

How to Name a War
"Euphemism and American Violence," an essay in the
New York Review of Books by
David Bromwich, may be the most important commentary on the uses and abuses of words since George Orwell's "Politics and the English Language."
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Bad Moon Rising
John Gorenfeld puts Obama's alleged "problem pastor" in perspective by shining a light on another religious figure with even deeper and longer-standing connections to national politics: that's right, the "True Father" Reverend Sun Myung Moon. In a chart convenient for clipping and carrying in your wallet, Gorenfeld compares the two men. Wright's religious views? Black liberation theology. Moon's? "Kneel before Moon!" Wright's outrageous statements? "Hillary never been called a nigger!" and assorted AIDS paranoia. Moon's? ""Homosexuals and fornicators are like dirty, dung-eating dogs." Also, a proposal that women who have sex outside of marriage should have their "concave organs" (Moon's term, not mine) "sealed with concrete." Who's crazier now, Washington Times?
Gorenfeld, the reporter who broke the story of Moon's divine coronation as messiah in the Dirksen Congressional Office Building, is the author of an excellent new expose of Moon called Bad Moon Rising: How Reverend Moon Created the Washington Times, Seduced the Religious Right, and Built an American Kingdom If Don DeLillo had taken a lot of acid and grown a funny bone before he wrote Mao II, this is the book he might have written. What's scary is that it's true. Gorenfeld isn't a sensationalizer; indeed, with material such as Moon provides, he can more than afford understatement. Gorenfeld didn't write this to poke fun at "Moonies," a derogatory term for followers of Moon, some of whom are indeed hapless victims of some very bad theology and many of whom are ordinary, reasonable people involved in a religion that's neither (no news there) and a few of whom, those close to Moon, are involved in a massive power grab with very serious implications for international politics.
The Washington Times, usually treated as a perfectly respectable paper, is one small part of that effort, but one of the most visible. The paper's first editor, James Whalen, denounced it in no uncertain terms after leaving in frustration over Moon's control of the paper: "They are subverting our political system. They’re doing it through front organizations -- most of them disguised -- and through their funding of independent organizations -- through the placement of volunteers in the inner sanctums of hard-pressed organizations. In every instance -- in every instance -- those who attend their conferences, those who accept their money or their volunteers, delude themselves that there is no loss of virtue because the Moonies have not proselytized. That misses the central, crucial point: the Moonies are a political movement in religious clothing. Moon seeks power, not the salvation of souls. To achieve that, he needs religious fanatics as his palace guard and shock troops. But more importantly, he needs secular conscripts -- seduced by money, free trips, free services, seemingly endless bounty and booty -- in order to give him respectability and, with it, that image of influence which translates as power."
Alternet has published an excerpt. And the progressive megablog Firedoglake featured Gorenfeld in this past Sunday's "Book Salon."
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Faith-Based Birthday
Faith-Based Initatives just turned seven. And it looks like the program may have a long life ahead of it. Bill Berkowitz offers the even-handed account of how one of Bush's signature programs has altered the federal landscape and why a...
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In Case of Rapture, Listen to Mark Dery
Revealer SoCal: Make sure to catch
Mark Dery's keynote address to the "Sacred and the Profane" conference at San Diego State University this Thursday, March 20. "In Case of Rapture, Car Will Be Driverless: Waiting for the End of the World in '70s Southern California." In this lecture, equal parts personal essay and cultural critique, Dery--now a godless leftist--takes us on a Proustian flashback to his days as a teenage fundie--a Jesus Freak caught up in the "born-again" religious fervor that swept Southern California in the '70s...
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John McCain's Rod
Much ink has been spilled over John McCain's ongoing relationship with ultra-right megachurch pastor and apocalypse dreamer John Hagee. Now the liberal press is starting to get up to speed on another McCain pal, Rod Parsley, the fundamentalist prince of...
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Faith-Based Democrat Not So Democratic
Sharlet: I've been following the career of Senator Mark Pryor ever since the faith-based Democrat of Arkansas told me that through his participation in The Family -- a bizarre network of politicians and businessmen dedicated to a fundamentalist theology of...
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Blog Wants You to Be Rich, John Hagee!
Sarah Posner ties the John Hagee story together at Religion Dispatches the old-fashioned way -- by following the money....
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Clinton's God Vote, Obama's None/Others
Catholics comprised the single biggest self-identified religious demographic in the Democratic primaries on Tuesday -- 28% -- and they voted overwhelmingly for Hillary, 59% to 37%. Self-described Protestants, 21% -- the same number of respondents who listed their religion as...
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Fetal Rock
What else to call the new CD from Christian industrial rocker Eowyn,
Silent Screams, which borrows its title from the famous
anti-abortion film once screened in the White House by Ronald Reagan? Eowyn wants to be the evangelical P.J. Harvey but comes off more like a
polite Alice Cooper...
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Blog Loves You, John Hagee!
Sarah Posner dedicates her "FundamentaList" at The American Prospect this week to the John Hagee / John McCain scandal. If you're reading The Revealer, you likely know about this already -- it's the kind of news that people who get...
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Christian Candidate Quiz Bowl
Fundamentalism loses its sway, even as politicians profess their faith. Let's ask them: how does God guide you, exactly?
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Yiddish for Evangelicals
Sharlet: How often do you get a chance to defend the Christian Right, public vulgarity, and Yiddish all at once? At Religion Dispatches, Randall Balmer, an eminent historian of American evangelicalism, calls on Southern Baptist leader Richard Land to resign....
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Only Visiting This Planet
Christian rocker Larry Norman moves on.
By S. Brent Plate: The first album I ever bought was Larry Norman's
Only Visiting this Planet (1972). I was probably about ten, and the album had already been out for a couple years, but I remember it all so well. (To this day, I could quote you pretty much the entire album's lyrics.) The allure certainly had to do with this being my "first," and the ways we all remember our firsts...
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