THE UNITED STATES
Re: What is America's greatest challenge?
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Alan Dershowitz
Uploaded on 11/13/2007

Description: The volatile mix of poverty and fundamentalism.

Transcript:

I think fundamentalism born of poverty is one of the great challenges that the United States faces. Look. The United States has its own problem of fundamentalism. We are the most religious western nation in the world. More Americans believe that there are angels hovering above them than believe in evolution. The difference is our fundamentalists generally are happy with their lives. And our fundamentalism also eschews and makes a sin out of suicide. So we don’t have a lot of suicide bombers in the United States growing out of fundamentalist movements. But if you combine a life of misery and poverty – often inflicted by their religious leaders themselves with a promise of paradise and a claim that suicide is in the interest of religion – then you’ve gotten a combination that awfully hard for western society to combat.

 

Recorded On: 6/12/07
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Re: Re: What is America's greatest challenge?
While suicide bombing is a major obstacle that must be overcome, I would argue that Mr. Dershowitz misses the point by equating fundamentalism with and being happy with their lives. Look where the suicides are taking place. Just because the Islamic world does not have a new SUV and an i-Phone does not mean they are not happy. Money does not equate happiness. If this were the case, the majority of the world would be experiencing severe depression. The problem is not fundamentalism born of out of poverty; it is fundamentalism of last resort. Look to Carter’s Peace Not Apartheid. Fundamentalism is a major challenge. Poverty is not the cause. Happiness is not the cause. Dogma is the culprit.
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