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Author Topic: Trump in Narnia  (Read 713 times)

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Offline MaterDominici

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Trump in Narnia
« on: January 29, 2016, 12:08:12 AM »
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  • http://www.firstthings.com/web-exclusives/2016/01/nikabriks-candidate

    If you ever doubt that C. S. Lewis was gifted with a prophetic voice, you need look no further for correction than Prince Caspian.

    In the story, you may remember, Narnia is in a desperate situation. The Telmarines have taken over, and the citizens of Narnia have been persecuted, silenced, and driven into hiding. When Prince Caspian—a Telmarine himself, but one who sympathizes with the Narnian cause—joins forces with them, this leads to a fresh round of attacks from the other Telmarines and their king, Miraz. The Narnians try to summon help by using Queen Susan’s horn—and they are successful, though not all of them realize it right away.

    Drawn to Narnia by the call of the horn, Peter and Edmund and their guide, the dwarf Trumpkin, come upon a handful of Narnians meeting with Prince Caspian. Nikabrik, another dwarf, is angry that apparently no help has come from Aslan or the old kings and queens of Narnia. While others argue that “help will come” if they can wait patiently, Nikabrik contends that there is no time to wait: They are running out of food and reinforcements.

    If Aslan won’t help, Nikabrik adds, perhaps another power will:

    “The stories tell of other powers besides the ancient Kings and Queens. How if we could call them up?” . . .
    “Who do you mean?” said Caspian at last.
    “I mean a power so much greater than Aslan’s that it held Narnia spellbound for years and years, if the stories are true.”
    “The White Witch!” cried three voices all at once. . . .
    This, of course, is the same Witch who killed Aslan in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Nikabrik has already gone so far as to recruit a sorceress to raise the Witch from the dead. But the others are horrified—so horrified that a battle ensues, joined by the Pevensies and Trumpkin. By the time it’s over, Nikabrik and his allies are dead themselves.

    How could one of the good guys in this story become corrupt enough to seek help from someone whose greed, brutality, and lust for power were legendary? As Lewis well knew, it can happen more easily and quickly than one might think. It’s been happening throughout history, ever since the first time the Israelites turned to a godless nation for help instead of trusting God to save them.

    One can make a case that it’s happening right now within the conservative movement in the United States.

    Which brings us back to the subject of prophetic voices. Did C. S. Lewis foresee the rise of Donald Trump? Not specifically, I’m sure. But Lewis had a remarkable understanding of human nature. He knew what it was like to feel that all hope was lost. And he knew that fear and despair can drive decent people to look for someone, anyone, who projects an appearance of strength.

    Through the character of Nikabrik, Lewis explored the depths to which we can fall through fear. The first time Caspian meets Nikabrik, he is waking up after an accident and hears the dwarf’s voice near him, saying, “Kill it. . . . We can’t let it live. It would betray us.” There is absolutely no room in Nikabrik’s mind for the idea that a Telmarine could be good. And at first we can sympathize; his people have suffered greatly under the Telmarines, and he is fiercely loyal to his people—a good quality. But as Lewis frequently warned us, good qualities can be twisted and used for evil purposes.

    Nikabrik’s fears are legitimate. His enemies are real and powerful and committed to the annihilation of his entire race. He is right to recognize the need for help. He is wrong to decide that help must come from a force equally merciless—wrong when he tells Caspian, “I’ll believe in anyone or anything . . . that’ll batter these cursed Telmarine barbarians to pieces or drive them out of Narnia. Anyone or anything, Aslan or the White Witch, do you understand?”

    When his friend Trufflehunter reminds him that the Witch “was a worse enemy than Miraz and all his race,” Nikabrik’s retort is telling: “Not to Dwarfs, she wasn’t.” His own people and their safety are all that matter to him now. Instead of being an important priority, this has become his only priority—and any attempt to remind him that other considerations exist brings only his contempt and anger.

    This is how good people with strong, ingrained values—people who have invested time and money in the sanctity of life, religious liberty, and similarly noble causes—can come to support a man who changes his convictions more often than his shirts. This is how people concerned about the dignity of the office of President end up flocking to a reality-show star who spends his days on Twitter calling people “dumb” and “loser.” This is how some who have professed faith in Jesus Christ are lured by a man who openly puts all his faith in power and money, the very things Christ warned us against prizing too highly. As one wag on Twitter pointed out, “If elected, Donald Trump will be the first US president to own a strip club,” and yet he has the support of Christians who fervently believe that this country needs to clean up its morals.

    As Joseph Loconte has observed, the Narnia stories offer us “a view of the world that is both tragic and hopeful. The tragedy lies in the corruption caused by the desire for power, often disguised by appeals to religion and morals.” How dangerously easy it is for the desire for power to take on that disguise—and how easily we Christians fall for it.

    Tired of waiting for Aslan—who may be nearer than we think—we turn elsewhere. It doesn’t matter if our candidate hates, bullies, and exploits other people, the reasoning goes, just as long as he’s good to us and gives us what we want. Hatred is a perfectly acceptable weapon, as long as it’s “on our side.”

    So said Nikabrik as he prepared to unleash a great evil on the land of Narnia.

    C. S. Lewis may have lived well before Donald Trump’s time, but he was prescient about the situation. The only fate that awaits a group that turns against its own core values for the sake of security and power is the fate of Nikabrik.
    "I think that Catholicism, that's as sane as people can get."  - Jordan Peterson


    Offline LaramieHirsch

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    Trump in Narnia
    « Reply #1 on: January 29, 2016, 12:58:43 AM »
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  • Quote
    Tired of waiting for Aslan—who may be nearer than we think—we turn elsewhere.


     :confused1:

    What in the world is this supposed to mean?  How am I to think after reading something like this?  What?  Do I say: "Too right, First Things!  I'm voting for Aslan this primary season!"


    Quote
    It doesn’t matter if our candidate hates, bullies, and exploits other people, the reasoning goes, just as long as he’s good to us and gives us what we want.


    So, the corrupt media and politicians don't deserve critical forceful language?  I thought that was what the Right has been waiting for for decades.

    This writer is a naive Pollyanna.  In my opinion.
    .........................

    Before some audiences not even the possession of the exactest knowledge will make it easy for what we say to produce conviction. For argument based on knowledge implies instruction, and there are people whom one cannot instruct.  - Aristotle


    Offline LaramieHirsch

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    Trump in Narnia
    « Reply #2 on: January 29, 2016, 01:55:24 AM »
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  • Thumbs up for providing the article, however.
    .........................

    Before some audiences not even the possession of the exactest knowledge will make it easy for what we say to produce conviction. For argument based on knowledge implies instruction, and there are people whom one cannot instruct.  - Aristotle

    Offline rum

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    Trump in Narnia
    « Reply #3 on: February 06, 2016, 12:53:56 AM »
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  • First Things was founded by the Judaized Fr. John Neuhaus after he was fired by Thomas Fleming of Chonicles Magazine. Midge Dector (wife of Norman Podhoretz), who was one of the principal Jєωs in getting Joe Sobran fired from National Review, serves on the board of advisors of First Things. Other Jєωs on the advisory board: Michael Novak, David G. Dalin, Eric Cohen.

    Quote
    The raid on the center's office was provoked by Pastor Neuhaus's complaint, supported by a number of leading conservative figures, that the Rockford Institute's monthly publication, Chronicles, was tilted toward a white, European tradition, called nativism among scholars, and that it was ''insensitive to the classic language of anti-Semitism.'' It is this, he says, that led him to request a separation of his organization from his parent.

    ...

    In a memo to Allan Carlson, the Rockford Institute's president, he said Chronicles has published articles ''that belittle the gravity of anti-Semitism as a moral evil'' while sustaining ''a running polemic against those whom the reader is invited to view as rootless, deracinated, and cosmopolitan elites,'' a reference, Pastor Neuhaus contends, to Jєωs.

    --http://www.nytimes.com/1989/05/16/us/magazine-dispute-reflects-rift-on-us-right.html


    A Jєω-controlled publication attacking a Jєω-controlled politician.
    Some would have people believe that I'm a deceiver because I've used various handles on different Catholic forums. They only know this because I've always offered such information, unprompted. Various troll accounts on FE. Ben on SuscipeDomine. Patches on ABLF 1.0 and TeDeum. GuitarPlucker, Busillis, HatchC, and Rum on Cathinfo.

    Offline TKGS

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    Trump in Narnia
    « Reply #4 on: February 06, 2016, 06:38:05 AM »
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  • Based on the people who are condemning Trump, I am beginning to wonder if he might not be the best choice!

    Frankly, the only people I would not vote for are:  Any Democrat, Jeb Bush, or Chris Christie.  Whether I'll even bother to vote is something I don't really know.  


    Offline HiddenServant

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    Trump in Narnia
    « Reply #5 on: February 06, 2016, 07:10:43 AM »
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  •   Wow and  powerful article ! Not sure how this may
    play out for the POTUS> and people voting now.