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The Radical Christian Right Is Built on Suburban Despair

By Chris Hedges, AlterNet. Posted January 19, 2007.


Millions of Americans live trapped in soulless exurbs which lack any kind of community, leaving them feeling isolated and vulnerable. Without alternatives for their social despair, they flock to demagogues promising revenge and a mythical utopia.
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The engine that drives the radical Christian Right in the United States, the most dangerous mass movement in American history, is not religiosity, but despair. It is a movement built on the growing personal and economic despair of tens of millions of Americans, who watched helplessly as their communities were plunged into poverty by the flight of manufacturing jobs, their families and neighborhoods torn apart by neglect and indifference, and who eventually lost hope that America was a place where they had a future.

This despair crosses economic boundaries, of course, enveloping many in the middle class who live trapped in huge, soulless exurbs where, lacking any form of community rituals or centers, they also feel deeply isolated, vulnerable and lonely. Those in despair are the most easily manipulated by demagogues, who promise a fantastic utopia, whether it is a worker's paradise, fraternite-egalite-liberte, or the second coming of Jesus Christ. Those in despair search desperately for a solution, the warm embrace of a community to replace the one they lost, a sense of purpose and meaning in life, the assurance they are protected, loved and worthwhile.

During the past two years of work on the book American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America, I kept encountering this deadly despair. Driving down a highway lined with gas stations, fast food restaurants and dollar stores I often got vertigo, forgetting for a moment if I was in Detroit or Kansas City or Cleveland. There are parts of the United States, including whole sections of former manufacturing centers such as Ohio, that resemble the developing world, with boarded up storefronts, dilapidated houses, pot-hole streets and crumbling schools. The end of the world is no longer an abstraction to many Americans.

Jeniece Learned is typical of many in the movement. She stood, when I met her, amid a crowd of earnest-looking men and women, many with small gold crosses in the lapels of their jackets or around their necks, in a hotel lobby in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. She had an easy smile and a thick mane of black, shoulder length hair. She was carrying a booklet called "Ringing in a Culture of Life." The booklet had the schedule of the two day event she is attending organized by The Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation. The event was "dedicated to the 46 million children who have died from legal abortions since 1973 and the mothers and fathers who mourn their loss."

Learned, who drove five hours from a town outside of Youngstown, Ohio was raised Jewish. She wore a gold Star of David around her neck with a Christian cross inserted in the middle of the design. She stood up in one of the morning sessions, attended by about 300 people, most of them women, when the speaker, Alveda King, niece of Dr. Martin Luther King, asked if there were any "post-abortive" women present. Learned ran a small pregnancy counseling clinic called Pregnancy Services of Western Pennsylvania in Sharon, where she attempted to talk young girls and women, most of them poor, out of abortions.

She spoke in local public schools, promoting sexual abstinence, rather than birth control, as the only acceptable form of contraception. And she had found in the fight against abortion, and in her conversion, a structure, purpose and meaning that previously eluded her. The battle against abortion is one of the Christian Rights's most effective recruiting tools. It plays on the guilt and shame of woman who had the abortions, accusing them of committing murder, and promising redemption and atonement in the "Christian" struggle to make abortion illegal, in the fight for life against "the culture of death."

Her life, before she was saved, was, like many in this mass movement, chaotic and painful. Her childhood was stolen from her. She was sexually abused by a close family member. Her mother periodically woke Learned and her younger sister and two younger brothers in the middle of the night to flee landlords who wanted back rent. The children were bundled into the car and driven in darkness to a strange apartment in another town. Her mother worked nights and weekends as a bartender. Learned, the oldest, often had to run the home. Her younger sister, who was sexually abused by another member of the family, eventually committed suicide as an adult, something Learned also considered. As a teenager she had an abortion.

She was taking classes at Pacific Christian College several years later when she saw an anti-abortion film called The Silent Scream. "You see in this movie this baby backing up trying to get away from this suction tube," she said. "And, its mouth is open and it is like this baby is screaming. I flipped out. It was at that moment that God just took this veil that I had over my eyes for the last eight years. I couldn't breathe. I was hyperventilating. I ran outside. One of the girls followed me from Living Alternative. And she said, 'Did you commit your life to Christ?' And I said, 'I did.' And she said, 'Did you ask for your forgiveness of sins?' And I said, 'I did.' And she goes, 'Does that mean all your sins, or does that mean some of them?' And I said, 'I guess it means all of them.' So she said, 'Basically, you are thinking God hasn't forgiven you for your abortion because that is a worse sin than any of your other sins that you have done.'"


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Chris Hedges, a graduate of Harvard Divinity School and former Pulitzer-prize winning foreign correspondent for The New York Times, is the author of American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America.

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"Elmer Gantry" redux
Posted by: xbj on Jan 19, 2007 12:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is so much in common with the Religious Right movement now with the revivals during the Depression. And much of the wisdom of the late 50's and early 60's that we've lost. "Elmer Gantry" said it all, and even the science-fiction of "The Outer Limits" and several "Twilight Zone" episodes warned of militarism and fascism, fed by fear of "the other", those that were somehow different than ourselves, or those that we only assumed were different from ourselves.

The basic law of true Christianity, "Love your enemy" was the pinnacle of empathy, but the people using false Christianity and Christianism today are doing it for money and power. A religion of tolerance and love for enemies perverted into intolerance, greed, and the power to inflict one limited idea of morality on everyone else in the world.

At least "Elmer Gantry" was just after money. Any amount of power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely, and what all these evangelists conveniently forget is just how diligently and faithfully and purposefully Jesus Christ ran from power and politics His entire life, at times completely disappearing into thin air when crowds got too rabid.

The evangelist leaves true Christianity the very second they ask for money, something Jesus Christ never did.

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» Protocols of Zion Posted by: BlueTigress
» RE: Protocols of Zion the fake Posted by: ReallyBearish
» RE: Protocols of Zion Posted by: xbj
» RE: "Elmer Gantry" redux Posted by: dpierson
» RE: "Elmer Gantry" redux Posted by: b4upoo
Religion: Brainwashing American-style
Posted by: Moonray on Jan 19, 2007 12:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree that religion appeals to those who are discouraged and adrift, but economic and social problems don't necessarily drive the masses to embrace invisible Bronze Age gods.

I spent some years in Asia and was impressed by the courage and stoicism of people there who at the time were living in grinding poverty, the kind that's very rare in this country. Yet it was my impression that the vast majority of those Asians were atheist or agnostic, or observed Buddhism or Taoism in a very casual way.

Americans are steeped in religious imagery and influences from birth. Religion assails us from our TV sets, radios and even movie theaters, not to mention the ubiquitous church on every corner. We must liberate ourselves from these influences and protect our children from them if our society and government are ever to improve.

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» RE: Bronze Age Gods... Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal
Spoon Fed Ignorance & Fear
Posted by: NoPCZone on Jan 19, 2007 12:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Within the Christian Church (not a denomination- but the whole) the issue of Bible illiteracy is discussed quietly among clergy but rarely from the pulpit. The truth is that millions of the faithful rely upon what they are told rather than read the texts for themselves, in context, for understanding.

This allows those who would twist a message of grace, peace, mercy and forgiveness into a practice of hatred, bigotry, violence and judgement a great deal of wiggle room. If one does not know what the texts say and are spoon fed by your pastor and elders, how would you know better? Some unscrupulous individuals prey on this fact to advance their political agendas by bending the message to suit themselves.

This is not the source of the whole problem, but is the source of much of it.

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» Faith Posted by: ssmit355
» RE: Why Atheism is a Faith Posted by: NoPCZone
» RE: Why Atheism is a Faith Posted by: LeeAnnG
» RE: Why Atheism is a Faith Posted by: NoPCZone
» RE: bad athiest Posted by: solrev
cautionary tale
Posted by: Lector on Jan 19, 2007 12:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How well put. How poor in spirit the majority of Americans seem to be when they have to turn to phoneys and miscreants in the form of Pat Robertsons, Dobsons, and others. This is a cautionary tale indeed. But very few of those caught in the delusion of false Christianity and the harsh realities of the world are going to be getting this information. The majority of Americans voted in a new Congress and now it remains to be seen if anything practical will come out of it for the ordinary working American and for those who have gone under in our society. They, we, all need help and to help each other and get rid of our delusions.

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» RE: cautionary tale Posted by: Dboy
Subdue your subdivision
Posted by: eddie torres on Jan 19, 2007 1:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you need a hard hittin' Christian SWAT team to take charge of godless institutions (schools, prisons) in your neighborhood, don't forget to contact COMMANDOS! USA

They'll swoop in and kick ass!

"We would like to encourage you to schedule an "Invasion Weekend" at your unit. As one of the leading crusade providers for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, we have ministered in nearly 300 prisons throughout the United States."

and

"Contrary to popular opinion, America does not have a gun problem, drug problem, violence problem, teenage pregnacy problem, or even a school dropout problem. America has a CHARACTER problem. As long as we continue to treat the symptoms and not the root cause, we will never keep up with crime, drugs, and other forms of moral failure."

It's the Texas way!

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» not mine Posted by: bookie
» Can we give Texas back to Mexico? Posted by: thinkingisfun
» RE: Giving Texas Back Posted by: NoPCZone
» RE: Giving Texas Back Posted by: azmtnman
» RE: Subdue your subdivision Posted by: Mamarianne
Boo hoo
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Jan 19, 2007 1:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Life sucks for lots of us. That's no excuse for being a stupid wacko-fanatic.

And what about those who aren't alienated, disconnected, down on their luck, etc., but join anyway because it feeds their ego and personal prejudices?

This is another example of the patronizing left deflecting individual responsibility off of grown adults and onto "elites" or circumstances, because they don't want to abandon their own blind faith in "the people."

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» RE: Boo hoo Posted by: gjames
» RE: Boo hoo Posted by: pomes
» RE: Boo hoo Posted by: Freticat
Ominous Times
Posted by: gazooks on Jan 19, 2007 3:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A beautifully written piece Chris, which illustrates the immense complexity of our social values situation and the price that's paid by all of us in one way or another for our cultural reliance on myth, fostered in a fear based reliance in church and state authority.

We demand so little from government that sponsors a view of community as simply a commercial enterprise and neglects any semblance of "soul". It too reveals a basic weakness in our underlying "spirituality" who's institutions are largely complacent with the status quo and discourage dissent.

Our vision of what's acceptable as community is stunted by our preoccupation with "appearances" of success, a soulless, plasticized facsimile of traditional architectural influences, our self perpetuating automotive culture of aggression based in fear, self doubt and intolerance, and environmental indifference. (unless it effects property values) Not a prescription for well balanced, creative and engaging future population.

It's discouraging, particularly at this time of year, while waging war for the wrong reasons, broad violations of principle and justice and with various calamities looming. But there is hope as long as we do what we can, whenever we can, to humanize our existence by reaching out to communicate as much good will as we can muster. To dispel if only for a moment, someone else's fear.

If we simply think creatively, commit to represent tolerance and extend ourselves to others we create community.

"... so if you see your neighbor carryin' somethin', help him with his load, and don't go mistakin' paradise for that home across the road." - Dylan

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» RE: Ominous Times Posted by: Guy
» RE: Ominous Times Posted by: azmtnman
Whence comes this paranoia?
Posted by: ISlamIslam on Jan 19, 2007 4:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
An answer is suggested by Lawrence Auster’s First Law of Majority-Minority Relations in Liberal Society.

"The First Law states that because of the modern liberal belief in the moral and substantive equality of all peoples and cultures, the worse any minority or non-Western group really is, the worse the West must be made to appear, as the guilty cause of the non-Western group’s bad or dysfunctional behavior, or as simply bad in itself. If the worse is made to look better, and the better made to look worse, an apparent rough equality is maintained between them, and the liberal view survives. In the case of Islam, if it is true that Islam seeks to impose an Islamic theocracy over the world, liberals cannot acknowledge this fact, because Islam would then cease being the morally equal and culturally rich Other whom we must tolerate and embrace, and become a morally inferior and hostile destructive adversary whom we must resist and exclude. Therefore, in a massive act of denial, liberals displace the danger Islam poses to the West onto the West itself, especially onto American conservative Christians. Instead of the threat being the historically and actually existing Islamic agenda to establish an Islamic world theocracy, the threat becomes a non-existent American Christian agenda to establish an American or even a world Christian theocracy, a threat that must be met by radically weakening Christianity or even eliminating it altogether.

Thus, having discovered that a non-Western religion is waging war on the West, the left responds by waging war against the West’s own religion."

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» RE: Whence comes this paranoia? Posted by: ISlamIslam
» Auster is a paranoid xenophobe Posted by: uberpatriot
» I think Jesus would reject your hate Posted by: chief of okeefe
» American Infallibity Posted by: buh
gentrification
Posted by: jamason on Jan 19, 2007 4:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One thing that really surprised me is that this author discusses the "neglect" of older neighborhoods but not their gentrification. Where I live, the middle and lower classes have been forced to move out because of gentrification. These rich-folk want to live the "authentic" leave-it-to-beaver lifestyle so they come into these historic neighborhoods and buy up houses and suddenly... my rent goes up. I now live in the last hold-out to this yuppie onslaught! But that community-type feeling left along with the middle and lower classes. I guess there's some things the rich can't buy.

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» RE: gentrification Posted by: ifyousayso
» Opposing self-interests? Posted by: ABetterFuture
» RE: gentrification Posted by: Kelly
amazed again
Posted by: amazed again on Jan 19, 2007 5:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sigh

THE Prime Minister has been caught in a religious row after taping a goodwill message for a fundamentalist Christian group previously accused of inciting anti-Islamic hatred.

The Prime Minister has appeared in a DVD message for a major multi-denomination gathering in Melbourne on Australia Day that is being sponsored by the controversial Catch the Fire ministries.

Organisers are refusing to release the content of the Prime Minister's message, other than to confirm it was on "Australian values" - saying anyone interested in hearing it will have to come to the event.

But it has been reported that in the message, Mr Howard says Christianity has been a force for good in the world. A spokesman for the PM has said Mr Howard does not regret recording the message.


The PM's decision has been described as "dangerous". Muslim community leaders said Mr Howard risked legitimising hateful anti-Islamic views.

Yasser Soliman, a member of Mr Howard's Muslim Community Reference Group and a former president of the Islamic Council of Victoria, said today while Mr Howard is free to address whom he chooses, he should have thought twice.

"What he says is extremely influential and what he fails to say is also influential. I would hope that he would clearly condemn hate speeches in all their forms, irrespective of who the perpetrators are," he said.

"I can't stop the Prime Minister addressing who he wants to, but he should be very cautious, especially with groups which have a history of toxic-hate speech."

Last month the Victorian Court of Appeal threw out the charges brought in the Victorian Civil and Administrative Appeals Tribunal which had sought to jail Pastor Danny Nalliah and Daniel Scot for allegedly inciting hatred, contempt, revulsion and ridicule of Muslims.

The outcry comes as federal police launched an investigation into inflammatory comments by Sydney's Sheik Feiz Mohammed, which included a description of Jews as pigs and calls for children to die as "martyrs of faith".

Friday's Christian rally at Melbourne's Festival Hall is expected to attract up to 5000 people of various denominations.

Mr Howard is being promoted in flyers as delivering a keynote message which will be "personally directed to Catch the Fire ministries".

The rally will also say prayers against terrorism, for divine protection for Australia's armed forces and for the Government, according to organisers.

Pastor Nalliah, one of two Catch the Fire ministers charged with breaking state vilification laws in 2002, has refused to divulge what Mr Howard has said in his recorded message for fear it will be taken out of context.

"I have kept it confidential up until Australia Day," he said.

"The best thing is for the media to come and listen to it firsthand on Australia Day, then say what they believed they heard the Prime Minister said."

He said the event involves a wide range of religious groups including the Salvation Army, Presbyterian and Anglican churches and smaller organisations.

"It's about coming together to pray for a nation and I think it's a great opportunity," he said.

Pastor Nalliah said Treasurer Peter Costello, Deputy Prime Minister Mark Vaille and former deputy PM John Anderson had addressed Catch the Fire meetings in the past.

Islamic Council of Victoria board member Waleed Aly described Catch the Fire as "spectacularly ignorant", claiming its members were in alliance with the far-Right League of Rights.

Amid the fallout of Sheik Feiz's lecture DVD becoming public, Acting Attorney-General Kevin Andrews said the Government was worried about a pattern of behaviour among outspoken Islamic leaders.
- Herald-Sun and AAP

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The end of America is near!!
Posted by: MartianBachelor on Jan 19, 2007 5:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
> ...the most dangerous mass movement in American history?!

Nothing like a bit of alarmist hyperbole about the end of the world coming next week to mark an article as being from AlterNet...

Fighting fire with fire, or is it just that "it takes one to know one"?

> She stood up in one of the morning sessions, attended by about 300 people, most of them women...

"The most dangerous mass movement in American history," a movement of women?

Ooooh, I'm really scared now...

I hope they eventually make it into a TV show. It could blow Desparate Housewives right out of the water in the suburban despair category.

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» RE: The end of America is near!! Posted by: cottontail
» RE: The end of America is near!! Posted by: Lincoln fan
Did you know that...
Posted by: wawa on Jan 19, 2007 5:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Before Emperor Constantine brought Christianity into the mainstream, all the early Church Fathers taught that Christians should not serve in the army but instead willingly suffer rather than inflict harm on any other.


St. Augustine was the first Church Father to consider the concept of a Just War. Within 100 years after Constantine, the Empire required that all soldiers in the army must be baptized Christians and thus, the decline of Christianity began.

With the justification of war and violence supplied by Augustine’s Just War Theory, wrong became right.

Nothing much has changed in two millennia, for in today’s Orwellian world politicians claim the way to peace is through war and that nuclear weapons provide protection.

In 313 AD, Emperor Constantine legitimized Christianity and thus, those who had been considered rebels and outlaws began to enjoy political power and prestige.

Jesus’ other name is The Prince of Peace, and with the marriage of church and state, his true teachings were reinterpreted.

The justification of warfare and the use of state sponsored violence corrupted what Christ modeled and taught. Jesus was always on about WAKE UP! The Divine already indwells you and all others.

Christ taught that to follow him requires that one must love ones enemies; one must forgive those who hate, curse and revile them, without a thought of payback.

Christ lived a life that proved evil can be opposed without being mirrored, and that the cycle of a “tooth for a tooth, an eye for an eye”, will never bring peace and justice.

The term Christianity was not coined until three decades after Christ walked the earth. Until the day of Paul, followers of Christ were called members of The Way; the way being what he taught!

Christ was never a Christian, but he was a social justice, radical revolutionary Palestinian devout Jewish road warrior who rose up/intifada and challenged the corrupt Temple and disturbed the status quo of the Roman occupying forces by teaching that God was on the side of the poor and the outcast.

Clement, Tertillian, Polycarp and every other early Church Father taught that violence was a contradiction of what Christ was all about. There have always been those Christians who spoke out against this corruption of scripture and they have been ignored, reviled, rejected, mocked, persecuted and maligned throughout time.

There have always been Christians who have never abandoned the true teachings, such as the Quakers, Mennonites, some Catholics and Protestants who have been faithful witnesses to Christ by denouncing violence and caring for the poor.

There have also always been Jews, Muslims, atheists, anarchists, secularists and other’s who have lived lives that embody the message of Christ.

I have had the opportunity to meet some of these people in Israel and Palestine and they are the inspiration for "Memoirs of a Nice Irish-American 'Girl's' Life in Occupied Territory"
to be released Feb. 2007.
More excerpts can be read in the Dec/Jan WAWA Blog:
http://www.wearewideawake.org/

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» RE: Did you know that... Posted by: gazooks
» RE: Did you know that... Posted by: hapibeli
» RE: Did you know that... Posted by: rhinojos
» Knees bowed Posted by: openhouse
» RE: Did you know that... Posted by: openhouse
» Thank you Posted by: Jbuuty
gentlewoman
Posted by: lokicat on Jan 19, 2007 6:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"the problem with a theology of despair" to further this metaphor is that it leads to wars of many kinds, the war on the poor and vulnerable, the war on women, the war on gays and lesbians, the war on the environment. Anti-abortion zealots are warring on other women. People get a physical rush or get 'high' on war. Robin Morgan called it "Wargasm.'

The women who get abortions/ come under the sway of the right wingers, are already shamed and humilated for what they have done because the culture is so shaming. (All they have done is exercise choice and have a will of their own--something men take for granted). Then, voila, the religious zealots tell you that you can rid yourself of your 'sins.' It's psycho-spiritual jujitsu--manipulate and dominate people's minds through shaming their sexuality.
Someone needs to write a book about shame and Christianity that looks into the mind control of people by shaming them.

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» RE: gentlewoman Posted by: hapibeli
» RE: lokicat Posted by: MartianBachelor
It's all about control , money, and sex.
Posted by: Ellie1 on Jan 19, 2007 6:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I never saw a poor evangelist. It is all about money, or control. it is also about sex. Controlling women, or satisfying physical needs. It is no coincidence that most religious clergy eventually are exposed (no pun intended) for sexual daliances of some kind. They prey on the emotionally needy and weak. Religion sucks, and it should have no role in Washington, which makes Bush(it) that much more dangerous and evil.

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Product of dispair
Posted by: jurgen on Jan 19, 2007 6:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good essay.

Reaction of the Americans you described is not surprising, however. You must be familiar with Cargo Cults, Ghost Dances and other group reactions to hopelessness. Somehow magic rituals, appeals to the supernatural, general irrationality will resolve problems that seem otherwise insoluble.

It doesn't work, but it gives the participant a feeling that the collective "we" will be saved. Maybe we shouldn't knock it if it keeps the masses happy, since they really can't do much else about their malaise.

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» Totally disagree Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Totally disagree Posted by: Lauren
» RE: Totally disagree Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Totally agree Posted by: solrev
» RE: Totally disagree Posted by: billebox
» Cargo cults Posted by: BlueTigress
» RE: Cargo cults Posted by: jurgen
Chris Hedges' Alternate World
Posted by: rileycase on Jan 19, 2007 7:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Chris Hedges (and evidently most of the responders) must live in an alternate upside down world where black is white, yes is no, and joy is despair. The evangelicals I know see a much more hopeful future than non-evangelicals. They are also happier, more fulfilled and even (according to one survey) have better sex. The last word I would ever use to describe them is the word "despair." That, I would suggest, better describes Chris Hedges who seems obsessed with what appears to be some grand conspiracy theory by conservative Christians to take over the world. Evangelical Christians are quite content to let God take care of such things.

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» RE: Chris Hedges' Alternate World Posted by: Lincoln fan
» Critical reading skills Posted by: eringhorm
Lack of Choices!!
Posted by: Stellaa on Jan 19, 2007 7:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I spend months at a time in Europe and I usually get asked the queston about American religious fanaticism. I have come up with an answer, that somewhat explains the differences at least between Americans and Europeans and Urban Americans and exurban with their church relationships.
The migratory tendencies of Americans social isolationism leads to a search for artificial belonging and family. Churches in the outalnds are the only places that offer that to immigrants and to migrants. Many immigrant groups keep their cultural attachments through church, native born Americans make many of their attachment through their churches. Churches become tribal markers. So, there is a history of Americans leaning on churches for security. When Americans move to cities they have many other choices that they can choose from. In Europe, church is just church. It is not a a place to find or make friends. It is not a place for social attachments, there are clubs, pubs and other familial connections. Churches here offer an easy avenue to belong. You can volunteer and you don't look or feel like a dork if you are in need of community. These "ministers" know that and they manipulate it. I am sure there will be a new movement of people that are psychologically abused by the ministers and the other church members. Hedges is exactly on point. These churches offer what the society does not offer, belonging, connection and relief from despair. In the Cities people can go join a Yoga group, find a Star Trek club, go out to a bar and vent, find an accupuncturist, take herbs, all kinds of strange things to tweak despair. Other than alcohol, tv, drugs and churches what is there in the wasteland of despair? Now a days, the old social support that was provided by churches has evolved into a big business and has become alligned with the politics of fear and vengeance. Hedges is right, a very scary path towards Fascism.

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» RE: Lack of Choices!! Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Lack of Choices!! Posted by: hms2004
Separation of church and state
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Jan 19, 2007 7:39 AM   
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A few centuries ago the Christian church and royalty were more widely seperated. They were rival groups exploiting the common people. Then fortunately it was remembered that Christ had said, "Render unto Caesar that which is Caesar's and unto God that which is God's". This magic formula allowed both institutions to share the plunder. The king "protected" his slaves from marauding neighbors who wanted to enslave "his" subjects. The church in turn kept the subjects from rebelling against the king with promises of Heaven if they did as they were told and Hell if they didn't. Also God's share had to be paid to the church. This system, which united church and state against the people, worked out extremely well for all concerned: except the people.

The American Founding Fathers thought that the common people should be free from the dictates of both the church and the state. The church and the state were once again separated. The people were to be in charge of the government and were to be free to worship God in any way or in no way according to their consciences and beliefs. This system worked even better for all concerned: except for the church and the state.

The rich corporate establishment which is now our government wants to return to the good old days when a monarch and the royalty ruled. This time around the plan is that the royalty rule and the monarch serve at their pleasure. To allow the church to take "God's" share is acceptable if they continue to keep the peasants from revolting. This isn't The American Dream it's the American nightmare. Wake up!.
Bob Reichenbach,
Director, The Lincoln Initiative.

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Fear & hate
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