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About Amil Imani
Amil Imani is an Iranian-American writer, poet, novelist,
essayist, literary translator, public speaker, political analyst and a
pro-democracy activist who has been writing and speaking out about the danger of
radical Islam both in America and internationally. He has become a formidable
voice in America against Islamic terrorism as well as for the struggling people
of his native land of Iran. Imani has been educating Americans regarding the
danger of radical Islam, and has encouraged democracy for Iran and helping the
Iranian people. His numerous articles about radical Islam have been published in
many newspapers and magazines around the world as well as in thousands of
Internet magazines, websites and blogs. Imani's writings can be found on his
website
Amilimani.com. He is a regular go-to-guy on the
Iranian issues on BBC World News. He is also 2010 honoree of EMET: "the Speaker
of the Truth Award" at the Capitol Hill. Imani is the author of the smashing
book "Obama
Meets Ahmadinejad.” |
Click here to purchase Amil Imani's new book:
Obama Meets Ahmadinejad |
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Recent Articles
Islam
& The Mental Immune System
The
Spirit of Israel Lives On
Mosques & The Islamization of America
The
Islamic Republic Is Not Iran
Islam
Must Be Stopped in America
Obama
Meets Ahmadinejad: An Excerpt
Understanding the Muslims Mindset
The
Turkish Conundrum
America the Vulnerable
Iran,
Islam & Cyrus the Great
Will
America Survive Islamofascisim?
America: Break the Silence on Islam
Muslims’ Sheep Mentality
Liberal
Pacifism v. Islamic Extremism
The
Anachronism of Apostasy
The
Islamic Republic of Torture, Rape & Murder
A New
Day for Iran
Empowering Iranians to Dislodge the Mullahs
Christmas Spirit & Islam
The Making
& Dealing with Jihadists
Islam
Bashers Repent
Does Islam
Breed Violence?
Religion &
The Marketplace
Saluting
Cyrus the Great on His Day
President
Obama's Policy Disaster
An American
Artist Immortalizes Neda
Islam is
Misunderstood
The Islamic
Republic Compassion
Islam is
Fire
Saluting
the Committee with a Cause
A Call to
New Resolve
The Islamic
Republic of Iran: A Reality Check
Saluting
Chancellor Merkel
France
Surrenders to Ahmadinejad
Liberal-Islamist Alliance
In
Solidarity with the Iranian People
What is
Neda’s Fourth of July Message?
Islam's
Victimization of Iran
Neda: An
Angel of Freedom
Today
Everyone Is an Iranian
Liberty vs.
Demagogues
Is Democracy the Killer of Liberty?
Honoring Nazanin: An Angel of Iran
Countdown to Disaster? Who Says?
Pres. Obama: What Is It You Do Not Understand?
Obama & Khamenei
An Appeal to Cultural Muslims
A Salute to Champions of Liberty
Turning Universities into Graveyards
The Story of the Liberty Gene
Chaos, Crisis & Terror Serves the Islamic Republic
Good Hate, Bad Love
Islam Demands Surrender
Click here
for more articles by Amil Imani |
Amil Imani & Dr. Wafa Sultan
Islam & The Mental Immune System
August 30, 2010
Our beliefs and ideas make us who we are
and the qualities of those beliefs and ideas determine the kind of person we
are. We shield and fiercely defend our beliefs and ideas for good reason:
without both integrity and internal harmony, the mind becomes disorganized and
even dysfunctional. While our inborn immune system fights off viruses and
bacteria that aim to kill us, another immune system, the mental immune
system—MIS—gradually formed after birth, protects the mind and takes every
measure to keep the mind’s ideas and beliefs on the same page. In general we
inherit our opinions. We are the heirs of habits and mental customs. Our
beliefs, like the fashion of our dresses, depend on where we were born. We are
molded and fashioned by our surroundings.
If
we had been born in Saudi Arabia, the most of us would have said: "There is no
God but Allah, and Mohammed is his messenger." If our parents had lived on the
banks of the Ganges, we would have been worshipers of Siva, longing for the
heaven of Nirvana. As a rule, children love their parents, believe what they
teach, and take great pride in saying that the religion of mother is good enough
for them regardless of what that religion entails or tells them to do.
Humans are living information machines, receiving input from both external
sources as well as the body’s internal cues, processing it in some fashion, and
producing output: our thoughts and behavior. From the moment of birth, parents,
siblings, and others play a pivotal part in supplying the input messages we
receive and influencing how it is processed within us.
The
raw material for ideas and beliefs reaches us through the senses. The brain
takes the massive barrage of input and attempts to organize it and incorporate
it in an orderly fashion: a monumental task that is taken for granted until
something goes seriously wrong. Relatively minor glitches in the working of the
mind, such as misunderstanding, misperception, and making poor decisions, occur
daily and may not present serious problems. Over time, however, even these minor
glitches in the mind, caused by faulty input, poor processing or both, can add
up and significantly compromise its integrity. This is referred to as "cognitive
dissonance” when we become internally incongruent resulting from an
inconsistency within our important attitude, beliefs, or behavior, thus
we utilize defense mechanisms in order for our ego to deal with the anxiety.
The
MIS is not limited to the sole task of preventing intrusion of the disruptive or
undesirable input. It also actively seeks ideas that are harmonious and
confirmatory of the ones already in the mind. Through the active admission of
supporting ideas, the MIS reinforces its defenses and reduces its vulnerability.
Given the tabula rasa—blank slate—nature of the mind, early input becomes of
paramount importance in determining its further development. It was in
recognition of this reality that the famed behavioral psychologist, J. B. Watson
proclaimed:
"Give me a dozen healthy infants, well-formed, and my own specified world to
bring them up in and I’ll guarantee to take any one at random and train him to
become any type of specialist I might select – doctor, lawyer, artist,
merchant-chief and, yes, even beggar-man and thief, regardless of his talents,
penchants, tendencies, abilities, vocations, and race of his ancestors. I am
going beyond my facts and I admit it, but so have the advocates of the contrary
and they have been doing it for many thousands of years.”
What Watson said may not hold perfectly in every case. Yet, the essence of his
boast is indeed supported by numerous studies as well as naturalistic
observations. Early environmental influences play the cardinal role in
programming the mind—setting it on its course. One great example in psychology
is the study conducted by Albert Bandura and his colleagues in 1963 called "The
Bobo Doll”. Children watched adults interact with a Bobo Doll. Those children
who witnessed adults’ model aggressive violent acts towards the doll replicated
the observed behavior when given the chance to play with the doll. Subsequently,
the children who observed adults play gently with the doll also replicated the
behavior. In actuality, the brain seems to say: first come, first served. It is
for this reason that Muslims are overwhelmingly born to Muslim parents, Hindus
to Hindu parents, Catholics to Catholic parents, and so on.
This is not to say that changes, even major changes, are not possible after the
early years. They are possible and they do happen in some instances. However, in
order for major changes to happen, major re-working must take place in the mind.
Change is effortful and the law of conservation of energy also applies to the
working of the mind and mitigates change unless the incentives to do so overcome
the default mode of inertia.
The parents, other adults and children, as well as the prevailing culture are
powerful teachers and trainers of the young mind. In the Islamic world, Islam
permeates every aspect of life with overbearing severity. The young mind has
little access to competing non-Islamic input. As the child’s foundation of
belief forms, the MIS works to protect it, further reinforce it, and bar,
falsify, or dismiss any ideas that may clash with the mind’s already in-place
contents.
As humans, we lack comprehensive pre-programmed software—instincts—to direct us
in life. We, however, are born with pre-dispositions—rudiments of software
programs that will be further elaborated in interaction with life. We are,
therefore, importantly dependent on how we and others, and in what fashion,
further elaborate the rudimentary software. Somehow, there has been a trade-off.
As our brain evolved both in size and power, what few instincts we may have had
gave way. In a real sense, we took charge of our own destiny.
Science is learning more and more about the brain/mind, considered by many
experts as the most complex and enigmatic entity in the universe. With each
passing day, another piece of the brain/mind puzzle falls in place. Just
recently psychologist Drew Western and his team at Emory University used FMRI—functional
magnetic resonance imaging—on 15 strong Republicans and 15 staunch Democrats to
literally pinpoint the parts of the brain involved in what is called
"confirmation bias,” the lead faculty of the MIS. The participants were asked to
evaluate statements by George W. Bush and John Kerry where the candidates
clearly contradicted themselves. The researchers found that the Republicans were
as critical of John Kerry as the Democrats were of George W. Bush, while both
fiercely defended their respective political comrade.
The surprising part of the study is that while the confirmation bias was at
work, the brain areas ordinarily associated with rational decision-making were
inactive. By contrast, an elaborate network of brain structures that process
emotion and conflicts were highly activated. In short, confirmation bias has its
own brain resources that shunt out the reasoning parts in order to protect the
already in-place beliefs and preferences.
The confirmation bias, the mainstay of the MIS, protects beliefs values and
ideas, be they political, religious, or of any other type; it is also helped in
the discharge of its functions by the mind’s defense mechanisms such as
rationalization (faulty reasoning) and denial (refusing to accept the reality of
the irrefutable). Allocation of extensive faculties of the brain to content
protection demonstrates the critical importance to its normal functioning of
safeguarding the mind’s contents. It is important to remember that rationality
is not the master faculty of the brain.
Emotions also play major parts in even tasks that are ordinarily thought to be
the purview of rationality, particularly when one’s beliefs, values, and ideas
are at stake. Much of the work of the MIS is done without the person himself
being fully aware of it. Confirmation bias seems to be almost automatic and
autonomous—a first line of defense against unwelcome intruders and a means of
summoning other resources of the mind to defeat the unwelcome invaders.
The MIS is not strictly static and defensive. As it protects what is in-place,
it also actively seeks to expand the prowess of the mind by incorporating new
knowledge—preferring the kind of knowledge that does not conflict with the body
of information already at hand. This necessary openness feature of the MIS makes
it susceptible to invasion by some disharmonious input that creates conflicts in
the mind and presents the risk of paralyzing or seriously compromising its
functioning. "Beliefs” can be thought of as the main framework of the mind while
"ideas” are the minor components that connect the grid-work together.
Total or major replacement of beliefs, particularly as one gets older, becomes
less likely, yet it happens occasionally. Paul’s sudden transformation from a
rabid Christian-persecutor to a devote believer of the faith of Christ is a
familiar instance of such a drastic change. Ideas, on the other hand, are much
more amenable to change, replacement or discard as long as they do not
substantially undermine the integrity of the main framework—the belief.
Lacking pre-programs to negotiate life makes the person his own boss and
compass. Being one’s own boss is a mixed blessing. The boss has to make
decisions, many with serious implications, and accept responsibility for all
outcomes. That’s what the mind has to do at all times. Faced with difficult
decisions, conflicting ideas and demands they are not equipped to address,
people may resort to a variety of alternatives such as "regression” (acting
child-like) to absolve themselves of the responsibility of deciding and acting
on their own. People, therefore, are often willing to let someone else do the
thinking, deciding and acting for them. Conformity becomes easier because it
diffuses one’s own responsibility. In the case of regression caused by the
stress of the inability to cope, the person reverts to the time that the parents
handled those chores the defense mechanisms act by lessening anxiety caused by
the cognitive dissonance.
It is in this vein that some people wish to go back, figuratively, to the
primordial time—the time that perhaps our life was steered primarily by reflexes
and instincts and the conscious volitional brain played only minor roles. For
this reason, there is a great deal of appeal to surrender the brain to another—a
substitute for the instincts we lack. By so doing, we would be largely freed
from the often daunting task of having to make critical decisions ourselves
referred to as: "Diffusion of Responsibility.” That external brain can present
itself as a leader, a prophet of God, or a charlatan.
We like to think of ourselves as rational beings. Yet, our rational nature is
only one part of the brain/mind enigma. We are also emotional beings. We tend to
favor our rational side, because it is generally fact-based, orderly and leaves
little room for uncertainty—all importantly operative components of our
emotional nature.
Religious belief is primarily emotionally based. There is no way of rationally
proving or disproving the religious faith. Faith and reason are not the same.
"Fore of the core religious faith is that mystic feeling which unites man with
God,” a religious luminary has proclaimed.
There is nothing inherently wrong with religion. Religion can be a tremendous
force for the good. However, when religion, this feeling-based belief, is filled
with superstition, intolerance and hatred, then the beholder of that religion
embodies those qualities and becomes a veritable menace to the self and to
others. Feelings energize actions. Destructive feelings energize destructive
actions.
Muslims living in theocratic states, in particular, tend to be victims of their
religious brains: their religious brains are indoctrinated, from the moment of
birth, by an extensive ruthless in-power cadre of self-serving mullahs and imams
who are intent at maintaining their stranglehold on the rank and file of the
faithful—their very source of support and livelihood. Allah does not reward his
followers for their honesty, generosity and bravery, but for the act of faith
and blind obedience. Without faith, all the so-called virtues were sins, and the
men who practiced these virtues, without faith in Allah, deserved to suffer
eternal pain.
The
mullahs and imams, as well as parents and others, envelop the receptive mind,
feed it their dogma, and shield it from information that may undermine or
falsify their version of belief.
Nothing serves as a greater joy than to know that this belief in eternal pain is
growing weaker every day -- that thousands of brainwashed Mullahs, Imams are
ashamed of their action. It gives us joy and hope to know that Muslims are
becoming merciful, so merciful that the fires of hell are burning low --
flickering, choked with ashes, destined in a few years to die out forever.
However, for as long as there are bigoted, self-serving clergy and their
collaborators with first exclusive access to the blank slate, the problem of
supplying wave after wave of Islamofascists will persist. It is the brain/mind
that assesses things, makes decisions, and orders actions. To the extent that
the in-place software of the religious brain is exclusionary in nature, hateful
in orientation, and violent in tendency, to that extent the individual is both
the perpetrator and the victim of barbaric acts.
The surest way of dealing with Islam’s intolerant views is through effective
inculcation of a religious software that promotes tolerance of diversity,
freedom of faith and conscious, goodwill to all, as well as purging of all the
vile and discriminatory dogma that permeates the out-dated primitive belief of
some 1400 years ago. The best place to start is clearly the home, then schools,
and mosques where the deeply-entrenched mullahs and imams of vested interest
must be compelled by law to refrain from preaching messages of hate and violence
against the unbelievers.
Perhaps free societies should constitute a diverse panel of citizens to
scrutinize all religious teachings and screen the software programs for
destructive viruses. Once these viruses are introduced into the mind, clearing
them, as we said before, becomes difficult if not impossible.
A religious brain programmed by the message of justice, love and respect for all
is bliss, while the discriminatory, hateful, and violent religious brain is a
curse.
Dr.
Wafa Sultan is a Psychologist and the author of "A
God Who Hates" |