The Religious Right
and
The Emerging American Theocracy
"The
religious right is winning. They've won." -- Howard Stern
In
Dec. 2002, New York Times columnist Paul Krugman reported that House
Majority Leader Tom Delay had openly admitted he was "on a mission from God to
promote a 'biblical worldview' in American politics." On Monday, the
Washington Times revealed that DeLay "is about to announce his own
legislative agenda."
"One
goal, [Delay] said, will be to re-establish what he sees as the rightful role of
religion in public places. . ." [Washington
Times]
In
other words, look out.
The
warning signs have been in place for quite some time, but went largely unnoticed
until the walls started closing in on shock jock Howard Stern. When Project
Censored listed "FCC Moves to Privatize Airwaves" as its top censored news story
for 2001-2002 and shed its suspicious spotlight on FCC chairman Michael Powell,
for example, few noticed. "[T]he mainstream press has raised few warnings about
the FCC's squashing of the public interest," Project Censored's Brendan Koerner
wrote, while co-author Dorothy Kidd explained that "things have just gotten
worse for the US public with regards to media democracy. Mergers are up and the
number of dominant players controlling media production and distribution has
shrunk to a handful." [ProjectCensored.org]
Or, as Rep. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) put it, "The bottom line is that fewer and
fewer huge conglomerates are controlling virtually everything that the ordinary
American sees, hears and reads."
Fast
forward to 2004 and Howard Stern's woes. "What this company [Clear Channel] is
doing is buying up every radio station, then they sign someone like me for five
years at a time and renew my contracts and then wake up one day and have a whole
new attitude," Stern said. "Now why do they have a new attitude with me, but not
with that guy [Michael] Savage who sits there and talks about infesting people
with AIDS and all that stuff? He's just as controversial, but he backs Bush.
They're being intellectually dishonest."
Welcome to our brave new world.
In
case you missed this unfortunate paradigm shift, this hypothetical scenario
might help: Imagine, for a moment, that Sept. 11 occurred on Clinton's watch.
Now, can you imagine anyone being "Dixie Chicked" for criticizing Bill Clinton?
"My
days here are numbered because I dared to speak out against the Bush
administration and say that the religious agenda of George W. Bush concerning
stem cell research and gay marriage is wrong," Stern said. "And that what he is
doing with the FCC is pushing this religious agenda."
For
those who've been supplementing daily requirements of U.S. news with reports
from the foreign press, the ramifications of Stern's honesty are understood.
Though it's likely to cost him dearly, he's become the unlikely champion for
those who know that the underlying themes are not, as most pundits would have us
believe, a matter of liberals vs. conservatives, Republicans vs. Democrats or
blue states vs. red, but threats to America itself.
Yet,
considering the steady diet of nonsense we're fed by a bevy of clueless pundits,
busy citizens are understandably confused -- which is why it is absolutely
stunning that Stern sees past the smoke and mirrors and is sounding off. "Does
anyone have a problem with a United States senator being funded by a religious
organization?" Stern asked, regarding Kansas Senator Sam Brownback's faith-based
living arrangement, which is subsidized by the secretive religious organization,
The Fellowship. [Charleston
Post and Courier] "Now when someone gives you low cost housing – a gift
– do you think you have to answer to them?"
As
Rev. Barry Lynn, head of Americans United for the Separation of Church and State
put it, "What concerns people is when you mix religion, political power and
secrecy," which coincidentally (and sadly) pretty much sums up the State of the
Union today.
So
how embedded is the religious right in our political institutions? In his aptly
titled Jan. 28, 2004 Rolling Stone cover story, "Reverend Doomsday,"
Robert Dreyfuss explains: "It might seem unlikely that the commander in chief
would take his marching orders directly from on high -- unless you understand
the views of the Rev. Timothy LaHaye, one of the most influential leaders of the
Christian right, and a man who played a quiet but pivotal role in putting George
W. Bush in the White House."
LaHaye, you may recall, is co-author of the various Left Behind series,
which, to date, has sold a reported whopping 60 million copies. A "strict
biblical reconstructionist" who takes the Bible as "God's literal truth," LaHaye
believes that Armageddon will be unleashed from "the Antichrist's headquarters
in Babylon" (i.e. Iraq).
"Of
course, there have always been preachers on the margins of the religious right
thundering on about the end of the world," Dreyfuss writes. "But it's doubtful
that such a fanatic believer has ever had such a direct pipeline to the White
House. Five years ago, as Bush was gearing up his presidential campaign, he made
a little-noticed pilgrimage to a gathering of right-wing Christian activists,
under the auspices of a group called the Committee to Restore American Values.
The committee, which assembled about two dozen of the nation's leading
fundamentalist firebrands, was chaired by LaHaye." [Rolling
Stone]
In
other words, Toto, we're not in Kansas anymore, and the religious right wants to
be the great and powerful Oz. For your consideration, here are some of the means
by which they're succeeding:
The
Council for National Policy
Deemed by ABC News as "the most powerful conservative group you've never heard
of," the Council for National Policy, which was co-founded by former Moral
Majority head LaHaye, has included John Ashcroft, Ed Meese, Ralph Reed, the
editor of The National Review, Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, Grover
Norquist and Oliver North among its members.
As
ABC put it, "the council has deservedly attained the reputation for conceiving
and promoting the ideas of many who in fact do want to control everything in the
world. . . The CNP helped Christian conservatives take control of the Republican
state party apparati in Southern and Midwestern states. It helped to spread word
about the infamous 'Clinton Chronicles' videotapes that linked the president to
a host of crimes in Arkansas." (According to Rolling Stone, "The
impeachment effort was reportedly conceived at a June 1997 meeting of the CNP in
Montreal.")
Secular-minded folks are likely to be most intrigued by the fact that President
Bush made his rumored "king-making" speech before CNP in 1999, fueling
speculation that the council was responsible for his presidential nomination.
And though the Democratic National Committee and others urged Bush's
presidential campaign to release the tape of his CNP speech, the Bush camp
refused.
What
was on that tape? Depending on who you believe, "Bush promised to appoint only
anti-abortion-rights judges to the Supreme Court, or he stuck to his campaign
'strict constructionist' phrase. Or he took a tough stance against gays and
lesbians, or maybe he didn't." [ABC
News]
As
we now know, Bush is endorsing a Constitutional amendment which could change the
country forever. As one Republican lawyer told Andrew Sullivan, "[With] one
amendment the religious right could wipe out access to birth control, abortion,
and even non-procreative sex (as Senator Santorum so eagerly wants to do). This
debate isn't only about federalism, it's about the reversal of two hundred years
of liberal democracy that respects individuals." Or, as Sullivan put it, "Memo
to straights: you're next." [AndrewSullivan.com]
The Christian Coalition
On
Dec. 24, 2001, the Washington Post featured an article entitled
"Religious Right Finds Its Center in Oval Office: Bush Emerges as Movement's
Leader After Robertson Leaves Christian Coalition " in which reporter Dana
Milbank explained exactly how significant the Supreme Court's selection of
George W. Bush was. "For the first time since religious conservatives became a
modern political movement, the president of the United States has become the
movement's de facto leader," Milbank wrote. [Washington
Post]
Meanwhile, former Christian Coalition head Ralph Reed explained Bush's rise to
the White House in revolutionary terms. "You're no longer throwing rocks at the
building; you're in the building," he said, adding that God "knew George Bush
had the ability to lead in this compelling way."
Bush
reportedly made similar statements. According to Newsweek, "As he
prepared to run, in 1999, Bush assembled leading pastors at the governor's
mansion for a "laying-on of hands," and told them he'd been "called" to seek
higher office." And as Bob Woodward wrote in Bush at War: "The President
was casting his mission and that of the country in the grand vision of God's
Master Plan," wherein Bush promised, in the President's own words, "to export
death and violence to the four corners of the earth in defense of this great
country and rid the world of evil."
"Bush's flirtation with End Times rhetoric makes some suspect that he actually
perceives himself as God's instrument," Gene Lyons noted, and his sentiment was
echoed in former Nixon aide Charles Colson's observation that, "Some wonder if
the president might be influenced by evangelical teachings that envision an
end-of-the-world battle between Israel and its enemies. It would be dangerous
for a president to take a particular theology like that and apply it to world
events."
Christian Zionists
Various mainstream sources, from the BBC to the Christian Science Monitor,
have long been reporting on ways Biblical prophecy is influencing political
reality – and the Christian Zionists' campaign to oust the Palestinians in order
to make way for the Second Coming of Christ is one of the most bizarre. In Oct.
2002, The Guardian's Matthew Engel spelled it out:
"What has really changed is the emergence of the doctrine known as "dispensationalism",
popularized in the novels of the Rev. Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins. . .
Central to the theory . . . is the Rapture, the second coming of Christ,
which will presage the end of the world. A happy ending depends on the
conversion of the Jews. And that, to cut a long story very short, can only
happen if the Jews are in possession of all the lands given to them by God.
In other words, these Christians are supporting the Jews in order to abolish
them." [The
Guardian]
"American politico-religious wackiness" aside, the conference Engel describes
begins "with a videotaped benediction straight from the Oval office," and
involves Tom Delay, "the most powerful man on Capitol Hill," addressing the
gathering "not once, but twice."
Opus Dei
While FBI agent Robert Hanssen brought the Catholic organization Opus Dei to the
prominence when he was caught spying for Russia, it is once again in the
spotlight thanks to the best-selling book The Da Vinci Code. And while
the group's secrecy appeals to some ("I think they really fly under everybody's
radar screen and that they're a lot more powerful than a lot of people think,"
Rev. James Martin, associate editor of America magazine explained. [ABC
News])
and
its attitude towards pain and suffering appeals to others ("After I joined, they
gave me a barbed-wire chain to wear on my leg for two hours a day and a whip to
hit my buttocks with," former Opus Dei member Sharon Clasen said. [Chicago
Tribune]) in April, 2001, The American Catholic co-editor
Catharine A. Henningsen revealed why this highly secretive group might be of
concern to average Joes:
"Immediately following that revelation [that Hanssen was a member of Opus
Dei] stories began to surface in the press claiming that FBI Director, Louis
Freeh and Supreme Court Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas are also
Opus Dei members. Opus Dei denies that Freeh, Scalia and Thomas are members,
though Freeh sends his son to the Opus Dei School, The Heights, and Scalia's
wife is reported to regularly attend Opus Dei functions. Robert Hanssen,
Justice Scalia and Louis Freeh also all worship at St. Catherine of Siena
parish in Great Falls, Virginia, where the Tridentine Latin Mass is offered,
rather than the new order of the Mass declared by Paul VI." [The
American Catholic]
"Whether or not an alleged member of Opus Dei, like Justice Antonin Scalia,
enjoys a touch of the lash on his prodigious derriere from time to time, is
certainly no business of ours," Mike Whitney wrote. "However, the affiliation of
a Justice on the highest court in the land to an organization that, for all
appearances, is nothing more than a right-wing cult should arouse not only
suspicion, but an investigation." [CounterPunch.org]
Scalia's alleged membership notwithstanding, the fact that a mere three weeks
after the Supreme Court agreed to take up the vice president's appeal in
lawsuits concerning the administration's energy task force, Scalia traveled with
Dick Cheney on Air Force Two to hunt on a private hunting reserve owned by an
oil industry executive is unsettling. And Scalia's keynote speech before a
Philadelphia-based advocacy group which actively opposes gay rights (during a
time when the Supreme Court was weighing a landmark gay rights case) has also
raised eyebrows. [LA
Times]
Christian Reconstructionists
Ever
hear of Rousas J. Rushdoony? Didn't think so. Before he died in 2001, he was the
leader of the Reconstructionist movement, which, in a nutshell, seeks to toss
out the U.S. Constitution and turn the United States of America into a
theocracy.
Active in the GOP for quite some time, the movement's greatest influence has
been, according to a 1998 article in Reason, "in helping change the terms
of discourse on the traditionalist right." Journalist Walter Olson put it this
way: "One of their effects has been to allow everyone else to feel moderate. To
wit: Almost any anti-abortion stance seems nuanced when compared with Gary
North's advocacy of public execution not just for women who undergo abortions
but for those who advised them to do so. And with the Rushdoony faction
proposing the actual judicial murder of gays, fewer blink at the position of a
Gary Bauer or a Janet Folger, who support laws exposing them to mere
imprisonment." [Reason]
Though Reconstructionists are deemed "scary," even by Jerry Falwell's followers,
considering that Rushdoony, like Attorney General John Ashcroft, was a member of
the Council for National Policy (see #1) and Rushdoony's son-in-law Gary North
is a current member, it may not be wise to dismiss them out of hand.
In
February, when Ashcroft subpoenaed hospitals for the records of patients who had
had late term abortions (a move which Philadelphia's Hahnemann's University
court filing deemed "vindictive and mean-spirited") red flags sprung up. "No
valid justification exists to allow such a blatant invasion of privacy into the
reproductive rights of the women whose medical records would be disclosed," the
filing read.
"People's medical records should not be the tools of political operatives," Rep.
Eliot L. Engel (D., N.Y.) added. "All Americans should have the right to visit
their doctor and receive sound medical attention without the fear of Big Brother
looking into those records." [Philadelphia
Inquirer]
The Moonies
In
January 1986, Mother Jones featured an article entitled "Unholy Alliance"
by Carolyn Weaver which detailed a letter written by Tim LaHaye to Colonel Bo Hi
Pak of the Washington Times, (which is owned and operated by the Moonies)
thanking him for his contribution to LaHaye's organization, American Coalition
for Traditional Values. (Also mentioned was "Concerned Women for America," which
is run by LaHaye's wife, Beverly).
In
2001, the St. Petersburg Times opined, "We believe Mr. Bush and his
supporters deserve to have their philosophy placed fairly before the public,
without the distorting lens of liberal media bias. Therefore, without further
ado, we give you the verbatim comments of the President's good friend and
spiritual comrade: the Reverend Sun Myung Moon.
"You
must realize that America has become the kingdom of Satan. Americans who
continue to maintain their privacy and extreme individualism are foolish people.
The world will reject Americans who continue to be so foolish.. . ."
"We
must have an autocratic theocracy to rule the world. So we cannot separate the
political field from the religious. My dream is to organize a Christian
political party including the Protestant denominations, Catholic and all
religious sects. We can embrace the religious world in one arm and the political
world in the other."
Coda: "I want to salute Reverend Moon. He's the man with the vision." - former
President George H.W. Bush. [St.
Petersburg Times]
And,
as As journalist Robert Parry wrote in July, 1997, "Despite his virulent
anti-Americanism, Rev. Sun Myung Moon still relies on friends in Washington to
help him expand his political-and-media power base. Moon's latest reach into
South America had the helping hand of former U.S. President George Bush. But the
Moon-Bush alliance dates back years and could reach into the future, as Bush
lines up conservative backing for the expected White House bid of his eldest
son." [ConsortiumNews.com]
Of
course the list of religious right organizations goes on and on, but this should
be more than enough to present the bigger picture. In other words, yes,
Virginia, the religious right is winning, even though most folks believe that
life in America proceeds as usual.
And
while you may not be able to hear Howard Stern on the radio in the
not-so-distant future, you can always tune into cable "news shows," where,
chances are, you can catch Washington Times editor Tony Blankley or
Concerned Women for America President Sandy Rios.
"I
really believe I'm hearing from the Lord it's going to be like a blowout
election in 2004. It's shaping up that way," Pat Robertson said on his
nationally televised 700 Club. "The Lord has just blessed [George W. Bush]. I
mean, he could make terrible mistakes and comes out of it. It doesn't make any
difference what he does, good or bad, God picks him up because he's a man of
prayer and God's blessing him."
All
of this sounds nuts, of course, because, quite frankly, it is. But considering
that when John Ashcroft became attorney general, Supreme Court Justice Clarence
Thomas reportedly anointed him with cooking oil (in the manner of King David), [The
Guardian] these are nutty times.
How
bad will things get? Stay tuned. But be forewarned. As the Washington Times
recently reported, Rep. Mike Pence, (R-IN) said that Mr. DeLay's decision to set
his own legislative agenda "signals the dynamics of the president's second term,
hopefully very different."
From
the tone, it sounds as if an American theocracy may some day be a reality. In
the meantime, however, Rev. Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans
United for the Separation of Church and State made a prediction we can be sure
of. "Pat Robertson in 2004 will continue to use his multimillion broadcasting
empire to promote George Bush and other Republican candidates," he said. [USA
Today]
|