New York Times reporter Chris Hedges has written an
extraordinary book, American Fascism: The Christian Right And The
War On America. Having survived a Christian fundamentalist
background myself, I marvel at the timely urgency of Hedges� book, but also, at
the obtuse disconnect most Americans have with the pivotal thesis of his book:
the power of the religious right in the United States to bring forth a nation
whose totalitarian repression could dwarf that of Nazi Germany in the 1930s.
As Hedges notes, we are well on the path toward such a
reality, and the Dominionist Christian right is a
principal player in the process. While the nucleus of that movement is small,
measuring only about 1 percent of evangelicals and led by the likes of James Dobson,
Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, and John Hagee, who dutifully preach the
consummate tenet of the movement, submission. Those leaders are supported by
throngs of evangelicals sympathetic to their theocratic
views: Citizens must submit to their government officials, particularly the
ones who claim to be born-again Christians and receiving their orders from God;
wives must submit to husbands; children must submit to parents; and everyone
must submit to the teachings of the Bible as interpreted by evangelical
Christianity or burn in hell. I will herein use the term "Christian
fascism" or "Cristo-fascism" as synonymous with a worldview and
political philosophy which are both fundamentalist Christian and fascist in
nature.
Recently, I viewed a chilling documentary "Jesus
Camp", which examines "the evangelical belief that a revival is
underway in America that requires Christian youth to assume leadership roles in
advocating the causes of their religious movement." [1] The film
follows a group of evangelical kids who attend a summer camp where they are
taught to become dedicated Christian soldiers in God�s army. Under the
leadership of control-freak youth pastor Becky Fischer, who makes Nurse Ratchet
in "One Flew Over The Cuckoo�s Nest" look like Snow White, the
children are told that theirs is a unique generation -- perhaps the last on
earth before the return of Christ to rapture his church, and that just as
Musilm children learn at an early age to carry and use automatic weapons so
that they can die for Islam, Christian kids must learn to fight in the Jesus
army in order to save souls and take back America for God -- and be willing to
die for Jesus.
One not need be a licensed mental health professional to
find the emotional manipulation, indoctrination, and outright brainwashing of
the Jesus Camp both repulsive and enraging. Its squeaky-clean, almost
exclusively white, puerile participants mouth all the right jargon, concepts,
and scripture verses impeccably and robotically like good little Christian boys
and girls -- or more chillingly, like Hitler youth. Jesus Camp is nothing less
than childhood spiritual abuse on steroids, leaving me personally and eternally
grateful that as a child growing up in fundamentalism, I wasn�t subjected to
anything worse in the context of religious services than the raspy screams of
Bible-thumping preachers
Hedges� brilliant article, "The Christian Right And The Rise Of
American Fascism" outlines several principles inherent in
Christian fascism, and to his list, I will add a few of my own:
1. Apocalyptic Violence -- A central tenet of Cristo-fascism
is the belief that after the Rapture or Christ�s returns to rescue Christian
believers and take them to heaven, a period of seven years, or the Tribulation,
will ensue in which an Anti-Christ will dominate the world, and every horror
imaginable will be unleashed on humankind. Those who do not submit (again a
pivotal word for Christian fascism) and accept Christ as their personal savior,
will be martyred but will be assured of spending eternity in heaven with
Christ. Those who do submit will be condemned eternally to hell. After the
Tribulation period, Christ will return again with the "army" of
Christians in heaven, and the battle of Armageddon will be fought against the
Anti-Christ and his armies. The latter will be slaughtered by Christ and his
followers who will set up Christ�s kingdom on earth where he will reign for one
thousand years, followed by the total and complete destruction of earth as
Christ and his followers return to heaven.
Sounds like a scene from the movie "Independence
Day." Actually, that movie cannot begin to capture the heinous barbarity
that Christian fascism fantasizes will befall the earth and those who reject
Christ. That scenario is a bloodbath of unimaginable, avenging horrors. Note
that not only will non-Christian human beings be decimated, but so will the
earth itself, the outcome being twofold: Humans who do not submit to Jesus will
be destroyed, and the planet itself will be annihilated. How delicious the
vindication for the Cristo-fascist psyche!
Not only will people who reject their Jesus be grotesquely
punished, but their God will prove himself more powerful than the very planet
on which they live. Obviously, no need here to worry about global warming -- at
least the kind created by humans. God will incinerate the earth--his own
instantaneous global warming, triumphing over all enemies of both himself and
the Christian fascists.
As Hedges notes, these fantasies of monstrous cruelty are
appealing to many within the Christian-fascist movement because "The loss
of manufacturing jobs, lack of affordable health care, negligible opportunities
for education and poor job security has left many millions of Americans locked
out. This ideology is attractive because it offers them the hope of power and
revenge. It sanctifies their rage." [2] And if any group of people on
earth is enraged, it is the Cristo-fascists whose rancor is every bit as
caustic and virulent as that of any Islamist fundamentalist on a suicide
mission.
2. One reason Hedges labels these
individuals fascist has not only to do with their positioning themselves on the
political right, but specifically, their fanatical insistence on submission to
theocratic government. Had George Orwell been a born-again Christian,
twenty-first century Cristo-fascists would probably declare him a saint. (War
is holy, and killing is sacred.) Their preferred polity is biblical
totalitarianism in which the principles embraced by secular society are
perceived as untrue and antithetical to their God and his Word. Unquestioning
obedience to fundamentalist Christian theology and its resultant theocracy are the cornerstones of
Cristo-fascism in twenty-first century America.
3. As a result, adherents are diametrically opposed to a
secular worldview and the tenets of modern science. As I have commented in
other articles [3] in recent years, fundamentalist Christianity generally
distrusts, and often despises human reason. Millions of children in America are
being home-schooled, and 75 percent of them are children from fundamentalist
Christian homes. [4] Home-schooling can offer an extraordinary alternative to
attending public school, but for fundamentalist Christians, it serves, among
other things, to shield their children not only from grappling with such issues
as evolution and global warming, but learning the scientific method itself and
the basic principles of critical thinking and logical analysis.
4. Cristo-fascism is overwhelmingly a white Anglo-American
movement. While one sees growing numbers of African Americans and Hispanics
joining their ranks, the movement remains predominantly white and rabidly
Islamophobic. Most outspoken on this issue is San Antonio�s megachurch pastor,
John Hagee, who perceives Islam as the new Satan
which must be destroyed by Israel and the United States.
5. While Christian fascism cannot give enough lip service to
the "culture of life" it is morbidly death-obsessed in its raging
support of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and capital punishment. The
popularity of the grisly, sado-masochistic "The Passion Of The
Christ" among fundamentalist Christians, as well as the Jesus Camp�s
indoctrination of children to be willing and proud to "die for Jesus"
further belie Cristo-fascism�s death fetish.
6. A new Christian Gestapo is in the works as the Christian
right is working vehemently to take control of military chaplaincies and
create, in Hedges words, "America�s Holy Warriors." He
points out that during the last century communist and fascist movements each
built paramilitary forces that operated beyond the reach of the law. The
frightening popularity and proliferation of the private security firm,
Blackwater, founded by a mega-millionaire right-wing Christian, Erik Prince,
has not only become a giant mercenary force in Iraq, but was heavily used in
New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. Increasingly, Cristo-fascists are becoming
more blatant about their wish to force conversion to Christ through the barrel
of a gun. A typical image of this concept, dripping with testosterone, may be
viewed at the website of Force Ministries.
Just this week, conservative theologian, Doug Giles, appeared on Fox News
arguing that Christian males should be tougher because "Jesus wasn�t a
bearded lady." Christians, he said, should stop raising nice boys and
raise warriors who can fight terrorism.
In answer to the question of what is to be done, I would
assert as I usually do: Knowledge is power. Fundamentalist Christianity is
inherently delusional. One cannot reason with its adherents nor influence them
with facts. What one can do is understand first of all that the United States
has become a fascist empire. If one takes seriously Mussolini�s definition of
fascism, "the corporate state," then this nation was well on its way
even before the ascendancy of the Bush II administration and September 11,
2001.
Furthermore, it is time for those who consider themselves
politically progressive to stop "tolerating" Cristo-fascists.
Certainly, these individuals have every right to believe whatever they choose
to believe, but when one comprehends the inherently fascist nature of both
their religion and their politics, one must necessarily confront not only their
ghastly disregard for separation of church and state, but their implacable
commitment to engineering a fundamentalist Christian theocracy in the United
States.
The exponential growth of the Cristo-fascist movement in the
past six years is yet another symptom of empire and a somnambulant society in
the throes of collapse. Whether or not one embraces Christianity or any
religion, for that matter, it is instructive to engage in reality-checking the
actual teachings of Jesus in the New Testament, and specifically, the gospels
and other sacred writings which were excluded from the bible in the fourth
century for political and socio-economic reasons in order to streamline
Constantine�s hierarchical, imperial, Christian regime -- the world�s first but
not last, Christian theocracy. With that in mind, I highly recommend The Jesus Mysteries, by
Timothy Freke and Peter Gandy.
1. Jesus Camp,
the movie
2. The
Christian Right and the Rise of American Fascism, Chris Hedges, www.theocracywatch.org,
Nov. 15, 2004
3. a) Dominionist
Dementia: What's Jesus Got to Do With
It? Carolyn Baker, Dec. 20,
2004
b) The Religious Right:
An Anti-American Terrorist Movement, Carolyn Baker, May 12, 2005
c) The
Religious Right: Pushing A Deadly Addiction, Carolyn Baker, May 17, 2005
4. Jesus Camp,
the movie
Carolyn
Baker, Ph.D. is author of a forthcoming book, �COMING OUT FROM CHRISTIAN
FUNDAMENTALISM: Affirming Life, Love and The Sacred.�
Her recent book is �U.S.
History Uncensored: What Your High School Textbook Didn't Tell You.� Her website is www.carolynbaker.org where she may be
contacted.