In its vain, and vaguely sickening attempt to find some way to bring
President Obama down to their level or to find something as base about
him as the embarrassment who was identified as our president for the
prior eight years, the far right fools who have taken over the
Republican Party spent half the week either
distorting things the President said to adoring crowds in Europe, or accusing him of subjugating our nation to royalty (after his wife was accused of insulting royalty by touching the Queen).
The
clearest sign that these out of touch hate mongers---inheritors of the
mantle on which the careers of Father Coughlin and Westbrook Pegler
were born---do not understand what our country is all about, was their
attack on the President for explaining that
we
do not consider ourselves a Christian nation or a Jewish nation or a
Muslim nation; we consider ourselves a nation of citizens who are bound
by ideals and a set of values
There is nothing radical, or even vaguely controversial about this. The now famous (and slightly ironic this week)
Treaty of Tripoli,
negotiated during Washington's administration and signed after
ratification by President Adams, certainly reflects the founders
identical view that
the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion
and, of course, there is President Kennedy's "declaration of independence" while running for the the presidency:
"I
believe in an America where the separation of church and state is
absolute...I believe in an America that is officially neither Catholic,
Protestant nor Jewish; where no public official either requests or
accept instructions on public policy from the Pope, the National
Council of Churches or any other ecclesiastical source; where no
religious body seeks to impose its will directly or indirectly upon the
general populace or the public acts of its officials...
Yet there they are, again, with that great moral arbiter Karl Rove explaining
Yeah,
look, America is a nation built on faith. I mean, we can be Christian,
we can be Jew, we can be Mormon, we can be, you know, any variety of
things. We're a country that prizes faith
In these
pages, I have ranted about presidents---the one we finally rid
ourselves of, and the one about whom we are so rightly proud---
announcing a national policy about funding scientific research based on the particular president's religious beliefs.
I have nothing against those religious beliefs: every president is
entitled to believe what the president wants to believe. My objection
has been to any suggestion that the president's religious beliefs are
those of the nation, and that I am bound by them.
and then, came this:
This
news, and then this beautiful photograph, was so touching because it
said that Passover, just like Easter, is a holiday in this country. You
don't have to celebrate it, but you can and, if you do, you do it not
simply as a member of your faith but as an American.
The White
House seder. The President of the United States at the head of a table
where the four questions are asked, reading from that oh so American
"Maxwell House" haggadah so many of us have used over so many years.
Laughing and smiling in front of the symbols of a holiday about
redemption and slavery and freedom.
That is what the
United States of America means.
And when we send Barack Hussein Obama abroad to represent us we send
that message, the real message our founders intended to send, loud and
clear. The people who hate us around the world have no answer to that
message, one of hope and of freedom and of what we can mean to those
who suffer in the forms of slavery that exist today around a still
unhappy world. This was how the people in the "huts and villages" as
President Kennedy described them, should see the United States of
America. And this is who we really are.
As it happens, the
wisest statement on the subject I have heard on recent years was by a
fictitious presidential candidate, Sen Arnold Vinick, on West Wing,
whose told a press hounding him on his religious fidelity (in a script
written by
Lawrence O'Donnell, Jr.):
I don't
see how we can have a separation of church and state in this government
if you have to pass a religious test to get in this government. And I
want to warn everyone in the press and all the voters out there if you
demand expressions of religious faith from politicians, you are just
begging to be lied to. They won't all lie to you but a lot of them
will. And it will be the easiest lie they ever had to tell to get your
votes. So, every day until the end of this campaign, I'll answer any
question anyone has on government, But if you have a question on
religion, please go to church.
It is bizarre
and not just a little bit scary to hear this rhetoric directed at a hugely
popular president by the grossly out of touch people who somehow took
over our national politics for almost 30 years. I remember similar
screaming from people like Fulton Lewis III in the 1960s, but those
people were understood as cranks, not the recently deposed arbiters of
political thought. These sad characters should be seen for what they
are---not the political thinkers they claim to be---but horribly
misguided fools who we tolerate because of our reverence for the right
to free speech (something they do not share with us, either).