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A "Real Christian" President? Perish The Thought Email Print


Illustrating The Joys Of Theocracy


All of the talk lately about the religious preferences of the presidential candidates or their lack of them has me concerned for the direction of the current campaign and the fact that religion has any place in this discussion at all.


Yesterday, while drinking my second cup of coffee and mentally preparing for the second week of moving to a new residence, a letter to the editor of USA Today caught my attention.


One Harold Burnett of Palmdale, California seems to have gotten his evangelical shorts in a wad over an op-ed piece titled "What is a 'real' Christian?" written by Dan Gilgoff in USA Today on May 21. Mr Burnett writes:

I agree with Focus on the Family's founder James Dobson, who seems to believe that a Christian should be the GOP presidential nominee ("What is a 'real' Christian?" On Religion, The Forum, May 21).


If for no other reason, a Christian would balance the power of the left, the atheists and those waging open war against many conservatives.


But where is this real Christian who is willing to run for president? The fact that Mr. Dobson is not considering it illustrates the problem Christians in this country face. It seems there is a perception that real Christians don't get involved in politics. Though we are willing to support someone who meets our conservative criteria, we are not willing to be him.


Could it be that many professing Christians are not real Christians and are afraid of being exposed as hypocrites? It seems to me that a religious conservative is the best we can hope for this time around.


Perhaps, due to my past exposure to various "Christian" denominations, and various experiences with other religious groups, sects, cults, klaverns, whatever, I no longer claim a religious affiliation of any kind and hope to quietly live out my days as far from religious authority, zealotry, bigotry and lunacy as possible.


I think that it was Einstein who said, "If God did not exist, man would have to invent him" or something along those lines.

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Report on a Gathering of Theocrats in Georgia Email Print

The Christian Reconstructionist movement has long been one of the driving forces of the contemporary religious right. I reported on this in a study published in The Public Eye in 1994, and expanded on my reporting and analysis in my 1997 book Eternal Hostility: The Struggle Between Theocracy and Democracy.

Since then the signficance and influence of the overtly theocratic Reconstructionist movement has come to be more widely recognized.

Some of the best reporting in rece