Still doesn't deal explicitly with the substance of the charges,
which is no small thing, but, yeah, I get the point.
 
Billy
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
message dated 6/9/2011 8:42:51 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

>From The American Spectator

_Political Hay_ (http://spectator.org/departments/political-hay)   
_Choosing  Ayn Rand or Jesus?_ 
(http://spectator.org/archives/2011/06/06/choosing-ayn-rand-or-jesus) 
By _Mark Tooley_ (http://spectator.org/people/mark-tooley)  on  6.6.11 @ 
6:07AM 
A liberal group is attacking Republican fans of Ayn Rand for  supposedly 
undermining Christianity. "Christians Must Choose: Ayn Rand or  Jesus," the 
_new campaign_ (http://americanvaluesnetwork.org/20<mce:script%20type=)  by 
the American Values Network. Specifically it  is targeting Congressman Paul 
Ryan, Senator Rand Paul, Rush Limbaugh and  others who have praised Rand's 
brand of Libertarianism. The network is headed  by sometime Democratic Party 
strategist Eric Sapp. Board members  eclectically include former Maryland 
Lieutenant Governor Kathleen Townsend,  former Democratic Party National 
Committee Chair Don Fowler, Huffington  Post religion editor and Princeton 
religion 
associate dean Paul  Raushenbush, and former pastor to the Clintons and 
United Methodist ethicist  Phil Wogaman. 
"GOP leaders and conservative pundits have brought upon themselves a  
crisis of values," the network explains. "Many who for years have been the  
loudest voices invoking the language of faith and moral values are now  
praising 
the atheist philosopher Ayn Rand whose teachings stand in direct  
contradiction to the Bible." The network complained that "GOP leaders want to  
argue 
that they are defending Christian principles" while also praising  Rand. 
Rand, of course, was a Russian émigré intellectual who wrote novels  like 
The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged that  championed ardent individualism 
against oppressive big government and cultural  conformity. The former was a 
famously classic film featuring Gary Cooper as  the hero. The latter was 
recently turned into a movie that largely flopped at  theaters, though Rand 
devotees and many other diehard Libertarians dutifully  watched it. Rand 
denounced all religion and portrayed her own version of  reason and 
self-initiative 
as a worthy substitute. 
Network chief Sapp told Religion News Service of Congressman  Ryan's 
ostensible hypocrisy for admiring Rand: "You've got a guy who is  a rising 
Republican star, and who wrote the budget, saying he's read her books  and 
Washington needs more of her values. If you're a Christian, you've got to  ask 
some 
serious questions about what's going on here." According to the  report, the 
network aims to divide conservative Christians from Libertarian  activists, 
especially in the Tea Party, by highlighting Rand's impieties. Sapp  
reported that he will mail his anti-Rand video to over 1 million Christians in  
Wisconsin, presumably in an effort both to weaken  Ryan in his home state and 
to help Democrats' overturn Gov. Scott Walker's  historic budget as they 
move to recall Republican state senators who backed  it. 
Sapp _promised_ 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/eric-sapp/ayn-rand-and-republicans_b_866097.html)
  in the Huffington Post that  his campaign against 
Randian Republicans could be a "a  game-changer" because "it uncovers the 
heartless GOP and Tea Party wolves  who've been parading around in sheep's 
clothing among the Christian flock,  leading them astray. Christians, 
especially 
conservative ones, know what to  look out for." He and his network point at 
an anti-Rand video by evangelical  prison ministry icon Chuck Colson, who 
derided Rand and her followers as the  "cranks" and "crypto-cultists" that 
conservative maven William Buckley strove  to ostracize from mainstream 
conservatism. Buckley's National Review  famously published Whittaker Chambers' 
damning review of Atlas  Shrugged, whose ultimate message he surmised was "you, 
to a gas chamber  -- go!" 
Joining the campaign to save Christians from Ayn Rand is Faithful  America, 
a group originally created during the 2004 presidential campaign by  the 
National Council of Churches when headed by former Democratic Congressman  Bob 
Edgar. Faithful America was founded as a liberal interfaith group and once  
even touted the prayer of one of its Wiccan supporters. It's now promoting 
a  petition campaign titled "Ayn Rand vs. The Bible," which _implores_ 
(http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/2518/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=6752&ta
g=AynRandvsTheBible/) : "As a Christian, I am concerned  that so many of 
our political leaders are taking their cues from the radical  philosopher Ayn 
Rand. Citizens, especially people of faith, need to know the  truth. I 
commit to telling 3 friends about Ayn Rand's incompatibility with  Christians 
ethics." The petition includes a sidebar with Bible quotes that  supposedly 
illustrate how Congressman Ryan's budget plan contradicts  Christianity. 
It's touching how liberal, religiously pluralistic groups like  Faithful 
America and American Values Network are suddenly very concerned that  
Christians specifically remain faithful to the Bible and to Jesus. Their  
respective 
boards are populated with activists and clergy not themselves known  for 
careful adherence to Christian orthodoxy. Rev. Wogaman, from the network's  
board, has been one of United Methodism's most liberal theologians, across the 
 decades expressing doubt about the miracles in the Bible like the virgin  
birth. Bob and Elizabeth Dole, long time attenders at Wogaman's Foundry  
Church in Washington, D.C., very publicly quit the church in 1995 because of  
the pastor's liberal politics and theological heterodoxies. Chuck Colson at  
least has the theological and spiritual pedigree to question why Christians  
would admire Rand. It's uncertain how religious pluralists effectively  
ostracize an atheist intellectual. 
And it's uncertain whether average evangelical Christians, along with  
traditional Roman Catholics, will become greatly exercised over some  
Republican 
admiration for Ayn Rand. But we'll maybe know more after Eric Sapp  and his 
network mail their video supposedly to over 1 million Wisconsin  
Christians. 
Mark Tooley is president of the _Institute on Religion and Democracy_ 
(http://www.ird-renew.org/)  in Washington, D.C. and  author of Taking Back the 
United Methodist Church.  

-- 
_
"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

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
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-- 
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