Monday, May 5, 2008

The Bin Laden Memorial

This essay was originally published by The Radical Capitalist Inserts on January 22, 2002

The professional mourners want to erect a shrine where the Twin Towers used to stand.

The professional mourners are the consolers and High Hand-holders of all faiths. They are of no use to happy, confident men, but in tragedy they find employment and even acclaim for uniting rich man and poor man to contemplate the meaning of life in the context of death. No horror is so unexpected that they are not ready with a chorus of "Amazing Grace." They sing "we shall overcome someday," always with the emphasis on someday. They share with Allah's martyrs the belief that an individual's true value is to be found at the time of his death.

None of the professional mourners has, to my knowledge, suggested erecting their shrine on private funds. But even if they did, there is no good reason to sell it to them; there is no good reason to replace the World Trade Center with a September 11 memorial. Our memory of the dead will not fade because there is no pyramid where they died.

I anticipate several objections. I expect, for instance, to hear it claimed that the fallen heroes of the police and fire departments deserve such a memorial.

In fact, they deserve better. Their job was to protect the World Trade Center and keep its occupants safe. They died on that job when they could have run uptown or across the river. By rebuilding on the site, we act according to their final wishes; by evacuating the site, we act according to bin Laden's.

Others object that the deaths at the site have made the ground sacred - "hallowed" - and therefore off-limits to activity not consonant with kneeling and mumbling. This objection asserts a subjective sense of the sacred as if it were a reality more valid than objective reality, and demands the medieval form of reverence for the graveyard; to wit, forbidding the business of the living for fear of annoying the dead. By calling the ground "hallowed," and refusing to explain myself further, I imply that I have a reverence for my country and/or the fallen, and that, by the way, if you keep pressing me to defend my position you are probably not a serious person, and maybe even a casual blasphemer.

The astute observer will have noticed that the hallowers' motivated core consists of luddites, and its rank-and-file of dilettantes. The luddites possess already an enmity for the business of living; an enmity now masquerading as reverence for the dead. What has happened to the New Yorkers and out-of-towners who thought that cities, particularly big cities, particularly skyscrapers in big cities, were blights on God's landscape canvas? Who always thought that the site of the World Trade Center would have been better used as a public park? They have become sisters in the Order of the Eleventh. What has happened to their canards about sunlight deprivation and the starry summer nights hidden from the city-dweller's view? They have been thrown over for a better rationale. They have been thrown over for "hallowed ground."

If you doubt the strength or even the presence of the luddites among the hallowers, then consider: what is it precisely that makes Ground Zero sacred?

I do not ask this question lightly. I believe that "sacred" denotes a valid concept, if by "sacred" you mean "deserving of reverence." But I would like to hear the theory of death that makes it a consecrator of the soil upon which it occurs. And once I have heard the theory, I am likely to ask why it is that every death does not possess whatever power its fans attribute to the deaths that occurred last September. If the site is hallowed because 3,000 died there, why wasn't it already hallowed because 6 died there in the bombing of 1993? Is it the sheer number? -- Or is it that the bombers in 1993 were unsuccessful? Calling the ground hallowed is not enough to get your fellow-citizens to voluntarily relocate and demolish their tall buildings. But it might be enough to keep them from rebuilding structures already in ruins.

The best argument the hallowers could concoct (although I have not heard it from them) is that Ground Zero is sacred because some individuals died there performing confirmable acts of heroism. This is the best argument, because the heroism of the cops and firemen makes the event at least ostensibly unique for the site, and because heroism unto death reveals the ultimate integrity, and tales of the ultimate integrity are proof that man - even modern man - has the capacity for glory in the classical sense; proofs against the cynic and the aesthetic naturalist. As I say, this is the best argument for hallowing the downtown ground, which means that it is the best of some very specious arguments. There are still a million miles of broken links between the plaque that reads "A hero died here" and the one that reads "A hero died here. - No trespassing."

The dilettantes will hallow the ground to salute the dead for the same reason they hold hands across America to cure hunger. It is a combination of low-risk grunt work and hype intended to replace the kind of effort they dread the most. - Cognitive effort. Anyone who knows the story of a Ground-Zero hero, and who believes the story should be told, should tell it. He should write the article, the book, the play. Found the foundation. But including a name among 3,000 other names on a stele in downtown Manhattan is a tribute only to the dilettante's willingness to invent something even smaller when the very least he can do is still too much.

In case you still doubt my assessment of the hallowers' motives, consider which activities will not be prohibited on this site, taking New York's other city parks and landmarks as a guide. The hallowed site will still be trodden by the living. Bums will invade it, horses will defecate in it, the phlegmatic will spit on it. It will be open to the public, after all, and it is a civil right of the dregs Americana to make any public park their pied-a-terre. The one activity that almost certainly will be prohibited is the activity that the victims were engaged in at the time of their deaths; that is, making a living in private enterprise. No buying or selling will be permitted at the Bin Laden Memorial. After all, Jesus purged the temple of the moneylenders, not of the codependent marchers in a Pride Day parade.

In brief, the medieval notion of ground made sacred is accepted and repeated by luddites and dilettantes, whose true motives will not endure scrutiny.

Others object that not erecting a memorial in place of the World Trade Center is the equivalent of turning our backs on history: of intentionally "not remembering." We must remember what happened so that it will not happen again, the argument goes.

I do not argue with the proposition that Americans must remember the attacks of September 11; specifically, that Americans must understand the fundamental conflict of values that it represented and still represents. But there are another million miles of broken links between remembering an abomination and erecting a "soaring memorial" (to use Mayor Giuliani's term) to commemorate it. Shrines have always been top-heavy information media, but prior to the inexpensive dissemination of printed text, they - along with other primitive media, such as ballads and oral chronicles - were the means of communicating historical events. Pyramids, steles, cathedrals, tombs, all conveyed information for future generations of the era in which they were created. Often this communication with future generations was intentional and elaborate. But the typical Egyptian who lived at the time the pyramids were built got his information from traders, soldiers, and the readers of the pharaoh's edicts; in short, anyone who brought information to him. Had he relied on the hieroglyphs at Abydos to teach him the lessons of history, he would have known nothing of them at all. Seeing these tombs and shrines would have meant putting down his plough and traveling days, weeks, or months to reach his destination. Then, even assuming he was literate (and literacy was a privilege of the priesthood) he would have spent more days, weeks, or months studying the inscriptions.

The invention of the printing press, and the subsequent availability of inexpensive volumes of printed text, did far more to inform the literate masses than any landmark anywhere at any time. News of the world, printed in London, could be carried to every part of the Empire. Yesterday's news and historical comment were available in books. Schools used books to educate the young.

If landmarks were never good stores of information for the present, and if the printed word made them obsolete as stores of knowledge for the future, photography, motion pictures, documentaries, and the distributed terabytes of raw information driving the Internet have killed and buried them.

Critics of this position often point to the long lines of tourists at historical landmarks as evidence of their contemporary relevance. In fact, these long lines prove that landmarks are utterly unnecessary to the remembrance of the events they commemorate. No tourist plans even a day visit to a landmark whose moment in history is unknown to him. That is, the long lines of tourists at landmarks are evidence - not of the landmarks' power, but of the power of the information media that made the tourist book the trip. Visitors to Pearl Harbor's museums already know of the Japanese sneak attack, and have come to the harbor in order to see the place where the famous event occurred. Even supposing the existence of a tourist to Hawaii who had never heard of the sneak attack, visiting one or all of the museums would leave him with only a vague idea of why it happened, and he would know less about how it happened than any homebound Scandinavian with a copy of Tora! Tora! Tora! on her nightstand.

The same is true for the restored concentration camps of the German Third Reich. At the site of Auschwitz-Birkenau stands a museum and a restored portion of the most infamous of the Nazi death camps. The museum contains all of the edifying materials: the documents, the photographs, and so on. The restored barracks are just grisly tourist attractions.

I know that the camps are, officially at any rate, preserved in order that visitors, chastened by the tour, may return to their own parts of the world better able to fight the occurrence of similar atrocities.

They have the opposite effect. Visitors make plans, board and debark airplanes, put up at hotels, then at last view the preserved site of the atrocities. They then take their memory of the low-risk grunt-work required to travel to the place, combine that memory with their visceral reaction to the artifacts of torture and humiliation, and substitute the compound for the intellectual work of determining how these artifacts came to be used on a daily basis by what was once one of the most civilized nations of Europe. They see where the gas pellets were dropped, shake their heads angrily at the people who let it happen, then check out of their hotels, board and debark airplanes, tell their friends about the evil Germans they now know all about, and vote for their local national socialist.

But the death camps at least had utility as a reminder at one time and in a limited context. Just after the liberation of the camp at Buchenwald, but before the stacked corpses of the victims could be taken away, General Patton rounded up the citizens of nearby Weimar and marched them through the camp so they could see with their own eyes the product of their moral cowardice and rationalizations. That day, the mayor of Weimar and his wife committed suicide. -- Maintaining the death camps as a scar on the lands of the former Reich was a form of retribution on the generation that made them a reality.

The Bin Laden Memorial will not have even this limited utility. The American government and its citizens were the targets, not the perpetrators, of the atrocity in Manhattan. Why compound the significant injury to this city and its people by forcing them to bear the cost and endure the sight of a Bin Laden Memorial?

Just after the attacks, Mayor Giuliani grasped the issue clearly: let our enemies change us - let them change the landscape of New York permanently - and they win a victory greater than perhaps even they expected. At a memorial service at Ground Zero a month after the attacks, he said, "We will dedicate the rebuilding of New York [to those who died in the attack] and [make] certain that we do not allow the terrorists in any way to break our spirit. Instead, they have emboldened it."

Who knows what whispers turned his head between that service and his farewell address last December, in which he suggested that New Yorkers would be better off dedicating the entire site - sixteen acres in downtown Manhattan - to some sort of memorial. Said Giuliani: "We have to be able to create something here that enshrines this forever and that allows people to build on it and grow from it."

"Enshrines it forever"? Bin Laden was surprised the buildings fell - He was only going for the top floors. Now, not only are the buildings gone and the neighborhood in ruins, but his enemy wants to take his handiwork and enshrine it forever.

Why enshrine it? So that we may "build on it and grow from it.".

It would appear, from his choice of words and change of heart, that he has been seduced by the over-rated ideal of unity. - Even unity in tragedy. It is the voice of the professional mourner again. People came together as a result of this tragedy. There is nothing warmer or more touching than people united in faith and a common knowledge of their shared mortality I.e. , there is nothing warmer than a hug at a funeral. If we can perpetuate the trauma, perhaps we can also perpetuate the unity. It is our new found unity that Giuliani wants to "build on" and "grow from."

He continues thus:

"This place [Ground Zero] has to become a place in which when anybody comes here immediately they're going to feel the great power and strength and emotion of what it means to be American."

This is how I felt about the World Trade Center before it was attacked. The difference in what provokes these feelings in us lies in our differing definitions of "being an American." As Giuliani defines it, being an American means going to the funerals of other Americans. - Forever. As I define it, being an American means having the freedom to create and earn and to associate or compete with others doing the same, until our combined energies become the dynamo that sustains and extends the modernity of all aspects of human life. The Twin Towers were steel-and-glass expressions of a way of life that feeds, clothes, and makes life enjoyable for the rest of humanity; ornaments on the constructive explosion that is the unleashed energies of free individuals.

Rebuilding the towers - or structures better than the originals - does not cheat the heroes of their tribute, it is their tribute. If you want to commemorate the event of the attacks, put a plaque on the side of one of the buildings, and for an inscription write: "On September 11, 2001, a handful of tent-dwellers thought they could stop this."

The world that comes to this site will be far larger than the world that would come to rubberneck the Bin Laden Memorial. - And it will see first hand what some brave men and women died to perpetuate, and what other brave men and women died to protect.

—Dan Roentsch

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Thursday, May 1, 2008

Faith-Based Rock Pile

This essay was originally published by The Radical Capitalist Inserts on February 17, 2004

"I am proud that Florida is the home to the first faith-based prison in the United States."
— Jeb Bush, Governor of Florida


The faith-based prison to which Governor Bush refers is not religion itself, but a penal fortress located in that Florence of the Eastern Seaboard, Lawtey, Florida. The prison is now, according to its press agents, home to about 800 pious crooks from twenty-six religions. (Most of these twenty-six "religions" appear to be denominations of the Protestant sect of the Christian religion, in case anyone thinks Yorubaland has been sending Ifa missionaries to Jacksonville.)

The dedication prayer for the new prison was delivered before the new year by a convicted bank robber named Ken Cooper. (Cooper is now an evangelical minister, there being no banks in prison.) An interested journalist asked the Reverend for his insight into the difference faith makes in an inmate's life, beyond the obvious difference of making him easier to trust when he gets out and asks his in-laws for a "loan." Here is the Reverend's reply:

"I'd always understood that I was doomed to a life of misery and hell, but I learned I could be forgiven," Cooper says. "Individuals in prison have always had a chance to learn who they are spiritually, but to dedicate a prison to faith is monumental. It's bold and courageous."


The Reverend isn't quoted on the subject of why it is wrong to rob banks, what effect he thinks robbery has on the robbed, and why it is in his best interest not to rob again. That, apparently, is the sort of trivia occupying the thoughts of secularists. What occupies Reverend Cooper's thoughts is the knowledge that he can be forgiven for sticking that gun in the teller's face and taking those people's money. And for whose forgiveness does he labor? Not for the forgiveness of any mortal, but for the forgiveness of the vaunted Arbiter of reality and human souls Himself, which vaunted Arbiter has never worked in a bank or had so much as His pocket picked. And how does the Reverend know the Almighty will forgive him? By means of the very faith his new home was built to cultivate. By means of holding a wish in common with his colleagues. And a unanimity giving substance to the fabulous is the closest thing to Heaven on Earth that the brethren can expect. Introduce one skeptic, and you exacerbate the ever-present doubt that tests the theist's fidelity to the invisible. (More than one hundred such skeptics were transferred out of the Lawtey citadel in order that the Reverend Cooper's brow might not furrow while pondering his postmortem prospects.)

But removing the skeptics will not remove the doubt, as any ascetic will tell you between lashings. Persistent doubt — the doubt against which the believer struggles his entire life — is not inflicted from the outside by skeptics or the Prince of Darkness. It is an inside job; it is his brain asking him what the hell he thinks he is doing with it, telling it now to look both ways before crossing a busy street, then a moment from now telling it to close its eyes while marching into eternity. —Am I in a reason-using situation now, or a reason-renouncing situation? What is the reason for that again? Is it a sin even to ask? The believer struggles to answer these demands, and as a consequence he is forever on the defensive.

Thus, creating faith-based prisons means promoting a form of rehabilitation based on intellectual suicide. No doubt the aficionados of the conspiracy will assert that this is not an attempt at rehabilitation at all, but at retribution; that the faith-based rock-pile is the smoking gun in a plot to kill the brains of inmates.

In spite of the astute observation informing it, this theory fails on examination of the faith-based advocates themselves, who are victims of the same neuron-pruning they propose for convicts. In so proposing, they only perpetuate the abuse they experienced in the care of their parents and Sunday School teachers, who were no doubt just as abused by theirparents and Sunday School teachers, and so on, ad infinitum, or at least back to the time of Moses.

The conviction lying at the root of the penal monastery movement is the same conviction that has colored the rhetoric of pastors since their evolution from the ape; namely, that if you turn your life over to God you will become decent. For the Catholic, you will become decent in order to earn fewer eons in Purgatory. The logistics of the Catholic's salvation lie in the sacraments, confession, and penance, the latter consisting usually of assigned words uttered over a rosary. For the Protestant, the going is even easier. The advertised charge for ascension is nothing greater than the willingness to receive a "free gift," and Purgatory doesn't even exist. The Protestants make large of the fact that no human can ever achieve salvation by doing good, since he is, by nature, so spiritually fetid that no number of pious acts could ever deodorize him. How, then, does seeing the light make the Protestant a better person in this life? The answer is: by magic. Protestants make the Holy Spirit—the silent partner in the Trinity—a more significant agent than do the Catholics, averring that He—or It—invades the prostrate personality, deprives it of whatever individuality, ego, and art it may once have possessed, and supplies it instead with conformity, humility, and stained glass. No mortal effort required or even appreciated. All the sinner has to do is suffocate his brain and ignore the screams.

What happened to the national choir's conviction that the rehabilitation of crooks is an improper use of prison time? It appears that what they meant all along is that psychological rehabilitation—an invention of certain presumptuous human beings—is improper. The penal monastery is, in this sense, a breakthrough; a victory for moralist who knows that his marching orders are as clear as their source is incomprehensible, and that people get into trouble with the law when they try to live by their own wits.

In fact, the criminal runs afoul of just laws not because he is a son of Adam and thus vulnerable to any succubus in a red leather corset, but because, having free will, he is able to act upon the fallacy that he is owed something for nothing, and upon the fantasy that the free will of the other humans is somehow inferior to his own. This is not to say that distinguishing fantasy from reality is, in every circumstance, an easy matter. It is not even to say that it is equally difficult for everyone. Making it requires cognitive effort, the kind of effort necessary to living in a world where the things that go bump in the night are things that go bump in the night.

Regardless of the liturgical details, a faith-based approach to moral reconstruction assumes that

a) Any moron can see that the ills of the world are caused by its abandonment of morality, and

b) Not even a genius can devise an effective system of ethics by reason alone, ergo

c) Humans must seek a divine, moral authority.

In short, by trusting the evidence rendered by your eyes and processed by your mind you must come to the conclusion that you cannot trust your eyes and mind.

The fundamental purpose of such fractured reasoning is not to induce faith for the purpose of increasing moral awareness, but to use greater awareness of immorality to create more persons of faith. Faith, for the brethren, is the end, not the means. If the devil has fewer agents in the culture, in the classroom, in the government, in the media, the evangelist will, he believes, be free to go about his business with fewer temptations, fewer doubts, and fewer pressures on his already-taxed capacity for rationalizing the unbelievable. And by succumbing to their whims at Lawtey, Americans establish a precedent for more initiatives intended to spare the faithful the sight of pagans unwilling to comport themselves as damned.

Should you object to their plans, you will hear the standard speeches about the laws of the United States and their supposed origins in the Ten Commandments, about how the freedom to practice religion means the freedom to practice it on the dollar pried out of your fist, about how Jefferson's reference to the Creator in the Declaration of Independence means that he and Pat Robertson could have talked, about how Madison's statecraft was fired in the same furnace that tried Meshach, Shadrach, and Abednego. The courts will no doubt have an opportunity to hear these arguments, and, in dispensing with them, to remind the world that the greatest nation on the planet was designed neither for nor by adults on their knees.

Moral accountability doesn't begin with the citizen's belief that his crimes against others are washed away by entreating translucent third parties. As a matter of fact, that is one of the places where moral accountability ends. Teach that to prisoners. Tell them that sacrificing their brains to powers they think they cannot control is perhaps the fundamental reason they are in prison to begin with. If they still want Jesus after that, let the Gideons provide the Bibles.
—Dan Roentsch


"Florida Gets Nation's First Faith-Based Prison," Beliefnet, December 25, 2003.

Jacqui Goddard,"Florida's New Approach to Inmate Reform: a 'Faith-Based' Prison," The Christian Science Monitor, December 24, 2003.

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