RD magazine
 
 Hate, An American Voter Value  By _Gary  Laderman_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/contributors/garyladerman/)  
 
 
    *    
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/images/managed/pieflagfinal.jpg)  
Apple pie: as American as Hate.  
    *       *   _Gary  Laderman_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/contributors/garyladerman/) 
Gary Laderman is Director of Religion Dispatches and Professor and  
Chairperson of the Department of Religion at Emory University. Order his most  
recent book, Sacred Matters (The New Press, May 12, 2009), _here_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Sacred-Matters-Celebrity-Ecstasies-Religious/dp/1595584374/ref=sr_1_
1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1240273863&sr=8-1) . His full bio can be found _here_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/about/1129/staff_&_bios_) . Read his 
other articles _here_ (http://www.religiondispatches.org/authors/garyladerman/) 
. 
    *   God hates fags. Burn the Qur’an. The president is a Muslim  
socialist. Jews control the media. Immigrants are invading America... 
Hate is as American as apple pie. A sentiment stitched into the fabric of  
national life from the early stirrings of Revolution in the colonies (they  
hated the old rulers across the Atlantic) to contemporary feelings about the 
 government (we hate the rulers in Congress). What’s most striking about 
this  embedded and endemic force circulating through the body politic for all 
these  years is just how valuable hatred can be for some segments of our 
culture; so  valuable that hatred can be sacred for some. 
Perhaps religion itself, at some early evolutionary point in human history, 
 emerged not as an outgrowth of altruism or loving bonds between community  
members, but rather as a result of hateful differences between groups.  
Religion has a rich history of promoting hate and gaining rewards from this  
hatred: more faithful adherents for sure, but also at times material wealth,  
political power, and social authority. The notion that religion contributes 
to  the social emphasis on hate and plays a role in the effervescent 
energies  devoted to stirring up hateful sentiment is elementary to many 
students 
and  observers on the subject. In the U.S., hate is a driver constantly 
shaping and  reshaping the religious landscape. 
Case in point: Just look at how hate brought the religious margins directly 
 into the mainstream, as was recently evident with the planned Qur’an 
burning  in North Florida. While the church itself came from the fringe, it 
certainly  resonated throughout American culture due, most likely, to a much 
larger and  more widespread fear and hatred of Muslims. Hate can also bring the 
religious  mainstream out into the convoluted lives of marginal characters 
who can  inflict awful harm on those singled out as objects of hatred; as is 
the case  in the recent brutal attacks on gays. The culture of hate 
emanating from many  in the mainstream religious right—hatred of “Obamacare,” 
of 
government,  Muslims, abortion, or gays—will continue to spur individuals to 
action bent on  destroying the enemy in the name of… some higher principle, a 
sacred law,  God? 
Politics thrives on hate as well, though politicians get value-added,  
religious-tinged benefits from naming an enemy who is not simply one who  
disagrees with a point of view, but is identified as the most vital threat to  
public order, the moral good, and national life. What are the values added?  
Fear, a tried and true ingredient for consolidating social power and  
sharpening the line between insiders and outsiders; a scapegoat—if  not for the 
sins 
of the community, then at least as a useful distraction from  community 
failures and sins; and retaliatory possibilities—every  crowd worked into a 
frenzy over whom to hate wants to be simultaneously  protective and aggressive, 
while our gun-crazy, militarized culture points the  way (in the name of 
God, blow ’em up!). 
Hasn’t it always been this way? Pick any decade from American history and  
you can find political leaders encouraging hate—both to protect American  
values and interests and to strengthen the civil religious ties that are  
supposed to bind us all together. Hate the English, hate the French, hate the  
Spanish, hate the Japanese, hate the Germans, hate the Koreans, hate the  
Vietnamese, hate the Russians, hate the Iraqis, and so on for the so-called  “
foreign” enemies to fear. On the domestic side, the list comes too easily:  
hate Indians, hate blacks, hate Jews, hate anarchists, hate war protestors,  
hate government, hate the North, hate the South, hate the gays…. 
Aside from the raw political value of hate, think of the potential for  
media exposure when you are a religious hater. When the Dalai Lama comes to  
town (to start with a counter-example) with monks, cultural activities, and  
lectures, the fundamental core of his teaching—compassion—is a media 
buzzkill.  Even with Richard Gere in tow, his visits are mostly ignored by 
journalists,  bloggers, and news celebrities, as well as their audiences. Love 
for 
your  fellow man and kindness to your neighbor just isn’t as appealing as 
calling  your opponent Hitler or burning the sacred text from a different 
faith. Why is  that? Maybe we should take a survey. 
The media, of course, is not the only culprit in promoting a culture that  
values hate; though its unofficial motto, if it bleeds it leads, does  
suggest some degree of culpability. A brief glance across news shows and sites  
suggests that hate stories—not just hate crimes, a relatively new legal  
designation, but also stories that focus on conflict and hostility based on  
passionate dislike for the other—are staples in news media. Additionally and  
beyond the news, so much of popular culture is fueled by depictions of hate  
and difference overcome by cruel violence. Whether it’s the cowboys killing  
the savage Indians, the space hero destroying the ruthless aliens, or the  
soldier slicing the enemy’s throat, hate is elemental in the entertainment  
industry. Do we even need to bring up shooter video games like  Bioshock, 
Resistance: Fall of Man, and Crysis in a  discussion of the value of hate in 
media? 
Though all this talk of hate and what seems like constant fighting and  
warfare has left me at a loss for words, these Clash lyrics seem to capture  
the essence quite nicely: 
Hate and War, the only things we got today
And if I close my  eyes
They will not go away
You have to deal with it
It is the  currency
Hate, hate, hate, hate, hate, hate,  hate

-- 
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