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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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This truly is the most absurd thing I have ever read in my life.
1 posted on 01/14/2007 6:01:27 AM PST by SHOOT THE MOON bat
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat; A. Pole

Wow! I want what he's smoking!


2 posted on 01/14/2007 6:03:01 AM PST by Incorrigible (If I lead, follow me; If I pause, push me; If I retreat, kill me.)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat
the radical Christian right in the United States - the most dangerous mass movement in American history

crossed into the absurd right here in the first line

3 posted on 01/14/2007 6:03:35 AM PST by cinives (On some planets what I do is considered normal.)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

And that's really saying something, considering how much truly insane garbage is published every day ...

The author needs to be institutionalized, I think, before he hurts himself.


4 posted on 01/14/2007 6:03:59 AM PST by Tax-chick ("I don't know you, but I love who you seem to be.")
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat
Wow. Totally bizarre.
5 posted on 01/14/2007 6:04:08 AM PST by Earthdweller (All reality is based on faith in something.)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat
All radical movements need a crisis or a prolonged period of instability to achieve power.

Indeed. And it's certainly ironic that the author omits the radical movements to which he likely belongs (global warming, socialism, etc.).

6 posted on 01/14/2007 6:05:03 AM PST by NittanyLion
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

I'm sure you don't mean that ... but it is pretty absurd. And I'll take my 'despair' in Christ any day over this guys 'joy.'


7 posted on 01/14/2007 6:05:43 AM PST by dartuser ("Until they love their children more than they hate us, there will be no peace" Golda Meir)
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To: Incorrigible; kstewskis; Victoria Delsoul; Raquel; Kelly_2000; ClaireSolt; Nancee; Tax-chick; ...
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.

Oh my goodness!

I am speechless.

8 posted on 01/14/2007 6:06:31 AM PST by Northern Yankee ( Stay The Course!)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat
religiosity

Is that even a word?

9 posted on 01/14/2007 6:06:46 AM PST by Excuse_My_Bellicosity (Liberalism is a social disease.)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

Unfortunatly, this is how the "intellectual" left views us.


10 posted on 01/14/2007 6:06:53 AM PST by Mom MD (The scorn of fools is music to the ears of the wise)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

Gotta agree with you. Not nearly as dangerous as the Democrats.


11 posted on 01/14/2007 6:08:58 AM PST by Brilliant
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

This guy really doesn't have a clue about Christianity or whatdrivers us. He should be looked after and prayed for.


12 posted on 01/14/2007 6:09:06 AM PST by WorkerbeeCitizen (Religion of peace my arse - We need a maintenance Crusade - piss on Islam)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

Wow, that is truly bizarre


13 posted on 01/14/2007 6:09:17 AM PST by Fzob (In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock. Jefferson)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat
he radical Christian right in the United States - the most dangerous mass movement in American history

Oh yes. There are Christian head-choppers, rioters, and suicide bombers all over the place. The Christians preach in churches that it's OK to beat your wife and daughters if they displease you. You can kill them if they want to marry a non-Christian. It's also OK to take the streets throwing rocks and setting things on fire if somebody insults Christianity. Right, Mr. Hedges? (No, the above passage is only true if you insert "muslim" where it says "Christian", you moron.)

14 posted on 01/14/2007 6:11:11 AM PST by Excuse_My_Bellicosity (Liberalism is a social disease.)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

Ironically much of the "despair" driving disenfranchised poor people to solace in radical religion - is true....in muslim societies.

The last mass movement that attracted the despairing was the secular religion known as communism.

Somehow I doubt this guy has set foot in a Christian church for a long long time. Got to chuckle at the thought of him sitting home watching TV televangelists and being afraid, very very afraid. LOL!


15 posted on 01/14/2007 6:11:31 AM PST by silverleaf (Fasten your seat belts- it's going to be a BUMPY ride.)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

Ironically much of the "despair" driving disenfranchised poor people to solace in radical religion - is true....in muslim societies.

The last mass movement that attracted the despairing was the secular religion known as communism.

Somehow I doubt this guy has set foot in a Christian church for a long long time. Got to chuckle at the thought of him sitting home watching TV televangelists and being afraid, very very afraid. LOL!


16 posted on 01/14/2007 6:11:44 AM PST by silverleaf (Fasten your seat belts- it's going to be a BUMPY ride.)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

Maybe he is setting the stage for Obama the Antichrist? ;)


17 posted on 01/14/2007 6:12:07 AM PST by sageb1 (This is the Final Crusade. There are only 2 sides. Pick one.)
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To: cinives

That's when I quit reading. Is there any reason to read the whole thing?

The looney Left is really working hard to paint everyone right-of-center with this brush.


18 posted on 01/14/2007 6:12:54 AM PST by FreedomPoster (Guns themselves are fairly robust; their chief enemies are rust and politicians) (NRA)
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To: DollyCali
This truly eye opening. To think that this type of thinking is now out in the open.

Wow!

19 posted on 01/14/2007 6:14:07 AM PST by Northern Yankee ( Stay The Course!)
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To: SHOOT THE MOON bat

"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."

Sounds more like this loon is the one in despair to me. The man needs mental help and gets published in a paper. Wow.


20 posted on 01/14/2007 6:14:11 AM PST by L98Fiero (A fool who'll waste his life, God rest his guts.)
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