power of the red heifer.

In this context, imagine the following scenario. It is the year 3002, and some kid is reading the Sunday funnies – yes, they still have Sunday comics, because some traditions are indeed sacred – and he comes across a little item that starts like this:

“How could a red heifer have started World War III? Impossible? Yet it happened….



TOPICS: General Discusssion
KEYWORDS: heifer; prophecy; red; redheiffer; worldwarthree; wwiii
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To: WALLACE212
Although I do not like the tone of this piece, or the obvious anti-Christian/Jew sentiment expressed, I do know I have heard over the years of the supposed birth of a red heifer.
Once a few years ago, it was supposed to have been birthed in some rural area of the United States and that was supposed to signal the end!
141 posted on 04/15/2002 2:26:10 PM PDT by ladyinred
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To: tpaine
You got it, "pal."

My point being, you inserted text into this discussion as if Klive Cussler (or whatever his name is - I'm too lazy to hit 'back' and look) were God Himself.

I refute that opinion with the counter-opinion (most people call them "counter-points," in case you've missed out on traditional modes of relevant human discourse, "bud") that it appears that whatver Mr. Cussler (or whomever) is saying seems to be summarized as:

"National or group identity is the cause of human fanaticism, which is the cause of all of humanity's problems."

To which I replied: "If that were the freepin' case, then why are we not living under the Global Roman Empire TO this date?"

Now, if I misinterpreted the OPINION expressed by Mr. God Himself, then so be it. (I don't think that I did. It's not like it was hundreds of pages long!). If not, then:

Based on the LOGIC presented in your quotee's OPINION, your quotee is mistaken. National or group identity was easily overridden by the rather democratic/republican [compared to the other governments slash monarchies at the time] Roman government, and ROME STILL FELL.

(But you can go on believing whatever the hell you want.)

;) ttt

142 posted on 04/15/2002 2:26:21 PM PDT by detsaoT
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To: wirestripper
I do not question the honest work of the monks, etc. who wrote the words. I question the compiling and re,re,compiling of the scriptures and the word of mouth stories they were based on.

Aha, but what leads you to believe that they are compiled from word-of-mouth stories, rather than on firsthand accounts? Archeological evidence has shown that the timeline presented by the books of the Bible (though not necessarily the compilation thereof, _if_ you dispute that) goes back roughly 6,000 years from present, ALL of which we have been capable of writing (cuneiform, etc). So who's to say that the original texts for many of these books could not be found? If the Gospels were written by who they said they were, why doubt the contents? If you were to meet God Himself, would you lie about it, particularly with Revelation 22:18-19 hanging over your head? Keep in mind that, even though they weren't known by the modern names we have for them at the time they were written, they were accepted by the early Church, under the leadership of the Apostles themselves, as the Word of Christ...)

I have no doubt about the general gist of the stories and the good that they do for humanity. I am simply a rebellious child who asks a lot of why's!

I won't fault you for that, I tend to be the same way (albeit about other, far less important issues). I still would like to heartily encourage you to do some heavy digging into the positions we've been discussing. There is much less of a political influence on the Biblical teachings than you think.

FReegards, as always!

:) ttt

143 posted on 04/15/2002 2:33:47 PM PDT by detsaoT
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To: Justin Raimondo
DON'T HAVE A COW
144 posted on 04/15/2002 2:35:23 PM PDT by Sabramerican
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To: weikel, wirestripper
Guys, it has truly been a pleasure debating with you. I have learned a lot from our discussions, even if the end result is not that we agree. I encourage you, particularly, wirecutter, to dig deeper into your fears to see whether or not they are justified. Weikel, even though we don't agree on this, don't think we're complete enemies. I look forward to conversing with you on a sundry of other topics.

FReegards to both of you. I'm gonna be signing off for the evening. I may pick things up where I left off tomorrow, but fear I have spent too much of someone else's time on the debate we've already had. Feel free to FReepmail me if you do want to continue our discussions.

Take care,

:) ttt

145 posted on 04/15/2002 2:36:47 PM PDT by detsaoT
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To: detsaoT
I see only one person on is thread that talks of god like abilities. - You.
-- And aptly enough, you seem quite toasted. - Thanks bud, you're a real pal.
146 posted on 04/15/2002 2:37:29 PM PDT by tpaine
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To: BlueLancer
Well, I guess that this is the best that we can hope for since we're not likely to get a nuke into Mecca or Medina anytime soon.

Please don't say such things - I prefer to keep hope alive!

147 posted on 04/15/2002 2:39:48 PM PDT by neutrino
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To: tpaine
bump to that
148 posted on 04/15/2002 3:05:28 PM PDT by Tauzero
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To: Tauzero
Bears repetition bump.
149 posted on 04/15/2002 3:15:03 PM PDT by tpaine
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To: weikel
The idea that the universe is uncaused does not require a time axis that "goes back forever".
150 posted on 04/15/2002 3:26:59 PM PDT by Tauzero
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To: detsaoT
"In other words, we're both being religious and dogmatic about our beliefs."

Indeed.

When you get down to it, solipsism is totally consistent and cannot be disproved. It is not, however, particularly useful for predicting the behavior of one's sensory input.

151 posted on 04/15/2002 3:30:20 PM PDT by Tauzero
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To: tpaine
Yet I think that -- at least at some point in our history -- such a tendency must have had survival value.
152 posted on 04/15/2002 3:35:00 PM PDT by Tauzero
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To: zuban
Hitler was a Christian like I am Santa Claus. Hitler was up to his little s**t mustache in the occult and eastern mysticsm. And guess what- I am damn proud that my great uncles on both sides sent plenty of his minions straight to hell. And when that evil returns, WHICH IT HAS, their great nephew is gonna carry on the family tradition!
153 posted on 04/15/2002 3:41:31 PM PDT by WALLACE212
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To: ladyinred
Prophecy will be fulfilled in His time, by His will. I do not pretend to know if this is the real thing or not, but all shall come to pass like I said above. The signs mount day by day that our Judgement is at hand..... but maybe He will spare us if we return to Him. I am not holding my breath, however.
154 posted on 04/15/2002 3:45:44 PM PDT by WALLACE212
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To: Tauzero
The universe is either a) created or b) eternal( if you have another theory I would like to hear it).
155 posted on 04/15/2002 4:09:47 PM PDT by weikel
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To: WALLACE212
Hitler was not a Christian but it wasn't Hitler who was obsessed with the occult that was Himmler.
156 posted on 04/15/2002 4:13:57 PM PDT by weikel
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To: weikel
Gods reference to human emotion is to describe in the best terms possible something which we as finite beings cannot comprehend.
157 posted on 04/15/2002 4:17:26 PM PDT by WALLACE212
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To: weikel
There are several cases that involved Hitler having horrific nightmares- waking nightmares (what modern psychology has dubbed "night terrors"), that are very consistent with the emotional and personal degradation that comes hand in hand with deep occult involvement. Attempted astral projection and other advanced stuff isn't very good for apparently.
158 posted on 04/15/2002 4:20:54 PM PDT by WALLACE212
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To: WALLACE212
....good for you apparently. Whoops
159 posted on 04/15/2002 4:21:47 PM PDT by WALLACE212
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To: Tauzero
Yet I think that -- at least at some point in our history -- such a tendency must have had survival value.

-- Do you mean a tendency to fanatical devotion?

In an era of small tribal governments, no doubt it does. -- But in the big brother government stage, -- where we are at now, -- it's practice allows, even promotes, -- movements like nazism, stalinism, & jihadism.
-- To my mind, fantacism isn't just a religious problem. -- It's a mindset of intolerance, a learned behaviour.

We have learn to teach constitutonal tolerance under law , which strangely enough, religions supposedly do. -- And are failing at, badly.

160 posted on 04/15/2002 4:34:01 PM PDT by tpaine
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