Showing posts with label Cultural Marxism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cultural Marxism. Show all posts

Saturday, February 05, 2022

What Happens When "Scholars" Fail to Address Arguments and Evidence Presented to Them

The Lynching of 17 Chinese in California 1871

Aram Sarkisian has posted another hit piece in "Public Orthodoxy" that attacks the Ludwell Orthodox Fellowship, as well as myself and others.

He begins by complaining about some of the online harassment he has received as a result of his previous essay. I truly I am sorry to hear that. However, this is not something unique to him or people of his political or religious views. My parish had a credible terrorist threat in June 2020 that I had to get the FBI, as well as state and local authorities, and my parish had to spend thousands of dollars to increase security. Mean tweets are far more easily handled. If you have someone saying stupid things to you online, blocking them is usually the best and quickest solution. The anonymity of the internet, and the fact that most social media platforms let people use pseudonyms create the environment that promotes that sort of behavior. Pointing out things that Aram Sarkisian has posted in the past, however, is not harassment, and it is certainly something that he feels free to do too.

Aram Sarkisian again plays the game of guilt by association, and he also didn't quote a single thing I actually said in my response to his first essay (nor did he provide a link to my article, so people could read it for themselves and come to their own conclusions). Instead, he mischaracterized what I said, and put his own twist on it. He also failed to address any of the contemporary moral issues that I pointed out -- nor did he explain his strange silence about them. The only contemporary moral issues he does talk about are abortion and the LGBTQP agenda, and on those issues, he promotes baby killing and sexual immorality. We cannot change the past, but we can do something about genocide in China, the genocide against Christians in Africa and the Middle East, the killing of a million babies a year in this country, the promotion of sexual immorality, and the rise of Marxism (the most evil and murderous ideology in human history) -- particularly in the academic environment that Sarkisian lives and works in. But saying something against those things might actually cost Dr. Sarkisian something professionally and personally.

He wrote, with regard to my response to him:

"Co-founder Fr. John Whiteford explained on the Michael Sisco Show in October, after all, that racial harmony in the antebellum South was such that the concept of segregation did not exist there—until it was exported from the North. Fr. John too asserted that post-Reconstruction Jim Crow segregation wasn’t all that bad for Black southerners—just misunderstood and misremembered."

I of course said no such thing, and in fact stated pretty much the opposite. The problem here is that it is unfair to compare the South at any point in its history with an ideal society, and to find it wanting. What is fair is to compare it with other societies at the same time. And as a matter of fact, it is true that there was no segregation in the South prior to the late 19th century -- there was subordination, but not segregation. In the North at that same time, blacks were excluded from society, pushed to the margins, and allowed not even the most basic of rights. As Alexis de Tocqueville put it, in his book Democracy in America

“So the Negro [in the North] is free, but he cannot share the rights, pleasures, labors, griefs, or even the tomb of him whose equal he has been declared; there is nowhere where he can meet him, neither in life nor in death.”

Northerners, in fact, often criticized Southerners for living in too close proximity to black people. For example, David Wilmot (of Pennsylvania) wrote:

“By God, sir, men born and nursed of white women are not going to be ruled by men who were brought up on the milk of some damn Negro wench!” (Brion McClanahan "Is “White Supremacy” an Exclusively “Southern” Ideology?")

There also were free blacks in the antebellum South, many of whom became prosperous. Many became slave owners themselves. Some even became very wealthy (e.g. Horace King). 

It is also true that Jim Crow laws originated in the North, and only came to the South with the New South Movement (which was a progressive movement, by the way -- for more information, see the book "The Strange Career of Jim Crow," by C. Vann Woodward (Oxford University Press, 1955). I never suggested that the Jim Crow period was a good time for black people. The fact people put laws in place to force segregation is evidence that there were many people who were doing the opposite. The same is also true of laws against interracial marriage. I believe that government-imposed segregation is wrong, and while I also think it is not a good thing even when voluntary, there have been many black scholars that have argued that black people were better off under segregation (economically especially), and you have many who are now pushing Critical Race Theory, that are promoting segregation today. I am glad legal segregation is a thing of the past (at least outside of American Universities). But here again, Dr. Sarkisian wants to compare the South with perfection, but fails to compare it with other contemporary examples. Segregation was very common in the North and West of the United States, and still is, in practice today. And the point is that even after segregation ceased to be legally enforced in the North, it remained a more pervasive and absolute reality than it ever was in the South.

I happen to have the ability to see this from both a Northern and Southern perspective, because while my father was from Texas, and came from a deeply rooted Southern family, my mother was from Chicago, and her family was mostly Northern in origin. I wouldn't throw either side of my family under the bus, but let's just say that I didn't hear much racist talk from the folks who were from the South. Chicago remains one of the most segregated cities to this day, but it is not particularly unique among large northern cities.

A black minister I know of pointed out what he saw as the difference between life in the South and life in the North in the post World War II era. He said white people in the South didn't mind living next to black people, but didn't want them to have more than they did. White people in the North, didn't care what black people had, but didn't want to live anywhere near them. That is of course a somewhat exaggerated generalization, but I think it has a lot of truth to it, if we are talking about life prior to about 1980.

Aram Sarkisian wrote: 

"There is little I could do in this brief essay that might even begin to dismantle such staggering historical falsehoods, nor do I think Fr. Whiteford would care to hear it."

I would actually love to see Dr. Sarkisian reply to the substance of my essay, but I am not holding my breath. I suspect he will continue to reply to his straw man characterizations of things I have said, rather than what I actually said.

"They were never dehumanized to the status of property, never barred from schools and universities on account of their race, were never asked to count bubbles on a bar of soap so they could vote, never had to hold their bladder until they found a “colored” bathroom, and knew they would never experience the terror of the lynching tree."

I have addressed the issues of slavery, and how this was an American problem, and a world wide problem, and not a specifically Southern Problem in "Orthodox America Has a Cultural Marxist Problem," Lynching was also an American problem. It was worse in the South in the wake of Reconstruction, because of the divide and conquer policies of Radical Reconstruction, which sought to cement Republican political control, rather than to bring about racial reconciliation in the South. The largest single incident of lynching happened in California in 1871, and the people lynched were actually Chinese. Chinese laborers were routinely abused and killed in the American West. The Chinese who worked on the railroad were paid slave labor wages, asked to do the most dangerous work, and little concern for their safety was given... which is the origin of the phrase "a Chinaman's chance," which was usually used in the form of "He hasn't got a Chinamen's chance," which given the slim odds Chinese people were usually given in America, basically means whoever is being spoken off hasn't even got those slim chances. And there would no doubt have been a lot more lynchings of Chinese, except Western politicians managed to pass the Chinese Exclusion Act, and effectively made it impossible for Chinese to immigrate to the United States prior to 1943, when it was finally repealed. Blacks were lynched in nearly every state in the Union. They were lynched more frequently in the South, because there were a lot more black people in the South, but of the lower 48 states, 44 of them had incidents of blacks being lynched, and while the numbers are lower, white people were lynched frequently too. Lynching is of course a horrible crime, and it is of course a good thing that we do not see it very much anymore.

"To be clear, no one is saying that racist ideas are held by all Orthodox Christians in the American South, or that American racism has been, or is now limited only to that region. And there is nothing wrong with Orthodox evangelism to the South. But if evangelism draws on racist Lost Cause mythology and iconography of the failed Confederate rebellion, especially at a moment of renewed Confederate nostalgia, it is important that these ideas are stopped from becoming mainstream. When a group bears witness to Orthodoxy using an image of Stonewall Jackson in uniform with his hand upon a Bible, as is found on the Ludwell Fellowship website, could the message be any clearer?" 

I addressed the question of the Lost Cause and Righteous Cause myths, but Dr. Sarkisian didn't bother to address any of my arguments or the evidence I presented, but instead simply repeats the accusation. Booker T. Washington was an actual slave, and yet he had this to say of Stonewall Jackson and Lee:

"The first white people in America, certainly the first in the South to exhibit their interest in the reaching of the Negro and saving his soul through the medium of the Sunday-school were Robert E. Lee and 'Stonewall Jackson.' ... Where Robert E. Lee and 'Stonewall’ Jackson have led in the redemption of the Negro through the Sunday-school, the rest of us can afford to follow.”

Stained glass window in the historically black 5th Avenue Presbyterian Church in Roanoke, Virginia. The scene is of an army camped by a river, and the text contains Stonewall Jackson's last words. It says, "In Memory of Stonewall Jackson. Let us cross the river and rest in the shade of the trees."

Stonewall Jackson taught a black Sunday School class, (which taught children how to read and write -- not just about the faith) and supplied its needs out of his own pocket, and out of that Sunday School class came four black churches, and several Black clergymen, who held him in high regard. There is even a stained-glass window dedicated to Stonewall Jackson in one the churches founded by these clergymen. In dismissing Stonewall Jackson as some sort of cartoonish evil character, Dr. Sarkisian is also dismissing the memory of these black people who knew and admired him. Stonewall Jackson is a good example of the deep religious piety that you find in the South. It has not normally been an Orthodox piety up until now, but it does provide us with something to work with. In my experience, I have seen this kind of piety especially found among the black folks I have worked with over the nearly three decades that I worked for the State of Texas.

"And it’s just as alarming that one of its primary voices is Fr. Whiteford, who has appeared on the “Dissident Mama” podcast, and who promoted the Fellowship alongside another co-founder, Dr. Clark Carlton, on the Michael Sisco Show. One loses plausible deniability when they repeatedly seek and out and accept these kinds of platforms to spread harmful historical falsehoods, especially when they wear a cassock."

I firmly believe, have written, and have preached, that hating someone on the basis of race, or mistreating someone on the basis of race is a sin. I don't believe Michael Sisco or Rebecca Dillingham disagree with that at all. Michael often makes fun of his critics by tweaking them in sarcastic ways, but that is a different matter. Rebecca pushes back against Cultural Marxists, but this is because of what she loves (her children, thus the moniker "Dissident Mama'), not what she hates. I am sure that they have said many things I wouldn't agree with, or said things in ways that I wouldn't say them, but having gotten to know them personally, I don't believe that they hate people, based on race or for any other reason. I believe that the Golden Rule applies to everyone, regardless of race, and I believe that they do too.

And by the way, I have also appeared on Roman Catholic podcasts, and Protestant podcasts, and I would even appear on a podcast by someone like Aram Sarkisian, so long as I thought the format would be fair. 

What Aram Sarkisian wants us to do is to hold Southerners to standards that no other group is held too. Do you hear any scholars lecturing Africans, Arabs, Indians, Chinese, or Latin Americans about how they should be ashamed of their own history because it included slavery? No, you do not. You also don't hear them talk very much about slavery in the United States that involved anyone other than Southerners, even though New Englanders ran the Slave Trade, which was the most brutal and inhumane aspect of American slavery. I am not a great student of Armenian history, but I suspect it included slavery too, and I also suspect that Armenians do not have a long history of embracing cultural and racial diversity. However, I would not expect Aram Sarkisian to denounce his ancestors, because that would be evil. The Golden Rule suggests that one should not expect other people to do what they would not want to do themselves.

Saturday, December 11, 2021

Orthodox America Has a Cultural Marxist Problem

Martyrdom of Archbishop Joachim of Nizhny Novgorod - he was crucified by the Communists upside down, on the Royal Doors of the Cathedral in Sebastopol in 1920

Dr. Aram G. Sarkisian recently wrote an article for the misnamed website “Public Orthodoxy” (which promotes pretty much everything except Orthodoxy) entitled “Orthodox America Has a Lost Cause Problem,” which was written in response to the launch of the Ludwell Orthodox Fellowship website, which is a website dedicated to the spread of the Orthodox Faith in the South, and also to discussing those aspects of Southern culture which are good, conducive to living an Orthodox life, and worth preserving. Apparently, Dr. Sarkisian thinks that this is not only a threat to the Orthodox Church (which is a Church he is not a member of, being an Armenian Monophysite), but also a threat to our democracy. 

Social Justice Warrior Hypocrisy

Dr. Sarkisian, like many contemporary “social justice” advocates, congratulates himself that 156 years after slavery was banned in the United States, he too is opposed to slavery; and that 57 years after the passage of the Civil Right Act, he too thinks black people should be treated equally. Such virtue signaling is popular these days because it gives people the false sense of being virtuous, and also, so they hope, gives them the appearance of being virtuous. But to be truly morally virtuous, one has to take actions that actually cost them something. Such virtue signaling costs nothing, any more than does coming out against wife-beating or foot-binding. 

But let us, for the moment, leave behind the moral questions of the past, and talk about some of the moral questions of the present. In American universities today, symbols of the Confederacy are railed against, and even statues of our founding fathers are no longer considered to be acceptable. However, Marxist symbols are chic, and Marxist ideology is regularly and openly promoted. And yet there is no ideology in the history of the human race that has produced more bloodshed and misery than Marxism – nor one that even comes close. Marxists are the moral superiors of no one, and those who enable them with their silence or complicity are not much better. 

Communist China is ruled by one the most brutal and bloody regimes of any nation in history. They intentionally starved and murdered tens of millions of their own people (some estimates go as high as 100 million), they have brutal concentration camps, which are up and running even as we speak, they are engaged in an ongoing genocide against the Uyghurs, and have only been slightly less severe in their treatment of Tibetans, only because Buddhists tend to be less violent in their resistance than Muslims. And much of what Communist China exports is produced by actual slave labor, or in near slave labor conditions. Apple products are produced in factories with conditions that are so bad that they had to put nets under the windows of the upper floors of their buildings to prevent workers from jumping to their deaths – so instead of improving conditions, so that workers wouldn’t want to kill themselves rather than to go on living, they simply made sure they couldn’t easily kill themselves, so that they would be forced to continue working in such conditions... so that social justice warriors in the west could get their latest iPhones at a reasonable price. But since Communist China has purchased a great deal of influence in academia, the media, and the government, criticizing their ongoing atrocities might actually cost someone who wants to be a career academic.

I scrolled through Dr. Sarkisian’s Twitter and Facebook feeds to see what kind of issues he thinks are important enough to comment on, and he is pro-abortion, supports Planned Parenthood – the #1 organization in the world that kills babies for money – and he thinks Biden should pack the Supreme Court to ensure that unfettered abortion remains the law of the land. He supports gay marriage, and the “LGBTQIA” agenda. He supports critical race theory – as he also does in his Public Orthodoxy essay – and CRT is rooted in Marxist theory. I found no expression of concern about slave labor or genocide in Communist China, nor the slaughter of Christians in Nigeria. No concern is expressed about the human trafficking that is allowed free passage across our border with Mexico, or the sexual slavery in the United States that it supplies with fresh victims. In short, Dr. Sarkisian does not take any public positions that would be out of fashion with the leftists that now dominate American academia. I would be interested in hearing of any position on any issue that he has taken that actually involved any personal cost or risk to his career. Perhaps he has, but if he has, one has to look pretty hard to find it.

Tossing Around Labels 

Most of his comments about the Ludwell Orthodox Fellowship have very little to do with anything actually posted on the website. He engages in guilt by association, by artificially linking this website with white supremacists (whom I have written extensively against) and the “January 6th insurrection,” (which after nearly a year, no one has been charged with insurrection, treason, or any other charge that an actual insurrection would have resulted in), by mentioning a priest who happened to be at the rally, but who took no part in anything illegal, and who also has no connection to the Ludwell Orthodox Fellowship. He finds it odd that this website dedicated to promoting the Orthodox Faith in the South would be named after the first convert to Orthodoxy in America, who also happened to be a Southerner. I find it odd that he would find that odd. Philip Ludwell III happens to be a cousin of mine, whom I am related to by multiple family connections, and he was the first person to bring Orthodoxy to the South, and so is therefore a perfect person to name this fellowship after.

He pointed out an article written by Rebecca Dillingham (on her own blog) that complained about the “deification” of Martin Luther King jr., in contrast with the attempts to erase the memory of Stonewall Jackson. I personally have no problem with celebrating the good things that MLK helped to accomplish, but we do know that there are FBI recordings of him participating in a rape, and so there are actual reasons one might have for being concerned about the degree to which he is held up as a hero, and if we are going to cancel historical figures in whom we can find any flaws, this certainly seems like a pretty big one. Stonewall Jackson was a man of his times, whose views on race would not coincide with those most of us hold today (though the same could be said of almost everyone of that time period), but he was a military genius, a man of courage, and he actually did care about black people. He taught a black Sunday school class (which taught children how to read and write -- not just about the faith) and supplied its needs out of his own pocket, and out of that Sunday School class came  four black churches, and several Black clergymen, who held him in high regard. Booker T. Washington wrote in 1910: 

"The first white people in America, certainly the first in the South to exhibit their interest in the reaching of the Negro and saving his soul through the medium of the Sunday-school were Robert E. Lee and 'Stonewall Jackson.' ... Where Robert E. Lee and 'Stonewall’ Jackson have led in the redemption of the Negro through the Sunday-school, the rest of us can afford to follow.”

Dr. Sarkisian freely tosses around the label of "white supremacist," but he ought to back up such claims with actual evidence that this is the case, rather than by begging the question, and assuming that any sympathy with Southern history makes one a racist. Such things are serious charges, and when they are made without any real basis, those who make them are violating the commandment against bearing false witness against your neighbor. 

Knee-Jerk Responses to Anything Southern

I suspect much of Dr. Sarkisian’s reaction to this website is a knee-jerk response that assumes when we are speaking of Southern culture, that we are speaking exclusively of white Southern culture, despite the fact that one of the articles he linked to is part of a series highlighting saints that are connected to the primary populations of the South, which include British, Western European, and African saints. As a matter of fact, when I think about the deeply religious culture of the South, some of the primary examples that come to my mind are the many pious Southern black co-workers I worked with over the 27 years that I worked for the State of Texas. Most of my co-workers were black females, and most of my supervisors over those years were also black females, and while I am sure that they often voted differently than I did, when we spoke about what was right or wrong, I generally felt a stronger kinship with them, then I did with most of my less religious white co-workers. Obviously, none of those people were Orthodox Christians, but there are many things about their culture and faith that would help them to connect to it more easily.

When I first began working for the State of Texas, I was part of a training group for six months that consisted of about eight black women, two white women, one black man, and one Hispanic man, and myself. We were also trained by a team of three black women. I remember one day when we were eating lunch together, we somehow got on the topic of abortion, and it was me and the eight black women, against the two liberal white women, with the other two men staying out of it. Over the years that I worked for the State of Texas, I discovered that black people generally are far more socially conservative than most white people, at least in the urban context that I have lived and worked in. This was also evident in California which had a constitutional amendment on the ballot to ban same-sex marriage. Had only white people voted, the amendment would not have passed. It was Blacks and Hispanics that swung that vote. Here in Houston, when they had an ordinance that would have allowed men who think they are women to use women's restrooms, the ordinance was voted down... and this is in a city where white people are about a third of the population. It was black and Hispanic Churches that led the push to overturn this ordinance, and it was voted down by an overwhelming majority of voters.

The South has long been portrayed as either the swarthy villain of American history, or a place filled with rubes and buffoons. If you hear a Southern accent in a film, you can usually be sure that the person is either evil, or the object of the film's ridicule. Christians are often treated the same way, and if you have a Southerner and a Christian, they are the ultimate "other," being members of two of the few groups of people we are still allowed to mock, ridicule, and hate. 

The Lost Cause, the Righteous Cause, or Complex Causes?

The Ludwell Orthodox Fellowship was not established to defend the Confederacy, but rather to focus on what is good, true, and beautiful in Southern culture, and to highlight how these things can help us to continue to grow the Orthodox Church in this region. However, if the “Lost Cause” is a myth, it is certainly not more so than the myth of the "Righteous Cause" – the claim that the North fought the war to free black people from slavery – because nothing could be further from the truth. But after more than a million people died, and many more were maimed and scarred for life during the course of the war, it made many feel better to believe it was true

In Lincoln’s first inaugural address he advocated for a constitutional amendment (the Corwin amendment, which many scholars think he was actually the author of) which would have protected slavery forever, and made it impossible ever to amend the Constitution to give Congress authority over slavery. 

“I understand a proposed amendment to the Constitution, which amendment, however, I have not seen, has passed Congress, to the effect that the federal government shall never interfere with the domestic institutions of the States, including that of persons held to service. To avoid misconstruction of what I have said, I depart from my purpose not to speak of particular amendments, so far as to say that holding such a provision to now be implied constitutional law, I have no objection to its being made express and irrevocable” (First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1861, Washington, D.C.).

I have had an above average interest in history all of my life, and yet I don't recall this amendment being discussed in any treatment of the Civil War that I had come across until just a few years ago, and when I have discussed this topic with many others, I have found that people generally have never heard of this. It is far easier to run with the cartoon version of history that the North were the good guys, who invaded the South to set black people free, Lincoln was the saint who led them, and that Southerners were fighting only to thwart this righteous crusade -- but this was the most important speech Lincoln had ever given up to this point in his life, and he was offering to keep slavery in place forever, if only the South would not secede from the Union. T. S. Eliot observed that mankind can take just so much reality. Better to run with the myth of the Great Emancipator than to face the loss of a million lives merely to avoid a negotiated division of the Union.

The US Congress also passed a nearly unanimous resolution on July 25, 1861, which stated that the war was being fought only to preserve the Union, and not to end slavery.

Aside from the desire to preserve the Union, the North was also concerned about the loss of tariffs, which at that time was the primary means of support for the federal government, and the bulk of those tariffs came from Southern ports. They were concerned about losing control of the Mississippi river, which was vital to northern and midwestern trade, even though the Confederacy had given assurances that they would allow for the free navigation of the Mississippi. And in the beginning, there was concern that the Confederacy might snowball, and that even northern and western states might join it.

If the original seven Confederate States were only concerned with protecting slavery, Lincoln's offer to protect slavery forever with an irrevocable amendment should have ended the entire matter, but it did not because it was not the only issue. It is true that in the articles of secession in these seven states, slavery was cited as an issue, along with abolitionist terrorism, and a failure on the part of northern states to abide by the Constitution, which required that they extradite those involved in John Brown’s raid on Harpers Ferry, so that they could be tried for the crime. John Brown was attempting to spark a Haitian style slave revolt that had the potential to engulf the South in a bloodbath. If you were a white person living in the South at that time, you did not have to be a defender of slavery to be concerned with that kind of a solution to the problem. And the fact that many in the North celebrated John Brown as a hero caused real concern among Southerners for what the future would hold under a Republican administration. For more on that, see the lecture “What we have to Expect," Harper's Ferry: Abolitionism, Extradition, and Secession” by Jonathan White.

Some may mention that Southerners were complaining that they were not being allowed to take their slaves into western territories. Had these seven states been allowed to secede, the territories would no longer have been an issue. Furthermore, the fugitive slave act would no longer have applied to them, and like it or not, this act was called for by the Constitution as it was originally framed. The fugitive slave act did amount to a government subsidy of slavery, and this subsidy being removed would have made being a slave owner a lot less profitable and sped up the process of slavery eventually coming to an end. This is in fact how slavery was peacefully ended in Brazil. Some states ended slavery. Slaves from neighboring states would escape to those states. This led to more states ending slavery, until finally it was ended completely.

It should also be noted that secession does not cause war. Trying to forcefully prevent it does, but secession itself is not an act of war. When Britain signed the peace treaty that ended the Revolutionary War, they actually made peace with each of the 13 colonies, not with a single entity called "the United States." When it was decided to scrap the Articles of Confederation, the new Constitution was set to go into effect if only 9 of the 13 states ratified it, and it would have only been in effect for those that ratified it. The other states would have been independent. The right of secession was explicitly asserted in the acts ratifying the Constitution in Virginia and in New York. New England states often threatened secession in the years after the Constitution was ratified, and so it was understood to be an option available to the states. The EU has not gone to war with the UK over Brexit. There was not a war when the various states of the Soviet Union seceded from it. And so even if we grant that the original seven states did secede over slavery alone, there was nothing in the Constitution which prevented them from doing so, nor was it a reason for there to be a war rather than a negotiated separation.

It is also incorrect to assume that those who did want to maintain slavery in the South all supported secession, or that all who supported secession wanted to maintain slavery. There were many slave owners who correctly believed that slavery was far safer in the Union, than in the proposed Confederacy. Sam Houston, who was a slave owner and a staunch Unionist, as the governor of the state of Texas did everything he could to prevent, or at least to stall secession. He even accurately predicted the outcome of the war. However, like many in the South who had opposed secession, he began to support the Confederate war effort when Lincoln called for troops to invade the South without consulting Congress and in defiance of the ruling of President James Buchanan and his attorney general that the central government had no constitutional authority to use the army to force a sovereign state back in the Union. This is also why the next four Southern states seceded. Virginia, for example, had voted against secession, and those opposing secession were led by no less than Jubal Early, who later became a Confederate general, and is often credited with being the father of the “Lost Cause.” But in the face of Lincoln’s call for troops to invade the seceding states, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee and Arkansas reversed their earlier decision and voted to secede. Like President Buchanan, they believed Lincoln’s invasion was unconstitutional. They do not present protecting slavery as their reason for secession.

Prior to the actual invasion, many Southerners continued to support the Union, but most (though certainly not all) switched sides when they were faced with the conduct of Union troops on their soil. One such example is Jack Hinson, who was a slave owner from Tennessee, who had even hosted Grant at his home at one point early in the war. One day his sons were out hunting, and a patrol of Union cavalry came along, assumed that they were “bushwhackers,” shot them, beheaded them, and mounted their heads on the posts of Jack Hinson’s gate. Hinson kept his calm. He freed all of his slaves, because he actually was concerned about their welfare, provided them with a share of his land, had a specially designed sniper rifle made, and then went on a one-man war against the Union Army.

It is a serious mistake to assume that slavery was something the South chose or was solely responsible for. At the time of the American Revolution, slavery was legal in every colony. The colony of Georgia had outlawed slavery, but this was overruled by the King, because the slave trade was very lucrative to the Crown. Other southern colonies had petitioned the Crown to stop the slave trade, because there were growing concerns about the risk of having such a sizeable population of slaves. In the original draft of the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson had proposed to cite the importation of slaves to America as one of the grievances against England:

“he [the King] has waged cruel war against human nature itself, violating it's most sacred rights of life & liberty in the persons of a distant people who never offended him, captivating & carrying them into slavery in another hemisphere, or to incur miserable death in their transportation thither.”

Slavery is a result of the Fall, however, it has been a reality throughout human history, even up to the present day, because man is still fallen. Almost every human society has had slavery in one form or another. It was always a bad thing, but it was often a less bad option when the alternatives were slaughtering captured enemies or turning them loose so that they could come back and slaughter you. The African slave trade would have been impossible without the Africans who ran it. Only a small portion of the slaves exported from Africa ended up in North America, and slavery as it existed in the United States was certainly not the worst place such slaves ended up. For most of human history, slavery was accepted as a fact of life. For more information, see the Just Thinking Podcast, Episode 63 "Slavery Reparations" (which begins by citing some horrible examples of abuse from Slave Narratives in the South, but goes on to talk about the bigger picture of slavery and the African slave trade). Also, listen to this recorded account of George Johnson, who was one of Jefferson Davis' former slaves.

After independence, gradual emancipation began to be enacted in the North, and it was moving towards the South. About half of the blacks in Maryland were already free at the time of the Civil War, and Virginia had been heading in the same direction. Much of this was due to the industrial revolution, which was likewise making its way south. The slave trade was almost entirely run by New Englanders, and this was without a doubt one of the most inhumane aspects of slavery. It was banned in 1808, but even so, no voice was raised in the North on behalf of emancipation until the 1830s, and that only by a few highly vocal abolitionists. But much of the wealth in the North had been built upon the slave trade, and much of it continued to be based on the exploitation of slave produced goods. So slavery was a national problem, not just a southern problem. But there was never any serious effort on the part of the North to advance a workable plan for emancipation. The model that should have been followed was that of Great Britain, which ended slavery peacefully, and by sharing the costs of doing so as a nation. Had there been a serious proposal along those lines, had the South rejected it, and had the North threatened to invade for the purpose of ending slavery, then there would actually be a basis to the claims that the invasion was justified.

With the exception of a very small minority even among the Abolitionists, slavery was not opposed out of concern for the welfare of black people. Slavery was simply used as a bludgeon against the South, which had been politically dominant, but with the addition of new states in the West, was no longer so. Most Northern states had laws which prevented free black people from settling there. Lincoln’s Illinois, for example, with his approval, prohibited free blacks from entering the state:

“The general assembly shall, at its first session under the amended constitution, pass such laws as will effectually prohibit free persons of color from immigrating to and settling in this state; and to effectually prevent the owners of slaves from bringing them into this state for the purpose of setting them free” (Article 14 of the Constitution of Illinois, which was ratified in 1848). 

It seems to me, that if you really opposed slavery, you would be happy to have slave owners bring slaves to your state for the purpose of setting them free. 

Many abolitionists in the North believed that if black people were emancipated, they would be pushed to the margins of society, and wither away. And this is because that is how emancipation generally happened in the North when those states ended slavery. Ralph Waldo Emerson, for example wrote:

“The dark man, the black man declines, it will happen by and by that the black man will only be destined for museums like the Dodo” (The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, ed. William H. Gillman, et al. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, Belknap Press (1960-92), 3:286., Qtd in Joanne Pope Melish, Disowning Slavery: Gradual Emancipation and “Race” in New England, 1780-1860, (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2000) p. 218).

There is no moral merit in people who held such views. They opposed slavery because it conflicted with their economic and political interests and because they did not want to live with blacks, slave or free. For more, see Anti-Slavery and Northern Racism and Anti-Slavery, Secession and New England Cultural Imperialism, by Donald Livingston, as well as Disowning Slavery: Gradual Emancipation and “Race” in New England, 1780-1860, by Joanne Pope Melish.

Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation intended to use emancipation as a threat, which he hoped would cause at least parts of the South to surrender before it went into effect. It also had the potential for sparking slave revolts in the South – though interestingly, this did not happen, though many farms had only white old men, women, and children left to defend against such revolts. However, at the Hampton Roads peace conference in February of 1865, Lincoln said that if the South ended the war, he would allow slavery to continue for decades longer, even after this proclamation.

We see how emancipation was used first as a threat, and then as a punishment for the South – without any mention of the welfare of black people – in one of Gen. William T. Sherman’s letters during the war:

“Three years ago, by a little reflection and patience, they could have had a hundred years of peace and prosperity, but they preferred war; very well. Last year they could have saved their slaves, but now it is too late. All the powers of earth cannot restore to them their slaves, any more than their dead grandfathers. Next year their lands will be taken, for in war we can take them, and rightfully, too, and in another year they may beg in vain for their lives. A people who will persevere in war beyond a certain limit ought to know the consequences. Many, many peoples with less pertinacity have been wiped out of national existence” (Letter to Major R.M. Sawyer, January 1864).

If Napoleon had issued an emancipation proclamation in Russia, when his invasion was failing to achieve the goals he originally had in mind when he launched it, his proclamation would not have made that war about ending serfdom. The emancipation of slaves in the South was only raised as an issue because the North was not winning the war on the battlefield, and there was the serious prospect of Britain and France intervening to help the South. The Emancipation Proclamation failed to induce the South to surrender, and it failed to inspire slave revolts, but it did succeed in preventing foreign intervention. So it was useful for winning the war. The South likewise was moving towards emancipation as a war measure. It was moving slower, however, only because it was a lot easier to proclaim someone else’s slaves to be free, than it was to come up with a workable plan to do it yourself, when you had to live with the consequences of it. The North never considered the consequences of emancipation. Consequently, slavery was ended in pretty much the worst possible way. Slaves were set free, but in the context of a devastated South, and with very little provision made for the former slaves, or for anyone else. For more information see the book "Sick from Freedom: African-American Illness and Suffering during the Civil War and Reconstruction," by Jim Downs (Oxford University Press, 2015).

So the Union was not waging a righteous crusade for selfless motives. Neither side consisted of angels, but Northerners were not more virtuous than Southerners. People don't choose the place or time of their birth. Northerners who didn't want to be around black people and spoke openly of their extinction as a race were not morally superior, simply because they were born in a region that was less conducive to the kind of agriculture that made slavery profitable and not in a region where the industrial revolution developed more slowly. The causes of the war were complicated, and while ending slavery was one good thing that came out the war, it was done in such a horrible way that it condemned most freedmen to a life of extreme poverty, in the midst of a region that had been devastated.

It should also be noted that the Union Army adopted a policy of making war on the civilian population of the South, and that this was a departure from the norms of warfare that had existed in the Christian west up to that time. There is a direct line from Sherman's march to the sea and his laying waste to South Carolina, and Sheridan's scorched earth devastation of the Shenandoah Valley, to the horrors of the First and Second World Wars, and our government dropping atomic bombs on Japan. Making war in this manner is effective, but the world is certainly not a better place as a result.

Everyone is free to come to their own conclusions on questions of history, but given the evidence I have seen, my conclusions seem reasonable to me. I would also add that I think one benefit of debunking the Righteous Cause myth would be that perhaps Americans would be more inclined to be skeptical, the next time our government tries to talk us into a war by painting one side as evil, and our motives as only unselfish and noble.

Reconstruction, Segregation, and Racial Violence

When you hear about Reconstruction, you might be tempted to think that this was sort of an earlier version of the Marshall Plan, but it was not. There was no effort to aid the South to rebuild, or even to prevent starvation. Rather, Southerners were subjected to punitive taxes that they were generally in no position to pay. Also, instead of encouraging racial harmony, radical Republicans sought to use freed Blacks as a means of keeping political power. Southern states which had helped to ratify the 13th Amendment, which ended slavery after the war, were then declared to be no longer states at all, but parts of military districts. The 14th Amendment granted black men the right to vote, while taking the right to vote away from the vast majority of Southern men who had supported the Confederacy during the war. Emancipation would have been a difficult transition to manage under the best of circumstances, but this made it far worse than necessary.

Dr. Sarkisian mentions Jim Crow laws but fails to mention that Jim Crow laws actually began in the North and were only adopted in the South in the late 19th century, as those who had grown up in the antebellum period passed from power, and the New South movement began to gain dominance, which was part of the Progressive movement. They wanted the South to be more like the North, and so adopted the Northern way of handling race relations. Granted, the North repealed these laws before they were ended in the South, but segregation did not end in the North when legal segregation ended. Today, cities like Chicago are still far more segregated than most Southern cities. For more information, see the book "The Strange Career of Jim Crow," by C. Vann Woodward (Oxford University Press, 1955).

The Houston area, where I live, is one of the most integrated metro areas in the United States. Just this past weekend a neighbor we had known since we moved to our neighborhood in 1995 passed away, unexpectedly. She was half Mexican and half German. Her husband is part Japanese and Caucasian. My wife (who is from the deep south of China) and I went over to comfort him and found him sitting on the bed of his pickup truck, while he was waiting for the coroner to arrive, and he was already being comforted by a black woman who lives next door, and a Mexican woman who lives across the street. This was a sad occasion, but this kind of interaction is fairly typical.

As for extrajudicial racial terror, I am sure Dr. Sarkisian is not unaware of the fact that this has also not been a unique feature of the South. In the century following the Civil War, there were many parts of the US outside of the South where there were very few black people, and so the fact that there was less violence there was not due to any excess of virtue on the part of the people there. Alexis de Tocqueville noted in his antebellum book Democracy in America, that hatred of black people was far more pronounced in those areas where there had never been slavery, than it was in those areas where it existed. During Reconstruction there was a lot of extrajudicial violence, because in some places you had what amounted to a low-grade guerrilla war, and there were paramilitary elements on both sides. Blacks who voted Democrat were often targeted by those who supported Republicans, and Blacks who supported Republicans were often targeted by those who supported Democrats. But these kinds of groups were fairly effectively squashed. The KKK was “reborn” with the first full length motion picture “The Birth of a Nation,” which had a huge cultural impact, and inspired many people to want to reestablish such organizations. These groups came to the South too, but they were actually more popular in the North and Midwest, and their ideology was more based on New England Know Nothingism, than on anything particularly Southern. For example, they were staunchly anti-Catholic, and antisemitic, while the Confederacy had many prominent Roman Catholics and Jews (including a Jewish Secretary of State), and the largest Jewish military cemetery outside of Israel in the world is a Jewish Confederate cemetery in Richmond, Virginia. Indiana was actually controlled at one time by the KKK. When the KKK marched through Washington, D.C. in 1925, they were holding American flags, not Confederate flags. Racial violence is horrible. The South certainly went through a period where this was a big problem, and as a result of this, along with the crushing poverty which persisted after the Civil War, between World War I and 1970, there was a big migration of black people out of the South, resulting in only 52% of the black population remaining in the South at its lowest point. It should also be noted, however, that there was a big migration of white people out of the South during the same period, and for the same economic reasons (my father's family being among them). Since the 1970’s, the trend in black migration has been reversing, and with ever increasing momentum. Obviously, we are not suggesting that everything about the South or Southern history is good, or that there are no problems that remain, but these were not uniquely Southern problems. And these are problems that are generally things of the past in the South.

And to leave no room for misunderstanding -- any group that espouses racial hatred is evil. Any group that encourages violence against people based on their race, religion, or their political views is evil. And that goes for the KKK, Neo-Nazis, Antifa, the Black Panthers, those who promote Critical Race Theory, or any other similar groups or ideologies.

Is Dixie Racist?

Black people in the South have generally not been in favor of removing Southern symbols from public spaces. They have not historically been offended by the word “Dixie,” or even the song “Dixie.” I remember my 5th Grade teacher, who was a black woman, leading our class in singing Dixie, and no one found it odd. Ella Fitzgerald produced the song “Strictly from Dixie,” in which she proudly identified herself as being from there. There is a black Gospel group that is fairly well known, called “The Dixie Hummingbirds.” The Dukes of Hazard was a popular TV show that regularly featured a car known as "the General Lee," which played Dixie every time they beeped their horn, and had a big Confederate flag on it, and black people were not generally offended by it, and enjoyed watching it in very large numbers. I don't think we should allow Cultural Marxists to continue to dictate what we can say, or what we can think, and Dixie is not racist just because they say so. It is simply a term of endearment for the region, and the song is simply a song about loving it, and there is nothing wrong with that. 

Going South

I’m not at all sure why Dr. Sarkisian finds the prospect of St. Vladimir Seminary moving to the South problematic. It is a growing part of the country, and clearly the center of gravity in Orthodox America is shifting from the Northeast to the South. Churches in the North are often closing, while Churches in the South are growing and multiplying. When I was a relatively new convert, and returned to live in Texas in 1992, there was only one ROCOR parish in the state, and there were not more than a handful of parishes in the Houston area. Now there are nine ROCOR parishes in Texas, and more than 20 parishes in the greater Houston area.

It is not racist to notice that New York is a very expensive state to live in, with very burdensome regulations. It is not racist to prefer small government, low taxes, and an affordable cost of living. I am glad that I live in a state that now has a constitutional ban on any state or local official shutting down worship services, for any reason. We have relatively low crime, and most of the people are nice. And that is why so many people are moving here. I just hope that they keep in mind why they are moving here, and don't vote for people who want to recreate the problems that they are fleeing from.

It is not the contention of anyone associated with the Ludwell Orthodox Fellowship that Orthodoxy is only suited for those in red states, or for any particular ethnic group. But we live here, and we want to see it spread here. The suggestion that we are giving a safe harbor to white supremacy is a lie. I have written and preached fairly extensively against racism. I suspect my parish is in the higher percentile when it comes to the ratio of “people of color” (several of whom are my family members) to white people. I am happy to see that there are groups that are trying to specifically reach black people with the faith. I do what I can to do that myself too, along with anyone else whom I can reach. I don’t think skin color is especially important. For the Church, there are only two races: the fallen race of Adam, and the Christian race. But culture is important, and it is important that people have a sense of rootedness. Rootless people are what Marxists try to create, so that they can mold them into what they think they ought to be. People with roots have the ability to resist.

There are reasons why the South is generally more religious than the rest of the country. It is true that this is being lost in some areas, partly due to people from outside of the South moving here, and partly because of the general cultural rot. There is a trend away from more conservative theology and practice in many non-Orthodox denominations too -- but that is one of the reasons why Orthodoxy is growing, because people who feel like their church has abandoned them are open to Orthodoxy now in a way that they would not have been 20 or 30 years ago.

Cultural Marxism and Critical Race Theory

I am aware that people on the left try to argue that Cultural Marxism is just a conspiracy theory, but this is simply not true. Cultural Marxism comes out of the work of several Marxist philosophers who began to realize that Marx's theory that the proletariat would eventually rise and overthrow their societies and establish Communism was not panning out. They came to realize that even the poor identified with the cultural institutions that supported the established order, and so they began to work on ways to separate people from their loyalty to these institutions. Critical Race Theory is but one expression of Critical Theory. Critical Theory generally seeks to analyze what it studies in terms of Marxist theories, but instead of focusing on economic issues primarily, they focus on issues of race, or gender, and then seek to identify who the oppressors are, and who are the oppressed in any given context, and to interpret their subject matter in ways that liberate the oppressed. It promotes activist scholarship, that throws off any effort at objectivity, in favor of an approach that advocates for certain groups and agendas favored by the radical left. For more information, see the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, s.v. Critical Theory; In Our Time (from BBC4): S12/16 The Frankfurt School (Jan 14 2010); and Cynical Theories: How Activist Scholarship Made Everything about Race, Gender, and Identity -- and Why this Harms Everybody, by Helen Pluckrose & James Lindsay (Pitchstone Publishing, 2020).

Marxist theories are not developed for nothing. Marxist theories are designed to bring about Marxism. Marxism is inherently coercive, and its history in actual practice shows that it is not just wrong -- it is evil. It's not just that it doesn't work – it's that it results in death and misery on a massive scale. It ostensibly is designed to bring about liberation, but in actual practice it brings about slavery of the mind and body. It attempts to destroy human society as it actually is, and to replace it with one based on an inhuman ideology. 

Dr. Sarkisian mocks parents who do not want their children taught Critical Race Theory, but CRT is not designed to bring about racial harmony. CRT is designed to stoke racial animosity, and to use it as a wedge to overthrow the system we have, in favor of the system that they want to replace it with. I suppose that there may be a lot of ignorant people who promote CRT without realizing its actual purpose, but you don't have to look very hard to discover who developed it, and why. CRT is not against racism -- it is racism. It teaches some children to feel virtuous because of their status as victims because of their race, and it teaches other children to feel ashamed because of their status as "oppressors" because of their race. We should teach history, but we should do so accurately and with balance, and we should focus on things that bring us together, rather than on things that divide us. We should be encouraging reconciliation. We should be teaching our children about real virtue and inspiring them to strive to be virtuous in reality, rather than to virtue signal, and then bask in fake warm fuzzy feelings. No society is perfect, but instead of trying to burn it all down, because there are flaws, we should work on the flaws. Marxists don't want to fix the problems – they want to intensify the problems, in order to impose their evil ideology on everyone else.

I think few would suggest that we should teach Mexican students that their culture is evil, because their ancestors practiced slavery, and engaged in human sacrifice. Few would say to Arabs that their ancestors were evil because their ancestors practiced slavery (and some still do). Few would say that West African children should be taught that their tribal culture is evil, because their ancestors sold other West Africans into slavery. In each of those cases we would think it perfectly legitimate for them to celebrate the good things their ancestors did, and the good things in the culture. Why should Americans in general, or Southerners in particular be treated any differently? Teaching people to hate their culture or to hate their ancestors is evil. We are taught to honor our parents, but that obligation doesn't stop at the immediate generation of ancestors prior to our own. That doesn't mean that we don't talk about bad things from the past, but we shouldn't fixate only on the bad things, and ignore all the good things either.

I am married to someone who was born during the cultural revolution in China. Her mother had to be raised by relatives, because the Communist murdered most of her family, because her father was guilty of being a successful merchant. My father-in-law was nearly worked to death as part of a forced labor policy -- which was slavery, but one of the worst examples of it the world has seen. He was malnourished, witnessed horrible summary executions, and he was only released from forced labor because he was at the point of death. Fortunately, my mother-in-law felt sorry for him, and nursed him back to health. Mao intentionally starved millions of his own people, because a terrorized population is a more compliant population. My wife's family had relatives who had made it to Hong Kong, and somehow, they were allowed to go to Hong Kong to join them, and then, not long before I met her in High School, they were able to immigrate to the US. 

Should China ever free itself from Communist control, future generations will not only lament the massive costs in human lives and suffering the Communists have inflicted on them, but they will bemoan what was lost to their history, and culture. They will condemn those who senselessly burned historical texts, and destroyed countless works of art, monuments, and historical buildings, because they did not comport to Marxist ideology. Were there things in Chinese culture that needed to be fixed? Yes. Were there many abuses throughout Chinese history? Yes. However, Chinese civilization is one of the great treasures of the world, and you don't burn it all down, simply to fix some problems... you work on the problems, while embracing the good. We should learn from their mistakes, rather than following down the same road.

Since becoming Orthodox, I have gotten to know many other people who experienced Marxism in real life rather than just in theory, and have heard many similarly horrible stories of life in the hands of Marxist utopians. I have never met anyone who actually experienced Marxism that would recommend it, but unfortunately for us, academics love utopian theories, and don't care that they have never accomplished anything good in the real world.

I don't know whether Dr. Sarkisian is a true believer in Marxism, or if he is merely willing to go along with it for the ride because in American academia today it helps one to fit in. But promoting an evil ideology is evil, whether you are doing it out of cowardice, or doing it out of conviction. Among the Orthodox in America, many of those whose parents or grandparents suffered at the hands of Marxists have apparently not been taught about how evil it is. We need to educate our people and be on guard against this growing problem -- which is a real danger and "threat to the integrity of democracy in the United States, and also to the moral integrity of the Orthodox jurisdictions found in this country."

See also Part II: What Happens When "Scholars" Fail to Address Arguments and Evidence Presented to Them

For more information see: 

Sermon: Cultural Marxism (November 26, 2018)

Sermon: Burning Down the House (June 7, 2020)

Saturday, March 17, 2018

Answers to Objections to the Statement Against Racism

I recently took part in the posting of a statement against racism that has sparked quite a reaction. The reaction has largely been positive, but not entirely, and so I will address the most common criticisms I have seen so far. Of course not everyone who objected to parts of the statement, objected to its main point, which was that racism was wrong; and so I want it to be clear up front that many of the objections come from people of good will, who simply didn't like the way some things were stated. On the other hand, the reaction from a number of real racists has, in my opinion, only served to substantiate the concerns expressed in the statement.


1. Was such a Statement Necessary?

One certainly could exaggerate the problem of racism in the Orthodox Church, and I think many have done that. However, I am not sure exactly how many vocal advocates of racism there have to be out there, who claim to be Orthodox, before we can say a response is necessary. However, I think when you have someone like Matthew Raphael Johnson, who claims to be an Orthodox Priest, and who has a small fan base of ostensibly Orthodox people, and who has a podcast on Radio Aryan (an overtly Neo-Nazi website, which celebrates, for example, the heroes of the Waffen SS), and who engages in public demonstrations with Neo-Nazis and Klansmen, there is a problem that needs to be addressed.




Matthew Raphael Johnson, in the helmet with the shield with the green cross on it. Note the Klansman standing in front of him, with the KKK cross on his shirt. This was at a "White Lives Matter" rally, in October of 2017.

On the one hand, I don't think we should go on a witch hunt, in search of people we suspect of being racists, without any substantial evidence, but on the other hand, when you have Orthodox people showing up at Neo-Nazi rallies, singing Nazi songs, and using Nazi imagery and rhetoric, there is a problem (aside from the fact that they can't carry a tune in bucket).

I personally have had quite a few discussions with these people on various forums, and we are not just talking about one or two kooks here. I wish we were, but Matthew Raphael Johnson has actively been recruiting white nationalists to join the Orthodox Church. Now if they joined the Orthodox after repenting of their racism, that would be great, but that is not what is happening, and so we can deal with this problem now, while it is still relatively small, or we can let it grow and fester, and have a much bigger problem on our hands.


2. Is Race an Artificial Construct?

When we say that something is an artificial construct, this does not mean that it has no connection with observable reality, or that the observable reality that it addresses is not real. It means that the construct is something that we impose on what we observe as a means of understanding what we see.

There are some distinctions that we make that are very clearly called for by the facts in nature. For example, when we say that water has three forms: gas, liquid, and solid, these are distinctions that arise directly from what we observe, and you can't make much of a case that you could choose to look at water differently, and ignore these distinctions. Also sex is not an artificial construct. Men and women are physically distinct, and these differences are essential distinctions to human reproduction. You cannot naturally produce a child without one man and one woman making that happen, and so there is nothing artificial about these differences.

On the other hand, take the question of color. We cannot deny that there are varieties of color. But exactly how we view color is somewhat of an artificial construct. There really are countless variations in color, but in traditional Chinese culture, for example, they speak of there being five colors: green and blue are seen as the same general color, then you have red, yellow, white, and black -- which correspond to the 5 basic elements of traditional Chinese culture: wood, fire, earth, metal, and water. Chinese people see the same colors everyone else see, but in our culture, we have never sorted out color in precisely that same way.

Another example is tropical cyclones. No one would deny that they are real, least of all anyone who lives along the gulf coast, but we sort them out with an artificial construct. We speak of tropical depressions, tropical storms, and then we have hurricanes, which we further divide into 5 categories. There is nothing in nature itself that says that when the average wind speed of such a storm goes from 73 miles per hour to 74 miles per hour, that some greatly significant line has been crossed, but at 73 mph, you have a tropical storm, and at 74 mph, you have a hurricane. Now this artificial construct is certainly useful. If I hear on the news that a category 5 hurricane is headed my way, I am a lot more concerned about it than I am if I hear a tropical storm is heading my way, but depending on the storm, tropical storms can do a lot more damage than some hurricane might -- Tropical Storm Allison, being a case in point.

No one would deny that when they see a white person and a black person, they are seeing skin colors that reflect genes from different regional gene pools. But how we choose to view the various genetic traits we see in people is nevertheless an artificial construct, which we culturally impose on real observable differences. If you take, for example, the traditional racial classifications used in the United States, we usually speak of Caucasians/Whites. African Americans/blacks, American Indians/Native Americans, Asians and Pacific Islanders, Hispanics, and "Other". Now, we could choose to say that Asians and Pacific Islanders should be grouped with American Indians, because they are all classified as "Mongoloid" peoples. But we could also choose to make many further distinctions, because as a matter of fact, there are a lot of obvious differences in appearance between the average Chinese person, and the average Navajo. But there is nothing in nature that says you should stop there, because even in China, there are many regional differences in appearance that Chinese people notice. Even I can usually see the difference between Chinese people, Koreans, and Japanese... though obviously, because these groups have not been entirely isolated from one another, it is not always easy to tell, and many times you would guess wrong about their country of origin. Also, many Chinese people are relatively light skinned, and many people from further south in Asia are fairly dark skinned. And the fact that racial distinctions are artificial is even clearer, when we consider that a person who has 25% African DNA and 75% European DNA is spoken of as being "Black". There is nothing in science or nature that demands such a conclusion, but this is often how our culture chooses to look at it. But we could choose to look at such a person as white, or we could put them into another racial category altogether. Science does not dictate how we view such a person -- our cultural choices do. In the light of DNA, scientist generally agree that race is an an artificial construct (see Megan Gannon, Race Is a Social Construct, Scientists Argue, Scientific American, February 5, 2016). And while using this construct to provide quick descriptions of people may be useful at times -- for example, when you are trying to clarify who you are referring to, it may be convenient to say that you are speaking about "that old Asian man wearing a blue sweater." However, racial distinctions are not useful constructs in Church. You will not find a single canon of the Church that employs the construct of race. And so, as Christians, while we do make some use of racial distinctions in our speech, we should understand that these are not essential distinctions, and that we should not allow those distinctions to divide us, especially when it comes to our brothers and sisters in the Church..

See Also:

On the Non-Existence of Race, by Fr. Cassian Sibley


3. St. Paul, St. Augustine, and St. John of Shanghai

The statement began with this citation:
"The Holy Apostle Paul, in his speech on the Areopagus in Athens, unequivocally asserted that God “hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on the face of the earth” (Acts 17:26)."
Some have tried to suggest that what follows this citation negates the point we were making: "...and hath determined the times before appointed, and the bounds of their habitation." And so the suggestion here is that St. Paul was actually affirming racial separation here. The problem is that you will not find any Church Father that reads the text that way. In context, we have St. Paul, who lived most of his life as Jew living among non-Jews. He is in this text addressing non-Jews with the message that in the past they did not know the true God, but that God was now calling them too to repent and embrace Christ. In that context, is it likely that St. Paul was trying to affirm the separation of the races? If that was his point, he contradicted himself, because in Galatians 2, he speaks of how he rebuked St. Peter to his face for separating himself from the gentile believers out of fear of Jewish Christians advocating a strict observance of the Mosaic ceremonial law:
"But when Peter was come to Antioch, I withstood him to the face, because he was to be blamed. For before that certain came from James, he did eat with the Gentiles: but when they were come, he withdrew and separated himself, fearing them which were of the circumcision" (Galatians 2:11-12).
This would be a rather strange stand for St. Paul to take, if he believed that God had established a bound for the Jewish nation, and they were not to mix with non-Jews. Jews understood eating with someone to be very important communal act, and so would not eat with pagans, and believed that they were defiled if they did eat with them. And so when St. Paul drew attention to St. Peter's change of practice with regard to eating with gentile Christians, this was not a small matter, or an incidental detail.



Matthew Raphael Johnson cited St. Augustine's interpretation of Galatians 3:28, as if to suggest that St. Augustine was advocating for racial separatism, because he says that although in Christ there is "neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female," this distinctions remain in this life. However, not only does St. Augustine not address the question of separating people based on ethnicity (he only states that ethnic distinctions remain in this life), St. Augustine is a case of ethnic mixing himself. St. Augustine was a North African from what is now Algeria, and his mother, St. Monica was almost certainly of Berber heritage, because her name is, as a matter of fact, a Berber name.

On the views of St. John of Shanghai, see: The Colors of the Russian Church.


4. What about racism against white people?

The statement condemns all forms of racism. No where does the statement suggest that only white people can be racist, or that they are never the objects of racism. It did, however, specifically cite one example of contemporary racism:
"The adoption of fascistic imagery, rhetoric, and tactics by groups that claim to represent “white nationalism” in the United States is a case in point, and constitutes a clear step in the direction of the extremes of which the Russian Church warns us."
Are white people sometimes the object of racism? Yes. It was not the intention of the statement to get into who is the biggest victim group of the day. However, the fact that there is a small group of racists who use fascistic imagery, rhetoric, and tactics who have publicly identified themselves and thus their cause with the Orthodox Church was the reason why this specific example was mentioned. I suppose we could have also mentioned Hutu violence against the Tutsis, but I don't think this was an example very relevant to the people who will likely ever read the statement in question.

Matthew Raphael Johnson's podcast cited crime statistics that indicate black people commit crimes against white people at a higher rate than white people commit crimes against black people. Obviously, in the past, violence was more often directed in the opposite direction. Certainly, where there are black people advocating violence or hatred against white people, this should be condemned just as vigorously as when white people advocate violence or hatred against black people. It doesn't matter who is engaging in racism... it is wrong 100% of the time.

However, even if black people were rounding up white people and putting them into gas chambers, or if white people were rounding up black people for the same purpose, this would not be a justification for hating even those guilty of the actual crimes. As Christians we are told that we are to love our enemies and even those that abuse us:
"Ye have heard that it hath been said, Thou shalt love thy neighbour, and hate thine enemy. But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you; that ye may be the children of your Father which is in heaven: for he maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust" (Matthew 5:43-45).
If this is true even of those who we know hate us, and from whom we have personally received actual abuse, it is all the more true of people who are not guilty of such things, but just happen to look like those who are. This does not mean that we cannot speak out against incidents of injustice where they actually occur... in fact, we should, regardless of who is doing it, or who they are doing it against.

I would recommend the reading of an old essay by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Repentance and Self-Limitation in the Life of Nations (found in the book "From Under the Rubble," beginning at page 105, and available online). When there is a history of ethnic animosity, the only way forward is repentance and reconciliation.

See Also: Hate and Racism.


5. Systemic and Institutional Racism

Some responses took exception to the reference to "systemic and institutional injustice" in the following statement:
"All of this obviously precludes any personal hatred, prejudice, or resentment of others on account of their “race” or nationality, and it must also lead Orthodox Christians to reject and oppose systemic or institutional injustice against racial or national minorities."
Some people claimed that this language was Marxist in origin. This document was a collaborative effort of four clergymen, and while I was not the one who suggested that particular phrase, I asked myself if there was such a thing as systemic or institutional injustice, and when you consider the Jim Crow system that once prevailed in much of the US, I couldn't deny that this is a fair description of that system. Today, in the United States, that kind of discrimination is illegal, but while I would agree that such injustices are far rarer than they once were in our country, I am not so sure that there are not some remnants that black people still encounter, but since they are illegal, they would also be harder to prove, because those engaging in such behavior would obviously have reasons to camouflage their behavior. But there are clearly instances of systemic and institutional injustice at play elsewhere in the world -- just consider the treatment of Christians in the most of the Middle East, for example. The statement said nothing about how pervasive such things are, or where they were to be found, only that we should reject such things, and it seems to me that this is something we should agree upon, though I can understand being concerned about how freely the charge of racism is thrown around these days. But if we want to be taken seriously when we object to the abuse of the charge, we need to clearly stand against those who are actually guilty of the real thing.

6. Antisemitism

I have been asked why specific mention was made of antisemitism. It was my idea to make that reference, and I suggested it because some don't think of it as racism, when in fact it is. It is also a form of racism that Orthodox Christians are, unfortunately, not entirely unfamiliar with. St. Paul tells us that one day we will see those Jews who have not already embraced Christ come to faith in Him. I want to hasten that day, rather than make it harder for Jews to come to faith in Christ because they experience hostility from people who claim to be Christians.

How would I define antisemitism? I would define it as the vilification of Jews, simply because they are Jews, and the promotion of hostility towards them as a group, based on who they are, rather than what they as individuals actually believe or have done. So for example, George Soros is seen as proof of Jewish conspiracy theories, because he has lots of money, supports evil things, and has a Jewish background -- though he is an atheist. Jeff Bezos is just a powerful liberal, with lots of money, who supports evil things, but isn't lumped in with Soros only because he doesn't have a Jewish background. I would prefer to just focus on criticizing the evil that people promote, regardless of whether they have Jewish ancestry or not. Criticizing Judaism is not antisemitic.Criticizing the policies of the state of Israel is not antisemitic. Criticizing the evil that some Jews do is not antisemitic.Lumping all Jews together, when criticizing the evils that some Jews do is antisemitic. Questioning the intentions of someone who is Jewish, because maybe they are part of the grand Jewish conspiracy, simply because they are Jewish, is antisemitic.

Some have tried to dismiss the idea that antisemitism is a sin by citing St. John Chrysostom's homilies "Against the Jews". But for one thing, the proper title of these homilies is not “Against the Jews." The translation by Paul Harkin states the following:
“Traditionally these homilies have been called Kata Ioudaion, which in Latin becomes Adversus Iudaeos, i.e., Against the Jews. This title misrepresents the contents of the Discourses, which clearly show that Chrysostom’s primary targets were members of his own congregation who continued to observe Jewish feasts and fasts. Since the Discourses were delivered in a Christian church to a Christian congregation with few, if any, Jews actually present, I have not hesitated to add “Christians” to the title. That Chrysostom’s polemics are aimed at Judaizers is borne out also in titles found in earlier editions and in the manuscripts. All these points will be discussed in their proper place in the introduction” (The Fathers of the Church: St. John Chrysostom, Discources Against Judaizing Christians, trans. Paul W. Harkins (Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 1979), p. x).
In footnote 47, on page xxxi, Harkin states:
“This [Adversus Iudaeos] is the Latin translation of the title given to the homilies in PG 48.843. The Benedictine editor, Montfaucon, gives a footnote (reprinted ibid.) which states that six MSS and [Henry] Savile [in his edition (1612) of Chrysostom] have at the head of this homily: “A discourse against the Jews; but it was delivered against those who were Judaizing and keeping the fasts with them [i.e., the Jews].” This note is not altogether accurate because Savile, for Hom. 27 of Vol. 6 (which is Disc. I among the Adversus Iudaeos in PG and in this translation), gives (p. 366) the title: “Chrysostom’s Discourse Against Those Who Are Judaizing and Observing Their Fasts.” In Vol. 8 (col. 798) Savile states that he has emended Hoeschel’s edition of this homily with the help of two Oxford MSS, one from the Corpus Christi College and the other from the New College; he must have gotten his title from any or all of these sources. Savile gives all eight of the homilies Adverus Iudaeos (Vol. 6.312-88) but in the order IV-VIII (wich are entitled Kata Ioudaion, i.e. Adversus Iudaeos), I (with the title given above), III and II (with the title affixed to them in our translation). Because of the titles in both some MSS and editions and because of the arguments which will be set forth in this introduction, we feel justified in calling this work Against Judaizing Christians rather than giving it the less irenic and somewhat misleading traditional title Against the Jews.
In the book “John Chrysostom and the Jews: Rhetoric and Reality in the Late 4th Century, by Robert L. Wilken (University of California Press: Berkeley, 1983), a very compelling case is made that applying the modern label of antisemitism onto St. John Chrysostom is anachronistic. He particularly focuses on the rhetorical genre that St. John employed, and points out that St. John was using the genre of psogos (or invective):
“The psogos was supposed to present unrelieved denigration of the subject. As one ancient teacher of rhetoric put it, the psogos is “only condemnation” and sets forth only the “bad things about someone” (Aphthonius Rhet. Graeci 2.40)…. In psogos, the rhetor used omission to hide the subject’s good traits or amplification to exaggerate his worsts features, and the cardinal rule was never to say anything positive about the subject. Even “when good things are done they are proclaimed in the worst light” (Aristides Rhet. Graeci 2.506). In an encomium, one passes over a man’s faults in order to praise him, and in a psogos, one passed over his virtues to defame him. Such principles are explicit in the handbooks of the rhetors, but an interesting passage from the church historian Socrates, writing in the mid fifth century, shows that the rules for invective were simply taken for granted by men and women of the late Roman world. In discussing Libanius’s [St. John’s Pagan instructor in Rhetoric] orations in praise of  the emperor Julian [the Apostate], Socrates explains that Libanius magnifies and exaggerates Julians virtues because he is an “outstanding sophist” (Hist. eccl. 3.23). The point is that one should not expect a fair presentation in a psagos, for that is not its purpose. The psogos is designed to attack someone, says Socrates, and is taught by the sophist in the schools as one of the rudiments of their skills…. Echoing the same rhetorical background, Augustine said that, in preparing an encomium on the emperor, he intended “that it should include a great many lies,” and that the audience would know “how far from the truth they were” (Conf. 6.6).” (p. 112).
Another important point of context that Wilkens highlights is the reign of Julian the Apostate, and the way he used the Jews (and was used by them) to undercut Christianity. Julian had even planned to rebuild the Temple in Jerusalem, primarily because he believed it would refute Christ’s prophesies about the destruction of the Temple. This happened when St. John was a young man, and so Christians at this time had no reason to believe that they had a firm position in society that could not be overturned in a short period of time. Thus polemics against the Jews were not the polemics of a group with a firm grip on power, but the polemics of a group that had good reasons to fear what the future might bring.
“The Roman Empire in the fourth century was not the world of Byzantium or medieval Europe. The institutions of traditional Hellenic culture and society were still very much alive in John Chrysostom’s day. The Jews were a vital and visible presence in Antioch and elsewhere in the Roman Empire, and they continued to be a formidable rival to the Christians. Judaizing Christians were widespread. Christianity was still in the process of establishing its place within the society and was undermined by internal strife and apathetic adherents. Without an appreciation of this setting, we cannot understand why John preached the homilies and why he responds to the Judaizers with such passion and fervor. The medieval image of the Jew should not be imposed on antiquity. Every act of historical understanding is an act of empathy. When I began to study John Chrysostom’s writings on the Jews, I was inclined to judge what he said in light of the unhappy history of Jewish-Christian relations and the sad events in Jewish history in modern times. As much as I feel a deep sense of moral responsibility for the attitudes and actions of Christians toward the Jews, I am no longer ready to project these later attitudes unto the events of the fourth century. No matter how outraged Christians feel over the Christian record of dealing with the Jews, we have no license to judge the distant past on the basis of our present perceptions of events of more recent times’ (pp. 162-163).
Wilken’s book is a key text to properly understanding these homilies. It should also be pointed out that St. John Chrysostom was also dealing with Jews who were extremely anti-Christian, and who blasphemed Christ. Consider the following:

In the Shemoneh Esrei, we find the following prayer:
“And for the Slanderers let there be no hope; and may all the heretics perish in an instant; and may all the enemies of Your people be cut down speedily. May you speedily uproot, smash and cast down the wanton sinners, destroy them, lower them, humble them, speedily in our days. Blessed are You, HASHEM, Who breaks enemies and humbles wanton sinners.” (Hebrew text on page 112, English on page 113, of The Complete Artscroll Siddur (Nusach Sefard), trans. By Rabbi Nosson Sherman, published by Mesorah Publications, Ltd., Brooklyn, New York, 1985).
This same translation provides a commentary on the word “slanderer”, which reads:
“Chronologically, this is the nineteenth blessing of the Shemoneh Esrei; it was instituted in Yavneh, during the tenure of Rbban Gamliel II as Nassi of Israel, some time after the destruction of the Second emple. The blessing was composed in response to the threats of such heretical Jewish sects as the Sadducees, Boethusians, Essenes, and the early Christians. They tried to lead Jews astray through example and persuasion, and they used their political power to oppress observant Jews and to slander them to the anti-Semitic Roman Government. In this atmosphere, Rabban Gamliel felt the need to compose a prayer against heretics and slanderers, and to incorporate it in the Shemoneh Esri so the populace would be aware of the danger” (Artscroll Siddur, pp. 112-113).
Now, lest you dismiss this as the opinions of an isolated source, let’s look at another text on this same prayer:
“From time to time, as we all know, the survival of the Jewish people is threatened. Threats may arise from hostile forces without or from traitors within. Such threats are sometimes aimed to destroy us physically, and sometimes to undermine us spiritually. In one place the Talmud indicates that this blessing, which was directed against heretical groups, was fixed at Yavneh under the leadership of Rabbi Gamliel the Elder during the second century c.e. (Berakhot 28b) and constituted the nineteenth blessing of the Shemoneh Esrei. Eliezer levy, however, argues from sources elsewhere in the Talmud (Yer. Berakhot 2:4) that this blessing was one of the original eighteen prescribed by Ezra. The opening words of the blessing were then Al Haminim (“For the heretics, let there be no hope”), and it was directed against the hostile Samaritan sect. Later, when the Samaritan threat declined, the blessing fell into disuse. When a new threat of religious heresy arose with the Sadducees (Tzedukim), the blessing was revived with a new opening that mentioned the Sadducees: “For the Sadducees, let there be no hope” With the growth of new heretic sects (among them Jews who adopted Christian beliefs) who informed on fellow Jews to Roman authorities, this blessing assumed new urgency and needed to be restated, this time at Yavneh, as the Talmud indeed relates” (Rabbi Hayim Halevy Donin, “To Pray as a Jew” (Basic Books, 1980) p. 92f).
And for an example of non-Christian Jewish blasphemies against Christ, see the text Toldot Yeshu. When you read that text, you can better understand what would motivate St. John to preach such sermons to denounce the anti-christian views of such people. But obviously not all Jews hold such views, particularly in our time and culture. Also, St. John was waging a war of ideas and theology. He never advocated violence against non-Christian Jews, or anyone else he disagreed with, and certainly had no desire to keep Jews from becoming Christians, because he thought they had some racial or genetic flaws that made them unfit to become Christians. St. John Chrysostom's criticisms were religious -- not racial, and not ethnic.

But unfortunately, I have heard antisemitic comments made about Jews who were even Orthodox Christians. No one familiar with St. John Chrysostom's homilies would suggest that St. John would wink at such treatment of those who are fellow believers. And if you look at St. John Chrysostom's 19th Homily on Romans, he speaks about those Jews who are believers, and those who will one day become believers. and these are obviously not at all the target of his homilies against Judaizing Christians.



And while St. John Chrysostom spoke at a time when Jewish persecution of Christians was still a living memory, Metropolitan Anthony (Khrapovitsky) spoke at a time when Christian persecution of Jews was an ongoing problem in Russia, and he spoke against it in terms no less vociferous than St. John Chrysostom. Hear the conclusion of his sermon Against the Pogroms:
"O Christians, fear to offend the sacred, even though rejected, tribe. God's recompense will fall upon those evil people who have shed blood which is of the same race as the Theanthropos, his most pure mother, apostles and prophets. Do not suppose that this blood was sacred only in the past, but understand that even in the future reconciliation to the divine nature awaits them (2 Peter 1:4), as Christ's chosen vessel further testifies, "For I would not, brethren, that ye should be ignorant of this mystery, lest ye should be wise in your own conceits; that blindness in part is happened to Israel, until the fullness of the Gentiles be come in. And so all Israel shall be saved: as it is written. There shall come out of Sion the Deliverer, and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob: For this is my covenant unto them, when I shall take away their sins" (Romans 11:25-27).
Let the savage know that they have slain future Christians who were yet in the loins of the present day Jews; let them know that they have shown themselves to be bankrupt opponents of God's providence, persecutors of a people beloved by God, even after its rejection (Romans 11:28).
How sinful is enmity against Jews, based on an ignorance of God's law, and how shall it be forgiven when it arises from abominable and disgraceful impulses. The robbers of the Jews did not do so as revenge for opposition to Christianity, rather they lusted for the property and possessions of others. Under the thin guise of zeal for the faith, they served the demon of covetousness. They resembled Judas who betrayed Christ with a kiss while blinded with the sickness of greed, but these murderers, hiding themselves behind Christ's name, killed His kinsmen according to the flesh in order to rob them.
When have we beheld such fanaticism? In Western Europe during the middle ages, heretics and Jews were shamefully executed, but not by mobs intent on robbing them.*
How can one begin to teach people who stifle their own conscience and mercy, who snuff out all fear of God and, departing from the holy temple even on the bright day of Christ's Resurrection, a day dedicated to forgiveness and love, but which they i rededicate to robbery and murder?
O believers in God and His Christ! Fear the Lord's judgment in behalf of His people. Fear to offend the inheritors of the promise, even though they have been renounced. We are not empowered to judge them for their unbelief; the Lord and not we will judge. We, looking upon their zeal even though it is "not according to knowledge" (Romans 10:2) would do better to contemplate their fathers: the righteous Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph and Moses, David and Samuel and Elijah, who rose to heaven still in the flesh. Look upon Isaiah who accepted voluntary death for the faith, Daniel who stopped the mouths of beasts in a lions' den, and the Maccabee martyrs who died with joy for the hope of resurrections. Let us not beat, slay and rob people, but soften their hardness toward Christ and Christians by means of our own fulfillment of the law of God. Let us multiply our prayer, love, fasting and alms and our concern for those who are suffering, let us be zealous about the true essence of the faith; let our light so shine before people that they may glorify our heavenly father and Christ. Let us overcome unbelief and impiousness among Christians first, and then concern ourselves with the Jews, "And he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: Whom the heavens must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began." (Acts 3:20-21)."
One other curious fact about antisemitism and racism, is that many who have criticized the idea that race is an artificial social construct, also show a distinct antipathy against Jews. When I have pointed out that if there are three primary races, the Jews would obviously have to be classified as Caucasians, because they are obviously neither Negroids or Mongoloids, the response I have gotten has been "But they don't identify as White." So I guess they do see race as an artificial construct, at least when it comes to the Jews.

See Also:

Was St. John Chrysostom Anti-Semite?, by Presbytera Eugenia Constantinou

Sermon: Hate and Racism

Sermon: The Church of Smyrna and the Synagogue of Satan (Revelation 2:8-11)


7. Border Security

Several critics of the statement suggested that it somehow argued that we should have no borders, however the statement did not address that issue. There is no official Orthodox position on how much border security a country ought to have, and so different people are free to form their own opinions. Personally, I am very much in favor of having tight controls on our borders, and more reasonable limits on immigration than we currently have, but this is a question of what is the wisest course for our country, not a matter of theological or moral principle.


8. Confusing race and nation

Some suggested that arguments that race is not an objectively definable reality promotes one world government and the erasure of all cultural distinctions. One has to read things into the statement that it does not say, and ignore what it actually does say to come to that conclusion. Nations and ethnicities are concepts found in Scripture... but nations and ethnicities are not race. I know a lot of very Asian looking people who are culturally Russian, speak the Russian language, are Russian Orthodox, and consider themselves to be Russian. The American nation is certainly not a race, though we share a language (English) and we share an American culture (although this has been fragmenting in recent decades).

I don't support the erasure of cultural or linguistic differences, nor do I support a one world government, and in fact we affirmed that there was nothing wrong with a desire to preserve ones culture or to defend one's nation.


9. Cultural Marxism

The claim that this statement reflected Cultural Marxism is perhaps one of the more comical criticisms, because Cultural Marxism is pretty much the opposite of what we were arguing for. Cultural Marxists want to promote racial division as a means of empowering the oppressed and bringing down their oppressors. We are arguing that we should look past racial divisions and see in each other the common image of God we all have as human beings. We don't want people judged by the group that they are identified with racially, but rather we want to see each other as individuals that either are our brothers and sisters in Christ, or if not, as people that we want to make our brothers and sisters in Christ.

As to the more blunt accusation that I have received that I am a communist, I only last month preached an entire sermon specifically against communism, and have spoken and written against it with regularity. I hate communism with the intensity of a thousand burning suns. Racism, however, is just a more primitive form of collectivism, and both communism and racism are evil, and so it is possible to be opposed to both communism and racism without any contradiction whatsoever.

The only more ridiculous accusation that I have seen is the claim that I hate white people. I will only respond by saying that some of my best friend are white people.

See also: Cultural Marxism and Public Orthodoxy