Dissipate
Diamond Member
- Jan 17, 2004
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Actually government is a form of religion. One of the cleverest tricks statists ever pulled off was kicking the systematized superstitions out the door and convincing everyone that the state was now "secular". Never mind that its legitimacy still rested on shifting sands of mythology. Wisely they finally gave up on the whole social contract idea when they realized that 99% of the people didn't really need to be told a convincing myth to substantiate the authority that they conjured out of nowhere... (That and a priori justifications for the legitimacy of a "state" - like social contract theory and other lame attempts - don't seem to hold up very well under philosophical scrutiny unless you are an avowed pragmatist - in which case you don't much care for philosophy anyways!)
An atheist who believes in the moral legitimacy of the state is no atheist at all. Just because you have decided to ignore the more elaborate superstitions doesn't mean you've eradicated them all. In fact, the most pervasive superstition throughout human history is the collectivist superstition that the will of the enshrined powers has moral force which trumps individual conscience.
Now I wouldn't go so far as to say that all "true" atheists must be anarchists (blech!), as there are good self serving reasons to play along with the farce that is government. There are even reasons to believe that government can affect some things for good. However I always get a kick out of people who believe that they don't believe in a deity, and yet put so many of their hopes and aspirations for themselves, for humanity, and for the future on an abstraction which is no more (or less) real than His Noodliness.
Cliffs: The clergy, the legitimizing mythology, and the complicity of the laity are the deity. Now repeat that a hundred times and then look at D.C. with fresh eyes.
Best post on ATP&N ever.