By Hunter Baker on 8.11.05 @ 12:06AM
Has James Dobson really made conservatives look bad?
David Gelernter has penned a Wall Street Journal
column in which he takes James Dobson to task
for a failure to make moral distinctions. According to Gelernter,
Dobson recently compared embryonic stem cell research to Nazi death
camp experiments and that doing so is tactless and unfair. This
mistake, Gelernter says, indicates Dobson has proven he doesn't
belong "in the major leagues" of public discourse and should be
"sent back to the minors." Gelernter makes the critique even though
he, too, opposes federal funding of the research. He fears Dobson
will damage the quality of discussion on the matter.
This episode of taking to task by Gelernter in the Wall
Street Journal is interesting on a couple of levels. First,
look at the substantive issue. Dobson was wrong, Gelernter says, to
compare Nazi death camp research to embryonic stem-cell research
because the stem-cell researchers are working to help mankind,
whereas the Nazi researchers were working to help mankind with the
exclusion of Jews.
At first blush, Gelernter appears to be absolutely correct. This
is just an unfair comparison by Dobson. Take a second look, though,
and things take on a different cast. If we broaden our inquiry just
a little, we see that what the Nazis were engaged in
philosophically and scientifically was not as fully distinguishable
from our modern dance with bioethics as we like to think.
For example, the Nazis did not confine themselves to the
extermination of Jews. They were also quite actively involved with
ridding the world of the retarded and mentally disabled. They did
not confine themselves to sterilization. In his powerful book
The Pillar of Fire, the great Jewish psychiatrist and
convert to Catholicism Karl Stern relates the story of a Lutheran
pastor Bodelschwingh who saves his colony of "feeble-minded,
epileptics, and idiots" from being killed only by protesting that
he must be killed, too. His fame was sufficient to prevent the
deaths. Stern indicates others were not so fortunate and that
during the war "the Nazis carried out the slaughter of all mental
patients."
Now, consider our current situation in which we boast of having
decreased the incidence of Down syndrome without adding that the
reduction has been due to counseled abortions targeting children
likely to have the condition. Imagine if we went about reducing
other social pathologies in this fashion. What other undesirable
potentialities might we isolate? I maintain that if a gay gene is
ever discovered and can be discovered in utero, the homosexual
community will find itself suddenly very pro-life in its sympathies
rather than see some parents abort because they'd really prefer to
have a child who will marry a member of the opposite sex and bear
children.
The point of this is simply to say that the Nazis didn't hate
the mentally retarded and epileptics the way they did Jews. They
thought they were building a better society and that if a price had
to be paid in terms of innocent human life to achieve that, they
were willing to pay it. That, too, was part of their great moral
disaster. Our current regime of bioethics shares that same flaw. We
are willing to destroy embryonic life in service of hopeful
improvements and pay scarce attention to whether it may be a
devil's bargain. Dr. Dobson (formerly a child psychologist for the
University of Southern California medical school) perceives that
fact and may be guilty of having expressed it imperfectly.
The second issue in this analysis is whether Gelernter is right
to suggest that Dobson doesn't belong in the major league of public
discourse. As an evangelical Christian who suffered long under the
many missteps of our other "spokesmen," I have to wonder who
Gelernter would prefer. The ascendance of Dobson to the public
stage is actually a great improvement in what we've had in the
past. Although Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson were both capable of
amazing performances at times, it has been too common to see them
hurt their cause in public.
It is a happy fact, not a discourse-damaging one, that the
American media have slowly begun to figure out that the real power
among Christian conservatives lies with James Dobson of Focus on
the Family and Chuck Colson of Prison Fellowship. Both men
represent the cause well. Those of us in the lower ranks may
sometimes grit our teeth with certain disagreements or feel various
nuances are inadequately presented by a spokesman like Dobson, but
I recommend the complainants engage in the television and newspaper
sound bite game and see how it feels. Under the circumstances,
broad strokes are about the best one can achieve.
In addition, I think we need to make allowance for the heartfelt
religio-ethical critique of society, particularly from the right.
When an advocate of the left is a religious person, we often hear
that the individual is speaking "prophetically from a critical
stance" or that he/she is "speaking truth to power." In their case,
the saltier and more cutting the words, the better. It is
understood they are speaking against insensitive movements of the
mass culture and that shock must be employed to inspire reflection.
I am still waiting for someone to take that view of a man like
James Dobson. Whether you agree or not, his attack on the mass
culture in the name of the sanctity of life can easily fit within
the honored tradition of religionists speaking truth to power. You
know what they say about strong medicine: If it tastes bad, it's
because it's working.
topics:
Television, Religion, Catholicism, Abortion, Law