I speak of this issue as a Christian who left the Southern Baptist Church when they advocated a war that was unjustified. No one cared when hubby and I took our names off the roll. We did not fit into their group of closed minds. I am in no way condemning Christianity, just its too heavy involvement in government right now. We are already seeing the harm done when a religious mindset is honored without a realization of how the views can harm those in your own party.
There are two groups which are asked to go to the back of the bus and not make many waves right now. The rights of both are being undermined by Democrats, and both groups are asked not to get upset.
The choice of Rick Warren is really even more shocking after the pain and anger from Proposition 8 and Amendment 2 in Florida. It is taking a stand with the wrong side, and more Democrats in leadership positions should be speaking up.
We women are asked to swallow the fact that women's right to choose abortion or birth control are going to be on the table as 31 Pro-Life Democrats could fail to fight for us against the right wing....might fail to protect the use of contraception including the morning after pill. They have already caved in on abortion rights in many ways. In fact our new Democratically led Congress voted last year to raise funding for the failed
abstinence only education"The Democratic leadership of the House Appropriations Labor, Health and Human Service, and Education (LHHS) Sub-Committee set science and commonsense aside by increasing the funding for discredited abstinence-only-until-marriage programs. Despite a congressionally mandated report that found these programs do not work to help teens delay sexual initiation, House leadership allocated $141 million (an increase of $27.8 million) to continue feeding America's young people misinformation.
Our Democrats last year also failed to require military bases to provide emergency contraception to women in the military. Very odd.
On Wednesday, May 16, advocates were optimistic that legislation requiring emergency contraception to be stocked on all military bases would pass in the House. “We had the votes on Wednesday night. Things were looking good,” says Monica Castellanos, press secretary for Rep. Michael Michaud (D-Maine), one of the lead co-sponsors of the amendment that was scheduled for a vote the next day. But then, something mysterious happened.
For reasons that remain unclear, Michaud withdrew the legislation the next morning. According to Castellanos, it was purely a logistical snafu: “Key supporters had to be in their districts.” But sources close to the issue tell a different story: The legislation, an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act, with bipartisan support, was dropped by a Democratic leadership unwilling to go to bat for pro-choice issues. Despite Michaud’s confidence that the votes were there, Democratic leadership wasn’t so sure, and they didn’t want to hang around long enough to find out. The legislation might not have sunk, but they jumped ship anyway.
We even need to keep our eyes out on the newly appointed HHS Secretary, as he once introduced an anti-abortion bill that was far more rigid that the GOP bill.
Daschle's so-called compromise bill, as quoted in the New York Times, permits an exception to the ban for `a severely debilitating disease or impairment specifically caused by the pregnancy (emphasis added),' but makes no provision for a pre-existing, life- and health-threatening `debilitating disease or impairment' that is being exacerbated by the pregnancy. This could include kidney disease, severe hypertension and some cancers. Nor does the Daschle bill allow for an abortion in cases of severe fetal abnormality where it is unlikely the fetus would live long outside the womb, even with technological support.
"The physician certification requirement and the potential loss of a medical license in the Daschle language invites government scrutiny of private medical matters and threatens doctor-patient confidentiality. The intent of this and other abortion ban bills is to control women and to limit their ability to make critical reproductive decisions that affect their families, their health and their lives. These bills represent the ultimate in Congressional arrogance," Gandy charged.
It is apparently just expected that both groups will be okay with it all, and are willing to stand by and take it. After all, we don't want to upset the applecarts of the Democrats who are reaching out way too far to the other side.
It's been going on for years. I found just a few related quotes from Democratic strategists and consultants and think tanks.
From Will Marshall writing at the DLC in 2001
DLC 2001 keep the faith, baby.In truth, there is little empirical evidence about the efficacy of voluntary charitable efforts in general or the oft-cited "faith factor" -- the spiritual motivation of volunteers out to heal damaged souls and transform people's lives. That's why the Senate should include money to fund research on what works and why. Above all, Senate Democrats should avoid knee-jerk opposition to the faith-based proposal as well as the rhetoric of their House counterparts, which too often was tinged with hostility to religion. This only plays into the hands of GOP strategists determined to drive the wedge deeper between Democrats and religious people, who leaned strongly toward the Republicans in 2000.
Democrats cannot afford to let stridently secular groups define their views on the interplay between religion and public life. Instead, they should follow the lead of Lieberman and his running mate, Al Gore, who challenged Democrats during the campaign to reject the "hollow secularism" of the left, and added: "We must dare to embrace faith-based approaches that advance our shared goals as Americans."
He was trying to define the left as being hostile to religion. That is just so wrong.
Will Marshall is president of the Progressive Policy Institute."
Jim Wallis called us the “secular fundamentalist wing of the Democratic Party.”"Wallis has labeled Howard Dean, chair of the Democratic National Committee, as leader of the “secular fundamentalist wing of the Democratic Party.” Referring to the disastrous statement by Howard Dean that Job was his favorite New Testament book, Wallis exhorted “…the worst thing anyone can be is inauthentic when they talk about religion or faith.”
"Jim Wallis threatens political party entrenchment by challenging Americans to rethink the connection between morality, biblical teachings and government policies.
As he said in his reply to Chuck Colson, “My message to both liberals and conservatives is that protecting life is indeed a seamless garment. Protecting unborn life is important. Opposing unjust wars that take human life is important. And supporting anti-poverty programs…is important.
Neither party gets it right; each has perhaps half of the answer. My message and my challenge are to bring the together.”
There is nothing at all wrong with having a secular view when it comes to politics or any other subject.
Kirsten Powers, Democratic political consultant, former media person for DNC chair Don Fowler, Fox News analyst.
From 2006
Election signals decline of old school liberalism"In a low point in Democratic Party history, Pennsylvania Gov. Bob Casey was banned from speaking at the 1992 Democratic Convention for being opposed to abortion rights. This year, his son, Bob Casey Jr., who holds the same views, was actively recruited by that same Democratic Party and unseated Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa.
This was a welcome move in a party that is home to vocal and organized far-left activists and bloggers who have grown increasingly shrill and threatening toward moderate and conservative Democrats. They also have excoriated former president Bill Clinton's brand of centrist politics. They argue for "party discipline," best exemplified by their jihad against Connecticut's Sen. Joe Lieberman for deviating from the party line on the Iraq war. During the past election for Democratic National Committee chair, delegates booed former congressman Tim Roemer of Indiana because he, too, opposes abortion rights.
..."The liberal evangelical minister Jim Wallis, who counsels Democrats, characterized these elections — perhaps too optimistically — as the end of not just the religious right's power but also of the secular left's political dominance."
For years, Democrats have quietly won governorships and statehouses in red and purple states by running candidates who shared the values of voters in their state, not the beliefs of the coastal intelligentsia. It turns out even in blue states, voters like centrist politics.
There is no proof of that...just strategists talking...if only centrists run only centrists get elected.
There is nothing wrong with secular. Here are just a few of the definitions.
sec·u·lar
adj.
Worldly rather than spiritual.
Not specifically relating to religion or to a religious body: secular music.
Relating to or advocating secularism.
Not bound by monastic restrictions, especially not belonging to a religious order. Used of the clergy.
Occurring or observed once in an age or century.
Lasting from century to century.
n.
A member of the secular clergy.
A layperson.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/secularThe obvious groups are already paying a price for this move toward what looks like a form of
Christian nationalistic policy.You either separate church and government or you don't. The militant groups of right wing Christians are not going to allow much room for being wishy washy on issues they feel strongly about. And these two groups pay the price first off.