Rant san: The illusory ‘values’ option

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#3  The conservative movement represents “family values.”

A few years back, my in-laws got me a subscription to World. World is an uber-conservative magazine that claims to focus on global issues, but is really just a rag for propaganda. Yes, I said it — propaganda. This is not because I “disagree” with World, although on many issues, I do. Propaganda is its own form of journalism, and there are several conduits for such journalism on both sides of the political line (on the liberal side, see Mother Jones). Anyway, I was reading along in World when I reached an article about campaign finance reform, where the magazine claimed that finance reform for political contributions was “unGodly” and that readers should call their representative before this terrible blight on Christian values was allowed to pass.

When people go on about family values, I think: 'Methinks thou dost protest too much'...

Um, excuse me?

Finance reform is unGodly?

This was the point where I tossed the magazine aside, and sent all the rest of the issues (yes, they came for 18 long months) into the recycling where they belonged. It is exactly this kind of rhetoric that makes me foam at the mouth. Anti-corruption legislation (oooo, that’s the other term for “finance reform”), if God were to decide on it, would probably not be unGodly. That’s just a guess. Not that I know what God is thinking. And for that matter, neither does World magazine. So claiming “rightness” and “Godliness” for issues like this…well, like I said, it just makes me foam at the mouth.

In reality, I started looking more closely at my conservative stance when I was 19 and on an internship that led me to Iowa.  My mentor, Sande, and his wife, Margo, are two of the kindest, most ‘Christian’ people I’ve ever met, yet they thought differently about life and politics (Margo was head of the Iowa Democratic party for some years) and I spent a lot of time listening to what they said and why they believed it.  I realized that liberal values were actually more in line with what I believed than conservative values, but that I had consistently fallen for the face value of the conservative ‘line’.  And that, folks, is how I became a bleeding heart liberal – because not everyone gets the same start, life isn’t fair, and sometimes those who have much need to give to those who have less.

More than this, though, I came to understand how really crucial it is for churches and religion to stay out of politics.  We talk a lot about theocracy in the Middle East, and how detrimental it can be; what people don’t consider is how dangerous theocracy can be in our own country. (More on this later…also, ignore the “read more” links at the bottom here, I’m changing my theme and I’ve got some kinks to work out) (oops, now it works!)

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