Saturday, August 11, 2007

Religious Right Claims Others Can't Be Christian, Have Values

I can't tell you how welcome I find this clarification:

The Family Research Council is launching a project aimed at convincing its supporters before the 2008 election that liberal politicians “are spouting God-talk” in order to “confuse people of faith” and hide their “true agenda.” Invoking the Religious Right’s recent favored phrase for its imagined constituency – as well as the “Swift Boat” campaign of 2004 – the so-called “Values Voters for Truth” campaign is an attempt to vilify liberals – and, obviously, Democratic candidates – as enemies of Christianity who are undertaking a conspiracy to “deceive and split values voters.” From a recent fundraising letter from FRC Action:

Our relentless effort to reveal the facts about the Left’s true agenda is already under way. It will not stop until the last vote of the 2008 election has been cast. The Values Voters for Truth campaign will partner with organizations in all 50 states—and at the national level. We will mobilize values voters, engage them in the war of ideas, and keep them informed and involved.

We will rally churches to the cause. And by God’s grace, we will neutralize our opponents’ deceptive tactics.


As an example of this supposed “fraud,” the letter cites a Democratic presidential candidate who spoke of his “belief in Christ” and also supports civil unions for gay couples. Similarly, the letter warns that a candidate noting a “biblical call to feed the hungry” also voted against an anti-abortion bill. A third candidate is denounced for the “hypocrisy” of wanting to let gay couples adopt children. According to FRC, these supposed contradictions indicate that Democrats discussing their faith and values is merely “lip service,” part of a “campaign of deception” that led directly to the Democrats winning control of Congress in the 2006 elections.

Read the rest ...

May I refer you to The Pope and his opinion on the topic?

Of course, I'm confused ... again.

1 comment:

Trudy said...

And when will it be safe for someone who is a non-Xtian to run for public office in this country?

What gall for the Religious right to say who is fit for public office or not, based upon religious claims or affiliations?

Someone in the Bible Belt needs to turn off TV tonight and pick up some writing of Thomas Jefferson, hmm? He wrote some drivel about separation of church and state if I recall.

But I know, next to George W.....Jefferson's just a slacker, right?