Below is a reprise from June 2003, which appeared on CounterPunch and in my Moscow Times column, a piece that was not included in the Empire Burlesque book. It is a general argument that tries, briefly, to get at some of the deeper issues underlying the bedevilments of the age, which, as noted below, are by no means exclusive to our modern times.
We meant no offense to any Christian readers with our recent blast at the crude fundamentalism no
w riding herd on the American government and large swathes of American society as well ("Devil's Advocate," Counterpunch, May 31, 2003). We realize that it is not the fault of Jesus Christ or
even the Apostle Paul – that seminal master of marketing who repackaged
Jesus' harsh and quirky parochial ascetism into a handy
one-size-fits-all panacea for existential ills – that fanatics like
Bush and Company believe there is only one immutable Truth about
reality, which they just happen to possess.It is, of course, the fault of Plato, whose poetic fantasy of a changeless Perfection behind the messiness of physical existence infected the Western mind with the germ of ideological intolerance. For if Perfect Truth exists, then it can be known, and once known, it must necessarily be acknowledged as the sole measure, explanation and arbiter of "all of life and all of history," as Mr. Bush likes to say.
With Plato begins the slow death of the old gods: those powerful evocations who in their conflicts and contradictions, their lusts and doubts, their recklessness, sorrows, tempers – and manifold imperfections – surely embodied the seething chaos of human reality far better than the degraded Platonic idealism adopted by the Pauline Christians. We leave aside here Jesus' ethical teachings, which despite millennia of lip service have never been adopted or even taken seriously by any society throughout history – although a few of Paul's more cranky notions about sex and obedience (especially his ever-popular injunction, "Slaves, obey your masters!") have been enthusiastically embraced by Western rulers since the days of the murderous Constantine the Great down to our present age, presided over by the warmongering Christian Coalition of Bush and Blair.
Paul's
simplified Platonism was wedded to a few particular strains of Jewish
Messianism. The result, of course, was a complete travesty of ancient
Jewish thought, which centered on the primacy of their God ("Thou shalt
have no other Gods BEFORE Me" is not exactly the same thing as "There
are no other Gods BUT Me"), and on cultivating correct behavior within
the national group itself – but never on the universal application of
their particular rites and customs. This was a "gift" of Platonic
Christianity.
Thus
began the break-up of a natural religious order that had held since
prehistoric times, made up of communities of differing moralities. Each
human grouping – nation, city-state, tribe, clan – had their different
gods, different faiths (or none at all), different ideas of correct
behavior; and this difference was accepted as a simple fact of nature.
It was an order where, for example, homosexuality would be abhorred in
Israel and celebrated in Sparta; where conflicting "gospels" of the
Olympian gods would be told in Crete and Athens (or even within Crete
and Athens); where religious war – or even the concept that any one
belief-system can and should be imposed on all humankind – was
virtually unknown. This order (which was often brutal in its own
particular ways, of course) disintegrated under the pressure of a
monomanical insistence on the universal application of a single
belief-system: that of an unchanging Perfect Truth animating all of
existence.
The
Arab world preserved much of the heritage of Classical Antiquity after
it had been lost in the West due to the twin ravages of state-sponsored
Christian extremism and barbarian invasion. Naturally, the Platonic
myth was part of that inheritance, and was incorporated into Islam from
the start. Indeed, Islam "improved" on its borrowings from Judaism and
Christianity in this regard. The basic Muslim tenet, "There is no God
but God," did away with the ambiguity in ancient Judaism's formulations
of deity, while the rigor with which Islam prosecuted the Christian
idea of the exclusivity of a single belief-system nearly shattered the
Christian West itself.
Many
writers have noted that "secular" movements such as Marxism, National
Socialism, and the harsh "market fundamentalism" that now dominates the
global economy are all off-shoots of this principle: the universal
application of a single, unassailable truth. (Mr. Bush, for example,
calls his own rapacious brand of crony capitalism "the single
sustainable model of national success" in the world.) The "war on
terror" now engulfing the planet is not a "clash of civilizations";
it's more of a civil war within Platonism. Fellow believers in Perfect
Truth are seeking to impose their particular interpretation of their
common faith on each other, and the rest of us as well. And for
possessors of Ultimate Truth, there is no price too high to pay – or to
impose – in the service of their ideal.
"On
the ground," of course, the Terror War is still largely a matter of
loot and ape-like power-lust. But looters and lusters – the Bushes,
Saddams and bin Ladens of the world – are not driven solely by base
impulses; they are also motivated by their ignorant and addled
understanding of "higher" concepts. For make no mistake, they all
believe themselves to be vessels of a higher truth, strivers after
Perfection, servants of the Eternal.
So
as these delusionaries shroud the world in blood and darkness, we would
do well to remember the origin of their metaphysics. Much like Paul,
Plato refashioned the earlier teachings of a more rough-hewn,
contradictory figure: the philosopher Socrates. It was Socrates, so
Plato says, who gave us the idea of a changeless, Perfect Truth that
stands outside physical reality and transcends all other values. And
where did Socrates obtain this wisdom, which has cost so many, many
millions of lives down through the centuries?
From his daimon, as he called it: an unconscious "inner prompting" that acted as his guide.
He got it from a voice inside his head.


Mister Wong
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