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Is it the end of the Christian Right as we know it, or is it the beginning of a beautiful relationship? Michael Farris, chancellor of Patrick Henry College, chairman of the Home School Legal Defense Association, and a longtime conservative evangelical leader, claimed in an op-ed piece for The Christian Post that the meeting of 1,000 conservative Christian leaders with Donald Trump "marks the end of the Christian Right." Tim Wildmon, president of the American Family Association, believes that "it was admirable and honorable for Trump to meet with Christian leaders. [because] [h]e is not our enemy."
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"It appears that the shooter was inspired by various extremist information that was disseminated over the internet" -- President Barack Obama, June 13, 2016, referring to America's biggest mass shooting in history, in Orlando, Florida on June 12, 2016.
A photo, attached to an opinion column dated April 16, 2016 that was published on a political website, shows Donald Trump standing with an even taller, neatly dressed, unsmiling man with a strangely intense gaze. Trump is smiling, and, according to the author, he holds the man's 2009 book. The book contains a conspiracy theory -- about an alleged Marxist plot behind "political correctness" -- which provoked a 2011 terrorist attack that killed and wounded almost 400 people.
In early Spring 2016, Donald Trump appears to have met a man whose 2009 book anticipated most of Donald Trump's key campaign positions. That man has disseminated over the Internet "extremist information" that inspired an even deadlier massacre than the 2016 Orlando, Florida mass shooting -- a meticulously planned 2011 neo-Nazi terrorist attack which killed 77, wounded 319, and shook Europe, an attack intended as a "marketing method" to promote that man's conspiracy theory concerning an alleged plot behind "political correctness", said to have been launched nearly a century ago by Jewish Marxists, to destroy America and Western Christian civilization.
That man has suggested his ideas on non-traditional "Fourth Generation" warfare (4GW) may have inspired the strategy behind al-Qaeda's 2001 terrorist attacks on America.
He has also provided, according to sociologist and authority on the Tea Party and the American militia movement Dr. James Scaminaci, the "blueprint for the development of the patriot militia movement" which hopes to one day overthrow federal authority; and in a key 1989 article that may have inspired al-Qaeda, he forecast that "The next real war we fight is likely to be on American soil." In 2014, he published a novel depicting such a war, that starts in 2020, in which white Christian militias overthrow the federal government and carry out the ethnic cleansing of American cities. |
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On the same day in 2011 during which he single-handedly blew up and shot to death 77 Norwegian citizens (mostly teenagers) and injured an additional 319 people -- with a truck bomb and automatic weapons firing hollow point bullets designed to inflict maximum tissue damage -- neo-Nazi terrorist Anders Behring Breivik electronically distributed a 1518 page manifesto titled 2083: A European Declaration of Independence that called for the deportation of Muslims from Europe and identified - as the arch-enemies of Western and Christian civilization - two forces: "cultural Marxism" and Islam.
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President Obama rose to the occasion in the wake of the horror in Orlando. The president made clear in a speech on June 14th that insulting adherents of one of the world's great religions (which is being advocated by Donald Trump and too many Republicans and the Religious Right) is not only wrong, its bad politics. |
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In what must be one of the worst public relations disasters in university history, wealthy donors to Baylor University recently took out a full page ad in the Austin Statesman newspaper. The sponsors of the ad praised the recently ousted president for "exceptional care of students." The man the news print praised was just released from his job for sitting back silent while Baylor athletes sexually assaulted female students. |
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Some elected officials have a bad habit of releasing official proclamations lauding the Bible, Christianity or religion generally. We at Americans United find these proclamations to be extremely annoying, but judges have not been very sympathetic to efforts to try to block them in court. They usually say that these proclamations are just suggestions that don't require anyone to do anything and therefore they pass constitutional muster. |
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Over the weekend, a group of atheists, humanists, agnostics and others held a "Reason Rally" in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. Thousands of people attended the event, which was designed in part to express support for secular government and separation of church and state. This is an audience we want to reach, so Americans United had an informational table at the rally. |
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Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore is in legal hot water again and has no one to blame but himself - but, as usual, he doesn't want to accept responsibility for his actions. As we reported previously, Moore has been temporarily suspended from the Alabama Supreme Court in the wake of charges that were filed against him by the Alabama Judicial Inquiry Commission. The commission, acting on complaints filed by state residents, sent the matter to the Alabama Court of the Judiciary, which will investigate. If Moore is found guilty, he could be removed from the court. |
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The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) is preparing to kick off its annual Fortnight for Freedom. This year the two weeks of events will feature a touring exhibit of relics of English martyrs Thomas More and John Fisher. The idea is to promote their idea of religious freedom; something I as an American Catholic find questionable, if not ironic. |
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Reports from around the nation are reporting Ken Starr, President of Baylor University, has been fired as head of the Baptist school. Other stories report the trustees are not commenting and refuse to respond to rumors. Supposedly by early June the full report of the board meetings will be revealed. |
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Political news of late has been dominated by three people - Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders. They've certainly provided good copy, but there are some other things going on politically that you might not have heard about. Let's consider Kentucky, for example. The commonwealth has been the site of mostly bad news lately. Ken Ham's "Ark Park" is getting taxpayer incentives, and the state's Republican governor, Matt Bevin, is thrilled. |
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Never ones to allow grass grow under their feet when confronted by social and cultural changes, the Christian Right has responded with a thunderous "No Way Obama," to the joint directive from Department of Justice and the Department of Education to public schools across the country advising them that they need to permit transgender students access to bathrooms consistent with the gender with which they identify, and deals with such issues as housing, locker rooms, pronouns and gender references on identity documents.
The Family Research Council's Tony Perkins called the directive a "missive ... courtesy of the lawless bullies at the Departments of Justice and Education." Other Christian Right leaders are calling it "radical social engineering," and a "leftist coup of local schools." One longtime conservative activist is calling on Christians to remove their children from public schools.
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