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Updated January 25, 2007 and April 19, 2005 (originally published November 24, 2004)
The “War on Terror” has provided Americans with a helpful
introduction to theocracy. The fight against Al Qaeda, the war on
the Taliban, and the growing tensions with the regime in Iran has
offered a quick primer on the hallmarks of the religious state.
First is the rule of religious authorities, whether it be Bin
Laden’s new Caliphate, Mullah Omar’s Taliban regime, or the mullahs
in Tehran. Second is the imposition of the faith’s sacred texts as
law, in these cases, some variant of sharia law of the Koran. And
last is the direct involvement of the state in the most minute and
deeply personal aspects of individual lives, enforced by religious
police, informed by spies, and punished severely (and often
publicly).
Now thanks to the Bush administration, a Republican Congress and
the conservative ascendancy, Americans need not travel to Kandahar
to learn about the perils of theocratic rule. Right here in the
United States, a network of politicians, religious leaders,
“faith-based” organizations and (literally) their amen corner are
working overtime to make a particularly onerous concept of
Christianity the de facto law of the land. Armed with the Bible in
one hand and the Patriot Act in the other, George W. Bush and his
GOP jihadists threaten to fundamentally change the role of
government in monitoring Americans’ lives, liberties and
even bodies.
Meet the
American Taliban:
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The
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George Bush
The President’s theocratic tendencies go back to his days as
Governor of Texas. There he proclaimed the celebration of
“Jesus Day”, in recognition of He who “changed my heart.” As
President, his “Faith-Based Initiative”
seeks to put $8 billion of
taxpayer money in the hands of religious organizations
to deliver social services without regard to potential
discriminatory practices. The President, who apparently has
his own "prayer
team",
consistently uses religious language and imagery in his
speeches. Regarding
his foreign policy,
Bush
emphasizes that the Declaration of Independence and
Constitution not withstanding, “freedom is a gift from the
Almighty.” (They were called the Founding Fathers, and not
the Founding Deities, for a reason.)
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Antonin
Scalia
Supreme Court Justice Scalia has provided
much of the intellectual heft and rhetorical rage in the
legal assault on the separation of church and state.
Scalia, a virulent opponent of gay and
reproductive rights, has dissented from virtually every
ruling expanding the right to privacy, including the Texas
sodomy case (Lawrence
v. Texas) and Colorado constitutional referendum on
gay rights (Romer
v. Evans). The outspoken Scalia had to recuse
himself from the
Newdow Pledge case after
his public criticism of the Ninth Circuit Court in
comments at a "Religious Freedom Day" celebration. As
for the separation of church and state, Scalia recently
asked a Jewish audience, "did it turn out that, by
reason of the separation of church and state, the Jews were
safer in Europe than they were in the United States of
America? I don't think so." He added, "I am an originalist,
I am a textualist, but I am not a nut." History, Mr.
Justice, will be the judge of that.
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Roy Moore
The
former Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court
insisted on displaying a massive granite monument bearing the Ten
Commandments at his courthouse and refused to obey a Federal
judge’s ruling ordering its removal. In defiance, he claimed
that announcing it depicts the "moral foundations of law"
and reflects the "sovereignty of God over the affairs of
men." For his actions, he is now
rightly the former Chief Justice. Now, he seeks passage of
the Alabama Senator Richard Shelby's "Constitution
Restoration Act" and its House companion, the "Ten
Commandments Defense Act" offered by Alabama Rep. Robert
Aderholt. Among other threats to the separation of church
and state, these bills would ban Federal courts from curbing
state court rulings allowing an "acknowledgment of God".
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Sam Brownback
The Kansas Senator and
2008 GOP presidential hopeful aims to bring his
retrograde worldview to the
White House. A one-time evangelical turned
born-again Catholic, the
former Gingrich firebrand wants to bring his personal
jihad against abortion, stem cell research and gay-marriage
to the entire United States. A warrior for the
supposed "culture of life," in 2006 Brownback
displayed a child's drawing of embryos on the Senate
floor during the stem cell debate, relating the 7-year old
girl's plea, "are you going to kill me?"
Announcing his candidacy, Brownback declared that "every
human life is a beautiful, sacred, unique child of a loving
God" and that "the family and the culture are under
withering attack."
It's no wonder his American Taliban fellow
traveler
Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council said of the
Kansan, "Senator Brownback is unrivaled as an advocate for
the family and for life in Washington."
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John Ashcroft
The Attorney General may be on his way out, but his longing
for a return to the Middle Ages is undiminished. The son of
a Pentecostal minister, the man who lost his Missouri Senate
reelection to a dead man brought his own version of sharia
to the Justice Department, holding regular prayer meetings,
covering up bare-breasted statues, and barring meetings of
gay employees. Apparently, only Ashcroft's deep devotion to
God exceeds his anti-abortion ferocity and fidelity to
neo-Confederate causes such as
blocking desegregation and
African-American judges. Ashcroft neatly
summarized
his own view of American government, "Unique among the
nations, America recognized the source of our character as
being godly and eternal, not being civic and temporal. And
because we have understood that our source is eternal,
America has been different. We have no king but Jesus."
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Tom Delay
The one-time exterminator and
ethically challenged House Majority Leader is also one of
Washington’s foremost Crusaders. The man who once compared
the EPA to the Gestapo (for banning his beloved DDT) sees
his mission as bringing “a Biblical worldview to government.”
Among other things, that worldview includes Delay's
conclusion that "I don't believe there is a separation
of church and state. I think the Constitution is very clear.
The only separation is that there will not be a government
church." Delay
also pronounced that "our entire system is built on the
Judeo-Christian ethic, but it fell apart when we started
denying God. If you stand up today and acknowledge God, they
will try to destroy you... My mission is to bring us back to
the Constitution and to Absolute Truth that has been
manipulated and destroyed by a liberal worldview."
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Henry Hyde
Author of the Hyde Amendment limiting the use of Federal
funds for abortions, Hyde is one of the fiercest voices of
morality in the House. This, despite the fact that the
Illinois representative and Clinton impeachment hound had
an
adulterous affair he deemed a "youthful
indiscretion.“ Hyde had experience in handling these
matters publicly, speaking out in defense of his
similarly disgraced colleague Dan Crane in 1982, "he is
embarrassed, he is humiliated, he is disgraced...The
Judeo-Christian tradition says hate the sin and love the
sinner...I think it is time to love the sinner." For
Hyde, the Judeo-Christian tradition apparently did not apply
to Bill Clinton.
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Rick Santorum
The staunchly Catholic Senator from Pennsylvania has been
ardent foe of abortion and reproductive rights since joining
the Senate. A leading voice in support of the Federal
Marriage Amendment banning same-sex marriage, Santorum has
been outspoken about the perils to American society of “man
on dog” relationships. The junior Senator from
Pennsylvania, who has also stated that
there is no constitutional right to privacy, sees gay
marriage, and not Al Qaeda, as
the greatest threat facing the United States. ""I would
argue that the future of our country hangs in the balance
because the future of marriage hangs in the balance. Isn't
that the ultimate homeland security, standing up and
defending marriage?"
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Tom Coburn
Joining Bill Frist among the ranks of the physician
Senators, the Oklahoman alerted his fellow Sooners to
the
threat of lesbians run amok in the their high schools.
"Lesbianism is so rampant in some of the schools in
southeast Oklahoma that they'll only let one girl go to the
bathroom. Now think about it. Think about that issue. How is
it that that's happened to us?" Coburn, an obstetrician, has
said he
favors the death penalty for abortion providers and
called state legislators "a bunch of crapheads." The
good doctor, who called his race against Brad Carson a
choice between "good and evil", also has been accused of
Medicare fraud and sterilizing a woman
without her permission.
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Jim DeMint
The new Senator from South Carolina
has already distinguished himself on both social and tax
policy. During a campaign debate, DeMint stated that
"if a person is a practicing homosexual, they should not be
teaching in our schools." DeMint also has it ass-backwards
(pun intended) on tax reform, proposing the abolition of the
income tax and its replacement with a wildly regressive 23%
consumption tax.
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James Dobson
The head of
Focus on the Family, Dobson has created
a global
empire in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Heading a group whose
radio programs reach 7 million Americans each
week and are broadcast in 115 nations, Dobson may now be
the leading crossover
politico-religious figure in the country. In the immediate
aftermath of Bush’s reelection and the GOP tidal wave in
Congress, Dobson threw his weight around, calling for Arlen
Specter’s head and
labeling Vermont Senator Pat Leahy
a “God's people hater.” (Dobson might want to consult with Vice
President Cheney on getting their message – and language –
straight visa vis Leahy.)
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Jerry Falwell
The creator of the Moral Majority, Falwell continues to play
a major jihadist role in mobilizing the Christian Right.
Still smarting from his courtroom defeat at the hands of
Larry Flynt,
Falwell attributed 9/11 to divine punishment of
America, stating "I really believe that the pagans, and the
abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays and the
lesbians who are actively trying to make that an alternative
lifestyle, the ACLU, People For the American Way, all of
them who have tried to secularize America. I point the
finger in their face and say 'you helped this happen.'"
More recently, he called
the NOW the “National Organization of Witches” and Americans
United for the Separation of Church and State “anti-Christ”.
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Pat Robertson
The one-time presidential candidate and broadcasting giant
with Ralph Reed made the Christian Coalition into the power
it is today. Robertson agreed with Falwell's assessment that
the United States, home of feminists, homosexuals and
abortionists, got its just desserts from the Lord on 9/11,
Robertson also turned
election prognosticator in October, "I really believe
I'm hearing from the Lord it's going to be like a blowout
election in 2004...It doesn't make any difference what he
[Bush] does, good or bad, God picks him up because he's a
man of prayer and God's blessing him."
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Ralph Reed
The head of the Georgia GOP and Bush’s coordinator for the
southeast U.S., Reed is the archetypal Crusader. The man who
helped make the Christian Coalition such a dominant force
summarized his
un-Christian tactics, “I
paint my face and travel at night. You don't know it's over
until you're in a body bag. You don't know until election
night.” Blessed are the meek indeed.
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Tony Perkins
Perkins has led the
Family Research
Council since 2003, after previously founding the
Louisiana Family Forum to fight the "increasing influence of
the homosexual community on public policy issues" and
authoring that state's covenant marriage legislation.
Perkins likes to refer to the "homosexual
death-style" and labels civil unions "a serious threat
to the health of our culture." With
Bill Frist, Perkins is at the center of the judicial
filibuster fight, proclaiming after the death of
Terri Schiavo that the courts "are suffering from a
persistent state of arrogance" and "no longer respect human
life." Along with Dobson and other junior members of the
American Taliban, Perkins is hosting the April 24th "Justice
Sunday" event
to protest the judicial filibuster as an attack "against
people of faith."
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Gary Bauer
Bauer, president of
American Values and former head of the Family Research
Council, shows that
bearing a striking resemblance to Star Wars' Yoda is no barrier to
influence in American culture. The one-time presidential
candidate continues to play a major role in driving the
supposed Christian agenda.
Telling his faithful that "our nation stands at the
brink of a cultural crisis", Bauer adds that "and so long as
God gives me breath I will do everything possible to defend
faith, family and freedom. Once again, I must ask for your
prayers and your financial support."
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Richard Land
Land, the head of the Southern Baptist Convention's "Ethics
and Religious Liberty" Commission, has been a steadfast and
vocal supporter of President Bush.
He noted that "Republicans abort at lower rates than
Democrats. I read an estimate that by the 2000 election,
five million potential Gore voters had been lost to
abortion." He also
pointed out that "I don't think there's any question
that this president's heartbeat is close to the heartbeat of
Southern Baptists when it comes to very serious and
important public policy issues to Southern Baptists."
Recently, Land's commission has been debating a proposal
encouraging Southern Baptists to home-school their children,
removing them from the "godless
public schools."
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