Wall Street Occupiers Urged to Target  Churches 
Posted By Mark D. Tooley On October 17, 2011 @ 12:10 am In  Daily 
Mailer,FrontPage | _31  Comments_ 
(http://frontpagemag.com/2011/10/17/wall-street-occupiers-urged-to-target-churches/print/#comments_controls)
  
 
 (http://cloud.frontpagemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Schaeffer.jpg) 
Franky Schaeffer is the son of the late, highly influential evangelical  
thinker Francis Schaeffer, who helped shape the modern conservative evangelical 
 
movement. The son boasts he was himself a co-founder of the Religious 
Right. But  he since has denounced Christianity as “stupid,” writes bitter 
tell-all books  about his parents, and ferociously attacks conservative 
religionists as the  virtual root cause of all American evils. 
A blogger for The Huffington Post, young Schaeffer is now faulting  
religious conservatives for facilitating Wall Street greed. He’s imploring the  
Wall Street Occupiers to “protest the root source of America’s tilt to the far 
 unregulated corporate right.” For Schaeffer, the next logical step is to  
demonstrate “outside mega churches, Evangelical publishing houses, [and]  
religious organizations that lead the ‘moral’ crusades against women and gays 
 and all the rest.” 
Will the Wall Street Occupiers heed Schaeffer’s frenzied call and next park 
 their tents, blankets and anti-capitalist placards in the parking lots of  
suburban mega churches? It seems unlikely. But Schaeffer’s demand fits with 
the  crazy Left’s sometime fixation on demonizing opponents based on class 
and  religion. 
Thirty years ago, young Schaeffer joined his father in critique of the  
secular Left. Today, he faults religious conservatives for the “insanity and  
corruption” that plagues America. In 2008, he endorsed Barack Obama and 
publicly  demanded John McCain renounce his ostensibly “hate-filled 
supporters.” 
More  recently, he’s slammed Obama’s critics as “racists.” All the energy 
he once  channeled into what he derides as “fundamentalist” Christianity 
is now furiously  focused against all the perceived representatives of his 
parents’ faith. 
In his recent appeal to the Wall Street occupiers, Schaeffer accused  “
Evangelical fundamentalism” of enabling the sinister top 1 percent’s “rape” of 
 the remaining 99 percent. According to his mythology, perhaps based on 
Thomas  Frank’s 2005 book _What’s the Matter with Kansas?: How Conservatives 
Won the Heart of  America_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Whats-Matter-Kansas-Conservatives-America/dp/080507774X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1318562571&;
sr=1-1) , evangelicals’ delusional focus on “values” issues beguiles  them into 
voting against their own supposed economic self-interest. Their “bogus  (and 
hate-driven) ‘morality’ litmus tests of spurious red herring ‘issues’ 
from  abortion to school prayer and gay rights” inveigles clueless evangelicals 
to  vote for Republicans “serving only billionaires instead of the rest of 
us.”   
Ecumenically, Schaeffer also tars Roman Catholics as likewise  “
fundamentalists” who have “delegitimized the US Government and thus undercut  
its 
ability to tax, spend and regulate.” So Catholic bishops, like evangelical  
mega 
churches, have also tricked their followers into voting against their “own  
class and self-interest.” Naturally, Schaeffer prefers not to acknowledge 
that  traditional Christians and other people of faith, unlike the dialectic 
Left, do  not typically identify by “class interest.” In contrast with the 
Left’s  materialist obsession, religious believers view the world through 
the prism of  their faith. Not as naïve as Schaeffer insists, traditional 
religionists have  noticed that the supposed champions of their “class” not 
only disparage their  faith’s morals, they also want further to marginalize 
faith through Big  Government’s constant expansion. While people of faith 
prioritize churches,  families, private charities, and private business, the 
Left 
pushes for  centralization of power in the coercive and unelected federal 
bureaucracy. 
More revealing of his own politics than of the purported beliefs  of his 
targets, Schaeffer explained that “fundamentalists” had stigmatized  
government as “evil” and “satanic” because it allows abortion and gay rights.  
Accordingly, these otherwise progressive “God-fearing folks will always vote 
for  less government and less regulation because ‘the government’ is evil.”   
These fools equate Wall Street with “freedom” and government with  “
tyranny.”  Incoherently, Schaeffer also surmised that Evangelical and  Catholic 
“
fundamentalists,” in keeping with their Puritan witch-burning and  Spanish 
Inquisition heritage, seek “fusion of state power and religion through  the 
reestablishment of the ‘Christian America’ idea of  ‘American  
Exceptionalism.’” So they apparently think government is both “satanic” and  
ordained 
by God, in Schaeffer’s telling.
Naturally, Schaeffer also faults these aspiring theocrats for supporting  
Israel, and therefore preventing Middle East peace. And he compares American  
“fundamentalists” to Iran’s mullahs, though the Iranian theocracy, which 
exists  in fact rather than just his imagination, does not merit nearly as 
much  condemnation. Schaeffer explained: “If you can get Americans to worry 
about the  Bible and not fairness and justice then you have handed a perpetual 
victory to  Goldman Sacks (sic) and company.” Not very strong on facts, he 
claimed one  percent of the population has more wealth than the other 99. 
Schaeffer pours on the venom thick. The Religious Right, “as alien as the  
Taliban,” relies on the “not-so-bright” who dare to doubt global warming 
and who  think “hating” America is patriotic. They are also apparently 
racist, wanting  private education so as to exclude non-whites. Evidently 
Schaeffer is not very  familiar with the demographics of most parochial 
schools. 
Religious  conservatives have “stalled and perhaps destroyed the Obama  
presidency.”   Their achievement in the 2010 congressional elections  was not 
democracy but a “putsch.” And the “timely destruction of the economic  elites 
and their religious facilitators begins by calling  
fundamentalist/Evangelical/Roman Catholic ‘religion’ what it is: a political  
grab for power.” 
Schaeffer chillingly warned that the only alternative to their  “destruction” 
is “
chaos, decline, oligarchy and theocracy.” 
This nearly Bolshevik-sounding plea for “destruction” of class enemies 
from  Schaeffer has all the sophistication of the Wall Street occupiers’ 
signage  without the excuse of their youth. The occupiers seem mostly like 
young 
people  looking to escape college debts and real world responsibilities. 
Deranged by  contempt for his parents’ faith, Schaeffer, at age 59, seems 
seduced by his own  demons of paranoia and hatred. He ignores that evangelicals 
in 
particular are  strongly associated with Main Street, not Wall Street, are 
inclined towards the  Tea Party with its own critique of bailouts, and in 
general have a historic  distrust for centralized power that is deeply rooted 
in Anglo-American  history. 
Neither resembling the Taliban or Iranian theocrats, most American  
traditional religious believers are far more winsome than Schaeffer’s  
bile-tinged 
rhetoric. If he attempts angrily to demonstrate outside a mega  church, 
maybe he will learn for himself.

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