On July 11, 2008, the propaganda organ of Don Wildmon’s American Family Association ran an article titled “
Wildmon: Prop. 8 vote crucial in culture battle”:
The Arlington Group, a coalition of about 60 pro-family groups and
ministries, will stress the importance of the November 4 vote in
California on Proposition 8, a proposed constitutional amendment that
would protect traditional marriage. To do that, pastors will be encouraged to use one Sunday in September to focus on the sanctity of marriage. Churches also will be encouraged to take up a special offering which will go toward the fight for marriage in California. [italics added]
The article reeks with the desecration of language at which
dominionists are so adept. Chris Hedges discussed “logocide” in his
2006 book
American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America:
Dominionists and their wealthy, right-wing sponsors speak in terms and
phrases that are familiar and comforting to most Americans, but they no
longer use words to mean what they meant in the past. They engage in a
slow process of “logocide,” the killing of words. The old definition of
words are replaced by new ones. Code words of the old belief system are
deconstructed and assigned diametrically opposed meanings.
“Protect traditional marriage.” What does “protect” mean? If gay and
lesbian couples marry, will heterosexual couples stop? If that were the
case, then prohibiting same-sex marriage would “protect” heterosexual
marriage. But that is not the case. Heterosexual couples still marry in
Massachusetts and California. In fact, heterosexual marriage in those
states has been totally
unaffected by marriage equality. So one has to conclude that by
“protect” dominionists mean reserve a civil right to a civil
institution for some people and deny it to others: the definition of
discrimination.
“Traditional marriage.” In biblical times a “traditional marriage” was
arranged, and often involved more than one “wife” and several
concubines. David’s eight wives, except for Mikal, are listed in 1
Chronicles 3:1-5, and his ten concubines are referred to in 2 Samuel
15:16. Thanks to those good old biblical times, for most of the next
two millennia “wives” were deemed little more than the property of
their husbands. Are those the biblical “traditions” dominionists want
to preserve and protect?
The “sanctity of marriage.” What does “sanctity” mean, and to whom? In
September 2004 – during the height of dominionists’ pre-election
campaign to “save traditional marriage” – the Barna Group, a Christian
marketing-research organization, issued a report
titled “Born Again Christians Just As Likely to Divorce As Are
Non-Christians.” It documented that “among married born again
Christians, 35% have experienced a divorce. That figure is identical to
the outcome among married adults who are not born again: 35%.” Barna
also documented that “nearly one-quarter of the married ‘born agains’
(23%) get divorced two or more times.” The struggle of gay and lesbians
Americans to secure the right to a legal, civil marriage clearly
demonstrates their belief in the “sanctity” of the institution as well
as their respect for it. Can the same be said for those twice-divorced
born-againers, many if not most of whom support the dominionist
campaign to “protect” the “sanctity” of marriage.
A “special offering.” Not only do the members of the Arlington Group
want the pulpit politicized, they want the worship service turned into
a fund-raising event for a political cause: a clear expression of the
dominionist goal of marrying church and state, with the state as the
“traditional” subservient wife who adheres to St. Paul’s edict in First
Timothy.
The “fight for marriage”? It is the gay and lesbian couples who are
fighting “for marriage.” Dominionists, on the other hand, are fighting against
marriage and to weaken the institution by excluding people who want to
support it. The gay and lesbian couples seeking the right to marry are
also fighting for the institution by expressing their faith in it.
Dominionists, on the other hand, are using it as a political toy and,
thereby, demeaning and trivializing it.
In keeping with dominionist logocide, Wildmon went on in the One News
Now article to claim that the institutions of marriage and the family
as well as society itself would collapse if civil equality won the day
in California on November 4. In that, he echoed James Dobson – another
self-appointed spokesman for God – who, in his 2004 book
Marriage Under Fire stated that if gay and lesbian Americans were allowed to marriage, the world would end “as it was in the days of Noah.”
There’s good reason the two men share the same rhetoric. They’re both
members of the Arlington Group, an organization dedicated to Christian
dominionism. People for the American Way offers
some insights:
The Arlington Group (AG) is the newest coalition of the leaders of
Religious Right groups brought together by right-wing strategist Paul
Weyrich and Don Wildmon, head of the American Family Association, to
coordinate activities. The group is widely credited with being the
driving force behind the effort to put marriage protection amendments
on the ballot in 11 states in the 2004 election. …
Membership: Members include the heads of 75 (as of September 2006) Religious Right groups such as Paul Weyrich, Don Wildmon, James Dobson, and Gary Bauer. …
The Arlington Group describes itself as a “powerful coalition of
leaders from the pro-family community, [that] develops and executes
national and grassroots strategies to: protect the traditional
institution of marriage, increase respect for every human life, limit
judicial activism, and act on other moral issues of concern.” …
In 2005, the Group threatened to withhold support for the President’s
proposed Social Security reforms if Bush did not actively work to pass
a federal marriage amendment banning same-sex marriage. … [links added]
Theocracy Watch – “a partner project of the
CRESP Center for
Transformative Action at Cornell University” – has much more to say,
especially about Paul Weyrich. In 1977, Weyrich co-founded Christian Voice. Two years later founded – with Jerry Falwell – the Moral Majority.
Weyrich coined the phrase “Moral Majority” which was neither “moral” or a “majority.”
Among Weyrich’s other organizations is the Free Congress Foundation.
According to Theocracy Watch (and the Anti-Defamation League), Weyrich
and his FCF advocate the dominionist agenda. That agenda can be summed
up in a few words: Biblical edicts the dominionists decide are literal
and valid combined with their concocted version of Christian dogma
should have supremacy – dominion – over
all secular laws, including the United States Constitution. From Chris Hedges’
American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America:
Dominionism is a theocratic sect with its roots in a radical Calvinism.
… It teaches that American Christians have been mandated by God to make
America a Christian state. … America bcomes, in this militant
Biblicism, an agent of God, and all political and intellectual
opponents of America’s Christian leaders are viewed, quite simply, as
agents of Satan.
Under Christian dominionism, America will no longer be a sinful and
fallen nation but one in which the 10 Commandments form the basis of
our legal system, and the media and the government proclaim the Good
News to one and all. Labor unions, civil-rights laws and public schools
will be abolished. Women will be removed from the workforce to stay at
home, and all those deemed insufficiently Christian will be denied
citizenship. …
The death penalty is to be imposed not only for offenses such as rape,
kidnapping and murder, but also for adultery, blasphemy, homosexuality,
astrology, incest, striking a parent, incorrigible juvenile
delinquency, and, in the case of women, “unchastity before marriage.” …
The moral calculus no longer revolves around the concept of universal
human rights, now its center is the well-being, protection and
promotion of “Bible believing Christians.”
For dominionists, all other religions and any political view other than
theirs are Satanic. Weyrich made that clear when he launched a
“Christian boycott” of the military because Wicca was recognized as a
legitimate religion. From Weyrich’s “‘Satanic’ Army Unworthy of
Representing United States,” Free Congress Foundation press release,
June 9, 1999:
Until the Army withdraws all official support and approval from
witchcraft, no Christian should enlist or re-enlist in the Army, and
Christian parents should not allow their children to join the Army…
An Army that sponsors satanic rituals is unworthy of representing the
United States of America … The official approval of satanism and
witchcraft by the Army is a direct assault on the Christian faith that
generations of American soldiers have fought and died for...
If the Army wants witches and satanists in its ranks, then it can do it
without Christians in those ranks. It’s time for the Christians in this
country to put a stop to this kind of nonsense. A Christian recruiting
strike will compel the Army to think seriously about what it is doing.
Obviously Mr. Weyrich has
no idea what Wicca is or what it
isn’t, nor does he understand what “freedom of religion” means. Does he
really believe the Army “sponsors satanic rituals”? Weyrich’s
assertions are grotesque exaggerations and flamingly flatulent:
characteristics the rhetoric of Christian dominionists share. That
could be because it’s commonly scripted behind closed doors?
Weyrich, Wildmon and Dobson are members of the
Council for National Policy:
the star-chamber in which Christian dominionists and their wealthy
right-wing sponsors plot and plan how to take over of the United States
and make it their own theofascist domain.
Never heard of the Council for National Policy? That’s not surprising.
It’s a highly secretive organization. Subversive organizations usually
are. Members never talk about what goes on behind closed doors. Some of
what is known is available
here and
here and
here and
here and
here and
here and
here and
here and
here. Do the words “shadow government” come to mind?
The CNP uses secrecy. Dominionists use fear. Their rhetoric is filled
with ominous predictions of impending doom and divinely ordained
punishments if the movement’s ideas are not blindly accepted and acted
upon. The “enemies of God” are identified and demonized – gay and
lesbian Americans head that list – and the faithful are called upon to
engage in a holy war to save “Christian America.” As Wildmon wailed,
“‘If we lose California, if they defeat the marriage amendment, I’m
afraid that the culture war is over and Christians have lost … If the
homosexuals are able to defeat the marriage amendment … then the
culture war is over and we’ve lost – and gradually, secularism will
replace Christianity as the foundation of our society.”
Wildom and the rest of the dominionist leaders see only black and
white. It’s either their way, or utter doom. They prey on people’s
fears and exploit their weaknesses. They claim they and
they alone
know “God’s” will and what’s right and wrong for everyone, and offer
simplistic, bumper-sticker answers to complex questions. They play the
victim while relentlessly victimizing others. They are the worst
humanity, religion and politics have to offer. As Chris Hedges noted,
“radical Christian dominionists have no religious legitimacy. They are
manipulating Christianity, and millions of sincere believers, to build
a frightening political mass movement with many similarities with other
mass movements, from fascism … to the ethnic nationalist parties in the
former Yugoslavia.”
The Alliance Defense Fund’s “Pulpit initiative” – which implies only
their
pastors can speak “Truth” – and the Arlington Group’s blatant call to
use their pastors’ pulpits and collection plates for political purposes
attest to the dominionist agenda. They also suggest… desperation.
Most of the leaders of Christian dominionism are … old and out of
touch. Reading their propaganda one would think America’s youth are
embracing evangelical doctrine, fundamentalist ideology and dominionist
ideas. They’re not. In fact, America’s youth is moving in exactly the
opposite direction and have been for some time. An October 2006
New York Times article reported the exodus:
Evangelicals Fear the Loss of Their Teenagers
Despite their packed megachurches, their political clout and their
increasing visibility on the national stage, evangelical Christian
leaders are warning one another that their teenagers are abandoning the
faith in droves. …
Their alarm has been stoked by a highly suspect claim that if current
trends continue, only 4 percent of teenagers will be “Bible-believing
Christians” as adults. That would be a sharp decline compared with 35
percent of the current generation of baby boomers, and before that, 65
percent of the World War II generation. …
The board of the National Association of Evangelicals, an umbrella
group representing 60 denominations and dozens of ministries, passed a
resolution this year deploring “the epidemic of young people leaving
the evangelical church.”
So what did the evangelical and dominionist elders blame for teens’ mass exodus?
Certainly not themselves or their message of intolerance, hate and bigotry:
I want you to just let a wave of intolerance wash over you. I want you
to let a wave of hatred wash over you. Yes, hate is good...Our goal is
a Christian nation. We have a Biblical duty, we are called by God, to
conquer this country. We don’t want equal time. We don’t want
pluralism.
Certainly not their hysterical preaching that everyone who disagrees
with their extremist agenda is innately evil and the cause of all the
world’s evils:
The feminist agenda is not about equal rights for women. It is about a
socialist, anti-family political movement that encourages women to
leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy
capitalism, and become lesbians. – Pat Robertson
Certainly not the preposterous anti-knowledge, pro-ignorance claims made by prominent leaders of the dominionist movement:
The Bible is the inerrant...word of the living God. It is absolutely
infallible, without error in all matters pertaining to faith and
practice, as well as in areas such as geography, science, history, etc. [italics added]
– Jerry Falwell
Nope. They blamed popular culture and, of course, played victim once
again citing “a pervasive culture of cynicism about religion.”
Cynicism? One of the keynote speakers at the gathering reported on by the
Times
was the then president of the National Association of Evangelicals, Ted
Haggard. He’d been an outspoken critic of gay and lesbian Americans –
and especially their desire to marry – until his
extra-marital, drug-fueled homosexual trysts with a male prostitute were made public. (Click
here. It seem Rev. Haggard was talking about himself and was quite serious about
sending him that $1000.)
And who could be cynical about the holier-than-thou who advocate
amending the U.S. Constitution to make gay and lesbian Americans
permanent second-class citizens? Such an effort is backed by pillars of
morality and honesty such as the two senators who “
named themselves as co-sponsors of” the Marriage Protection Amendment:
Sen. Larry Craig (R-ID), who was arrested June 11, 2007 on charges of
lewd conduct in a Minneapolis airport terminal, is co-sponsoring the
amendment along with Sen. David Vitter (R-LA).
Craig, who entered a guilty plea to a reduced charge of disorderly
conduct, was detained and charged for attempting to engage in sexual
activity with a male undercover police officer. His arrest and plea
became public two months later. At that time, Craig attempted to
withdraw his plea and enter a new plea of not guilty. To date, his
efforts have been denied by the courts.
In July of 2007, Vitter was identified as a client of a prostitution
firm owned by the late Deborah Jeane Palfrey, commonly known as The DC
Madam.
Every poll shows America’s youth – ages 18-30 –
overwhelmingly
support equality for gay and lesbian Americans, including the civil
right to a civil marriage. In November 2008, Californians will vote on
Proposition 8 which, if passed, would amend the state’s constitution
and ban the same-sex marriages that are now legal in California. A
statewide
Field Poll
conduced the week of July 15, 2008 found that “if the election were
being held now, more voters say they would vote No (51%) on Prop. 8
than would vote Yes (42%). … By age, opposition to Prop. 8 is greatest
among younger voters under age 30, as well as among ‘baby boomers’ in
the 50 – 64 age bracket.”
Today’s youth are media savvy. They can see through frauds and
charlatans, and they’ve had enough of the hate, irrationality and what
can only be called the blind (and blinding) arrogance so ubiquitous in
dominionist rhetoric.
To be sure, dominionists will not go extinct. They will change their
name and, like a virulent pathogen, lay low until they sense an
opportunity to break out and infest the body politic again. Those who
have used religion to feed their megalomania and further their own
hate-based political and social agenda have always existed. Their names
are among history’s most infamous,
then and
more recently.
During the Bush administration, dominionists and the Council for National Policy have had
carte blanche.
In many ways they have steered the ship of state. That administration
is coming to an end. It’s time for religion to again become one of many
passengers on the ship, not its captain.