----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Dan Minette" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'Killer Bs Discussion'" <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, July 01, 2006 3:36 PM
Subject: RE: SCOUTED: Bush is Not Incompetent


> Here's the text of the speech:
>
> http://www.wfn.org/2006/06/msg00594.html
>

For balance, here is a dissenting opinion:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michelle-goldberg/whats-the-matter-with-ba_b_24133.html

What's the matter with Barack Obama?

The trouble with Barack Obama's controversial recent speech about 
religion and the Democratic Party is not his embrace of religious 
language in the service of liberalism. Religious speech can be 
transcendent, and genuinely Christian ideals about justice and mercy 
can inspire even non-believers. The right has successfully convinced 
much of the country that the Democratic Party is hostile to people of 
faith, and speeches that work to counter that myth are valuable. 
Unfortunately, Obama's rhetoric ends up reinforcing Republican myths 
about liberal Godlessness instead of challenging them.


There's much in the speech to admire, particularly Obama's call for us 
to take the religious right's rhetoric seriously, to engage and argue 
with the movement's ideas rather than brushing them off as mere 
fanaticism. He gets the spiritual void at the heart of American life, 
and the need for social movements to offer people meaning and 
existential solace along with practical policy solutions. "Each day, 
it seems, thousands of Americans are going about their daily rounds --  
dropping off the kids at school, driving to the office, flying to a 
business meeting, shopping at the mall, trying to stay on their 
diets -- and they're coming to the realization that something is 
missing," he said. "They are deciding that their work, their 
possessions, their diversions, their sheer busyness, is not enough. 
They want a sense of purpose, a narrative arc to their lives. They're 
looking to relieve a chronic loneliness, a feeling supported by a 
recent study that shows Americans have fewer close friends and 
confidants than ever before. And so they need an assurance that 
somebody out there cares about them, is listening to them -- that they 
are not just destined to travel down that long highway towards 
nothingness."

When I was in Dover, PA during the intelligent design controversy, a 
preacher's wife told that if evolution is true, life has no meaning. 
"Where's this universe heading?" she asked. "What's the purpose of it 
all? There's no standard, no guidelines." Obviously, Democrats should 
not join Republicans in pretending that they have a lock on divine 
truth, but they can speak to people's anxiety, their hunger for 
community and purpose. The religious right offers people a narrative 
arc, not just about their own lives, but also about America's decline 
and imminent resurrection. Democrats need a mobilizing vision as well, 
one that speaks to the despair that underlies so much of our politics.

Obama recognizes this, but he errs in taking Republican propaganda as 
fact, or, to put it in Lakoff's terms, in accepting the GOP frame. He 
perpetuates the fantasy that there really is a liberal war on faith. 
"[A] sense of proportion should also guide those who police the 
boundaries between church and state," he says. "Not every mention of 
God in public is a breach to the wall of separation -- context 
matters. It is doubtful that children reciting the Pledge of 
Allegiance feel oppressed or brainwashed as a consequence of muttering 
the phrase 'under God.' I didn't. Having voluntary student prayer 
groups use school property to meet should not be a threat, any more 
than its use by the High School Republicans should threaten Democrats. 
And one can envision certain faith-based programs -- targeting 
ex-offenders or substance abusers -- that offer a uniquely powerful 
way of solving problems."

Let's unpack this. It is a common right-wing talking point that 
liberals want to take the phrase "under God" of the pledge of 
allegiance. Undoubtedly, some of us regret that, during a moment of 
Cold War panic in 1954, our government amended the historic pledge to 
put the word God in it. However, there is now no organized movement to 
take it out. The California man who sued over the pledge a few years 
ago represented no one but himself, and in 2002, when the 9th Circuit 
voted in his favor, many ardent defenders of church/state separation 
groaned. "This is a godsend for the religious right," Rob Boston of 
Americans United for Separation of Church and State told me that day. 
"They're going to raise millions of dollars on this issue. I'm sure 
even as we're speaking, there are presses running overtime printing 
fundraising letters saying, 'Save the Pledge of Allegiance!'" 
Meanwhile, the Supreme Court had recently ruled that public money 
could be used for religious school tuition. "We're on the verge of 
tax-supported religion in this country. It's a startling change of 
policy, and instead of taking a hard, serious look at that, we're 
going to spend a couple of months arguing about the Pledge of 
Allegiance."

The fact is, no liberal of any stature -- and certainly no Democrat --  
is fighting against the mention of God in the Pledge of Allegiance. 
Indeed, the day that decision came down, the Senate unanimously voted 
to condemn it.

Similarly, no one is stopping religious kids from gathering together 
to pray at school. Last year, when I was writing about the myth of the 
War on Christmas, I interviewed Charles Haynes, a senior scholar at 
the First Amendment Center and an expert on religion in public 
schools. He's presented as a heroic voice of sanity in John Gibson's 
ridiculous book "The War on Christmas: How the Liberal Plot to Ban the 
Sacred Christian Holiday Is Worse Than You Thought." This is what he 
told me: "The big picture is that there's more religion now in public 
schools than ever in modern history. There's no question about that. 
But it's not there in terms of the government imposing religion or 
sponsoring it, and that bothers some people on the right. They miss 
the good old days when public schools were semi-established Protestant 
schools."

In the last two decades, Haynes said, "religion has come into the 
public schools in all kinds of ways ... many schools now understand 
that students have religious liberty rights in a public school, so you 
can go to many public schools today and kids will be giving each other 
religious literature, they will be sharing their faith. You go to most 
public schools now and see kids praying around the flagpole before 
school." In this evangelical climate, I suspect many students who 
practice minority religions, or no religion at all, are made to feel 
far more alienated than when I was in school during the 80s and 90s. 
Nevertheless, when schools have stopped kids from engaging in 
religious speech -- say, not letting them hand out religious tracts at 
lunch -- the ACLU has stepped in to defend them, and they've been 
correct to do so. Liberalism, at its best, stands for free speech, 
even when that speech is annoying.

The relevant argument, then, is not about whether there will be prayer 
in public schools. It's about whether there will be 
government-mandated prayer in public schools. The argument is not 
whether religion can do good things in people's lives. It's whether 
the government should fund religion. The argument is not even whether 
religious groups should contract with the government to provide social 
services -- Catholic Charities, the Salvation Army and others have 
been doing that for decades. It's whether religious groups that do 
receive taxpayer funds should be permitted to proselytize on the 
public dime, and to refuse to hire those of the wrong faith. The 
relevant debate is about government-financed religious discrimination. 
The rest is just a smokescreen to make it seem like defenders of the 
First Amendment are the ones on the offensive.



xponent

Spent Dimes Maru

rob


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