On December 10, 2017, I gave a 45-minute briefing to the Humanists of West Florida, a group I belong to, on "Fourth Generation Warfare, Dominionism, and 7 Mountains Doctrine." Below, the talk is presented in three parts. In addition, each slide is presented along with any information I had previously written on the Notes Page. Virtually every Notes Page has a citation to sources and some explanation of the slide. But, what I briefed and what is on the Note Page are not identical. My briefing style is to simplify and condense. Any errors are mine alone and not the cited materials.
VIDEOS OF PRESENTATION
PART 1
PART 2
PART 3
POWERPOINT SLIDES WITH NOTES
NOTE:
Lydia
DePillis,
“Meet the New GOP Centrists: How a formerly fringe caucus is giving Tea Parties
a direct line to the Hill,” The New Republic,
January 13, 2010, at https://newrepublic.com/article/72431/meet-the-new-gop-centrists.
FIGURE 1 NOTE:
DISCUSSION,
PART III, pages 1-12 and 26-29.
COMMENT:
Federation for American Immigration Reform—between 1992 and 1995 FCF broadcasts
FAIR’s Borderline
television program over its National Empowerment Television channel. In 1998, John Tanton and Tanton-supported
American Immigration Control Foundation (hate, SPLC) wrote of multiculturalism
destroying ”Euro-American culture” with multiculturalists and immigrants the
main culprits. SOURCES: Media
Transparency,
“Free Congress Research and Education Foundation,” at ttp://mediatransparency.org/recipientprofile.php?recipientID=126. FCF broadcasts Borderline. Heidi
Beirich,
“The Teflon Nativists.
FAIR Marked by Ties to White Supremacy,” Intelligence
Report
Winter 2007, at http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=846. FAIR produces Borderline. Southern
Poverty Law Center, “The Puppeteer,” Intelligence
Report
Summer 2002, at http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=93. AICF and Tanton
wrote about multiculturalism.
In 2001, FCF gives tacit approval
for Council of Conservative Citizens (CCC) (racist, SPLC) to produce and
distribute video on Culture Wars and multiculturalism. CCC linked to neo-Confederacy movement, Ku
Klux Klan, and neo-Nazis. SOURCES: Bill Berkowitz,
“Reframing the Enemy. ‘Cultural
Marxism,’ a conspiracy theory with an anti-Semitic twist, is being pushed by
much of the American right,” Intelligence Report
Summer 2003, Southern Poverty Law Center, at http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?pid=112,
113, and 114. SPLC: CCC distributes
FCF-like video. Southern
Poverty Law Center, “Sharks in the Mainstream. Racism
underlies influential ‘conservative’ group,” Intelligence
Report
Winter 1999, at http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?pid=620. CCC members linked to neo-Confederacy and
factions of Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazi National Alliance, America First Party, and
Christian Patriot-militia group such as the Populist Party.
COMMENT:
In
June 2002, William Lind, Director of Cultural Conservatism at FCF, addressed
major Holocaust denial conference sponsored by Willis Carto’s
Institute for Historical Review.
Sometime after 2007, William Lind appeared as a guest on the
IHR-CCC-sponsored radio talk show “The Political Cesspool,” the “shamelessly
white nationalist radio talk show that’s….become the primary radio nexus of
hate in America.” SOURCES: Southern Poverty Law Center,
“Mainstreaming Hate. A key ally of Christian right heavyweight Paul Weyrich
addresses a major Holocaust denial conference,” Intelligence
Report Fall
2002, at http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=40#.
The
Political Cesspool, “Guest List,” no date, at http://www.thepoliticalcesspool.org/guestlist.php. “William Lind” listed as guest. David
Holthouse,
“Memphis Sewage,” Intelligence Report Fall
2007, Southern Poverty Law Center, at http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?pid=1433. SPLC: radio nexus for hate.
JOHN
TANTON: Heidi
Beirich,
“The Tanton
Files. Nativist
Leader’s Racist Past Exposed,” Intelligence Report
Winter 2008, at http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=981. Southern Poverty Law Center, “The Puppeteer,”
Intelligence
Report
Summer 2002, at http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=93.
WILLIS
CARTO: Anti-Defamation League, “Willis Carto,” at
http://www.adl.org/learn/ext_us/carto.asp?LEARN_Cat=Extremism&LEARN_SubCat=Extremism_in_America&xpicked=2&item=carto.
This slide depicts how the white
nationalist, nativist anti-immigration movement founded by John Tanton,
became partners with various ad hoc Christian Right coalitions on immigration
issues. These included the short-lived
Secure Borders Coalition, the Families First on Immigration coalition, and the
Declaration Alliance.
At the top, Tanton’s FAIR
influenced the House Immigrationn
Reform Caucus to end the 14th
Amendment’s birthright citizenship.
And, the bottom depicts the
relationships that Tanton’s
network of anti-immigration groups forged with racist, white nationalist
groups.
It is interesting to note how the
1990s concern of white nationalist groups regarding “white genocide” has now
migrated further into the Christian Right, the Tea Party movement, the Patriot
militia, and, now into the White House.
FIGURE 3 NOTE:
The Conservative Action Project,
headed by former Reagan Attorney General Edwin Meese III, itself the
operational arm of the secretive Council for National Policy, was involved in
the anti-immigration movement; the Tea Party movement; the Freedom Federation,
a hybrid of old and new Christian Right groups plus the Koch-funded Americans
for Prosperity. And, there is the yearly
Values Voter Summit where every Republican hopeful pays obeisance and fealty to
the Christian Right.
FIGURE 4 NOTE:
This slide depicts how the Council
for National Policy and its Conservative Action Project operate through TheVanguard
network apparently to produce and coordinate operational plans.
Notice that two key members of the
Trump campaign, Steven Bannon and Kellyanne Conway, were part of this network,
with Conway herself working inside TheVanguard.
NOTE:
Richard
Viguerie, The
New Right: We’re Ready to Lead,
Falls Church, VA: The Viguerie
Company, 1981, p.55.
The late Paul Weyrich,
employer of William S. Lind, the originator of Fourth Generation Warfare, is a
radical revolutionary. Weyrich was
one of four men who created the Christian Right in the 1970s—along with the
late Howard Phillips, the late Terry Dolan, and Richard Viguerie. NOTE:
William S. Lind, et alia, “The
Changing Face of War: Into the Fourth Generation,” U.S.
Marine Corps Gazette,
October 1989: 22-26, Global Guerrillas, at http://globalguerrillas.typepad.com/lind/the-changing-face-of-war-into-the-fourth-generation.html.
William S. Lind, having worked for
years with the late Colonel John Boyd, probably America’s greatest military
strategist, published a seminal article on Fourth Generation Warfare in the
U.S. Marine Corps’ Gazette.
Of particular note is one element
of his thoughts on 4GW—that the manipulation of reality would be a strategic
weapon designed to undermine the support a government receives from its
citizens—and would be more valuable than military operations at the physical
level of combat. We can see that even in
1989 that the main ideas of 4GW were consistent with John Boyd’s thinking on
the nature of moral conflict. NOTE:
William S. Lind, Major John F.
Schmitt, and Colonel Gary I. Wilson, “Fourth Generation Warfare: Another Look,”
U.S. Marine Corps Gazette, December 1994, at http://www.dnipogo.org/fcs/4GW_another_look.htm.
Wikipedia, “National Empowerment
Television,” no date, accessed April 26, 2013, at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Empowerment_Television.
Watch Pair (Barbara Aho),
“The Heritage Foundation: Power Elites: The Merger of Right and Left,” April
22, 1999, at https://web.archive.org/web/19990422122843/http://www.watch.pair.com/heritage.html.
What is shocking about Lind’s 1994
article on 4GW in the Gazette is
that in an official U.S. Department of Defense journal, Lind openly and
deliberately and obliquely targeted President Clinton, the Democratic Party,
and the liberal intelligentsia and academia.
We know from Wikipedia that Lind’s
program, Next
Revolution,
began broadcasting on the Free Congress Foundation’s National Empowerment
Television network in December 1993.
Barbara Aho quoted from a FCF blurb for the
program. Lind described the program: “Next
Revolution is
one of the most radical—and most popular—programs on America’s Voice. Each week, hosts Bill Lind and Brad Keena say
what people are thinking but are often afraid to say: that the cultural Marxism
of Political Correctness is destroying our country, that ‘multicultural’
nations break apart in civil war, and that uncontrolled immigration and rising
crime are turning America into a Third World nation.”
NOTE:
Eric
Heubeck, ‟The Integration of Theory and Practice: A Program for the New
Traditionalist Movement,” [Free Congress Foundation, 2001], no date, at https://web.archive.org/web/20010713152425/http:/www.freecongress.org/centers/conservatism/traditionalist.htm.
Bruce Wilson, “Paul Weyrich’s Teaching Manual For The New
Progressive Movement,” Talk to Action, September 9, 2006, at http://www.talk2action.org/story/2006/9/9/13473/53538. NOTE:
William S. Lind, “Understanding
Fourth Generation War,” Antiwar.com, January 15, 2004, at http://antiwar.com/lind/?articleid=1702.
William
S. Lind, “Hate!,” Traditional Right, October 25, 2013, at https://www.traditionalright.com/hate/.
William
S. Lind, “Cultural Marxism Takes the Offensive,” Traditional Right, April 21,
2015, at https://www.traditionalright.com/cultural-marxism-takes-the-offensive/.
The
following quotes illustrate how a practitioner of 4GW, William S. Lind the
originator of 4GW, uses rhetoric to delegitimize an opponent, in this case,
liberalism. Lind is certainly not the
only Christian Right political operator to do so and these quotes do not
exhaust his loathing for liberalism.
But, Lind constantly tells his right-wing audience that liberals are the
enemy, they pose an existential cultural threat to their version of America,
and an existential threat to them as persons. NOTE:
William
S. Lind, “The Rise of White Political Consciousness,” Traditional Right, March
23, 2016, at https://www.traditionalright.com/the-election-the-rise-of-white-political-consciousness/.
William
S. Lind, “How to Prevent 4GW in America,” Traditional Right, February 19, 2017,
at https://www.traditionalright.com/the-view-from-olympus-how-to-prevent-4gw-in-america/.
William
S. Lind, “Nazism and Fascism Are Dead,” Traditional Right, September 24, 2017,
at https://www.traditionalright.com/nazism-and-fascism-are-dead/.
William S. Lind, “Words That Lie,”
Traditional Right, September 20, 2017, at https://www.traditionalright.com/words-that-lie/.
David Neiwert, The Eliminationists:
How Hate Talk Radicalized the American Right, Sausalito, CA: Poli
Point Press, 2009.
Seymour Martin Lipset and
Earl Raab, The
Politics of Unreason: Right-Wing Extremism in America, 1790-1970, New
York: Harper Torchbook,
1970, p. 6.
Lind, having painted liberals as an
existential threat, then suggests that the final solution for liberals is
extermination. David Neiwert
calls this rhetoric eliminationism. It
is widespread on the right-wing. But,
this eliminationist
rhetoric also strongly corroborates what Seymour Martin Lipset
and Earl Raab
noted was one the central characteristics of the right-wing, namely, its
commitment to monism.
As Lipset and Raab
observed, “More precisely, the operational essence of extremism, of monism, is
the tendency to treat cleavage and ambivalence as illegitimate.”
NOTE:
Major
Jeffrey L. Cowan (USAF), “From Air Force Fighter Pilot to Marine Corps
Warfighting: Colonel John Boyd, His Theories on War, and their Unexpected
Legacy,” U.S. Marine Corps Command and Staff College, paper submitted for the
Masters of Military Studies, 1999-2000, at http://www.dnipogo.org/fcs/boyd_thesis.htm.
Frans P.B. Osinga, Science, Strategy and War: The strategic
theory of John Boyd,
London: Routledge, 2007, Chapter, pp. 166-180, 215-7.
In Boyd’s schema of
conflict—physical, mental, and moral—moral conflict is the highest and most
powerful. The objective of moral
conflict, the underlying epistemological strategy of 4GW, is to create fear,
anxiety, and alienation which magnifies friction and thus collapses an enemy
from within. As Boyd wrote (Osinga, p.
176), the “strategic aim is to: ‘Penetrate moral-mental-physical well-being to
dissolve his moral fiber, disorient his mental images, disrupt his operations,
and overload his system, as well as subvert, shatter, seize or otherwise subdue
those moral-mental-physical bastions, connections, or activities that he
depends upon, in order to destroy internal harmony, produce paralysis, and
collapse adversary’s will to resist.’”
Boyd’s moral conflict involves both
offensive and defensive operations.
Defensively, leaders must inoculate their soldiers or citizens from
menace, uncertainty, and mistrust. Offensively,
leaders must undertake operations to create menace, uncertainty, and mistrust
in the adversary’s military or society.
Whether one is attacking the mind
of the opposing commander, the adversary’s military, the opposing political
leader, or the enemy’s citizens, the objective is to collapse their will to
resist.
NOTE:
Julie
J. Ingersoll, Building
God’s Kingdom: Inside the World of Christian Reconstruction, New
York: Oxford University Press, 2015.
James
C. Sanford, Blueprint
for Theocracy: The Christian Right’s Vision for America,
Providence, RI: Metacomet Books, 2014.
Flo
Conway and Jim Siegelman, Holy
Terror: The Fundamentalist War on America’s Freedoms in Religion, Politics and
Our Private Lives,
New York: Doubleday, 1982.
We have seen how Lind used menace
and fear to both delegitimize liberals and liberalism and to warn right-wingers
of the existential danger to themselves.
But, the Christian Right has been building up the moral resolve of its
followers using a very conservative brand of evangelical, neo-fundamentalist
Christianity. Believing that they are
obedient to the “authority of God” and executing the “will of God,” they
believe they will be victorious and bring in the Kingdom.
NOTE:
Flo
Conway and Jim Siegelman, Holy
Terror: The Fundamentalist War on America’s Freedoms in Religion, Politics and
Our Private Lives,
New York: Doubleday, 1982, pp. 215-7.
NOTE:
H.
Wayne House and Thomas Ice, Dominion Theology, Blessing or Curse?: An
Analysis of Christian Reconstructionism, Portland, OR: Multnomah, 1988, p.
412.
See
also the discussion in Julie
J. Ingersoll, Building
God’s Kingdom: Inside the World of Christian Reconstruction, New
York: Oxford University Press, 2015, pp. 56-69.
Anti-Defamation League, The
Religious Right: The Assault on Tolerance & Pluralism in America, New
York: ADL, 1994, p. 1.
The
Christian Right, the driving force of the Republican Party, in ideology, public
policies, and electoral power, wants domination.
The King
James Version Dictionary defines
dominion in its first meaning: “Sovereign or supreme authority; the power of
governing and controlling.” Its second
meaning is even more ominous: “Power to direct, control, use and dispose of at
pleasure; right of possession and use without being accountable…”
Nothing suggests that the Christian
Right is dedicated to maintaining America’s current secular, democratic,
pluralistic society. As the ADL noted
1994, “During the past 15 years, an exclusionist religious movement has
attempted to restore…the ruins of a Christian nation by seeking more closely to
unite its version of Christianity with state power.”
NOTE:
Frederick
Clarkson, “Dominionism
Rising: A Theocratic Movement Hiding in Plain Sight,” Political Research
Associates, August 18, 20160, at http://www.politicalresearch.org/2016/08/18/dominionism-rising-a-theocratic-movement-hiding-in-plain-sight/.
Frederick
Clarkson, one of the country’s leading and early analysts of the developing
Christian Right, noted that all of the key concepts of dominionism,
whether in a hard or soft version, lead to religious domination by a peculiar
version of Christianity.
NOTE:
Frederick
Clarkson, “Dominionism
Rising: A Theocratic Movement Hiding in Plain Sight,” Political Research
Associates, August 18, 2016, at http://www.politicalresearch.org/2016/08/18/dominionism-rising-a-theocratic-movement-hiding-in-plain-sight/ .
Clarkson pointed out that there are
three strains of dominionism. The originators in the modern America era
were the Christian Reconstructionists, a
small religious movement founded by Rousas J. Rushdoony,
that proved to be the intellectual driving force of the Christian Right from
the early 1960s. Though many Christian
Right leaders have been influenced, explicitly or implicitly, by the Christian Reconstructionists, few
will admit to being followers.
The most dominant strain is now the
New Apostolic Reformation, a non-denominational brand of Christianity that
brings together Pentecostals, Charismatics, Fundamentalists, and
Evangelicals. It is geared, in part, towards
Spiritual Warfare against demons on earth and Spiritual Mapping of satanic
bastions.
Francis Schaeffer’s importance has
greatly faded. He helped bring
evangelicals into the anti-abortion fight, but it is admitted by Paul Weyrich that
opposition to the desegregation of whites-only, Christian academies is what
compelled the formation of the Christian Right.
NOTE:
Coalition on Revival, A
Manifesto for the Christian Church,
July 4, 1986, at http://www.churchcouncil.org/Reformation_net/COR_Docs/Christian_Manifesto_Worldview.pdf, 1986/1999/2002.
Frederick Clarkson, Eternal
Hostility: The Struggle Between Theocracy and Democracy, Monroe, Maine: Common Courage
Press, 1997, p. 96.
Colonel V. Doner,
Christian
Jihad: Neo-Fundamentalists and the Polarization of America, Denver: Samizdat Creative, 2012,
pp. 160-8 .
Discernment
Research Group, “Denying Dominionism,” Herescope, August 26, 2011, at http://herescope.blogspot.com/2011/08/denying-dominionism.html.
The central importance of the
Coalition on Revival cannot be overstated.
The COR allowed conservative religious groups that had not previously
cooperated due to deep theological and eschatological differences to join
together in a coalition to engage in political combat against the forces of
secularism, liberalism, and pluralism.
These documents provided a common political and theological ground
allowing the racist, anti-Semitic Christian Identity movement to cooperate with
the Christian Right in the formation of the Patriot militia movement in the
1990s.
The 17 worldview or sphere
documents were eventually reduced down to 7 mountains.
NOTE:
Gary DeMar and Colonel Doner,
“The Christian World View of Government,” Coalition on Revival, COR Sphere
Document, 1989 and 2004, at http://www.reformation.net/Pages/COR_Docs_Worldview_Docs.htm.
These foundational documents of the
Coalition on Revival demonstrate beyond a shadow of doubt that the Christian
Right is pursuing a political-religious strategy in deep conflict with the
letter and spirit of the U.S. Constitution.
NOTE:
Gary DeMar and Colonel Doner,
“The Christian World View of Government,” Coalition on Revival, COR Sphere
Document, 1989 and 2004, at http://www.reformation.net/Pages/COR_Docs_Worldview_Docs.htm.
Frederick
Clarkson, “Dominionism
Rising: A Theocratic Movement Hiding in Plain Sight,” Political Research
Associates, August 18, 2016, at http://www.politicalresearch.org/2016/08/18/dominionism-rising-a-theocratic-movement-hiding-in-plain-sight/.
Sandhya Bathija, “Praying For Theocracy?: Across The
Country, Groups Seek To Impose ‘Religious Law,’” Americans United, November 20,
2009, at http://blog.au.org/2009/11/20/praying-for-theocracy-across-the-country-groups-seek-to-impose-religious-law/.
In
2009, the Christian Right managed through the leading efforts of a Catholic
scholar and eventual 7 Mountains proponent, Robert P. George, to forge the Manhattan
Declaration,
essentially the opening shot in the battle over the meaning of religious
liberty and a war for religious supremacy.
NOTE:
Frederick
Clarkson, “When Exemption is the Rule: The Religious Freedom Strategy of the
Christian Right,” Political Research Associates, January 12, 2016, at http://www.politicalresearch.org/2016/01/12/when-exemption-is-the-rule-the-religious-freedom-strategy-of-the-christian-right/.
NOTE:
Rachel
Tabachnick, “Palin’s Churches and the Third
Wave,” Talk to Action, September 5, 2008, at http://www.talk2action.org/story/2008/9/5/0244/84583/.
Sandy
Simpson, “The Third Wave ‘New Apostolic Reformation,’” Deception in the Church,
October 2002, at http://www.deceptioninthechurch.com/thirdwaveteachings.html.
Dog
Emperor, “Dominionism as a coercive religious movement
(part 3),” Daily Kos, October 4, 2006, at
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2006/10/04/253481/-Dominionism-as-a-coercive-religious-movement-part-3.
The New Apostolic Reformation is a
fluid religious movement. Known also as
the Third Wave or Joel’s Army, it is also includes the mixture of Latter Rain
and the Manifest Sons of God.
Of central importance is the belief
that members of Joel’s Army are divine beings carrying out God’s will to
conquer the world and bring the earth under Christ. Of course, they also believe that Christ
dwells within themselves, so it is apparent that they are going to do the
killing.
But this belief in moral
superiority and physical invincibility conforms with Boyd’s notion of Moral
Victory—the defeat of menace, fear, and alienation.
NOTE:
Dog Emperor, “‘Seven Mountains’ and
the ‘Joel’s Army’ plan for takeover,” Daily Kos, October 7, 2008, at https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2008/10/7/621837/-.
Philip Jenkins, Laying
Down the Sword: Why We Can’t Ignore the Bible’s Violent Verses, New
York: HarperOne,
2011, p. 34.
The 7 Mountains doctrine is not
benign. DogEmperor, a
survivor of an abusive, coercive right-wing church, uncovered that the
proponents conceive of themselves as equivalent to ancient Israel’s founders
and apparently endorse genocide.
NOTE:
Johnny Enlow, “Girgashites and
the Mountain of Government,” Reclaim 7 Mountains, January 2008, at http://www.reclaim7mountains.com/apps/articles/default.asp?articleid=39113&columnid=4336.
Enlow is a
leading proponent of the 7 Mountains doctrine and is quite explicit in stating
that, translated into English, Democrats are doing the work of Satan.
It is important also to note that
an apostolic ruler need not and probably should not have the title of
“apostle.” Rather, this ruler should
have the anointing to do God’s will.
NOTE:
Cole
Parke, “Religious Right Leaders Strategize: Who Needs SCOTUS When You Can
Control Everything Else?,” Political Research Associates, June 26, 2015, at http://www.politicalresearch.org/2015/06/26/religious-right-leaders-strategize-who-needs-scotus-when-you-can-control-everything-else/.
If you look at 7 Mountains doctrine
in light of Fourth Generation Warfare, you can see how various groups and
policies are attacking the legitimacy of a secular, democratic, and pluralist
society.
NOTE:
Miranda, “Fact Sheet: Gov. Rick
Perry’s Extremist Allies,” Right Wing Watch, June 9, 2011, at http://www.rightwingwatch.org/post/fact-sheet-gov-rick-perrys-extremist-allies/.
Kyle Mantyla,
“300: Religious Right Forming Its Own Spartan Army,” Right Wing Watch, March 7,
2011, at http://www.rightwingwatch.org/post/300-religious-right-forming-it-own-spartan-army/.
Frederick
Clarkson, “Dominionism is
the New Religious Freedom,” Political Research Associates, February 14, 2016 at
http://www.politicalresearch.org/2016/02/14/dominionism-is-the-new-religious-freedom/.
Kyle, “Dominionism and
The Religious Right: The Merger Is Complete,” Right Wing Watch, July 6, 2010,
at http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/dominionism-and-religious-right-merger-complete.
Bruce Wilson, “Palin Pastors,
Ensign C Street House Owner Promote Same Infiltration Plan,” Talk to Action,
July 16, 2009, at http://www.talk2action.org/story/2009/7/16/143533/029.
Kyle Mantyla,
“Congressional Prayer Caucus Teams Up for Seven Mountain-Themed Pre-Election
Prayer Rally,” Right Wing Watch, August 30, 2012, at http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/congressional-prayer-caucus-teams-seven-mountain-themed-pre-election-prayer-rally.
Brian Tashman,
“Religious Right and Dominionist
Leaders Come Together (Again) for ‘America for Jesus,’” Right Wing Watch, July
27, 2012, at http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/religious-right-dominionists-again-america-for-jesus.
NOTE:
Mike Lofgren, “GOP Insider: How Religion
Destroyed My Party,” AlterNet, August 7, 2012, at http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/gop-insider-how-religion-destroyed-my-party.
Miranda,
“Fact Sheet: Gov. Rick Perry’s Extremist Allies,” Right Wing Watch, June 9,
2011, at http://www.rightwingwatch.org/post/fact-sheet-gov-rick-perrys-extremist-allies/.
Hemant Mehta, “South Carolina
Governor Calls on Pastors Across the State to Join Her for a Christian
Revival,” Patheos, May 18, 2015, at http://www.patheos.com/blogs/friendlyatheist/2015/05/18/south-carolina-governor-calls-on-pastors-across-the-state-to-join-her-for-a-christian-revival/.
Bruce Wilson, “Ted Cruz: Born From
The Heart of the Dominionist Christian Right,” Talk To Action,
March 23, 2015, at http://www.talk2action.org/story/2015/3/23/133750/843/.
Warren
Throckmorton, “Bachmann Staffer Likens Rick Perry to King Saul and Bachmann to
anointed King David,” Religion Dispatches, August 18, 2011, at http://www.religiondispatches.org/dispatches/guest_bloggers/5004/bachmann_staffer_likens_rick_perry_to_king_saul_and_bachmann_to_anointed_king_david/.
Rachel
Tabachnick, “Lou Engle Only One of Many of
Sen. Brownback’s NAR Apostle Problems,” Talk to Action, October 17, 2010, at http://www.talk2action.org/story/2010/10/17/11135/471/.
Bruce
Wilson, “Ensign’s ‘C Street House’ Owned By Group Touting Plans For Christian
World Control,” The Huffington Post, July 11, 2009, at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bruce-wilson/ensigns-c-street-house-ow_b_230015.html.
NOTE:
D.C. McAllister, “Why It’s Justified To
Vote For A Morally Questionable Politician,” The Federalist, November 28, 2017,
at http://thefederalist.com/2017/11/28/justified-vote-morally-questionable-politician/.
No one would mistake Donald Trump
for a righteous man, let alone a man with a moral compass. But, have no doubt that the leading thinkers
and operators of the Christian Right believe that Donald Trump is on a divine
mission.
Writing at the “secular” The
Federalist website, McAllister argued that conservative Christians could vote
for an immoral man because God used them to do his work. McAllister claimed, “God uses, in this
secular sphere, all kinds of ‘immoral’ men and women to bring about his
purposes for his church. He is actually rather utilitarian and pragmatic
regarding the secular world…. King David was an adulterer. Samson was a
womanizer. Jonah was a coward. Peter denied Christ. All served God well.”
In other words, in the alternate
reality of the Christian Right, biography and character count for nothing.
NOTE:
Michael Reynolds, “Rendering Unto
God,” Mother
Jones,
December 2005, at http://motherjones.com/politics/2005/12/rendering-unto-god.
Mike Reynolds [mryen],
“At Play in the Fields of Mammon,” Talk to Action, October 26, 2006, at http://www.talk2action.org/story/2006/10/26/182546/91.
Nothing demonstrates commitment
like the source of money. The National
Christian Foundation receives a rather large donation from a donor and then
makes a donation to an organization that adheres to those Christian beliefs. The Foundation determines the ultimate
recipient, not the donor.
Do we ever see disclosure of
funding for such “secular” organizations as the Koch-funded Americans for
Prosperity or the Heritage Foundation or the Ludwig von Mises Institute in the
media? The State Policy Network is a
50-state network of libertarian, “secular” think tanks, partly funded by the
Koch brothers. The State Policy Network
was instrumental in giving policy direction to the then nascent Tea Party
movement.
This shows the two-faced nature of the
Christian Right. Right next to its
religious face is an essentially faux secular face—both in service to the
billionaire class. For tax cuts and no
regulations, the billionaires will gladly fund a theocratic movement.