Secular Humanism
The Masonic Order of Canaanites has flourished because t has chosen its propaganda vehicles
with great care. Perhaps j he most efficient of these, one which has converted a large and vocal
segment of the Christian church to its work, is secular humanism. The basic premise of secular
humanism is that human interests should take precedence over all things. Because of its
insistence that "government interests" are the primary instrument for implementing the good of
human interests, secular humanism has become the primary advocate or statism, or big
government, which means, of course, totalitarian government. This implementation by
government bureaucrats always pits "human interests" against "spiritual interests." The spiritual
interests are soon shunted aside. Secular humanism, more properly, is the humanism of temporal
affairs, the affairs of this world. For those who believe there is no afterlife, it is of supreme
importance to maintain total control throughout this life, believing that there is no other. Those
who believe in the afterlife, on the other hand, are tempted to be too tolerant of outrages on the
earth, supposing that things will be better in the next world.
Many people confuse in their own minds the term "humanitarianism" with that of humanism.
Humanism is never humanitarian; its most widely perceived example in the twentieth century is
the death camps of Soviet Russia, where some sixty-six million souls have perished.
Humanitarianism results from compassion–and the desire to alleviate someone else’s suffering.
Humanism, on the other hand, stemming it does directly from the demon worship and the child
murders of ancient Babylon, has as its ultimate goal the inflicting of suffering on its enemies, or
anyone whom it perceives as an enemy. Humanistic social agencies in the United States
continually degrade and humiliate the persons whom they claim to be "helping." The Internal
Revenue Service is the outstanding humanistic agency in the United States; its goal is to
redistribute the wealth of the citizens to "more deserving" recipients; quite often, these
recipients are resident in foreign lands, and they would like nothing better than to see the United
States destroyed.
Humanism always has a specific political direction. Its aim is to usurp and replace man's
political institutions, and to set up in their place a permanent type of socialism, in which "the
good of humanity" will be administered by the bureaucracy of a totalitarian state. The "welfare
state" which has been established in so many Western nations is a giant step on the path leading
to this goal.