I think that I’ve always harbored a fear of the Christian need to proselytize from having grown up in a “Born Again” fundamentalist family (only 1 of whom, by the way, believed it — the patriarch of course.) But living in a fundamentalist home also meant that we were constantly surrounded by fundamentalist people, and it wasn’t really my own family that scared me, it was “the group” of them. Their fake piety gnawed at me, relentlessly, from a very early age — probably 12 or 13. I never believed their smiles or their constant references to the Lord and to God, etc. Even when my dad died, only about 3 hours dead or so, one of them started talking about how my brother suddenly cut off in the middle of a conversation and went upstairs to where my dad was living out his last moments in his deathbed. He died about a half a minute later with my brother in the room, and he shouted for my sister and mom to come from the office, where they were looking at computer stuff, and then the crying and the mourning began.
This woman who would have been about my age at the time, 40 or so, didn’t understand why my brother would just leave in the middle of a conversation, Unless It Was God. She said to all of us, sitting around 3 hours after he died, that it must have been God who told my brother to break off that conversation.
The man was unconscious, his breath rate was collapsing, but it could only have been God that caused my brother to go upstairs and check on him. This is the kind of absolute stupidity that being a rigid fundamentalist causes. The inability to understand even the basics of living and dying are lost on these people. And what’s more, they’re scared. Trying to believe that she had witnessed God in action is a perfect example of how frightened they are, and also why they’re so dangerous.
Anyway, to get back, I first became aware of my fear of fundamentalists when a group developed in the 80s and got a little notice on television shows which I think was called Fundamentalists Anonymous. A quick search on the internet reveals that it was founded in 1987 by a man named Richard Yao, ran for several years, and then was destroyed by Fundamentalists. But I remember the purpose of it was not as political as it sounded. It was not their goal to destroy religion and I vaguely remember the guy talking about this. It was meant to help people through the trauma of losing their religion — people who have left it because fundamentalism is ALWAYS dogmatic and fascist and cannot tolerate dissent.
When I was desperate to have a book published before I was 40 I decided to self-publish because at the very least that would be something in print. So I had been working on this novel called Illyria in around 2005 and I decided, mistakenly, to write a prologue. A 100 year old retaining wall in the Way-UWS area had collapsed. I rode my bike back then, and when I was riding around up there, I stopped to look at the wall and because of the height of it (65-90 feet) and the way it had this huge gash right in the center, I couldn’t help but feel that it was like a castle that had been hit with a boulder from a trebuchet. And then I began to imagine that it was the Christians attacking New York City, the center of all sin, vice and criminality. And I thought to myself, “They’re here.” And I even wrote this in the prologue, that the character was living comfortably behind the New York City walls and thought, erroneously, that he was safe. That is the reason the character gives for deciding to sit down and write what happened to him and his friends because of the so-called Christians.
Prologues have no reason to exist, other than to allow the person not to read the rest of the book. So I deleted it in an “updated” version. But I never forgot that deep down, I have always been concerned about the Christian nationalists.
And now, with the news that they are going to try to do away with any global warming initiatives, I’ve realized that they are, in fact, here. And their wish — which is to die — may be met at our expense. I think that’s what’s bothering me most about that horror of a person I’ve loathed for as long as I can remember — that life as we know it might be destroyed by a degenerate, in the name of God, but really, in the name of a Death Cult. Christians think that Rome collapsed because it allowed homosexuality. (This is a constant quiet belief they don’t talk about too much, but it’s there.) The fact is that the Roman Empire collapsed because of widespread corruption. And that, alas, is what we’re facing here, brought to you, once again, by the barbarian Christians.
