This discussion concerns my mass-mailed letter on Columbus day, which is found in blue. A representative response is found in pink.
These days it's hard to find any good stuff on the Web
about Christopher ["Christ-bearer'] Columbus. Since the 500th anniversary of his
discovery of the Western Hemisphere (1992), Columbus has been thoroughly trashed by the PC
police. Why do I like Columbus? Columbus was brave. http://members.aol.com/kevin4vft/cw/them.htm Columbus was a Christian. Columbus was after Gold. |
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Even the U.S. Constitution says gold is good: that no state shall make anything but gold and silver a tender in payment of debts. The triumph of Secular Humanism's preference for unbacked paper money has empowered the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank to crush more poor Latin Americans than Columbus could ever dream of. |
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Columbus Attempted to Civilize the Indians. How many Indians were there? Less than a million? Ten million? Russell Means says 100 million http://www.indians.org/welker/russmean.htm This is nonsense. The Indians were unable to sustain a population in North America which is one-hundredth that of today. To quote Hobbes, their lives were "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short." The Ignoble Savage The Indian as Environmentalist The Indian as Egalitarian |
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Was Columbus an instrument of God's judgment upon a
people dominated by idolatry, slavery, immorality, brutality, and tribal racism? Columbus and the Puritans came to this nation to bring the Gospel to the natives, and this is their chief offense in the eyes of modern man. http://members.aol.com/TestOath/08theocracy.htm#t12 Columbus
Defended Western Civilization |
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Prior to 1492, what is now the United States was sparsely inhabited, unused, and undeveloped. |
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The inhabitants were primarily hunter-gatherers, wandering across the land, living from hand-to-mouth and from day-to-day. |
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There was virtually no change, no growth for thousands of years. |
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With rare exception, life was nasty, brutish, and short: there was no wheel, no written language, no division of labor, little agriculture and scant permanent settlement; but there were endless, bloody wars. |
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Whatever the problems it brought, the vilified Western culture also brought enormous, undreamed-of benefits, without which most of today's Indians would be infinitely poorer or not even alive. |
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Columbus should be honored, for in so doing, we honor Western civilization. But the critics do not want to bestow such honor, because their real goal is to denigrate the values of Western civilization and to glorify the primitivism, mysticism, and collectivism embodied in the tribal cultures of American Indians. They decry the glorification of the West as "Eurocentrism." We should, they claim, replace our reverence for Western civilization with multi-culturalism, which regards all cultures as morally equal. In fact, they aren't. Some cultures are better than others: a free society is better than slavery; |
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reason is better than brute force as a way to deal with other men; |
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productivity is better than stagnation. |
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In fact, Western civilization stands for man at his
best. It stands for the values that make human life possible: reason, science,
self-reliance, individualism, ambition, productive achievement. The values of Western
civilization are values for all men; they cut across gender, ethnicity, and geography. We
should honor Western civilization not for the ethnocentric reason that some of us happen
to have European ancestors but because it is the objectively superior culture. Underlying the political collectivism of the anti-Columbus crowd is a racist view of human nature. They claim that one's identity is primarily ethnic: if one thinks his ancestors were good, he will supposedly feel good about himself; if he thinks his ancestors were bad, he will supposedly feel self-loathing. But it doesn't work; the achievements or failures of one's ancestors are monumentally irrelevant to one's actual worth as a person. Only the lack of a sense of self leads one to look to others to provide what passes for a sense of identity. Neither the deeds nor misdeeds of others are his own; he can take neither credit nor blame for what someone else chose to do. There are no racial achievements or racial failures, only individual achievements and individual failures. One cannot inherit moral worth or moral vice. "Self-esteem through others" is a self-contradiction. Thus the sham of "preserving one's heritage" as a rational life goal. Thus the cruel hoax of "multicultural education" as an antidote to racism: it will continue to create more racism. Individualism is the only alternative to the racism of political correctness. We must recognize that everyone is a sovereign entity, with the power of choice and independent judgment. That is the ultimate value of Western civilization, and it should be proudly proclaimed. Michael S. Berliner, Ph.D., is the executive director of the Ayn Rand Institute in Marina del Rey, California. http://www.aynrand.org/medialink/columbus.html |
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What About Other Infamous Conquerors? Cortez the Infamous Christianity & Conquest Columbus realized his errors. Which is more than I can say for Secular Humanists. |
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At the end of his life, Columbus regretted his use of the sword against defenseless natives. He had bought into the myths prevalent in his day that justified the State and its use of the sword, and especially the view that certain people could be thought of as non-human and their lives taken in order to advance our own material prosperity. Columbus repudiated his earlier championing of this "pro-choice" mentality, and became pro-life. Convicted of his sins in his later years, Columbus purposed never again to wear the costly garments of "the Admiral of the Ocean Sea" and assumed the brown habit of a Minorite friar as a symbol of his penitence. This remained his costume when in Spain for the rest of his life. |
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The modern world of Political Correctness has learned
nothing from Columbus. Even the hysterically overstated estimates of
"historians" like Russell Means pale in comparison to the genocide committed by
20th century Secular Humanists: an average of 10,000 people per day, every day of the week
for 100 years; nearly half a billion people murdered in this century. http://members.aol.com/XianAnarch/pacifism/Rummel.htm Columbus was an admirable man, as well as a product of his times. His times were Christian, crippled by the myth of the State. Our times are non-Christian, empowered by the myth of the State, and therefore more enslaved and more violent by several orders of magnitude. We can learn much in every way from Columbus. Happy Columbus Day! Kevin C. http://members.aol.com/TestOath/HolyTrinity.htm --------------------------------------------- And they shall beat their swords into plowshares and sit under their Vine & Fig Tree. Micah 4:1-7 |
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