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Objective Religions Studies
Debunking Creationisms

The Evolution of Family Values

One of the most popular phrases thrown around in the culture wars is Family Values. It is often the phrase wielded by the side that believes themselves to be the moral cultureal forebearers of America. They seek to counter certain outgroups they deem undesirable or damaging to society. These outgroups include homosexuals, heavy metal bands, goth culture, hippie culture, drug users, new age groups, couples who cohabitate, those who engage in pre-marital sex, abotion groups, and atheists. They also assault products of pop culture they deem damaging and obscene such as violent movies, video games, comic books, rock and rap music, extreme sports like the UFC, pornography, prostitution, divorce, and contraception. A quick rundown of these lists and it's painfully obvious that few have anything to do with families or values. Many cynics will say the family values crowd is against pretty much anything that's fun. There may be a grain of truth to some of these remarks, but like many moral crusades the family values movements has it's roots.
 
Much of the family values movement began amid the turmoil of the late 1960s. The counterculture movement along with a growing tolerance of different lifestyles created a rallying point for those opposed to such movements. In the 70s and 80s, family values rode on the backs of the religious right and the moral majority to seek to buck the trend of a society becoming more diverse and liberal. Their focus is on the ideal of the family. They argue that the building block of all stable societies centers around the marriage between a man and a woman raising children together in a single, nuclear household. These idealized forms are epitomized in pop culture references like Ozzy and Hariet and Father Knows Best. What is often lost in the conversation is that the idea of the nuclear family being the building block of civilization is entirely misleading.
 
Historically speaking, the nuclear family is a very new concept that is far from the norm throughout history. In fact, the very notion of family values had a very different meaning in the first half of the 20th century. "Family" as it was defined did not refer to just a married couple in their kids. It was more understood to be "extended family." The idea of family denoted notions of both parents, kids, aunts, uncles, grandparents, and cousins. The nuclear household was not the norm. It was in fact rare for a couple and their kids to live very far from their own parents or close relatives. Family was, and has historically been, much more communally focused. Going back throughout civilization, family values were community values. The traditional notions of one man and one woman raising their kids together was rare especially considering that most unions were between many women and one man. It had to be because for much of history, women died frequently in childbirth. And they had to have more kids because most children didn't live past age five. So in reality it isn't the family that is the bedrock of civilization. It is community.
 
In the second half of the twentith century a lot changed. Now people were more mobile than they had ever been before. Instead of spending much of one's life in the same area around their family members, people and families had the ability to leave and live life in another locale. The addition of the post-war housing boom also allowed families to separate, which essentially is what made the nuclear family even viable in the first place. It was popular culture and social ideologues that labeled this new innovation a 'value' to be championed. So when society began shifting again, the natural reaction was to try and defend it.
 
But the way in which to defend such values isn't focused on the families themselves. It's focused on the outside forces that are deemed to be threatening families. Their logic follows that it's not the families themselves that need help. It's because they're being poisoned by outside forces led by deviant groups seeking to obstruct the family. This of course is based on the assumption that people have no ability to rationalize and will react to any outside influence that comes their way, which any basic research into psychology would disprove. But the family values crowd goes for these influences like drugs, pornography, and homosexuality because it's easier and it's tangible. It also is a way for them to gain political power by seeking help from government to impose their values, and this is where the real danger to the free society lies.
 
When certain groups start catering to government in order to get them to use force to impose a certain ideal, it becomes a source of tyranny and thus loses it's moral highground. By legislating their tastes, they further alienate people and just like the way in which the family values crowd started, they are countered with groups who end up seeking their own government favors. It divides the population and wastes public resources that could be better used at the community level. Research and history shows that when communities are strong, nurturing, and safe people will turn out better regardless of what pop culture creates. They don't have to be ridgedly dogmatic. They just have to be supportive.
 
For the family values crowd, it is perfectly reasonable in a free society to try and persuade others that drugs, gambling, and pre-marital sex are wrong and should be avoided. But it is not reasonable to forcibly impose those standards with government force. The consequences, unintended or otherwise, only serve to be more destructive to the free society. Whether it is family or community, there is never any value in tyranny.
 
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Banning Something Doesn't Make It Go Away

In the 1920s, religious and political ideologues were convinced that alcohol was the cause of everything wicked in society and that banning it's sale and distribution would make for a better society. They were so convinced they muscled through a constitutional amendment to ban alcohol. Distilleries were closed, bars and saloons went out of business, and entire communities were changed. But while the idea may have seemed sound, none of the people behind the movement could have foreseen the unintended consequences. Their cause, as noble as it may have sounded, did more harm then good. They banned something they considered immoral, but it didn't go away. Instead, something worse came about.

Throughout the 20s, crime soared as continued demand for alcohol created a new black market. Gangsters like Al Capone came to power, creating networks of illegal businesses that were not governed by free markets or rule of law. Force was the only way to carry out business. It lead to bloody battles between rival gangs and authorities that resulted in the deaths of many. But even more damage was done as a result of poorly made and dangerously formulated products like Moonshine. The cost of enforcing this ban on alcohol was immense and even when major crime figures were apprehended, new figures always took their place and the trade continued.

The 1920s prohibition on alcohol failed. In the span of a decade another constitutional amendment made alcohol legal again. But the era of  prohibition offers an important lesson to modern social activists who seek to ban certain vices. Banning something doesn't make it go away. And banning something often leads to unintended consequences that can only make the problem worse. Yet this is lost on people. Even when they know what they do won't stop something, they do it anyway just because it makes them feel good. And that level of conceit and selfishness is reprehensible on all levels.

While the battle against alcohol is long over, other battles continue. One is the ever popular War on Drugs. Up until the 1920s and 30s, there were no drug laws because it was thought to be unconstitutional to dictate what people could and could not consume (and it still is). But that didn't stop Nixon from flat out banning substances like marijuana and cocaine. And the result of his policies were the same as the policies on prohibition. Black markets have thrived and crime has surged with prisons overflowing with non-violent drug offenders. And like Moonshine, new drugs like Crystal Meth and Crack emerge as potent new synthetics that are far more harmful than anything naturally occurring. But it doesn't stop people from selling them because in the world of black markets, there are no rules or standards.

Another battle is abortion. Some radical pro-lifers seek a constitutional amendment defining personhood as beginning at conception. This would in effect, make all abortion illegal. But would it make abortion go away? No, it would only lead to the deaths of countless women. When abortion is legal it can be regulated and scrutinized for safety so that the risks are low. But where it is illegal, like in much of the developing world, women still seek them and often resort to the black market to get them. These are called 'back alley abortions' and they have no standards and regulations guiding them. According to the World Health Organization, around 68,000 women die every year because of unsafe abortions. Is such a price in human life worth it?

Another battle that emerged around the time of prohibition is prostitution. Up until the 1920s, prostitution was legal throughout most of the United States. But the same idealogues who banned alcohol sought to ban prostitution as well. But once again, banning it didn't make it go away. Instead, it sent it to the black market where the ugly forces of pimps and human traffickers control the trade. Like the drug war there is no order and there are no standards. Criminals will abduct children and take advantage of runaway women to force them into prostitution. And there's nothing they can do about it because if they go to the police, they get thrown in jail. Then there are the women choose prostitution of their free will (yes it does happen). Should they be thrown in jail too even though they're not hurting anybody?

Then there are the other smaller battles like banning pornography, violent video games, and profanity. Idealogues think that by removing these from society people will be better off, but banning them will only create more black markets and more illegal trades that will clog courts and put non-violent people in jail. Some states like Texas and Alabama have laws banning the sale of erotic toys. But people are still able to get them through the internet so it doesn't go away and it risks putting the people that sell them in jail. How is that justice?

These social ideologues are usually not driven by anything rational. They are usually people seeking political power through scapegoating certain aspects of society or religious leaders who believe they have a god given right to take away the freedoms of others and impose their standards on society. They don't care that doing so only makes things worse. They only care about doing something that makes them feel good about themselves. Because at the end of the day that's all these battles do. They make the idealists feel good about themselves while the rest of society suffers.

But in a truly free society, people have the freedom to live their lives as they see fit so long as they do not harm other people. That means they have a right to take drugs if they want or eat junk food if they want. That means they have a right to engage in prostitution so long as it is not coerced. That means they have a right to watch whatever violent or erotic media they want so long as they aren't harming people. This is what freedom truly is. You don't have to like these things or participate in them. But you don't have a right to tell other people they can't. That is the essance of a free society.

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Atheism in a Religious Nation

Last year there was a study done by the Barna Group, a religious polling firm, that estimated there were around 5 million atheists living in the United States. That number swells to 20 million if agnostics or people who do not identify with any religion are included. So in a country where Christianity dominates, there are 20 million people who do not believe in a god or deity. Even in a country of 300 million that is a significant number and many believe it's higher than that because there are those who will not identify themselves as non-religious out of fear of scrutiny or discrimination. This is difficult to prove, but even if it isn't true it does reflect the unreasonable power religion is given in this country.

When the American republic was first established, America was the most secular nation in the world. It was rare for a country of that time not to have an official religion or a state sponsored church. The founding fathers saw it fit to ensure there was a clause in the constitution that stated explicitly that no official religion would be established and there could be no litmus test for public officials that could deny them office based on their religious beliefs or lack thereof. And yet few politicians or officials can survive these days without professing their faith in a higher power. All presidential candidates, even the fringe candidates, are careful to express their faith in god so as not to alienate voters. They believe that faith in god is a value. But that is entirely false.

There is no value or moral superiority in those who believe in god. It is a belief and nothing more. There is even evidence that non-religious societies may be less deviant. A study done by the Journal of Religion and Society in 2005 studies religious groups in America and other industrialized nations and found consistently that "data correlations show that in almost all regards the highly secular
democracies consistently enjoy low rates of societal dysfunction, while pro-religious and anti-evolution
America performs poorly."

That's not to say that there religion by default is bad for society. Other studies show that on a small community level, religion can reduce deviance and encourage people to make charitable contributions to society. But again, this can be coupled with more prevelance in bigotry, racism, and intolerance.

Atheism is a minority in America, but it is a significant minority. Few atheists wish to force people to abandon their religious beliefs, but the kind of power and influence sought by groups within the Christian Right are highly detrimental to a free society. Groups like the Family Research Council, Focus on the Family, and the Christian Coalition would have it so homosexuality is illegal, pornography is illegal, all pre-marital sex is illegal, and all public officials must adhere to so called Judeo-Christian values. This completely defeats the purpose that the Founding Father's intended. This is actively flying in the face of the establishment clause and favoring one religious doctrine over many others.

As an atheist, I am often disturbed by how many Christian groups pursue agendas to impose their worldview on others. I have no problem with them believing in something, but when they try to legislate their beliefs that is when they cross the line. I believe in the constitution and I believe in the fundemental principles our founding fathers set up when they formed this nation and I have no desire to see it become corrupted by religious groups of any kind. Atheists are no less American than devout Christians and it's time people understood that.
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