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Luciferian Good and Evil by Bob Wallace Oh
boy. There's just no telling
where my thoughts will lead me. Sometimes,
to very odd places. Let's
take the concepts of Good and Evil. Just
what are they? In reality, I
think Good can be defined as harmony and wholeness (which is related to
words "health" and "holy").
That means "evil" is the exact opposite -- lack of
harmony, lack of wholeness (or "unholiness"). True
"good" and "evil" are a continuum, with harmony and
wholeness at one end, and disharmony and unwholeness at the other.
I think we all intuitively understand this -- thus the distinctions
between "ease" and "dis-ease" (which are themselves a
continuum). Now,
here's where things get really
weird. There is another
kind of false Good and Evil which is based on black-or-white thinking --
something is either all good or all bad, with nothing in between.
It's very dangerous stuff -- Satanic, actually, if you want to use
religious and mythological terms. For
the sake of simplicity, I'll call the false Good and Evil Luciferian Good
and Evil. You'll understand
why once I explain. But let's
just say Lucifer only thinks in black or white, only in terms of pure Good
or pure Evil. Humanity
tends to mix both kinds of good and evil together, or to think they are
the same thing. But they're
not. They need to be
separated. Unfortunately, it
seems to be instinctive for humans to divvy up the world into these neat
but false categories of good and evil. Let's
take George Bush as an example. He
spoke of the "Axis of Evil."
Implicit is that Bush
is also implying he's a good man, which I find odd, considering the fact
that when a woman called Jesus good, he answered, of all things, "Why
did you call me good? No one
is good but God." What
kind of dangerous traits does Bush show, in greater or lesser degree?
Here is a list: Hubris
(infantile grandiosity) Paranoia Dehumanization
of enemies Scapegoating
(Your fault, not mine) Self-deception Magical
thinking Sadism Vengeance Hate Anger These
traits are good? They're
the exact opposite of harmony and wholeness!
Yet people often think the aforementioned traits lead to harmony,
or are harmony itself.
They think those traits lead to peace and happiness. What?
Those above traits, all of which are an inherent part of war, lead
to peace, wholeness and happiness? No
wonder religious geniuses throughout history have said many people can't
tell the difference between God and the Devil.
After all, look at the things Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson say.
And they call themselves Christians? Let's
look at the story of the Garden of Eden.
One interpretation is that evil is brought into the world through
scapegoating, which is denial of self-responsibility and projecting your
problems onto others. Adam
blames Eve for his transgressions; Eve blames the serpent.
In some versions, that's why they get kicked out.
As the psychiatrist M. Scott Peck noticed, "Scapegoating is
the genesis of human evil." In
the 20th century, the Communists and the Nazis were the best-known
scapegoaters: get rid of those people and Utopia shall reign! Implicit
in that myth is the black-or-white thinking of both Adam and Eve.
Both deny their responsibility ("I am good"); each
projects it elsewhere ("You are bad").
It's not spelled out, but it's there.
Adam and Eve, in some degree, would show the above traits. Curiously,
when God accuses them -- puts them under a little pressure -- they
instantly start acting like children and pointing fingers.
The greater the stress, the more liable people are to act like
children, deny their own responsibility, engage in black-or-white
thinking, and scapegoat others. Isn't
that what always happens during war and other upheavals? That
black-or-white thinking is also implicit in the myth of Satan.
The story is almost a clinical description of a psychopath, all of
whom are afflicted with the worst hubris possible.
Satan wants to be God ("I am good"); anyone who gets in
his way is . . . you guessed it: bad.
Satan, too, in greater or lesser degree, would also show the above
traits. The
Greeks had a few myths about black-or-white thinking.
Again, it's not explicit, but it's there. The best known is that of
Narcissus, who wasted away absorbed in his own reflection in a pool of
water. A narcissist is a less
extreme version of a psychopath, who also can see only himself.
Both narcissists and psychopaths engage in black-or-white thinking:
I am Good, everyone else is nothing, because they are dehumanized. The
scariest myth the Greeks had was Hubris followed by Nemesis.
Hubris is seeing only yourself and thinking you're a god.
The sequence they outlined was Koros (stability) to Hubris
(arrogance) to Ate (a madness in which evil
appears as good) to Nemesis (destruction).
Those afflicted with hubris always see things as either black or
white. Currently, Bush is an
example. He did say,
"Either you are for us, or you are against us."
A simple-minded and very dangerous splitting of the whole world
into either Good or Evil. These
myths are all related. All of
them are about hubris and the attendant traits, and what happens to those
afflicted with them. All are
about the black-or-white thinking, the categorization into all-good or
all-bad, inherent in hubris, in Narcissus, in Adam and Eve, in Lucifer.
In all of us. Countries
can be afflicted with hubris, too, especially when they become empires.
Every country denies the bad it has done, sees itself as good, and
blames its problems on others. Bush
and his supporters are claiming the All
that, lost. Instead, we were
attacked because we are "good," and they are "evil."
Black or white thinking, with nothing in between.
A simplistic and dangerous view, in the extreme. Tribes,
races, ethnic groups, religions . . . all do the same thing.
"Our problems are not our fault.
It's somebody else's fault. We're
good; they're bad." The
aforementioned traits are worse when groups exhibit them.
Individuals can think; groups cannot.
Groups absolutely will not admit responsibility for their problems
unless they are forced to. Tribes
have almost variably throughout history called themselves "the
People" or "the Humans," relegating everyone outside the
tribe to less-than-human status. Since
they are non-people and non-human, again we have that black-or-white
split: the tribe is Good, the chosen of God, with all its problems
projected onto those outside of the tribe. When
people, or nations, engage in the black-or-white thinking, since they
always call themselves Good, they always scapegoat everyone outside of the
tribe. They always deny their
own badness, and deceive themselves about it, and become paranoid because
they think the "bad" is always out to get them. Because
it is so familiar to libertarians, the novel I use to explain
black-or-white thinking is Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged.
She splits nearly all of her characters, indeed the whole world,
into either all-good or all-bad. In
her case, it's either her Galtian heroes or her "looters" and
"parasites." Her
god-like, chosen of God Galtian heroes withdraw into their little Utopia,
relegating everyone outside of it to the Randian version of Hades.
Everyone in the world is either grandiose or devalued. Her
bizarrely idealistic novel is not the way things would work in real life,
since she splits everyone into either pure Good or Evil.
In life, things would be like they really are: a paranoid,
grandiose, self-deceptive tribe engaging in magical thinking, scapegoating
and blaming all of its problems on those outside of the tribe.
That definition of what tribes do to each other is probably what
causes most of the problems in the world.
It's about what nearly all tribes say to each other: "We are
the chosen, and you are not." Where
does this simplistic, dangerous, Luciferian either black-or-white thinking
invariably lead? Exactly to
where the Greeks noticed: nemesis. So,
in a general way, I can predict the future.
Because of the current US administration's belief in either
black-or-white thinking, with its magical, self-deceptive view of itself
as Good and everyone else as Evil, with the scapegoating of other
counties, I can predict this "War on Terrorism" will not work.
For one thing, it encourages the other side to behave toward us as
we behave toward them. Black-or-white thinking always
leads to extremes on both sides. As we judge them, they judge us. As we sow, so we will reap. As the other side sows, so they
will reap. It would help greatly if the administration and those in it stopped their splitting of the world into pure Good and pure Evil. But, I don't expect this to happen anytime soon. discuss this column in the forum Bob Wallace has a degree in Journalism, is a former reporter and editor, and has been published at LewRockwell.com, Sierra Times, and The Libertarian Enterprise. |