• Shrike502
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    2 years ago

    Wait, since when is capitalism attacking Religion? They seem ultra intertwined nowadays

    • JucheBot1988
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      2 years ago

      My Americ*n may be showing here. During the 70s and 80s, there was a certain amount of fear on the part of the US government that the Hispanic minority, who have always been oppressed and who were at that time mostly Catholic, were ripe for radicalization; liberation theology, it was thought, was the conduit through which Marxist radicalization would come. So there was a deliberate attempt to foster a sort of pan-denominational, rabidly pro-American “religious right,” which would back unquestioningly whatever the US government was doing in South America. In effect, Washington was trying to head off the creation of an American IRA.

      The attempt was wildly successful, but it also left the American ruling class with a synthetic ally who was, and is, completely batshit insane. (Growing up in a small town in California, theoretically the most “progressive” part of the country, I remember seeing signs on churches with messages like “Jesus Christ and the American GI are the only two people who have ever offered to die for your freedom.”) The religious right backed George W. Bush right to the bitter end, long after most apolitical people, even, had begun to regard him as incompetent and a disaster. There was thus, in the Obama years, an attempt to rebrand American imperialism by pushing, as a kind of new ideological justification for capital, the “hipster” atheism of Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, etc. I went to university during the Obama years, and if I had a nickel for every time some dumbass pseudo-intellectual told me “I’m economically conservative, socially liberal, my favorite author is Hayek, and I just read The god Delusion by Richard Dawkins,” I could probably fund the entire Belt and Road Initiative myself.

      In Russia and a lot of post-Soviet countries it’s very likely different. But recall that capitalism there is a fairly new implant and as a result, the ideological superstructure is not nearly so developed.