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Emit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 03:15 PM
Original message
The Religious Right's Effort to Reshape History Thru Public Schools and Establish a Christian Nation
Excellent article, highlighting the Religious Right's current and continued efforts to establish the US as a Christian Nation, starting with Texas:

How Christian Were the Founders?

By RUSSELL SHORTO
Published: February 11, 2010

... Ralph Reed, once said, “I would rather have a thousand school-board members than one president and no school-board members” — and Texas was a beachhead. Since the election of two Christian conservatives in 2006, there are now seven on the Texas state board who are quite open about the fact that they vote in concert to advance a Christian agenda. “They do vote as a bloc,” Pat Hardy, a board member who considers herself a conservative Republican but who stands apart from the Christian faction, told me. “They work consciously to pull one more vote in with them on an issue so they’ll have a majority.”

~snip~

... The one thing that underlies the entire program of the nation’s Christian conservative activists is, naturally, religion. But it isn’t merely the case that their Christian orientation shapes their opinions on gay marriage, abortion and government spending. More elementally, they hold that the United States was founded by devout Christians and according to biblical precepts. This belief provides what they consider not only a theological but also, ultimately, a judicial grounding to their positions on social questions. When they proclaim that the United States is a “Christian nation,” they are not referring to the percentage of the population that ticks a certain box in a survey or census but to the country’s roots and the intent of the founders.

The Christian “truth” about America’s founding has long been taught in Christian schools, but not beyond. Recently, however — perhaps out of ire at what they see as an aggressive, secular, liberal agenda in Washington and perhaps also because they sense an opening in the battle, a sudden weakness in the lines of the secularists — some activists decided that the time was right to try to reshape the history that children in public schools study. Succeeding at this would help them toward their ultimate goal of reshaping American society. As Cynthia Dunbar, another Christian activist on the Texas board, put it, “The philosophy of the classroom in one generation will be the philosophy of the government in the next.”

~snip~

THE TOWN OF Lynchburg, Va., was founded in 1786 at the site of a ferry crossing on what would later be called the James River. During the Civil War, it was a Confederate supply post, and in 1864 it was the site of one of the last Confederate victories. In 1933, Jerry Falwell was born in Lynchburg, the son of a sometime bootlegger. In 1971 — in an era of pot smoking and war protests — the Rev. Jerry Falwell inaugurated Liberty University on one of the city’s seven hills. It was to be a training ground for Christians and a bulwark against moral relativism. In 2004, three years before his death, Falwell completed another dream by founding the Liberty University School of Law, whose objective, in the words of the university’s current chancellor, Jerry Falwell Jr., is “to transform legislatures, courts, commerce and civil government at all levels.”

~snip~

I had come to sit in on a guest lecture by Cynthia Dunbar, an assistant law professor who commutes to Lynchburg once a week from her home in Richmond, Tex., where she is a practicing lawyer as well as a member of the Texas board of education. Her presence in both worlds — public schools and the courts — suggests the connection between them that Christian activists would like to deepen. The First Amendment class for third-year law students that I watched Dunbar lead neatly merged the two components of the school’s program: “lawyering skills” and “the integration of a Christian worldview.”

Dunbar began the lecture by discussing a national day of thanksgiving that Gen. George Washington called for after the defeat of the British at Saratoga in 1777 — showing, in her reckoning, a religious base in the thinking of the country’s founders. In developing a line of legal reasoning that the future lawyers in her class might use, she wove her way to two Supreme Court cases in the 1960s, in both of which the court ruled that prayer in public schools was unconstitutional. A student questioned the relevance of the 1777 event to the court rulings, because in 1777 the country did not yet have a Constitution. “And what did we have at that time?” Dunbar asked. Answer: “The Declaration of Independence.” She then discussed a legal practice called “incorporation by reference.” “When you have in one legal document reference to another, it pulls them together, so that they can’t be viewed as separate and distinct,” she said. “So you cannot read the Constitution distinct from the Declaration.” And the Declaration famously refers to a Creator and grounds itself in “the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God.” Therefore, she said, the religiosity of the founders is not only established and rooted in a foundational document but linked to the Constitution. From there she moved to “judicial construction and how you should go forward with that,” i.e., how these soon-to-be lawyers might work to overturn rulings like that against prayer in schools by using the founding documents.

~snip~

In 2008, Cynthia Dunbar published a book called “One Nation Under God,” in which she stated more openly than most of her colleagues have done the argument that the founding of America was an overtly Christian undertaking and laid out what she and others hope to achieve in public schools. “The underlying authority for our constitutional form of government stems directly from biblical precedents,” she writes. “Hence, the only accurate method of ascertaining the intent of the Founding Fathers at the time of our government’s inception comes from a biblical worldview.”

~snip~

Dunbar’s book lays out the goal: using courts and public schools to fuse Christianity into the nation’s founding. It may be unlikely that it will be attained any time soon, in which case the seeding of Texas’ history-textbook guidelines with “Christian nation” concepts may be mostly symbolic. But symbols can accumulate weight over time, and the Christian activists are in it for the long haul. Some observers say that over time their effort could have far-reaching consequences. “The more you can associate Christianity with the founding, the more you can sway the future Supreme Court,” Martin Marty says. “That is what Pat Robertson was about years ago. Establish the founders as Christians, and you have it made.”

~snip~
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/14/magazine/14texbooks-t.html?pagewanted=1
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bluestateguy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 03:32 PM
Response to Original message
1. Another reason to support liberal private schools, guided by liberal principles
Yes, they do exist.
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rd_kent Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 03:52 PM
Response to Original message
2. The next time I hear of a christian complaining that they are being "persecuted"
Im gonna puke this right on their head.


Where are all the "non-wingnut" christians opposing this?
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The_Commonist Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 04:16 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Non-wing-nut Christians...
...are the "meek" and they shall never inherit the earth.
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rd_kent Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 04:17 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Then their silence makes them 100% complicit in this kind of thing.
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mrbarber Donating Member (884 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 04:41 PM
Response to Reply #2
5. The one they mentioned in the article, Pat Hardy?
As a "Conservative Republican" in Texas, one can assume he is a Christian.

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Emit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-14-10 07:09 PM
Response to Reply #2
13. There are groups of non-wingnut Christians who speak out
I don't know whether they've addressed this particular thing in TX, but here are some that I follow who alert about various things:

Americans United for Separation of Church and State:
Americans United is a religious liberty watchdog group based in Washington, D.C. Founded in 1947, the organization educates Americans about the importance of church-state separation in safeguarding religious freedom.
http://www.au.org/media/press-releases/archives/2010/02/americans-united-urges-obama.html
Rev. Barry LynnExecutive Director
http://www.au.org/
http://www.au.org/issues/

Lynn can be read at Huffington Post: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/barry-w-lynn/faith-hope-and-charity-wh_b_450099.html

People for the American Way:
PFAW was founded in 1981 by Norman Lear, the late Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, and a group of business, civic, religious, and civil rights leaders who were disturbed by the divisive rhetoric of newly politicized televangelists.
http://site.pfaw.org/site/PageServer?pagename=about_landing

Interfaith Alliance:
The Interfaith Alliance celebrates religious freedom by championing individual rights, promoting policies that protect both religion and democracy, and uniting diverse voices to challenge extremism.
http://www.interfaithalliance.org/


Here's a link to a letter that 25 national groups sent to Obama re his continuation of Faith Based Initiatives: http://www.au.org/media/press-releases/archives/2010/02/card-letter-to-obama-2-3-2010.pdf
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starroute Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 04:59 PM
Response to Original message
6. Can we just define Christianity as a brainwashing cult and be done with it?
Edited on Sat Feb-13-10 05:00 PM by starroute
I know there are still some good and decent people out there who consider themselves Christians -- though I think they're fooling themselves if they believe their Christianity is anything but a dead weight on their goodness and decency -- but the core fact is that Christianity as a brand has been entirely coopted and corrupted by these nutjobs.

At this point, acknowledging that Christianity is anything but a toxic poison, or admitting that there was any uniquely Christian sentiment behind the core events of our nation's founding, is only cutting our own throats. The Christian "God" has far less in common with the Creator of the Founding Fathers than with the Muslims' Allah -- whom many fundies are already prepared to label as some kind of demon.

Christianity itself in this country has become a cult by most definitions. It is based on fanatical adherence rather than considered choice. It practices black magic. It endorses the use of deception and falsehood. It has relegated the teachings of Jesus to some nebulous post-apocalyptic era, and implicitly accepts that Satan is the current Lord of the World and that Satanic methods are the appropriate means of operating in this world.

And as someone suggested above, the mainstream and non-cultic churches are allowing this to go ahead by their silence. If they themselves no longer see the Christian religion as worth fighting to preserve, why should any of the rest of us think any better of it?

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Initech Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 05:18 PM
Response to Original message
7. Oh god imagine if the Talibornagain gets control of our government...
:scared: :nuke:
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Touchdown Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 05:51 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. Yeah! That would look like.... Today!











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Initech Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 05:56 PM
Response to Reply #8
9. George Carlin had a great line about the Talibornagain:
"The people who are motivated are the ones who are causing all the trouble - stock swindlers, serial killers, corpse fuckers, Christian conservatives? These people are highly motivated!"
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Hubert Flottz Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 06:52 PM
Response to Reply #8
11. Now that's what I call...
A SHIT LIST...in pictures
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Hubert Flottz Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 06:47 PM
Response to Original message
10. Those fools should move to Iran where the kooks and fundies
rule the roost.
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H2O Man Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-13-10 06:55 PM
Response to Original message
12. Recommended.
The threat of the neocons and the theocons is as great today, as when Bush and Cheney were in office.
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