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http://www.slate.com/id/2087621/
Brief Quote:
Moore's Law
The immorality of the Ten Commandments.
By Christopher Hitchens
Posted Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2003, at 5:04 PM ET
...
we may ask ourselves why any sect, however primitive, would want to base
itself on such vague pre-Christian desert morality (assuming Moses to be
pre-Christian).
The first four of the commandments have little to do with either law or
morality, and the first three suggest a terrific insecurity on the part of the
person supposedly issuing them. I am the lord thy god and thou shalt have no
other ... no graven images ... no taking of my name in vain: surely these could
have been compressed into a more general injunction to show respect. The ensuing
order to set aside a holy day is scarcely a moral or ethical one, unless you
assume that other days are somehow profane.
...
So the first four commandments have almost nothing to do with moral conduct and
cannot in any case be enforced by law unless the state forbids certain sorts of
art all week, including religious and iconographic art—and all activity on the
Sabbath (which the words of the fourth commandment do not actually require). The
next instruction is to honor one's parents: a harmless enough idea, but again
unenforceable in law and inapplicable to the many orphans that nature or god
sees fit to create. That there should be no itemized utterance enjoining the
protection of children seems odd, given that the commandments are addressed in
the first instance to adults. But then, the same god frequently urged his
followers to exterminate various forgotten enemy tribes down to the last infant,
sparing only the virgins, so this may be a case where hand-tying or absolute
prohibitions were best avoided.
There has never yet been any society, Confucian or Buddhist or Islamic, where
the legal codes did not frown upon murder and theft. These offenses were
certainly crimes in the Pharaonic Egypt from which the children of Israel had,
if the story is to be believed, just escaped. So the middle-ranking
commandments, of which the chief one has long been confusingly rendered
"thou shalt not kill," leave us none the wiser as to whether the
almighty considers warfare to be murder, or taxation and confiscation to be
theft. Tautology hovers over the whole enterprise.
...
Too many editorialists have described the recent flap as a silly
confrontation with exhibitionist fundamentalism, when the true problem is our
failure to recognize that religion is not just incongruent with morality but in
essential ways incompatible with it.
Christopher Hitchens is a columnist for Vanity Fair. His most recent book is
Thomas Jefferson: Author of America. His most recent collection of essays is
titled Love, Poverty, and War.
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http://www.slate.com/id/2135499/
Brief Quote:
Cartoon DebateThe case for mocking religion.By Christopher Hitchens Posted Saturday, Feb. 4, 2006, at 4:31 PM ET
As well as being a small masterpiece of inarticulacy and self-abnegation, the statement from the State Department about this week's international Muslim pogrom against the free press was also accidentally accurate. "Anti-Muslim images are as unacceptable as anti-Semitic images, as anti-Christian images, or any other religious belief."
Thus the hapless Sean McCormack, reading painfully slowly from what was reported as a prepared government statement. How appalling for the country of the First Amendment to be represented by such an administration. What does he mean "unacceptable"? That it should be forbidden? And how abysmal that a "spokesman" cannot distinguish between criticism of a belief system and slander against a people. However, the illiterate McCormack is right in unintentionally comparing racist libels to religious faith. Many people have pointed out that the Arab and Muslim press is replete with anti-Jewish caricature, often of the most lurid and hateful kind. In one way the comparison is hopelessly inexact. These foul items mostly appear in countries where the state decides what is published or broadcast. ... Christopher Hitchens is a columnist for Vanity Fair. His most recent book is Thomas Jefferson: Author of America. His most recent collection of essays is titled Love, Poverty, and War.
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