|
Two memorable speeches were delivered in the early 1980s on separation of church and state. The first was by U.S. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) and was given - at all places - before an audience at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va. Because of the unusual venue, Kennedy's speech on Oct. 3, 1983, attracted a lot of attention. But about a year later, another politician delivered an equally impressive speech, and it also grabbed some headlines. This was New York Gov. Mario Cuomo's address to Notre Dame University on Sept. 13, 1984. |
According to a statement on his web site, tonight will be Mike Huckabee's last show on Fox where he has held forth on Saturday night for more than six years. Apparently he is thinking seriously about getting into the GOP race for president. If he runs, it will be in part because he has a good chance of being the Christian Right's preferred candidate. He has certainly been paying his dues -- working in the trenches of the Christian Right for many years, as a headliner at many of the Pastor Policy Briefings organized by David Lane of the American Family Association and at the annual Values Voters Summit organized by the Family Research Council -- and several major organizations of the Christian Right. |
Note: Like all of my posts, this one is a cross-post from Americans United's "Wall of Separation" blog.
Two weeks from today, the nation will celebrate Religious Freedom Day. Don't feel bad if you were not aware of that. Most people aren't. Religious Freedom Day, which is celebrated every Jan. 16, tends to be somewhat obscure. My desk calendar, which includes Groundhog Day, Armed Forces Day and Benito Juarez's Birthday, does not list Religious Freedom Day. |
(34 comments, 823 words in story) |
|
Will Rogers once said "the schools ain't what they used to be and then again never was." Public education has become the subject of much speculation and blame. William Bennett, former Secretary of Education and popular author, stated that public education is finished in America. The rise of the school voucher movement across the nation, issues likes school prayer and the hanging of the Ten Commandments in school hallways have placed public education in the national spotlight.
|
(3 comments, 3263 words in story) |
|
When I heard the news that Mario Cuomo died I had to sit down and write and consider the legacy of this extraordinary leader.
I always wished that Mario Cuomo had run for president. He is one of the pols I most admired over the years. He was a great liberal. A great thinker. And a great orator. May we be blessed as a nation that more will rise to the occasion to try to fill his shoes.
As someone who writes about politics and religion, one of the things that stands out in Cuomo's long and distinguished career is the way he balanced his personal faith with his public career. One of his lasting contributions to our public life was his speech at Notre Dame in 1984. It was the height of the Reagan administration, Operation Rescue and similar groups were engaged in mob violence (as well as peaceful protests) at abortion clinics, and leading Catholic prelates were pressing Catholic politicians hard to conform to Church doctrine.
And into the fray stepped Mario Cuomo. He gave a speech detailing his dissent -- as a Catholic and as a political leader in a religiously plural society -- from the authoritarian vision of the Bishops. The New York Daily News in reporting Cuomo's death wrote that along with his "barnburner" of a speech at the 1984 Democratic Convention (which I watched live on TV) his speech at Notre Dame ranks "among the top speeches of the 20th century."
Here are some excerpts from his Notre Dame speech (which can be read in its entirety here).
I hope these excerpts will remind us why this speech got that kind of mention, and help us as we contend with the endlessly tricky issues of religious freedom in our time.
He had been asked to address the tough questions of the often complicated relationship between religion and public life. He rose to the occasion life few others ever have. |
(3 comments, 872 words in story) |
|
In the heat of our political moment, we sometimes don't see how our future connects deeply to our past. But the Christian Right does -- and they do not like what they see.
The Christian Right has made religious freedom the ideological phalanx of its current campaigns in the culture wars. Religious freedom is now invoked as a way of seeking to derail access to reproductive health services as well as equality for LGBTQ people, most prominently regarding marriage equality.
But history provides little comfort for the theocratic visions of the Christian Right. And that is where our story begins. |
(4 comments, 1504 words in story) |
|
According to FBI analyses, the classic film It's A Wonderful Life, (what seems to be the go-to Christmas season film for all time) is really part of a communist plot against the one percenters!
I learned this remarkable claim today from Michael Winship, the senior writer for Moyers & Co. -- whose essay at Truthout is a handy snapshot of a streak of paranoia as fresh as an end of the year fundraising letter from the darker precincts of the Religious Right.
These days, it does not take much to b e seen by some as on the spectrum of evil. Basically all you have to do is to fail to be a Christian of The Right Sort. For most of us, this is not difficult to achieve. But at least those who may see us that way, do not have the kind of power their ancestors enjoyed in 1947 when the House Un-American Activities Committee was investigating Hollywood, and launching the national political careers of, among others, Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon. |
(2 comments, 970 words in story) |
|
It has been more than two years since Bishop Robert Finn was convicted by a Missouri criminal court for failing to report child abuse by Fr. Shawn Ratigan. Finn had been warned about Ratigan's behavior but the prelate inexplicably waited six months before notifying authorities as required by law. Within that same period of time, Ratigan pleaded guilty to possessing child pornography. He is now serving a 50-year sentence in prison. But Finn walks free.
Enter Pope Francis.
|
(3 comments, 468 words in story) |
|
In recent years at Christmastime, I have posted a response to the preposterous-but-malevolent claims broadcast on Fox News and elsewhere that there is a War on Christmas. Slightly revised and updated -- FC
Christmas has at least as many meanings as there are people, whether they celebrate the holiday or believe in any of the story, or not. It affects us all. There is hardly a more defining day in all of our culture, and it embraces the best and the worst of what we have become as a people.
In that regard, it is sad that the Religious Right and the dour propagandists at Fox News annually revive the repulsive anti-Semitic tradition begun by Henry Ford: Falsely claiming that there is a War on Christmas. |
(11 comments, 768 words in story) |
|
Fox News personality Mike Huckabee had a defining moment in the wake of the Newtown massacre. One that as we enter the 2016 presidential season, we should not forget. Its too bad that the original of the video at the end of this post is no longer available, but I found another. In any case, I think the rest of this re-post says what needs to be said. -- FC
When I was considering writing this post, at first I thought that too much had already been said about Mike Huckabee's comments on the Newtown massacre. But I now think that maybe there has been nowhere near enough.
The horror affected most of us profoundly and all of us differently. Many of us, on reflection, encountered eternal questions about the meaning of life and death, and particularly, how such evil can happen.
The religious among us come from many different traditions. But even the most orthodox among us know that whatever revelations God (or gods) may have provided us; and whatever our understanding of ancient texts may be, mysteries remain. Many of us are not part of a religious tradition. And those of us who look to science for answers may find that nothing we know, or think we know, explains everything. Especially about Newtown.
And then there was Huckabee. |
(6 comments, 919 words in story) |
|
The Religious Right's Moses fixation continues to grow. As you might recall, the Texas State Board of Education recently demanded social studies textbooks that highlight the role Moses supposedly played in the founding of the United States. If that wasn't bad enough, U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) recently decided to give a farewell address of the floor of the House of Representatives that focused largely on - you guessed it - the Old Testament patriarch. |
(1 comment, 775 words in story) |
|
|
|