death penalty news

Feb 14, 2005


USA (death penalty related):

BuzzFlash interview: Susan Jacoby

...liberals tend to be looking for common ground, but I don't believe the 
right wing in this country wants common ground. To liberals and people who 
believe in secular government ? I say forget about the fundamentalists. 
Appeal to the 60 or 70 percent of the American people who aren't 
fundamentalists ? who may have lots of religious beliefs, but who also 
believe in secular government. Don't waste time trying to persuade people 
who believe that the earth was created in seven days. You're not going to 
persuade those people of anything.

* * *

Susan Jacoby, a fervent believer in the separation of church and state, 
recently spoke with BuzzFlash about America's historical roots in 
secularism, or freedom of religion. Her latest book, Freethinkers: A 
History of American Secularism (a BuzzFlash premium), is an exploration of 
the rich history of our secular country, a nation conceived in the "Age of 
Reason," in response to European religious oppression. As she argues so 
persuasively, our American revolution, our heroic and enlightened founders, 
and our unique Constitution left behind the old European model of 
governments founded on a fixed religious hierarchy and belief in the divine 
rights of monarchs. America was founded to allow religious thought and 
practice, not to endorse a single form of it. Trouble is, some of our most 
powerful leaders today would have us march right back to that 
pre-revolutionary, "divinely inspired" model of governing.

Susan Jacoby is director of the Center for Inquiry - Metro New York, as 
well as an independent scholar, author of seven books, a respected 
journalist and a Guggenheim Fellow.

* * *

BuzzFlash: The chapter in your book entitled "Reason Embattled" is of 
special interest to BuzzFlash, because we?ve covered Antonin Scalia's 
religious outlook quite a bit. In that chapter, you refer to a speech 
Supreme Court Justice Scalia gave at the Chicago Divinity School, which 
went largely unnoticed by the media. More recently, he has been stampeding 
around the country, making speeches to synagogues, saying that Jews would 
be safer in a Christian nation. At a recent Knights of Columbus meeting, he 
proclaimed that no one should be afraid to be a fool for Christ. Amidst all 
his proselytizing, you bring up the point that he uses this rationale as an 
argument for capital punishment ? that this is a Christian nation and the 
United States -- as a Christian nation -- shouldn't question the notion of 
capital punishment because it's really divine dictum, in a way.

Susan Jacoby: Well, actually he's more general than that. His argument is 
simply this: that capital punishment is lawful because all just governments 
derive their power from God.

That's number one, ignoring the fact that our Constitution says nothing 
about God, but ascribes powers to "we the people." And so the argument, by 
extension, for a death penalty is simply this: that because God has the 
power of life and death, and since all just governments derive their power 
not from the consent of the governed, but from God Himself ? and I'm sure 
Scalia's God is a Himself, not a Herself ? therefore, governments, too, 
should have power over life and death.

Scalia is a devout right-wing Catholic, and one of the things that's mildly 
interesting about this is the one problem he has with that is the fact that 
it's been denounced by the Pope, who argues exactly the opposite ? that 
only God should have the power of life and death. But I guess that makes 
Scalia more Catholic than the Pope.

But in terms of American government, what is so disturbing is this argument 
in favor of a public policy -- which one can certainly argue about on 
secular grounds -- on the grounds that if God can do it, so too can we, 
because we get our power of the government from God, according to Scalia.

BuzzFlash: Your book, Freethinkers, of course, debunks the notion that the 
Constitution was a document that was written as, let?s say, the Ten 
Commandments ? something that was given from God to the founders of this 
country. They expressly wrote out that this was NOT a divine document, but 
it was a document of reason and of reasonable men at the time. BuzzFlash is 
also offering a book on the Founding Fathers and their opinions on the 
separation of church and state, where it is quite clear that they thought 
they should be separated. So how does Scalia get away with calling himself 
a strict constructionist of the Constitution when....

Susan Jacoby: Somehow that?s very interesting, because, in fact, Scalia has 
often called the Constitution a dead document, meaning that it means 
exactly what it said when it was written at the time, but no more. And 
that?s why he calls himself a strict constructionist.

But in fact, reading God into the Constitution is the exact opposite of 
strict constructionism. In fact, leaving God out of the Preamble to the 
Constitution ? it was revolutionary. There had never been a government that 
legally separated church and state before, and it was very deliberate. The 
omission of God from the Constitution was debated at all of the state 
ratifying conventions about the Constitution before and when it was finally 
ratified.

And the Christian right at the time ? the right-wing ministers ? were very 
opposed and predicted that God would smash America for leaving Him out of 
the document. And by the way, this was a division then, too, between 
conservative and liberal religion, not only between conservative religious 
people and freethinkers, because religious dissidents also supported the 
separation of church and state strongly in the Constitution. And indeed, it 
was a coalition of freethinkers ? of people like Thomas Jefferson and 
Thomas Paine ? and dissident Evangelicals ? Baptists, for instance, who 
were then the minority religion in most states, who joined in this 
coalition to support the separation of church and state. How far we have 
come from that.

BuzzFlash: You quote Justice Scalia in your book as saying, "The more 
Christian the nation is, the less likely it is to regard the death penalty 
as immoral." Abolition of capital punishment has taken hold in what Scalia 
would view as post-Christian Europe, meaning what Rumsfeld would call "the 
old Europe." And so there's this common theme between him and Rumsfeld, 
which is sort of a little footnote ? that the old Europe is somehow 
decadent. And in Scalia's term, it's because it has fallen out of the 
fundamentalist religious sphere of influence. And to Rumsfeld, it has 
fallen out of the military powers' sphere of influence. And the United 
States is a God-fearing Christian nation, and therefore we believe in 
capital punishment, or at least Scalia does.

Susan Jacoby: There are a whole lot of Christians who don't believe in 
capital punishment. In fact, it's a very strong strain in Christian 
churches. Those who believe in capital punishment in a religious sense are 
the right-wing Christians. And, by the way, there are a good many extremely 
right-wing Jews, on the right wing of Judaism, who also believe in capital 
punishment. This is not a divide between Christian and non-Christian. It's 
a divide within religion as well as between religious people and freethinkers.

BuzzFlash: Your book is subtitled "The History of American Secularism." My 
next question is this: we have a President who says he was chosen by the 
divine power to rule, and that he told Bob Woodward that he ? his source of 
guidance and inspiration is a father ?

Susan Jacoby: A higher father.

BuzzFlash: A higher father than George Bush the first.

Susan Jacoby: Right.

BuzzFlash: And although he's toned it down a little recently, 
post-election, until then he was convinced that his decisions were correct 
because they were divinely inspired. Rather than that he was responsible to 
the people, he was responsible to God, and God's guidance would guide the 
American nation: divine guidance would be Bush's inspiration. We thought 
that in the sixties or seventies, America seemed, if anything, to be 
accelerating into a more secular nation through technology, through the 
emancipation of women, through civil rights. And now, as Mark Crispin 
Miller says, we have an administration that goes back to basically 
pre-Enlightenment.

Susan Jacoby: I think that's right. We really need to think about this not 
in terms of any contrast with the sixties, but in a much larger time frame. 
And I think the difference now, and why George Bush is a really unique 
figure in American history, is there have been lots of Presidents who were 
devout believers in God. But there has never been a President, before, who 
set himself up as the leader or the spokesman for one religious faction in 
the country.

And I think a really good comparison in terms of attitudes toward God and 
the role God plays in public rhetoric and public decisions really is with 
Abraham Lincoln. He talked about God a lot. And one of the points he made 
over and over again was that both Northerners and Southerners prayed to the 
same God supposedly -- but the Northern God told the people in the North at 
the time that it was right to go to war to end slavery, and the Southern 
God told Southerners that God Himself supported slavery, and it was their 
right to go to war to uphold that divinely inspired institution.

And right there is the quandary and the dilemma and the wrongness of citing 
God as a final authority for public policy, because what we all know is 
that whatever one believes about God, God speaks to people in different 
voices, and darned if that voice usually isn't the voice of what we already 
think.

That's the problem of citing God as a justification for capital punishment 
or war. You close down any public discourse when you do that because, 
presumably, people who take their inspiration from their vision of God are 
convinced that they know the will of God. And even though their neighbor 
may know the will of a completely different God, you just ? you close down 
any discussion, when God is appealed to as the sort of President-in-Chief.

BuzzFlash: Well, your book is entitled >Freethinkers. But to the right wing 
of the Republican Party, which is the faction that's in charge of the White 
House and the Executive Branch and Congress now, freethinking is almost 
heretical. Instead we have group think. We support the nation, the 
homeland, the fatherland. We support the war whether it's right or wrong. A 
recent poll indicated that 66% of Republicans said they would support the 
United States in a war whether the war was right or wrong. Freethinking 
individualism, thoughts and reasoning outside of group think, are now 
branded as unpatriotic. And yet when the Constitution was created at the 
time of the revolutionary period, it was a vote against the very concept of 
group think, of monarchy, and was a radical recalibration of government to 
the people themselves deciding what form of government they want. Now, 
we're really back to the monarchy type of structure, where decisions come 
down from up high and are considered unchallengeable.

Susan Jacoby: There are a lot of reasons for that. They don't all have to 
do with the rise of religious fundamentalism. One of the questions today ? 
and I?m asked this a lot ? is if fundamentalists are a much larger group of 
people in America than in any other developed country. By most standards, 
you define a fundamentalist as someone, whether Christian or Jewish or 
Muslim, who believes the literal interpretation of what their sacred 
scripture is ? that the world was created in seven days, or that you get to 
have sex with a whole lot of virgins if you die for Allah, for instance. 
The fundamentalist is someone who believes in the absolute sacredness and 
unalterability of his text. Probably that minority in America is between 
about one-fifth and one-third, which leaves two-thirds of people who aren?t 
fundamentalists.

So why do fundamentalists have such influence? Well, one answer for that is 
that, by very virtue of the intensity of their religious beliefs, they care 
more about their issues than a lot of more secular people, and they do more 
to see that their influence is felt.

Most people who are freethinkers or secularists or liberal religious 
thinkers don?t spend their whole day thinking about God and how every 
decision in government accords with their religion. But fundamentalists do. 
That makes them much better organized, much better disciplined and 
goal-oriented in both a specific and a general way than more secular people 
tend to be. And I think that has to change.

I think the reluctance of Democrats to come out and defend the separation 
of church and state strongly is lamentable. I don?t agree with those people 
who say the Democrats have to make themselves more like Republicans, and 
talk about God more. No, that doesn?t do any good. I think, by the way, one 
of the reasons George Bush appealed to people, whether they agree with him 
or not, is that he is perfectly honest about what he is in terms of his 
religious and political beliefs. The Democrats, by contrast ? many of them 
tend to soft-pedal what they really think about things like the separation 
of church and state. And it doesn?t work to pretend to be something you?re not.

BuzzFlash: Well, isn?t there a paradox ? the nation was created to embrace 
secularism, to embrace individuality, to embrace the will of the people ?

Susan Jacoby: And religious freedom ? don?t forget that.

BuzzFlash: And religious freedom.

Susan Jacoby: And that?s a very important part of it, too.

BuzzFlash: And to keep the government from imposing a particular viewpoint 
upon people. In this case, we seem to be seeing in Antonin Scalia and in 
George W. Bush,that they want the federal government to impose a certain 
perspective ? a fundamentalist religious perspective on the population as a 
whole.

Susan Jacoby: Right. This policy is right because God says it's right. I 
was on a radio show with a very prominent conservative commentator named 
Michael Medved, who's an Orthodox Jew. And on this show, a caller called in 
and said, "You know, I'm praying for you, Miss Jacoby, so you'll accept 
Jesus and you won't, you know, go to hell." And I said on the air ? I said 
how patronizing that is, how typical this is. I said, wouldn't anybody of 
any religion be offended if I said I was hoping that they would see the 
light and become an atheist?

And Michael Medved said, "I know." He said he was Jewish and people came up 
to him at book signings ? Christians ? and said, "You know, you're a great 
guy and I agree with what you say. But I'm praying that you'll accept the 
Lord Jesus." He said, "I'm not offended by that."

Well, you know, he ought to be offended by it. It really amazes me, for 
instance, to see these male, conservative Jews acting like the 
fundamentalist Christians are their very best friends. The whole Jewish 
success story in America arises from America's unique separation of church 
and state. And Jews would be nowhere in this country if fundamentalist 
Christians had been writing the Constitution. If people ? if George Bush is 
thinking he'd written the Constitution, we'd just see just how far Jews 
would have gotten in American society.

BuzzFlash: It seems the fundamental conflict here historically is that 
either we are a nation that embraces diversity and finds our strength in 
diversity, or we are a nation that gains strength from uniformity in belief 
in a divine God, and that the divine God is guiding our government forward, 
as Bush and Scalia believe.

Susan Jacoby: Right.

BuzzFlash: Is George Bush just the fundamentalist Christian counterpart of 
Osama bin Laden in terms of believing that he's ? and he let it slip 
shortly after 9/11 ? leading a Crusade? Is the President accountable to the 
people of the United States, or only to God? Bush says ? maybe he implies 
it, or we infer - that he's positioned himself as being somewhat 
Christ-like ? that he is an instrument of God, and that God is speaking 
through him and acting through him. And that's a tremendous difference 
from, as you said, Abraham Lincoln, who felt humbled before God.

Susan Jacoby: It was Lincoln who famously said, "I'm not so concerned about 
whether God is on our side, as to whether we are on God's side."

You know, the God is on our side philosophy is a very dangerous philosophy. 
One of the great ironies of today is that we've seen fundamentalist Islam. 
We've seen those planes being flown into the World Trade Center. We've seen 
the destructive results of the feeling that God is endorsing particular 
kinds of political acts. And I think it's really important to realize that 
this really, truly is not about whether this is a religious nation or not. 
America was a Christian people at its founding. America is still 
predominantly Christian, though not necessarily predominantly the kind of 
Christian George Bush is.

But there's a difference between the people and their individual religious 
beliefs, and the government. And that is really important. It is why I keep 
harping on it, as they say. Bill Moyers said to me in an interview ? he 
said, "You've got a bee in your bonnet." I do have a bee in my bonnet. And 
the inability to distinguish between people's beliefs and the government 
and the leadership of the government is the problem that the leadership of 
George W. Bush and the Christian right in Congress poses today. It's fine 
to have people believing all of the things they want to believe. But to be 
putting those beliefs into governmental policy is another matter entirely, 
and they don't understand the distinction.

BuzzFlash: Reading the Constitution, or rereading the Founding Fathers' 
philosophical statements, as they deliberated the Constitution, one of 
their greatest fears was a national government that would impose its will, 
its plurality, its thoughts, its religion on the people. They expressly 
wanted to revolt against that very concept, which prevailed in the old 
theocratic dynasties of Europe. The irony is that Scalia and Bush want to 
restore the pre-revolutionary dynasties of "the old Europe" to the U.S.

Susan Jacoby: What the Christian right says today is that the founding 
fathers were only concerned about religious freedom from government 
interference. They weren't concerned about government freedom from 
religious interference. That is the big lie of the religious right today. 
In fact, the founders were concerned both about religious freedom from 
government interference and government freedom from religious interference. 
And no government had ever been free from religious interference, and no 
minority religion before in America had ever been free from government 
interference. They naturally cared about both, because all around them ? 
and yes, all over old Europe ? they saw what the union between government 
and religion meant for both religion and government.

BuzzFlash: It was a radical notion. It was a true revolution at the time, 
and a form of government that brought strength to the individual, to 
secularism, to embracing a diversity of religions, to the freedom that Bush 
proclaims but then goes on to try and undercut here at home.

What did secularism ? that dramatic revolutionary introduction of the 
protection of the individual and individuals? rights, and the right of the 
individual to determine his or her government ? what did that bring to the 
United States? And what?s the argument for a secular society?

Susan Jacoby: The argument for a secular government is it enables 
everything to flourish within a society. But, ironically, one of the 
reasons there are so many religions in the United States is that we did 
have a secular government right from the beginning. In Europe, because 
there was always a union of church and state, being a religious dissident 
meant being a political dissident, too. You couldn?t not be, because 
religion and government were united.

Now in America, when people were religious dissidents, they just ran off 
and founded another church. You could do that in America. And the strength 
of secular government is that it allows everything to flourish. It has 
probably led to the feeling that all religion is somehow good, whereas in 
Europe, they had longer demonstrations, well into the 20th Century in some 
countries like Spain, of the damning power of the union between religion 
and government. I think we focus on Bush too much, we secularists. Bush 
couldn't be possible without a kind of flabbiness of mind in America. 
Somehow, we have enjoyed secular government for so long that we don't have 
before us a clear vision of the dangers of a society in which government 
isn't secular.

BuzzFlash: Well, isn't part of that the old conundrum that it's like 
herding cats, which is to say when you are secular, even if you are religious ?

Susan Jacoby: Well, lots of religious people believe in secular government.

BuzzFlash: Yes. So if you are that way, you each have your own thoughts, 
it's hard to have a united Democratic Party, for instance, because it's 
composed of independent individuals.

Whereas the Republican right wing is moving forward in a very uniform, kind 
of hierarchical, strict father model, divinely inspired, undissenting 
fashion. It's very hard to counteract because you have different viewpoints 
about how to counteract it on the secular side. Because having differing 
viewpoints is at the core of an embracing secularism.

Susan Jacoby: That's like what I was saying, that the people who are 
intensely focused on one thing, as fundamentalists are, they are far more 
disciplined. This is true of a lot of social issues that are related to but 
also independent of religion.

Look, Senator Hillary Clinton made a speech last week in which she said, 
"We who support abortion rights need to find common ground with the 
anti-abortion people on things like preventing pregnancies." Well, there's 
really one problem with that, which is the anti-abortion people ? most of 
them ? are just as anti-contraception, so they're not really just 
anti-abortion. They're also anti- the kinds of things that can reduce the 
need for abortion by preventing pregnancy.

So, you know, when you talk about common ground, liberals tend to be 
looking for common ground, but I don't believe the right wing in this 
country wants common ground. To liberals and people who believe in secular 
government ? I say forget about the fundamentalists. Appeal to the 60 or 
70% of the American people who aren't fundamentalists ? who may have lots 
of religious beliefs but who also believe in secular government. Don't 
waste time trying to persuade people who believe that the earth was created 
in seven days. You're not going to persuade those people of anything.

BuzzFlash: Let me just ask your perspective on something slightly outside 
the framework of the book. Do you think that technology was supposed to be 
liberating? I mean, there was a conventional wisdom that it was going to 
liberate society. Do you think maybe there's a backlash, in the sense that 
20-25% of the American population wants this fundamentalist certainty in 
the face of an overwhelming advancement in technology that's causing 
dislocation and confusion? Or is faith ? is that kind of faith just always 
there?

Susan Jacoby: That kind of faith is always there. But here's something I 
feel very, very strongly about. Technology has nothing to do with liberty 
and freethinking at all. Technology is just a tool. And one of the great 
successes of the Christian right is they employ technology very 
effectively. Nobody uses the Internet more effectively than the Christian 
right.

Science ? real scientific and rational thought ? is something quite other 
than technology. The Christian right very often is anti- the kind of 
rationalism that science is based on. For example, the renewed 
anti-evolutionist movement ? the new movement against the teaching of 
Darwin's theory of evolution in the public schools ? is because Darwin's 
theory of evolution, of course, does not support the theology that the 
whole world was created in seven days. But you can use the Internet to 
promote anti-evolutionism just as easily as you can use it to promote 
pro-evolutionism.

So I think technology ? really, thinking of technology as anything but an 
instrument of whatever ideology people happen to have - is a mistake. 
Technology itself is not a liberating force, even though it actually is a 
product of rational thought. But anybody can use it.

BuzzFlash: You close your book, and we'll close the interview with ? a 
quote from King Lear, and then you say: "This is the essence of the 
secularist and humanist state, and it must be offered not as a defensive 
response to the religiously correct, but as a robust creed worthy of the 
world?s first secular government. American secularists have trouble 
deciding what to call themselves today, in part because the term has been 
denigrated by the right and in part because identifying oneself as a 
secular humanist...has a vaguely bureaucratic ring. It is time to revive 
the evocative and honorable freethinker, with its insistence that Americans 
think for themselves instead of relying on received opinion. The 
combination of free and thought embodies every ideal that secularists still 
hold out to a nation founded not on dreams of justice in heaven but on the 
best human hopes for a more just earth."

Susan Jacoby: That?s a really good sentence. I like it!

BuzzFlash: Yes, yes ? I wonder who wrote it? But you end by emphasizing the 
deeds we accomplish on earth. The original founders of the nation said 
people elect the government, and then the government is responsible to the 
people. Otherwise, they elect a new government. That was a revolutionary 
thought. And have we reached a point where deeds are divorced from faith?

With Bush, it seems that every day we wake up, and no matter what he does, 
there's a renewed faith in him as a person. His deeds are separated from 
his faith, from his promises, from his speeches, and he's not held 
accountable for his deeds. He's held accountable for what he says is his 
faith and his optimism. There is a disconnect ? we've lost accountability 
at least for the national government in terms of its deeds, and the deeds 
become separated from the words and the administration is judged by its 
words, not its actions.

Susan Jacoby: Well, I would say as a freethinker and as a secularist ? I 
would say the ideal response to that definitely comes from the Bible, and 
it is, "By their fruits, ye shall know them."

BuzzFlash: Well, with that I want to thank you, Susan. It's a wonderful 
book and definitely full of insightful historical background on why we are 
a secular nation and what strength that brings to the great democracy that 
we are, and that we hopefully will be once again.

Susan Jacoby: Thank you.

(source: Working for Change / BuzzFlash)

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