The Grand Delusion: Islam
by Amil Imani
"We are our beliefs," it is said. Beliefs steer people
in life. Some beliefs are harmless, some are the
motive force for good, and yet others are delusional,
misguided, and even outright dangerous. Every version
of the belief called "Islam" ranges from the
delusional to the dangerous.
Islam is a Grand Delusion, birthed by Muhammad's
hallucination he relayed to his first wife and
employer, Khadija. Greatly frightened, he told Khadija
that he was visited by jinn (devil) in the Hira cave.
Khadija comforted the distraught man by assuring him
that the episode was Allah's way of choosing him as
his messenger. Muhammad believed his rich
wife-employer who was 15 years his senior and the
delusion became a belief-Islam.
Remarkably enough, under the early tutelage of
Khadija, Muhammad succeeded in attracting a number of
influential followers. Before long, the movement
gathered more and more power through violent campaigns
and the faith was taken to new people and alien lands.
This grand delusion, Islam, presently has in its
stranglehold over a billion humans, posing an
existential threat to all non-Muslims.
Islam is rooted in the primitive tribal mentality of
"We against Them," "We the righteous against the
heathens," "We the servants submissive of the Great
Allah against the rebellious enemies of Allah." Islam
is a polarizer. Islam is an enemy-maker. To Islam, a
non-Muslim is a combatant against Allah and he is fair
game to be subjugated and killed.
When some billion and a half adhere to the
pathological belief of Islam and use it as their
marching order of life, the rest of humanity can
ignore the threat only at its own peril.
Once again, a resurgent Islam is on a campaign of
conquest throughout the world. Hordes of life-in-hand
foot-solider fanatical Muslims are striving to kill
and get killed. All they want is the opportunity to
discharge their homicidal-suicidal impulse, on their
way to Allah's promised glorious paradise. And in the
background granting the foot-soldiers' wishes are
their handlers, the puppeteers, who pull the strings
and detonate these human bombs. Those who cherish life
must recognize these emissaries of death, what makes
them, what motivates them, and how best to defend
against them.
The campaign of death waged by the Islamist-jihadist,
be he a puppet or a puppeteer, is energized by the
belief of delectable rewards that await the faithful
implementer of Allah's dictates. Through a highly
effective indoctrination, the jihadist has come to
believe firmly in Islam's grand delusion. He believes
that Allah is the one and only supreme creator of
earth and heavens; that it is his duty and privilege
to abide by Allah's will and carry out his plans at
all costs; he believes firmly in a gloriously
wonderful immortal afterlife in paradise, for which a
martyr's death is the surest quickest admission.
Although the dominating theme of the delusion is quasi
spiritual, the promised rewards of the afterlife
awaiting the martyr are sensual and material. All the
things and activities that the jihadist desires and
cannot attain or practice, and rejects in his earthly
life will be purified and proffered to him in the
paradise of the next life. Thus goes the delusion.
It is important to understand that the human mind is
not a perfect discerner of the objective reality. In
actuality, reality is in the mind of the beholder. The
outside world only supplies bits and pieces of raw
material that the mind puts together to form its
reality. Depending on the type and amount of bits and
pieces that a given mind receives, its reality can be
very different from that of another mind.
The more prescribed and homogeneous a group, the
greater is the group's consensual reality, since the
members share much in common experiential input and
reinforce each others' mindset. Thus, members of a
given religious order, for instance, tend to think
much more similarly to one another than to members of
other groups with different experiential histories.
Various approximations of the objective reality,
therefore, rule the mind. The degree to which these
approximations deviate from the larger group's
consensual reality determines its delusional extent
and severity.
A cocaine mainliner, for instance, under the influence
of the drug, may become convinced that a bug is
burrowing under his skin. In his absolute, although
clearly false, certitude of the reality of his
perception, cocaine users are known to take a knife to
their own body to dig the burrowing bug out before it
has penetrated too deeply.
A methamphetamine user's reality is often distorted in
a different way. Under the influence of the drug, an
intense paranoia overtakes him. His reality is
dominated by the belief that one or more people are
lurking about to harm or kill him. He may wield a
deadly weapon, going from room to room, from closet to
closet, in search of the assailants.
If you believe that a bug is camping deeply in your
body, then you might go ahead and try to dig the
non-existent bug out. If you believe that people are
lurking around the house to harm or kill you, you go
after them before they get you. If you believe that
all the troubles of the world are due to the
evil-doings of the non-Muslims who war against Allah,
then you do all you can to fight and kill them,
particularly since Allah tells you to do so in the
Quran.
The drug-induced delusions are hallucinations. They
are dramatic and usually transitory, while
religiously-based implantation of ideas program the
mind with lasting delusions.
Delusions, even when they are at great variance from
the objective reality, can rule the mind without the
need for drugs, or as a result of neurological
dysfunctions or other factors. The young and the
less-educated are most vulnerable to believe the
claims of charlatans, con artists, and cunning
clerics, as truth and reality.
A tragic example of the young's susceptibility to
induced delusion is the case of thousands of Iranian
children who were used as human minesweepers in the
last Iran-Iraq war. The mullahs issued made-in-China
plastic keys for paradise to children as enticement to
go forward and clear the minefield with their bodies
ahead of the military's armored vehicles. The children
believed the murderers and rushed to their death,
thinking that they were headed for Islam's glorious
paradise.
The repeated intense indoctrination of the children
even changed the perception of some of the charlatan
mullahs so that they, themselves, believed their own
lies, took their own keys to Allah's paradise and
rushed to their death clinging to the plastic
trinkets. Hence, some of the puppeteers, in this
instance, became puppets themselves. Such are the
follies and fallibilities of the human mind.
It is, therefore, understandable that many of the
higher-up Islamic puppeteers, who are usually
brainwashed from early childhood, devote their
fortunes and persons to the implementation of their
deeply engrained delusions.
Deluded by the threats and promises of Islam, Muslims,
poor or rich, vie with one another in furthering the
violent cause of Allah.
Many non-Muslims are also victims of a different, yet
just as deadly, delusion. They believe that Islam is a
religion of peace, that only a small minority of
Muslims are jihadists, and Muslims can be reasoned
with to abandon the Quran-mandated elimination of the
non-believers. These well-meaning simpletons are just
as deluded as the fanatic jihadists by refusing to
acknowledge the fact that one cannot be a Muslim and
not abide by the dictates of the Quran.
Amil Imani is an Iranian-born American citizen and
pro-democracy activist residing in the United States
of America.
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