Extreme Education: Ron Paul Teams With `Stoner' Gary North To Indoctrinate Home-School Kids
Rob Boston printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Mon Apr 22, 2013 at 11:52:28 AM EST

Since 1988 I've been keeping an eye on a faction of the Religious Right known as Christian Reconstructionists.

Reconstructionists are so extreme they make TV preacher Pat Robertson look like a moderate. They call themselves Reconstructionists because they plan to "reconstruct" American society along "biblical" lines - well, it's really more their interpretation of what the Bible mandates. In their case, that means a country that is a fundamentalist Christian theocracy operating under Old Testament law.

(7 comments, 687 words in story)
Republican National Committee Won't Be Holding Gay Marriage Fundraisers Anytime Soon
Bill Berkowitz printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Sun Apr 21, 2013 at 12:05:27 PM EST
Reports of the Decline of the Religious Right are Premature

Rocking and reeling from November's election debacle, the Republican Party has been desperately trying to find its footing. A major goal - as stated in its post-election Growth and Opportunity Project report - has Party leadership looking to rebrand and re-market itself to younger people minorities and gays, an almost impossible task considering the power of its conservative Christian base.

Despite its stated desire to reboot, the Republican National Committee came out of its April meet-up in Los Angeles affirming that it can not and will not be embracing change, at least as far as "The Gay" is concerned.

According to ABC News, RNC members "voted unanimously to reaffirm the language in the GOP platform defining marriage `as the union of one man and one woman.' The resolution went further, asking the U.S. Supreme Court to `uphold the sanctity of marriage in its rulings on Proposition 8 and the Federal Defense of Marriage Act.'"

(2 comments, 1021 words in story)
Why Bomb the Boston Marathon?
Chip Berlet printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Sat Apr 20, 2013 at 12:37:55 PM EST
Islamic Totalitarians, Apocalypse, and Terrorism
Walk a mile in the shoes of those who claim to honor God and yet cheer the bombing of the Boston Marathon. They represent only a tiny fraction of the Muslims on our planet, yet they see themselves as carrying out the will of God. Fanatics such as these can be found in many of the World’s religions. They shoot abortion providers in the United States; blast apart buses in Israel; and murder Muslims and Hindus in India.

These religious fanatics often combine a totalitarian political mindset with a belief in sacred prophecy that they are mandated by God to rule the world, and they must act now against their enemies because time is running out. In fact they believe that we are approaching the end of time itself, the literal end of the world as we know it. This worldview is call apocalypticism. Sketchy details are emerging that suggests one of the motives for the alleged suspects in the Boston bombing may have been a belief in an obscure and contested Muslim prophecy about the apocalyptic End Times. We may never know the full details of what motivated the Tsarnaev brothers, but if we want to understand the genesis of much Islamic terrorism by a small handful of Muslims around the world, a speculative tour of their apocalyptic worldview may help us design a more effective response.

(65 comments, 276 words in story)
Did Repression in Chechnya Breed the Boston Bombing?
Chip Berlet printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Fri Apr 19, 2013 at 08:44:40 AM EST
The repression in Chechnya by invading Russian troops was brutal and deadly. In 2002 Human Rights Watch issued a report stating that "Russian forces in Chechnya arbitrarily detain, torture, and kill civilians in a climate of lawlessness."

Some Chechen Muslims suggest that Russia and the United States reached an understanding whereby the US would not pay attention to human rights abuses in Chechnya as long as Russian forces were fighting radical Muslims.

Richard H. Schultz, Jr. and Andrea J. Dew in Insurgents, Terrorists, and Militias: The Warriors of Contemporary Combat, note "the growing significance of Sufi Islam in the social, political, cultural, and economic life of Chechnya."

The Sufi form of Islam around the world is a pacifist religious movement, and Sufis generally stay out of politics, and sometimes are persecuted by the more orthodox Muslims.

According to Schultz & Dew, in Chechnya an aberrant form of Sufism developed.

Schultz & Dew suggest that after the Russian invasion of the North Caucuses, the "idea of ghazzavat or holy war made it easier for Chechens to take on" the Russian invaders.

"By labeling the Russians 'infidels,' the ghazzavat doctrine" infused the Muslim fighter with a "feeling of worthiness and moral supremacy." In addition, it "provided fighters with safe passage to the afterlife" by "eliminating fear of death and the unknown."

For some Muslims in Chechnya, terrorism was the only viable form of resistance. According to Shultz & Dew, "radical Islamists from various Arab and Muslim countries" joined the Chechen resistance, and saw the fight as "part of the international holy war."

What began as a resistance by Chechen nationalists seeking independence from Russia eventually morphed into a religious campaign dominated by Muslims. According to Shultz & Dew, "radical Islamists from various Arab and Muslim countries" joined the Chechen resistance, and saw the fight as "part of the international holy war." In 2003, the authors note, "the U.S. State Department designated three Chechen groups as terrorist organizations and charged they had links to al-Qaeda." This has been disputed by some experts. Clearly, not all Chechen resistance fighters were Muslim; some were simply nationalists opposed to the vicious Russian campaign against Chechnya. And not all resistance fighters turned to terrorism.

Nonetheless, the question remains, did repression in Chechnya breed the Boston Bombing?
(5 comments)
Sex Scandal: Brave W. Va. Student Challenges Inaccurate Sexuality Lecture
Rob Boston printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Thu Apr 18, 2013 at 10:41:41 AM EST

Recently I had occasion to talk with Ellery Schempp, the plaintiff in the landmark 1963 school prayer and Bible reading case Abington Township School District v. Schempp. The 50th anniversary of that ruling is in June, and we'll have a story about the case in the forthcoming May issue of Church & State.

It's not too much of a spoiler to share one story Ellery told me: After he filed a lawsuit against mandatory religious exercises at his suburban Philadelphia public high school, the principal was furious. The man actually called Tufts University, where Ellery had been accepted, and urged officials there to rescind their decision to admit him. Ellery, you see, was a "troublemaker." (Tufts officials ignored the principal's demands.)

(1 comment, 764 words in story)
Falsehoods, By George!: Religious Right Seeks Retroactive Baptism Of America's First President
Rob Boston printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Tue Apr 16, 2013 at 01:01:45 PM EST
If you have nothing better to do on Wednesday, May 8, at 6:30 p.m., you could go to Statuary Hall in the U.S. Capitol and listen to a bunch of Religious Right activists tell lies about George Washington.

U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) and other members of Congress are sponsoring an event to celebrate the 224th anniversary of the inauguration of Washington. The event is called "Washington: A Man of Prayer."

(2 comments, 1034 words in story)
Ten Thoughts on the Boston Bombing
Chip Berlet printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Tue Apr 16, 2013 at 08:49:13 AM EST
More mourning and prayers.

Lots of praise for all the first responders.

Less speculation and gossip.

Keep in mind that not all acts of violence are terrorism.

Realize that terrorism can be carried out by individuals, groups, and governments.

Talk to friends and family for support.

Don't spread rumors or more anxiety in any way.

Confront the attention-seeking conspiracists for spreading lies. Their swill is toxic to democracy.

The FBI has not stopped numerous acts of terrorism, they have entrapped numerous hapless people and then busted them for headlines.

Whoever is responsible, do not blame entire groups of people based on their political leanings, religion, or race.

(3 comments)
David Kuo, Faith-Based Initiative Whistle Blower, Dies at 44
Bill Berkowitz printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Mon Apr 15, 2013 at 03:11:53 AM EST
(Thanks to Americans United's Rob Boston for calling attention to the death of David Kuo in an earlier T2A post.)

If you are a regular consumer of conservative blogs, newsletters and other such stuff, you'd be on an unsuccessful Sir Henry M. Stanley-like quest in order to discover that David Kuo has died. (While Stanley found Livingstone, I have yet to see any meaningful reporting about Kuo's passing in the conservative media-sphere.)

On April 5, Kuo died at age 44, after almost ten years of battling a brain tumor. Although he wasn't a household name, Kuo was a major player in the Bush Administration's Faith-Based Initiative who after leaving the administration wrote a book blowing the lid off the administration's faith-based shenanigans.

 

(1 comment, 886 words in story)
The Christian Right & Child Sex Abuse
Frederick Clarkson printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Sat Apr 13, 2013 at 08:31:40 PM EST
The American Christian Right has a problem that I think has not been adequately addressed by most interested journalists, scholars and activists. The problem is that the conservative Catholic Bishops and the conservative leaders of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) have such a bad record when it comes to child sex abuse, that it should be counting against their moral and official standing far more than it has.
(4 comments, 836 words in story)
Boykin's Muslim-Bashing Bombast
Bill Berkowitz printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Fri Apr 12, 2013 at 03:21:36 AM EST
You wouldn't recognize William "Jerry" Boykin if you were sharing a pole with him on the subway or sitting next to him on a bus. While he isn't one of the brightest stars in the conservative Christian right's constellation, he has certainly tried - and in some cases succeeded - to raise his profile. For Boykin, now executive vice president of the Washington, D.C.-based Family Research Council, the path to right wing stardom has revolved around a protracted and vicious anti-Muslim campaign: Shtick that he's been purveying for more than a decade.
(11 comments, 878 words in story)
One Year Ago Today, the 'Least Credible History Book in Print' was Published
Chris Rodda printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Wed Apr 10, 2013 at 10:25:06 AM EST
One year ago today, on April 10, 2012, a new book hit the shelves -- David Barton's The Jefferson Lies: Exposing the Myths You've Always Believed About Thomas Jefferson.

Although Barton has been writing "history" books for well over two decades, he was relatively unknown outside of evangelical Christian circles and those of us who fight historical revisionism until a few years ago, when Glenn Beck, by making him his resident "historian" and new BFF, propelled him to Christian nationalist rock star status.

(3 comments, 1235 words in story)
DeMint at Heritage: Curse or Blessing for Religious Right
Bill Berkowitz printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Wed Apr 10, 2013 at 02:44:47 AM EST
Weyrich's vision, Coors' money, Fuelner's leadership, and Reagan's stamp of approval propelled the Heritage Foundation to prominence. Will Jim DeMint's marketing strategy lead to a conservative revival?

For a good part of the past forty years, The Heritage Foundation has been the most influential conservative think tank in the country. Now, with its long-time president Ed Fuelner stepping down and Tea Party favorite former South Carolina Senator Jim DeMint becoming its president, will it continue to prosper?

(1236 words in story)


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