Door Church

View Original

#FirstWorldProblems

Jessica Greer

On September 12, 2015, the student government president of Missouri State University, Payton Head, complained in a Facebook post of an off-campus incident in which he was the victim of racism and anti-gay bigotry. Two unidentified people in a pickup truck shouted slurs at him as they drove by.

From this post grew a pseudo-revolution that engulfed and inspired several college students throughout the country to wage war against the establishment. The Mizzou students set the tone by demanding that president Tim Wolfe of Missouri State University resign as a result of his inadequacy to secure “safe spaces” for black students by addressing the racial issues being protested; as well as apologize in a handwritten note for his “white privilege.”

Wolfe pandered to these so-called radicals. Like all parents that accommodate and reward irrationally destructive spoiled children, he could not win their approval. Wolfe eventually resigned on November 9, 2015. 

The chain reaction that followed was not merely based on race, but even more on revising the history or heritage of the country. College students from Yale University, Amherst College, Claremont McKenna, and others united to destroy the foundations of the quest for scholarly credibility, truth, knowledge, and critical thinking, only to replace these with a revised “diversity curriculum” that has nothing to do with enlightenment but everything to do with narcissistic nihilism.

Their entitled demands read as a litany of absurdity. “President Martin must issue a statement of apology to students, alumni, and former students, faculty, administration, and staff who have been victims of several injustices including but not limited to our institutional legacy of white supremacy, colonialism, anti-black racism, anti-Latin racism, anti-Native American racism, anti-Native/indigenous racism, anti-Asian racism, anti-Middle Eastern racism, heterosexism, cis-sexism, xenophobia, anti-Semitism, ableism, mental health stigma, and classism. Also include that marginalized communities and their allies should feel safe at Amherst College.”

Students began complaining, that while they may have never actually experienced overt sexism, racism, xenophobia, and all these other offensive -isms and phobias, they had still been exposed to and even persecuted by what they labeled “microaggressions.” 

Microaggressions are described as “small actions or word choices that seem on their face to have no malicious intent but that are thought of as a kind of violence nonetheless.” So these would include, for example: a joke, a debate, a history lesson, a conversation, the news, facts, basically anything that you hear that you do not like.

A whole movement inspired by the alleged victimhood of those exposed to microaggressions swept our first world education system like swine flu, with paranoia and sensationalism being galvanized by the media.

The momentum slowed when these same students for equality and unity threw their final public tantrum after being pushed out of the limelight by the Paris terrorist attacks on November 13, 2015. They then claimed that the media attention shifting to 130 fatality victims was intentionally “erasing” their “struggles,” thus equating microaggression to terrorism.

If that is not the ultimate reflection of egocentric relativism, I’m not sure what is. 

For almost sixty years the liberal universities have been peddling the same doctrine: all ideas are equal; the highest value in academia is no longer truth, but tolerance; the individual has been replaced by the collective, and the most dangerous enemies are not the radicals blowing up markets every five days, but rather those that reject ideas and lifestyles that are detrimental to the whole.

Pedagogues have dedicated themselves to demanding students open their minds up to intellectual discourse by first becoming a clean slate of nothingness: no morality, no religion, no right, no wrong. From their bully pulpits they have perpetuated the three sacred campus ideologies: Radicalism, Rape, and Revolution.

If you are, in fact, an educated intellectual and an open mind, says the collective, then it must follow that you will be a radical, casting off all restraints that keep you STD free, drug free, and moral. If you are a minority of any kind, then it must follow that you have been raped, either by colonialism or a fraternity of white boys.

Finally, you are expected to join the revolution which seeks to destroy the foundations of our first world luxuries in the name of progress, annihilating the very documents that give you the right to hold such protests and defy such ideas. 

What should we expect? Our first world education has massacred male curiosity, surgically removing it from grade school onward by drugging up boys who would much rather play outside than dress transgender dolls. The result is a bunch of 20-year-old men who accuse universities of microaggressions in the hope of starting a revolution.

If you can’t handle a snub, I’m not sure you’re suited for a revolution.

Liberals have revised history to eliminate the parts that make them feel uncomfortable; naturally this has led to a total ignorance of the realities that have always followed radicals and revolutions.

The French Revolution of 1789 was perhaps one of the most influential revolutions in history, setting off a causal nexus of revolts throughout Europe and South America.

The Revolution of 1789 held to many ideologies of liberty and natural rights, all very familiar ideas to the American Revolution. However, the French liberals became so radical that they believed they had to purify France of any remaining shred of monarchy because they felt threatened by any potential counterrevolutionaries. 

They also sought to eliminate Christianity, and these factors collectively resulted in the Reign of Terror. As revolutionaries became more radical, they began to massacre thousands of French citizens in the name of liberty. After a chaos of bloodshed, the irony of the revolution emerged when Napoleon Bonaparte rose to power as a dictator, and later an emperor.

The Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 erupted out of a need for equality. Promising food and freedom to the peasants with the radical notion of an economic Utopia through communism, it failed the Russian people miserably. 

The first Marxist state was established by Vladimir Lenin, who demanded that citizens capitulate to the collective state by surrendering their individuality, property, and religion. Lenin and his successor, Joseph Stalin, went on to murder millions of their own people in the name of equality. 

How does a movement morph from liberty and equality into the guillotine and the Gulag? 

Eliminate God. 

In his novel East of Eden, John Steinbeck writes: “In our time mass or collective production has entered our economics, our politics, even our religion, so that some nations have substituted the idea collective for the idea God. This in my time is the danger. There is great tension in the world, tension toward a breaking point, and men are unhappy and confused. At such a time it seems natural and good to me to ask myself these questions. What do I believe in? What must I fight for and what must I fight against?”

The trending specious arguments are using the term “safe space” to refer to an all encompassing refuge for ideas and values, no matter how contradictory or destructive. 

In 1973 Roe vs. Wade established a precedent for one of the first “safe spaces” where women could terminate their pregnancies for the supposed betterment of their lives. The most recent spectacle is the Boston Health Care for the Homeless, which will soon be providing a “safe space” for heroin users to get high with the support of medical professionals.

The hope is to use this non judgmental environment as a bridge to rehab. Kind of like providing radical Islamists with more comfortable bomb straps for a better jihad experience. 

Psalm 74:4-8 says: “Your foes roared in the place where you met with us; they set up their standards as signs. They behaved like men wielding axes to cut through a thicket of trees. They smashed all the carved paneling with their axes and hatchets. They burned your sanctuary to the ground; they defiled the dwelling place of your Name. They said in their hearts, ‘We will crush them completely!’ They burned every place where God was worshiped in the land.”

The outcome of the American Revolution is a historical anomaly. The ideas of liberty, freedom, and equality have circulated through many generations, cultures, and civilizations. Yet the Founders, unlike the rest, not only embraced the God of the Jews, they based natural rights and fundamental principles on God’s laws.

Why then, would we in the free world seek the eradication of these convictions? How can we create “safe spaces” when those spaces include ideals that by natural law are perilous? 

Our trivial first world problems will fall into actual critical plight if we continue to undermine the reality of sin. Unlike American politicians, God does not need to indulge the wicked for their approval. He is God, He is king, and He is good.

The real problem in the first world is not the lack of “safe spaces” or of microaggressions against easily bruised narcissists. It is the lack of awareness and ability to distinguish the truth from the lies.