Hewitt and Limbaugh

A reader remonstrates:

By dismissing them as liars and party hacks, I don’t think you’re really confronting their argument head-on. I know because I’ve had this argument a million times with conservative friends. Rush and Hugh are probably being sincere in their contention that the Democratic party is SO debased and oblivious to the terrorist threat that it would put our safety directly at risk to not overlook some of the flaws in the current Republican leadership. To them, even to entertain the notion of giving power to a modern-day Democrat is to embolden our enemies and show ourselves as cowards to the rest of the world.

So, much like you and your temporary kinship with liberals, Rush and Hugh put their objections to the side and unite with a deeply flawed group of politicians. Just as you see the christianist/free-spending Republican threat as so serious as to require putting an otherwise unattractive bunch of liberals in power, Rush and Hugh see the democratic threat as so serious as to require keeping the republicans in power. If conservative vision gets trashed in the process so be it – conservatism is strong enough to reassert itself when the threat to our existence is not so imminent. To counter this, don’t you have to defend the leadership abilities of a bunch of indefensible democrats? What have they shown us to deserve such praise?

Two responses: if Hewitt and Limbaugh had said before the election that they knew these Republicans were not conservatives, and didn’t deserve their support, but that they were still preferable to any Democratic check on presidential power, it would be one thing. But they didn’t. They bit their tongues on the GOP. That’s intellectually dishonest.

The second point is: is their fear of the Democrats a rational one? On some key issues, I just don’t think so. On the war, it is hard to imagine how much worse you could get than Rumsfeld’s management. Is Biden really lunatic to propose dividing the country? Is Levin eager to allow Islamist terrorists to win? Please. Show some respect. On spending, again, how much worse could it have been? These guys increased spending at a faster rate than any Democratic Congress since FDR. I could go on.

There comes a point at which an adult conservative should be eager to see the Democrats come to the center, if only to avoid the hubris and corruption that always stems from one-party rule, whichever party it is. I think the explanation for the intellectual dishonesty was that an entire industry was built around demonizing the left; and that this demonization became all conservatives were about. There was so much money in it; and it was so easy to demonize liberals that that’s all they ended up doing.

The Republicans had become so enthralled by what they were against that they had forgotten what they were supposed to be for. So they came off as negative, mean-spirited and cruel. Hence the solid American center moving back to the Dems. The result, however, is in many ways a good conservative one. Many more conservative Democrats are now in Congress than before. We have a chance to move in a realistic way in Iraq, now that the loonies have been removed from the Pentagon (Cambone has just been given his papers, I hear). And we may get a sensible compromise on immigration. Bush has a real opportunity to rescue his presidency. For the sake of the country, I hope he succeeds.

The Mike Jones Interview

Radar online has an interview with the "angry hustler" who exposed Ted Haggard’s hypocrisy. They also have an interview with me on the book, by the way. The gay press has also perked up. My Q and A with Washington D.C.s’ "Metro Weekly" can be read here. If you’re interested in my own interaction with the gay world, it may help explain a few things. For them, I have always been perceived as a conservative, whatever the right is now trying to claim.

Yglesias Award Nominee

"Everything we know tells us that mankind developed by small gradations from earlier forms.  With modern genomics we can even set approximate dates for the various changes.  At which point in this Darwin1854 everlasting series of changes were we kissed by God?  Or:  How would we go about seeking an answer to that question?  And if, at some point in the series, God did indeed say:  "This is my favorite creature, this one I will bless with special gifts"‚Äîif that actually happened, why might not it un-happen?  If God can bestow His favor at some point in our phylogenetic development, why might He not withdraw it at some further point, for His own mysterious purposes?  How do we know this hasn’t already happened?  How, in fact, do you detect this specialness‚Äîthis having been favored by God?  What would be the difference between a human being, or the human race, thus favored, and one not thus favored?  How would I tell which was which?

My main point about biology in my original piece was just that up until about 150 years ago practically everyone believed what Wesley believes‚Äîthat we are a uniquely blessed and gifted creature.  All the big religions of the world are built around that notion.  It is now clear that we are not, after all, special in the way we thought.  And that weakens faith.  That’s all.  As I said in my piece, the creationists are perfectly correct to hate and fear modern biology.  Probably all religious people should hate and fear it.  If its discoveries pass the very strict evidentiary tests required by science, though, then to reject it is just obscurantist," – John Derbyshire, NRO.

The alternative, of course, is to integrate what we thought we knew of God into what we now know is empirically true about the planet. I explore how a revitalized Christianity should embrace Darwin in my book.

Even Glenn …

… thinks Limbaugh is full of it:

I note that Rush Limbaugh, who was complaining about my pre-mortem before, now says he feels "liberated" because he’s able to say things like . . . what I said back before the election. Well, better late than never, but one problem with the GOP is that it lost touch with the things it was supposed to stand for, and a little more tough love from Limbaugh before the election might have done some good.

Reynolds voted for the GOP in the Senate. He was against the Republicans before he was for them.

They Knew Haggard Was Gay!

Haggarderikstenbakkenap_1

Here’s a startling admission from the Reverend Louis Sheldon, a Christianist from the "Traditional Values Coalition:

Sheldon disclosed that he and "a lot" of others knew about Haggard‚Äôs homosexuality "for a while … but we weren‚Äôt sure just how to deal with it."

Months before a male prostitute publicly revealed Haggard’s secret relationship with him, and the reverend’s drug use as well, "Ted and I had a discussion," explained Sheldon, who said Haggard gave him a telltale signal then: "He said homosexuality is genetic. I said, no it isn’t. But I just knew he was covering up. They need to say that."

Or maybe Haggard was telling the truth. And maybe it’s the Christianists who are "covering up" the simple fact of homosexual orientation.

The parallels with the Vatican are eery. They too knew they had priests behaving at odds with church doctrine. But they chose to protect them, rather than the children and youths the priests were molesting. Haggard’s activity is far less grave than molestation, but it was a manifest contradiction of his own teaching. And many evangelical leaders, according to Sheldon, knew they had a hypocrite on their hands for a long time. And they did nothing. They kept this fact from Haggard’s flock. And people wonder why voters put corruption and ethics at the top of their concerns in this election; and why white evangelicals abandoned the GOP in such large numbers. They can smell the b.s. They can smell the hypocrisy and intellectual dishonesty. For the last several years, the American right has been full of both. They now have a chance to rethink. Here’s hoping they can.

(Photo: Erik Stenbakken/AP.)

Vive La Resistance

"You’ve heard of IslamaFascists – I think we now have Christian fascists. What is the definition of a fascist? Not only do they want to beat you, but they want to destroy you in the process… if things keep going the way things are going locally and statewide, it is going to be more and more difficult for Republicans to recruit candidates. We have elements of the party who are moral absolutists, who take the approach that if you don’t take my position every step of the way, not only will I not support you, but I will destroy you," –  Republican Chairman Steve Salem from Woodbury County, Iowa.

Marriage Equality Watch

The ANC, divided on the issue, just resolved it:

In a major about turn, the African National Congress (ANC) in Parliament‚Äôs home affairs committee yesterday swept aside opposition objections to the same-sex marriages bill and used its 70 percent majority to force the use of the terms ‘civil union’ and ‘marriage’ equally.

The approved version of the bill makes the term ‘civil union’ the same as a ‘marriage’ and wherever the one appears, so too does the other. This approval is a direct rejection of the masses of submissions from religious groups objecting to giving homosexual couples the choice of using the term marriage. It is also a direct rejection of traditional leaders who wanted the constitution to be changed rather than the bill approved.

In Massachusetts, the legislature has done, in my opinion, the wrong thing. By denying the voters the chance to have the final decision on marriage rights, the pro-marriage forces have lost a clear chance at democratic legitimacy. Yes, in some respects, civil rights should not be up for a vote. But many opponents of equality in marriage do not accept the premise that civil marriage is a civil right for gays. I think they’re wrong; but it’s an honest disagreement. And they’re not wrong that equality in civil marriage is also a social change that should have democratic input. To prevent such input by parliamentary maneuvers taints the victory. I think we would have won the vote in 2008. I’m sorry we won’t now get the chance to prove it.

Nationally, of course, Massachusetts is becoming less anomalous. In California, the state legislature has approved full marriage rights for gays; and the issue is awaiting the state Supreme Court’s ruling. I hope they rule for full civil marriage rights and that the first governor to sign a marriage law into effect for gay couples in Anerica will be a Republican in the most populous state in the Union.