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Thursday, October 19, 2006
Marvin Olasky :: Townhall.com Columnist
Tempting faith, baiting Bush
by Marvin Olasky
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From Foley to Kuo: Washington is buzzing this week about a book by former Bush staffer David Kuo that hit the shelves on Monday. His "Tempting Faith: An Inside Story of Political Seduction" reveals -- according to the breathless Free Press publicity headline -- "How the Bush White House Manipulated the Christian Right."

In reality, the book and its relentless publicizing -- on "60 Minutes," "Good Morning America" and other network shows, hundreds of newspaper and magazine articles -- show rampant manipulation on all sides. As Kuo put it in an interview I've done for the upcoming issue of World, "everyone is using everyone and everyone has his own agenda."

-- Kuo signed a contract with Free Press last year to produce a book for publication in the first quarter of 2007, but the company -- with Kuo's consent -- shrewdly moved up publication to present an October anti-Bush surprise. Nine pages of publicity materials accompanying "Tempting Faith" ignore the spiritual aspects that Kuo emphasizes.

-- The liberal press agenda in pushing the book is clear, as it was regarding Rep. Foley's disgrace: Suppress the Christian conservative vote. Kuo's revelation that some Bush staffers called certain Christian leaders "ridiculous" and "goofy" helps in that process.

-- Bush administration staffers are attacking the book, and Kuo asks rhetorically, "Is the White House using this to mobilize Christian conservatives by showing how much the 'liberals' are out to get them? Absolutely. They see this as a great opportunity to stir up the controversy necessary to mobilize blase evangelicals."

And what about Kuo's agenda? He is a smart, sophisticated and sociable 38 year old. With those attributes and a great back story -- his Chinese dad fought Mao Tse-tung and escaped the communist takeover on the last boat to leave Shanghai -- he has worked (usually briefly) as a speechwriter and aide for Bill Bennett, Jack Kemp, John Ashcroft, Bob Dole, Ralph Reed and George W. Bush. But like many 20- and then 30-somethings who write in the voice of others, he has had a hard time finding his own.

"Tempting Faith" is Kuo's attempt to be his own man, a Christian. The book is far more than its highly publicized excerpts about some Bush staffers dissing Christian leaders. Those supposed revelations come as no surprise -- the administration, like the GOP generally, includes both Christians and secular conservatives opposed to Christianity -- but by including them, Kuo gets many more readers than his work would otherwise receive.

To me, Kuo's book is valuable for its specific detail on how the Bush faith-based initiative went astray. Kuo notes that the 2001 Bush tax cut left out "the president's promised $6 billion per year in tax credits for groups helping the poor. Those tax credits had been the centerpiece of compassionate conservative efforts for years." But the White House, Kuo charges, decided that it was more important to cut the estate tax than to help the poor and decentralize poverty fighting. Not wanting to make the big tax bill any bigger, the Bush administration surprised key congressional leaders by pushing successfully to have the anti-poverty tax credits dropped.

Kuo, saying he still wants the compassionate conservative movement to succeed, hopes through his book to attract attention to its yet-unrealized potential: "If this hadn't come out now, how many conservatives would even have given it a single thought?" He wants to communicate to Christians: "Please understand that you are being used. Look shrewdly at that and remember, remember, remember that Jesus must come first."

He's right. Christians clearly need to be discerning and to accentuate biblical ways of helping widows and orphans. But the irony of Kuo's call for Christians to "fast" from politics is that it would increase the power of anti-Christian politicians. If the saints go marching out, others will march in unimpeded.

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About The Author
Marvin Olasky is editor-in-chief of the national news magazine World, provost of The King's College, and a professor of journalism at The University of Texas at Austin. For additional commentary by Marvin Olasky, visit www.worldmag.com.
 
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First of all most politicians try to manipulate one or other politcal groups for their own gain. It's always been part of the pol process in the U.S., rightly or wrongly.
The Democrats use anything to slur Christian evangelicals although I'm not sure some of them don't deserve it. My belief system doesn't include non-Christians being doomed for eternity.
The part of the process that is scary is the intellectual anti-Christ movement among Democrats and mainstream media, which I define as the three major tv networks[except for Fox], and the major print media.

david kuo
"It is a shame that David Kuo does not understand that when we believers approach the political arena and, in particular, certain politicians, it is with the hope (though not the expectation), but the hope, that we can successfully persuade a few, if not more, of those politicians to cast a vote that might count toward doing such things as protecting the unborn; putting an end to public policies that promulgate out-of-wedlock births and the wretched lifestyle that that imposes on innocent children; fighting poverty and hunger without stripping folks of the dignity of employment and self help...if we manage to do that then we believers have accomplished quite a bit. Where David has gotten confused is in wanting or expecting non-believing politicians to LIKE him.
Who CARES if Karl Rove rolls his eyes when a zealous, evangelical lobbyist walks away?
Who CARES if those people in Washington don't LIKE us?
Who cares if they think we're weird?
Why care at all?
All we should care about is if they, in fact, get in there and vote the way we ask them to vote.
We Christians are not of this world, right?
We are citizens of another world.
This world will NEVER "get us"!
We need to get over that and just keep on fighting the good fight.
We do not NEED the world to like or approve of us.
That is the example that Jesus set. He set about the Father's business and did not worry about whether or not He was appreciated or liked or admired or "popular".
He just did what He was called to do and that is our example.
Don't worry if "those people" ridicule us or if they like us or dislike us or approve of us or disapprove of us.
Just get their support and call it a victory!"
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