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by quacked 1105 days ago
After reading this article, I agree with the words of Thich Nhat Hanh, thank you for the recommendation.

> The religious right in the US just wants to suppress it out of ignorance

I tend to agree that the religious right in the US is a legislative force that does more harm than good, and that many people who campaign against drugs don't have a solid understanding of drugs or drug culture. However, I don't think that it's ignorant to want to suppress drug culture (either in the media or in real life), and I think more religious conservatives have experience with addict family members than you think.

1 comments

Good point, I ninja edited just before you posted to say that a chunk of them have been mislead by televangelists and such.

I can tell Thich Nhat Hanh appreciated the people you're talking about, having read about him traveling all around the world and meeting people from the US (where he lived for quite some time) and countless other countries.

Ah, there's the edit, right.

One of the principles that I hold to pretty strongly is that the more performatively famous someone is surrounding a certain idea, the more likely it is that they don't have any real principles, and they're just beating whatever drum allows them to continue to hold influence over people. So someone like Pat Robertson doesn't actually believe what he's saying in private, but if he kept banging that drum he kept his lifestyle and acolytes. I think the majority of US politicians that people recognize by name are like that, and certainly most religious leaders like Pat or Joel Osteen.

I think that generalizes to all human interactions. The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life [1] is the canonical work on this topic.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Presentation_of_Self_in_Ev...