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Moral Values:
Torture v. Gay Marriage *
This is one of the
great euphemisms of our time. Extraordinary rendition
is the name that's been given to the policy of seizing
individuals without even the semblance of due process
and sending them off to be interrogated by regimes
known to practice torture. In terms of bad behavior,
it stands side by side with contract killings.
Our henchmen in places like Syria, Egypt, Morocco,
Uzbekistan and Jordan are torturing terror suspects at
the behest of a nation - the United States - that just
went through a national election in which the issue of
moral values was supposed to have been decisive. How
in the world did we become a country in which gays'
getting married is considered an abomination, but
torture is O.K.? As Ms. Mayer [of the New
Yorker] pointed out: "Terrorism suspects in Europe,
Africa, Asia and the Middle East have often been
abducted by hooded or masked American agents, then
forced onto a Gulfstream V jet,
Herbert,
NY Times, 2/11/05
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Dear
President Bush,
Thank you
for doing so much to educate people regarding God's Law. I have
learned a great deal from you and understand why you would propose and
support a constitutional amendment banning same sex marriage. As you
said "in the eyes of God marriage is based between a man a woman." I
try to share that knowledge with as many people as I can. When someone
tries to defend the homosexual lifestyle, for example, I simply remind
them that Leviticus 18:22 clearly states it to be an abomination. End
of debate. I do need some advice from you, however, regarding some
other elements of God's Laws and how to follow them. Leviticus
25:44 states that I may possess slaves, both male and female,
J. Kent
Ashcroft and others
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Bush
the Crusader*
Bruce
Bartlett, a domestic policy adviser to Ronald Reagan and a treasury
official for the first President Bush, told me recently that ''if Bush wins, there will be a civil
war in the Republican Party starting on Nov. 3.'' The nature of that
conflict, as Bartlett sees it? Essentially, the same as the one raging
across much of the world: a battle between modernists and
fundamentalists, pragmatists and true believers, reason and religion.
. .''This is why George W. Bush is so clear-eyed about Al Qaeda and
the Islamic fundamentalist enemy. He believes you have to kill them
all. They can't be persuaded, that they're extremists, driven by a
dark vision. He understands them, because he's just like them. . . ..
''He truly believes he's on a mission from God. Absolute faith like
that overwhelms a need for analysis. The whole thing about faith is to
believe things for which there is no empirical evidence.'' Bartlett
paused, then said, ''But you can't run the world on faith.''
RON
SUSKIND, NY Times Mag., 10/17/04
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Boykins's Brimstone Bigotry *
The
first reports sounded like an over-the-top satire of the Bush
Pentagon: the deputy secretary of defense for intelligence - the
ranking general charged with the hunt for Osama bin Laden - was
parading in uniform to Christian pulpits, preaching that God had put George Bush in the White House and that Islamic terrorists will only be
defeated "if we come at them in the name of Jesus." But now a Pentagon
inquiry has concluded that Lt. Gen. William Boykin did indeed preach
his grossly offensive gospel at 23 churches, pronouncing Satan the
mastermind of the terrorists because "he wants to destroy us as a
Christian army.". . Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, far from
disturbed, praised General Boykin . . .The sense of offense
among Islamic Americans is already deep. Removal of the
preacher-general should be a no-brainer, however much the president's
campaign generals might fear offending the Christian right voting bloc.
NY Times Editorial,
8/26/04
Bush
Justifies Torture using
Moral Relativism and Situational Ethics!
A team of administration lawyers concluded in a March
2003 legal memorandum that President Bush was not bound by either an
international treaty
prohibiting torture or by a federal antitorture law because he had the
authority as commander in chief to approve any technique needed to
protect the nation's security. The memo, prepared for Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, also said that any executive branch
officials, including those in the military, could be immune from
domestic and international prohibitions against torture for a variety
of reasons. . .[Another report said] interrogators could justify
breaching laws or treaties by invoking the doctrine of necessity. An
interrogator using techniques that cause harm might be immune from
liability if he "believed at the moment that his act is necessary and
designed to avoid greater harm."
NEIL A. LEWIS and ERIC SCHMITT, NY Times, 6/8/04
Religiosity*
Karl Rove .
. . is well aware of his president's troubles, and -- even as the
Beltway boys and girls obsess over Iraq -- Team Bush is furiously
sucking up to the base on domestic issues. Just this week, W.
delivered a keep-the-faith barn-burner to nearly 2,000 religious
leaders and social service workers . . .In his best preacher's voice,
Bush spoke of souls lost and found, the power of the Good Book, and
the need to surrender one's life to "a higher being." But his larger
goal: Reminding the audience of what a key friend he has been.
Stressing his commitment to government funding of religious groups, .
. .[and] who is with them on . . . home-grown moral atrocities that
inflame the right far more than anything that went down at Abu Ghraib.
Michelle Cottle, The New Republic, 6/4/04
Bush, the
Apocalyptic*
It was an
e-mail we weren't meant to see. Not for our eyes were the notes that
showed White House staffers taking two-hour meetings with Christian
fundamentalists, where they passed off bogus social science on gay
marriage as if it were holy writ and issued fiery warnings that "the
Presidents [sic] Administration and current Government is engaged in
cultural, economical, and social struggle on every level"—this to a
group whose representative in Israel believed herself to have been
attacked by witchcraft unleashed by proximity to a volume of Harry
Potter. Most of all, apparently, we're not supposed to know the
National Security Council's top Middle East aide consults with
apocalyptic Christians eager to ensure American policy on Israel
conforms with their sectarian doomsday scenarios.
Rick Perlstein, The VillageVoice,
5/18/04
The Bush
Crusade*
As an
article on Monday in The Times noted about the growing ranks of angry
Muslims: "The call to jihad is rising in the streets of Europe, and is
being answered."
Communing with the Higher Father and the Almighty, President Bush has
either stumbled into a Holy War or swaggered into one.
In their new book, "The Bushes," Peter and Rochelle Schweizer, who
interviewed many Bushes, including the president's father and his
brother Jeb, quote one unnamed relative as saying that W. sees the war
on terror "as a religious war": "He doesn't have a P.C. view of this
war. His view of this is that they are trying to kill the Christians.
And we the Christians will strike back with more force and more
ferocity than they will ever know."
Maureen Dowd, NY Times, 4/29/04
God Made Me
Do It
(Again)
Reports
Woodward and 60 Minutes:
Did Mr. Bush ask his father for any advice? "I asked the president
about this. And President Bush said, 'Well no,' and then he got
defensive about it," says Woodward. "And then he said something that
really struck me. He said of his father, 'He is the wrong father to
appeal to for advice. The wrong father to go to, to appeal to in terms
of strength.' And then he said, 'There's a higher father that I appeal
to.'" Perhaps Bush believes that he has a pipeline to God, that he can
ask God for advice about which wars to launch. . .Says Woodward,
succinctly, of Bush: "He's not an intellectual." He's not. But
Woodward makes clear that Bush is perfectly capable of disguising his
godly work from people who disagree, such as Colin Powell,
Robert Dreyfuss, TomPaine.com, 4/19/04
Pat Robertson on the
Election
Pat Robertson
says that God has spoken to him and told him that George W. Bush will be
re-elected because he deserves to be.
Here's Pat
Robertson's exact quote: "I think George Bush is going to win in a walk.
I'm hearing from the Lord that it's going to be a blowout." . . .
"Andrew," God
said to me. He always calls me "Andrew." I like that.
"Andrew, you
have the eyes and ears of a lot of people. I wish you'd tell your
viewers that both Pat Robertson and Mel Gibson strike me as wackos.
. . .
My
own question to Pat Robertson is this: The election looks as though it
could be close, certainly not a blowout. If George W. Bush loses the
election to a Democrat, will you become an atheist?
Andy
Rooney, 60 Minutes, 2/22/04
Chaney on Religion
Over the
holidays, Vice President Dick Cheney's Christmas card symbolized all
that troubles me about the way politicians treat faith — not as a source
for spiritual improvement, but as a pedestal to strut upon. Mr. Cheney's
card is dominated by a quotation by Benjamin Franklin: "And if a sparrow
cannot fall to the ground without His notice, is it probable that an
empire can rise without His aid?"
It's hard not to see that as a boast that the U.S. has become the global
superpower because God is on our side. And "empire" suggests Iraq: is
Mr. Cheney contending that in the dispute over the latest gulf war, God
was pulling for the White House and fulminating at Democrats and others
in Beelzebub's camp? . . .Or there's the real Ben Franklin — not the one
counterfeited by Mr. Cheney — who warned each of the framers of the
Constitution to "doubt a little of his own infallibility." That would be
a useful text for Mr. Cheney's Christmas card next year.
Kritstof,
NY Times, 1/7/04
Politics and Religion
Last
year the Bush administration, in return for a military base in
Uzbekistan, gave $500 million to a government that, according
to the State Department, uses torture "as a routine investigation
technique," and whose president has killed opponents with boiling water.
The moral clarity police were notably quiet.
Why is aiding a
brutal dictator O.K., while trying to understand why others don't trust
us — and doing something to create that trust — isn't? Why won't the
administration mollify Muslims by firing Lt. Gen. William Boykin, whose
anti-Islamic remarks have created vast ill will, from his
counterterrorism position? . . .It's sheer folly to keep General Boykin
in his present position, but as Howard Fineman writes in a Newsweek
Web-exclusive column, the administration doesn't want "to make a martyr
of a man who depicts himself as a Christian Soldier, marching off to
war." . . .Yet because of a domestic political struggle that seems ever
more centered on religion, such attempts at understanding are shouted
down. Krugman, NY
Times 10/28/03
The
10 Commandments Judge
*:
The
Ten Commandments is a crowd-pleasing cause. A huge majority of Americans
regard these words as a map for a good life, though an equally large
majority has trouble reciting them. In this Disney culture, it's
entirely possible more people can name the seven dwarfs -- including Doc
-- than the Ten Commandments.
Americans seem to want the
Commandments displayed even if they don't want them all enforced. When
was the last time we arrested people at the local mall for dishonoring
the Sabbath? When was adultery last a felony?
The Ten
Commandments grace the walls of the U.S. Supreme Court building without
controversy. Moses stands along with Confucius and Mohammed in a frieze
celebrating the history of the law. But Roy's Rock is about as
nonsectarian as a sign over a judicial bench reading "What Would Jesus
Do?"
Ellen Goodman, Washington Post 8/30/03
Bush & the
Religious Right:
Many
conservative Christians view support for Israel and its right-wing
government as an obligation flowing directly from biblical prophecy.
Middle East experts say this activism has complicated matters for the
Bush administration as it tries to navigate the tricky shoals and
riptides of the region. "They make it difficult for the administration
to move toward more centrist policies, and they make it difficult to
hold to the president's determination for a two-state solution as
outlined in his roadmap for peace," said David Mack, vice president of
the Middle East Institute, a Washington think tank. . .Given the key
role conservative Christians play in the Republican electoral coalition,
DeLay's comments and travels were widely interpreted as a cautionary
message to
Bush
Ken Fireman, Newsday 7/30/03
Faith Gone Amuck: The
rest -- a nuclear program, links to terrorism -- was a different matter.
No one much believed it. But Bush, it is now clear, did. He
believed --
virtually without evidence -- that Saddam and bin
Laden were in cahoots. Why? It's hard to say, but probably because they
were both evil. Evil leaders do evil things and they do them together.
The evidence for this is lacking, to be sure,
but you have to take it as a matter of faith. Bush
did. . . . The favorite Bush grammatical construction is the
tautology: Something is bad because it's bad. A synaptic leap is made in
which a certain cause will have a certain effect -- never mind why.
Richard Cohen, NY Times, 7/17/03
Bush and the Devine Plan:
"We are
witnessing a shift in Bush's theology – from talking mostly about a
Wesleyan theology of "personal transformation" to describing a Calvinist
"divine plan" laid out by a sovereign God for the country and himself.
This shift has the potential to affect Bush's approach to terrorism, Iraq
and his presidency.
" Deborah
Caldwell,
Religion News Service 2/12/03
God Made Me Do It:
‘God told me to strike at al Qaida and I struck them, and then he instructed me to strike at
Saddam, which I did, and now I am determined to solve the problem in the
Middle East.
If
you help me I will act, and if not, the elections will come and I will have
to focus on them.”
George W. Bush, June 2003 in
discussions with Abbas on Palistine.
"This
crusade, this war on terrorism is going to take a while."
This conviction
that he is doing God's will has surfaced more openly since 9/11. In his
State of the Union addresses and other public forums, he has presented
himself as the leader of a global war against evil. As for a war in Iraq,
''we do not claim to know all the ways of Providence, yet we can trust in
them.'' God is at work in world affairs, he says, calling for the United
States to lead a liberating crusade in the Middle East, and ''this call of
history has come to the right country.''
Jackson Lears, NY Times
3/11/03
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The Bush
Theory of Science *
WITH THEIR SLICK
Web sites, . . .the proponents of "intelligent design"
-- a "theory" that challenges the validity of
Darwinian evolution -- are far more sophisticated than
the creationists of yore. . .they operate simply by
casting doubt on evolution, largely using the
time-honored argument that intelligent life could not
have come about by a random natural process and must
have been the work of a single creator. They do no
experiments and do not publish in recognized
scientific journals. . . . this new generation of
anti-evolutionists, arguing that children have a
"right to question" scientific truths. . . 67 percent
of those who voted for President Bush -- do not, . . .
believe in evolution at all. . .To teach intelligent
design as science in public schools is a clear
violation of the principle of separation of church and
state. It also violates principles of common sense.
Washington Post Editorial, 1/24/05
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Censorship of Science *
FOR YEARS
the World Health Organization has enlisted US government scientists to
attend WHO meetings or serve on its panels without first getting the
approval of the federal government. That open relationship between the
UN organization and scientists ended in April, however, when the Bush
administration decreed that WHO must first clear appointees with the
Department of Health and Human Services. . . The new policy is a
textbook example of what the Union of Concerned Scientists complained
about in a report issued in February on the politicization of science
by the Bush administration. At that time, 60 of the nation's top
scientists said the administration had systematically suppressed or
misrepresented science. They called on Congress to hold investigative
hearings.
Boston Globe Editorial
7/2/04
Bush's Orwellian Science*
In the
Orwellian world of 21st century America, two plus two no longer equals
four where public policy is concerned, and science is no exception.
When a right-wing theory is contradicted by an inconvenient scientific
fact, the science is not refuted; it is simply discarded or ignored. .
. Over-the-counter morning-after contraceptive sales are banned. .
.health risks of mercury were discounted . . .A National Cancer
Institute fact sheet was doctored to suggest that abortion increases
breast-cancer risk. . .the Bush administration distanced itself from a
climate report the Environmental Protection Agency wrote. . .the
National Institutes of Health and Centers for Disease Control quietly
removed information on the benefits of condoms and safe sex education.
Gov. Howard
Dean, MD, Daily Camera.com, 7/5/04
Bush-League
Science*
The
administration misrepresented the findings of the National Academy of
Sciences and other experts on climate change. It meddled with the
discussion of climate change in an Environmental Protection Agency
report until the EPA eliminated that section. It suppressed another
EPA study that showed that the administration's proposed Clear Skies
Act would do less than current law to reduce air pollution . . . It
even dropped independent scientists from advisory committees on lead
poisoning and drug abuse in favor of ones with ties to industry. . .
The Department of Health and Human Services deleted information from
its Web sites that runs contrary to the president's preference for
"abstinence only" sex education programs. . . .
The
Editors, Scientific American
Bush Attacks
Science*
Today, more
than 60 leading scientists—including Nobel laureates, leading medical
experts, former federal agency directors and university chairs and
presidents—issued a statement calling for regulatory and legislative
action to restore scientific integrity to federal policymaking.
According to the scientists, the Bush administration has, among other
abuses, suppressed and distorted scientific analysis from federal
agencies, and taken actions that have undermined the quality of
scientific advisory panels. “Across a broad range of issues, the
administration has undermined the quality of the scientific advisory
system and the morale of the government’s outstanding scientific
personnel,” said Dr. Kurt Gottfried, emeritus professor of physics at
Cornell Union
of Concerned Scientists, 2/18/04
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