God and His Demons is a 2010 polemic by political scientist and cultural critic Michael Parenti
, questioning their "holy" reputations and highlighting their ties to reactionary political regimes. Institutional Exploitation
One of the primary concerns with the concept of God and his demons is the problem of evil. If God is all-powerful, all-knowing, and benevolent, why does evil exist? The presence of demons, or malevolent entities, seems to contradict the notion of a benevolent God. This paradox is often referred to as the "problem of evil." If God is capable of preventing evil, knows that evil exists, and desires to prevent it, then why does evil persist?
The vision shifted. He saw a demon, the one who used to manage the file on "Children Who Die Before Baptism." The demon had not stopped working. It couldn't. It was its nature. For ten thousand years, it had been filing the same infinite folder, but now there was no destination for the files. So the demon had improvised. It had started filing them in the hearts of the living. Into the quiet moments before sleep. Into the space between a parent's goodbye and a car crash.
Institutional Hypocrisy: He critiques historical figures often considered "saints" (such as Mother Teresa) and explores the political alliances between religious institutions and right-wing regimes. Accessing the Text
Assuming you are looking for the content rather than just the file, here are the three major arguments you will encounter if you locate the document.
Unique among critics, Parenti extends his scrutiny to Eastern traditions. He specifically challenges the "Shangri-La myths" of old Tibet, describing the oppressive feudal control maintained by Buddhist clerics before 1959. Is There Hope for the Sacred?