Pennsylvania politics: Resolved to continue bigotry
By Walter Brasch
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Jul 2, 2008, 00:17
There
should have been absolutely no controversy in a resolution presented in the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives last month.
Speaker
Dennis O�Brien, a Republican from Philadelphia, wanted to honor the Ahmadiyya
Muslim Community, which was holding its 60th annual national convention in
Harrisburg. These resolutions are routine and almost always noncontroversial.
The resolution pointed out that the organization�s purpose was to �increase
faith and harmony and introduce various humanitarian, social and religious
services.�
But
that wasn�t what angered Rep. Daryl Metcalf, a five-term Republican from north
of Pittsburgh. �The Muslims do not recognize Jesus Christ as God,� he declared
indignantly, and said he would vote against the resolution. Now, normally, Rep.
Metcalf�s views would be heard -- and dismissed as a bigoted attack. But this
is Pennsylvania politics. So, Rep. Gordon Denlinger, a Republican from
Lancaster, felt he had to talk. �Certainly this nation went through an attack
some years ago that is well-burned into the subconscious of our society,� he
said, and then emphasized, �What I sense on our floor today is that, for some
people, this evokes very strong passion and emotion.� Apparently, Denlinger
never considered that all religions, including Christianity, have violent
extremists. Nevertheless, on Denlinger�s suggestion, the full House sent the
resolution to committee, where it would ultimately die long after the weekend
convention.
The
nonsense in the House isn�t isolated. Voluminous lies and exaggerations about
Sen. Barack Obama permeate the conservative talk shows, e-mails, and Internet.
From bitterness dripping in an equal amount of invective and stupidity, we are
told that Obama is a radical Muslim �mole� who is waiting to take over America,
that he attended Muslim schools and was indoctrinated in that faith, that he
switched to Christianity solely to get elected to office, and that he took his
oath of office by placing his hand on a Koran.
Obama�s
supporters aren�t much better than the liars from the misnamed �right.� Their
vigorous defense of the probable Democratic nominee is that Obama isn�t a
Muslim but really a Christian; his staff has even gone to great lengths to
distance Obama from any possibility that he could have any connection to Islam.
Apparently, being a Christian is more tolerable, certainly more acceptable,
than being a Muslim, a Jew, or a believer of any other religion.
Sen.
John McCain, the probable Republican nominee for president, agrees. �Since this
nation was founded primarily on Christian principles, I prefer someone who I
know who has a solid grounding in my faith. But that doesn�t mean that I'm sure
that someone who is Muslim would not make a good president. I don�t say that we
would rule out under any circumstances someone of a different faith. I just . .
. feel that that�s an important part of our qualifications to lead.�
Disagreeing
with Sen. McCain and millions of Americans are the Founding Fathers, some of
whom were Deists, some were secularists and some were Christians.
�[T]he
Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the
Christian religion,� according to Article 11 of The Treaty of Tripoli, written
near the end of George Washington�s presidency, unanimously approved by the
Senate, and signed by John Adams in June 1797. That same treaty also
established that the United States �has in itself no character of enmity
against the laws, religion, or tranquillity [sic], of Mussulmen; and, as
the said States never entered into any war, or act of hostility against any
Mahometan nation, it is declared by the parties, that no pretext arising from
religious opinions, shall ever produce an interruption of the harmony existing
between the two countries.�
The
treaty itself was an extension of the principles enunciated within the
Constitution. Article VI, Section 3 of the Constitution is clear that �no
religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or
public trust under the United States.� The First Amendment assures not only a
separation of church and state, but the right of any person to practice any
religion -- or no religion.
Thomas
Jefferson said that his Bill for Religious Liberty in Virginia was �meant to
comprehend, within the mantle of its protection, the Jew and the Gentile, the
Christian and the Mahometan, the Hindu, and infidel of every denomination.�
George Washington, the year after his inauguration, wrote the Hebrew
Congregation of Newport, R.I., to tell them that �happily the government of the
United States . . . gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance.
. . . Everyone shall sit in safety under his own vine and fig tree, and there
shall be none to make him afraid.�
Explaining
what James Madison and the other Founding Fathers intended, Jefferson as
president in 1802 wrote, �I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of
the whole American people which declared that their legislature should
�make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof,� thus building a wall of separation between church and
state.� The Supreme Court of the United States twice used Jefferson�s argument
to rule that the Constitution, although it doesn�t specifically spell it out,
does include an �establishment clause� to preserve the separation of church and
state.
Abraham
Lincoln later quashed all attempts to create a constitutional amendment that
would have established America not only as a Christian nation, but would impose
Christianity as the official state religion.
Even
contemporary theologians agree that the United States was not founded on
Christian principles; most defend the separation of church and state. �Some
Christians imagine a version of history in which the republic was established
as a Christian nation [but] an honest look at the historical record indicates
that this was not the case,� says R. Albert Mohler, Jr., president of the
Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, one of the largest seminaries in the
world.
Nevertheless,
the action of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, the blathermouths who
populate talk radio and the Internet, and the apologists who whine that Sen.
Obama is really a 100 percent genuine practicing Christian, make it obvious
that a large part of Americans not only fail to appreciate the structure of
what is America, but in their own misguided form of Christianity fail to
understood the values of the Jew named Jesus Christ.
Walter Brasch is professor of journalism at Bloomsburg
University and president of the Pennsylvania Press Club. He is senior author of
the critically-acclaimed "The Press and the State," and author of "�Unacceptable�: The Federal Response
to Hurricane Katrina" (January 2006) and "Sinking the Ship of State:
The Presidency of George W. Bush" (November 2007), available through amazon.com. You may contact
Brasch at brasch@bloomu.edu
or through his website at: www.walterbrasch.com.
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