Robertson race horses scratched after critics charge hypocrisy. (People & Events).TV preacher and Christian Coalition Christian Coalition, organization founded to advance the agenda of political and social conservatives, mostly comprised of evangelical Protestant Republicans, and to preserve what it deems traditional American values. founder Pat Robertson Marion Gordon "Pat" Robertson (born March 22 1930)[1] is a televangelist from the United States.[2] He is the founder of numerous organizations and corporations, including the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ), Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN), has agreed to end his involvement in horse racing horse racing, trials of speed involving two or more horses. It includes races among harnessed horses with one of two particular gaits, among saddled Thoroughbreds (or, less frequently, quarterhorses) on a flat track, or among saddled horses over a turf course with after a barrage of negative reaction to a New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times report about his fondness for the sport. Robertson owns several thoroughbreds and recently purchased a horse he named Mr. Pat, which he had hoped would some day race in the Kentucky Derby Kentucky Derby One of the classic U.S. Thoroughbred horse races. It was established in 1875 and run annually on the first Saturday in May at Churchill Downs track in Louisville, Ky. With the Preakness and the Belmont Stakes, it makes up U.S. racing's coveted Triple Crown. . Robertson now says he will disband dis·band v. dis·band·ed, dis·band·ing, dis·bands v.tr. To dissolve the organization of (a corporation, for example). v.intr. 1. his racing stable by November. "I don't bet and I don't gamble," Robertson told The Times. "I just enjoy watching horses running and performing." Robertson's Coalition, which he officially stepped away from last year, has long opposed legalized gambling, and Robertson himself has opposed other forms of gambling in some states. In Alabama he appeared in television commercials to oppose a bill that would have permitted video gambling at dog tracks. He has also backed a ban on some forms of Internet gambling but said he would exempt horse racing. "I wish horse racing was not supported by gambling," Robertson told The Times. "They call it the sport of kings. People from King Solomon on have been raising and racing horses. The people I see at the track, they don't seem to love horses. They're looking at The Racing Forum and are trying to make money betting. I like to look at them as performers and to study their bloodlines. That's what I find interesting." Martin Marty, a professor of the history of modern Christianity at the University of Chicago, was not persuaded by Robertson's attempt to justify his actions. "The notion of an evangelical entering horse racing and gambling, well, he can pretend all he wants that he's in it for the beauty of the sport, but you can't look at it that way or buy your way out of it by saying that," Marty observed. "The whole culture of horse racing involves gambling, and all the money comes from people trying to hit it big gambling. This is like saying you're investing in a bordello but aren't in favor of prostitution." Robertson took a hard line toward gambling in his 1984 book Answers to 200 of Life's Most Probing Questions. "Pervasive gambling teaches people that fame, success, and fortune are available without work or struggle," Robertson wrote. "A roll of the dice, a turn of a card, the spin of a wheel, the run of a horse, the drawing of a lottery number are held out as the way to riches. The virtues of industry, thrift, careful investment, and patience are all undermined by this vice. In their place come human greed, lust, avarice av·a·rice n. Immoderate desire for wealth; cupidity. [Middle English, from Old French, from Latin av , sloth sloth (slōth, slôth), arboreal mammal found in Central and South America distantly related to armadillos and anteaters. Sloths live in tropical forests, where they sleep, eat, and travel through the trees suspended upside down, clinging to , and a live-for-the-moment mentality." On May 8 more than 200 religious leaders, including many Religious Right activists, placed a full-page advertisement in Washington, D.C.'s Roll Call newspaper, urging President George W. Bush to curb the spread of legalized gambling. Robertson was noticeably absent from the list of signers. A few weeks after the April 22 Times story ran, Robertson announced that he was ending his involvement in horse racing. On his website, www.patrobertson.com, Robertson said he had received about 200 letters from supporters disagreeing with his involvement in racing. He sent each a letter that read in part, "I am sorry that my fondness for the performance of equine athletes has caused you an offense; therefore, for your sake and the sake of others like you, I have set in motion the necessary plans to dispose of To determine the fate of; to exercise the power of control over; to fix the condition, application, employment, etc. of; to direct or assign for a use. See also: Dispose all of my thoroughbred racing and breeding stock between now and the breeding sale in Kentucky in November." In other news about the Religious Right: * Religious Right author Chuck Colson is under fire for using ghost-written material in his books and columns. The evangelical magazine World reported in April that Colson, in a Christianity Today column, blasted historian Stephen Ambrose, who has been accused of plagiarism Using ideas, plots, text and other intellectual property developed by someone else while claiming it is your original work. . Ironically, that same Colson column was in fact written by someone else--ghost writer Anne Morse, although her name appeared nowhere on it. Colson later admitted that his books, columns and other materials are produced by teams of writers. Colson defended his practice, saying he gives credit to the other writers when he feels he should. * The president of Bob Jones University wants people to stop using the terra "fundamentalist," saying it has become too closely identified with terrorism. Bob Jones III Robert Reynolds Jones III (b. August 8, 1939), third president of Bob Jones University. The son of Bob Jones, Jr., and the grandson of Bob Jones, Sr., the university's founder, Jones III served as president of BJU from 1971 to 2005. , president of the ultra-conservative school, based in Greenville, S.C., wrote a column recently asserting, "Fundamentalist evokes fear, suspicion and other repulsive connotations in its current usage." Jones recommended using the term "preservationist pres·er·va·tion·ist n. One who advocates preservation, especially of natural areas, historical sites, or endangered species. pres " instead. |
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