Truth To Power

the strong do as they wish, and the weak suffer as they must

Brit Hume and the madness of blind faith

Thanks to the Daily Show I was fortunate enough to watch Brit Hume on Bill O’Reilly’s show discussing his remarkably ignorant statement concerning Tiger Woods path to forgiveness via the only real religion, Christianity. In case you missed what sparked all this, I’ll quote him:

He’s said to be a Buddhist. I don’t think that faith offers the kind of forgiveness and redemption that is offered by the Christian faith. So my message to Tiger would be, “Tiger, turn to the Christian faith and you can make a total recovery and be a great example to the world.”

Naturally, this caused an uproar, and Hume went on the safe confines of The O’Reilly Factor to explain, and Bill buttered him up with the non-question “But what do you think drives the negative comments about Christianity?”, but that’s standard majority rule “I’m a victim” bullshit he always peddles. Hume looked clearly confused as to the reaction, mainly:

He clearly believes that his myth set trumps all others, and actually “offers” something tangible that another person could take advantage of, if only they “believe” in his specified delusion.

He doesn’t understand why anyone would object to this, since everyone obviously “believes” as he does, being that he’s a white male in the greatest by God society that has ever existed anywhere and

He believes its an appropriate use of the airwaves to proselytize his belief in a pretend world, and the notion that someone might object to it is well, crazy.

Brit Hume is free, obviously, to believe whatever nonsense he likes. He believes in American Exceptionalism, which is complete, utter, world destroying bullshit. He believes its ok for America to invade sovereign nations and murder vast amounts of the civilian population for oil, even if they have to lie to do so. He believes that America is blameless around the world, and he can’t understand why anyone would fly planes into buildings because they disagree.

He does all this because he’s what Eric Hoffer termed a “true believer”, someone who is a member of a mass movement based upon the promise of a glorious future in the absence of any evidence to that “fact”. No amount of rational thinking can dissuade them, so debate is fruitless. To those like Brit Hume, the concept that an invented set of beliefs called Christianity actually offers something that a person such as Tiger Woods could use in the real world is a dead set fact. No matter that of course it is not, that belief in the God/Jesus myth-set is solely an invention of man, (a particularly dangerous one at that) that exists entirely in the minds of those such as Hume who have convinced themselves that it is true.

Now, if he had suggested to Tiger Woods that he merely appear to be a Christian and pretend to ask for forgiveness, then the media and sheep of this nation would in turn pretend to forgive him, then that would have been an accurate statement. Because its all pretend. Tiger Woods belief system has no deity, and in it forgiveness comes not from playing pretend but in fact the opposite, in the practice of not falling prey to harmful, delusional thoughts.

Brit Hume is merely a talking head who reads disinformation off a prompter about situations that don’t really exist as he depicts them (the definition of Fox News), at the bidding of the huge multi-national corporations that hired him. His “advice” to Tiger Woods is no different, and no less an example of disinformation as any other “my way or the highway”, “with us or against us” nonsense that has propped up American intervention since our inception as a nation, which he blathers without remorse nightly.

What is so sad about this episode is that it illustrates just how far from evolved and sane our nation is. For America to become “exceptional” it must first become reality-based, and the fact that a debate even exists over the validity of Hume’s statements shows just how far from sane we are. You are free to believe anything you choose, no one can stop you. But you are not free to affect my life because of it, no matter how well meaning you “believe” you are behaving.

Because blind faith, be in it in Christianity or America, is both false and dangerous. To refuse to see it as such will be our ruin.

7 Responses to “Brit Hume and the madness of blind faith”

  1. yoshi Says:

    abrahamic religions = death

  2. Ron Says:

    I wonder why the author doesn’t sign his name to his writing. Is it because he doesn’t want to take personal responsibility for the contradictions in his his “reasoning”? I wonder also why the author insists so vehemently that Christianity is wrong. Is it because he doesn’t want to take personal responsibilty ….. ? And what is so wrong about a news commentator giving his opinion during an opinion piece anyway? Why does the “C” word cause such anger in certain people? Perhaps we should view that reaction as a red flag that could be telling us something very important about that person.

  3. James Mann Says:

    It’s a bug in the software that doesn’t show my name, which is James Mann.

    I stated at no time that Christianity is “wrong”, only that it can’t be proven, hence, its all in the mind of the believer.

    And yes, my post obviously does say something important about “that person”, namely that I’m not a sheep believing in a fairy tale. You can believe whatever you want, doesn’t make it true. If you awoke tomorrow and your toaster talked to you, everyone would think you nuts. I’m just not as polite…you’re delusional now.

  4. Ron Says:

    While you may be correct that it can’t be ‘proven’ (although we don’t know what your standard of “proof” may be …), that doesn’t explain why Mr. Hume’s opinion makes you so angry.

    Why DOES it make you so angry?

  5. Ron Says:

    By the way, I love the Claire Wolfe quote. Just remember, though – Claire said that over 10 years ago …. ;-)

  6. Ron Says:

    OK, while you are trying to figure out why you are so angry, also explain this if you can: How does Brit Hume’s faith ‘affect your life’ in any sort of negative way?

  7. James Mann Says:

    Because like Hume, far too many people in this country base their lives on something that is a fantasy. Evidently reality is too great a load to bear so they retreat into, and make decisions based upon delusion.

    If you’ve found a myth set that makes you happy, great. Just leave me out of it.

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