Take Your Bats and Balls and Go Home

In the late 1950s, when I was an adolescent growing up on a cotton farm just south of Caruthersville, my parents often took my little sister and I on Saturdays to visit our older sister’s family who lived in town. There we would spend most of the day playing with our nephew and niece, both slightly younger, while the older folks commiserated about life. Invariably my nephew and I turned to baseball or softball for entertainment, and we frequently recruited neighborhood kids from Madison, Collins, and later Zaida Avenues for a friendly game, if the weather permitted. During one such game a gaggle of kids from houses at the far end of the street showed up, as a team, and wanted to play. We agreed enthusiastically, and so began a series of encounters that I will never forget—mainly because of the lessons it taught me about human nature. When the inevitable childhood conflicts surfaced, our team members winced, then at first tolerated the rule changes or suspension of rules altogether that the other kids demanded. After all, we loved baseball and wanted to play. Soon, however, we just couldn’t accept the taking of last strikes for others, the batting for others, the running for others. One day, when the cheating became too blatant and involved a lot of phony interference calls, rule perversions concerning tagging versus forcing someone out, and eventually running completely outside the base lines, it became evident to us that an umpire was necessary if the game was to go on.

Finding an impartial person in this environment seemed impossible, but I had noticed an old, white-haired man who sat regularly on his front porch across the street and watched us play. Hesitating at first, I thought once again of the boredom of listening to the grownups sitting inside on such a gorgeous day, so I walked over and asked the man if he would umpire our game. He said he would, for an hour or so. That Saturday, as I remember, became one of the most pleasurable of the entire summer. We reveled in the excitement of the game, gave up our petty protests and resentments, and enjoyed baseball the way it was meant to be played—by some rules. I believe our team lost the game that day, but it didn’t matter so much because there would always be another game, as long as we revered baseball. The presence of an adult, in this case knowledgeable and respected (or feared) by all the players, ages 8 to 13, made all the difference. I grew used to that difference.

A few weeks later the old man was not there on his porch. We played anyway, of course, and at first made an effort to follow rules when we knew them and to compromise when we didn’t. But that didn’t last long in the fierce climate of competition. We fell again into our pattern of losing, resentment, and retribution on one side, and winning, belittling, and entitlement on the other. That day our team was winning but not enjoying it because it was driven by resentment and the desire for retribution for earlier games when we just knew that cheating had occurred. Soon we were belittling and childishly claiming superiority as well. The last straw came when a boy on the other team threw a bat that connected with my nephew’s face. As he began to wail, I could see the blood running down his cheek from a small cut just below his eye. Though there was a bit of shock on the faces of all of us, there were no apologies, just the picking up of gloves and bats, and the characteristic taunting as the other team walked away from our makeshift ball field.

My nephew was okay, of course. But we never again played baseball with those other kids. Too many hard feelings, and the game itself seemed too much trouble, too much effort. When my sister and I visited my niece and nephew, we found other, more peaceful, diversions. Sometimes, however, I looked out at the vacant ball field with what I’d now call a sense of nostalgia, for somehow I knew we had lost something of value.

Like baseball, democratic politics is a game, though in comparison one that perhaps should be taken more seriously. Can politics be taken too seriously? Maybe, but again egos and self-image are involved. With politics we have to add safety and security, health, family fortunes, status in community, invested time and energy, financial success…the list goes on and on. Again, we hate losing through our proxy candidates and harbor resentments when we do—unless we adhere to rules and find a neutral arbiter that frees our egos and allows us to accept loss graciously. But even then we must willfully accept both the rules and that arbiter’s judgements, in order for the game to go on. In politics our judicial system fills that role—all our federal and state courts—with our Supreme Court acting as our home-plate umpire. If we don’t accept the rules and our courts’ rulings, all descends into chaos and the game we call politics disappears into oblivion.

In the days following the Presidential election in November 2020, Donald Trump, in cooperation with several elected Republican officials, including Missouri’s own Senator Josh Hawley and Representative Jason Smith, deliberately violated their constitutional oaths. They disregarded over sixty legal judgements, perpetrated attempts to overturn a legitimate election, including the sanctioning of fake electors in some states, and incited a violent assault on our Capitol. Representative Liz Cheney, a rare Republican figure with principles these days, opposed these efforts, not only witnessing the attack first hand but also playing a key role in the Congressional Select Committee investigation. For her scruples her Republican constituents back home in Wyoming took away her House seat in the next election. In her new book “Oath and Honor: A Memoir and a Warning,” Cheney recounts this crucial moment in American history and helps us understand both who propagated Trump’s Big Lie and who acted to safeguard our constitutional principles.

In Cheney’s book she describes in detail the events of January 6, 2021, on the floor of Congress as our Vice President, Mike Pence, prepared to certify each state’s lawful electors for the election held the previous November. Our own Jason Smith was in the process of formally protesting the certification, in spite of the more than sixty judicial decisions against Trump’s case. When the MAGA mob, the insurrectionists, began to breach the doors and windows of the building, House members were told they must be evacuated for their own safety. Cheney looked over at Smith and said, “You did this!” Of course the proceeding was interrupted and only completed the next day on January 7. Meanwhile Pence and his staff were led away to safety, amid cries of “Hang Mike Pence,” and our Senator Josh Hawley was caught by video running down the hall to his own safety after fist-pumping in support of MAGA just a few hours before. Apparently Hawley and Smith, in those moments of fear, realized they couldn’t control the mob they had helped foment and simply fled the scene.

A few days later, after some soul-searching I’m sure, both our brave Congressman and our Senator decided to take the expedient course and double down on their support of Trump and MAGA—even after the insurrectionist attack on our capital. After all, their Missouri constituents back home were already practicing selective amnesia about what they had seen with their own eyes on the news, and embracing crackpot conspiracy theories that the FBI or maybe even ANTIFA (an anti-fascist group) had orchestrated the entire rebellion. An “inside job,” many called it. Others claimed it was merely a mass Capitol tour that got out of hand. Today these same Missouri Republicans are both calling the insurrection, in which five police officers died in the following days, an “unruly protest” and, at the same time, calling for amnesty for the gullible pawns who carried it out. Why do they need amnesty?

To all those Trump supporters who do not agree with our nation’s rule of law, I simply would say: America, Love It or Leave It. Some readers will remember that is precisely what was said to the anti-war protestors, both law-abiding and not, who disagreed with neo-conservatives over Richard Nixon’s Vietnam War policies in the late 1960s and early 1970s. When Nixon resigned from the Presidency in 1974, after his own violation of the law, these same conservatives grew strangely quiet for about six months. In those days there was still such a thing as shame, but the modern Republican Party has moved beyond all that and just keeps doubling down into infamy. The old timers, however, always hold onto their party affiliation—I still often encounter those who seem to think they’re voting for Nixon some fifty years later!

This kind of intractable behavior and disrespect for the rule of law will eventually cause the demise of our fragile democratic system as voters invite fascism to step in and bring order out of chaos. Ironically, like the naive German Lutherans and Catholics who at first welcomed Mr. Hitler’s brand of “law and order” in 1933-4, Evangelicals in our own nation, indulging the obsession that they can “defeat the libtards” and establish a theocracy, are in the same unconscious process of destroying our own democracy. They seem to have little understanding of their own history—that their forebears came to America to escape religious persecution and that our nation’s founders established a separation of church and state in order to prevent the religious wars that had caused them so much misery. They are fortunate and don’t know it, but they are also susceptible to the grifters like Mr. Trump who would lead them into a fascist state in the guise of establishing God’s will on earth.

We still have a democracy, of course, but voting this November to give up our future choices would be foolish indeed.

Sam J Duckworth

January 26, 2024

Fascism and Trump’s MAGA Movement

Someone asked me recently why I believe that Trump’s MAGA movement is fascist. I responded by describing some of fascism’s characteristics and applying them to the Trump phenomenon that so dominates modern political discourse. Later, however, I did some online research, and what I found is perhaps the best list of the qualities of fascism I have seen. I often have argued that Americans simply did not learn the lessons of fascism after World War II, though many GIs saw and photographed the gas chambers, the skeletal bodies of the survivors, and the huge piles of human bones when they liberated the concentration camps throughout much of Europe. There is no doubt in my mind that Holocaust survivors did learn those horrific lessons.

This list resides on a wall in the Holocaust museum. I have added numbers to help distinguish the items.

EARLY WARNING SIGNS OF FASCISM

  1. Powerful and continuing nationalism
  2. Disdain for human rights
  3. Identification of enemies as a unifying cause
  4. Supremacy of the military
  5. Rampant sexism
  6. Controlled mass media
  7. Obsession with national security
  8. Religion and government intertwined
  9. Corporate power protected
  10. Labor power suppressed
  11. Disdain for intellectuals and the arts
  12. Obsession with crime and punishment
  13. Rampant cronyism and corruption
  14. Fraudulent elections

I believe only two of these signs are debatable in terms of their accuracy in describing Trump’s MAGA movement: numbers 4 and 7. The rest fit his policies to a tee. And supremacy of the military, as well as obsession with national security, would simply come later, after he gained and consolidated more power. In regard to number 6, Trumpers control only one of the cable news channels—Fox News—but would control MSNBC and CNN if they could. Number two has been demonstrated aptly in the recent Supreme Court decision against the continuation of abortion rights (Roe vs. Wade) for women. Number 14 is already being planned by MAGA Republicans in 2024, if they gain control of our Congress in the upcoming midterm elections.

In regard to number 8, evangelicals, in their tunnel vision, believe they have won a victory for Christian morality. But their own doctrine and the First and Second Epistle of John tell them quite clearly that they will be deceived by the Antichrist in the “end times,” which most say is now. It is supremely ironic that it never seems to cross their minds that Trump himself just might be that personage. I am sure some ministers have developed elaborate explanations as to why Trump could not be that individual. I myself believe that he has neither the intellect nor the skill to fill that role, but their total susceptibility to a such a bumbler does not bode well for their future political choices. After all, many of them are supporting Ron DeSantis for President in 2024.

It is not an exaggeration to claim that the fate of our democratic republic is at stake this November. The transformation of Germany, beginning in 1933, from the semi-democratic, constitutional Weimar Republic to Hitler’s totalitarian Third Reich, came as a rude shock to many Germans who found themselves powerless to undo what they had regrettably supported.

I am often told that the threat to our nation comes from the Left, usually from Republicans who are steadily goose-stepping to the Right. A similar sequence of political logic was employed by the Nazis against the Social Democrats in Germany in the early 1930s. Republicans also point out that Left-leaning Democrats often display foolishness in terms of economic policy, and sometimes I have to agree. In the final analysis, however, I will choose foolishness with good intentions over willful self-delusion with hateful intentions anytime.

God’s Only Party in 2016

Note: Some readers will notice that I have revised and updated this poem several times already. My only defense is the evidence of a fluidly changing situation best described, I believe, as not only scary but a telling indictment of human nature.

According to them, they’re God’s only party,
Entitled to claim the “high ground”.
To scripture about the least among us,
The Social Darwinists will not be bound.

They pander to the working poor.
They prey on anger, hate, and fear.
They claim to be the saved elite,
But Jesus’ words they do not hear.

I’ve often thought to send a list
Of sparrows in my hometown,
To churches that have somehow missed
The needy all around.

In Heaven they will walk the streets,
Shamefaced with much regret.
They’ll meet their maker’s eyes with pain,
For negligence they did abet.

In denial they embrace gullibility.
It’s hard to maintain one’s civility.
They listen to hacks,
No regard for the facts,
False witness defines their virility.

On Earth they endorse misogynists
In candidates quite unadorable.
They hem and they haw,
It sticks in one’s craw,
And their motives might just be deplorable.

One megalo takes his cue
From his pop and Roy Cohn.
Miss Universe he berates,
Kellyanne Conway just placates,
And he tweets his defense by phone.

Credit must be given, one must admit,
To give clout to someone so unfit.
To win by deceit they have to please
Both white lower classes and Pharisees.
The FBI and Russia engage in preclusion,
And WikiLeaks adds to the confusion.

No wall, no peace, no wage increase,
No reasons to bring the masses surcease.
They beg him to use his magic wand,
Cry out for scapegoats now they’ve been conned.
He leaves our nation direly mired,
And we cannot just say, “You’re fired.”

Bannon as Goebbels dupes the Alt-Right.
They’ll embrace him till Doomsday, quite willing to fight.
Violence toward Muslims and blacks and gays,
On vicious know-nothing heartstrings he plays.
The circle always comes around;
Flirting with fascism breaks no new ground.

Till Time itself ends…

It’s crucial to remember
One’s choices, in November.

Sam J Duckworth
(a poor, old, Southern white man)

The Real White Man’s Burden

While perusing an article and its replies on the Right-Wing website D C Clothesline, I became intrigued by a running thread touting the role of the white race in “civilizing our planet”, its responsibility for the spiritual lives of other peoples, and its right to claim not only moral supremacy but also the spoils of “victory”. I suppose we could sum up this type of racism as the “Doctrine of White Supremacy”. Here is one thoroughly typical quote:

All the BS racist scumbags who whine like huge crybabies over “whatever privilege”! Did black people create the US culture, society, civilization? Did the indians? Did anybody but white folks bring the world to the place we are now? Any brain dead person can trace the ease of life to one thing and one thing only THE WHITE RACE! Look to africa and see what the negro race has created for themselves! Look to africa and see how they kill each other and love to live in shanties, then move here and create ghettos! WHITE PRIVILEGE”? YOU BET WHITE PRIVILEGE! IF THE WORLD WERE LEFT TO ANY OTHER RACE THE OUTCOME WOULD HAVE BEEN HUMAN EXTINCTION LONG AGO!

Obviously, this is racism at its worst. But I’ve noticed that bigots, if encouraged, tend to narrow even further their ranges of acceptance or tolerance. I guessed that the replier was white, male, elderly, and Anglo–like myself–so I suggested, in my own reply, that he go a step beyond and say: “If the world were left to any other nationality besides English or American, the outcome would have been human extinction”. The particular replier above was all too happy to take this assertion and run. In his next several responses he praised England’s colonization of much of our earth, but then held up America (he meant the United States) as the pinnacle of justified revolutionary fervor against such imperialism. The white race, of course, led the way, doing the hard work (but not necessarily physical, I suppose) to build our nation.

All races, including black people, have contributed to the life of this nation. Any real historical research will show that. And a search on Wikipedia (pretty reputable) will show it quickly.

The writer also left out the destructive legacy of white Europeans in the colonization of most of Africa. Though warring factions and nations have existed there since the birth of mankind, some native civilizations there were quite “civilized”–just not in terms of the possession and use of firearms to impose their will on other peoples. The “ease of life” the replier refers to is perhaps not as important as living life in peace, for which white Europeans have never shown a penchant. Their motives–brought about by the worship of Mammon–led to horrendous bloodshed, but they got their gold and diamonds and slaves.

The public rationale for such bloodshed, of course, was the “moral necessity” to “convert the savages” to Christianity. For this reason, the Church, both Catholic–for its collusion in the decimation or enslavement of native populations in Brazil, for example–and Protestant–for its collusion in the decimation of Native Americans in this country, for example–bears much responsibility.

It also bears much responsibility for the lasting influence of such rationalizing notions as the “White Man’s Burden”. Remember that old Biblical adage of “The sins of the fathers are visited upon the sons”? I suspect this is the real burden. One’s psyche can resist that assertion only as long as one denies they were sins at all–and that denial is often sanctioned, in practice, by the Church. Repression and suppression are the keys here.

Better to accept the guilt of one’s fathers–ancestors–and move on in the light of that awareness.

Self-fulfilling Prophecy and the End of the World

I’d urge readers to consider the phenomenon that social scientists have labeled “self-fulfilling prophecy”.

This term refers to the tendency of those who believe in a certain prophecy to act in such a way that they actually cause that prophecy to come true.

Think of the practice of “creative visualization” used by ambitious persons to help bring their goals into actuality.

This term refers not only to individuals but to entire groups–like Fundamentalist Christians and Islamic Extremists who live and work and behave (and often vote) in such ways that they bring our world that much closer to Armageddon.

The supreme irony is that these people claim that “the devil made me do it” or “I know that God wills it”, while God is waiting to see what mankind will do with the freedom and power He has given to us. Will we do the right things?

Probably not, but, in any case, we ourselves bear the responsibility for our actions and their consequences.

EVEN THE END OF THE WORLD.

Churches and the IRS

In a recent Right-Wing article entitled “IRS Agents Pretend to be Clergymen to Spy in Churches”, I found this assertion:

“Under the First Amendment, the pastor has a right to determine what is said from the pulpit, not the IRS.”

I don’t for a minute believe the “factual” statement in the title, simply because I could find no real substantiation and also because of the pattern of lying one often encounters on such websites. But, yes, the pastor, under our Constitution, has the same rights to free speech as every other American citizen. However, practically speaking, “free speech” is often limited, even suppressed, by social sanctions, including local control of the media, the economic and social status of the speaker, and, of course, funding.

If a pastor and his or her church are engaged in political campaigning or proselytizing–either “from the pulpit” or through church literature or other media–that pastor and that church may be in violation of the 501c(3) law, and therefore not eligible for tax exemption. I believe that giving up the exemption is the right thing to do if a church also functions as a political organization.

Ministers often get away with violating such laws, anyway. I know one here in my hometown who is openly selling mail-order products (shades of Amway) on his church’s website. Talk about moneychangers in the temple! A couple of the deacons are upset, but so far have voiced only their disapproval. Perhaps Jesus will enter this church and express his anger.

There is another church here (Day of Hope) that operates a discount store. From what I know, proceeds, except for the salaries of store employees, go to the food bank that specifically and practically helps “the least among us”, as directed by Scripture.

This is Jesus’ work–not political proselytizing or maintaining the status quo.

Replies to the aforementioned article on the website illustrate the general Conservative consensus on the subject of income taxes:

“Forgive me, agent, for I have sinned. It has been five years since my last tax filing.”

“Forgive me agent, for I have withheld tax payments, it has been five years since my last submittal, and here are my disclosures.”

“This is straight outta the text book for GESTAPO 101.”

I invite readers to examine the 501c(3) and c(4) tax-exemption laws. Just do an online search. I’d read the laws themselves–not rely on the word of those with obviously political agendas.

What is the original intent of the 501c(3) and c(4) provisions for income tax exemption?

Though frequently not enforced, the meaning is quite clear that organizations whose primary purpose is political should not be granted tax-exempt status. Nevertheless, the abstract wording of 501c(3) has proven itself ambiguous in actual practice.

Most churches and pastors, of course, claim that their primary purpose is “saving souls” but also claim First Amendment rights, especially in the pulpit. And many argue that religion and politics are so intertwined as to be virtually inseparable.

Churches and other “nonprofit organizations” like public libraries whose demonstrated primary purpose is public service certainly should be granted such status. But how do such groups demonstrate this?

It is evident that someone would have to make that judgement over a period of time.

Remember the uproar over the IRS investigation into the tax-exempt status of organizations with obviously political agendas? Most examined were Right Wing, but that is to be expected because those groups outnumber the Left-Wingers at least five to one.

Few people seemed to figure out that the infamous list that aroused the ire of Conservatives was simply compiled by someone who flagged organization names with obviously political intentions.

Perhaps that IRS employee naively thought he or she should be enforcing the law.

Evangelicals, Theocracy, and the Enlightenment

Recently, while surfing Right-Wing websites, I came upon an interesting, though thoroughly typical, article by an Evangelical minister named Ted Weiland with an obvious polemical axe to grind. Weiland’s argument that all governments are theocracies may be summed up in his own words:

…There is no escaping theocracy. A government’s laws reflect its morality, and the source of that morality (or, more often than not, immorality) is its god. It is never a question of theocracy or no theocracy, but whose theocracy. The American people, by way of their elected officials, are the source of the Constitutional Republic’s laws. Therefore, the Constitutional Republic’s god is WE THE PEOPLE.

People recoil at the idea of a theocracy’s morality being forced upon them, but because all governments are theocracies, someone’s morality is always being enforced. This is an inevitability of government. The question is which god, theocracy, laws, and morality will we choose to live under?…

[Chapter 3 “The Preamble: WE THE PEOPLE vs. YAHWEH” at bibleversusconstitution.org/BlvcOnline/biblelaw-constitutionalism-pt3.html.]

According to Weiland, every government is a theocracy because “the source of that morality” is its god. As one who often applies the American philosopher Charles Peirce’s “Pragmatic Criterion of Meaning”–the meaning of a statement consists of the sum total of its expected practical consequences–I have to question, then, whether our own government hasn’t been serving the Great God Mammon all along. I could ask the same, I suppose, about many self-identifying Christians in our own culture.

A theocracy is a government set up expressly to promote policies that reflect a particular conception of God and a particular set of religious doctrines (a theology, like Christian theology). In the late 1700s, in spite of the Separatist Movement that had founded the Plymouth Colony over a century and a half earlier, the Church of England was poised to extend its theocratic control over all the colonies, had already largely done so in the southern colonies (including Virginia), but was prevented from extending its power over our fledgling nation by a few forward-thinking revolutionaries like Thomas Paine, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson.

The fact that a “government’s laws reflect its morality, and the source of that morality…” is probably an inevitable one, since ethical values derive directly from the cultural background and traditions of the members of said government. Our founders’ cultural background was obviously white, Anglo-Saxon, and Protestant (WASP), with a few Catholics thrown in (though somewhat distrusted). Since then the integration of Hispanic cultures, northern European, Irish and Scottish, African, Middle Eastern, and East Asian (all generally invited, because of the need for laborers) in our “melting pot” has brought with it an influx of Catholics, Presbyterians, Jews, Muslims, Hindi, and Buddhists, to name the most prominent.

The beauty of the Enlightenment (also known as “The Age of Reason”) is that thinkers like Ben Franklin and Thomas Jefferson evolved into rationalists (later called “Deists”), who eventually discounted the supernatural elements accepted by most in their own religious culture. Jefferson even created his own “secret Bible” by cutting and pasting passages of the New Testament into a work that leaves out altogether the claims about angels, miracles, and even the resurrection itself. Jefferson’s aim was to find the core of Jesus’ moral teachings and to put together a chronological life history of Jesus as a human being.

It was their ability to transcend conventional organized religious doctrine (mainly Anglican, but also Christianity in general)–through free thinking and reason–that eventually resulted in what Fundamentalists today hate so much: our nation’s adopted policy of separation of church and state (sometimes capitalized). Evangelicals today, with the power and following of the Anglican Church of the 15 through 1700s, demonstrate little understanding and even less appreciation for the liberation of human thought brought on by the Enlightenment.

My point? That religious and cultural backgrounds do not have to mandate particular policies in action–if those leaders choose what they consider to be higher principles than what organized religions like to call their “absolute truths”. But virtually all organized religions assert that there are no higher principles than their own absolute truths. Hence the distinction between “organized religion” and the “natural religion” of the individual that we see in Ben Franklin’s Autobiography.

In conclusion, two living and concurrent but disparate strands of thought about religious freedom run through our American political discourse today. Both were incubated in that hotbed of revolutionary ideas in the 1700s:

1) The WASP-oriented Evangelical argument, propelled by the “Great Awakening” and including such notions as “the white man’s burden”. This strand insists there is one set of “absolute truths” (though many denominations) and one true God (often simply equated with Jesus), which we as a nation disobey at our own peril. For this reason, Evangelicals generally support theocracy, but only if it is their own. Any competing ideas and doctrines are “of the Devil”. Transformation, even at the risk of bloodshed, trumps integration and co-existence.

2) The Enlightenment argument, with its emphasis on reason and science over faith, and its “rationalist” approach to finding “the truth”. This strand distrusts traditional ideas like the “divine right of kings”, Judaic conceptions of God, and even the supernatural explanations and elements found in the New Testament. It is concerned, instead, with the “Rights of Man”–the freedom of the individual to pursue life, liberty, and happiness…in this life. Theocracy precludes this freedom by establishing either a hierarchy of social status or a tyranny of spiritual belief.

The Homosexual “Cause”

One doesn’t “support homosexuality” or be “against it”. That would be equivalent to being for or against rain, or rocks, or joy, or pain. These are simply facts of life, and the sooner one understands that–through one’s relationship with a friend, relative, neighbor, colleague–the sooner one develops the kind of empathy that leads to tolerance.

Most individuals who are “against it” don’t understand that IT has been with us from the beginning–just hidden in plain sight because of social sanctions and denial in particular cultures. Remember the recent statements by Iranian leaders that there are NO HOMOSEXUALS in their society? Why the repulsion that leads to this?

In Jungian theory–Analytic Psychology–our bodies, even perhaps our individual cells, have a collective unconscious or “racial memory” that often determines our initial responses to outside stimuli. How did this subconscious memory and corresponding attitude form? Probably because of the NEED FOR PROCREATION IN ORDER TO ENSURE THE SURVIVAL OF THE SPECIES.

But we can rise above such driving, subconscious forces that lead us to persecute those who are different through no fault of their own. We already know that geneticists have identified “genetic predispositions”, so we should be wary of the easy judgments of the past.

Those who would cite the sanctions against homosexuality in Leviticus tend to ignore the equally harsh proclamation that an unruly child can be put to death. They’ll use whatever they want for their agenda of intolerance and ignore the rest if it suits them.

In the final analysis, gay people have PREDISPOSITIONS OF ATTRACTION that are recognized early in life, at least by many, but tragically, sometimes, not by the gay people themselves. This is a process of discovery and self-acceptance that our society is just beginning to understand.

Lowbrow Righteous Denial: Threatening Facts about Christian History

The Right-Wing’s righteous anger at Obama’s National Prayer Breakfast speech  in February 2015 neglects some salient facts of Christian history that bely their seriousness as authorities on both modern morality and the evolution of an organized religion. Indeed, their obvious pandering to Islamophobes–by judging Obama’s statements as the anti-Christian opinions of “an arrogant highbrow professor”–reveals both a lowbrow, anti-intellectual ethnocentrism and a corresponding agenda–a crusade, if you will–to discredit the President’s efforts to defeat ISIS. But facts are facts, and not always politically expedient.

The Crusades (ca. 1096-1291) and The Inquisition (ca. 1184-1240) were definitely low points in the history and evolution of Christianity–at least in terms of bloodletting, torture, and nonsensical “faith”.

Most of us know something about the torture techniques of the Inquisition–in order to save souls–and the bloodshed of the Crusades, including the utterly delusional Children’s Crusade to Palestine, in which most of the children were captured and sold into slavery before they even reached the Holy Land, but few seem to know about the disinterment of Jewish corpses during the Inquisition, their “baptism” so they could be “saved”, and their subsequent reburial.

This was organized religion during an EXTREMIST and juvenile phase of development, just as Islam is suffering its own growth pains today. Factions struggle for dominance; delusion, deceit, and rationalization carry the day; and human beings commit unspeakable acts on other human beings in the name of God.

It is important to keep in mind–no, it is crucial to avoid DENIAL–that our own religion has had its warring factions and utterly un-Christlike leaders and policies, during its slow but inevitable evolution. We must also remember that Islam is the youngest–most juvenile–of the world’s major religions and that our own moral sanctions preclude killing a teenager.

But a part of this violent, unreasoning faction called Radical Islam may have to be amputated–for the sake of the rest of the world.

The withdrawing into the “righteousness” of one’s own religious culture and the convenient denial of FACTS are NOT what we need now. What we need is FIRMNESS OF PURPOSE.

Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
(George Santayana)