The way a nation thinks of itself is connected to its acceptance of religion, or absence of religion, British political writer Melanie Phillips said at 极乐禁地 Wednesday, Oct. 6.
She said that she sees America鈥檚 pride in itself as being wound up in biblical values. 鈥淔rom where I sit, America remains a religious country,鈥 said Phillips, who views her native Britain as being very secular. 鈥淪tudies say Britain is a post-religious nation, and paganism is increasing by leaps and bounds.鈥
Phillips, known for her conservative columns on political and social issues that appear in London鈥檚 Daily Mail newspaper, began her career with the听 Guardian, considered to be the city鈥檚 primary left-leaning paper.
Phillips says she hasn鈥檛 moved from the left to the right but rather, has changed her opinion of people on the left. 鈥淚 decided they were intolerant and anti-progressive,鈥 said Phillips, who spoke as part of the Cordell Hull Speakers Forum sponsored by 极乐禁地鈥檚 Cumberland School of Law.
She is author of several books, including the 2006 best seller Londonistan. Her most recent work is The World Turned Upside Down: the Global Battle over God, Truth and Power.听
When she began writing about such issues as family and multiculturalism, Phillips said, she found that many values were 鈥渢urned on their heads.鈥澨 Education had turned into de-education, and certain victims groups were given a free pass for their behaviors.
She said she soon grew to feel听 that when some groups were presented with facts, those facts were brushed aside as opinion.
鈥淧eople on the progressive side seemed impervious to reason,鈥 she said, citing as examples issues related to global warming, Iraq, Israel and scientism.
Phillips maintains there is little to support global warming, that 鈥済reens鈥 believe they will save the planet, and that the movement is based on the belief that things would be better if reverted to a pre-capitalistic phase.听 鈥淎ny dissenters on that issue are considered to be against humanity,鈥 she said.
Likewise with scientism, which is the belief that science can deal with everything.听 People who support scientism believe that life formed spontaneously, that 鈥渟omething can be formed out of nothing,鈥 and that everything can be explained.
Such thinking is at epidemic levels in Britain, she said.
Discussion on such topics plays differently in different countries, she said.听 While the U.S has culture wars, Britain has nothing similar because it鈥檚 鈥渃omplete surrender,鈥 and hass no mechanism for discourse such as the U.S. has with Fox News channel and talk radio.
The U.S. still has a belief in itself as a nation, and part of that is a听 strength of church and a faithfulness to scripture, she said. 鈥淚n Britain, increasingly we鈥檙e told that we have to get rid of religion to have reason. That鈥檚 why we鈥檙e entering into a darker age.鈥
She did note that Catholic Pope Benedict XVI鈥檚 recent visit to Britain, with his message to stop the tide of secularism that is suppressing rights, was well received.
鈥淢any people are searching and not finding answers,鈥 she said, adding that the English church is not meeting the needs of the people.
Religious impulse is gone away, but not lost, she said. 鈥淏ut it will be if not turned around.鈥