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Chris Hedges: The Christian Right’s War on America

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Posted on Feb 6, 2007
Robert Scheer, James Harris and Chris Hedges

From left to right: Truthdig Editor Robert Scheer; Truthdig contributing editor James Harris; author Chris Hedges. 

Robert Scheer and James Harris speak with Chris Hedges, the veteran journalist and author of the new book “American Fascists,” about the threat of the radical Christian movement, and about how getting it right on Iraq ended his relationship with The New York Times.

Listen to the full interview (running time: 44:56 / 41.1 MB)

Full transcript:

Harris: James Harris sitting down with Mr. Robert Scheer, and special guest on the phone is Chris Hedges, the author of the new title ”American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America.” Chris is currently a senior fellow at The Nation Institute, and a former correspondent for The New York Times. Chris, how are you today?

Hedges: I’m all right—just flew in from Seattle.

Harris: Let’s start by talking about your 2002 book, “War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning.” In this text, you talk about nations and their behavior during wartime. Looking back at our behavior over the last three and a half to four years, as we’ve been at war with Iraq, how have our citizens and our president—how have we behaved?

Hedges: Well, the book, because I spent almost 20 years covering various wars around the globe, the book tried to explain the patterns of war—what happens to individuals and societies in war, and how they react. Unfortunately, we reacted in the way that most countries react when they go to war. It wasn’t just the Bush administration that pushed us into war. The media was completely in complicity with very few exceptions. The population at large got off on it; the cable news channels pumped out this garbage over 24-hour news cycles with graphics and drum rolls. And this was part of the whole sickness that happened to the country after 9/11, where unbridled nationalism—which I think is a disease—was unleashed. It brings with it—it really is just a form of crude, self-exaltation, but it brings with it a very dark undercurrent of racism—racism towards Muslims, towards anyone, including the French, who disagreed with us. And our society was really enveloped with this sickness. It really was a sickness that I had seen on the streets of Belgrade. It wasn’t a new sickness to me, but of course it was disturbing because this time around it was my own nation. And that euphoria lasted basically until the war went bad, or until people realized that it was going badly. And then we forgot about it. There’s a kind of willful amnesia that is also a pattern of wartime society—certainly something I saw in Argentine society after their defeat in the Falkland war. And now these very cable news channels and media outlets that sold us the war virtually don’t cover it. They pretend the war doesn’t exist, and they feed us this trivia and celebrity gossip that unfortunately in American society is consumed as news.

Harris: The situation that constituents, that the media was complicit in starting the war, I think some people may take offense to that. How was that received at the time, and what do you say to the criticism of, “Chris Hedges, I think you’re crazy.”

Hedges: Well, as one of the very few people, along with Bob Scheer, who was speaking out against this war, I can tell you that it was a very lonely position to be in. And I worked at the time for The New York Times. The New York Times acted as nothing less than a stenographer for the Bush White House—pumping out the lies used to justify the war. And there were reasoned, thoughtful, well-informed voices questioning, for instance, whether Iraq was trying to reconstitute a nuclear weapons program, or whether it actually had WMD, or whether it was actually a threat or had links to al-Qaida—and they couldn’t get into the mainstream media at all.  I think you’d be very hard-pressed—with the exception obviously of the alternative press. But we live in a country where the press, like everything else, has become completely corporatized. I think it’s something like 80 percent of American newspapers are controlled by six or eight corporations. And it’s pretty hard to break through that wall. So there were people around the edges, and there were a few of us even within the mainstream who spoke out against the war, but our voices were pretty much drowned out in this cacophony of war rhetoric and fear.

Harris: I don’t know if you know the name Scott Ritter—you probably do.

Hedges: I know Scott.

Harris: I remember at the time hearing Scott Ritter say, without reservation, that there are no weapons in Iraq, but still we went in; still Colin Powell stood before the United Nations and showed them the video, showed them the footage where there were weapons in Iraq. And Scott Ritter all along said, “There are no weapons.” I do blame, and in retrospect say that there should have been more effort to bring these stories to the forefront. Are you suggesting that propaganda was used by the media, perhaps by the government to suppress these types of stories?

Hedges: At the inception of any war, the press is part of the problem. That’s a pattern I certainly saw—and there are almost no exceptions to that. When your nation goes to war, there’s a kind of knee-jerk kind of response on the part of most of the press that their job is to boost morale, maintain the myth of war, vilify the enemies. And that goes all the way back to the Crimean War when the first modern war correspondent was invented.

Harris: Chris, a lot of people may not know that you are a graduate of Harvard Divinity School, and your new text, “American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America,” I like your perspective, because you, obviously from an educated standpoint, can speak to the theology around this war.

Hedges: I look at the religious right, the radical religious right, those people who want to create a Christian nation, as a mass movement. I don’t give them much religiosity at all. I think they have acculturated the Christian religion with the worst aspects of American imperialism and American capitalism. They prey on the despair of tens of millions of Americans in this country who have been completely disenfranchised and shunted aside with the creation of this American oligarchy. That is the engine of the movement. These people, their lives have become train wrecks, their communities have been physically obliterated with the flight of manufacturing jobs, or they live in these soulless exurbs, in places like Orange County, with no community center, no community rituals—you know, they don’t even have sidewalks. And they’re lonely, and they’re alienated, and they’re lost. And that’s the fodder that demagogues use to amass totalitarian movements. And they do that by offering these people a world of magic, of belief in destiny and miracles and angels, that Jesus has a plan for them. And they essentially remove them from the reality-based world. That’s what creationism is about. And everybody who’s written about despotic movements, from Hannah Arendt to Karl Popper to Fritz Stern to Robert Paxton, cites this despair as being the kindling that allows despotic, totalitarian movements to tear apart the open society. So for me the radical Christian right is very much a manifestation of the inequities and the injustices that plague American society. We now live in a country where the top 1 percent control more wealth, or have more wealth, than the bottom 90 percent combined. The absolute destruction of the working class—and much of my family has been a victim of this—has now been accompanied by an assault on the middle class. So anything that can be put on software, from engineering to finance to architecture, can get outsourced, where it’ll end up in India, where they’ll work for a third of the wages, with no health insurance, no benefits. These kinds of assaults against the working and middle class are absolutely deadly to a democratic state. And that’s something that even the Greeks wrote about. I mean, Plutarch and Thucydides understood that.

Harris: Clarify for me, though, the relation to the evangelical right, or evangelists in general. I understand the preying on a particular class—because they’re vulnerable. When you live without for most of your life, you’re vulnerable to anything that looks appealing to you. How are the evangelists using this to influence government? Because you seem to be implying that they have a profound effect on the way that American government works.

Hedges: Well, they are. When this notion of a new political religion was first articulated in the early ’80s by people like Pat Robertson, the proponents of this were on the margins or fringes of American society. They’ve now moved into the corridors of power—into the House of Representatives, the Senate, the executive branch and the courts. And they’ve received under the Bush administration hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayer money. They’ve gone a long way toward setting up hermetic, closed indoctrination systems through Christian radio and television. They’ve brought the teaching of this mythology of creationism into public schools in places like Kansas. The advances that this movement has made in the last 20-25 years, is frightening. There’s no question that unless we begin to rectify the imbalances within this country, this will become the dominant political force. And it is a force in which all who do not subscribe to this narrow, frightening ideology—which bears many similarities with classical fascist movements—and all those who do not submit to these so-called Christian leaders, will at best become second-class citizens.

Harris: As a country, aren’t we open to this by virtue of the phrase “One nation, under God”? We’ve never been—you may argue otherwise—we’ve never been terribly eager to disassociate ourselves with religion. All of our presidents, except for one, practiced some sort of religion. So the fact that 20 million or how many other million Americans find interest in this practice of evangelism isn’t really that shocking, is it? Is it problematic, Chris Hedges, when you see church and state joining hands like this?

Hedges: Well, of course. Because it essentially serves the same purpose as the fusion of party and state, which is what totalitarian movements do. The state implements the policies of the party; they become essentially one entity. And that is by its very definition what a totalitarian state consists of. I think we have to remember that this new political religion is a radical mutation from traditional fundamentalism, or traditional evangelism. Evangelical leaders in the past, like Bill Graham, always warned their followers that—and he of course got burned and used by Richard Nixon—to keep their distance from power. And fundamentalists have traditionally called upon their followers to remove themselves from the contaminants of secular society, and to shun political activity. This is something we have not seen in the past. And yes, the nation has had certainly a Christian component to it, but there was always that understanding that religious belief was a private, internal affair, and not something that would be propounded by the state. And of course the architects of the Constitution were terrified of going back into the kind of tyranny and repression that was practiced by the puritan states, and more importantly by the religious states in Europe, because they understood the danger of that sectarian violence. And I think we should also be clear that the early Christians in this country, most of them were Deists, which these radical Christians would consider as heretics, the notion that you could find God in nature, as Jefferson and others believed.

Scheer: If I could just interrupt for a second, I feel like—this is Bob Scheer—I’m sort of a bystander to a very interesting discussion about a world that I don’t inhabit. I know James here is a practicing Christian.

Harris: Yes, I am.

Scheer: And Chris, I know you’re a person who’s been involved with religion.

Hedges: My father was a minister and I graduated from seminary.

Scheer: And so when I’m sitting here thinking: Well, what about all those other Christians—I know I traveled around with Jerry Falwell once and wrote a piece for the L.A. Times. Almost everyone I ran into, even in Lynchburg, Va., everywhere, they said they thought the guy was something of a charlatan. “Why is he on TV? Why is he getting all this money?” And this came from other “born-again” ministers and other evangelical people. And I’ve looked at some of the polling data and so forth, and evangelicals, I think, were a bit disillusioned with George Bush’s use of religion. Isn’t there a tradition of skepticism? Isn’t this what the Protestant religion was all about—skepticism of too organized, too powerful a church?

Hedges: I think you raise a really good point. Even within a single congregation, people are not going to walk in lock step. But I think that what’s happened is that with this notion of the creation of the Christian state, it has managed to overcome these doctrinal schisms. When I would attend an anti-abortion event, I would see Priests for Life, Catholic priests with people from the Salvation Army, with Baptists, with fundamentalists, with charismatics, and traditionally fundamentalists have always looked at charismatics as Satan worshippers, because they speak in tongues. But they’ve all managed to come together—although these factional disputes remain, and these differences remain—under this notion that our goal is to create the Christian state. There is a very ruthless core of people who are better described as dominionists. One thinks of Dobson, Robertson, LaHaye, Benny Hinn. These people who are pushing through a radical Christian agenda, who essentially control all Christian radio and television, and who have been quite ruthless—as we saw in the Southern Baptist convention—in pushing aside those people who don’t accept that particular political agenda, even if they’re born again, and even if they subscribe to some of the hot-button issues, like thinking that homosexuality is a sin. And they count on the sympathy or support or tacit acceptance of 80 to 100 million evangelicals in the United States, because they have been very effective in using the religious vocabulary and religious iconography—in the same way that they wrap themselves in the American flag. But I think that when you look closely, which is what my book tried to do, at what their belief system is, it is really a theology of despair. It is about bigotry, intolerance, there’s not only a lust for violence, but a kind of pornographic fascination with violence. There’s a cult of masculinity. There’s a war on science, a war on truth. And what they do, like many totalitarian movements, is speak in a language that’s comforting to the rest of us, but hollow out the definitions so they mean something else. It has a kind of newspeak quality, so peace is war. The concept of liberty, for them, as it is defined, is not our traditional definition of liberty, but liberty that comes with giving yourself over to Jesus and complete submission to Jesus Christ. And of course, in their minds, leaders who speak to Jesus. So yes, there is a great deal of skepticism. And I actually think that the most virulent opposition will rise not from the liberal church, but from within the evangelical movement itself. But these people are well financed, oftentimes by corporate interests—Wal-Mart—a lot of right-wing foundations. They’ve harnessed the power of modern communications systems and they’ve locked tens of millions of followers in closed systems of indoctrination, where they get their news, their spiritual guidance, their health and beauty tips, their entertainment, all filtered through this ideological prism.

Scheer: In your [most recent Truthdig column] you refer to your original mentor, James Luther Adams. That paragraph that caught my attention—because your book has not been easily accepted this time around, right?

Hedges: No.

Scheer: It’s interesting, when I look at your place in American letters, on the one hand you’re often celebrated as this brilliant person, you get awards, high prestige, and then every once in a while you hit some third rail, whether it was the graduation speech on the war [which resulted in your dismissal from the N.Y. Times], or when you mention Israel, even in pieces for our site, we seem to get a lot of mail, and now with this book. And when I was thinking of the criticisms of your work, I was thinking you wrote something about Adams. You wrote:

His critique of the prominent research universities, along with the media, was no less withering. These institutions, self-absorbed, compromised by their close relationship with government and corporations, given enough of the piece to be complacent, were unwilling to deal with the fundamental moral questions and inequities of the age. They had no stomach for battle that might cost them their prestige and comfort.

Is this what you’re experiencing with some of the criticism that you’ve been getting?

Hedges: Yes, although that’s not a new phenomenon, because when I was speaking out against the war, I was on the news staff of The New York Times, and I had been at The New York Times for 15 years. I knew what I was doing—that it was a kind of professional suicide. But at the same time I felt that it was morally incumbent upon me as someone who spoke Arabic and spent seven years in the Middle East, and because I had a platform because of my book—to avoid those questions or not answer them, or give non-answers to them, was not morally defensible. And then of course after I was booed off this commencement stage in Rockford, Ill., I was given a formal reprimand by the paper, and told to stop speaking out against the war. And at that point I knew my relationship with The New York Times was over, because I didn’t want to be muzzled for [the rest of] my career. And that comes out of the church. It comes out of having a father who was in the civil rights movement, the antiwar movement, and finally the gay rights movement. And as a young boy I watched him take a lot of heat for that—not only from people in the community, but from the institutional church as well. And it was a pretty good reminder that you don’t get rewarded for taking a moral stance. And the sooner you learn that, the happier you are.

Scheer: What about the criticism of your current book? It seems petty in a way—again coming often from the universities. How do you respond to it?

Hedges: I try not to focus on it. I’ve had to deal with the Israeli lobby for so long that I really try and shut it out and try not to read it, because a lot of it is just completely untrue and unfair, and I don’t want to burn up a lot of energy. I’d rather just put the blinders on and keep going and say what I have to say. I don’t like it, obviously, and I especially don’t like it when it devolves—as it usually does—into character assassination. We saw that with the response to Jimmy Carter’s book ["Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid"]. Nobody actually talked about the book; they talked about it as a controversy, at best; and usually they went after him. I sort of plow ahead. I’m not going to pretend that it’s pleasant. But at the same time I try not to waste a lot of emotional energy on it.

Harris: Do you validate or recognize any of the criticism that you’ve received? Does any of it mean anything? How do you support this? How do you stand by this point when there’s really no proof of that?

Hedges: Well, there is proof. We know Tim LaHaye has formed an organization where he matches donors with these organizations—groups like Sam’s Club have brought evangelical chaplains into their plants. There is evidence to that. And that relationship between these neocons and Christian radicals, there’s evidence within the Bush White House itself. I’m sure Cheney laughs at these people, but he finds them convenient allies. And of course, when you get people to believe in a system of magic and miracles and healings, then you don’t need health insurance; you don’t need unemployment [benefits]; welfare doesn’t matter, because as long as you get right with Jesus, you’re going to be taken care of. And I think there’s plenty of evidence to support that relationship between these sort of Straussians, like Richard Perle and others, and these Christian radicals who essentially get out the vote in places like Ohio.

Scheer: Is that an alliance that can hold?

Hedges: It’s always an uneasy alliance, and Paxton, in “The Anatomy of Fascism,” writes that, unlike communism, there’s no such thing as a purely fascist movement. Fascist movements make alliances with conservative sectors of society and often very uncomfortable ones. You saw that in Nazi Germany with Hitler and the German industrialists.

Divisions between the Bush White House and the Christian right arose over the issue of immigration, where Bush sided with the corporations—angering many within the base of the Christian right, because there’s a real backlash against immigrants within the Christian right. So it’s an uneasy alliance, but they both need each other. And in fact, this nonreality-based belief system, this ideology that is now peddled into the homes of many marginalized and desperate Americans, is one that plays into the hands of corporations that really want to defang the federal government. [The corporations] find in the ideology that’s promoted a very convenient vehicle to do that.

Harris: Have you seen Alexandra Pelosi’s movie on HBO?

Hedges: No.

Harris: She talks about the evangelicals and the extremist nature of their approach. So if you haven’t seen it --

Hedges: I don’t own a television.

Harris: A traditional man. A traditional man.

Hedges: No, I’m a freak.

Harris: [Laughs]

Scheer: We lump all these evangelicals together. But first of all, there is a racial divide.

Hedges: Yeah, and you know, the black church has been very wary of this movement traditionally, because this movement comes out of the John Birch Society, like Tim LaHaye, and the World Anti-Communist League, all the way back to the Klan. Jerry Falwell got his start as a racist demagogue who got up and talked about how desegregation was going to destroy the white race. That’s how he made his money, that’s how he built his church. And he went back in a kind of Stalin-esque purge and destroyed copies of almost every sermon he preached over a 10-year period, because it was so virulent and raw. He still preaches, in my mind, bigotry and racism. It’s just that he’s turned it on others, like homosexuals or liberals or feminists or immigrants, or whatever. But this man, he has the profile of a classic demagogue. And I think the African-American church has been very wary of these people—with good reason. Now, this movement realizes it has to bring African-Americans into the fold. So if you listen to “Focus on the Family,” this very popular radio program run by James Dobson, during Black History Month, every day they fall all over themselves to celebrate black history. I went to an event called Patriot Pastors in Ohio—this rally where they had adopted as their symbol an American flag with a Christian cross superimposed on it. They had a choir singing hymns while we watched video clips of American soldiers in Iraq. But they began by showing pictures of Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks, because they’re trying to co-opt the civil rights movement and present themselves as the natural heirs of the civil rights movement. Now not a lot of people of color were in the audience. Most of the people of color were sitting up on the podium. But one of the stars of the Christian right, a guy named Rod Parsley in Ohio, is being heavily promoted and bankrolled by people like Dobson and others because, although [Parsley’s] white, 40 percent of his congregation is African-American. So yeah, the African-American church traditionally has been sympathetic on issues such as homosexuality, on some of the hot-button issues. But as African-Americans they get institutional repression, because they’ve been a victim of it. They’ve been very wary of this movement because of the antecedents of the movement, and because they understand in a way that perhaps even whites who are at the same economic level don’t always understand, the way institutions work in places like the urban ghetto—to make sure that poor people remain poor.

Scheer: You know, one reason I don’t panic—I’m reading you and all that, and I think it’s probably that I’m just kidding myself—I just assume capitalism will triumph and that these people are at war with capitalism, for better or worse.  For instance, just the whole question of creationism—that you can’t have good science if you embrace creationism, you just can’t, and then you’re not going to be competitive with people who are doing good science, and it seems to me that, and I think this might be naive on my part, you know I’m very old-fashioned, but I have this idea that somehow they are out of step with the modern world, whether it’s controlling the lyrics in music or ... images that are shown on television or blaming Hollywood for everything. I guess I always assume they’re going to lose. Tell me why that’s wrong.

Hedges: They present themselves as a traditional movement, but they’re a distinctly modern movement, in this sense: that they promote an ideology that’s superstitious, magical and primitive, but they can only do it by co-opting the language of science, and there’s a huge industry of creationist scientists who will “prove” through scientific jargon and pseudo-science that the creation myth in Genesis is true. They don’t have a problem with technology itself, and I think that creationism serves the same role eugenics served in Germany, which was a pseudo-science about measuring people’s skulls and all this garbage, and they set up huge institutes. It was a way of turning lie into truth, of making facts interchangeable with opinion, of removing people from a reality-based world into the world they want them in, but at the same time the process of sort of building a machine is not going to interfere with that. And we’ve seen [that] Islamic groups which originally were, for instance, very distrustful of the Web have now adopted it. So I think sometimes you can have the marriage between very primitive superstitious belief systems and very advanced technology. I think one could argue that fascism in Nazi Germany did that.

That’s the first point. The second point is that this movement cannot come to power unless there is a period of prolonged instability or a crisis. I covered the war in Yugoslavia and we heard all these stories about ancient ethnic hatreds. The war in Yugoslavia had nothing to do with ancient ethnic hatreds; it had to do with the economic meltdown of Yugoslavia in the years leading up to the war, which, again, created deep despair and dislocation which the nationalist demagogues like Milosevic or Tudjman played upon. And I think that if we don’t enter a period of crisis, this movement can make creeping gains, as it has, but it probably can’t take power. But if we suffer another catastrophic terrorist attack—and I spent a year of my life covering al-Qaida for The New York Times, and there was not an intelligence chief that I interviewed here or abroad that didn’t talk about an eventual attack as inevitable—should we suffer a series of environmental disasters, or an economic meltdown, if we watch petrodollars become petroeuros, if we enter a prolonged period of instability, especially if people become afraid, then I think this movement does stand poised to reshape the country in ways that we’ve not seen, probably since our founding.

Harris: Chris, aren’t people already afraid? I mean, you look at this event that happened in Boston, where they posted these little electronic devices around the city, and Homeland Security was alerted, traffic was shut down. Aren’t we afraid right now?

Hedges: I think we’re paranoid. I think there’s a difference. I think we’re paranoid and they work to make us afraid. But I lived in Israel when the suicide bombings began. I was in Sarajevo during the war. I know what it’s like to be afraid. And you start thinking with another part of your brain. You reach out to people like Dick Cheney, who talk tough and promise to stomp the vermin out—if we’ll just give them the power to do it. That’s the appeal of an Ariel Sharon at a moment like that. That’s the appeal of a Slobodan Milosevic. So you’re right that they’ve worked really hard to try and make us afraid, but real fear, to be gripped with fear, in the sense that, “If we get on the subway it could blow up,” that’s another state and another level. And if we reach that level, especially with instability, especially with chaos, then we’re in trouble.

Scheer: As you know, the Intelligence Estimate Report, which the Washington Post had, and even [Sen. John] McCain said in his questioning of [U.S. Army general in charge of Iraq operations George] Casey—that the last two and a half years have been a disaster. And then you’ve got [Sen. Joseph] Biden coming along with this plan to partition—the old imperialist model of “divide and conquer”—and break Iraq up into three states. As probably the most experienced person who’s looked at this thing, what do you think is going on, what’s going to happen, how do you see it?

Hedges: Well, let me stress the issue of partition. Because partition presupposes that Sunni, Shia and Kurds are divided up into neat little areas—and that’s not true. There are 1 million Kurds in Baghdad alone. A partition plan would mean the dislocation of millions of Iraqis and probably murder of many Iraqis—in the same way that we saw the disasters that befell India and Pakistan during the partition plan. Because they’re mixed together. You have a huge Arab population up in the Kurdish north in Kirkuk. A partition plan like that is going to be a bloodbath.

So, what’s going to happen? A lot depends on Iran, because if—well, we’re losing the war and we’re going to have to leave, is the short answer. But the wild card becomes a hit against Iran, because a hit against Iran would ignite a Shiite uprising throughout the Middle East and become incendiary within Iraq. Whatever constraints had been placed on Shiite forces in Iraq until now would be lifted. Iran, which I’m sure is supporting the militias, would do everything in its power to turn what is already a hell into a nightmare of unimaginable proportions for American troops there. It would ignite a regional conflict, I fear, because you have Hezbollah, which is Shia; Pakistan has a huge Shia minority; Bahrain is Shia; there are 2 million Shia in Saudi Arabia—most of whom work in the oil sector; the Straits of Hormuz would get shut down. Iran does not have the capacity in a conventional sense to hit us; they might find a way to hit us in a nonconventional sense. But they certainly can hit Israel. Israel would hit back. And we’re already fighting a proxy war with Iran in the Middle East now. It happens to be a proxy war that we’re losing, because Iran backs Hezbollah; they back Hamas; they back the Shiites in Iraq. And in all of those fronts, we’re not doing real well—us or our Israeli allies. So this proxy war, which is already under way, would devolve into a full-fledged war, and I think it does have the possibility to ignite within the region, something that comes pretty close to this catastrophic Armageddon that many people in the Christian right see as a great sign, because it’s the end of history and the return of Jesus Christ.

Scheer: Now why doesn’t that scare many of the Jewish—and if they’re not Jewish, secular—neocons? I don’t get it.

Hedges: Because the neocons have built an unholy alliance with a group that’s—these people are anti-Semites, and I think the smart ones know it. But it has built an alliance between messianic Jews and messianic Christians, who believe that they have been given a divine right to rule one-fifth of the world’s population who happen to be Muslim. And that alliance is very convenient. It’s shortsighted on the part of the Jews, but for now it works. And I think that’s where they converge. There is a horribly racist element towards Muslims and a belief that we can impose through military might massive social engineering to create a Muslim Middle East which we can control, and that is amenable to our interests. And that, the messianic Jews and the messianic Christians share.

Harris: Do you think the media has done a good job of making us hate Middle Easterners? If we see someone who looks Middle Eastern, even the most educated, I think we all question, we all say, “What are their intentions?” Do you think I’m a bit off base with that question, or that thought?

Hedges: No, I think the things we say about Muslims in this country could not be said about any other ethnic group. I think the racism is raw, the ignorance is appalling. The way we denigrate their culture, their religion, talk about how they only understand violence, or that they want their children all to be suicide bombers, it’s just a huge advertisement to our incredible lack of understanding and appalling ignorance. And for somebody who’s spent so much time in the Middle East, it’s almost impossible to counter. The notions that all Muslims—who are one-fifth of the world’s population, most of whom are not Arab—[the notion that they] all think the same way, or that there isn’t a moderate center, or that Algerians are the same as Iraqis—you don’t even know where to begin.

It’s so vast, and it’s pervaded the mainstream to such an extent that I think you raise a good point. We’ve turned 1 billion people into a caricature or stereotype—and not a very pleasant one. And it’s ominous, if we should have another catastrophic terrorist attack, it’s going to be pretty ominous for Muslims in this country. And ominous for us because once again we’ll be responding or at least supporting a violent response, probably, in the Middle East, without any kind of cultural understanding or sensitivity. And all we’ve done since the war in Iraq is essentially dumped gasoline over the best recruiter that al-Qaida has—the conflict. And it comes because we’re walking blind into an area of the world we know absolutely nothing about, and dealing with people we’ve turned into cartoon figures.

Scheer: Basic to that cartoon image, when people talk about Islamo-fascism—which Bush seems now to have accepted—is a very simple, crude idea of religious evolution, that they didn’t have the religious reformation, that there’s an arrested development to the Muslims. And that takes all responsibility off other people who interacted, say, with Afghanistan, with Indonesia—the role of foreigners. And the example I think of is Afghanistan, which was not particularly given to a virulent form of fundamentalism, at least not in Kabul, where, under the king, women could get doctorates and be gynecologists, and so forth. [There, under Jimmy Carter,] we weighed in on the fundamentalist side. It seems to me that that was a perfect example; it wasn’t that they reread the Koran. It wasn’t that they did or did not suddenly discover the reformation. But in fact they were responding to a set of circumstances. And I think that could be said about Iraq, which was, after all, a primarily secular country at one point.

I don’t know if you agree with that, but I just wonder what happens when you have discussions with people who are in the State Department, or pundits commenting on all this. What do they say to that?

Hedges: Well, the State Department actually isn’t the problem. The best Arabists in the government are in the State Department and in the intelligence services. Because they speak the language and they spend time there. They get it. And I have friend who are Arabists in the State Department. They’re pretty lonely figures, because nobody in the Bush administration gives them the time of day. Oh, the issue of the reformation: Islam itself is so varied; there are mosques in India where men and women pray together; Egyptians could drink me under the table, for the most part. The notion that there is any kind of strict Islamic code that is pervasive throughout the Muslim world is just not true. Most Muslims, although that moderate center is under attack, do not live lifestyles that are particularly different from most mainstream Christians. So I think you’re right. Fundamentalism, and Karen Armstrong has written about this, is very much a response to essentially despair—to being pushed, like the Christian right, to be pushed into corners where you don’t have any hope. Where the only hope you have if you’re a kid locked up in Gaza, the only way that is left for you to affirm yourself, is through death. And they are responding to real conditions around them, and real conditions of oppression. And that is far more influential in fueling their belief system than the reformation.

I think you’re right. It’s the conditions that they live in that form the ideological belief system, rather than antecedents. Because Islamic scholarship is quite profound, and certainly rivals the great Jewish thinkers, or the great early church fathers. This is a religion that has deep and an incredibly rich intellectual tradition. It’s just not a tradition we know about.

Harris: Thank you, Chris. That was Chris Hedges, who is currently a senior fellow at The Nation Institute, and former correspondent for The New York Times. He’s also written the new and controversial title “American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America.” For Bob Scheer, this is James Harris. And this is Truthdig.

Chris Hedges graduated from seminary at Harvard Divinity School and worked for many years as a foreign correspondent for The New York Times, where he also served as Mideast bureau chief. Hedges’ latest book, based on two years of reporting, is ”American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America.” He is also the author of the bestseller “War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning.”

Click here to read Hedges’ biweekly column on Truthdig

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By Lefty, April 16, 2007 at 7:50 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: #64266 by Fadel Abdallah on 4/15 at 8:08 pm
(1 comments total)

#64173 by Lefty on 4/15 at 10:33 am
(Unregistered commenter)

“This soulless character who calls himself “Lefty” hates all religions and goes out of his way to ridicule and blaspheme them; thus hurting the feelings of billions of people around the world. Obviously, this makes him a hatemonger who should be banned from the Truthdig blog, if they were to follow the rules they lately introduced. A faithless communist is a more fitting name for this type.

“Beware “Lefty”! Your unbound hate might catch with you one day and you might get consumed by it till you drop dead! A more sensitive and loving attitude is healthier for your soul.”
-----------------------------------------------------
Hey Fidel!  I guess this means that your multiple posts, each promising to be the last time you would address me directly, were all BS, hey!

In the mean time, your attitude is about as “sensitive and loving” as that of a car bomber.  In any event, your attitude it a matter of public record as long as Truthdig’s servers are up and running.  And, BTW Fidel, I think that you and I are equally souleless.

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By Fadel Abdallah, April 15, 2007 at 8:08 pm #

#64173 by Lefty on 4/15 at 10:33 am
(Unregistered commenter)

This soulless character who calls himself “Lefty” hates all religions and goes out of his way to ridicule and blaspheme them; thus hurting the feelings of billions of people around the world. Obviously, this makes him a hatemonger who should be banned from the Truthdig blog, if they were to follow the rules they lately introduced. A faithless communist is a more fitting name for this type.

Beware “Lefty”! Your unbound hate might catch with you one day and you might get consumed by it till you drop dead! A more sensitive and loving attitude is healthier for your soul.

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By Lefty, April 15, 2007 at 10:33 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Revelations 1:1

HEY DIDDLE DIDDLE,
THE CAT AND THE FIDDLE,
THE COW JUMPED OVER THE MOOOOOOOON.

THE LITTLE DOG LAUGHED,
JUST TO SEE SUCH SPORT,
AND THE DISH RAN AWAY WITH THE SPOOOOOOON . . . .

I think that says pretty much everything anyone needs to know about Christianity.

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By Skruff, April 13, 2007 at 7:04 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

#63661 by old benjamin on 4/12 at 4:59 pm says:

“Ike was a great man. He handled the politics and let Ol’ Blood ‘n Guts do the fighting. But Ike didn’t shrink from what had to be done to kick Adolph’s sorry butt, including raining death and destruction on Germany’s populous cities. None of our presidents since Ike have been military men of his sort, unfortunately. He had the experience and judgement to use military force wisely and effectively. I must say, however, that Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush were no slouches in that regard. For the rest, the less said the better. Derek Jeter once said that the ghosts of Yankees past still play a part in Yankee success. Would the same were true of old soldiers”

Intresting thoughts, BUT not a response to my post.  My point was that after actually EXPERIANCING war (first hand...down and dirty) he was ready for peace as President.  He said something along the lines of… The American people want peace ...and the politicians had better get out of the way and let them have it.

He warned us of the Halliburtons and Dow Chemical companies “Beware the military indrustrial complex”
He knew about financing expensive and unnecessary wars.. Every Gun that is made, every warship built, and every bomb dropped is a theft from our children....

Eisenhower was a hero in war, but knew how to keep peace.

In this regard you are right… too bad old combat veterans are not around to help with policy....If they were there would be far fewer wars.

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By old benjamin, April 12, 2007 at 4:59 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Skruff,
Ike was a great man. He handled the politics and let Ol’ Blood ‘n Guts do the fighting. But Ike didn’t shrink from what had to be done to kick Adolph’s sorry butt, including raining death and destruction on Germany’s populous cities. None of our presidents since Ike have been military men of his sort, unfortunately. He had the experience and judgement to use military force wisely and effectively. I must say, however, that Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush were no slouches in that regard. For the rest, the less said the better. Derek Jeter once said that the ghosts of Yankees past still play a part in Yankee success. Would the same were true of old soldiers

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By Skruff, April 12, 2007 at 9:20 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

#63407 by old benjamin on 4/11 at 3:24 pm
(Truthdig Guest)

“Yes, Jesus taught that we should return good for evil....”

He also said “let he who is without sin cast the first stone.... complicated dude.

“Those are the same rules, by the way, by which we defend our country against foreign attack. We don’t just return evil for evil. We return overwhelming, merciless destruction. Sorry if that offends your delicate sensibilities, but that’s how the Romans did things back in the first century, and that’s how you win wars. Those without the stomach for it should take up flower arrangement.”

Since you don’t know me, or where I’ve been, or whom I’ve defended, it makes no sense for you to level your sites at me.  I have been scrupulous about avoiding personal attacks....but I assume from your point of view, and with your aggressive patriotism, you are writing from Baghdad or Kabul?

Think about this… The most peacefull president of my lifetime was an exsoldier named Eisenhower.  The most war-like is a beer-swilling weekend warrior named Bush.

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By old benjamin, April 11, 2007 at 3:24 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Skruff,
Yes, Jesus taught that we should return good for evil. No question about it. He also said, “Render unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s.” There is the realm of personal behavior and there is the realm of public responsibility. Jesus rules the former and Caesar the latter. We may occasionally disagree about where one ends and the other begins, but we usually know. If someone kidnaps one of your kids, you know. If someone insults you privately, you know. If someone tells public lies about your kin, you probably know. If someone tells public lies about my Lord and Savior, I know, and I must defend him in public, with Caesar’s rules. Those are the same rules, by the way, by which we defend our country against foreign attack. We don’t just return evil for evil. We return overwhelming, merciless destruction. Sorry if that offends your delicate sensibilities, but that’s how the Romans did things back in the first century, and that’s how you win wars. Those without the stomach for it should take up flower arrangement.

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By Skruff, April 11, 2007 at 6:29 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

#63203 by billy flynn on 4/10 at 4:11 pm says:

“You are an argumentative sort, aren’t you.”

That is a joke right? 

If you read a bit further in Acts 1, you would have discovered that Judas hanged himself after he betrayed Jesus. The Judas in verse 13 is clearly a different Judas, unless he too was resurrected. There is no implication whatsoever that Judas Iscariot, the traitor, was in the upper room.
Thus, he is not called a “brother.”

“The twelve” were bretheren, and since Judas was replaced by Matthias AFTER Judas death, (he reportedly hung hi9mself on the day Jesus was crucified) it is assumed by most that Judas was indeed at the last supper one of the twelve bretheren. Indeed the Michelanglo painting has Judas there front and center.

“You are, of course, entitled to held whatever doctrinal beliefs you choose. Whether they are defensible is quite another issue. In any case, I have no interest in changing your mind.”

Thank you for that

Your last point is a real piece of sophistry. Jesus would condemn leading children astray but not condemn leading adults astray? Come on, dude. Use your head. You can’t claim that verses 7 -10 apply only to leading children astray. The text makes clear that a person can be a stumbling block to his own self. Is that restricted to children. I’m afraid not.

You said “words mean what they say” The words absolutely refer to children. why else would he use “little ones”?

Xtians with whom I have had the privledge of association tell me their god grants “free will” (choice?) to adults while enjoining these adults to keep their young on the path. 

One more question:

When jesus said “Let the children come unto me” was he speaking literally, or figuratively?

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By old benjamin, April 10, 2007 at 5:33 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Jim Hanley,
Christianity has been around for over 2000 years and has hundreds of millions of adherents worldwide. You’ve been around for less than 100 and have no adherents. I think you’ll have to do a bit better with your arguments than name-calling and citing an obscure cleric if you wish to dismantle Christianity. It’s like gravity, dude. It’ll take an Einstein to change it. That clearly leaves you out. Now go ride your dirt bike and leave the theological stuff to your betters.

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By billy flynn, April 10, 2007 at 4:11 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Skruff,
You are an argumentative sort, aren’t you. If you read a bit further in Acts 1, you would have discovered that Judas hanged himself after he betrayed Jesus. The Judas in verse 13 is clearly a different Judas, unless he too was resurrected. There is no implication whatsoever that Judas Iscariot, the traitor, was in the upper room. Thus, he is not called a “brother.” In all probability, the reference to “brother” is to Jesus’ literal kin.

You are, of course, entitled to held whatever doctrinal beliefs you choose. Whether they are defensible is quite another issue. In any case, I have no interest in changing your mind.

Your last point is a real piece of sophistry. Jesus would condemn leading children astray but not condemn leading adults astray? Come on, dude. Use your head. You can’t claim that verses 7 -10 apply only to leading children astray. The text makes clear that a person can be a stumbling block to his own self. Is that restricted to children. I’m afraid not.

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By Skruff, April 10, 2007 at 3:06 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

1 Peter 4:17
“....What will be the end of those who do not obey the Gospel of God?”

2 Peter 2:21
“For it would have been better for them never to have known the way of righteousness than after knowing it to turn back from the holy commandment delivered to them.”

Corinthians 13:2
“.......if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing.”

Galations 5:6
“.....faith working through love [will be justified]”

1 John 2:4
“He who says, “I know him” but disobeys his commandments is a liar, and the truth is not in him.”

1 John 3:10-11
“By this it may be seen who are the children of God, and who are the children of the devil: whoever does not do right is not of God, nor he who does not love his brother. For this is the message which you have heard from the beginning, that we should love one another.”

Heavy stuff… seems to heavy for this generation of “xtians”

Jesus also says;

“Whoever then relaxes one of the least of these commandments and teaches men so, shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven; but he who teaches them shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven. For I tell you, unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.”

“And everyone who hears these words of mine, and does not do them will be like a foolish man who built his house upon the sand; and the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell; and great was the fall of it.”

Matthew: 25: 31-46
This is some of what Jesus said about being “saved.” This implies that “believing” in him is more than the mere acknowledgement of Jesus as the son of God. It means you also have to believe in what he said and try to live by his commandments.

Here is some of what Paul said which echoes what Jesus said:

Romans 12:14
“Bless those that persecute you; bless and do not curse them.”

Romans 12:17-21
“Repay no one evil for evil , but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all. If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all. Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God; for it is written, ‘Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord.’ No ‘if your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him drink.... Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.”

Romans 13:8
“...and any other commandment, are summed up in this sentence, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’”

Galations 5:14
“For the whole law is fillfilled in one word, “For you should love your neighbor as yourself.”

Galatians 6:9-10
“And let us not grow weary in well-doing............So then, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all men.”

Colossians 3:14-15
“And above all these put on love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony. And let the peace of Christ rule you....”

1 Thessalonians 5:15
“See that none of you repays evil for evil, but always seek to do good to one another and to all.”

Hebrews 10:34
“.....and you joyfully accepted the plundering of your property, since you yourselves had a better possession and an abiding one.”

Here James is implying that the righteous man does not resist violence toward him and echoes Jesus’ idea of turning the other cheek:

James 5:5-6
“.........you have killed the righteous man; he does not resist you.”

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By Skruff, April 10, 2007 at 3:00 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

John 4:1-21

These are the main examples. The Ethics of Reciprocity can be found in many of the other comments as well (e.g.; “The last shall be first,” “They have their reward,” and “The measure you give will be the measure you get,” etc.). It is abundantly clear, without interpretation, guessing, or contradiction, that he was preaching love over everything - including how to respond to hatred, violence, or your enemies.
Colossians 1:23
“Provided that you continue in the faith, stable and steadfast, not shifting from the hope of the gospel which you heard...”

Ephesians 2:17
“And he came and preached peace to you who were far off, and peace to those who were near; for through him we both have access in one Spirit to the Father.”

Hebrews 12:14
“Strive for peace with all men, and for the holiness without which no one will see the Lord.”

James 2:14-17
“What does it profit, my brethren, if a man says he has faith but has not works? Can his faith save him? If a brother or sister is ill-clad and lack of daily food, and one of you says to them, ‘Go in peace, be warmed and filled,’ without giving them the things needed for the body, what does it profit? So faith by itself, if it has no works, is dead.”

James 2:24
“You see that a man is justified by works and not faith alone.”

James 2:26
“For as the body apart from the spirit is dead, so faith apart from works is dead.”

So here we have the other side of it. Just as works without faith will not get you into heaven, faith without works will not. If you have faith in the Word, you will live by the Way. The Word and the Way are perfectly embodied in Jesus. He gave the Word and he demonstrated the Way by living it out to its fullest extent.

4- That if you are not advocating or trying to live by, or if you are advocating or living by the opposite of his commandments, you can’t be considered a child “of God”.

James 4:17
“Whoever knows what is right to do and fails to do it, for him it is a sin.”

Titus 1:16
“They profess to know God, but they deny him by their deeds; they are detestable, disobedient, unfit for any good deed.”

2 Thessalonians 1:8
(Jesus’ angels will be) “...inflicting vengence upon those who do not ....obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus.”

Romans 1:32
“Though they know God’s decree that those who do such things deserve to die, they not only do them but approve those who practice them.”

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By Skruff, April 10, 2007 at 2:57 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

#62836 by roxy hart on 4/08 at 12:11 pm says:

“What is indeed amusing is that you, of all people, expect Christian charity from those you regularly attempt to discredit, defame, and ridicule.

The Lord requires justice and mercy. Think of me like the Guardian Angels, or like Bill O’Reilly. I’m lookin’ out for the folks.”

Hummm What does Jesus say about that?

(Matthew 5:5) “Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.”

“Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.”
“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the sons of God.”

(Matthew) “You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I say to you, Do not resist one who is evil. But if any one strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also; and if any one would sue you and take your coat, let him have your cloak as well...”

(Matthew) “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I say to you, Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven; for he makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust....”

(Luke) “But I say to you that hear, Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you. To him who strikes you on the cheek, offer the other also; and from him who takes away your cloak do not withhold your coat as well.”

(Luke) “But love your enemies, and do good, and lend, expecting nothing in return (despairing of no man); and your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Most High; for he is kind to the ungrateful and the selfish.”

(Luke) “Be merciful, even as your Father is merciful.”

(Matthew) “For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father also will forgive you; but if you do not forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.”

(Matthew) “Judge not, that you be not judged. For with the judgment you pronounce you will be judged, and the measure you give will be the measure you get. Why do you see the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye? Or how can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when there is the log in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s eye.”

(Luke) “Judge not, and you will not be judged; condemn not, and you will not be condemned; forgive, and you will be forgiven; give, and it will be given to you.... For the measure you give will be the measure you get back.”

(John) “Let him who is without sin among you be the first to cast a stone...”

(Matthew) “And do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul.”

(Luke) “I tell you, my friends, do not fear those who kill the body, and after that have no more that they can do.”

(Matthew) “Then Peter came up and said to him, ‘Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? As many as seven times?’ Jesus said to him, ‘I do not say to you seven times, but seventy times seven’.”

(Matthew) “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”

(Matthew) “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it, You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the law and the prophets.”

(Matthew) “Put your sword back into its place; for all who take the sword will perish by the sword.”

(John) “A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another - even as I have loved you, that you also love one another.”

(John) “This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you.”

(John) “This I command you, to love one another.”

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By Skruff, April 9, 2007 at 2:31 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

#62878 by Billy Flynn on 4/08 at 6:31 pm
says;

“In the first place, Hedges is no ‘brother.’”
Jesus considered Judas “a brother” despite his trechery (Acts 1;14)Do you contend Mr. Hedges is further beyond “redemption” than Judas?

“Second point: orthodox Christianity holds to the notion of fallen nature of mankind. One’s soul is in mortal danger from the get go. So your question is really moot. The real question is whether one accepts or rejects God’s plan for reconciliation.”
The question would be “moot” only if I held the beliefs of an orthodox xtian.  I do not.

“To summarize, the first passage is concerned with a reprobate, someone who discourages belief in Jesus.”

It would seem to me that this “sumarization would contridict your statements in post

“...if you believe words mean what they say. Whatever context you imagine, the words could not be more clear nor the meaning more certain.”

BUT

““but whoever causes one of THESE LITTLE ONES [emphasis added] who believe in me to stumble, it is better for him that a heavy millstone be hung around his neck, and that he be drowned in the depth of the sea.”” As you point out, words DO mean what they say. Jesus is speaking of “little ones”

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By Billy Flynn, April 8, 2007 at 6:31 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Skruff,
In the first place, Hedges is no “brother.” If he were, he wouldn’t air his dirty laundry for all to see. It should be clear, from the preponderance of the posts on this thread, that he gives aid and comfort to the Christian haters, such as Lefty. If he had the welfare of the Chistian community in mind, he would make his criticisms known in a different spirit and venue. Does he expect to influence fundamentalists by posting on this left-wing site? In your dreams. This guy is simply a bomb thrower who couldn’t care less about the collateral damage. His rants will serve to harden the positions of those he criticizes, not to moderate them. As late as 1965, Jerry Falwell said that the clergy should refrain from political involvement. It was Roe v. Wade in 1973 that lead to a change in
Falwells views and practices. Anyone who has any knowledge of history knows that persecuting Christianity just makes it stronger. It survived Rome and the Soviet Union and it certainly will surive this pipsqueak Hedges.

Second point: orthodox Christianity holds to the notion of fallen nature of mankind. One’s soul is in mortal danger from the get go. So your question is really moot. The real question is whether one accepts or rejects God’s plan for reconciliation.

To summarize, the first passage is concerned with a reprobate, someone who discourages belief in Jesus. I presume his fate is an unhappy one, regardless of the age of his listeners. The second passage speaks to how believers should resolve disputes. Clearly, Hedges has not chosen the latter path and must therefore abide in the contempt of the Christian community.

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By Fadel Abdallah, April 8, 2007 at 5:12 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

As Christians celebrate the Death and Resurrection of the good Jesus Christ, who was supposed to have died for our sins, and for the glory and preservation of human life, the later day Christians fundamentalists continue to send their young people to far away lands to be sacrificed for the sins of evil Bush, Blair, Howard and gang and for the glory of the empire and the mighty dollar. What a contrast and what a continuing sad story!

For during this Easter weekend 10 U.S. soldiers were killed in Iraq and 6 more so-called coalition forces were killed in Afghanistan; not to mention the hundreds of Iraqis and Afghanis killed.

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By Skruff, April 8, 2007 at 1:28 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

#62736 by Billy Flynn on 4/07 at 5:25 pm relates:

“Skruff,
I stand rebuked. I forgot the most important part of Matthew 18:6. I’m quoting verbatim now from the NASB:

“but whoever causes one of these little ones WHO BELIEVE IN ME [emphasis added] to stumble, it is better for him that a heavy millstone be hung around his neck, and that he be drowned in the depth of the sea.”

I’m afraid Mr. Hedges is in serious jeopardy if you believe words mean what they say. Whatever context you imagine, the words could not be more clear nor the meaning more certain. “

Ahh yes, but as I said there is context.

The setting:

Jesus is sitting with his diciples and telling them how they must live their lives in order to get “into heaven” (no one has ever clearly stated what that means)

Jesus brings a small child into the group, and says that the diciples must “be as a child” (I’ll leave that to your imagination) in order to “see god.” The KJB quotes “But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believes in me it were better if...and etc etc etc… As I read this verse it applies only to “offending children” you disagree?

HOWEVER later in the same chapter Jesus tells the diciples;

Matt 18;15 “If thy brother shall trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault; between thee and him alone. If he shall hear thee thou has gained thy brother.”

Now for the sake of argument, does that mean that one is endangering his immmortal soul by rebuking others for their beliefs and practices on this board in front of others?

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By roxy hart, April 8, 2007 at 12:11 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Lefty,
Glad to help with your problem, but I recommend liposuction in your particular case.

What is indeed amusing is that you, of all people, expect Christian charity from those you regularly attempt to discredit, defame, and ridicule.

The Lord requires justice and mercy. Think of me like the Guardian Angels, or like Bill O’Reilly. I’m lookin’ out for the folks.

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By Lefty, April 8, 2007 at 11:53 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: #62736 by Billy Flynn on 4/07 at 5:25 pm
(Truthdig Guest)

“Skruff,
I stand rebuked. I forgot the most important part of Matthew 18:6. I’m quoting verbatim now from the NASB:

““but whoever causes one of these little ones WHO BELIEVE IN ME [emphasis added] to stumble, it is better for him that a heavy millstone be hung around his neck, and that he be drowned in the depth of the sea.””

“I’m afraid Mr. Hedges is in serious jeopardy if you believe words mean what they say. Whatever context you imagine, the words could not be more clear nor the meaning more certain.”
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BAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!  Yes, I’m so sure Mr. Hedges is in jeopardy from the nothingness of Christian myth and fable.

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By Billy Flynn, April 7, 2007 at 5:25 pm #
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Skruff,
I stand rebuked. I forgot the most important part of Matthew 18:6. I’m quoting verbatim now from the NASB:

“but whoever causes one of these little ones WHO BELIEVE IN ME [emphasis added] to stumble, it is better for him that a heavy millstone be hung around his neck, and that he be drowned in the depth of the sea.”

I’m afraid Mr. Hedges is in serious jeopardy if you believe words mean what they say. Whatever context you imagine, the words could not be more clear nor the meaning more certain.

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By Skruff, April 6, 2007 at 7:28 am #
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The meanest comments, the most hostile speech, the most assaultive posts seem to be from self-identified xtians… For shame… Xtianity could have been a wonderfull religion.... too bad no one ever practiced it.

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By Lefty, April 3, 2007 at 7:48 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: Comment #61823 by roxy hart on 4/02 at 2:50 pm

“Lefty,
“When was the last time you saw the birth of George Washington? Did he exist or do we need repeatable evidence? When was the last time you saw birds evolve from reptiles? Did it happen or do we need repeatable evidence. I’m afraid your methodology is just a wee bit inadequate. By your logic, you couldn’t even prove that you were born. At least it’s my fervent hope that that sad event isn’t repeatable. Give my love to Madalyn.”
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LMAO! Spoken like a “real christian,” Roxy! You’ve helped to prove my point about Science and Christianity being mutually exclusive.

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By Skruff, April 3, 2007 at 2:52 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Comment #61825 by billy flynn on 4/02 at 3:06 pm says:
“Skruff,
I can’t quote verbatim, but I think Jesus had some rather harsh things to say about reprobates of the Chris Hedges class. “If anyone offends one of these little ones, it would be better if a millstone was hung around his neck and he was drowned in the depths of the sea,” or something close. Given Chris Hedges on-going assault on things religious, I think my preview of his destiny is quite mild. He should be so lucky.”

Then get it right, and in context

Find it in Matthew 18:6

“Will they have Mogan-David in heaven?
Oh lord we all want to know.
Will they have Mogan-David in heaven sweet jesus?
If they don’t, who the hell wants to go?”

(Gatlin Bros)

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By billy flynn, April 2, 2007 at 3:06 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Skruff,
I can’t quote verbatim, but I think Jesus had some rather harsh things to say about reprobates of the Chris Hedges class. “If anyone offends one of these little ones, it would be better if a millstone was hung around his neck and he was drowned in the depths of the sea,” or something close. Given Chris Hedges on-going assault on things religious, I think my preview of his destiny is quite mild. He should be so lucky.

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By roxy hart, April 2, 2007 at 2:50 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Lefty,
When was the last time you saw the birth of George Washington? Did he exist or do we need repeatable evidence? When was the last time you saw birds evolve from reptiles? Did it happen or do we need repeatable evidence. I’m afraid your methodology is just a wee bit inadequate. By your logic, you couldn’t even prove that you were born. At least it’s my fervent hope that that sad event isn’t repeatable. Give my love to Madalyn.

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By Skruff, April 2, 2007 at 5:50 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Comment #61517 by billy flynn on 3/31 at 10:20 am says:

“Let him rant. Like Madalyn Murray O’Hare, “

There’s a lot of that going around.

“.... he is destined for the trash dump of history. God speed...”

a xtian expression of love no doubt.

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By Lefty, April 1, 2007 at 6:52 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: Comment #61253 by ROXY HART on 3/29 at 4:21 pm

“Actually, Michael Behe is a Roman Catholic. That no more discredits him as a scientist than does Richard Dawkins atheism discredit him.”
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Yes it does! 

Science and faith are mutually exclusive.  Science is based on the presence of empirical, observable, repeatable evidence.  Faith is based on the absence of empirical, observable, repeatable evidence.  When you have proof, you don’t need faith.

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By billy flynn, March 31, 2007 at 10:20 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Susan28,
You couldn’t be more wrong. Hedges is virulently anti-Christian. If you doubt it, read his latest diatribe on this site, “A World Where Lies are True.” He apparently thinks he has to debunk Christianity to promote his version of reality. It’s been tried before by men (and women) far more capable than he. They are gone and Christianity is alive and well. If the Soviet Union couldn’t extinguish it, we needn’t worry about poor, pathetic Chris Hedges. Let him rant. Like Madalyn Murray O’Hare, he is destined for the trash dump of history. God speed.

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By susan28, March 30, 2007 at 9:59 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

again these discussions of religion in politics seem to keep coming down to whether a particular religion (usually Christianity) is “true” or not (we get sidetracked and i’m as guilty as anyone here) but Hedges’ article has nothing to do with whether or not Christ rose from the dead or any other Christian tenet. it’s about the question of imposing one’s religious values on others via secualr law, with the subtext of whether or not Christian values are in keeping with right-wing politics to begin with. 

i have a friend where anytime you dispute the right wing (political) agenda - anything from Iraq to corporate welfare - she says things like “there are lots of Christians out there, you shouldn’t attack them”, as though Christianity and “right wing” were somehow inseperable, which they clearly aren’t, but the Right, sadly, is succeeding in painting it that way.

this seems more about the political overthrow of a religion than vice versa. 

i’ve oft noted Antipas Ministries as an example of a Christian organisation that is not allied with the radical right, and provides ample Biblical text to explain why, and who do not advocate codifying the Bible into secular law. whether or not they should is up for debate, but the arguments of Antipas and of the Focus member who disagrees with Dobson - for better or worse - shows that believing in Christ does not necessarily lock one into the political Right, and, more importantly, that challenging the Right is not tantamount to challenging Christ, as the Right would have us believe.

this is what i get from Hedges’ article. it wasn’t about attacking Christianity, it was about attacking the Right’s co-opting of same. as with women in the Mafia, they don’t use the Mob, the Mob uses them, and i fear it’s the same with the Right’s exploiting of the social anxiety of sincere Christians like my friend, who views any critique of the Right as an attack on Christianity. but i think the “war on sin”, now as with the Pharisees, is just another attempt to distract the faithful from the (rich) man behind the curtain, who pays lip service to virtue while delivering Christ to the Romans.

and Skruff you’ve got some good points on the “21” thing. i fully agree that whatever we set as the “age of consent” should apply across the board, from military service to court proceedings to substance use. the latter is an emotional issue for people and the “brain development” thing seemed to be a nice objective way to arrive at the “magic number” without sacrificing individual rights at the altar of “moral panics”. as you said those studies are debatable (especially as they were politically motivated), but that’s the nice thing about science; it *is* debatable and can change as new facts are learned (or frauds exposed).

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By Lefty, March 29, 2007 at 8:10 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: Comment #61183 by Ethan Baker on 3/29 at 10:01 am

“As to Dobson, I stand by the positive things I said about him a while back.”
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Well, there you have it.  Ethan Baker is cuckoo, cuckoo, cuckoo, cuckoo . . . .

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By ROXY HART, March 29, 2007 at 4:21 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Actually, Michael Behe is a Roman Catholic. That no more discredits him as a scientist than does Richard Dawkins atheism discredit him.

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By Skruff, March 29, 2007 at 2:46 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Comment #61183 by Ethan Baker on 3/29 at 10:01 am

“...Many of scruff’s on religion seemed narrow-minded and came out of ignorance...”

I have attempted to be civil. If what you read offends you I think you are correct to take the action (not responding) that you see fit.

Attacking folks in an enviornment such as this (where one does not have to look into the eyes of those they insult) is a cowardly pursuit… and one who echews “name-calling” should refrain from “naming” (labeling) others. 

As for foaming at the mouth vehemence… you proved your point by showing the rest of us what foam is.

I’ve got plenty left, and will be happy to respond to you.

I suggest if you don’t care for argument, a “liberal” (sic) chat-board is a poor place for a self identified Conservative to hang....

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By Ethan Baker, March 29, 2007 at 10:01 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Wow, this forum is a mess. Squabbling back-and-forth name calling, “bigot” thrown around as a catchphrase, unfounded claims on both sides, he said - she said nonsense. Apparently, almost everyone here believes EVERYTHING they hear or read (as long as it seems to back up their opinion). The only attempts at even half-intelligent argument I’ve see here are the ones on the legal drinking age and abortion. (most of the time) This page has turned into a joke.

Reading many of the posts by lefty made me alternate laughing and rolling my eyes throughout. The ones by billy flynn were not much better. Lefty said to billy: “Your comments are a combination of false premises, misrepresentations, and conclusions based thereon.” If that’s true, Lefty’s comments are just as bad if not worse. Many of scruff’s on religion seemed narrow-minded and came out of ignorance.

On a side not, I’ve always wondered why the typical liberal-minded person’s response to opposition is to foam at the mouth. If their positions are so absolutely righteous, why do they feel the need to defend them so vehemently? What are they afraid of? They also seem to believe that calling others bigots somehow nullifies their own overwhelming bigotry. “All Christians” are a favorite target.

As to Dobson, I stand by the positive things I said about him a while back. To those who think he’s a cruel villain, don’t believe everything you hear…not even misguided babble from Focus on the Family co-founders.

I will not respond to any of the posts here directly (anymore), but I will leave a small list of good books for those ready to learn a thing or two.

1. Darwin’s Black Box by Michael J. Behe - guaranteed to shoot a gaping hole in the irrational, scientifically bankrupt myth of evolution. (this guy’s not even a Christian.)

2. More than a Carpenter by Josh McDowell - The Bible may be more valid than you know.

3. In the Beginning: Compelling Evidence for Creation and the Flood by Walt Brown, Ph.D. - Religious belief and science are quite reconcilable.

4. The Case for Christ by Lee Strobel - Take it from a guy who spent years trying to disprove the claims of Christ.

And please don’t go off and simply download some dumb review off an atheist website like some I’ve talked to have done. READ the book. These can probably all be found in a library.

Be careful about believing everything you read…

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By Harry H Snyder III, March 29, 2007 at 4:12 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Comment #61030 by old benjamin on 3/28 at 3:37 pm

I am in fact an ANCIENT jarhead. Another senior moment

Vietnam?

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By susan28, March 28, 2007 at 5:24 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Skruff:

i *totally* agree that the “adulthood” distinction should be applied across the board and not selectively. i said 21 because that’s what