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Attack of the fuzzy-faithed Rovians.


I HAVE NEVER BELIEVED that religiosity re·li·gi·os·i·ty  
n.
1. The quality of being religious.

2. Excessive or affected piety.

Noun 1. religiosity - exaggerated or affected piety and religious zeal
religiousism, pietism, religionism
 was the primary underlying reason for George W. Bush's hallmark "Faith-Based Initiative." I see it as primarily an updated and expanded version of the spoils system spoils system, in U.S. history, the practice of giving appointive offices to loyal members of the party in power. The name supposedly derived from a speech by Senator William Learned Marcy in which he stated, "to the victor belong the spoils. : sending resources to prop up the base, reward friends, and buy off or neutralize opposition.

On January 18, 2005, the Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times

Morning daily newspaper. Established in 1881, it was purchased and incorporated in 1884 by Harrison Gray Otis (1837–1917) under The Times-Mirror Co. (the hyphen was later dropped from the name).
 published an investigation of this program that demonstrated that most of the money went to religious groups in swing states, particularly African-American churches. The paper demonstrated a direct correlation Noun 1. direct correlation - a correlation in which large values of one variable are associated with large values of the other and small with small; the correlation coefficient is between 0 and +1
positive correlation
 between money going in and a significant increase in the African-American vote for Bush between 2000 and 2004.

In one sense there is nothing new in this. There have been many GOP efforts to divide the African-American churches over the years, and this is but one of them. The GOP has sought to degrade the historic Democratic coalition and to reduce the volatile issues of race as a moral and political factor working against them. Conservatives, including conservative Christians, were mostly on the wrong side or on the sidelines On the sidelines

An investor who decides not to invest due to market uncertainty.


on the sidelines

Of or relating to investors who, having assessed the market, have decided to avoid committing their funds.
 of one of the great moral struggles of the twentieth century--the African-American civil rights movement--and they are still paying the price. Recently GOP National Chairman Ken Mehlman Kenneth Brian Mehlman (born August 21, 1966, Baltimore, Maryland) is an American attorney who was chairman of the Republican National Committee from 2005 to 2007. He served as the campaign manager for George W. Bush's 2004 re-election campaign.  noted that the party intends to further improve its numbers among African-Americans, Jews, and women over the next four years. So we can reasonably expect to see more such taxpayer funds directed to selected religions. Journalist and blogger Max Blumenthal calls it "bribery."

That said, let's recall that Bush was unable to get legislative authorization for a broad faith-based agenda during his first term, so the administration did everything it could to use executive orders to fast track cash to faith-based groups--this, while doing everything it could to underfund un·der·fund  
tr.v. un·der·fund·ed, un·der·fund·ing, un·der·funds
To provide insufficient funding for.
 and overregulate o·ver·reg·u·late  
tr.v. o·ver·reg·u·lat·ed, o·ver·reg·u·lat·ing, o·ver·reg·u·lates
To burden excessively with rules and regulations: did not want to overregulate the airlines.
 public agencies. It's an old Republican strategy to discredit and hobble hobble

leather straps fastened around the pasterns of horses, mules and donkeys. Placed on all four legs and pulled together by a rope, it provides an effective means of casting the horse.
 government agencies and programs they don't like, and to turn taxpayer money over to private business. Now religious groups are beneficiaries of the spoils as well. (That the justification for this is often "efficiency" is beyond preposterous and warrants reframing reframing (rē·frāˑ·ming),
n the revisiting and reconstruction of a patient's view of an experience to imbue it with a different usually more positive meaning in the
 from a reinvigorated Democratic Party.) What we are seeing in this--and of course in the attempted privatization privatization: see nationalization.
privatization

Transfer of government services or assets to the private sector. State-owned assets may be sold to private owners, or statutory restrictions on competition between privately and publicly owned
 of social security, no-bid defense contracts for the war in Iraq, and tax cuts for the rich, among other things--is the transfer of wealth, the common wealth, to base constituents and prospective constituents of the Republican Party.

We have seen this at the state level in the efforts to direct money for public education into religious and for-profit "charter" schools. Lack of rigorous evaluation and oversight has meant more than a few scams, and more than a few grants handed over to incompetent operators and overt proselytizers, as has been documented by Americans United for Separation of Church and State Americans United for Separation of Church and State (Americans United or AU for short) is a religious freedom advocacy group in the United States which promotes the separation of church and state, a legal doctrine seen by the AU as being enshrined in the Establishment  and reported in Church and State magazine. This, and Americans United's effective public opposition to the program, hasn't gone unnoticed at the White House.

James Towey, director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives The White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives (OFBCI) is a department under the Office of the President of the United States that was established by President George W. , reiterated the president's commitment to the program in a speech in December 2004. In the same speech he denounced opponents of the program as "secular extremists" and singled out the Reverend Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United. Not only is Lynn a minister in the United Church of Christ United Church of Christ, American Protestant denomination formed in 1957 by a merger of the General Council of Congregational Christian Churches (see Congregationalism) and the Evangelical and Reformed Church.  but the AU board and chapter leaders are believers of many faiths, and many of them are clergy.

Towey's attack on the religious faith of people who oppose the political program of the administration is a symptom of exactly what is wrong with the Faith-Based Initiative: it is not now nor has it ever been about faith, except in the sense that the idea of faith is being cleverly used to promote a political program.

What then to do? For starters, let's stop using the term faith-based as much as possible. It's a Bushist frame that conceals and clouds the political and policy purposes of administration programs. More specifically, when we mean government grants and contracts to religious groups, let's say so. Try saying it out loud: "Government grants and contracts to religious groups." Hmm. It doesn't have the same ring or meaning does it? Now say out loud "Faith-based programs" It sounds so soft, safe, and noncontroversial.

In fact, the term itself and the reality behind it is a classic cooptation of faith itself. Most religious traditions recognize that the state can never be the source of faith, even as many, if not most, people in politics have religious ideas of their own. Their personal faith may have everything--or nothing--to do with their jobs or their idea of public service. But the conflation (database) conflation - Combining or blending of two or more versions of a text; confusion or mixing up. Conflation algorithms are used in databases.  of faith with government--with its programs, policies, staff, and elected leaders--is a distortion and often an abuse of faith itself. (And the Bush administration effectively misuses the idea of "faith" as a cover for the real intentions of its programs.) A politician or program may share values and ideals consistent with one's faith but it isn't the same thing, even though clever politicians know how to play to religious communities just as they do any other constituency.

There is no singular faith at work in any government--including the Bush administration--even as it seeks to wrap religiosity around its entire public policy and political agenda. There is great diversity among Christians, even conservative Christians, as well as non-Christians--whether in the Bush administration, in the nation, or in the world. The danger here is the cooptation of religious faith by the most powerful government on the planet to justify and promote its domestic and foreign policy.

Some of those on the Christian theocratic the·o·crat  
n.
1. A ruler of a theocracy.

2. A believer in theocracy.



the
 right have seen this clearly for a long time. They see the risk of corruption and compromise by feeding at the government trough and don't partake. But the Rovian politics behind the Faith-Based Initiative, in all of its manifestations, see it not as a risk but an opportunity. For you see, people of many varieties of faith (including some of the most conservative theocrats), along with their institutions, can be a check against the power of the state. Therefore, such potentially powerful opponents to the direction of a nascent imperial state must be dealt with--with money and the seductiveness of power--or otherwise coopted, neutralized, or silenced.

The effort has been successful. As a result, we now have churches and religiously oriented agencies lined up at the faith-based soup kitchen while the Bush administration carries out the greatest transfer of wealth in the history of the world and conducts a largely unfettered march towards global domination. That religious opponents of major domestic and foreign policies of the Bush administration have internalized the faith-based frame on their own is a gift that Karl Rove undoubtedly savors every time he hears a mainstream religious leader use the term and try to own it. Every such usage further legitimizes the fuzzy-faithed facade on the administration's political program of cooptation of churches.

Frederick Clarkson is an independent journalist, author, and lecturer who has written about politics and religion for twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
. He is author of Eternal Hostility: The Struggle Between Theocracy theocracy

Government by divine guidance or by officials who are regarded as divinely guided. In many theocracies, government leaders are members of the clergy, and the state's legal system is based on religious law. Theocratic rule was typical of early civilizations.
 and Democracy (Common Courage Press, 1997). This column is an adaptation and abridgement of a January 27, 2005, post of the same title to his blog at www.FrederickClarkson.com.
COPYRIGHT 2005 American Humanist Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Church & State
Author:Clarkson, Frederick
Publication:The Humanist
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 1, 2005
Words:1207
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