The binging continues and now I'm reacting to this video. I must say, while I've subbed to this guy for a while, I never really watched him. At first he seemed kinda pretentious, primarily because he was recommended to me by a liberal christian who thought this is how nonbelievers should act (while I tend to have a harder edge than he does toward Christianity), but I will say I find these videos relatable. Thankfully for me, the ties I had to religion by the time I left were never that extreme, and by the time I left, I was quite distanced from my Christian school, my old pastor left my church, the new pastor wasnt super popular with my family (too business/money oriented), and my parents were the only christian influences really trying to keep me in the faith, and while there was friction there, we largely resolved our differences. So outside of kinda not trying to kinda downplay my secularism among my christian friends on social media, I never really had too much trouble trying to live a lie. And even among those friends, when confronted among a more boisterous one years later who wanted to directly confront me, I didn't hide it, and I was willing to go at it with him. We largely dont talk, and I did burn some bridges there, but worth it. I aint living a lie. But it is interesting to see stories from those who, due to social relations, jobs, etc., have to put up the charade. Not gonna lie, I dont think I could do it. I mean, I did burn a lot of bridges in my day over political shifts, deconversions, and dont really regret any of it. Sometimes I lament the lost friendships, but ultimately I realize that it's the other peoples' problems, not mine.
But anyway, there were a few more direct points I wanna add here. Like the whole despite working in a homeless shelter, these guys really have anti poor attitudes thing. And again, this comes down to worldview. Keep in mind, for these guys, being poor is a MORAL failure. And they take it upon themselves to believe that they need to minister to them by teaching them Jesus and the protestant work ethic to make them not poor. Even more so, these guys just use poverty as an excuse to minister to people. That's why many of them dont wanna solve the issues of capitalism. In a way, their ministry efforts rely on manipulating people at their low points. Another video talked about how the destruction of local culture made their third world efforts more successful, their old worldviews were broken so they came in and replaced them. They do the same with the homeless. They prey on the weak, they prey on the vulnerable. They are religious zealots who believe in imposing their worldview on these people. They care more about this than actually solving their basic needs.
If anything, looking at how this lines up with this capitalist superstructure as GMS puts it in another video, and how this overlaps with my own studies, well, it seems like these guys dont WANNA solve issues. They dont want a world where peoples' basic needs are met, because they would lose their power over people. Not just the job creators, but the christians too. They'd rather there be a world full of desperate people for them to minister to, than a world full of people whose needs are met who have no need for their BS. While I dont think many christians actively realize this, because again, the worldview doesnt make this super obvious to them, it's only after you leave and study this stuff that you realize how messed up it is and realize how tied to racism, colonialism, and imperialism that it is, that you make these connections. But yeah. The christian worldview relies on charity over state action, uses charity to impose their nonsense onto people, and uses the desperation the current system causes as an excuse to minister to people. It actually makes me sick to realize this. But yeah. That's how you get people in a christian homeless shelter being anti bernie sanders, for example, and having "anti poor" attitudes.
On the infiltration front, admitting they dont believe in creationism was a huge tell. The biblical worldview collapses without an active belief in creationism. Seriously, this whole belief system is a HUGE house of cards. Pull the wrong one out and it collapses. If you believe in an old earth, the whole narrative stops making sense, and the religion implodes. While there are christians who believe in that stuff while not accepting the creation story as literal, I honestly don't find them to be very coherent myself. I'll actually agree with the fundies that it's either all true or none of it is, and because not all of it is true, well, none of it is, and we shouldnt accept any of it. Seriously, it might seem scary leaving at first, but once you're out, you realize how messed up that whole worldview was. it's actually liberating.
Speaking of which, another topic I wanted to talk about on this was purpose. A lot of Christians struggle with purpose post faith. I know I did, and still do. For me, it's more at this point seeing this capitalist superstructure as evil and oppressive post faith. Dont get me wrong, Im not fully opposed to capitalism. My views are well documented. But what justifies it? Freedom. And how do we get freedom? UBI. The coercion to work is an evil of capitalism that never sat well with me post leaving and I never really adjusted to the system after leaving, especially because i know its current logic is supported...quite explicitly...by christianity.
Still, in the name of intellectually honest, I will say this. I can't not believe what I believe. I mean, I cant delude myself. And I dont wanna delude myself. I fully recognize where I stand on the issue, and I realize my views do go against the system as it exists. It is what it is. Like what, am I supposed to aspire to be a de facto wage slave, working a job I hate for the rest of my life? I mean, come on...
Anyway...I will tell an interesting story, and this is one that has contributed to my belief in spirituality. One time when I was depressed, a few years after deconversion, I kind of had a bit of an existential freakout. It was triggered over a situation related to me leaving. I revisited the situation, and much like later on, I found a piece of evidence that forced me to reevaluate the situation. I ended up reaching the same conclusion I started at, which was atheism, but at one point, I did literally pray about not knowing how to live without purpose in this world.
A few months later...I was on vacation, and on a park bench was a copy of the book the myth if sisyphus by albert camus. I was aware of absurdism before this from a philosophy class I took. I even read the myth of sisyphus short story version which planted the seeds for my eventually rejection of the work ethic. So, if anything, reading this book just strengthened my resolve against the protestant work ethic and delusional forms of belief of purpose. I accept reality as it is, I accept it's purposeless, but unlike sisyphus, I dont come to terms and grow to love the grind. Rather, I realize that this system is crap and my soul screams for change. So...yeah.
Idk. I just wanted to discuss my angst, and how it has contributed to my existing worldview. As I said, I really aint well adjusted all things considered in terms of accepting the whole idea of loving work, capitalism, and purpose. The system seems evil to me, probably because it is. Dont get me wrong, once again, unlike leftists, i dont believe this requires abolition of it. It just requires a few tweaks, like a UBI and other proposals I support. I support a more voluntary capitalism: one that allows those who actually do believe that nonsense to work all they want, while allowing those of us who dont to not work all we want.
Anyway on that experience...I kinda wondered at the time, if God was answering my prayer with that book, as it just seemed so convenient that someone dropped a book on a random bench and i just happened to pick it up and it seemed extremely related to what I prayed. But it would take several more years and more weird crap like that for me to finally be like "okay, yeah, something is definitely out there and listening to me", but yeah it did plant a seed that gee, maybe something IS out there.
I just told that one because it related to the purpose without god question. And I guess I will say what GMS said in the video. This stuff was made up and put in our heads in a way to be a disease to be cured. We're told we want purpose that can only be filled by work...to make us wanna work. They put a mental illness in us to then cure us. It's how these belief systems work. Meanwhile, rejecting the belief system in the long term is healthy and IMO a sign of being more well adjusted in accepting reality, even if our society is structured around these belief systems in harmful ways (hence why I never really adjusted to our society's expectations that we adopt those values). Like, basically, these belief systems are abusive. Straight up. They mess with your head and it can take years to undo that. And sometimes you just cant fully undo it because, well, guess what, we have a society wide problem with this stuff.
This is why, in response to the whole people fearing what people would do if they didnt have to work any more, my response is we need a mass existential crisis. I want everyone to go through that, as it's a necessary part of deprogramming us from these harmful beliefs. Rather than keeps pushing people back into the belief system because people feel mental distress when it starts to fall apart, my solution to the crisis isn't to resolve it by giving people purpose through a job, as that's just reinforcing illusory and deluisional nonsense that keeps us chained to harmful social institutions we should do away with, but to actually let people go through the process of "waking up."
Again, our society is like the matrix, and as with the matrix, sometimes people cant stand to be unplugged. They desire the mental safety that IS the matrix over the cold hard reality that's uncomfortable. They become like cypher where they think ignorance is bliss and if only i can forget and go back in, i can just live a normal life. But again, if we want true freedom and true liberation...well...that involves accepting reality, even if uncomfortable. Is it better to be a pig satisfied or socrates unsatisfied? That's up to you to decide.
Well, that's my reaction to this. THis went on a lot longer than I thought it would, but it was an interesting discussion. But yeah. Religion F-s you up, and it takes years to process all this stuff. Hell, here I am 14 years later and I'm STILL processing this stuff and realizing just how depraved the worldview and its related superstructure is. Like I'm STILL making realizations for how deep this rabbit hole goes. And its depressing, but well, it's reality. And it's better to confront it than to stick your head under a rock in my opinion. Anyway, that's all i gotta say for now.