Yesterday, the Family Research Council’s Tony Perkins blamed the “secular media” for Matthew Murray’s shooting rampage in Colorado on Sunday, which left five dead, including the gunman. Murray, 24, had been raised in “a deeply religious Christian household,” but apparently overcome by mental illness, he snapped and gunned down innocent people — a tragedy Perkins sought to exploit to advance his political agenda.
A few hours later, another religious right powerhouse, Gary Bauer, sent a similar message to his supporters.
There are several disturbing parallels to the Virginia Tech massacre. First, it appears as though his final online post occurred between the two attacks. Second, despite his upbringing, he was clearly motivated by an intense hatred for Christians, just as the Virginia Tech murderer was. In his last online message, Murray reportedly wrote, “You Christians brought this on yourselves. All I want to do is kill and injure as many of you as I can especially Christians who are to blame for most of the problems in the world.” It is worth noting that this hatred of Christians is constantly promoted by the radical Left – on their websites and in their books, articles etc. (emphasis added)
OK, name one. Highlight some of these multimedia liberal examples in which progressives “constantly promote” violence against Christians. If Gary Bauer wants to back this smear up, terrific. At that point, he’d only be guilty of taking advantage of a horrible tragedy to take a cheap shot at Americans he disagrees with. But I have a hunch he can’t back it up — Bauer wants to exploit the tragedy with baseless demagoguery, which is crass and ugly, even by the religious right’s low standards.
What’s striking is that Perkins and Bauer seem to be part of a larger victim complex.
Rick Moran at Right Wing Nut House, a prominent far-right blog, pointed to a Christian majority that’s feeling under siege — and more than a little sorry for itself. (via Oliver Willis)
[F]undamentalist Christians are still the target of an insidious bias in the news media as well as Hollywood. And the question that must be asked in the wake of the Colorado church shootings is does all this create an atmosphere of permissiveness that enabled the shooter? […]
Given the spate of lawsuits brought by atheists and others who seek to remove Christian symbols and the outward manifestations of Christian beliefs from the public square along with attacks in media and on the internet, is it any wonder that Christians feel themselves besieged?
Remember, we’re talking about this in the context of a deranged young man with access to firearms, who grew up in a deeply religious Christian household, attended church services for years, and was homeschooled for religious reasons. And yet, somehow, this madman was poisoned, at least part, by a secular culture that disdains fundamentalists? This tragedy generates questions about state-sponsored Ten Commandments displays?
I can appreciate the notion that in the wake of a tragedy, people are looking for answers. A sick young man with a gun murdered innocent people, and it’s tempting to want to extend the blame beyond just the guilty individual. Perhaps it helps us make sense of the senseless.
But for conservatives to lash out at the culture, the media, and secularists is sad and misguided. Matthew Murray was sick. Blaming the left is no more reasonable that blaming his conservative Christian upbringing.
Perhaps it’s best for Perkins, Bauer, and others to simply show some compassion, refrain from absurd finger-pointing, and simply extend sympathies to the victims’ loved ones. Is that really too much to ask?