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The Prophets of Politics Are Angry
Charting Course ^ | 1/6/14 | Steve Berman

Posted on 01/06/2015 7:00:57 AM PST by lifeofgrace

angry_man

It doesn’t take anything more than the possibility of a Christian right candidate like Mike Huckabee running for president to turn the Tea Party-aligned Republican mood rings from algae green to obsidian black.  The reaction runs the gamut from not taking Huckabee seriously in spite of his tenure as a two-term governor and solid campaigner, to outright hostility that someone who believes the Book of Genesis literally could be qualified to hold office.

I am heartsick at this, and I think it highlights the main fissure within the GOP.  It’s almost bigotry in the way candidates are vetted according to their belief backgrounds, then their policy positions.  Leon Wolf wrote about this.

What bothers me is the contempt that the consultant class has for the very idea that Mike Huckabee is a qualified or serious candidate. To listen to these people talk, Huckabee has no more right to be taken seriously than someone like Ben Carson who has never held or run for any office of any kind. This is just facially insane. The guy was a governor for a full decade, winning re-election twice, which indicates at least basic competency at the job of being chief executive.
Jonathan Adler of NRO wrote
FWIW, I’m as anti-Huck now as I was then. Why? He’s more of a liberal Christian populist than a limited-government conservative. He’s economically illiterate, has protectionist impulses, endorses nanny-state policies and creationism, urged the isolation (i.e. quarantine) of AIDS victims long after such a position could be remotely defensible (1992), and repeatedly dissembled when called out on it.
This exhibits the sort of horror much of the pundit class harbors for people like Huckabee (and Santorum, Bachmann, and Palin).  This twitter thread with Adler illustrates it nicely.
@lifeofgrace224 @ByronYork @ron_fournier I have no problem with Christian moralists. I just oppose nanny-state bigots.

— Jonathan H. Adler (@jadler1969) January 4, 2015

@lifeofgrace224 @RockwallSciGuy @ByronYork @ron_fournier No. But wanting Genesis taught in school as science is a strike against.

— Jonathan H. Adler (@jadler1969) January 4, 2015

From my point of view, Huckabee’s faith values are more closely aligned with mine than any other potential candidate in the race so far.  I’ve been called a fool for believing Genesis and espousing it publicly (more than once).  I have no problem with intelligent design being presented in high schools—let the kids make their own decisions on what they believe.  If Genesis is true, then ID is “science” no matter what we believe about goo-to-you, and like all questions of cosmology and origin it’s not provable from a first-person perspective.

Do I think Huckabee could win?  Frankly, no.  But he represents something important.  Governor Huckabee is the demarcation point between the bulk of the GOP, the Christian Right, and just over the horizon from the Tea Party*.  I believe Huckabee should run, if only to keep the RINOs honest.  Since I have been excoriated for that thought, let me explain it.  Many Republicans treat their party like a religion—in fact better than they treat their actual religion.  Church is for Sunday before lunch, and politics is life.

wheres_huckabee

And for those people, I have some advice:  you have your life priorities backwards.  I would rather have a person in the oval office who agrees with my life values than someone who agrees with my political positions.  I have two very important reasons for this.

First, all policy positions should flow from personal values.  There should be a very clear alignment between someone’s worldview, beliefs, values, and policies.  Everyone has their own way of expressing their worldview in terms of policy, and every political leader has their own management style.  We can argue about qualifications for office based on experience and effectiveness, and we can argue about their record all day, but if a politician exhibits a disconnect between what they profess and what they support, that’s a major red mark.  I can’t stand politicians whose main emphasis is pragmatism or get-something-done-ism.  That is the definitive sign of a waffler.

In high school, my english teacher Mr. Rice used to give out normal letter grades, A through D, and you could also get an F is you simply failed to complete an assignment.  But the absolute worst grade he could give you was a W.  A W meant “waffle”:  a result so bereft of thought and backbone as to leave the reader exhausted and in pain from the effort of reading it.  This is how many politicians, even those in the GOP, seem to me.  They are wafflers, more interested in their own featherbedding, power, ambition, and legacy than a consistent application of their values.  In my book, Mike Huckabee is not a waffler, and that’s a good thing.

Second, the office of president has necessary limitations.  Not every president will become the dictator that President Obama fashions himself.  I keep hearing Republicans talking about the office of president like we’re electing a fuhrer or a dictator in the Roman Republic.  The chief executive office of the U.S. is not the main lawmaking organ, yet we seem to have ceded all authority to it, game, set and match.  Washington D.C. needs an enema, and that’s more important to consider than getting “your candidate” into the White House, then complaining when they don’t accomplish all the things you thought they could when you inscribed an “S” on their chest.  Just look at eight years of G.W. Bush.

For those who don’t like Huckabee because he pardoned too many prisoners, or advocated for too many social programs, or feels that a return to God and Godly precepts is the answer for America:  you call him a nanny-stater, and come up with all kinds of reasons to disqualify him, but what you’re really saying is that Huckabee is a Christian, all the way through, and that offends you.  If it does, come out and say it.  Not all Christians are blood-red all the way through.  I don’t think you can be one if you lack compassion, or you lack moral foundation (judge me not!), and you certainly can’t be a Christian politician if you lack the calling to do it.

Candidates like Mike Huckabee keep the RINOs honest because they anger the prophets of politics, who believe more in their particular stripe of government and advocacy than they do their own beliefs that apply to their lives and their families (anyone who isn’t of their stripe is, by definition, a RINO to them).  People who put more faith in their politics than their Bible (or whatever other personal beliefs they hold) tend to call people like Huckabee “holier than thou” or condescending in a morally-superior way (not that Democrats act that way every single day?).

By flushing out the wafflers, Huckabee serves a very useful purpose.  And for that, I hope God really did call him to run, and if God did, then I sincerely pray Huckabee will remain faithful to that call.  It will drive the wafflers and the prophets positively crazy, and that’s just fine for me because I hate wafflers.

 

*Check out the Public Religion Research Institute.  They also have an interesting study titled “In Search of Libertarians in America” which I highly suggest you read.

(Image source:  Shutterstock)


TOPICS: Government; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: gop; mikehuckabee; wafflers
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To: CondorFlight

That is a well-worn tactic from Rove’s bag of tricks. Thing is though, I’m getting sick of “freedom loving” my-way-or-the-highway atheists telling us what we can and cannot do and think. Christian candidates do get consistently torpedoed by their own side, and somebody is scared poo-less by Cruz. Thing is that I’m not sure what Cruz is actually good for. Bush family members do need to be avoided at all costs if for no better reason than an overly sentimental take on “friendship” the taxpayers get stuck footing the bill for and the tendency to kill off everything but the most groveling of yes men.


21 posted on 01/06/2015 8:48:45 AM PST by BlackAdderess
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To: Opinionated Blowhard
but what you’re really saying is that Huckabee is a Christian, all the way through, and that offends you. If it does, come out and say it.

I'll take what you said on the matter and add this:

That sounds an awful lot like "It's because he's black" to me.

22 posted on 01/06/2015 9:03:11 AM PST by Turbo Pig (...to close with and destroy the enemy...)
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To: Opinionated Blowhard
For those who don’t like Huckabee because he pardoned too many prisoners, or advocated for too many social programs, . . . . you call him a nanny-stater, and come up with all kinds of reasons to disqualify him, but what you’re really saying is that Huckabee is a Christian, all the way through, and that offends you. If it does, come out and say it.

=======================================================================

I'm offended that someone thinks pardoning Maurice Clemmons and advocating budget-busting spending increases and entitlement expansions is what a true Christian would do.

Yes.

What the author is attempting to do is create an "anti-Christian" card that is equivalent to the overused, burntout "Race" card used by Obama and the "Poverty Pimp" crowd.

To disagree with Huckabee is to be anti-Christian, just like to disagree with Obama is Racist, according to this article's Author.

It's wrong on so many levels, and dishonest in it's inference.

23 posted on 01/06/2015 10:38:38 AM PST by Col Freeper (FR: A smorgasbord of Conservative Mindfood - dig in and enjoy it!)
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To: lifeofgrace

Great post, right up where I stand (typically)


24 posted on 01/06/2015 12:17:19 PM PST by Moleman
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To: CyberAnt
If you’re looking for a SMART Christian to be President, my choice would be Ted Cruz.
Ted Cruz would also be my choice. He's brilliant and he shares my values. I don't know if he's capable of being a leader on the world stage at this point, and I'm not sure he's going to run in 2016 either. But I'd vote for him over Huckabee.

The Establishment GOP would oppose him at all costs.
25 posted on 01/07/2015 4:43:23 AM PST by lifeofgrace (Follow me on Twitter @lifeofgrace224)
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To: lifeofgrace

So what the hell else is new .. and they protested Reagan too .. but Reagan never let them get the upper hand.


26 posted on 01/07/2015 8:10:24 AM PST by CyberAnt ("The hope and changey stuff did not work, even a smidgen.")
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