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Christopher Hitchens: god is not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything
(Twelve Hachette Book Group USA, 2007) That Hitchens could produce such an
excellent compendium of reasons why religion is simply unacceptable and
answers to the by now tedious self-justifications of the religionists shows
that even a fairly common or garden Englishman, given the gift of free and
clear thought plus an admirable mastery of the language, can lead a reader
to thoughtful conviction. One must give
Harris
and Jacoby
credit for breaking the glass ceiling of American Xtian censhorship, but
Hitchens does make the whole thing so much more entertaining – and rich in
content. And Hitchens does correct Harris’ error: Fascism was not just not
atheistic, it was a Xtian, indeed Catholic movement. You might call Fascism
the political wing of Pius XII’s Vatican. The blemish – somewhat minor in
context – lies in Hitchens’ rather bourgeois cultural universe: Shakespeare,
Mozart, Orwell (He even throws in the odious
Ayer).
One can just imagine the author, eyes beatifically shut, beating time with
his finger to Eine Kleine Nachtmusik.
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