domingo, 18 de novembro de 2012

Deus é anarquista


GOD IS AN ANARCHIST 

Cam Rea , Gary Chartier

Gary Chartier (author of The Conscience of an Anarchist: Why It's Time to Say Good-Bye to the State and Build a Free Society & Anarchy and Legal Order: Law and Politics for a Stateless Society) writes the foreword: "Anarchists frequently view religion as exemplifying or sustaining arbitrary authority. Consider Mikhail Bakunin’s God and the State, suggesting that subservience to the state is disturbingly similar to religious belief, and Daniel Guerin’s No Gods, No Masters, effectively treating religious and socio-political authority as coordinate.

When religious institutions are intertwined with a society’s power structure, just as when those institutions reinforce submissiveness to authority by denigrating or otherwise resisting critical thinking, it’s easy to see why they might be seen as anarchism’s enemies. But it is also surely crucial to recognize alternative strands in the history of multiple religious traditions. In the Abrahamic traditions, which I know best, it is clear, for instance, that belief in divine transcendence has undermined the idolization of political authority; that belief in individual access to God and to divine truth has strengthened belief in the capacity of ordinary people to make their own political decisions; and that Jesus’ praise of peace has inspired rejection of state-made wars and the search for a truly consensual society. Religion and authoritarianism may sometimes be allies, but the story is too mixed to make it reasonable to insist that they have to be.

Cam Rea’s God is an Anarchist is an attempt to explore the anti-authoritarian side of Christianity. It is structured primarily as a reading of the Bible, with a focus on biblical passages that might be thought to lend support to the state’s putative legitimacy, as well as on those that can be seen as counting against it."

Biography

Cam Rea lives in Indiana and is a Military Historian. Cam also served in the U.S. Army as a Combat Engineer.

Cam Rea first started writing poetry back in the mid 90's and was published in several anthologies. The most notable of these anthologies was "In Our Own Words: An Anthology of Poetry: From a Generation Falsely Labeled", (Volume 1), 1997" and "In Our Own Words: A Generation Defining Itself," (Volume 2), 2000.

Cam Rea's main interest is Military History, particularly the Ancient Near East. His first two books were an examination of the Lost Ten Tribes of Israel subject. He wrote two books on the subject, the first being, "The Assyrian Exile: Israel's Legacy in Captivity" (2008), and his second titled book, "Isaac's Empire: Ancient Persia's Forgotten Identity" which was released on September 11, 2009.

He is currently working on his third book titled, "March of the Scythians: From Sargon II to the Fall of Nineveh" that will be published in the fall of 2012. A fourth book is also on its way titled, "The Rise of Parthia in the East: From the Seleucid Empire to the Arrival of Rome" that will be published in early spring 2013.

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