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The Holy Place
29-XI-2004
This from Scott Adams...
As you know, the best way to solve a problem is to identify the core
belief that causes the problem; then mock that belief until the people
who hold it insist that you heard them wrong.
The core belief that drives terrorism is the notion of a "holy place,"
along with the idea that some people belong there and other people
don't. That's why the only solution to terrorism is for religious
scholars to hold a global summit to agree on the definition of "holy
place." Once they agree on a definition, it will be easier to mock it
into submission.
At some point during the summit, probably after a week or so, the
scholars would tire of saying to each other, "Nice hat" and asking,
"What setting do you use to trim your ratty beard?" Then they'd get down
to the business of defining what makes a place holy. Someone would
suggest that the key things are the location and the fact that something
holy happened there.
Eventually, someone with a second-grade understanding of space,
possibly the busboy, would point out that everything in the universe has
moved a gazillion miles since the holy event, and the concept of location is
meaningless unless all the reference points stay put. The best-case scenario
is that the "holy place" is now a billion miles away, floating in empty
space.
After some embarrassed mumbling, the scholars would insist that they knew
all along that location wasn't important. One of them would break the
awkwardness by suggesting that a holy place must be defined by the "stuff"
that comprises it. That's good news, because the Middle East is made
entirely of dirt. The wise King Solomon probably would have advised people
to help themselves to as much holy dirt as they wanted. He might have gone
so far as to suggest that people put holy dirt in their socks so they can
enjoy walking on it wherever they go. But first he would have invented socks
and patented the idea, because in addition to being wise, he had a good head
for business.
Religious scholars should also help the rest of us understand the question
of holy depth. Is it just the top layer of soil that's holy, or does the
holiness continue lower into the ground? It's important because if there's
no bottom limit, then whatever is on the exact opposite side of the earth is
also holy, only upside down. The residents would have to stand on their
heads to get the full benefit of the holy rays, but it would be worth it.
Feel free to forward this Holy Place argument to any Induhviduals who need
the enlightenment that comes from having their core beliefs mocked. I can't
guarantee that this will stop terrorism, but whatever you're doing now isn't
working.
If you want more thought-provoking ideas in the same realm, check out my new
book, The Religion War. It's a sequel to my non-Dilbert book, God's Debris.
It's guaranteed to become a collector's item after al-Qaeda gets me. And
it's ideal for book clubs and people who like to have their preconceived
notions tweaked.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0740747886/dilbertcom-20
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