More importantly, is God a properly registered voter?  What about the
repeated declarations that God is dead.  What about the witnesses who
saw him die on the cross, as opposed to the much smaller number of
witnesses to the supposed resurrection. Will mail to God's address be
returned "addressee unknown"?  I can't tell you how many times that has
happened to mail sent to me, at least the first time around?  Where does
God live? Is it in a mostly Democratic precinct? Problem. They're
targets. Is God Black? He may be in even more trouble? 

Does God really believe that "God said it, I believe it, that settles
it?" That would help him vote in some places (but maybe not where I
live, Newark, unless God is Black, since most people who hold that
belief in Newark are Black and are voting against Bush). My advice to
God, and I hope he doesn't take it personally, is that if he wants to
vote in the United States, he better have a good Jewish lawyer.
Fred Feldman 


-----Original Message-----
From: PEN-L list [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Michael
Hoover
Sent: Friday, October 29, 2004 11:16 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PEN-L] Is God an American Voter?


Is God an American Voter? 
Conservative Pundits Question Bush's Religious Appeals 
By Jefferson Morley
washingtonpost.com Staff Writer
Tuesday, October 26, 2004; 10:26 AM 


"George Bush did what God wanted him to do," one U.S. voter told a
reporter. "Who cares what the rest of the world thinks?" 

That kind of religious fervor among President Bush's supporters,
reported yesterday by the Sydney Morning Herald, is provoking a broad
and deep backlash in the international online media. Even in news sites
that supported President Bush's invasion of Iraq, pundits assert that
the president's religiosity is a menace. 

With Bush consistently invoking religious themes, Democratic candidate
Sen. John F. Kerry overtly discussing his faith last Sunday in an appeal
for votes at an African-American church in Florida and the Vatican
releasing a guide to Catholic political thought, the subject of faith
and U.S. politics is rapidly moving to the fore of the intense
international coverage of the U.S. presidential race. 

In Central America, the Honduran daily El Heraldo (in Spanish) recaps
the candidates' religious views for readers. A Spanish TV documentary
(in Spanish) traces 50 years of evangelical efforts to influence the
White House. 

The coverage is driven partly by recognition of a seemingly ironic
American reality. As El Diario (in Spanish), a daily newspaper in
Juarez, Mexico, reminds its readers this week, "the United States has
secular laws and the most religious population of any industrialized
country." 

But commentary is also driven by fear of a political movement -- and a
president -- who seems to claim divine inspiration. 

Correspondents for El Correo (in Spanish) in Bilbao, Spain, and the
Guardian in London attended Bush rallies in New Jersey and came away
"shaken" by Bush's religious appeal. 

"People said 'amen' when he spoke," one Norwegian correspondent said.
"It was chilling to see who are his followers." 

Uneasiness with Bush's evangelical Protestantism seems to lie at the
heart of Bush's well-documented unpopularity abroad. 

"What deeply alarms many non-Americans," writes Toronto Sun columnist
Eric Margolis, "is the prospect of a second Bush term dominated by a
coalition of evangelical Christians, Christian 'Rapturists,' American
partisans of Israel's PM Ariel Sharon, and rural voters from the Deep
South who reject evolution and think French is the native language of
Satan." 

This complaint is not new. Mexican writer Carlos Fuentes, who likens
contemporary America to pre-Nazi Germany, tells Red Voltaire, a leftist
Spanish-language Web site, that Bush's religiosity makes him want to
start drinking again. 

It is hardly surprising that Jean Daniel, a veteran centrist French
journalist, told a Spanish audience that "no nation can try to by itself
incarnate the good, the virtue and the humanity. Let us leave to God
that pretension." 

But when Rupert Murdoch's conservative organs start echoing variations
on this theme, there may be something new afoot. 

In the Australian, the flagship of Murdoch's global media empire,
conservative U.S. journalist Scott McConnell writes this week that
Bush's presidency combines "two strands of Jewish and Christian
extremism"â€"pro-Israel neoconservatism and the Christian Right.
McConnell calls for Bush's defeat. 

In the Times of London, another Murdoch paper, conservative British-born
pundit Andrew Sullivan laments that Americans' "deepest and most
mysterious beliefs are being dragged more and more into the public
square." 

"It is one thing to have religious rhetoric and language in public. That
is the American way. It is another to base political appeals on
religious grounds -- whether crudely or subtly. It is one of the saddest
ironies of our time that as America tries to calm the fires of theocracy
abroad, it should be stoking milder versions of the same at home,"
Sullivan writes. 

British historian Adam Nicolson goes further describing Bush's world
view and his religious supporters as "wicked." 

In a piece for London's reliably conservative Daily Telegraph, Nicolson
noted that Bush's infamous "Mission Accomplished" photo opportunity in
May 2003 was accompanied by a less-noted but perhaps more important
reference to the prophet Isaiah: "To the captives, come out, and to
those in darkness, be free," the president said. 

"It seems a straightforward remark, almost a statement of the obvious,"
says Nicolson, author of a history of the King James Bible. "But to
anyone familiar with the Bible, those few words ring far larger bells"
because they come from a biblical passage (Isaiah 49.9) with a much more
sweeping message: 

"The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, because the Lord hath anointed
me, to preach good tidings unto the meek, he hath sent me to bind up the
broken hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives and the opening of
the prison to them that are bound. I will greatly rejoice in the Lord,
my soul shall be joyful in my God: for he hath clothed me with the
garments of salvation." 

Nicolson says that Bush, in laying claim "to the robe of righteousness,"
was articulating a "vision of establishing the Christian God's dominion
on earth" via war. 

The implications for Iraq are disturbing, he says. 

"To those who see war as an occasional and necessary evil, the
developing situation in Iraq is a disaster. Violence is feeding
violence. The Abu Ghraib pictures, the rounding up and detaining of
thousands of civilians and the cockpit-shot film of an American pilot
firing missiles into the streets of Fallujah: all of that has fuelled
and will fuel decades of future rage and resentment," he writes. 

"But for any Christian who is driven by an apocalyptic and millennial
vision, these events are exactly what should be happening. Terrible and
desperate violence, blood and grief are all, for them, mileposts on the
road to God's dominion," Nicolson says. 

In this view, Bush's refusal to admit any mistakes in Iraq reflects not
arrogance nor evasiveness but divinely inspired confidence that all is
going according to His plan. For the formerly pro-Bush press, it's a
scary thought. 


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