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Wednesday, December 03, 2008
David Harsanyi :: Townhall.com Columnist
Giving Up On God (Sort Of)
by David Harsanyi
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Will Sarah Palin make a run at the GOP Nomination in 2012?


Do we need God in politics?

Washington Post columnist Kathleen Parker recently penned a provocative column titled "Giving Up on God," wherein she suggested that the Republican Party ditch G-O-D. The piece so rankled James Dobson (Ph.D. in divine insight) that he compared Parker to that seditious bum Benedict Arnold.

Among factions of conservatism, there is a general willingness to coexist and -- sporadically -- win elections. Dobson, conversely, employs a saintly litmus test that marginalizes large swaths of his own party. He has redefined "traditional values," an essential ingredient for Republican victory, to mean illogical rigidity.

Californians, Dobson rationalizes, proved that values voters still matter, because "many who pulled the lever for the 'change' (Obama) espoused also pulled it for the stability provided by marriage as recognized for millennia in all civilized societies."

Actually, if California voters proved anything, it is that voters don't feel the need to vote Republican, even if they happen to recognize the stability provided by the millennia-long need to be hassled by a clingy do-gooder from the opposite sex.

And despite perceptions, Barack Obama did not support gay marriage. In fact, few national Democrats of note explicitly back gay marriage -- notwithstanding their demonizing conservatives. Democrats have made social issues irrelevant by simply ignoring them. Abortion may elicit passionate quarrels among online commentators, but on the ground, policy has scarcely stirred in decades.

Those Californians who voted for Obama and also against gay marriage signaled that social issues are, at the very least, of secondary political importance. Nationally, polls ranging from USA Today/Gallup to CBS News/New York Times to NBC News/Wall Street Journal to Fox News/Opinion Dynamics bear this out. Factors such as "improving the economy," "creating jobs" and "stabilizing the nation's financial institutions" were on the tops of voters' minds this time around, while values issues brought in the rear with other subjects Americans pretend to care about, such as "helping the environment."

Sure, there are citizens who oppose gay marriage not out of bigotry or irrational loathing but out of a sense of tradition and faith. The problem is that the Dobson wing hinders Republicans from offering any feasible counter-solutions. Dobson opposes not only man-on-man matrimony but also civil unions. He opposes adoption for gay couples. Let's face it; he opposes the existence of gays. Continued...

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About The Author
Freedom is the Real Issue
I do not spend a lot of time judgning non-Christian behavior. I am not again st gay marriage in theory. I would be fine to have the staet out of the marriage business. I do believe in smaller government and think that anyone who does not think school vouchers is a good idea cannot really be a conservative. I simply think that the laws should be clear in terms of guaranteeing religious freedom (and sadly, they seem to be vague to some judges). This article is polarizing at a time when the Republican Party does not need polarization. I think we should focus on what we supposedly agree on. I would happily approve gay marriage is liberals would vote for school vouchers and religious freedom.

Harsanyi
jhohn - harsanyi is far more a conservative than kathleen parker. he's a fiscal conservative for sure, but i've read many column where he defends social conservatives.
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