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Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Secularists Often Behave As They Claim Christians Do
By David Limbaugh
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Newsweek's Anna Quindlen recently wrote that a presidential victory for Rudy Giuliani "wouldn't be a good thing for this country, but his candidacy may wind up being a good thing for his party," which Quindlen obviously believes has been hijacked by the Christian right.

Giuliani's strong poll numbers, said Quindlen, perhaps "indicate that the end is nigh for the stranglehold the Leviticus Lobby has had on the GOP."

It's no longer surprising that those screaming most loudly against Christianity and its influence on public policy in America often employ the same tactics and represent the same dangers they falsely attribute to Christians. Christians have far more to fear from the secular thought police than the other way around.

Whether it's writer Christopher Hitchens or CNN's Christiane Amanpour sloppily conflating Christian "fundamentalists" or observant Jews with Islamic jihadists; secular leftists calling the Christian right the American Taliban; or militant secularists like HBO's Bill Maher salivating over reports that Mother Teresa had a crisis of faith, the theme is the same. Christian activists are a societal nuisance.

The secularists' criticism goes beyond decrying the Christian right's alleged hostility to church-state separation. They claim strong religious belief leads to oppression, tyranny and violence.

They even suggest the mere defense of absolute truth is dangerous. Alan Hurwitz of North Star Writers Group, wrote, "One thing I do know -- the pursuit of 'truth,' as in mine over yours, creates conflict and isolation among individuals, groups and societies. I am secular enough to think those are bad things. Religious zealots, 'knowers of truth often have a scary gleam in their eyes. The challenge of dealing with rigid manifestations of religious 'truth' is one of management leadership -- how to create societies that allow diverse groups to believe and act on their truth, without hurting each other." Note this is not some Christian talking about creating societies and exerting control.

The secularists demanding the removal of specks from Christians' eyes are oblivious to the planks in their own. Their paranoid predispositions about Christians lead them to the very type of oppressive behavior they wrongly ascribe to Christians. If anyone is guilty of wanting to foreclose debate and impose their values on others, it is these hyperventilating secularists.

They are the ones who have decreed there's a consensus on global warming and attempted to stigmatize dissenters as paid mouthpieces for "evil" energy companies. With their absence of self-reflection it must never occur to them that in their professed monopoly on "science," they squarely violate the fundamentals of the scientific method by forbidding debate and insulating their theories from scientific scrutiny.

They malign intelligent design proponents for daring to subject their dogma -- and distortions -- to the rigorous re-examination scientific methodology requires. Continued...

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About The Author

David Limbaugh, brother of radio talk-show host Rush Limbaugh, is an expert in law and politics and author of Bankrupt: The Intellectual and Moral Bankruptcy of Today's Democratic Party.

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Amanpour Envy?
This piece screams for a point-by-point rebuttal.

CNN's Christiane Amanpour "sloppily conflating Christian fundamentalists"? Did you actually see the recent report she did on God's Warriors? It was objective, thorough, and spent more time on Judaism and Islam anyway.

If anything was sloppy, it was Limbaugh's assessment of Amanpour. There is a valid reason she has the reputation she holds in the journalism community.

Limbaugh complains that secular liberals avoid scientific criticism of global warming, blissfully unaware that thousands of climatologists have spent decades detailing the evidence.

He wishes intelligent design would finally get the scientific scrutiny it deserves, conveniently forgetting that it has been scrutinized and found to be an ideology rather than a theory.

And yes, since you brought it up, let's compare violence against women - developed beings who can feel pain - with violence against the unborn - undeveloped zygotes without pain receptors.

hmmmm
As a libertarian and an atheist, I'd be thrilled to see the Republican party end its love affair with the Christian right. Then it might be a party that I could again support.

"Mark my word, if and when these preachers get control of the [Republican] party, and they're sure trying to do so, it's going to be a terrible damn problem. Frankly, these people frighten me. Politics and governing demand compromise. But these Christians believe they are acting in the name of God, so they can't and won't compromise. I know, I've tried to deal with them."

-Barry Goldwater
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