Lessons I learned from this interaction
(image courtesy Clipart Library)
By Spencer Gear PhD
It is acceptable to send rugby league, ice hockey and basketball players to the SIN BIN when they violate certain rules of the code. To talk about all people committing SIN and needing punishment invites hisses from opponents.
Some of the articles in âTruth Challengeâ are generated by my discussion of issues with people. This topic is one of them.
1. The White Australia Policy is not the solution
A person had the cheek to sing the praises of The White Australia Policy:[1] He (I think heâs male) claimed human beings were tribal and territorial. What held societies together were shared beliefs and values of what constitutes right and wrong?
Therefore, it is a âcultural universalâ to want to live among oneâs own kind of people. The ghettoes of âsuburban enclavesâ in Australia demonstrate that multiculturalism has failed. It never works, he stated.
What do these “multicultural” states have in common?
Lebanon, Fiji, Cyprus, Georgia, Afghanistan, Biafra, Rhodesia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Liberia, Kashmir, Punjab, Sudan, Nigeria, Bougainville, East Timor, Yugoslavia, Kurdistan, New Zealand, Bhutan, Angola, Burma, Chechnya, Guadalcanal, Aden, Malaya, Oman, Congo, Northern Ireland, Palestine/Israel, Czechoslovakia, Yemen, Mexico, East Timor, Thailand and recently, Ukraine.
Why do you want Australia to emulate their failed societies?
Then there was this king hit from him: âIf Australia had kept the White Australia Policy, this country would now be a stronger, more prosperous and a safer country than it is nowâ.
Instead we have âdiversity bollardsâ on our streets, teachers not wanting to teach in troubled schools with Muslim and African students. He gave many other examples of how he sees multiculturalismâs failures.
He tackled another person who he claimed thought that âracism is bad. âAnything associated with racism must not even be thought about or considered in any way. Turn off brain. Bask in the reflected glory of your shining moral virtueâ.
He continued to extol the virtues of the White Australia Policy, which he claimed would have made Australia âa stronger, more prosperous and a safer country than it is nowâ.
Is a return to The White Australia Policy a decent step towards progress in immigration in Australia?
2. A major error of his analysis
The problem with this assessment[2] is that it avoids a fundamental problem with the human race, including the Caucasian race.
Exalting the White Australia Policy and dumbing down on multiculturalism misses a critical factor that is present in all people.
2.1 âWhitesâ have the same contamination
Sin (breaking Godâs laws) infects all of us, no matter what the colour. Iâve addressed some of this problem in my On Line Opinion article: ‘Cricket ball-tampering disease in all of us‘.
Hereâs an example of a rugby league referee giving a “sin bin” penalty against a player, signifying the ten minutes that the offender must spend off the field (photo courtesy Wikipedia). Ice hockey calls it the âpenalty boxâ. A similar action applies to other sports where the violation was not serious enough to ban for the rest of the game.
Sin is a good word to describe the corruption all of us suffer from. We have no problem sending rugby league and rugby union players to the Sin Bin when they violate rules of the game.
Many non-Christians will reject this diagnosis, but we see it all over Australia in examples from the Sexual Abuse Royal Commission, the Banking Royal Commission, and the crime and violence we see on the nightly TV news. I know we all have to battle with lying, stealing, deceit, evil thoughts, sexual immorality, etc (and that includes me, a ‘white’ person).
You do remember Hitler & the Nazi Holocaust, Mussoliniâs killing brigade, the Soviet Gulag and the European-Communist problem? Resorting to a White Australia Policy focusses on one group that is supposed to be better than other races. The truth is that ALL races are infected with the same sinful disease as the rest of humanity. Europeans and Russian people have as much contamination as people from all races with different coloured skins.
This is what this fellowâs analysis demonstrated. In my view, his conclusions are wrong but I couldnât imagine he would recognise the problem and be open to the solution.
2.2 Claims with illogical reasoning
This personâs reply did not deal with the issues I raised by the all-encompassing influence of sin. Take a read of his comeback:
I gather from your article that you are a Christian? OK, I don’t have a problem with Christianity because it is part of western culture, and the moral code that Christianity imparted is the reason why western societies are much more peaceful and honest than cultures based upon other religions. But I reject the idea that all people are equal. Even God discriminates between those who worship him and those who do not.
Exactly what you are inferring in the rest of your reply is unclear. You seem to associate racism with sin, Hitler and genocide. Your inference seems to be, that even thinking that there might be some validity in racism is sinful and therefore unthinkable. You have set yourself an intellectual boundary that you refuse to think past, because you think it must lead to Nazism and genocide.[3]
So he considers in what Iâve written above that:
He âreject(s) the idea that all people are equalâ.
He can express his worldview of God discriminating against those who donât worship Him.
I seem to associate racism with sin, Hitler and genocide.
I think racism must lead to Nazism and genocide.
Of these points, there is only one with which I agree: Racism is sin. How do I know? The Scriptures tell me so:
Gal 3:28 (NIV), âThere is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesusâ.
5 My dear brothers and sisters, listen to me. Hasnât God chosen those who are poor in the worldâs eyes to be rich in faith? Hasnât he chosen them to receive the kingdom? Hasnât he promised it to those who love him? 6 But you have disrespected poor people. Arenât rich people taking advantage of you? Arenât they dragging you into court? 7 Arenât they speaking evil things against the worthy name of Jesus? Remember, you belong to him.
In 1993, Billy Graham wrote his message on âthe sin of racismâ. Part of what he wrote was:
Racism is a sin precisely because it keeps us from obeying Godâs command to love our neighbor, and because it has its roots in pride and arrogance. Christians who harbor racism in their attitudes or actions are not following their Lord at this point, for Christ came to bring reconciliationâreconciliation between us and God, and reconciliation between each other. He came to accept us as we are, whoever we are, âfrom every tribe and language and people and nationâ (Rev. 5:9) [Billy Graham on Racism, 2018].
2.2.1 Nature of illogical reasoning
This was how he dished it up to me: [4]
Thinking my way was pursuing the thoughts of âŠ
Christians who refused to consider the validity of the Earth not being the centre of the universe, or whether the earth was round, or whether evolution was a fact. Because to even think about any of these concepts meant that you were denying the holy scriptures, and therefore committing heresy.
He came down on me as one who
may even believe that the earth is the centre of the universe, that the earth is flat, and a committed “intelligent design” believer? But if you are smart enough to realise that those concepts are clearly wrong, and that believing the opposite does not mean that you are renouncing God, then for God’s sake do the same with racism.
He proceeded to goad me: If I considered that racism had some validity, it doesnât mean Iâve resigned from the human race. He put forward two racist ideas in the western world:
âWhite western people are cause of all the world’s problems and they are vilest race on Earthâ.
âThe reason why some ethnicities are always successful and why some are always dysfunctional may have a lot to do with geneticsâ.
He asked: Which idea is correct?
What is he trying to do with this kind of response which imposes his non-Christian views about Christianity on what I wrote? Is he using a particular tactic that avoids dealing with the matters I raised? Read on!
3. The human heart is desperately wicked
Please read my post again at: OzSpen, Saturday, 6 October 2018 6:31:33 AM.[5]
At no point did I suggest any of the red herring logical fallacies you raised in your last post.
What I emphasised was your favouring the White Australia Policy when the whites are as contaminated with sin like all others â whether black, white or brindle.
The prophet Jeremiah nailed it: âThe human heart [inner part] is the most deceitful of all things, and desperately wicked. Who really knows how bad it is?â (Jer 17:9).
The next verse affirms that the Lord God âsearches all hearts and examines secret motivesâ. The human race has had this sinful nature problem since the beginning of time (Genesis 3).
You claim: âBut I reject the idea that all people are equalâ.
The Scriptures contradict you (and so do I). Scriptures support the equality of all human beings. When God made the first human beings, âGod said, âLet us make human beings in our image, to be like usââ (Genesis 1:26). Equality among all human beings is Godâs design.
You stated: âEven God discriminates between those who worship him and those who do notâ.
That might be how you see it, but when God says, âYou shall have no other gods before meâ (Ex 20:3), he is demonstrating who He is in the context of the Israelites coming out of Egypt and crossing the Red Sea into Canaan. Exodus 15:11 states âWho is like you among the gods, O LORDâglorious in holiness, awesome in splendor, performing great wonders?â
This is not discrimination but stating facts:
In the Israelites crossing the Red Sea, the miracle of Yahweh allowed them to cross the water on dry land, while Pharaoh and his armies were drowned.
Israel saw Godâs great power against the Egyptians in their deliverance.
Therefore, the Israelites exalted the one true God. Who is like Jehovah among the gods? No other god compares.
We see evidence all around us of human depravity – from individuals, corporations, church organisations and governments. I urge you to quit inventing things I didnât write in my post.
4. Refusal to debate if biblical texts used
To the above, this person only had this to say:
I debate using reason and logic. If you wish to use religious texts to justify your amazing worldview, then let’s just call it a day. I will note your name and I will not address posts to you again.[6]
This assumes my quoting from the Bible (religious texts) to support my âamazing worldviewâ is not of sufficient value to continue the discussion and he wonât address posts by me again
Letâs see if he can live up to that claim or will he be dishonest and continue to interact with me?
4.1 Is the Bible a reliable source?
When I use biblical texts,[7] Iâm quoting from documents that are reliable and trustworthy, even on a purely historical basis. Take a read of this article from the secular, The Huffington Post, â2,500 Year Old Jewish Tablets Discovered in Iraqâ (2015).
(Image courtesy The Huffington Post Australia)
What does this non-Christian source conclude about this discovery? âThis discovery is a remarkable confirmation of the historical reliability of the Biblical textâ.
See also my articles:
Can you trust the Bible? Part 1
Can you trust the Bible? Part 2
Can you trust the Bible? Part 3
Can you trust the Bible? Part 4
My âamazing worldviewâ is rooted in aletheia (truth) which means,
(a) âtruthfulness, dependability, uprightness in thought and deedâ (Rom 3:7; 15:8);
(b) âtruth as the opposite of falseâ (Mk 5:33; 1 Tim 2:7);
(c) âreality as opposed to mere appearance’ (Rom 2:2; Phil 1:18) [from Bauer, Arndt & Gingrich 1957:35-36].
In the future, you state you [LEGO] will avoid posts by Toni and me. Are you afraid to debate alternate views with reason, logic and truthfulness?
When addressing ârunnerâ, you dumped your worldview on the readers, âMothers of Gods, etc.â without explanation.
As for eternal life or eternal damnation, one minute after your last breath youâll wish you had discussed this further with us, instead of resorting to your Ad Hominem (Abusive) logical fallacy of âcompulsive psychological needâ and âeven stars dieâ.
Donât you get it that human beings are not stars?
4.2 Avoiding the issues: The errors of his ways
Take a read of how LEGO replied to the above response. [8]
He wrote of âpseudo liberalsâ, left wing people who think they are intelligent, progressives who donât denounce free speech, freedom of association, and evidence-based logic.
His claim was that leftist activists are social conservatives trying to shut up criticism of their failed ideologies of socialism and multiculturalism. The public no longer trusts the pseudo liberal media to tell the truth. (Note: He does acknowledge there is âtruthâ but what is truth to him? Where would he fit in the above definitions?)
His next discussion was
the farcical, fake news furore over the appointment of a new Supreme Court justice in the USA. By any application of reasoned logic, it is obvious that the charges of sexual misconduct leveled at Trump’s appointee by politically partisan activists is a frame up. When the pseudo liberals demanded the FBI investigate, it did so and found nothing. No witnesses, no corroboration, and odd memory lapses and strange behaviour by the accusers. Then the pseudo liberals claimed the FBI was biased.
Those are not my words but those of LEGO, to whom I responded.
He compared the pseudo liberal media with its fake news to the Korean War Chinese propaganda where some US pilots were forced to admit the cruel capitalist masters forced them to commit inhumane germ warfare on the âpeace loving socialist peopleâ.
What did he do with that kind of response to what I wrote?
4.2.1 Failing to address the issues
My retort will demonstrate the errors I saw in his post.[9]
In my previous reply to him, I mentioned âŠ
Your illogical use of an Appeal to Ridicule logical fallacy;
 Your failure to write a logical sentence when you misspelled âpsuedoâ;
 When I quote from the Bible, Iâm referring to reliable and trustworthy texts and I gave one example.
My Christian worldview is rooted in aletheia (NT Greek for truth);
I asked: Are you afraid to debate Toni (another poster) and OzSpen when you stated you would avoid posts by us?
You dumped your worldview on ârunnerâ (another poster).
You committed an Ad Hominem (Abusive) logical fallacy in your comment about those who seek eternal life.
 There was not one sentence in his reply that addressed the specifics of what I wrote.
He gave his rationalisation about Tony vs Toni and then called Toni he, him and his. How does he know Toni is a male?
Instead of addressing my issues with his reply post, he was off and running with his own agenda of âŠ
âą todayâs left wing people;
âą leftist activist class;
âą new Supreme Court judge in the USA, and
âą pseudo liberal media.
When he avoids the topics I raised, creating his own content, he gave us another logical fallacy, the Red Herring.
Red Herring
(also known as: beside the point, misdirection [form of], changing the subject, false emphasis,… irrelevant conclusion, irrelevant thesis, clouding the issue, ignorance of refutation)
Description: Attempting to redirect the argument to another issue to which the person doing the redirecting can better respond. While it is similar to the avoiding the issue fallacy, the red herring is a deliberate diversion of attention with the intention of trying to abandon the original argument (Source: Logically Fallacious).
He doesnât seem to understand how his claim of using logic and reason is wrecked by his use of logical fallacies, which amount to erroneous reasoning.
I urged him to address the issues I raised and give us the agenda with which he is more comfortable debating. We canât have a rational debate when he uses irrational tactics â logical fallacies.
4.3 How logical fallacies destroy meaningful debates or discussions
Dr L Kip Wheeler, assistant professor at Carson-Newman University, Tennessee USA, provided this assessment of logical fallacies for his students in composition and literature:
Fallacies are statements that might sound reasonable or superficially true but are actually flawed or dishonest. When readers detect them, these logical fallacies backfire by making the audience think the writer is (a) unintelligent or (b) deceptive. It is important to avoid them in your own arguments, and it is also important to be able to spot them in others’ arguments so a false line of reasoning won’t fool you (Logical Fallacies Handlist).
The Future Team at the University of Auckland stated:
One reason theyâre [logical fallacies] common is that they can be quite effective! But if we offer or are convinced by a fallacious argument we will not be acting as good logical and critical thinkers (Common Fallacies).
4.3.1 Lessons Iâve learned from conversation with LEGO
I have to be honest and say that I failed in my approach with him, particularly with the naming of his logical fallacies. Josh Brahm paraphrased what his friend and colleague, Trent Horn, said about identifying logical fallacies:
I would encourage people to not say âyou committed X fallacyâ because itâs terribly presumptuous and arrogant and most people donât appreciate talking to someone who points out every little fallacy they make. Instead you should follow Greg Kouklâs tactics and Justice For Allâs training and ask, âwhy do you think that?â And then continue to ask follow up questions.
As Trent suggests, you could ask whether a bad person could be right about something. Thatâs so much better than accusing them of making an ad hominem fallacy!
Confession time: it was only a few months ago that I responded to somebody who posted a comment on my Facebook profile by telling them that it appeared they were committing the fallacy of post hoc ergo propter hoc and included this link so they could educate themselves and not make that mistake anymore.
Iâm cringing as I write this. Yeah, I really did that.
If youâre using Latin during a debate, you probably sound like a jerk.
You know what would have been better? I could have said something like this: âI want to understand your argument, but Iâm not sure I do. What it sounds like youâre saying is that because this thing happened after this other thing that the first thing caused it. Am I misunderstanding you? I donât want to put words in your mouth.â
Do you see the difference? Itâs not easy though. Easy is naming the fallacy. Hard, but better, is being able to think to yourself, âI believe he just committed the genetic fallacy,â and then thinking of questions to ask with an open heart that will help the person see the problem with their reasoning. You could ask, âI want to understand you. Can I ask a clarification question? It sounds like youâre implying that because this person is biased, their argument must be wrong. Is that what youâre saying?â
But to do that you really need to understand what the fallacies are, because that will better prepare you to ask the right kinds of questions when a fallacy is committed (The Best Way to Expose Logical Fallacies: Donât Call Them by Name).
I have learned a big lesson from this discussion / debate with LEGO. I must ask probing questions instead of labelling his logical fallacies by name.
5. Conclusion
Throughout this interchange, I saw my blind spots concerning biblical teachings
(a) There was an acknowledgement that âI don’t have a problem with Christianity because it is part of western culture, and the moral code that Christianity imparted is the reason why western societies are much more peaceful and honest than cultures based upon other religionsâ.
However, there was a failure to pursue this to deal with the foundation of Christianity in the Judeo-Christian God with whom there is no parallel.
(b) If Christianity is so valuable, why dumb down on the nature of the biblical texts (Scripture) and treat them as unreliable or irrelevant.
(c) One of his major problems is violating the law of non-contradiction, which can be described in these ways:
Bill Pratt has explained the law of non-contradiction this way:
What is the law of non-contradiction? There are at least three ways to state it:
1. A thing cannot both be A and not-A at the same time and in the same sense.
2. A thing cannot both exist and not exist at the same time and in the same sense.
3. A statement cannot both be true and not true at the same time and in the same sense
LEGO was assuring us that he used âreason and logicâ and then committed illogical actions in his use of logical fallacies, which amount to erroneous reasoning. Thus, his view was: I believe in logic and not-logic (logical fallacies).
To maintain rational existence, we must live by the law of non-contradiction.
(d) He refused to respond when I called him for the logical fallacies he committed. Instead he would go into what he wanted to talk about, thus committing another logical fallacy, the Red Herring.
(e) I learned much from this encounter: I should never give the proper name to the logical fallacy, but to use questions that try to get to the heart of what I see as the fallacy committed. Iâll never name logical fallacies in further posts online or those that make it from blogs to an article on my homepage, âTruth Challengeâ.
(Image courtesy Cognitive World)
6. Works consulted
Arndt, W F & Gingrich, F W [from an earlier work by W Bauer] 1957. A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and other early Christian literature. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press (limited edition licensed to Zondervan Publishing House).
7. Note
[1] Comment to Spencer Gearâs article, Fake News! The Senator Fraser Anning saga, 3 October, 2018, On Line Opinion, (online). Posted by LEGO, Friday, 5 October 2018 1:53:49 PM. Available at: http://forum.onlineopinion.com.au/thread.asp?article=19972&page=3 (Accessed 8 October 2018).
[2] Ibid., Posted by OzSpen [Spencer Gear], Saturday, 6 October 2018 6:31:33 AM, available at: http://forum.onlineopinion.com.au/thread.asp?article=19972&page=4 (Accessed 8 October 2018).
[3] Ibid., Posted by LEGO, Saturday, 6 October 2018 9:12:43 AM, Available at: http://forum.onlineopinion.com.au/thread.asp?article=19972&page=5 (Accessed 8 October 2018).
[4] Ibid.
[5] Ibid., Posted by OzSpen, Saturday, 6 October 2018 1:16:27 PM. Available at: http://forum.onlineopinion.com.au/thread.asp?article=19972&page=5 (Accessed 8 October 2018).
[6] Ibid., Posted by LEGO, Sunday, 7 October 2018 3:49:28 AM.
[7] Ibid., Posted by OzSpen, Sunday, 7 October 2018 7:58:51 AM.
[8] Ibid., Posted by LEGO, Sunday, 7 October 2018 10:43:28 AM.
[9] Ibid., Posted by OzSpen, Monday, 8 October 2018 8:05:23 AM,
Copyright © 2020 Spencer D. Gear. This document last updated at Date: 21 March 2020.