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The Stealing of America - May 05

 "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Ist Amendment

For Mary and millions like her.

80's previous comments on the growing influence of the religious right in the US have tended to look at the top of the pyramid, from members of the Bush administration to various pressure groups with a national scope, rather than their grassroots counterparts. But what is it like on a local basis, how does such religiosity at the other end of the scale affect regular citizens in their everyday lives? 80's example here is the experience of an old and dear friend who lives in a pleasant suburban neighborhood in Contra Costa County, Northern California. A widow with a teenage son, she works many hours a week to keep a good home and to be able to give her boy what he needs. Mary (not her real name) is also a great believer in a live and let live philosophy - other folk can do what they like, so long as they break no laws and bring no harm to others. She loves the area in which she lives with its clean streets and shopping plazas and access to the big city (San Francisco). She has been struggling recently to cope with extra demands made upon her since her boy was seriously injured in a car crash. Consequently she has been juggling her time between working to keep the show on the road and caring for her son. This has obviously left her feeling somewhat frazzled, but she is a great one for plowing on and working hard at her office and home until things return to a semblance of normality. Anyone unaware of her current problems wouldn't guess from her demeanor the strain under which she is operating right now, but 80 spoke with her the other day and found her uncharacteristically het up. The first thought was that her son had suffered a setback, but no, he was ok. Maybe the huge amount of work she does was wearing her down, but again, no. Just what was it that had so upset this tough and caring mom? It was the arrival in her mailbox of the May issue of a local magazine called The Valley Citizen. So? Big deal, we have all seen mags like this, with reports of local interest, diaries of sporting events and pages with recipes and lots of local ads - surely this is just the regular community stuff? It turns out that, yes, the Valley Citizen does contain much of the content you would expect, but it also runs columns that made Mary feel marginalized, shut out, hurt and deeply offended. The magazine's main page proclaims "The Valley Citizen is committed to providing a clear voice for our area's citizens." But only some of them, as we shall learn.

You see, Mary does not believe in God - or any manifestation of the supernatural. She also believes that women are fully the equal of men - something she proves everyday, working and caring for the home she bought with money she earned herself, and raising her son. In the Valley Citizen she read the views of people who feel very differently. More than that, they wish to impose these views on everyone else. She also read things that made her feel offended and embarrassed on behalf of many of her neighbors, who represent the broad spectrum of 21st century multicultural life. Many of them are professionals who emigrated to California, drawn by the siren song of the place - and the good high-tech jobs that needed their skills, skills the US alone can no longer supply (but that's another story, although connected with this one). These neighbors include, among others, a couple of Indian families, one Sikh and the other Hindu. The neighbors also include a gay couple in a longstanding and stable relationship, late middle-aged men who have retired to this pleasant area. The columns in the Valley Citizen that we shall glance at in a moment damn all these good people, just because they are what they are. What is on display in this magazine is a complete reversal of the all-inclusive American dream that has, in the past, attracted immigrants the world over to make the country their home, where they can raise their kids and where they can contribute to society and their new country and be valued for it. In the past many of these people left their homelands because of religious persecution. The Valley Citizen, for all of its external banality, is full of bigotry and thinly disguised hatred, and it is aimed at these American citizens. One attribute of the US that attracted folk in the past, particularly from Great Britain, was the lack of a class system. If you worked hard and obeyed the law then you belonged - this is no longer the case - there is now an attempt to create a new underclass, an underclass consisting of those of a religion other than Christianity or (gasp!) no religion at all. The agenda of the Valley Citizen, or more accurately that of the editors, Terry & Dee Thompson, is a right-wing, Christian, intolerant one that excludes many good Americans. (Their racist views have offended previously - they must be a charming couple.) This intolerance is nowhere more evident than in the section called Family Values. There is something about that term, and the kind of people who use it, that tells you it really means OUR values, not yours, are the right ones. Here you will meet America's homespun Taliban, starting with Our Godly Heritage by Russell Boates, in which he uses the happy event of the birth of a grandchild to put women firmly in their place, which is at home doing household work and having babies. As this Christian mullah puts it, "Women are being stripped of their God-given maternal instincts by liberal feminists who promote abortion, alternate life-styles, and equality with men. How sad! Women can do men's work many times but who is taking the woman's place in the home as mother, nurturer, encourager, home-maker, etc." You can perhaps imagine the effect this tirade had on Mary, who is not only an intelligent and independent woman (something that seems to frighten Boates) but has managed to run a home, hold down a job without which she would lose that home, and raise a son. Boates' misrepresentation of "liberal feminists" is outrageous - no one "promotes" abortion but in some sad and very difficult circumstances it may be necessary. It is certainly not a course upon which ANY woman would embark lightly - and it is certainly none of Boates' damn business if they do. And what does he mean by alternate lifestyles? Any lifestyle which differs from his own interpretation of a Christian one, of course. He also has another job in mind for mothers, "God meant for them to impart rich character qualities into their children raising them in the fear of God." Surely "rich character qualities" and living in constant fear of a supernatural being are mutually incompatible. In fact, the latter would seem to call for psychiatric help rather than praise and approval.

Boates' agenda is made more obvious by clicking the link at the end of his diatribe, which will take you to Wallbuilders, a site apparently dedicated to re-writing American history from a narrow religious point of view. While many of the Founding Fathers believed in a god, the Christianity of someone like Boates is not representative of their beliefs. Many of them were theists, believing in a divine guiding power, but they deliberately chose not to establish a Christian church - or any other. The example of the religious wars and intolerance in Europe was enough for these wise men not to shackle themselves to a single interpretation of religion. For all the cherrypicking of choice phrases by Wallbuilders from the correspondence of these men, employed in an attempt to bolster the idea of a Christian theocracy, this is not reflected in the one document that really matters, the Constitution. These founders were men of the Enlightenment, they had seen the horrors of a church and state shackled together in the holy wars and persecutions that had wracked Europe for centuries. Many of them undoubtedly believed in a god, but equally undoubtedly they did not seek to impose their religious beliefs on others who did not share them.

Boates is not the only contributor who deeply upset Mary, there is David "Pastor" Brown with his View from the Pulpit. Brown takes exception to the court decision that allowed Terri Schiavo to die, but not with any sort of dignity. Who took away that dignity? Interfering politicians and religionists like Brown who saw a bandwagon and jumped aboard - only to find that the majority of Americans did not approve of such high-handed interference in what was a private family tragedy. In his piece Standing Up or Standing By Brown equates the decision of Judge Greer to allow Terri Schiavo to die, instead of pointlessly prolonging her bodily functions by the misapplication of technology, with the actions of the Nazis. As 80 has noted before, anyone that starts flinging Nazi accusations around is doing so because of the weakness of their own position, and pushing the Nazi button is the only thing they can do. It is noteworthy that many of the leading lights of the Nazi regime were, in fact, religionists including Hitler himself. Belief in a deity, and the belief that one's actions are ordered by that deity, has led to more oppression, hatred and cruelty than any atheist or agnostic could achieve. The unbelievers would have to live with the consequences of their actions, instead of shunting responsibility "upstairs" to some supernatural Higher Command. To quote Blaise Pascal, "Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from religious conviction."  Astoundingly, Brown, by a twisted analogy between the court process in Florida and the Nuremburg trials at the close of the second World War, says that, "By the Nuremburg standard, Judge Greer is guilty and deserves the death penalty." And how does this deeply unpleasant and bigoted man arrive at this conclusion? "Because God's law takes precedence over man's law!" This of course, is Brown's god, or rather his narrow interpretation of the Christian god. Implicit in his piece is that everyone should live subject to HIS god's laws, with a "...conscience formed from our study of the Bible and the Ten Commandments". (Which ten commandments he does not specify.) So there we have it - this is the voice of those who want a theocracy - based on OUR study of the bible and ten commandments, not yours. The arrogance of this person is breathtaking - he already knows all the answers - this is the kind of smug certainty that one's actions are unassailably right and divinely inspired that led to Auschwitz, the Inquisition and the Salem witch trials.

So, what place is there in the America of Boates and Brown and their ilk for Mary, her neighbors and their children? The unsolicited arrival of the Valley Citizen was like a slap in the face to my friend. At another time she might have dismissed such bigotry and propaganda as not worth the little time she has to spare in a busy life, but right now she is tired out, struggling hard so she can keep her home and nurse her son back to health. Her vision of a  good life means being caring and tolerant of other's point of view, and not unthinkingly and contemptuously imposing one's beliefs, or lack of them, on others, in short, to live and let live. No doubt the editors of the Valley Citizen are happily smug in their righteousness and no doubt feel that the hurt and rejection felt by those who worship differently from themselves, or not at all, is well-deserved. The editors, Terry & Dee Thompson, and their columnists such as Russell Boates and Pastor Brown, are keen at every opportunity to wrap themselves in the flag of the United States of America, but they do not represent the America where individuals are free to make their own way and flourish in a climate of tolerance, whether they are Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, Christians or any other faiths, and none. A land where ideally everyone is equal,  where there is no underclass whose membership is decided by ignorant religious bigots whose cruel and thoughtless propaganda masquerades as a neighborhood magazine. This America, the land of the free, is under threat as never before. This is not the external threat of terrorism but a threat from within, a threat to the very structure of the country, from the plutocrats like George W Bush and Tom DeLay at the very top, down to the grimy little footsoldiers spreading prejudice, intolerance, misogyny and homophobia via grubby little publications such as the Valley Citizen. For every Russell Boates or Pastor Brown and their poison there is a Mary, raising her son to be a fair and tolerant citizen, a citizen unwilling to condemn others merely because their beliefs and ways of life are different from his own. The bigots and the hatemongers must not be allowed to steal America from its citizens. It would be a most interesting exercise to contact the many businesses that advertise in the Valley Citizen and which no doubt furnish a large proportion of its revenue, to see if the owners approve of the material published in Family Values, and whether they are proud to have their businesses associated with such sentiments.