Religion and Legend
Religion (noun)
1. A set of beliefs concerning the
cause, nature, and purpose of the universe, especially when considered as the
creation of a superhuman agency or agencies, usually involving devotional and
ritual observances, and often containing a moral code governing the conduct of
human affairs.
In this article, I intend to explore the legends underlying
the American religion. By American
religion, I mean to suggest the belief by a large segment of the population in
the structures and institutions of government, and the belief that these
structures and institutions are used for purposes beneficial to the people. In other words, the religion is belief in the
benevolence of the state and the goodness of the political leaders.
Legend (noun)
1. A non-historical or unverifiable
story handed down by tradition from earlier times and popularly accepted as
historical.
2. The body of stories of this
kind, especially as they relate to a particular people, group, or clan….
There are several American legends that either support this religious
belief directly, or otherwise contribute to the deification of the state and
those who act through it. Such legends,
taught in the public schools and perpetuated through various mainstream media
outlets – movies, books, and magazines, as well as mainstream web-sites –
create a common foundation as the basis for the desired religious belief:
belief in the state.
Legends are material to be moulded,
and not facts to be recorded.
Many have done valuable to work toward the shattering of one
or more of the key legends, thereby contributing to the loss of faith in the
religion. These efforts can only be
beneficial to freedom. The work of
shattering these legends is the work of revisionist historians, although not
all revisionists support the idea of shattering the religion of state. Such historians have toiled tirelessly from
the inception of each legend, yet many worked in relative obscurity. Certainly the internet has made their work
easily available to any who care to look.
Legends die hard. They survive as
truth rarely does.
There are many such legends in American history. I will explore three of these, and suggest that
these three may be the most foundational due to the magnitude of awareness in
and acceptance by the population at large – most importantly, due to the
importance of these legends to the foundation of the American religion. Proximity in time, I suggest, is not the key
criteria – one event occurred 150 years ago, while the most recent is only ten
years old. But what these three cases
hold in common is the level to which the legends have been internalized by
large portions of the population.
Sometimes legends make reality, and
become more useful than the facts.
A major impediment to shattering the legends is that such
action runs full-force into a brick wall of “we the people.” Too many accept the idea that “they” are the
government; that the people are in charge; that the government and the country
are the same; that I vote, so I have control.
As opposed to control through dictators and kings (where the self-interest
of the rulers at the expense of the people was never in question), representative
democracy has done a wonderful job of convincing the people that they are the rulers,
choosing politicians to work on their behalf for their good.
Because they have been taught to believe that they and the
government are one-and-the-same, they cannot accept that the legends are not
only false but shed light on the murderous actions of government. They cannot damn themselves. Additionally, they cannot accept that the
legends are false, because to do so will suggest that they have been dupes.
When the legends die, the dreams
end; there is no more greatness.
I do not intend to refute each legend in detail in this post
– I am not qualified to do so, even if I chose to. My purpose is to suggest the three that I
view as the more important legends to burst, specifically because they are so
deeply ingrained and hold significant sway as basis for the religion.