By George Neumayr on 6.26.08 @ 12:08AM
Obama doesn't believe in the separation of faith from winning.
After John Kerry lost in 2004, the Democrats began to re-think
their loud secularism. The separation of politically handy
religious rhetoric from winning had left them chastened. Suddenly
secularist liberals were upbraiding Kerry for bobbling moral and
religious issues.
Nancy Pelosi, stricken by the poll data, took a stab at
criticizing Kerry along these lines: "Democrats did not connect
well enough with the American people. Certainly Democrats are
faith-filled. Certainly we love our country, and we're very
patriotic, but somehow or other that did not come across when 61%
of those who are regular churchgoers voted Republican -- voted for
President Bush, and when 22% of Americans gave its highest number
to what determined their vote to issues relating to morality, more
than the economy, more than terrorism."
Henceforth, the Democrats would maintain the same old
secularism, but shoehorn it into religious packaging. Now they have
an ideal candidate in Barack Obama. Unlike John Kerry, whose
respect for religion extended to calling defrocked Haitian
strongman Aristide "Father," Obama has perfected this con job.
It is often on display in his oh-so-thoughtful, post-partisan
musings about the "connection between religion and politics." Sort
through all the sophistries and quasi-religious uplift, however,
and the only connection that emerges is strategic: How can
Democrats use the language of religion to win, then solidify the
gains of secularism? Religion in public life, under Obama's
thinking, exists not to purify the party's extreme secularism but
to advance it.
Examining anew the "connection between religion and politics"
means adjusting one's PR, not philosophical positions. All it comes
down to is: an annoyingly large number of people practice religion
in America and therefore the Dems have no choice but to posture
accordingly. But the content of religion is certainly not true;
there is no need to re-think the party's moral philosophy, though
Obama does hope Democrats will talk a little bit more nicely to
pro-lifers in the future, which leaves the Doug Kmiecs breathless
with gratitude.
Indeed, Obama is very proud of his commitment to "people of
faith," who enjoy a slot on his campaign web page in the "people
section" two down from the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender
community.
He certainly values their votes, but their faith is pretty
tiresome, unless it happens to fortify progressive politics. His
supposedly seminal June 2006 speech at the Call to Renewal's Building a
Covenant for a New America conference, in which he essentially
counsels progressives on the value and efficacy of patting the
religious on the head from time to time, is insidious drivel that
makes the straightforward secularism of the ACLU look honest and
respectable by comparison.
In the speech, Obama affected to explain how Christianity guides
his politics. But the influence is all in reverse: his liberal
politics determines the content of his Christianity. The latter is
negotiable and hazy for him, while the former represents an
organizing, not-to-be-doubted-or-changed truth for society.
Liberalism is so obviously true in fact that the traditional
understanding of Christianity must give way to it, under Obama's
reading. That liberalism itself should undergo similar skeptical
revision is thus out of the question: the platform of the
Democratic Party is inerrant.
There is no real argument in the speech. There are just a few
irenic thoughts about religion followed by scattershot assumptions
that revolve around secularism's claimed monopoly on reason which
render the previous, pro-religious musings meaningless.
Secularism, of course, never has to explain itself or prove its
claims, a curiously privileged position for an ideology that rests
on skepticism and relativism. Apparently everything is unknowable
to secularists except the obvious wisdom of their holding a
dominant spot in public debates. How we know with certainty that
secularism is synonymous with "reason" and religion synonymous with
"mere opinion" is never explained.
Obama, who automatically accepts these premises and feels no
need to demonstrate them, encourages the religious to enter public
life in a "pluralistic" society provided that they aspire to
secularism's high level of rationality: "Democracy demands that the
religiously motivated translate their concerns into universal,
rather than religion-specific, values. It requires that their
proposals be subject to argument, and amenable to reason. I may be
opposed to abortion for religious reasons, but if I seek to pass a
law banning the practice, I cannot simply point to the teachings of
my church or evoke God's will. I have to explain why abortion
violates some principle that is accessible to people of all faiths,
including those with no faith at all."
This is very big of him. But somehow Obama, a supporter of
partial-birth abortion and other anomalies that would make
barbarians blush, is exempt from such expectations: he doesn't have
to cite a universal moral principle based upon reason for that
"value."
The willfulness he casually assumes in the traditionally
religious defines his own stance, as he cobbles together a sham
Christianity from scratch that conveniently dovetails with the
platform of the Democratic Party, then calls his vote-searching the
reconciliation of "religion and politics."
topics:
Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, Religion, Abortion, Law