The saga of the Benham brothers
 
 
The two brothers were interviewed on TV last night. From what I can tell  
they
are well-intentioned and have hearts made of gold.  They also are  
successful 
businessmen who deal in real estate.
 
However, like many (overwhelmingly most) Christians who take a stand  on
the issue of homosexuality, or other social issues such as Islam, they are 
uninformed and make all kinds of ridiculous statements that seem to  have
the premise:  "all you need is love."
 
This is the Christian version of kumbaya. It is hopelessly  simple-minded
and guaranteed to be ineffective.
 
There is, it has become obvious, a sort of simple-mindedness that is  
endemic
to evangelical Christianity.  Another form it takes is that of  Christian 
businessmen
who think that all you need is faith in the market, everything else is a  
distraction,
and if you mean well and are inspired by your faith that is  sufficient.
 
Except that a lamb among wolves always ends badly for the lamb.
 
When will they ever learn?
 
You've got to make yourself well-informed, seriously well informed,
otherwise they win and you lose. So, since this ought to be utterly  
obvious,
why isn't this usually the case  -rather than, in our world, only  sometimes
is the case?
 
I have some ideas but would prefer to hear others' opinions before
expressing my own. In any event this proclivity among Evangelicals
is destroying evangelical Christianity because, and it always is  true,
there are enemies to contend with and you cannot overcome them
with love alone, indeed, "love" as the word is customarily understood
in this kind of context, may well be counter-productive.
 
You cannot "love your enemies to death," you need to fight your  enemies,
and fight to win.  
 
What is "Christian" is the necessity to never compromise away your  
integrity
in the process and to never cease looking for an opportunity to  transform
a fight into something else, something productive. But it is essential  to
take care of business first, to actually win the fight, to be damned  sure
that you win the argument thoroughly and decisively.  
 
 
Billy
 
 
---------------------------------
 
 
 
 
NRO
 
 
May 9, 2014 7:18 PM 
The New Fascism Rolls  On
Now it’s twin brothers with a home-decorating show who can’t hold  
heterodox political views
 
Charles Cooke
 
 
Another day, another witch hunt — this time in  duplicate. “Twin brothers 
David and Jason Benham,” CNN _reports_ 
(http://www.cnn.com/2014/05/08/showbiz/tv/benham-brothers-hgtv/) ,  “have lost 
their opportunity to host their 
own HGTV show.” On Tuesday, the pair  was gearing up for their new role; by 
sundown the next day, the network had  announced tersely that it had “decided 
not to move forward with the Benham  Brothers’ series.” And that, as they 
say, was that. 
HGTV’s mind was allegedly changed by a post on the blog Right Wing Watch,  
where the duo was described as being “anti-gay” and “anti-choice.” That 
post,  David Benham told Erin Burnett yesterday, “was too much for them to 
bear — they  had to make a business decision.” How sad. Certainly, the Benhams 
hold some  heterodox views. They are not merely opposed to abortion and gay 
marriage, but  critical of divorce, adultery, Islam, pornography, “
perversion,” the “demonic  ideologies” that have crept into the nation’s “
universities  and . . . public school systems,” and the general culture of  “
activist” homosexuality, which, David contends, is inextricably tied up with a  
wider “agenda that is attacking the nation.” But so bloody what? They were  
tapped to host a home-improvement show, not rewrite the Constitution. 
Per Right Wing Watch’s rather hysterical indictment, the brothers’ main  
crimes against humanity are to have “led a prayer rally,” talked a few times 
on  the radio, written a few articles, and — shock! — been involved in “
protests  outside of abortion clinics” and “at a 2009 LGBT event.” In other 
words, to have  taken to the public square and to have _spoken_ 
(http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/hgtv-picks-anti-gay-anti-choice-extremists-new-real
ity-tv-show)   — an activity free societies have traditionally tended to 
cherish. Did they  bring their views into their work environment, impose them 
upon their employees  and their clients, or physically threaten anybody who 
disagrees with them? Of  course not. “We’ve been running a successful real 
estate company for the last  eleven years, and we help all people,” Jason 
Benham told CNN. “There is no  discrimination.” 
Jason’s brother, David, concurred, explaining that, 
we love all people. I love homosexuals. I love Islam, Muslims, and my  
brother and I would never discriminate. Never have we — never would  we.
Fair enough. But, as the likes of Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Alec Baldwin, Paula 
Deen,  Dick Metcalf, and Phil Robertson have recently learned, these days one 
doesn’t  need to actually do anything in order to become persona non grata.  
Before he was defenestrated for the high crime of having donated to California
’s  Proposition 8, Mozilla’s short-lived CEO, Brendan Eich, made it clear 
that he  considered it his responsibility to ensure that his company 
remained “a place  that includes and supports everyone, regardless of sexual 
orientation, gender  identity, age, race, ethnicity, economic status, or 
religion.”
 It counted for  nothing. 
Predictably, the boycott-and-divest Left is thrilled by the scalp. “You can 
 be plenty offensive and stay on TV as long as your show’s a hit,”  Salon’
s Mary Elizabeth Williams _lamented_ 
(http://www.salon.com/2014/05/09/why_did_hgtv_try_to_give_anti_gay_activists_a_show/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=s
ocialflow)   this week. Nevertheless, she continued, “thanks to social 
media, it may be  becoming a little harder to be offensive and actually get on 
TV in the first  place.” “I guess,” she concluded, “we’ll call that 
progress.” That’s one word  for it, certainly. Another one might be 
“McCarthyism.”
 Americans with  unfashionable views do not have a right to have television 
shows. But, as  Twitter’s David Burge likes to _point out_ 
(https://twitter.com/iowahawkblog/status/413875134034759681) ,  “nobody had a 
right to be a 
Hollywood screenwriter in 1948” either. 
As a rule, the term “McCarthyite” is too lazily and too readily thrown  
around. Here, though, it is somewhat appropriate. At its root, McCarthy’s  
contention was that because free nations are vulnerable at their edges, they 
are  on occasion justified in persecuting their radicals. Today’s inquisitors 
take a  similar approach, Erin Ching, a student at Swarthmore College, 
telling reporters  in Februrary that “what really bothered” her was “the whole 
idea that, at a  liberal arts college, we need to be hearing a diversity of 
opinion.” More  specifically, Ching objected to “tolerating conservative 
views.” Why? “Because  that dominant culture embeds these deep inequalities in 
our society.” And so, it  must be repressed. 
Future students of language will wonder at the period in our history in 
which  it was said with a straight face that diversity required uniformity, 
tolerance  necessitated intolerance, and liberalism called for dogma. Of late, 
we have been  told that Brandeis University is simply too open-minded to 
hear from a critic of  Islam, that Mozilla believes too vehemently in “freedom 
of speech” to refrain  from punishing a man for his private views, and that 
a respect for the audience  of a show about duck hunting demands that we 
suspend a man for expressing his  religious views in an unrelated interview. “
Never,” David Benham confirmed in an  interview with CNN, “have I spoken 
against homosexuals, as individuals, and gone  against them. I speak about an 
agenda.” Later, he added that “that’s really what  the point of this is — 
that there is an agenda that is seeking to silence the  voices of men and 
women of faith.” Say, now where might he have got hold of  that idea?

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