SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (502040)12/2/2003 10:24:17 AM
From: CYBERKEN  Respond to of 769670
 
The old Leninist "Where's your evidence!!" ploy again. It's also a favorite of the anti-humanity atheist American "Civil Liberties" Union.

A renaissance are not made in courtrooms by nattering tort lawyers. It eventually re-builds those courtrooms, and fumigate the barbarian natterers, though...



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (502040)12/2/2003 10:31:34 AM
From: CYBERKEN  Respond to of 769670
 
George Bush has never lied to the American people. The Clinton-sucking domestic enemy hates that. Just HATES it!...

nationalreview.com



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (502040)12/2/2003 10:42:37 AM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Democrats Play the Religion Card

by David N. Bass
2 December 2003

If you don’t allow your faith to affect your decisions, why believe at all?


Howard Dean is no longer the only Democrat presidential candidate for guys with Confederate flags in their pickup trucks, according to a recent article by CNN.com. Fortunately for Dean, the hubbub over his October remark has settled down, but apparently the Democrat’s quest to garner southern religious voters hasn’t.

In the CNN article, the nine Democrat presidential contenders attempted to reassure southerners that, contrary to what some might think, Democrats really do have religious faith. Wesley Clark is quoted by CNN as saying: “[T]he Republican Party does not have the monopoly on faith in this country.” Obviously so, since Clark has so many religious affiliations it’s difficult to keep them straight. He was raised a Baptist, married a Catholic and supposedly converted, but now goes to a Presbyterian church, although he’s never openly renounced Catholicism.

How about the others? According to CNN, John Kerry is a practicing Catholic, but one who believes the Founding Fathers articulated a “clear” separation between church and state in the Constitution, even though such words appear nowhere in any of America’s founding documents. Howard Dean (of Confederate flag fame) describes himself as a “nice New England Congregationalist.” Dean was raised an Episcopalian, but switched after a dispute with the church over a bike path location.

Richard Gephardt is a Baptist who claims his faith helped him through the pain of his son’s struggle with childhood cancer. Ever since Gephardt began telling his son’s story, the other candidates have been falling over each other to try and come up with an I’ve-got-a-tear-jerker-too story they can use at campaign stops. While everyone feels for anyone in such a situation, it is sad seeing suffering used for political purposes.

John Edwards is a Methodist and says he prays every day, but he evidently doesn’t think his relationship with God is important enough to affect public policy decisions. The President of the United States “should not be setting policy for the country based on his or her faith,” Edwards is quoted by CNN as saying.

Carol Moseley Braun lists her faith as Catholic. Her support of abortion on demand, though, stands in stark contrast to the teachings of the Vatican. Dennis Kucinich is also a Catholic, but his stance on homosexual marriage not only differs with his faith, but with most Americans in general.

Al Sharpton began preaching in public school kindergarten (whatever happened to separation of church and state, Mr. Sharpton?). He was ordained a Pentecostal minister at age 13. But honestly, when was the last time you saw Sharpton preaching from anything other than the NAACP’s handbook?

Joe Lieberman has used his faithful adherence to Judaism as a campaign tool. Oddly enough, however, while he’ll strictly observe the Sabbath, he voted against the ban on partial birth abortion in the Senate. To boot, his homepage proudly displays the vote.

So what’s the deal? Are the Democrats really as religious as they claim? Do their sympathies really lie with the faithful, or are they simply pandering to conservative southerners?

Just take a look at the political opinions and voting records of the nine Democrat presidential candidates to get an answer: no prayer in public schools, no government funding of faith-based initiatives, absolutely no display of Christian or Jewish symbols in the public square, promotion of homosexual agendas, support of a President who practiced adultery and blatantly lied before the nation, support of every abortion procedure imaginable (no questions asked), rabid support of euthanasia, and unapologetically favoring more intrusive government and taxation.

How many of the Ten Commandments have the Democrats upheld with their political positions?

Very few.

How have the Democrats honored the precepts of the churches they claim to attend?

They haven’t.

The Democrat’s religious push isn’t about true faith but about votes. The Democrats need key southern states to win in 2004. And appealing to those southern states is only possible by appealing to the predominantly religious people who live there. That’s a hard task for any Democrat considering America’s current political climate. Witnessing these competitors walking the fine line between appealing to religious southerners and satisfying northeastern liberals is amusing.

Maybe Howard Dean, et al., really do have religious fervor in their souls. None of us can know for sure. But if they do, they keep it tightly guarded, and that pretty much nullifies everything they believe. After all, if you don’t allow your faith to affect your decisions, why believe at all?

Put simply, the Democrats are playing the religion card and I suspect southerners realize it. Like Howard Dean’s comments on the Confederate flag, the hollow faith of the nine Democrat contenders is nothing but a vie for votes.

David N. Bass writes for World Newspaper Publishing



intellectualconservative.com