Religion and american politics are intertwined in many ways, and
there is unending concern, largely among his opponents, that a
politician’s religious background will interfere with his judgment,
affect his decisions and his appointments, and otherwise get in the
way of his exercise of power. Mitt Romney’s critics constantly
worry about his Mormonism, the mainstream press incessantly refers
to the Evangelical influences on Michele Bachmann and Rick Perry,
and Herman Cain is criticized for his ties to the Christian Right,
although in a restrained way because he comes from the black
Baptist tradition responsible for the civil rights movement and the
“social justice” tradition of Martin Luther King, Jr.
But what if a presidential candidate’s religious authority
preached anti-Semitism, opposed interracial marriage, and believed
that HIV was designed by the U.S. government as a way of shrinking
the black population? It would be off limits, is what would
happen.
Well, we think it should be part of the debate, and so we
continue our examination of some of President Obama’s old friends
and colleagues with a well-researched piece on the Rev. Jeremiah
Wright, Obama’s pastor of 20 years from Chicago, who made a cameo
appearance in the 2008 campaign and quickly disappeared.
The American Spectator’s young
reporter, Charles Johnson, dug deep into the archives in and around
Chicago for information about the good Reverend that had escaped
Hillary Clinton and John McCain in 2008 (Hillary was the candidate
who first exposed Obama’s ties to Rev. Wright), and escaped the
media as well. Mr. Johnson read every one of Wright’s sermons, his
history of the church, all press accounts in mainstream and black
media outlets, and much more.
Nobody knows for sure whether Obama shares Wright’s views, but
we do know that those beliefs make the religious influences on
conservative candidates that scare the bejeezus out of the media
look pretty mild in comparison. But what’s sauce for the goose is
sauce for the gander, and we think a harder look by the electorate
at the good Reverend Wright would be well worthwhile.
The constant drumbeat we hear from Obama these days may not come
from the Reverend Wright, but is taken right out of FDR’s playbook:
redistribute the wealth by taxing the rich and get reelected by
instituting class warfare. Burt and Anita Folsom, authors of a new
book on the FDR administration, write that the rationale for the
New Deal’s tax schemes has been bought hook, line, and sinker by
the Obamaites, and that we should expect similar results. By 1945,
marginal rates on incomes of more than $500,000 had shot to 98.7
percent—from 25 percent before FDR was elected — and Roosevelt
made no bones about campaigning against the rich for not paying
their “fair share.” But what Obama has failed to learn, or at least
ignores, is that the results of FDR’s tax policies were a disaster:
among other shortcomings, when top rates were raised to 79 percent
in 1935, revenue into the federal treasury was half what it had
been in 1929, when top rates were only 24 percent.
Politically, of course, class warfare worked for Roosevelt. And
Obama believes it will work well for him. But like so many other
things, there is a great deal about America that Obama does not
understand. As Ronald Reagan wisely said, “Since when do we in
America accept this alien and discredited theory of social and
class warfare? Since when do we in America endorse the politics of
envy and division?” Let us hope that the American people are still
with Ronald Reagan.