Christian Right Default: Blame the Jews
Frederick Clarkson printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Sun May 05, 2013 at 12:29:11 AM EST
This past week we saw a remarkable example of the whipping-up of outrage over the alleged persecution of Christians.

The story turned out to be bogus.

Christian Right leaders are scrambling to recover.

And its getting ugly.

(2 comments, 858 words in story)
Investigating the Indiana Family Institute
Frederick Clarkson printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Thu May 02, 2013 at 08:21:22 PM EST
The Indiana Society of Professional Journalists gave Andy Kopsa its 2012 award for Best Investigative Reporting for a newspaper under 40,000 in circulation.  And it is well deserved.

The judges wrote:

"The writer does a good job of connecting the dots to show the cozy intersection between religion and politics in Indiana. [S]He highlights the lack of accountability and transparency on the state's part, raising legitimate questions about whether public money is being spent properly. This is the kind of watchdog journalism that can make a difference, giving readers useful information to become more engaged in how their tax dollars are being spent."

Her story  Separation Anxiety:  Limited religious mindset takes broad root in Indiana politics appeared in the altnerative weekly, NUVO.

(500 words in story)
Thomas E. Woods, Jr. and the Neo-Confederate Catholic Right
Frank Cocozzelli printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Wed May 01, 2013 at 04:38:58 PM EST
Thomas Woods is an increasingly influential  player on the Catholic Right. In this and a subsequent post, we will consider how his world view is   incompatible with both Catholic Social Justice principles and American history.
(11 comments, 1028 words in story)
Memo To The Religious Right: You Don't Need The Government To Tell You When To Pray
Rob Boston printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Mon Apr 29, 2013 at 12:56:47 PM EST

Thursday is the National Day of Prayer, and if you want to pray, by all means have at it.

I'll let you in on a little secret: You can pray (or not) as dictated by your very own conscience. You don't need any branch of the government to tell you what to do when it comes to religion.

(5 comments, 698 words in story)
Book in 2012 Predicted Boston Bombing Motive
Chip Berlet printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Mon Apr 29, 2013 at 09:06:54 AM EST
A book published in 2012 predicted the motive for the suspects in the Boston Marathon bombing. Terrorist's Creed, by professor Roger Griffin, explains how revolutionary religious movements construct a motive for terrorism against the United States and the West.

Griffin, a world-renowned expert on totalitarian thought and the connections among political fanaticism, violence, and religion, highlighted Chechnya in his study that explains how young men are radicalized into a zealous form of Islam. Carefully avoiding stereotyping Islam or Muslims around the world, Griffin zeros in on the powerful allure of revolutionary "Islamism" in mapping a course toward terrorism.

(1 comment, 1209 words in story)
The End of the Literature of Pooh Poohery about Dominionism?
Frederick Clarkson printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Sun Apr 28, 2013 at 04:50:45 PM EST
It is no small thing that Sally Quinn, doyenne of religion at The Washington Post, seems to have turned around on the problem of dominionism.

In a recent column at The Washington Post, where she is the founder and co-editor of On Faith online, Quinn wrote about the serious problems of divisions in the military, pointing in particular to rape and proselytization. In the case of the latter, she highlights the problem of "dominionism."   If this signals a trend, it is a sea change at the paper, whose featured religion writer Lisa Miller was a noted contributor to the literature of pooh poohery about both the New Apostolic Reformation and dominionism.  

"'Dominionism'", Miller wrote at the time, "is the paranoid mot du jour."  

It is good to see these issues getting fresh traction Inside the Beltway.  Let the debate that Miller et al sought to squelch -- begin now in earnest.  The constellation of issues related to religion in the military has long been reported and discussed on this site.  Noted blogger Ken Bernstein at Daily Kos has taken the conversation forward. I hope others will as well

(8 comments)
Death by Dominion
Frederick Clarkson printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Fri Apr 26, 2013 at 07:05:03 PM EST
The Chalcedon Foundation in Valecito, California was founded by R.J Rushdoony in 1965 and continues to this day as a think tank devoted to the development of a school of evangelical Christian thought called Christian Reconstructionism. It is part of a broader modern theocratic movement that many writers and scholars refer to as dominionism, after the notion that a goal of many conservative Christians is to "take dominion" over all aspects of society.

The Chalcedon Foundation conveniently provides its own explanation of the notion of Christian Dominion on its web site. This is significant in part because in a media flap a few years ago some journalists and pundits engaged in a round of smears, denials and distortions in response to reporting on the contemporary politics of dominionism in the Republican Party.  Some professed ignorance, and claimed that dominionism was insignificant if it existed at all. Some questioned the motives of those of us who have written about these things. (Some of us formally responded to the more egregious smears.)

(25 comments, 815 words in story)
7 Experts Who Want to Reframe the Boston Bombing Media Coverage
Chip Berlet printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Fri Apr 26, 2013 at 07:20:55 AM EST
Much media coverage of the worldview and motivation of the suspects in the Boston bombing case--one now dead--was sensational and provocative. Very little of it, however, relied on experts who use contemporary--rather than outdated and discredited social science. Discussions of the possible role of religion were often stilted or stifled. Contemporary sociological theory contends that:

  • Most people who join social movements, political movements, or religious movements are not mentally ill or stupid. They have adopted an ideology and constructed an identity that in their view justifies their actions--whether these actions are deemed constructive or destructive by society.
  • The vast majority of movement activists never engage in violence.
  • There is no correlation linking religious piety with violence.
  • The radicalization process itself does not cause violence.
  • Dissent, movement activism, and non-violent civil disobedience are part of the democratic process in civil society.
So we asked a variety of respected academics, researchers, and analysts of movements and political violence to craft an answer to this question: "As a person with expertise, what would you tell a reporter who wanted to know what she or he needs to know to craft a better, more informed story about the Boston bombings as details emerge?

Below the fold is a collection of their responses along with additional resources.

(1 comment, 2495 words in story)
Press Sanitizes or Ignores Howard Phillips' Role in Using Religion to Radicalize the Political Right
Rachel Tabachnick printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Thu Apr 25, 2013 at 05:28:16 PM EST
Following the death of Howard Phillips on April 20, the New York Times described Phillips as a "pillar of conservative activism," but with no mention of his role in the Religious Right or the Christian Reconstructionist base of the political party Phillips founded.  The Constitution Party, previously the U.S. Taxpayers Party, is described in the New York Times as "based on the founding documents of the nation and the original intent of the founding fathers" with no reference to the party's mission "to restore American jurisprudence to its Biblical foundations."

It's impossible to describe the significance of  Howard Phillips' career without mentioning religion, but mainstream press tried.  Like former Rep. Ron Paul, with whom he worked closely for many years, Phillips was at the nexus of the free market gospel and authoritarian Christianity, using biblical inerrancy as the justification for both social and economic policy. The redefining of libertarianism and "religious liberty" as part of a theocratic agenda, is a driving force behind the radicalization of today's political Right and its "Constitutional Conservatism."

(4 comments, 1276 words in story)
Boston Bombing: Ignoring the Dynamics of the Holocaust
Chip Berlet printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Wed Apr 24, 2013 at 08:58:14 AM EST
A week before the bombing of the Boston Marathon I was in Colorado explaining how demagogues can use skillful rhetoric to construct a framework that justifies apocalyptic aggression in the name of a higher purpose. Those who join in such a violent campaign to purify the land by targeting the scapegoated enemies are heroes in this storyline. That is what scholars Hannah Arendt and Gordon W. Allport spent decades explaining about the Nazi genocide in chilling detail. That was my topic which I summarized in less than ten minutes in the video here.
(2 comments, 793 words in story)
Boston Bombing Media Slant: Religion as Pathology
Chip Berlet printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Tue Apr 23, 2013 at 11:30:02 PM EST
The corporate media is locked in a battle between two offensive frames for explaining the Boston Marathon Bombings, both of which treat religion like pathology.

Right-wing frame: Blame Islam, the religion of violence, it's all about a religion of uncivilized tribalists, unleash the FBI, round up all the teenage Muslims in the United States. Pay no attention to all the liberals mewing about civil liberties. Our religion is good; theirs is bad.

Liberal/Centrist Frame: It's not Islam, it is teenage angst, and it's all psychological alienation. Send all the teenagers in the United States to counseling sessions so they join the Peace Corps or the military instead of Jihad or Occupy Wall Street. Religion is a crutch for the damaged.

(8 comments, 695 words in story)
Christian Rapper Blasts Prosperity Preachers as "Fal$e Teacher$"
Bill Berkowitz printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Tue Apr 23, 2013 at 02:49:08 PM EST
While Jay-Z & Beyonce's recent trip to Cuba to celebrate the couple's fifth anniversary stirred up significant controversy, a new song by a Christian rapper, relatively unknown to the general public, is ruffling feathers in the conservative Christian evangelical community, especially amongst a gaggle of religious gurus known as "Prosperity Preachers."

Christian rapper Shai Linne, according to Charisma News, "recently released a song [which peaked at #7 on iTunes' Hip Hop/Rap charts] calling out prosperity gospel teachers by name."

The 12 pastors named are -- Joel Osteen, Joyce Meyer, T.D. Jakes, Benny Hinn, Creflo Dollar, Paula White, Fred Price, Kenneth Copland, Robert Tilton, Eddie Long, Juanita Bynum and Paul Crouch - and each name is followed by the song's refrain, "is a false teacher!"

(1185 words in story)


WWW Talk To Action


Respect for Others? or Political Correctness?
The term "political correctness" as used by Conservatives and Republicans has often puzzled me: what exactly do they mean by it? After reading Chip Berlin's piece here-- http://www.talk2action.org/story/2016/7/21/04356/9417 I thought about what he explained......
MTOLincoln (253 comments)
Fear
What I'm feeling now is fear.  I swear that it seems my nightmares are coming true with this new "president".  I'm also frustrated because so many people are not connecting all the dots! I've......
ArchaeoBob (107 comments)
"America - love it or LEAVE!"
I've been hearing that and similar sentiments fairly frequently in the last few days - far FAR more often than ever before.  Hearing about "consequences for burning the flag (actions) from Trump is chilling!......
ArchaeoBob (214 comments)
"Faked!" Meme
Keep your eyes and ears open for a possible move to try to discredit the people openly opposing Trump and the bigots, especially people who have experienced terrorism from the "Right"  (Christian Terrorism is......
ArchaeoBob (165 comments)
More aggressive proselytizing
My wife told me today of an experience she had this last week, where she was proselytized by a McDonald's employee while in the store. ......
ArchaeoBob (163 comments)
See if you recognize names on this list
This comes from the local newspaper, which was conservative before and took a hard right turn after it was sold. Hint: Sarah Palin's name is on it!  (It's also connected to Trump.) ......
ArchaeoBob (169 comments)
Unions: A Labor Day Discussion
This is a revision of an article which I posted on my personal board and also on Dailykos. I had an interesting discussion on a discussion board concerning Unions. I tried to piece it......
Xulon (180 comments)
Extremely obnoxious protesters at WitchsFest NYC: connected to NAR?
In July of this year, some extremely loud, obnoxious Christian-identified protesters showed up at WitchsFest, an annual Pagan street fair here in NYC.  Here's an account of the protest by Pagan writer Heather Greene......
Diane Vera (130 comments)
Capitalism and the Attack on the Imago Dei
I joined this site today, having been linked here by Crooksandliars' Blog Roundup. I thought I'd put up something I put up previously on my Wordpress blog and also at the DailyKos. As will......
Xulon (331 comments)
History of attitudes towards poverty and the churches.
Jesus is said to have stated that "The Poor will always be with you" and some Christians have used that to refuse to try to help the poor, because "they will always be with......
ArchaeoBob (149 comments)
Alternate economy medical treatment
Dogemperor wrote several times about the alternate economy structure that dominionists have built.  Well, it's actually made the news.  Pretty good article, although it doesn't get into how bad people could be (have been)......
ArchaeoBob (90 comments)
Evidence violence is more common than believed
Think I've been making things up about experiencing Christian Terrorism or exaggerating, or that it was an isolated incident?  I suggest you read this article (linked below in body), which is about our great......
ArchaeoBob (214 comments)

More Diaries...




All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective companies. Comments, posts, stories, and all other content are owned by the authors. Everything else © 2005 Talk to Action, LLC.