Quote Originally Posted by Alex Bragi View Post

However, I can’t agree with this assessment: “But Karen Armstrong aptly points out that fundamentalism is already on the way out and was mostly a 50'ies to 80'ies phenomena. Today fundamentalists are a fringe movement in all parts of the world including the middle-east.”

You need not look further than the USA’s “Bible Belt” (where the separation of Church and State has become so blurred), to realise how strong fundamentalist Christianity is today and, more importantly, how politically powerful it’s become.
I'll buy that. Karen Armstrong's theory is that the root of all religious fundamentalism is the stress of the new modern culture and the perceived assault of the secular world on it. If we accept her theory and think of all our new technology and it's increasing complexity it becomes understandable.

Her focus in this book was Islamic fundamentalism. She covers the Christians fundamentalists in "God's warriors". I haven't read that one, so I can't really say in detail what she mentions about it, and me personally; I don't know more than what I see in sensationalist press, which paints a picture of USA as extremely backward spiritually, (like in Kansas for example) which I just don't accept. I personally think it's just journalism focusing on the extremes