Dr. Steven Jonas
|
archived: 4 - 10 Feb, 2007 Back Next UPDATED: FEBRUARY 7, 2007 “ON GEORGE BUSH AND RELIGION, II, REDUX” Author’s Note. As I have noted previously, every third week or so in this pace I will be publishing a re-run from the set of columns written since the outset of my appearance on TPJ that focus on George Bush. Steve Gheen and I thought that in light of the fact that Bush is now in the twilight of his Presidency (that is in the Gotterdammerung, not the gentle, sense of the word), such a series would be appropriate: a backwards look at a backwards man, only the second true reactionary, in the literal sense of the word (Reagan was the first), ever to have occupied the White House. The columns will each receive a light edit but no updating. I hope that you will consider these writings an adequate representation of this man who continues to work so hard at achieving what is evermore so obviously his original goal: the overthrow of US Constitutional Democracy, to replace it with a Georgite version of theocratic fascism. Introduction As I said in my column on this topic that was published on April 8, 2004, organized religion and its exploitation is an obvious major feature of the Bush II Presidency, one that I like to refer to as the Georgite regime. There is a view held in some quarters that this is simply cynical politics: that many Right-Wing Republican policies fit into and/or reflect the agenda of the Christian Right, which then forms the electoral center of the Bush Base. Certainly, many of the top Georgites appear to be anything but True Believers: Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, Wolfowitz, Perle. They all seem eminently secular. As for Karl Rove, who knows if he has any true beliefs, one way or another. But does that view apply to the top-dog Georgite, G.W. Bush himself? Is he simply a cynical politician, mouthing phrases to take advantage of a group of Right-Wing voters who just happen to hold, very strongly, to a particular brand of hellfire and brimstone old-fashioned Protestant theology? I don’t think so. I think that this George is a true believer, himself. As our European Editor, Michael Carmichael, has said, there is no person more firmly attached to preconceived notions than “Born Again,” reformed alcoholics/drug addicts, especially those who happen to be not-too-bright. That he has this background makes G.W. Bush even more dangerous. In this column, you will find some further evidence to support my position (and one or two other observations on political religion as well). We will also briefly examine why the Georgites have met with such success in a country in which their professed religious views are those of a rather small minority. On the True Meaning of the "gay marriage" Amendment George Bush has come out foursquare in support of this proposed amendment. I think that his position reflects his true religious beliefs because he has never said anything to the contrary. That the putting forth of this proposal happens to open up the Georgites to the charge of "political distraction" is in my view an occurrence planned by them, which occurrence however they don’t want to become the subject of public discussion. By getting the controversy onto whether or not the proposed amendment is planned as a political distraction pulls the consideration of it away from the real issue, and where the position is coming from. The real issue is that by destroying the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment as it applies to civil marriage under state laws, such an amendment would fundamentally change the nature of the Constitution. Once that is done, in the future any group of people could be put into the "no-equal-protection-for-you" category, based simply on who they are, not anything that they have done. Where the Republican position comes from was clearly framed by two leading Republican Senators. (It has been part of the Republican national platform at least back as far as 2000.) In a statement Sen. Trent Lott made when he was still Majority Leader (revealing that he is an equal opportunity bigot) he held stated that homosexuality is a sin and it is a sin because the Bible says so. G.W. Bush has never said anything different. Rick Santorum, the third highest ranking Republican in the Senate and well known for his open adherence to the doctrines of the Republican Religious Right, last April compared homosexuality to bigamy, polygamy, incest and adultery. Bush’s response was to praise Santorum as "an inclusive man.'' Bush’s True Views on Homosexuality Do you believe that Bush is just “playing politics” with this one? Well, about six weeks ago there was this little news item (which many of you may have already seen): “Tennessee county wants to ban gays” Thursday, March 18, 2004 Posted: 7:29 AM EST (1229 GMT) Copyright 2004 The Associated Press. “DAYTON, Tennessee (AP) -- The county that was the site of the [1925] Scopes "Monkey Trial" over the teaching of evolution is asking lawmakers to amend state law so the county can charge homosexuals with crimes against nature. The Rhea County commissioners approved the request 8-0 Tuesday. Commissioner J.C. Fugate, who introduced the measure, also asked the county attorney to find a way to enact an ordinance banning homosexuals from living in the county. ‘We need to keep them out of here,’ Fugate said.” This was a piece of national news, surely known to the White House staff if not to the man in it who has told us that he “never reads the papers.” He was silent on this one. Such silence reveals volumes about how this man thinks. Even more frightening to contemplate is the direction in which our beloved country would be headed was he to be re-elected. On Firing Gays for Being Gay Need more convincing on what Bush really believes? Get this one (which I received over the Net; don’t know the original reference):
BUSH
ALLOWS GAYS TO BE FIRED FOR BEING GAY Opening Up the Country to More Dangers It should be noted here that not only does this religious-based view of homosexuality lead to proposals to fundamentally change the nature of our Constitutional Democracy, but it also further opens up the country to threats of terrorism. Consider the subject of a cartoon by Mike Lukovich (Newsday, Feb. 28, 2004): A bin Laden caricature is addressing several other Islamist caricatures, saying: "Here's my plan for destroying America: we sneak in and marry each other." Needless to say a couple of those being addressed do look doubtful, although we don't know for what reason. Bush, Religion, and the Money At this point one might say, how does Bush hold get all the political money he does, given that his position of religion and how it should govern the country, how it should either stand above the Constitution or be the justification for changing its very nature, it so at odds with our history, and surely with the personal views of many of his big, corporate, donors (up to hundreds of thousands of dollars) such as: American Express, Bechtel, Convergys, Dell Computer, Delphi Automotive, Fidelity, Ford, General Electric, Hewlett Packard, HSBC, McKinsey & Co, Sallie Mae. Of course it is his economic, environmental, and social policies. : How many of the executives of these companies do you think believe in the religious doctrines that Bush obviously believes in? How many of these executives don’t think about those religious doctrines and their implications for the future of Constitutional Democracy in the United States when they are thinking about what Bush economic, social, and environmental policies, to say nothing of his anti-labor, anti-national domestic spending policies, do for their corporate profits and personal incomes? Now then, how many executives of the German corporations, large and small, that funded the rise of Hitler and the Nazi Party starting in the mid-1920s thought about the social doctrines that Hitler had spelled out in Mein Kampf when they were thinking about what Hitler would do to the Communist and Socialist Parties and the labor movement in general? (It happens also that a Bush great-grandfather, George Herbert Walker, began giving money to Hitler in 1924.) Ah the lessons one can learn from history, if one only looks. ________________ Steven Jonas, MD, MPH is a TPJ contributing author. He is a Professor of Preventive Medicine at Stony Brook University (NY) and author/co-author of over twenty-five books. Dr. Jonas is one of America's most perceptive Democratic political analysts. Dr. Jonas is also: a Columnist for the webmagazine BuzzFlash (http://www.buzzflash.com/); a Contributing Editor for the Moving Planet Blog (http://www.planetarymovement.org/); a Contributing Columnist for the Project for the Old American Century, POAC (http://www.oldamericancentury.org/); and a regular contributor to the weblog Thomas Paine's Corner (http://civillibertarian.blogspot.com/). He has his own website for short pieces entitled “Dr. J.’s Short Shots, II” (http://drjsshortshots.wordpress.com/). In his book The New Americanism, Dr. Jonas presents his proposal for that “new vision and mission” for the Democratic Party that so many, for so many years, have been urging it to find. A new vision and mission are obviously needed with increasing urgency as with increasing speed and determination the Georgites drive our nation towards frank theocratic fascism. Dr. Jonas finds the needed vision and mission in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. "The New Americanism: How the Democratic Party Can Win the Presidency is available from Amazon.com (go to "Books;" enter the full title) and BarnesandNoble.com (same). He is also the author of The 15% Solution: A Political History of American Fascism, 2001-2022. Under the pseudonym "Jonathan Westminster" this book was originally published in 1996. It was republished with a New Introduction in 2004. Under Georgite rule, the “fictional non-fiction” scenario of this work of “future history” is, most unfortunately, becoming all too real, now almost day-by-day. Both versions are available at www.amazon.com and www.barnesandnoble.com (go to "Books;" enter the title). The 2004 edition is also available at www.xlibris.com (click on “Bookstore,” then “Search” with the title). 2007 2006 Oct 26, 2006
"The US Enabling Act,
2006,
Part I: What It Is
And Some Comparative History” Sept 28, 2006
"Democratic
Ideas, XIII: Controlling The Agenda” Aug 16, 2006
"Let's Hear It For Strict Constructionism, V. 3, Part 2" Jul 27, 2006
“What's It All About, Alfie?” Jun 29, 2006
"Ideas For Democrats, VI: Attack On Defense, II” Jan 26, 2006
"George
Bush And The Doctrine Of Original Intent"
Nov 25, 2005
“The
Future Of The Democratic Party, VII: ‘The Ten Commitments’” Oct 27, 2005
“The Future of the
Democratic Party, IV: Sept 29,
2005
"The Bush Flood, And
The Georgites: New Orleans, III" Aug 25,2005
"Some
Thoughts On The Atomic Bombing Of Japan" July 28, 2005
“Iran
Nukes, Revisited" June 23, 2005
"Why
All Of This Repression Abroad?" May 26, 2005
"Pat
Buchanan's 'What If?'" April 28,
2005
"The Schiavo Case, IV:
The Definitions Of Life And Death" March 31, 2005
“John Bolton And The
Nuclear Option"
February 24, 2005
"Going Nuclear
In Iran"
Jan 27, 2005
“Comparing
George
W. Bush And Adolf Hitler”
Dec 30, 2004
“The ‘Unless’ of the ‘Coming Second
Civil War’ Series, Part I”
Oct 28, 2004
Why The Patriot Act?”
Sept 30, 2004
“Four 800 Lb. Gorillas In The
Campaign Room”
July 29, 2004
“Some Thoughts For and About The
Kerry Campaign, IV”
May 27, 2004
“On Fascism -- And The Georgites”
April 29, 2004 “On
George Bush and Religion, Part 2”
March 25, 2004
“Brief Essays” February 27, 2004 “On Doctor Dean” |
| NEXT- JUNKIES SPEAK
|
Last Update: 02/10/2007