Hats off to the First Freedom Bloggers!
Frederick Clarkson printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Sun Apr 08, 2007 at 03:55:24 PM EST
This weekend, big chunks of the Greater Blogosphere are participating in the  Blog Against Theocracy blogswarm.

I am proud to be a coconspirator in this fearless and feisty crew; this band of sisters and brothers who are taking the vision of the founding generation of America into the 21st century.  Talk to Action's heroic Mainstream Baptist, calls us the "First Freedom Bloggers."   And as you can see, the writers here at Talk to Action are rising to the ocasion, and dispatches from the Greater Blogosphere indicate that many others are as well.  Here is a sample:

I encourage you to read participant posts; comment on their blogs; expand and extend the conversation.  The Blog Against Theocracy is, as Talk to Action readers know, neither the beginning or the end of this struggle; but it may very well be, down the road, seen as a benchmark -- and everyone reading this is a part of this potentially pivotal moment in our history.  

Mock, Paper, Scissors

commander other writes:

Over the past couple of days, in preparation for participating in this Blogswarm Against Theocracy, I have had several conversations with friends and acquaintances on the subject of theocracy in general. As the majority of these friends are Christians, the conversation always got off to a bit of a rough start, but ironically, every single one ended with my friend's assertion that indeed, a theocratic state wouldn't be beneficial for this country, and quite often included an expression of exasperation at how various state legislatures, municipal governments, and even federal entities persistently attempt to hijack public forums and taxpayer monies to promote obviously religious agenda. For my experiences with my friends, and from what I read online, in the paper, and in national magazines, the Christian public at large doesn't see a need for a theocratic state, and honestly resents taxpayer monies being used to promote such agendas. Personally of course, I believe they're right to be offended by the actions of their own elected leaders and church leaders.

Wall of Separation  

Jeremy Leaming gives a run down on how the U.S.Department of Justice is increasingly carrying water for the religious right, and is staffed accordingly.

Like other components of the Bush administration, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has become a conduit for advancing the Religious Right's agenda.  Under this White House, the DOJ has overhauled its Civil Rights Division to focus large amounts of attention on helping "faith-based" organizations receive grants and trolling the land looking for supposed discrimination against evangelical Christians.

The department's fervid focus on advancing Religious Rights concerns makes its claim "to ensure fair and impartial administration of justice for all Americans" a mere platitude.

Hullabaloo

tristero writes about Rev. Joseph Morecraft, of Georgia, a leading Christian Reconstrucitonist, and an unapologetic theocrat.

In order to understand what American theocracy is - and why those of us who are worried about it are worried sick over it - you need to encounter it in context and that means reading beyond deliberately tendentious soundbites like, "9/11 is God's vengeance on a corrupt United States." You need to see how the various pieces of their arguments are developed and interconnect. You also need to see how the theocrats deliberately manufacture opportunities to create coalitions with non-religious extremists. And you need to see how theocratic ideas have become not only more acceptable, but actually become mainstream topics of political discourse.

In short, if you want to understand how to confront theocracy - and with a lot of effort on our part on a lot of different fronts, I think it can be re-consigned to the ugly margins of American public discourse - you need to find out not only what they think, but how they think. And that will take examining what theocrats say in context.

Morecraft's book  is useful because it is stylistically consistent and short. Also, Morecraft is unusually blunt and direct both in his language and his intentions. That said, it is not, repeat NOT, "the Christianist Manifesto." It's not even close. There probably is no such thing. The theocrats, for many reasons, simply don't work like that. For one thing, there is so much they intuitively agree about, there's no reason to bother. For another, they are way ahead of us. They know what they want; their focus now is on implementation, not theorizing.

But the excerpts from Morecraft's book will give you an excellent introduction to their genuinely bizarre mindset. It's my hope that these excerpts dispel a lot of liberal misconceptions about the theocrats. For example, what theocrats like Dobson and Donohue mean by "religious freedom" and "tolerance" is very different than our understanding of the terms. By getting a clearer view of their rationales, deceptions, distortions, and obsessions, I think we will be better able to craft more effective ways to fight them.

The Quaker Agitator

The Quaker Agitator has some sharp political analysis:

Despite protestations to the contrary by those who will benefit most from a theocratic take-over of the federal and state governments of the United States, our country is, in my opinion, slowly headed in this direction. Initiatives against gay marriage, for example, which supposedly come from "grass roots" organizations, are in fact organized and financed by national groups with ties to the Republican Party. No thinking person can deny that it was a carefully plotted strategy by the GOP to put anti-gay marriage initiatives on the ballots in key swing states during the last presidential election cycle as a way of getting out the franatical base and assuring a Bush/Cheney victory in those states. That fact alone gives the lie to the idea that the fight over gay marriage, for one example, is about "morality." It's not, not really. It's about power. Who gets it, and who gets to use it. And who will be victimized by it.

When people use their interpretation of a particular religion to obtain, hold, and wield political power, that is theocracy. That is also what makes the current battles in the so-called "culture wars" different from, say, the Civil Rights struggle and before that, the battle for women's suffrage. Those struggles were about expanding rights to previously oppressed disenfranchised groups. The fights today being waged in the media, at the polling place, and in the courts are about denying rights, rights given to us by our Creator, and about reducing the scope of who can be a full citizen. And that should concern everyone, of every political and religious persuasion. Because if they come into my Friends' Meeting and spy on us as we speak to the Peace Testimony, or when we put into practice the Testimony of Equality by sanctioning a marriage between two people who love each other who also happen to be of the same sex, then they can come after you, too.

The Springy Goddess

Astreja K. Odinsdóttir  a Canadian with family and friends in the states, is worried about us:  

I have tried to bring myself up to speed on the intricacies of U.S. governance -- Enough, at least, to know of the Establishment Clause; Thomas Paine's Age of Reason; Dominionists; the Lemon Test.

It amazes me and saddens me to see the truly nonsensical debates on issues that were supposedly put to rest centuries ago. To see disdain for scientific method in a country that claims Ben Franklin and Thomas Edison and adopted Albert Einstein as its own. To hear the ravings of public figures who think blind obedience is a virtue and who view the world through a simplistic us-versus-them lens.

To watch helplessly as theocrats dismantle the work of Frederick Douglass, Susan B. Anthony, Thomas Jefferson, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, John Dewey, Margaret Sanger.

And I worry about you.

But I know, and history shows time and time again, that you have the will to take back your birthright. May you safely emerge from this nightmare with even greater strength and resolve.




Display:
Especially Blue Gal; and fellow coconspirators: Neural Gourmet and Mock, Paper, Scissors.

by Frederick Clarkson on Sun Apr 08, 2007 at 04:25:13 PM EST

In my Easter sermon, I wrote:

"I hear quite often that all the problems facing America would be resolved if only we hadn't evicted God from our lives. I worry about that attitude for many reasons, not the least of which is that some of the people who hold that attitude tend to think that God comes in a neatly wrapped book called "The Holy Bible" that contains no inaccuracies or errors in its original King James Version. And more than that, for some who hold this attitude, the only way to bring God back into America is for everyone in America to believe exactly what they believe about God, which takes religious intolerance to a level seen elsewhere in the world predominantly in areas where Sharia Law has been established under strict Islamic theocracies."

I am thankful to be in a congregation that, though located in the very reddest part of Pennsylvania, is open-minded and welcoming of diverse understandings and experiences of God. We are a real threat to those who want only their version of God to be preached and taught!

by RevRuthUCC on Sun Apr 08, 2007 at 11:12:45 PM EST


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