Texas' Republican governor, Rick Perry, has remained mum after sharing the podium at two get-out-the-vote events with a minister who wondered whether God sent Hurricane Katrina to purify the nation of its sins.
"They have devil worship. They advertise 'Sin City' tours. They celebrate Southern decadence. Girls go wild in New Orleans," Rev. Dwight McKissic, organizing pastor of Cornerstone Baptist Church in Arlington, said at meetings last week in San Antonio and Houston of the Texas Restoration Project, which seeks to register 300,000 voters. "
Sometimes God does not speak through natural phenomena. This may have nothing to do with God being offended by homosexuality. But possibly it does."
Rather than distance himself from Rev. McKissic, Perry's spokesman, Robert Black,
played coy: "The governor does not agree with that.
But far be it for the governor to try to divine the will of the Almighty."And that, in a nutshell, shows us Gov. Perry's priorities. It's more important to keep the religious right happy than to denounce a hateful man of the cloth.
We've seen it before in Republican politics. James Dobson
compares embryonic stem cell research to Nazi science, and not a single Republican leader says boo. Pat Robertson
suggests that he approves of the assassination of a foreign leader, and the White House fails to condemn the statement.
Black told the
Austin American-Statesmen that Perry speaks at hundreds of events annually and "sure doesn't do public critiques of what every speaker says."
But that's just empty conservative spin. No one is asking for Perry to "do public critiques" of every speaker. But how about standing up for -- oh, I don't know -- religious tolerance, or the concept in our Declaration of Independence that "all men are created equal"? How about speaking out against the idea of a vengeful, hateful G-d?
Nah, it's easier to play it safe, keep quiet, and reap the benefits of being a "compassionate conservative."
***
Perry isn't some small-time politician. He's the governor of one of the nation's largest states -- the state that brought us the current president. And, while he's not as high-profile as other Republicans, he certainly is part of the national political scene.
Were Perry a Democrat, I have no doubt that the conservative punditry would blast this story from coast to coast. Instead, it has been met with silence.
Is that because conservatives believe Katrina was a message from G-d against the sinners of the Gulf Coast? I can't believe that's the case. Is it because conservatives are beholden to the religious right? I'm betting that's closer to the truth.
Certainly, in other cases involving questionable, if not offensive comments, the conservative punditry has demanded quick apologies from Democrats.
Consider how the right wing came out in force last year,
attacking Democratic Presidential Candidate John Kerry after comedian Whoopi Goldberg made an off-color joke at President Bush's expense at a Kerry fund-raiser. Or how about the
conservative reaction last year after Democratic Presidential Candidate Wesley Clark failed to denounce Michael Moore, who at a Clark rally called President Bush a "deserter"?
This kind of guilt-by-association is great fodder for Rush, Sean and the rest of the gang. James Taranto and Michelle Malkin live for this sort of stuff.
But when it's a fellow conservative who shares the stage with someone offensive? Silence.
***
This article first appeared at
Journalists Against Bush's B.S.