Only in America?
Sharlet's article contains interesting info on the Religious Right's latest favorite conservative Senator and potential Presidential candidate Brownback, who has received public and monetary support from an A list of Religious Right leaders and organizations including Harold Bredesen (described as the "spiritual father of Pat Robertson"), James Dobson, (Focus on the Family), Tony Perkins (Family Research Council), Beverly LaHaye (Concerned Women of America), Rod Parsely (Thee Center for Moral Clarity) and David Barton (Wallbuilders).
Brownback seeks something far more radical: not faith-based politics but faith in place of politics. In his dream America, the one he believes both the Bible and the Constitution promise, the state will simply wither away. In its place will be a country so suffused with God and the free market that the social fabric of the last hundred years -- schools, Social Security, welfare -- will be privatized or simply done away with. There will be no abortions; sex will be confined to heterosexual marriage. Men will lead families, mothers will tend children, and big business and the church will take care of all. The personal information on Brownback is interesting, but some of the most startling info in the article pertains to the tactics, methods and goals of the American Theocratic Right.
One of the little-known strengths of the Christian right lies in its adoption of the "cell" -- the building block historically used by small but determined groups to impose their will on the majority. Seventy years ago, an evangelist named Abraham Vereide founded a network of "God-led" cells comprising senators and generals, corporate executives and preachers. Vereide believed that the cells -- God's chosen, appointed to power -- could construct a Kingdom of God on earth with Washington as its capital. They would do so "behind the scenes," lest they be accused of pride or a hunger for power, and "beyond the din of vox populi," which is to say, outside the bounds of democracy. To insiders, the cells were known as the Family, or the Fellowship. To most outsiders, they were not known at all. One very interesting attitude these elected leaders seem to hold is that their constituency actually consists of not thousands or millions of voting citizens, but only ONE - God. Would this info be of interest to the thousands who vote for or against these candidates if they were told directly that, if elected, their views and interest meant nothing, and the candidate would only concern himself with his interpretation of God's will? Rather convenient accountability, I would say - is God a registered voter in their district (and, if so, to what party...)?
They were striving, ultimately, for what Coe calls "Jesus plus nothing" -- a government led by Christ's will alone. In the future envisioned by Coe, everything -- sex and taxes, war and the price of oil -- will be decided upon not according to democracy or the church or even Scripture. The Bible itself is for the masses; in the Fellowship, Christ reveals a higher set of commands to the anointed few. It's a good old boy's club blessed by God. Brownback even lived with other cell members in a million-dollar, red-brick former convent at 133 C Street that was subsidized and operated by the Fellowship. Monthly rent was $600 per man -- enough of a deal by Hill standards that some said it bordered on an ethical violation, but no charges were ever brought.
I am reminded of bin Laden's organization of the 911 hijackers: 4-5 men per cell, and only one actually knew the entire plan and ultimate goal. They were told to blend in, shave their beards, etc. These American Religious Fundamentalists KNOW their views are unpopular, and would NOT be successful in a transparent democratic system, so they stay quiet publicly, fly under the radar and wait... Another of these "cells", which includes Brownback's supporters listed above, is battling that democratic and pluralistic Constitutional value (and the Right's newest "N" word"), "secularism":
Every Tuesday, before his evening meeting with his prayer brothers, Brownback chairs another small cell -- one explicitly dedicated to altering public policy. It is called the Values Action Team, and it is composed of representatives from leading organizations on the religious right. James Dobson's Focus on the Family sends an emissary, as does the Family Research Council, the Eagle Forum, the Christian Coalition, the Traditional Values Coalition, Concerned Women for America and many more. Like the Fellowship prayer cell, everything that is said is strictly off the record, and even the groups themselves are forbidden from discussing the proceedings. It's a little "cloak-and-dagger," says a Brownback press secretary. The VAT is a war council, and the enemy, says one participant, is "secularism."
This article contains very interesting and ominous insights into tactics that are regularly attributed to "evil doers" who "hate our freedom". But it's just like cries against "activist Judges" so regularly heard from the Right: their real complaint is not that these judges are "activists," but that they are not FAR-RIGHT activists. These movements are fully committed to "ends justify means" operations. Democracy and the Constitution mean nothing - who cares if you're LEGAL, as long as you are RIGHT.
Sound familiar, Mr. Bush?
Los Angeles-based artist Joel Pelletier is the creator of "American Fundamentalists (Christ's Entry into Washington in 2008)", an 8x14 foot painting depicting American religious, political and economic fundamentalists. He has been touring the US with the painting talking about "American Fundamentalism and the Threat to Democracy and Freedom of Faith." In March 2006 the painting itself goes to Washington DC; other confirmed 2006 locations include Buffalo, Detroit and Minneapolis (more at americanfundamentalists.com)
Only in America? | 7 comments (7 topical, 0 hidden)
Only in America? | 7 comments (7 topical, 0 hidden)
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