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Postmodern Political Correctness and Christianity
Townhall.com ^ | January 16, 2012 | Mike Adams

Posted on 01/16/2012 3:25:26 AM PST by Kaslin

Author’s Note: A student-led apologetics ministry at Lenoir-Rhyne University called Ratio Christi will be hosting a convocation on Spiritual and Intellectual development titled "Postmodernism, Political Correctness, and Christianity" on Thursday, January 19th from 7:00-9:00 PM in the Belk Centrum. I am honored to be the featured speaker. A Q&A will follow the presentation. The event is open to the public. I hope to see you there.

I’m often asked how Marxism took root in the American university system. I’ve never been fully satisfied with my standard answer to the question. Given my background in psychology, I sometimes seek psychological explanations to the exclusion of broader historical explanations. But I do believe there is something different about the mind of the man to whom Marxism appeals.

The Marxist is less willing to compete with others. He is content living in a world where everyone is similarly situated. He relinquishes the prospect of success for the assurance that he cannot fail. The same mentality is often found among those who seek refuge in the academy. There is little chance that the academic will find fame or fortune. But a few years of hard work will be rewarded with promotion and tenure and all of the security that comes with it.

Marxism was once the dominant philosophy in higher education – at least within the social sciences and humanities. But one would be hard pressed to make the case that Marxism remains the dominant philosophy on college campuses today. That title now belongs to postmodernism - although the two philosophies cannot be divorced from one another. Marxism is an economic and political philosophy. Postmodernism is a broader worldview. But postmodernism could not have achieved its rapid ascent without Marxism.

The Marxist emphasis on class struggle has fueled the postmodern assault on objective truth. It has led to the idea that truth is simply a byproduct of power struggles between warring factions. That idea has dangerous moral ramifications.

Postmodernism poses a threat to college students and to the very existence higher learning itself. For many students, postmodern education lights a well-paved path that leads directly to moral relativism. The two are not the same thing. But postmodernism eventually compels moral relativism. If there is no objective truth then moral positions cannot be objectively true. When morals become private or subjective, they tend to be built around personal conduct – simply to accommodate personal conduct. That is why many college students find themselves trapped in a downward moral spiral in the wake of abandoning the idea of objective truth. I am speaking from personal experience as well as years of observation.

Sixteen years ago, I had an experience for which I am most grateful. I was in a prison in South America interviewing prisoners and prison guards. I witnessed firsthand a very brutal clubbing of a young prisoner. I heard prison guards admit that they shot prisoners in the back on their way out of the prison. This was just after they tricked them into believing they were free to go. The same prison officials told stories of suspects shocked into giving false confessions. This was after police officers wired the suspects’ testicles to car batteries as they sat locked in police vans undergoing coercive questioning.

I needed to witness that beating and hear those stories in order to be shocked out of my own childish belief system. The day I walked out of that prison, I left behind my faith in moral and cultural relativism. I realized that forced confessions, brutal beatings, and staged escape executions were all objectively wrong. The time and place of such atrocities is irrelevant. They are examples of purely objective evil. But there is good news accompanying this realization. As C.S. Lewis often said, the shadow proves the sunshine. Therefore, the heart is sometimes awakened to a greater appreciation of the truth after witnessing its collision with falsity.

When I returned to my position in the secular university, I realized we were doing something more than simply promoting a worldview that made it easy for students to spiral downward morally. We were also clinging to a philosophy that was threatening the very existence of higher education as we know it. That philosophy was being encoded into campus rules that threatened permanent entrenchment of the very ideas which gave them birth.

I’ve written of many conflicts involving such policies – the most notable cases involving campus speech codes. But I often wonder how many times the reader has taken the time to examine the common themes that run through the many cases. It is worth taking a moment to reflect back upon some of the worst.

In 2006, two young conservative women contacted me for help. They had protested The Vagina Monologues because the play encouraged use of the c-word as a way of describing women. After posting a sign saying “We are not (c-words)” feminists invoked the university speech code. They claimed that they, as feminists, could use the c-word as a term of endearment. They then claimed that their detractors could not use the same word if they did so in a derisive way. In other words, the constitutionality of the c-word hinged upon the thought behind the word at the time of its utterance. This was more than simple thought control. It was state-enforced though control undertaken for the ostensible purpose of protecting fragile feminists from being offended.

These speech code supporters are the same people who advocate abortion. They are also the same people who hurled abusive racial epithets at those two plaintiffs I brought to the Alliance Defense Fund. But we won this case in both the court of law and the court of public opinion. Those will be familiar themes when we dissect the next case in part two of this series.

To be continued …


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 01/16/2012 3:25:29 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Apple Pan Dowdy; bayouranger; bboop; BenKenobi; Biggirl; Blue Collar Christian; boomop1; ...

Mike Adams Column


Please Freepmail me if you want to be added, or removed from the ping list

2 posted on 01/16/2012 3:27:26 AM PST by Kaslin (Acronym for OBAMA: One Big Ass Mistake America)
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To: Kaslin

Mike is correct. The only alternative to theism is nihilism.


3 posted on 01/16/2012 3:52:22 AM PST by circlecity
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To: Kaslin

“Political Correctness”, eh? Part of the reason for people being oblivious to the quality of their own penmanship and how their poor spelling, math skills, and knowledge of history doesn’t seem to phase them...in America? At this rate of expansion and at some point, we’re going to have to call it something else.


4 posted on 01/16/2012 4:37:56 AM PST by equaviator ( "There's a (datum) plane on the horizon coming in...see it?")
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To: circlecity

Very strong, pellucid article. It’s always mentally clarifying to read Mike Adams.


5 posted on 01/16/2012 5:04:26 AM PST by Mrs. Don-o (Truth is stronger than faction.)
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To: Kaslin

Thank you for posting this. IMHO every one of the potentially disasterous problems we face today can be traced back to the corrupting influence of moral relativism.


6 posted on 01/16/2012 5:18:51 AM PST by Dr. Thorne (Fall on your knees before Christ, your only salvation!)
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To: circlecity

That’s not what he said.


7 posted on 01/16/2012 5:53:37 AM PST by Salman
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To: Salman
"That’s not what he said."

Of course it is if you take it to it's logical conclusion. If there is no God there is no objective basis for any values, morals or meaning. All you are left with is relitivism: personal preference and social convention. Without God the normative becomes the personal.

8 posted on 01/16/2012 6:49:51 AM PST by circlecity
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To: circlecity
But it's not what he said.

Your answer just goes to show how inherently dishonest your religion is.

9 posted on 01/16/2012 7:41:56 AM PST by Salman
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To: Salman
"But it's not what he said."

yes it is. It is a fundamental rule of epistimology and metaphysics. That you can't understand this is of no moment and does not change the objective reality of the concept.

10 posted on 01/16/2012 7:51:48 AM PST by circlecity
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