
Why the Modern World is Far Too Good
How virtues — untethered from reality — are running wild and wrecking havoc.
Do you remember when CNN reported that 88 percent of Covid deaths were in countries where more than half the population was classified as fat?
Those with modern sensibilities might have accused the network of fat-shaming people.
So what that Covid death rates were ten times higher in countries where most people were overweight. What of it?
Such insensitive reporting only served to unfairly stigmatise fat people.
Next, they’ll be suggesting that obesity has something to do with heart disease!
When you understand that an obese person is someone who weighs as much as two healthy people combined, you could say that they are, therefore, twice as healthy.
Why doesn’t CNN make that argument?
The biggest risk factor for Covid was not diet, it was failure to wear two masks, a face shield, gloves, and a hazmat suit while driving alone. That and not getting a 28th booster shot.
Rather than worrying about people’s health, the media should be promoting body positivity.
Okay, I’m being entirely facetious. Obviously.
But in these politically correct times, not offending someone is seen as the highest form of virtue.
It wouldn’t be surprising at all to read something like what I’ve just written as serious commentary.
Actually, you can read it right here!
Feelings Over Facts
Warped, fake compassion is the true sickness of our age.
Loving people to death with sentimentality is the real pandemic of our generation.
Take the dreaded Monkeypox, for example.
The CDC came to resemble a pretzel more than a health advisory body when the Monkeypox arrived.
They twist and contort their reporting to advise that 98 per cent of cases had been found in gay men who, to quote the CDC, “had sex with other men”, while going out of their way to emphasise that “anyone can get Monkeypox”.
Well, sure.
And anyone can be run over by a car. But playing on the road makes it far more likely.
You can’t say that, though, lest you stigmatise people who play chicken with oncoming traffic.
The CDC and other health bodies, in attempting to tippy-toe around what they must have considered to be fragile feelings, actually endangered the gay community by failing to give them clear health information that they required to stay safe.
This is the problem that now afflicts Western culture. We are more concerned about protecting a group’s feelings than about genuinely helping them.
It’s reflective of a culture that, having abandoned any source of objective truth, now regards feelings as the only reality.
It’s so nice, it’s dangerous.
As English philosopher G.K. Chesterton observed,
‘The modern world is not evil. The modern world is far too good.’
Chesterton argued that the rejection of Christianity would ‘let loose virtues gone mad’ because they would be isolated from a single unifying truth.
This explains why, in our post-Christian world, we have a generation who care only for charity toward others, but their charity (sorry to say) is often untruthful.
It’s the same overdone virtue that insists — to be kind — that obesity is beautiful while ignoring the myriad of associated health risks.
It is kindness that lies.
Uncertainty
But it’s not just charity and kindness that are now running out of control. That other great virtue, humility, is now so overdone as to be completely destructive.
Many of us watched with amusement as former Australian Health Secretary Dr Brendan Murphy told a Senate Committee hearing back in 2022 that he could not say for sure what a woman was without advice from his department.
In like fashion, US Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson famously said she could not be sure what a woman was since ‘I’m not a biologist’.
Humility was supposed to mean being doubtful of yourself, not being doubtful of obvious truths. But this has been completely reversed.
These days, people assert themselves while, in order to demonstrate humility, they doubt reason and logic.
Ours is the generation that boasts about how we would never be so arrogant as to say that two and two is four. When confronted with the most obvious questions, we boast about being clueless.
We couldn’t possibly be so opinionated or judgemental as to say for sure what a woman is.
We are so humble we have become stupid. And we’re proud of the fact. We have become so open-minded that our brains have fallen out.
Love for love’s sake is not love at all. It is something else.
The same goes for kindness, charity, humility, and any other virtue you might care to mention.
The virtues are only helpful in so much as they reflect ultimate reality and truth. But divorced from reality, they become dangerous.
If the reality is that being overweight is unhealthy but, to be kind, you tell the obese person that obesity is beautiful, then your virtue is more harmful than any of the vices.
The vices – sloth, envy, gluttony, and so on – are as immediately recognisable as dangerous as the red devil with his pitchfork and horns.
But the seductive charm of virtue, untethered from reality, threatens to destroy Western culture, even as we pat ourselves on the back at just how virtuous we have become.
___
Republished with thanks to The James Macpherson Report.
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Image courtesy of Adobe.
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Good article. Actually, I think that this displaying of “kindness” divorced from truth is part of a wider problem called humanism which is a false religion that declares that man (i.e. mankind) is basically good and can save himself from eternal destruction (i.e. damnation). The god that is worshipped is man and the prophets are those who demand conformity to the type of kindness described in this article. The conformity requirement carries a big stick through cancel culture, dismissal from jobs, violence, and government encouraged litigation against those who point out the real problems and sins of people. The truth is that everyone is basically evil at the core of our being (sinners) and we need a Saviour (Jesus) to free us from the chains of sin. True humility is saying that I cannot save myself but I need God to save me.