Fundamentalist Political Movement Today Is Savvy, Well Funded And Influential

FredFlash

New Member
The Religious Right After Falwell: Less Visible But More Powerful Than Ever
Thursday, May 17, 2007

Fundamentalist Political Movement Today Is Savvy, Well Funded And Influential

Summary: Some political commentators say the Religious Right is a spent force. The recent death of the Rev. Jerry Falwell will hasten the demise of this movement, they say. Americans United for Separation of Church and State says a careful analysis of the facts suggests otherwise.

The May 15 death of Moral Majority founder Jerry Falwell marks a point of passage for the Religious Right, but it does not mean that politically active fundamentalist Christians are in decline or that their movement is waning. Here’s why.

Falwell was an important figure in the early days of the Religious Right, but his influence had waned considerably in recent years. The Lynchburg, Va., televangelist shut down his Moral Majority in 1989, after a decade of political activity, to spend more time on building his Liberty University. Although Falwell still frequently appeared in the media and worked through various religious and educational organizations, he never recovered his former prominence.

Lessons Learned From Falwell’s Failings

The new breed of Religious Right leaders has learned from Falwell’s mistakes. Falwell’s rhetoric was often intemperate. While it made for lively television, his over-the-top remarks probably alarmed more people than they attracted. Even in his home state of Virginia, polls showed Falwell with high negative ratings.

Falwell also failed to truly cultivate the grassroots. By the time the Moral Majority collapsed, it had become apparent that the group was essentially a large mailing list with little local presence. By contrast, groups like the Christian Coalition saw the value in local organizing. The Coalition, founded by TV preacher Pat Robertson, at one time had viable chapters in most states and even some at the county level.

The Christian Coalition emphasized working within the Republican Party to achieve its goals. The group paid attention to local races as well as national ones. Employing a political model that stressed activity at the party precinct level, the Christian Coalition achieved great success in influencing the Republican Party and making certain that candidates seeking the presidency met rigid ideological litmus tests. While the Coalition has followed the Moral Majority into eclipse, the fundamentalist voting bloc in the GOP ensures that its theocratic agenda still has enormous power.

Even though Falwell and Robertson no longer have significant political operations, GOP presidential candidates this year have lined up to seek the TV preachers’ expressions of support.

Religious Right Image Makeover

The Religious Right has changed its public relations approach in the years since Falwell launched the Moral Majority. Movement leaders today are less likely to seek the kind of media notoriety that Falwell relished. Some Religious Right leaders, such as Colorado-based powerhouse James Dobson, shun almost all mainstream media interviews, using their own broadcast channels to spread their views. Other organizational spokespersons have toned down their public rhetoric especially when speaking to general audiences through the mass media.

The emphasis is often on non-threatening terms like “family values” and “traditional values.” Arguments are made that all these groups want is “a place at the table.” They have let up on the triumphalist rhetoric and often couch their arguments in terms of “religious freedom.”

Thus, today’s Religious Right is much more sophisticated.

Religious Right Powerhouses

Religious Right groups are better organized and often operate from multi-million-dollar, tax-exempt broadcasting or denominational empires.

Consider the following:

• Dr. James Dobson’s Focus on the Family radio/publishing outfit brought in $137 million in fiscal year 2005. Dobson sat in the front row at the White House May 3 and was personally welcomed by President George W. Bush during a National Day of Prayer observance. Republican presidential candidates seek Dobson’s endorsement, and Republican leaders in Congress fear him. (Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich went on Dobson’s radio show to profess repentance for moral failings in his marriages.) Dobson, in addition to his sprawling Colorado Springs-based headquarters, has political affiliates in 30 states.

• Tony Perkins’ Family Research Council serves as James Dobson’s beachhead in Washington, D.C. The FRC, with a budget of $10.8 million in fiscal year 2006, lobbies for the Religious Right agenda in the nation’s capital. Later this year, the group is sponsoring a mass gathering to vet Republican presidential candidates and mobilize evangelical voters in preparation for the 2008 elections.

• The Rev. Pat Robertson’s Christian Broadcasting Network took in $236 million in contributions in fiscal year 2005. It claims nearly a million daily viewers. Robertson uses CBN to spread his often shrill religious-political message nationwide, and right-wing politicians and Republican political candidates are often showcased on his “700 Club” program.

• The Rev. Donald Wildmon’s American Family Association (AFA) targets “anti-family” forces in America. He rails against gay people and launches boycotts of companies with gay-friendly policies. Based in Tupelo, Miss., the AFA has a limited Washington presence, and thus operates beneath the mainstream media radar. However, Wildmon oversees a radio empire of more than 170 stations, and his AFA revenues reach $17 million annually.

• The Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) is firmly in the grip of far-right fundamentalists, and its leadership pushes a Religious Right agenda. The SBC is the largest Protestant denomination in America with some 16 million members. SBC top lobbyist Dr. Richard Land acts as a powerbroker in the Republican Party, declaring which presidential candidates are acceptable to evangelical Christian voters. Land’s office works alongside Religious Right groups to lobby on “moral” concerns in Washington, and its attorneys often file court briefs on the side of the Religious Right in court cases.

• The Rev. Louis P. Sheldon’s Traditional Values Coalition (TVC) is a specialized Religious Right operation. While it takes stands on a wide range of issues in Washington and in its California home base, it is known for its strident attacks on gays. In fiscal year 2005, it operated with an annual budget of $6 million. TVC is typical of an array of smaller Religious Right organizations that influence public policy.

The Religious Right’s Reach In The Courts And Other Government Venues

The Religious Right’s influence reaches deep into all three branches of government. In the courts, Religious Right legal groups press their views on a range of social issues, arguing for more religion in public schools and against church-state separation, abortion rights and legal protections for gay people.

The Alliance Defense Fund, an Arizona-based legal group founded by Dobson, Wildmon and other Religious Right figures, has an annual budget of $18 million. Pat Robertson’s American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ) pulls in $14.5 million every year. The ACLJ is so powerful it has helped vet the Bush administration’s Supreme Court nominees.

This crusade often comes with assistance from the Justice Department, which has a special unit devoted to “religious liberty” concerns. The Supreme Court is increasingly stacked with right-wing appointees, thanks to a decades-long pressure campaign by Religious Right operatives.

Robertson’s Regent University contains a law school and claims to have 150 graduates working in the Bush administration. (Former Attorney General John Ashcroft teaches at Regent.) Falwell’s Liberty University has a Bible-based law school as well.

Meanwhile, in Congress a Republican-sponsored Values Action Team meets weekly with Religious Right leaders to coordinate and strategize.

Influencing Both Political Parties

The Religious Right’s role in the Republican Party is now secure. During primary elections, its activists make up such a large percentage of GOP voters that candidates ignore them at their peril. Recent events bear this out, as candidates like John McCain, Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani have adopted more conservative stands to appeal to social conservatives.

While Religious Right leaders have yet to identify a presidential favorite, their influence in the race is undeniable. McCain, after identifying Robertson and Falwell as “agents of intolerance” in 2000, appeared as the commencement speaker at Falwell’s Liberty University last year. Romney is scheduled to appear at Robertson’s Regent University this year.

Recognizing the movement’s power, even some Democrats have sought to court the evangelical Christian bloc. Democratic advisers increasingly stress the importance of reaching out to “people of faith.” In 2006, one top party adviser even told candidates not to use the phrase “separation of church and state” because it might turn off church-goers.
 

FredFlash

New Member
Religious Right Goals

There are no signs that the Religious Right is moderating its agenda. The movement seeks to scale back church-state separation and bring in a government that reflects “Christian” values. In keeping with fundamentalist theology, activists seek to ban all abortions, deny civil rights protections for gays, fund religious schools and other ministries with tax dollars and teach the Bible and creationism in public schools.

At Religious Right conferences to rally the faithful, the speeches and tactics are as controversial as ever. The crowd is treated to generous amounts of gay bashing alongside attacks on Democrats, liberals, legal abortion, public education and the church-state wall. At last year’s Family Research Council “Washington Briefing,” one preacher referred to gay people as “sissies,” “******s” and “sodomites.” Another speaker urged church members to use deceptive phone bank techniques to win votes for favored candidates.

So-called “moderate evangelicals” are a hot media topic right now, but there is precious little evidence that this movement has clout or that it even exists in significant numbers. While many evangelical leaders cringe at the shrill rhetoric from leaders like Robertson, few have taken a public stance against Religious Right extremism. In addition, many moderate evangelicals tend to layer a few issues like global warming on top of a very anti-church-state separation, anti-choice, anti-gay agenda. To the extent that moderate evangelicals exist at the organizational level, their movement is dwarfed by the political influence and money of the Religious Right.

Conclusion

Jerry Falwell’s death marks the passing of an era. He was a member of the Religious Right’s founding generation. But Falwell was merely one midwife of the crusade to blend ultra-conservative politics and fundamentalist religion. He was not the entire movement; indeed, the Religious Right he helped shape left him behind some years ago as it matured.

Certainly there are many Religious Right activists who will miss Falwell’s energy and leadership. However, they are faced with no lack of replacement leaders.

Comment from the Rev. Barry W. Lynn, Americans United executive director

“Jerry Falwell is no longer with us, but the fundamentalist political movement he helped shape certainly is. The Religious Right is politically connected, well funded and extreme in its agenda. Without Falwell ranting on television, the Religious Right may be less visible, but it’s no less dangerous. Americans would be wise to be wary of the Religious Right’s continuing clout.”

Americans United is a religious liberty watchdog group based in Washington, D.C. Founded in 1947, the organization educates Americans about the importance of church-state separation in safeguarding religious freedom.

http://www.au.org/site/News2?abbr=pr&page=NewsArticle&id=9113&security=1002&news_iv_ctrl=2286
 

Hessian

Well-Known Member
Thanks for the confidence builder!

To see millions of $$ spent by Decent Christians on political issues and slamming leftist, atheists, communists, socialist, new agers, pornographers and other undesirable elements...hitting them with truth (and they know it!)

it does a heart good,
thank you for that post. I need to hear more of that.

hessian
 

Bustem' Down

Give Peas a Chance
Hessian said:
To see millions of $$ spent by Decent Christians on political issues and slamming leftist, atheists, communists, socialist, new agers, pornographers and other undesirable elements...hitting them with truth (and they know it!)

it does a heart good,
thank you for that post. I need to hear more of that.

hessian
I take offense at being called an undesirable just because I'm an atheist. I'm willing to bet I've done more for society than a lot of your "Decent Christians". :mad:
 

2ndAmendment

Just a forgiven sinner
PREMO Member
Nucklesack said:
Right because obviously your idea of a "desirable element" is having "Decent Christians" "slamming" little boys.

Maybe if Falwell spent a little less time on Tinky Winky's handbag and blaming Homo's for 9/11 and the Tsunami, he wouldnt have a tarnished legacy
Tarnished in who's opinion? Yours? Like I care about your opinion on anything having to do with God.

It seems you think a lot about "slamming" little boys. Freudian?
 

Midnightrider

Well-Known Member
Nucklesack said:
I think he was more than happy to denounce in the most vulgar terms anyone and anything that stood in the way of his narrow dogmatism. He was a wretched human being, and not because of his faith. There are countless men of faith who are kind and decent, nowhere near the scumbag that Falwell was.

He tarnished his own legacy, when he spouts crap like this about 9/11:
Link

Falwell apologized, though he later said that he stood by his statement, stating "If we decide to change all the rules on which this Judeo-Christian nation was built, we cannot expect the Lord to put his shield of protection around us as he has in the past."

And that opinion is not just mine :
Link


I’m not a believer in an afterlife, but if there is one I hope it is one Falwell finds truly repugnant, so that he can spent the rest of eternity in the type of divine misery he has made a career threatening the rest of us with.

If you believe in Christ you disbelive in almost as many Gods as I do, tens of thousands of Gods you do not believe in including most you have never even heard of let alone examined the evidence (or lack therof) for their existance. I simply disbelieve in one more God than you, which in the grand scheme of things given how many God options there are, istn’t much different from you.

I dont think about it nearly as much as the leaders of your Faith.

How great would it be if hell was the Teletubbies, and Falwell had to spend eternity being done up the pooper by Tinky Winky.
i agree, he was an idiot who used religion to excuse his hate and prejudice.
 

PsyOps

Pixelated
Bustem' Down said:
I take offense at being called an undesirable just because I'm an atheist. I'm willing to bet I've done more for society than a lot of your "Decent Christians". :mad:
And let the competition begin. :popcorn:
 

rraley

New Member
I'm a Christian and I think that Jerry Falwell was a nut. Self-rightous little a hole if you ask me. He didn't read or understand a lot of the Bible. I'm glad that he believed in Christ and God, but I wish that he would have used his position to do more than bash gays and abortionists, there is a whole lot of other more pressing and harmful evils out there in the world.
 

2ndAmendment

Just a forgiven sinner
PREMO Member
rraley said:
I'm a Christian and I think that Jerry Falwell was a nut. Self-rightous little a hole if you ask me. He didn't read or understand a lot of the Bible. I'm glad that he believed in Christ and God, but I wish that he would have used his position to do more than bash gays and abortionists, there is a whole lot of other more pressing and harmful evils out there in the world.
Quite frankly, "Christians" that don't believe the Bible or think homosexual behavior or abortion or other sin is OK in any way are not what they profess to be.
 

Midnightrider

Well-Known Member
2ndAmendment said:
Quite frankly, "Christians" that don't believe the Bible or think homosexual behavior or abortion or other sin is OK in any way are not what they profess to be.
again the definative word on who is and is not a christian from the chruch of 2ndA :bigwhoop:

Gotta love how he determines your status based on his prejudices and misconceptions.
 

2ndAmendment

Just a forgiven sinner
PREMO Member
Midnightrider said:
again the definative word on who is and is not a christian from the chruch of 2ndA :bigwhoop:

Gotta love how he determines your status based on his prejudices and misconceptions.
And again, criticizing from the one who claims to understand me yet knows me not.

The Bible defines what a Christian is. I don't. The Bible defines sin. I don't.
 

Midnightrider

Well-Known Member
2ndAmendment said:
And again, criticizing from the one who claims to understand me yet knows me not.

The Bible defines what a Christian is. I don't. The Bible defines sin. I don't.
the bible doesnt say anything about abortions, so thats you and your prejudices being projected onto others.

The bible might define it, but you are the one making the judgement, i'll choose to let god do that, you are a nobody in the grand scheme of things.... thanks
 

Toxick

Splat
Midnightrider said:
the bible doesnt say anything about abortions, so thats you and your prejudices being projected onto others.


There is some blather near the beginning which mentions that murder is bad.



Midnightrider said:
The bible might define it, but you are the one making the judgement, i'll choose to let god do that

Noted.




Midnightrider said:
you are a nobody in the grand scheme of things.... thanks

This sounds like a judgement call. One made out of spite, at that.
 

2ndAmendment

Just a forgiven sinner
PREMO Member
Midnightrider said:
the bible doesnt say anything about abortions, so thats you and your prejudices being projected onto others.

The bible might define it, but you are the one making the judgement, i'll choose to let god do that, you are a nobody in the grand scheme of things.... thanks
Murder ring a bell?

Exodus 20:13 "You shall not murder.

I am a child of God, thank you, as are you. I want to be no more and no less than God wants me to be.
 

Midnightrider

Well-Known Member
2ndAmendment said:
Murder ring a bell?



I am a child of God, thank you, as are you. I want to be no more and no less than God wants me to be.
Funny thing about murder, abortion is not considered murder, just like killing in self defense, or when killing is being metered out as justice.



Well the homos and abortionist are the children of god too, in fact they were also made in god's likeness, so if they are gay murderers, then on some level god must be too..... that is if god dictated the book.
 

vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron
Nucklesack said:
I think he was more than happy to denounce in the most vulgar terms ...
I have never heard of Falwell being vulgar. Please find a reference.

And DIDN'T Osama bin Laden say himself that America had fallen into moral decay and that was one of the reasons he wanted to wipe us off the face of the earth? So one could argue that in fact we were attacked on 9-11 because of gays, perverts and atheists.

:smile:
 

Toxick

Splat
Midnightrider said:
Funny thing about murder, abortion is not considered murder, just like killing in self defense, or when killing is being metered out as justice.


I consider abortion murder. That's kinda why I'm against it. That and the fact that I enjoy telling women what they can and can not do with their bodies. On accounta' I'm an evil rightwing christian fundie bible-pounder.


I also consider killing in the name of metering (sic) out justice to be murder.
 

Midnightrider

Well-Known Member
Toxick said:
I consider abortion murder. That's kinda why I'm against it. That and the fact that I enjoy telling women what they can and can not do with their bodies. On accounta' I'm an evil rightwing christian fundie bible-pounder.


I also consider killing in the name of metering (sic) out justice to be murder.
well, thats an awful lot of you considering.

BTW, i feel abortion is wrong too, but i wouldn't force my beliefs on others who have a different moral compass.

"...you can't run a country by a book of religion..." FZ
 
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Toxick

Splat
Midnightrider said:
well, that an awful lot of you considering.

Indeed it is.

I have an opinion for just about everything.




Midnightrider said:
BTW, i feel abortion is wrong too, but i wouldn't force my beliefs on others who have a different moral compass.

I don't "feel abortion is wrong". I think it is MURDER.


Midnightrider said:
"...you can't run a country by a book of religion..." FZ

FWIW: I was pro-life long before I was a Christian.
 
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