Site logo

Prometheus 6

All respect and no restraint

Low-crawling on the high road

I have to admit I noted a bit of smug nastiness in Huckabee this weekend. Huckabee said something about it not mattering if someone is Christian, Jewish or Muslim...and the inclusion of Muslim made the exclusion of Mormon all the more pointed. He talked about how it's not important to be pointing out how others are wrong.

The Republican presidential field has some feeble minds and some dangerous ones as well, but none has done as much damage as Huckabee has. Religion does not belong in the political arena. It does not lend itself to compromise. It is about belief, not reason, and is ordinarily immutable. Romney is a shifty fellow, but he will always be a Mormon, and it will never make a difference. Should he become president, he will still light the national Christmas tree and pardon the Thanksgiving turkey and host the Easter egg roll on the White House lawn.

Un-Mormon and Unchristian
By Richard Cohen
Tuesday, December 4, 2007; A21

What could be called "The Huckabee Moment" occurred Sunday morning when ABC's George Stephanopoulos asked the former Arkansas governor, suddenly and ominously the front-runner in Iowa's GOP contest, whether Mitt Romney is a Christian. Mike Huckabee knew precisely what was being asked of him, and he also knew, because he is a preacher, what the right -- not the clever, mind you -- answer should be. But Huckabee merely smiled that wonderful smile of his and punted. This, with apologies to George W. Bush, is the soft demagoguery of low expectations.

Until just recently, the expectations have indeed been low for Huckabee. He is more famous for losing more than 100 pounds than for any towering political accomplishment. But he is an ordained Baptist minister, and Romney is a Mormon -- a member of a church that some conservative Christians consider heretical. Huckabee has presented himself as the un-Mormon.

Pardon me for saying so, but that is the chief difference between the two. On about all the social issues you can name -- abortion, stem cells, gun control -- Huckabee and Romney are in sync. So their religious differences are not about morality. They are about belief -- religious belief, precisely the issue that is not supposed to matter in this country. Huckabee, though, clearly thinks it ought to.

The reason I started with Stephanopoulos is that he provided the perfect opportunity for Huckabee to make some ringing statement in support of religious tolerance. He might have made some reference to the ugly anti-Catholic campaigns run against Al Smith (1928) and John F. Kennedy (1960) and how they had both been spearheaded by prominent members of the Protestant clergy, Methodist Bishop Adna Leonard in the former's case, the renowned Norman Vincent Peale in the latter's. (Peale later went on to receive a Presidential Medal of Freedom from Ronald Reagan.) In other words, Huckabee might have preached. Instead, he said Romney had to answer for himself the question of whether he's a Christian. As for the TV commercial Huckabee is running in Iowa that opens by proclaiming him a "Christian leader," he said this is just because that's what he is -- not, mind, you, the former governor of a nearby state or even a weight-loss guru. But as he well knew, it is not his surprisingly moderate record as governor of Arkansas that so attracts Iowa's conservative Christian voters, it's his obdurate and narrow-minded religious beliefs.

I think this is the wrong time for FlippingMitt to do this

and, if he's not going to address the whole Black folk couldn't get into Heaven as anything other than SLAVES until 1978, then the speech is moot for me. He's not genuine, and when you talk about religion, you have to seem genuine.

I wouldn't care if Romney or

I wouldn't care if Romney or any other Mormon addressed the sect's previous or current views regarding black people's fitness for salvation or ascension into the bosom of Abraham. What he and other Mormons thought about black people was not acceptable to me before 1978 and their so-called post-1978 conversion matters even less to me now. I have always been a human being born without sin and no need to atone. The concept of Original Sin or that we are descendants of Ham is both preposterous and irrelevant.

Romney's views on public policy issues - domestic and foreign - should be anathema to any black person with sense enough to come in out of the rain. Romney's religious views don't matter. Anybody who believes that Missouri is the site of some sort of divine intervention should be laughed at even if that that person is black.

 

This site best viewed with a jaundiced eye