Posted on 12/15/2005 6:57:56 PM PST by freedom44
CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. Jewish leaders say they are increasingly worried that Christian conservatives want to turn America politically and culturally into a country that tolerates only their brand of Christianity.
"There is a feeling on all sides that something is changing," said Abraham Foxman, director of the New York-based Anti-Defamation League.
"The polls indicate a very serious thing -- that over 60 percent of the American people feel that religion and Christianity are under attack," he said on Thursday in an interview.
"Some are saying we are attacking (Christianity). This whole movement is not anti-Semitic or motivated by anti-Semitism. But sometimes unintended consequences are much more serious than intended" he added.
Foxman recently arranged a meeting in New York involving six Jewish organizations to discuss the problem. He said that while participants did not agree on the exact level of the problem, they felt a strategy was needed.
"It's not a war room strategy," he added. "It's to understand what's out there."
He said Jews are a people of faith but are opposed to anyone who would say only they know the truth and want to impose it on everyone else.
While every December brings disputes over what to call the "holiday season" and its trappings, the level of lobbying by those who fear Christmas is becoming something generic has been particularly high this year.
But the issues raised by Foxman and others goes much deeper into American society, ranging from challenges to teaching evolution to bans on abortion and same-sex marriage or deciding
what kind of people who should serve on the U.S. Supreme Court.
"Every room (from bedroom to classroom) in the American mansion is under assault to impose either de facto or de jure a Christian theocracy -- I call them Christocrats," said Rabbi James Rudin, former head of interreligious activities for the American Jewish Committee.
"They are people who believe there should be a legally mandated Christian nation, where the concept of separation of church and state is weakened or abandoned," he added.
Rudin said he has met pastors "who say that Jesus Christ is the ultimate leader of America and that God's law trumps the Constitution ... I'm very concerned."
While far from all evangelical Christians hold those views, he said, the influence of those who do is strong.
Rudin, whose book "The Baptizing of America: The Religious Right's Plans for the Rest of Us" will be published in January by Avalon, said those with a theocratic agenda are not anti-Semites, and in fact some of them are among the strongest supporters of the state of Israel.
But he said they are Christians who see secular humanists and globalists as their enemies and who feel they are being attacked.
Mathew (cq) Staver, general counsel of the Florida-based Liberty Counsel, a group which backs conservative Christian causes in court and which has been particularly active in Christmas-related issues, says "there is absolutely no effort that I'm aware of to theocratize America or put down other faiths to expand Christianity."
He credits the increased activity surrounding Christmas issues this year to three years of building an organization over the matter.
"People have said enough is enough," he said, citing such incidents as naming Boston's Christmas tree a "holiday tree" and the publication of a sales catalog by a major retailer which featured Kwanza and Hanukkah gifts but made no mention of Christmas.
President George W. Bush, who describes himself as a born-again Christian, also faced criticism recently for sending out cards wishing people a happy "holiday" season.
"This clearly demonstrates that the Bush administration has suffered a loss of will and that they have capitulated to the worst elements in our culture," William A. Donohue, president of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights told the Washington Post.
If you wanted to guess which of two individuals were more warmly disposed towards Jews and Israel, and the only thing you knew about these two people was that one was an evangelical Christian, and the other was a member of an "establishment" denomination (eg, Episcopalian, Presbyterian) is there any doubt who it would be?
Yes, I understand that I am making a generalization, and that there are anti-semitic evangelicals and philo-semitic Presbyterians, but Foxman is really barking up the wrong tree.
Sadly, we Canadians dont have a written constitution. The Bill of Rights is actually a section of the Constitution, correct?
Jews needn't feel threatened by Republicans and Conservatives; they should rightly be deathly afraid of their long standing moral(?), ethical(?) and monetary support to liberalism and the Democratic Party, however.
"Sadly, we Canadians dont have a written constitution. The Bill of Rights is actually a section of the Constitution, correct? " YES. Ten where ratified from an original 12. If you would want a quick glance, you may want to go to this site;
http://usinfo.state.gov/usa/infousa/facts/funddocs/billeng.htm
The reason I included them as a seperate entity is they define a citizen's rights in relation to the over all constitution. In essense they are simply a part of our constitution. Think of them as "add-ons" to what the original constitution contained.
Intereseting. I had no idea you folks did not have a constitution along similiar lines as ours.
I got you. Tongue in cheek. :) You can't always be sure in print.
Thanks for your explanation. Interesting. I understood your borrowing the English parlimentary process but just assumed all our western nations had a written constitution. Great. I learned something new today.
Your welcome. That's why I am a recent convert to republicanism. Other democracies are not equal essentially because they simply result in mob rule. Sufficient constitutional protections from the government do not exist.
Great post! Thanks!
The Christian Right are Israel's best friends.
A scientific "theory" is the end game in science, it doesn't get any higher than that.
Sure it can. There is a step above theory. Its a scientific law. Thats why you have Newton's three laws of motion. They are not theory, they are indisputable. Scientific theories can be fairly iron clad, but not necessarily irrefutable. That is why they are called Theories.
Not only do most Americans not know what the Electoral College is for, they also don't know what the US Senate is for. The founders orignally had the state legislatures elect the Senators for a reason. Since the XVII amendment was passed, now the state legislatures don't have a single check against the Federal government, except for calling a Constitutional Convention. We should give our state legislatures a check in the Senate again. We should repeal the XVII amendment and restore Checks and Balances to our system. Then the states could stop liberal judges who ban religion from this nation from being confirmed.
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