Our human cultures define an abomination as any action, behaviour, occurrence, or event, that can render extinct a community.
If the planet Earth were a community in equal context as our human communities, something abominable to it would be an asteroid impact, global warming, or the killing of endangered species crucial to our ecosystem, all of which any person found not working to avoid or prevent, would receive the death sentence.
At the emergence of each of our human communities, we all understood our environments as being under the authority of a God or a series of Gods. Our God or Gods gave us commandments to keep us safe in our environments. The commandments they gave us however were within context only of our immediate environments. The climatic, ecological, and geological processes of our environments, their natural resources and disasters, community trends, political and economic upheavals, also regional conflicts, and more, all influenced to great extents the types of commandments the Gods gave us.
Each set of commandments, founded regionally, applied traditionally, obeyed unquestionably, and passed on from generation to generation, defined conclusively the moral standards of each our communities, inseparable from our cultures. One commandment common across many communities was that we avoid intermingling with other cultures. This was for our protection, because to take the commandments of any one community out of context of its environment, and apply to another community in another environment, was deliberately to cause that community to sin, potentially to live in abomination.
Today, all our communities in existence have their list of abominable actions, behaviours, occurrences, and events that they believe their God, Gods, Government leaders, Supreme Deities, Lawmakers, or Senates have given them for their protection, and they condemn any other community contravening their list. A community considers another community abominable if the people either eat certain foods, wear certain clothing, worship a certain god, have a particular skin colour, equate women to men, accommodate being LGBTQ, ignore a holy day, or disregard the status quo of having slaves and masters or bloodlines. Each community believes that avoiding their abominations has been the key to their survival and continued existence for generations, and they treat with extreme prejudice, any person, people, or societies engaging in these abominable acts, whose destruction, they believe, is inevitable.
There is no version of Earth where any two of our human communities, having different evolutionary human cultures, coexist peacefully. Regrettably, we all as humans inescapably each are offspring of one of the numerous human cultures evolved in our nations. Cultured from our childhoods, we subconsciously endorse their moral standards, believing them the finest for every community. We all are guilty equally of the understanding that our cultures of origin are the most rational or morally accurate, and we propose passionately to colonize other cultures, being cynical of their standards. We take confidence in the delusion that our cultures possess the best ideology for our collective human peaceful and progressive coexistence.
The moral standards of all our evolutionary human cultures in existence are self-righteous, opinionated, and egotistical, because they cater only to our racial interests. They all suffer from a lack of knowledge of how a single environment, inclusive of all human cultures, should work successfully.
As an embryonic civilization, we were ignorant to the handicaps of our human cultures. Now however with greater knowledge, we have a choice, either to reinvent them, or to continue unrealistically in competition for cultural dominance against one another, the height of which would be the war called Armageddon.
To be destructive people, we need not be religiously extreme, politically biased, racially inclined, or tyrannical leaders. We need only be loyal to preserving our moral values, as defined by our evolutionary human cultures.
In conclusion here, we must try to answer the following question. Are we intelligent enough to revolutionize our human cultures?
#End of Part 1.