Faith Abuse: When God Becomes a Campaign Ploy
George W. is truly corrupting faith and dragging it into the political
gutter.
By Arianna Huffington
http://www.alternet.org/columnists/story/20318/
As someone for whom faith is incredibly important, and who regularly
prays for all the people and things that matter to me, I'm hopeful
that God is as appalled as I am with the way His name is constantly
being taken in vain on the Bush campaign trail, and with how the
president is abusing his faith to justify to himself and to the world
his disastrous policies.
Lord knows there's a very long list of things to be angry with Bush
about but this one has moved to the top of my personal hit parade
because, as Catholic theologians teach us, "the corruption of the best
is the worst." And George W. is truly corrupting faith and dragging it
into the political gutter. In two fundamental ways:
First, he's using it as a spiritual inoculation against uncertainty
and complexity.
Ron Suskind's recent piece in the New York Times Magazine painted a
chilling portrait of a presidency in which thoughtful analysis and
moral questioning have been replaced by "God-given" certainty, and
where facts and open debate have become an anathema.
Suskind reveals a president who uses his faith to numb himself against
reality. It anesthetizes him in the same way a stiff drink – okay, 20
stiff drinks – used to, and allows him to drown out the voices of
doubt.
Great thinkers throughout history have extolled the virtues of doubt.
As Paul Tillich put it: "Doubt isn't the opposite of faith; it is an
element of faith."
But not in the Bush White House, where doubters are treated as
traitors, and inconvenient facts are the work of the Devil. Because
facts can lead to questioning, and questioning undermines faith. And
that would be blasphemy in an Oval Office where unbending resolve has
become a holy sacrament. No wonder Bush is unwilling to admit to even
a single mistake.
The second way the president is corrupting his faith is by using it as
a marketing tool designed to garner support among the over 60 million
Americans who identify themselves as evangelical – particularly the
four million born-again voters who stayed home in 2000.
Nowhere is this blending of church and campaign more evident than in
"George W. Bush: Faith in the White House," a DVD being distributed to
tens of thousands of America's churches.
Although not officially the work of the Bush-Cheney campaign, it
obviously has its approval, and indeed was screened at a party for
Christian conservatives hosted by the campaign at the GOP convention
in New York.
In the documentary, President Bush is presented as a man with "the
moral clarity of an old-fashioned biblical prophet" – and is shown
sharing a beatific split screen with the Son of God himself.
So, in 2004, Jesus is not only the president's favorite philosopher –
he's his surrogate running mate. I'm surprised we haven't seen any
"Bush-Christ 2004" bumper stickers yet. It would make for a heck of an
October surprise.
All this pious posturing is also being used as a cudgel with which to
attack John Kerry, portraying him as a sorry second in the faith
sweepstakes.
Forget that Kerry carries a bible and a rosary with him on the
campaign trail, used to be an altar boy, and has said "My faith
affects everything that I do" – the Bushies have made it seem as if
they are running against Joe Pagan. Just check out the "Kerry: Wrong
for Catholics" page on the official Bush-Cheney campaign website.
What's next? Attack ads from Altar Boys for Truth claiming Kerry never
actually swallowed the body of Christ during communion?
What the president calls faith is actually nothing of the sort. It is
fanaticism, pure and simple. The defining trait of the fanatic is an
utter refusal to allow anything as piddling as evidence to get in the
way of an unshakable belief.
This zealot's mindset is what allows President Bush to take in the
death and destruction in Iraq and see them as "freedom on the march."
And it's also what allows Abu Zarqawi and his followers to coldly put
a bullet in the back of the head of four-dozen unarmed Iraqi Army
recruits because they are "apostates."
"Either you're with us, or you're against us" plainly cuts both ways.
"This is why George W. Bush is so clear-eyed about Al Qaeda and the
Islamic fundamentalist enemy," explained Bruce Bartlett, a domestic
policy advisor to Reagan and Bush 41. "He understands them because
he's just like them."
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