Guest Post by Morbo
Amy Sullivan, a moderate Christian whose writing pops up in places like The Washington Monthly, Salon and The New Republic, thinks the Democrats have not exploited former White House Faith-Based Office staffer David Kuo’s revelations as much as they could.
In a New Republic online piece Sullivan writes:
The problem is that Kuo’s book creates cognitive dissonance for liberals. Conspiracy theories about theocracy have haunted liberals for the last few years, and, if you believe that religious conservatives lead Bush around by the nose, evidence to the contrary is impossible to absorb. Everyone on the left “knows” that the faith-based initiative is a slush-fund, a jackpot for religious conservatives. If it turns out instead to be a political sham that produced only 1 percent of the new funds it promised for faith-based organizations, liberals need rethink their theocracy-phobia.
I’m not a fan of Sullivan’s, and as usual I find it difficult to determine what exactly her point is. She seems to be arguing that because the faith-based initiative was, according to Kuo, largely a political stunt, claims that Bush is beholden to the Religious Right must collapse.
But this analysis is facile and suffers from a glaring oversight: The initiative is far from the only thing Bush has done to please the Religious Right.
Let’s consider some of those other things Bush gave them:
* Abortion: Bush’s first act in office was to sign an order prohibiting taxpayer money from going to any group that promotes legal abortion. The group is denied this funding even if they aren’t using tax fund for abortions. If they merely believe abortion should be legal, they can no longer get tax support for any population-control or public health program.
Bush’s Justice Department has repeatedly sided with “pro-life” groups in every major legal case dealing with abortion to reach the Supreme Court and lower federal courts.
* End-of-life/Privacy: Bush interrupted a vacation to fly back to Washington to sign a bill designed to keep Terri Schiavo alive even though polls showed most Americans opposed to government intervention in what should have been a personal family matter. He did this because the Religious Right demanded it.
* Gay Rights: At the behest of James Dobson, Bush backed a constitutional amendment banning “same-sex” marriage. His political advisors worked hand in glove with anti-gay groups that placed ballot initiatives in several key states in 2004.
* Contraceptives: The Bush FDA blocked over-the-counter approval for “Plan B” for three years, even though most medical professionals support greater access to this medication. Rules in effect will continue to make if next to impossible for young women to get in time. His administration supports the so-called “right” of pharmacists to refuse to fill doctor-prescribed birth control pills on moral grounds.
Bush has directed millions to religious groups overseas to fight the spread of AIDS by endorsing abstinence programs – even though medical experts caution that this approach will not work and is even dangerous.
* Stem Cells: Bush vetoed a bill funding stem-cell research, even though most American back this research, recognizing that it holds the potential to cure people of debilitating diseases. He did this because the Religious Right told him to.
* Federal Judges: In perhaps his most crucial concession to the Religious Right, Bush vetted his two Supreme Court nominees with pressure groups run by TV preachers. One candidate, Harriet Miers, had to withdraw after the Religious Right turned against her. Lower federal court judges have also been subjected to a Religious Right litmus test.
* Sex Education: Most Americans support comprehensive sex education in public schools and other public institutions. Yet federal funds support can go only to “abstinence-only” programs that are ineffective, inaccurate and often rife with sectarian dogma. The Religious Right supports this approach, and so does Bush.
* Creationism/Intelligent Design: Bush and the Religious Right support watering down instruction about evolution in public schools, even though virtually no serious researcher in the biological sciences doubts the reality of evolution.
Sullivan thinks liberals are paranoid to say that the Religious Right wants a theocracy in America. I wish she would attend some of their meetings, as I have done.
The Religious Right says all abortions should be illegal because of its interpretation of the Bible. It opposes gay rights because of a passage in the Book of Leviticus. It says the Bible debunks evolution. It insists that if science and the Bible clash, science must yield. Religious Right leaders frequently claim that the Bible speaks to all areas of life, including politics. Religious Right activists believe the symbols of the majority faith should adorn our public schools, courthouses and other institutions. They want their prayers to open the school day. They seek to curtail access to books, movies and other media that offends their religious sensibilities. On their best days, they might extend a measure of limited toleration to non-Christian faiths, but never full rights. (And don’t even ask what they want to do to non-believers.)
Does this mean we are doomed to live in a society like that described in Margaret Atwood’s novel The Handmaid’s Tale? No. But if the Supreme Court, stacked with ideologues in the mode of Antonin Scalia, conjures up bogus “secular” justifications for various laws that are really based on religious understandings, we will sooner or later find ourselves in a society where someone’s interpretation of the Bible of religious creeds becomes the basis for many public policies.
Let’s say that in five years, no matter who is sitting in the White House, women are unable to get an abortion in many parts of the country because Roe v. Wade has been overturned. Let’s say pharmacists have a legal right, thanks to a federal law, to refuse to fill certain prescriptions. Let’s say your kids learn next to nothing about evolution in science class because of pressure from the Religious Right. (This is already the case in many parts of the country.) Let’s say gay rights have been curtailed and new laws have been passed barring gays from adopting children or becoming foster parents. Let’s say efforts to pass a new stem-cell bill have failed.
Sure, that would not be as bad as living under the Taliban — after all, no one is being stoned in the streets for blasphemy — but I fail to see how you could call a country like that anything but a “theocracy lite.” Whether Amy Sullivan cares to acknowledge it or not, this is where the Religious Right, often with Bush in tow, would like to take us.
Instead of trying to outbid the Republicans by offering religious groups even more “faith-based” money, perhaps the Democrats should remind pastors that real freedom means the right to raise your own money for your own projects — and then recommit the nation to meaningful religious liberty that recognizes that you always have the right to worship (or not) wherever you please but never have the right to demand that the machinery of the state impose your faith on unwilling participants.