Judging someone as irredeemably lost to damnation is one thing.
However, nonjudgmentalism as the highest regard has contributed to flourishing wickedness and misery.
Nonjudgmentalism is one factor that has lulled people to allowing violent, anarchic, anti-American, anti-Semitic, anti-White behavior with impunity.
It is nonjudgmentalism that has allowed the current drug epidemic, deterioration of our cities, decay of civilization, and people living like animals in the streets.
For
one example from my 25 years in mental health, it is nonjudgmentalism that ignores a teenage girls promiscuity, leading to parenthood, unstable and often violent relationships, and attempts to "treat" her diagnoses as if they all originated within her brain.
Below are excerpts from
The Rush from Judgment by famed psychiatrist Anthony Malcolm Daniels, better known by his pen name Theodore Dalrymple:
Quote:
Apologists for nonjudgmentalism point, above all, to its supposed quality of compassion. A man who judges others will sometimes condemn them and therefore deny them aid and assistance: whereas the man who refuses to judge excludes no one from his all-embracing compassion. He never asks where his fellowman's suffering comes from, whether it be self-inflicted or no: for whatever its source, he sympathizes with it and succors the sufferer.
Quote:
If the doctor has a duty to relieve the suffering of his patients, he must have some idea where that suffering comes from, and this involves the retention of judgment, including moral judgment. And if, as far as he can tell in good faith, the misery of his patients derives from the way they live, he has a duty to tell them sowhich often involves a more or less explicit condemnation of their way of life as completely incompatible with a satisfying existence. By avoiding the issue, the doctor is not being kind to his patients; he is being cowardly. Moreover, by refusing to place the onus on the patients to improve their lot, he is likely to mislead them into supposing that he has some purely technical or pharmacological answer to their problems, thus helping to perpetuate them.
Quote:
In any case, nonjudgmentalism is not really nonjudgmental. It is the judgment that . . . everything is the same, nothing is better. This is as barbaric and untruthful a doctrine as has yet emerged from the fertile mind of man.