How so ?  Obviously this is not in my bailiwick, so I'm lost.  Like I said,.
this is article # 3 in two days making the "Rand = anti-Christian"  
connection
and I presume the 3 authors are not just blowing smoke through their  
hookahs.
 
Billy
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
 
 
 
message dated 6/8/2011 9:20:58 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

Liberal Christians are, that's for sure. Liberal  Christians also think 
that the "religious right" has hijacked the church and  is basically wrong 
about everything. Same song, next verse. The "Ayn Rand vs.  Jesus" motif 
actually has me laughing. 

David

  _   
 
"There  is no virtue in compulsory government charity, and there is no 
virtue in  advocating it. A politician who portrays himself as "caring" and 
"sensitive"  because he wants to expand the government's charitable programs is 
merely  saying that he's willing to try to do good with other people's 
money. Well,  who isn't? And a voter who takes pride in supporting such 
programs 
is telling  us that he'll do good with his own money -- if a gun is held to 
his  head."--P. J.  O'Rourke


On 6/8/2011 12:38 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  
This is  the third essay about Ayn Rand in the past two days which has  
taken
Republicans to task for buying into  Objectivism.  This one may be 
especially
significant  since it directly links  libertarianism with Ayn Rand and 
makes a
case that  Christian faith is the diametric opposite. Actually the article 
about  
La Vey  does so also, but this one may be more important.
 
Not sure  if this is simply a blip or the start of something more  
sustained.
In any  case, could be a warning that Christians are not happy with the
implications of Ayn Rand's version of  libertarianism and may be in the
early  stages of organizing against it.
 
Billy
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
RD  magazine
 
 
June  7, 2011
 
 The Problem with Ayn Rand Isn’t Atheism   Post by _Sarah Posner_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/contributors/sarahposner/)  
 
  
Detroit Examiner columnist Brandon Schlacht _takes issue_ 
(http://www.examiner.com/atheism-in-detroit/ayn-rand-atheists-vs-liberal-christians-a-battle-o
f-dogma?fb_comment=34027636)  with the American  Values Network ad, 
targeted at liberal Christians, which criticizes _Republican affection for Ayn 
Rand_ (http://www.religiondispatches.org/dispatches/sarahposner/4708/paul_ryan’
s_bible,_jim_wallis’,_or_none_of_the_above/) .  Schlacht writes: 
Members of the American Values Network have come out in opposition to  Ryan 
based on their Christian faith and Ayn Rand's atheism; however, while  Ryan 
was indeed influenced by Rand and would like to see her Objectivism  
influence more of Washington's policy, his budget is not wrong due to Ayn  
Rand's 
lack of belief in a supreme being. The real issue is not atheism,  but 
Randian dogma, which holds a strict commitment to cutting government,  
promoting 
libertarian ideals, and allowing for the best to emerge, even if  it occurs 
at the expense of the downtroden. . . . 
The real issue isn't God with Paul Ryan's budget, but his strict belief  
that one ideal and one political ideology will fix the crippling budget  
problems the U.S. faces.
The American Values Network is run by the principals of the Eleison  Group, 
a political consulting firm which _describes_ (http://eleisongroup.com/)  
itself as "a full-service consulting  firm helping political, non-profit, 
business and government entities better  understand America’s rich and complex 
faith landscape and build  relationships with people of faith from across 
the ideological spectrum on  the local and national level." It is boasting on 
its website of its  attendance at the upcoming Netroots Nation conference 
where principals Burns  Strider and Eric Sapp will be on a _panel_ 
(http://www.netrootsnation.org/node/1703) , "Moving Forward With Faith." The  
description on the Netroots Nation website reads, "A clear lesson to from  our 
recent 
history is that faith and values communities are increasingly  proving to 
be critical to successful progressive advocacy." Other panelists  include 
Elizabeth Denlinger, Director of Campaigns at Sojourners, which her  biography 
describes as "one of the largest networks of progressive  Christians in the 
nation," a characterization some progressive Christians _take issue_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/dispatches/sarahposner/4592/progressive_christian
:_wallis_“no_longer_speaks_for_us”/)  with. (I'm also speaking  on a 
_different panel_ (http://www.netrootsnation.org/node/1685)  at the same 
conference.) 
Eleison and the AVN are focused on making "people of faith" "comfortable"  
with Democrats, who've gotten a bad rap about being "hostile" to religion.  
That rap, incidentally, came from Democratic "faith" strategists, not  
because Democrats are demonstrably anti-religion, but it has resulted in  some 
painful pandering to make up for these alleged deficiencies. Eleison's  
Democratic clients have _included_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/dispatches/sarahposner/2680/democratic_faith_outreach:_not_dead_yet)
  Alabama's Parker 
Griffith,  who went on to become a Republican, and North Carolina's Heath 
Shuler, a  prominent Blue Dog who recently _spoke_ 
(http://www.watchmenpastors.org/briefing-video-archives/)  at the Family 
Research Council's Watchmen  on 
the Wall conference for pastors, where he insisted that if Christians  "had 
provided for people in our community," then we "wouldn't've needed a  
debate on health care." The Family Research Council, incidentally, has  
signaled 
its full _support_ 
(http://www.frc.org/washingtonupdate/gop-budgets-six-trillion-times-better-than-obamas)
  of the Republicans'  budget-slashing. But at 
least Shuler's not an atheist! 
At the AVN website touting the anti-Rand ad, AVN _notes_ 
(http://americanvaluesnetwork.org/aynrandvsjesus/) , "The choice is simple: Ayn 
Rand or Jesus  
Christ. We must choose one and forsake the other." 
Will the AVN ad help Democrats? Last year, Sapp _blamed_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/dispatches/sarahposner/3682/did_the_democrats_punt_on_faith_
outreach/)  Democratic losses in the  midterm election on a failure to 
engage in faith outreach, a claim that  Robert P. Jones of the Public Religion 
Research Institute _rebutted,_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/dispatches/sarahposner/3682/did_the_democrats_punt_on_faith_outreach/)
  by showing that 
not only  were Sapp's numbers off, but his theory was "untenable. Assigning 
the lack  of religious outreach any primary, causal role in this particular 
election  is simply not a credible argument, given the economic context, 
comparable  losses among other important demographic groups, and the 
particular makeup  of the 2010 electorate." Other strategy emanating from 
Eleison has 
included  Sapp's _offering up_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/dispatches/sarahposner/2935/are_tea_partiers_pro-gay_and_pro-choice_)
  of his firm's 
claimed  25 million-name list of evangelical voters so Democrats can 
"educate" them  about how (in Sapp's mind) Tea Partiers are pro-gay and 
pro-choice 
and  therefore shouldn't be trusted. Sounds like a winning Democratic 
strategy,  right? 
Sapp and Strider's latest strategy is to highlight Rand's atheism. While  
it is indeed a profile in Republican hyprocrisy that conservatives complain  
about liberals "persecuting" Christians, and insist that we are a "Christian 
 nation," and then turn for inspiration to Rand, who denigrated organized  
religion, Rand's atheism is not what's wrong with Ryan's budget. Schlacht  
warns, "Christians are making a mistake by attacking Ryan due to Rand's  
atheism by isolating themselves from likely allies. They have remained so  
committed to their dogma regarding a supreme being, that they may alienate  
their 
own Liberal allies, damaging relations between the faithful and  faithless 
for some time." That might be overstating the case. But we don't  have to 
choose between Rand and Christ.
--  



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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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