REASON IN REVOLT

The Empire of the One God.

The Empire of the One God.NO.

Iran’s Muslim ayatollahs are NOT the deepest problem.The Zionist regime of Israel is NOT the ultimate evil.Even the so-called “Great Satan,” the United States, is NOT the root of the crisis.

These are only symptoms.

The deeper and far more destructive force in human history is Abrahamic monotheism itself—and its three institutional embodiments: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.

For thousands of years these religions have proclaimed a single jealous God who speaks through prophets and demands obedience. The result has been predictable: wars of revelation, civilizations divided into believers and enemies, and moral systems grounded not in reason or compassion but in divine command.

Strip away the sacred language and a simpler reality appears.

They are called religions. But viewed through history rather than faith, they are CRIMINAL enterprises with metaphysical justifications — theological MAFIAS operating on a planetary scale.

These traditions often function as metaphysical systems of domination—religions that claim divine authority while reshaping or erasing the civilizations they encounter.

History offers many examples.

In the late Roman Empire, the rise of Christian orthodoxy led to the destruction of pagan temples across the Mediterranean world, dismantling religious institutions that had sustained Greek and Roman civilization for centuries.

Across Persia and large parts of India, Islamic conquests displaced older religious worlds, replacing temples, traditions, and intellectual cultures with a new order grounded in revelation.

In the Americas, Christian missionary expansion accompanied European conquest, transforming entire civilizations and replacing indigenous spiritual traditions with the theology of a distant desert revelation.

The pattern repeats across history.

These religions often arrive proclaiming salvation, but they also carry a civilizational program: take the land, convert the people, and replace the older world.

And then comes the theater of charity.

First they come and break your legs—destroy your temples, erase your traditions, dismantle the intellectual and spiritual world that sustained your civilization.

Then they arrive with wheelchairs.

Photographs are taken. Cameras flash. Reports are written. The images travel across the world as proof of their compassion.

Look, they say, how kind we are.The broken legs disappear from the story.The wheelchair becomes the miracle.

Humanity deserves better than this theological theater.

Liberate yourself from the bluffs of Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad. Their authority rests not on evidence, reason, or philosophical inquiry, but on unverifiable claims of revelation.

Turn instead to the teachers who invited humanity to think rather than submit: Buddha, Confucius, and Socrates.

These traditions encourage examination rather than obedience, dialogue rather than dogma, and wisdom rather than fear.

They also cultivate a very different relationship with the living world.

In the Abrahamic traditions, animals are routinely slaughtered under religious law. Halal and kosher practices sanctify ritual killing, embedding violence within theology itself.

Contrast this with the Jain tradition of India, one of the most radical ethical experiments in human history. Jain philosophy elevates ahimsa—non-violence toward all living beings—to the highest moral principle. Many Jain practitioners go to extraordinary lengths to avoid harming even the smallest creature.

The contrast is profound.

One worldview sanctifies the killing of animals under divine command.

Another strives to avoid harming even a fly.

Imagine a world that moved away from Abrahamic monotheism and toward philosophies grounded in compassion and rational inquiry.

The first beneficiaries would not only be human beings.

Animals themselves would be happier in such a world, no longer hunted for pleasure or butchered in the name of God.

The world will not become humane by choosing between rival monotheisms. Humanity’s real hope lies elsewhere. It lies in the courage to say that the age of Abrahamic monotheism must end.

Only through intellectual and moral liberation from the empire of the one God (THAT ONE GOD IS FAKE) can humanity begin to build a civilization grounded in reason, compassion, philosophical inquiry, and genuine reverence for life.