Phony
Wars and the Prince of Peace
by
Christopher Manion
by Christopher Manion
I
can’t help wondering about the ongoing campaign against the "war
on Christmas" that’s getting so much neo-press these days.
Our civil religion took "Christ out of Christmas" long
ago, and reduced it to a mere secular excuse for a series of long
weekends for government workers.
So,
what gives?
Sure,
a few professional atheists perennially grouse about crèches
on courthouse lawns, but even the defenders of the displays have
been reduced to calling them an empty cultural nod towards history
or tradition. Few will line up behind Alabama Chief Justice Roy
Moore, who actually takes the Ten Commandments seriously as commands
from (shudder!) the Living God who gave us the rights to life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness.
The
growing use of "Happy Holidays" to replace "Merry
Christmas" merely reflects the relativism that has dominated
the secular culture for years. Have we forgotten that employers
risk jail and economic ruin if they happen to "discriminate"
against a Wiccan, say? As a matter of contrarian fact, genuinely
anti-religious discrimination in the workplace these days is practiced
primarily against genuine Christians.
Consider,
for instance, the pharmacists who refuse to sell abortifacients,
since (they believe) such action forces them to be accessories to
murder.
But
that story is strangely silent as the phony "Christmas war"
rages on.
So
what is it about the war against the "war on Christmas"?
Indeed, the entire enterprise appears to have a design, and it isn’t
hard to perceive, once the hype is laid aside.
Simply
put, the campaign is being waged for political ends. Neocon supporters
of the U.S. occupation of Iraq are aghast in the recent turn of
public opinion against the war. If they cannot preserve the loyalty
of the president’s evangelical Christian base long enough to survive
the 2006 congressional elections, it could mean disaster for their
Middle Eastern agenda. It is that agenda, and not Saint Nick, that
so uniquely focuses their minds.
Ironically,
few evangelicals have taken public notice that the neocons have
consistently betrayed virtually every profamily cause that is so
important to evangelical Christians. Yet, when it comes to coverage
of those betrayals, the "neomedia" remains silent. (When’s
the last time you heard Richer Perle railing against abortion, for
instance, or homosexual marriage? For that matter, how about Vice
President Cheney?).
Neocons are petrified that the Christians whom they
persuaded (or hijacked, take your pick) to back their imperialist
wars might well abandon them by 2006.While they cynically whip up
war fever among evangelicals,
the neocons have exercised their right to remain silent on pro-family
issues like stem cells, same-sex marriage, and indecency. Today,
neocons are merely self-dealers who view the evangelicals with the
same disdain with which the Bush administration appears to view
the Democrats – to purloin Lenin’s term, as "useful idiots."
On
Iraq, Bush implies that the Democrats were as dumb as the White
House when it came to believing what it now admits was faulty "intelligence"
– primarily, the lies of Ahmed Chalabi that fueled the neocon
war fever. In like fashion, the neocon hype about the "War
on Christmas" relies on the same shell game: "Don’t look
behind that curtain – at domestic spying, at Catholics in Congress
like John Murtha and Walter Jones who have changed their minds about
the war. Ignore the thoroughgoing corruption that threatens to rot
the Republican Party every bit as much as it already has destroyed
the Democrats."
Ignore
all that. Instead, be outraged that Wal-Mart isn’t handing out a
crèche with every purchase.
If
they can just distract dispensationalist evangelicals from the seamy
side of the Iraq war until after the 2006 elections, the neocons’
dreams of empire still might survive reality.
But
they know full well that, if the Democrats take the House in 2006,
the neocons’ biggest Christmas present next year will be a raft
of subpoenas from new House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Dingell,
as impeachment hearings get under way for the major architects of
the war.
Seldom
has Christmas been manipulated with such sheer gall than in this
cynical con game. To demonstrate, imagine the neocon horror, should
America actually turn away from the doctrine of endless preemptive
war and embrace instead the Prince of Peace (who’s He? Hint: His
Birthday is celebrated on December 25). Can you imagine that the
folks at AEI and the Weekly Standard would stand up and cheer?
No,
the neocon pantheon does not include the Prince of Peace; instead,
it celebrates the idolatry of endless war in faraway lands. America’s
interests, and "the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God,"
play no role at all.
The
neocons simply turn the Founding Fathers upside down. Their domestic
agenda for America is subordinate to their international imperial
agenda: "We must destroy our Constitution in order to save
our constitutional republic from the terrorists."
This
canard hardly reflects the spirit of Christmas or of the Babe born
in Bethlehem; in fact, it flows straight from the father of lies.
The
neocons are probably startled at how easily their enterprise has
succeeded so far. Like their fellow leftists at the Washington Post,
they must still believe that evangelicals are "poor, undereducated,
and easily led." Yet it must be somewhat startling when they
see millions of believing Christians so easily fall prey to their
chicanery.
So,
"on with the show." Neocons are falling all over each
other to insist magnanimously that Christians should be allowed
to say "Merry Christmas." Funny, I haven’t heard one of
them mention a real problem – the Vatican’s concerns about the harassment
of Palestinian Christians in Bethlehem, or the isolation of Christ’s
birthplace by the "security wall" that closes it off from
Jerusalem.
Nor
has Fox News spent much air time reporting on Pope Benedict’s admonition
to the faithful that they minimize the materialism surrounding "Christmas"
and concentrate on awaiting, and celebrating, the birth of Christ
the King. One doesn’t see there any call for repentance and reparation.
Nor
is veracity highly prized. In defending their war fever, neocons
constantly invoke the spirit of Ronald Reagan. Curiously, however,
they shrink from the observation that it was President Reagan who
worked closely with Pope John Paul II to bring down the Soviet Empire,
and did it without a shot being fired. President Bush, on the other
hand, defied Pope John Paul’s opposition to the invasion of Iraq.
Now we know, by the president’s own estimation, that his war has
killed tens of thousands of Iraqis, not to mention more than 2000
American soldiers and Marines.
It’s
pretty simple. The neocon game is designed to distract believing
Christians from a disastrous Iraq war. If it succeeds, evangelicals
will take their eye off the Iraq war and will suit up for a phony
one. But hope springs eternal: this Christmas, and beyond, Christians
might actually embrace the Prince of Peace.
That
would be sheer hell for the neocons.
December
20, 2005
Christopher
Manion [send him mail] is
president of Manion Music,
LLC, which produces copyrighted, royalty-free music collections
for telecommunications media and commercial and hospitality sites
that use background music or music-on-hold. He writes from the Shenandoah
Valley.
Copyright
© Christopher Manion 2005. All Rights reserved.
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