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Despair drives the Christian right
Philadelphia Inquirer ^ | 1/14/2007 | Chris Hedges

Posted on 01/14/2007 6:01:26 AM PST by SHOOT THE MOON bat

Extremism: Radical preachers offer a magical world for battered believers.The engine that drives the radical Christian right in the United States - the most dangerous mass movement in American history - is not religiosity, but despair. It is a movement built on the growing personal and economic despair of tens of millions of Americans, who watched helplessly as their communities were plunged into poverty by the flight of manufacturing jobs, their families and neighborhoods torn apart by neglect and indifference, and who eventually lost hope that America was a place where they had a future.

This despair crosses economic boundaries, of course, enveloping many in the middle class who live trapped in huge, soulless exurbs where, lacking any form of community rituals or centers, they also feel deeply isolated, vulnerable and lonely. Those in despair are the most easily manipulated by demagogues, who promise a fantastic utopia, whether it is a worker's paradise, fraternité-egalité-liberté, or the second coming of Jesus Christ. Those in despair search desperately for a solution, the warm embrace of a community to replace the one they lost, a sense of purpose and meaning in life, the assurance they are protected, loved and worthwhile.

During the last two years of work on the book American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America, I kept encountering this deadly despair. Driving down a highway lined with gas stations, fast-food restaurants, and dollar stores I often got vertigo, forgetting for a moment whether I was in Detroit or Kansas City or Cleveland. There are parts of the United States, including whole sections of former manufacturing centers such as Ohio, that resemble the developing world, with boarded-up storefronts, dilapidated houses, potholed streets and crumbling schools. The end of the world is no longer an abstraction to many Americans.

We as a nation have turned our backs on the working class, with much of the worst assaults, such as NAFTA and welfare reform, pushed through during President Clinton's Democratic administration. We stand passively and watch an equally pernicious assault on the middle class. Anything that can be put on software, from architecture to engineering to finance, will soon be handed to workers overseas, who will be paid a third what their American counterparts receive and who will, like 45 million Americans, have no access to health insurance or benefits. There has been, along with the creation of an American oligarchy, a steady Weimarization of the American working class. And such distortions, as Plutarch reminded us, have grave political consequences for democracies. The top 1 percent of American households have more wealth than the bottom 90 percent combined. This figure alone should terrify all who care about our democracy.

The stories believers told me of their lives before they found Christ were heartbreaking. These chronicles were about terrible pain, severe financial difficulties, struggles with addictions or childhood sexual or physical abuse, profound alienation and often thoughts about suicide. They were chronicles without hope. The real world - the world of facts and dispassionate intellectual inquiry, the world in which news and information were not filtered through the comforting ideological prism of radical religion, the world where they were left out to dry, abandoned by a government hostage to corporations and willing to tolerate obscene corporate profits - betrayed them. They hated this world.

And they willingly walked out on this world for the mythical world offered by radical preachers - a world of magic, a world where God had a divine plan for them and intervened daily to protect them and perform miracles in their lives. The rage many expressed to me toward those who challenge this belief system - to those of us who do not accept that everything in the world came into being during a single week 6,000 years ago because it says so in the Bible - was a rage born of fear, the fear of being plunged back into a reality-based world where these magical props would no longer exist, where they would once again be adrift, abandoned and alone.

The danger of this theology of despair is that it says that nothing in the world is worth saving. It rejoices in cataclysmic destruction. It welcomes the frightening advance of global warming, the spiraling wars and violence in the Middle East, and the poverty and neglect that have blighted American urban and rural landscapes, as encouraging signs that the end of the world is close at hand.

Believers, of course, clinging to this magical belief, which is a bizarre form of spiritual Darwinism, will be "raptured" upward, while the rest of us will be tormented with horrors by a warrior Christ and finally extinguished. This obsession with apocalyptic violence is an obsession with revenge. It is what the world, and we who still believe it is worth saving, deserve.

Those who lead the movement give their followers a moral license to direct this rage and yearning for violence against all those who refuse to submit to the movement, from liberals, to "secular humanists," to "nominal Christians," to intellectuals, to gays and lesbians, to Muslims. These radicals, from James Dobson to Pat Robertson, call for a theocratic state that will, if it comes to pass, bear within it many of the traits of classical fascism.

All radical movements need a crisis or a prolonged period of instability to achieve power. And we are not in a period of crisis now. But another catastrophic terrorist attack on American soil, a series of huge environmental disasters, or an economic meltdown will hand to these radicals the opening they seek. Manipulating our fear and anxiety, promising to make us safe and secure, giving us the assurance that they can vanquish the forces that mean to do us harm, these radicals, many of whom have achieved powerful positions in the executive and legislative branches of government, as well as the military, will ask us only to surrender our rights, to give them the unlimited power they need to battle the forces of darkness.

They will have behind them tens of millions of angry, disenfranchised Americans longing for revenge and yearning for a mythical utopia, Americans who embraced a theology of despair because we offered them nothing else.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chris Hedges' new book is "American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 2ignorant4words; 2stupid2ton; ac; americanfascists; brownacid; chrishedges; christophobia; dementalillness; fauxchristians; neverbeeninachurch; nutjob; offhismeds; persecution; projection; religiousleft; theocracy; waronchristianity
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To: Paige

That explains much. Thanks.


121 posted on 01/14/2007 9:17:31 AM PST by FreedomPoster (Guns themselves are fairly robust; their chief enemies are rust and politicians) (NRA)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat
The engine that drives the radical Christian right in the United States - the most dangerous mass movement in American history - is not religiosity, but despair. It is a movement built on the growing personal and economic despair of tens of millions of Americans, who watched helplessly as their communities were plunged into poverty by the flight of manufacturing jobs, their families and neighborhoods torn apart by neglect and indifference, and who eventually lost hope that America was a place where they had a future.

This should have come with a Super-Dooper Extra Special Mega Hurl Alert!!!!

This is the sorriest excuse for writing from what is supposed to be a "neutral" journalist that I have seen to date.

Seems to me that we have a case for "hate speech" from the Phildelphia Inquirer.

122 posted on 01/14/2007 9:48:03 AM PST by DustyMoment (FloriDUH - proud inventors of pregnant/hanging chads and judicide!!)
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More anti-Christian bigotry from the liberal left. Patently absurd nonsense. A marginal, hysterical, jihad against believing Christians, delivered by an organ of the MSM , an institution that has been almost completely captured by bigoted anti-Christians.
In fact, traditional Christians are not radicals at all. Rather they are engaged in a lonely rear guard struggle to protect their children from the moral and cultural decadence and depravity actively promoted by liberals in Hollywood, the television networks and,increasingly, the government schools. Resistance to the rot is actually done in quite traditional ways--using the political process to elect like minded people and, when this is not possible, abandoning the institutions--public schools in some areas--where the rot has gone too far to be reversed. Make no mistake: the demonization of Christians is conscious and intended to lay the ground for overt persecution. In Illinois, at least one democratic Congresswoman wants to compel Catholic hospitals to perform abortions. Gay rights groups want to criminalize Christian churches that openly affirm traditional marriage. The persecution is coming--a democratic, House, Senate and President would almost certainly lead to overt attempts to close Christian churches as "vessels of hatred." Be prepared.......
123 posted on 01/14/2007 9:55:30 AM PST by Godwin1
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

If this is your opinion of Christians, what do you say about Islamo-Nazis who want to kill you?


124 posted on 01/14/2007 10:41:16 AM PST by Tennessee Nana
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To: Excuse_My_Bellicosity

religiosity = those who believe in global warming or communism

It works just as well for those "religions".


125 posted on 01/14/2007 10:42:53 AM PST by cinives (On some planets what I do is considered normal.)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

I do not remembering anywhere in the Bible where one of the true attributes of a Christian was despaiir.

OTOH, I do remember we are to be "in but not of" the world.

Frankly, the lack of faith is fear, and the lack of fear is faith. It is laid out pretty clearly here; http://web.mac.com/egoble/iWeb/Site/Kingdom/Kingdom.html

We should not be afraid of people. Any people.


126 posted on 01/14/2007 10:51:06 AM PST by RobRoy (Islam is a greater threat to the world today than Nazism was in 1938.)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

It's pretty weak. He makes no real arguments, it's just emotional rhetoric.


127 posted on 01/14/2007 10:53:44 AM PST by Ironfocus
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

Actually, there may be a thread of truth to this article. Despair can drive people TO Christianity as illness drives them to the doctor. It does not mean the doctor is the cause of the illness or some sort of evil brought on by the illness.

Same with Christianity. Ultimately, people will not accept Jesus until they hit some personal "bottom". Sometimes that bottom can be drunk in a gutter, sometimes it can be despair as described in the first paragraph of the article, and sometimes it can be no more than truly grasping the futility of life without Him.


128 posted on 01/14/2007 10:54:50 AM PST by RobRoy (Islam is a greater threat to the world today than Nazism was in 1938.)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

Hardly, we know that we're not home yet! The reason we have such struggles on this earth is because "this is not our home" We are just passing on through it.


129 posted on 01/14/2007 10:56:09 AM PST by STD (Rough Sailing Directly Ahead)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

"...the fear of being plunged back into a reality-based world where these magical props would no longer exist, where they would once again be adrift, abandoned and alone."

Existentialism isn't for sissies.


130 posted on 01/14/2007 11:16:32 AM PST by gcruse (http://garycruse.blogspot.com/)
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To: gcruse

is that the philosophy of socialized Europe, where people are in such despair they don't even have kids?


131 posted on 01/14/2007 11:36:52 AM PST by gusopol3
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To: Pietro
This man is clever to couch his own designs as the designs of the "christian right". The time is approaching when all the world will hate us for His name.

I've got to agree with you.

This man's books sound so much like the anti-jewish propaganda that was steadily fed to the Germans for years by Hitler and his minions. It's not to much of a streach to imagine a similiar solution in his mind's eye. After all, if they're so dangerous...

132 posted on 01/14/2007 11:36:53 AM PST by Red Boots
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To: gusopol3

It's the logical extension of the Enlightenment, which is also a philosophy instead of a pacifier.


133 posted on 01/14/2007 12:02:51 PM PST by gcruse (http://garycruse.blogspot.com/)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat
How did you ever happen to discover this loon? Do you spend a lot of time at the 'Funny Farm'?

Nam Vet

134 posted on 01/14/2007 12:05:59 PM PST by Nam Vet ( The original point and click interface was a Smith & Wesson.)
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To: gcruse

and the logical extension of existentialism, as being demonstrated in Europe, is Sharia law.


135 posted on 01/14/2007 12:06:04 PM PST by gusopol3
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To: gusopol3

Sharia, summoning its precepts from religion, seems not to be an extension of secular thought.


136 posted on 01/14/2007 12:10:44 PM PST by gcruse (http://garycruse.blogspot.com/)
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To: gcruse

it is if an existential philosophy leads to the suicide by attrition of the native populace; weeds come in where the garden has died


137 posted on 01/14/2007 12:14:18 PM PST by gusopol3
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

And WHERE'S the barf alert in the title on this thread...


138 posted on 01/14/2007 12:14:43 PM PST by rottndog (While reading this tag, remember Tens of Thousands of Americans are risking their lives for you.)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

Hey! This guy must be the one who Rosie O'Donnell was quoting when she said that Christians were just as dangerous as the Islamists.


139 posted on 01/14/2007 12:15:51 PM PST by Gumdrop
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

Hedges is the same scribbler who was hooted off the commencement stage at some Illinois University a few years ago when he started babbling about the evil of the U.S. He said it was good we lost Vietnam and it would be good if we get defeated in Iraq and Afghanistan. The students listening couldn't take it anymore and they booed him off the stage.


140 posted on 01/14/2007 12:16:56 PM PST by driftless2
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