| VOL.
IX, NO. 108 |
CALIFORNIA
STATE UNIVERSITY, LONG BEACH |
April
25 , 2002 |
Daily
49er - opinion
Think for yourself,
don't just agree
Recently, signs and posters have been sprouting up around the campus
of Cal State Long Beach.
You have likely all seen the ubiquitous yellow signs that ask the
vague question, "Do you agree with John?"
No, it's not a fashionable new cult, but merely a group that agrees
(apparently whole-heartedly) with a CSULB student who has publicly
declared the need for God in his and everyone else's life.
What is initially disappointing is seeing legions of college students
marching around campus in identical yellow T-shirts, proclaiming their
allegiance to the cause.
College, which is supposed to be where you go to learn how to use your
brain to analytically examine all evidence presented to you, has
produced a group of pod people as insidious as Rush Limbaugh's
deplorable Dittoheads.
Of course, the argument could be made that colleges are merely
breeding grounds to indoctrinate the young to a certain left-leaning
worldview. Or, maybe I've just taken too many general education
classes.
Faith is something that is very important to people's lives, but it is
something that should happen on a personal level, regardless of
whatever this or that holy book might say.
The urges to go out and persuasively (or forcefully) make others
believe like you do have brought us historical highlights like the
Crusades, the Spanish Inquisition, and the genocide of countless
indigenous populations, thanks to well-meaning and disease-carrying
missionaries.
Seeing a gaggle of yellow T-shirt clad students congregating in my
path gives me the same sense of unease I feel when I look out the
front window and see Jehovah's Witnesses creeping down the street,
arms full of Bibles and pamphlets.
With world events getting scarier by the day and our psyches as yet
unrecovered from Sept. 11, it is understandable that people need to
make sense of the world.
But just because some bad things are happening around the world and
here in America does not mean that Armageddon is upon us.
Bad things happen all over the world every day and have throughout
history.
It is only American narcissism and vanity that leads some to believe
the horrific events that have befallen us portend the end of the
world.
And please save yourself the time of searching out that perfect Bible
verse that will prove me wrong. It is just that sort of selective
interpretation that gives some people the self-righteousness to go out
and forcibly convert the heathens.
If we truly used the Bible to guide our lives, men would be enjoying
their sexual rights with their brother's widows and we'd spend our
time trying to figure out compensation when we kill our neighbor's
slaves.
Oh, and there'd be a lot more smiting.
For the sake of those who have given these issues much thought and are
firmly convinced of our beliefs, please go back to having Bible study
in designated rooms at designated times where people who are
interested can seek you out. And leave the rest of us alone.
So, to make a short story long, no, I don't agree with John.
Phil Witte is a journalism major at Cal State Long Beach.
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