Black Metal and Self-Liquidation

Sunday, December 6th, 2015

In the 1980s heavy metal bands rode the Satanic panic to popularity with over-the-top lyrics and album-cover art, but its more extreme subgenre of black metal led to actual anti-Christian action in Norway:

In the early to mid-1990s, black metallists launched a wave of arson attacks on churches, including one dating from the 12th century. By 1996 there had been 50 church burnings, with similar attacks spreading to Sweden.

Those convicted showed no remorse, and lack of remorse still prevails among many in the black metal scene:

Many, such as Infernus and Gaahl of Gorgoroth, continue to praise the church burnings, with the latter saying “there should have been more of them, and there will be more of them”. Others, such as Necrobutcher and Kjetil Manheim of Mayhem and Abbath of Immortal, see the church burnings as having been futile. Manheim claimed that many arsons were “just people trying to gain acceptance” within the black metal scene. Watain vocalist Erik Danielsson respected the attacks, but said of those responsible: “the only Christianity they defeated was the last piece of Christianity within themselves. Which is a very good beginning, of course”. (Wikipedia, 2015b)

Why this hostility to Christianity? And why is it more extreme in Norway? These questions are raised in a review of black metal around the world:

Individualistic and anti-Christian rhetoric is common across the American death metal scene, and metal bands worldwide look to native traditions as a means to combat cultural hegemony [...], yet nothing on the scale of the crimes in Norway has occurred elsewhere. (Wallach et al., 2011, p. 198)

One reason is the role of organized religion in Norwegian life. Although there are other denominations, the Church of Norway is the leading one and receives State support. Despite recent legislation in 2012 to weaken this relationship with the State, all clergy remain civil servants, the central and regional church administrations remain part of the state administration, all municipalities must support the Church of Norway’s activities, and municipal authorities are still represented in its local bodies (Wikipedia, 2015a)

As either a partner or a rival of the government, the Church of Norway has helped to make public policy: first, the postwar expansion of the welfare state and, later, the boycotts against South Africa. Now, it is leading the push for large-scale non-European/non-Christian immigration, which began in the early 1990s through the “sanctuary movement.” By 1993, as many as 140 congregations were housing 650 Albanians from Kosovo. By reframing immigration in moral terms, the Church made it that much harder to place limits on it, since morality is normally perceived in absolute terms, e.g., murder is always wrong, and not wrong within limits (Lippert and Rehaag, 2013, pp. 126-129).

After a lull, this movement is once more on the upswing:

As the group of unreturnable refugees in Norway has risen over recent years, churches have again become places for public appeals for these groups, through hunger strikes, tents camped as protest at the walls of central churches, and asylum marches following old pilgrimage paths. (Lippert and Rehaag, 2013, p.129).

The Church of Norway is now working with Lutherans elsewhere in Northern Europe to facilitate immigration from Africa and the Middle East. At a meeting this year in Trondheim, the Lutheran World Federation pushed for three measures: expansion of Italy’s Mare Nostrum initiative to the entire Mediterranean; creation of “safe passage” corridors for migrants; and “just distribution” of migrants within Europe (Anon, 2015).

Norway is not the only country where churches have been promoting African and Muslim immigration, but church involvement is especially pivotal there and in Scandinavia as a whole. Because immigration was very limited until recent decades, it is legitimized much more by Christian universalism than by a pre-existing tradition of immigration, as in the United States, Canada, and France. A second reason is the relative dominance of one State-supported church and the unthinking adherence of most Scandinavians, even atheists, to the Lutheran tradition. Thus, in comparison to other predominantly Christian societies, they can more quickly reach a policy consensus, or have one imposed on them.

Frost concludes:

Aside from a few frozen islands and a brief claim to part of Greenland, Norway never had a colonial empire. Nor was it ever involved in the slave trade. Yet, today, the average Norwegian feels more guilt over having white skin and more deference toward dark-skinned people than do citizens of most European countries, including former colonial powers. This is a relatively recent development, being postwar and mostly post-1960 — a time when Norway and other Scandinavian countries were striving to assimilate modern Western values, including antiracism.

Scandinavians have been very good at internalizing and acting out those values. They are like model students who have learned to outdo their teachers. This partly reflects — ironically — their cultural homogeneity and their ability to reach consensus and act collectively with little foot-dragging.

This also reflects certain profound psychological traits that characterize Northwest Europeans in general, with Scandinavians forming the epicenter. To the north and west of the Hajnal line, Europeans have long had weaker kinship ties and correspondingly stronger individualism. This social environment has in turn favored a greater emphasis on absolute, universally applicable rules, combined with a stronger desire to expel rule breakers. This system of morality differs from the relativistic, kin-based morality that prevails elsewhere in the world, where right and wrong are more a matter of whose side you are on… and who does what to whom.

Moral universalism and moral absolutism have brought many benefits. They have enabled Northwest Europeans to free themselves from the limitations of kinship and build large high-trust societies that leave greater room for the individual. But such societies have an Achilles heel. They are vulnerable to people who play by a different rule book, be they native deviants who practice “selfishness for me and selflessness for thee” or immigrants from low-trust, kin-based societies… in short, the majority of humans on this planet.

In the past, this was no problem because Norway received few immigrants and because rule breakers of any origin were ruthlessly ostracized. Over the past half-century, however, Norwegians have been persuaded that the supreme rule is Thou shalt not be racist. It follows, therefore, that racists are supreme offenders who must be expelled from society, like witches and heretics of another age. A psychological mechanism that once enabled Norwegian society to perpetuate itself has been reprogrammed to ensure its self-liquidation.

Comments

  1. Slovenian Guest says:

    It’s not called Christ insanity for nothing… A perfect fit for the toxoplasmosis-ridden Whitey.

    Hail Thor, mighty thunderer!

  2. Grurray says:

    Notice they attack churches not mosques. We saw at the Bataclan what happens when these poseurs meet Islamic terrorists.

    They’re remorseless for their crimes because they barely get punished. My advice is to cut off their unemployment checks and their monthly allotment of anti-depressants. Maybe they’ll then find real jobs instead of that candy-assed knumbskulled noise pollution.

  3. Bomag says:

    Christian doctrine could leave one prone to extinction: keep turning the other cheek, and the world will take advantage of you until you are wearing a gimp suit inside a shipping container. The admonition in Luke to “give to everyone who begs from you, and from one who takes away your goods do not demand them back” looks like a recipe for the secular world to dine on your carcass.

    One of the first questions in the Bible inquires, “am I my brother’s keeper?” The extant Norwegians have answered it in the affirmative, but when your brother has had seven billion kids, it is time for some context.

  4. A.B. Prosper says:

    Grurray, horse hockey.

    Varg Virkirnes for example got 25 years for his crimes which is far more than the homicide would normally have gotten (6-12 years for what was probably second degree murder) because he burned a church in this manner.

    Also the church burnings are somewhat related to the burning of refugee centers or less so to Brehkiks attacks. Attack on the root of the problem which is the church and in Brehviks’s case the next political class. Attacking refugee centers is far more effective than attacking Mosques as well.

    Quite logical actually if cold blooded.

    Also we in the West are basically fed a censored news feed.

    They don’t cover the massive number of refugee center burnings, the arming of at least parts of Europe the rise of the Right and the pushback mainly to create a myth of Cathedral omnipotence

    We aren’t really allowed to see it simply because they fear contagion. People there know and I think the Left their knows, they either resolve the problem or end up dealt with.

    However starting a civil war in a tiny country means killing hundreds of thousands of your close fellows. It is a big deal, especially for Scandinavians and they like our actual Right are trying to avoid a bloodbath.

    I don’t know how much longer they can keep it up though. its heavily dependent on how much of the European left is still sane

    if they entirely as nuts as SJW’s and always double down and choke off political options, they’ll be removed by force if needed.

    If they don’t, a lot of foreign people will be removed,

    I’ll note too Sweden is already cracking down on immigration and others will follow. Norway my be last but again they had a mass killing over it and Brehvik is not alone in those feelings.

    Those same Black Metal guys could easily be weaponized

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