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Look, it's quite simple: I have no problem with religious beliefs being the precursor of a person's policies; indeed, this is a great place to start for many people. (I wish people had more morality for morality's sake instead of having to have it enforced by some supernatural being, but what the hell...) I DO have a HUGE problem with religion being used to justify policies, though, and the line is far too often blurred.
For a politician to look to his/her god for inspiration to create or direct a political agenda is one thing, and if it sets him/her on a course to advance policy that addresses it, then it's great. If that person starts to say that god wants this particular law passed, I'm completely against it. People can say that if they want to, but I will adamantly resist, and if they do it as part their work as an elected or unelected government employee, they should be stopped. By Article One of the Bill of Rights, no employee of government should even be able to state as fact that there's a supreme being; that's what establishment means. It's endorsement. It's not just a case of not picking between religions, it's THE VERY CONCEPT ITSELF.
Doctors, of course, are mostly NOT part of the government, so they can do as they please, but if they deny care based on their beliefs, they should be sued six ways from Sunday and hung out to dry. If they pull this crap while working for the VA, they should be given a chance or two to be true to their job or else be fired then and there.
I don't think your contention of a slower pace of change can be justified; neither of us can truly describe what a society without religion would have been like, say, in the nineteenth century. If religion was used as a tool to justify slavery as well as a beacon to end it, where is the balance of good and evil here? Religion fostered the problem; perhaps without it, people wouldn't have stood for such a thing in the first place. This hits at the heart of one of my principal contentions about most religions: they take all the credit for everything that's wonderful and absolve themselves of anything that went sour. Just once, I want to hear some ball player say: "Man, I just don't get it. We was workin' real hard'n prayin' an' everything, and Jesus, man he just fucked us." Fat chance on that one, though; god is good, and shut the eff up.
The battle for our nation's future will be fought by left-believers and reactionary-believers; the rest of us don't have a voice, and I still think there's serious reason to dread that when the smoke clears, it will be driven even deeper into our national psyche that ONE MUST HAVE RELIGION OR NOT TRULY BELONG. It's sad, but I don't see anything in the offing but more pro-religious bigotry, no matter how gentle, nurturing and "good" the prevailing assumption is.
So be it, though. This is the world in which we live, and if the liberal believers don't organize and use this for all it's worth, we're going to be swept under by feudal thugs with nary a scruple in the lot of 'em.
Yes, I will read that book at some point, but it's a bit down on the list.
Now here's something to chew on: reactionaries haven't just co-opted religion; organized religion is inherently CONSERVATIVE.
Conservatism is selfishness, demand for strict order, hatred of anything different and unwavering certainty. Tweak a few words here and there, and you've got a good working definition of most christian sects. Faith is certainty. Outsiders should be brought into the fold. Worse than anything is this: it's an inherently selfish belief system; one's principal duty is to save one's own ass, and whatever happens in the process is just secondary. Couple this with the absolute hierarchy of god, the ultimate father figure, and it's easy to see why the reactionaries have a leg up on using it to their advantage. Some sects depict god as the nurturing father (as Lakoff would put it) but many have him as the stern taskmaster withholding his love until you toe the damn line, and ready to throw you in the fiery pit of fear if you don't submit like a quavering slave. Harsh fundamentalism is a demeaning misery, and those who will go along with that will go along with anything the god-surrogates want. Liberal religion emphasizes peaceful obedience and even uncertainty and some questioning, but that submission to authority is still there.
Tactically, liberal believers are at a huge disadvantage. Who's going to prevail, the gentle colloquium of mellow friends, or the cocksure, goose-stepping phalanx of the fire-breathing certaintybots?
Good luck to the liberal believers; there's a lot of heart and feeling out there to tap into, and if abortion and gays can be kept from demonizing liberalism, the need for social and economic fairness can provide a real groundswell.
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