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Knocking Over the Wall
The Suppression of Church by State
by
Barry Loberfeld
by Barry Loberfeld
DIGG THIS
"I would ban
religion completely.... Religion has always tried to turn hatred
towards gay people. It turns people into hateful lemmings.... The
reality is that organized religion doesn't seem to work." These
words, from pop singer Elton John, are the latest indication that
when it comes to the knee-jerk demand for government to prohibit
the "offensive" – which for many includes homosexuality, as Sir
Elton clearly knows – now even religion is no longer sacred.
John's statement
(however serious) is also a crystallization – of something commonly
not grasped. Everyone, be they friend or foe, speaks of America's
"Religious Right," and everyone, though they more often than not
don't use the term, acknowledges its Religious Left. They know who
Pat Robertson and Jesse Jackson are. They've heard of the Christian
Coalition and the National Council of Churches. But what has yet
to fully materialize in the public mind is the Anti-Religious
Left.
First, from
the What's-in-a-name? Department: We should really speak of the
Theocratic Right and Left. That is their fundamental feature,
which shouldn't be confused with whether the members are personally
"religious." The term also voids the dogma that religious impositions
from the Left are not theocratic the way their counterparts on the
Right are. But Anti-Religious does not mean secular or personally
opposed to religion; it denotes the wielding of state power against
the religious. (Elsewhere, I've used the term atheocracy
to convey this meaning.)
If the public
isn't fully aware of the Anti-Religious Left, it's because said
phenomenon isn't fully realized as a movement. Communism is its
most obvious manifestation, but not its most prominent – not in
the United States. Its members have no one organization but, like
Communists, infiltrate other groups. Thus, they reveal themselves,
not by affiliation, but by advocacy. Its practical expression can
be found in the policies of the socialistic half of the American
"mixed economy." And behind that looms a perverse legal theory that,
in a parallel conflicting combination, often co-exists with genuinely
positive positions in such groups as the ACLU and Americans United
for Separation of Church and State. Emotional fuel is drawn from
such wells as The Humanist magazine, which zealously conjoins
theological skepticism and left-of-center orthodoxy.
My own first
awareness of – and personal contact with – the Anti-Religious Left
occurred when I, as a libertarian, spoke at a meeting of Long Island
Secular Humanists (LISH) in February of 2000. My talk was entitled
"Theocracy in America: The Second Coming of the Christian Right,"
and it dealt with the details of the truly abominable Christian
Reconstructionists, who openly preach death by stoning for a multitude
of Old Testament sins. It was very well received, and afterwards
I enjoyed speaking with many of the attendees. They put me on the
list to receive their newsletter/journal, which I often found engaging.
I liked its definition of secular humanism ("the philosophy
of life guided by reason and science, freed from religious and secular
dogmas") and especially its commitment to First Amendment principles.
But then I
got the March 2004 issue. The French government had just prohibited
public-school students from wearing anything "religious," so the
Question of the Month was: "Do you agree with France's ban on religious
garb or symbols in their Public Schools?" This was the first time
I encountered something that I thought was beyond debate for this
publication. I considered it as far-out as Amnesty International
asking its American members whether they "agree" with torture in
Pakistan. Even its language is Orwellian: Talk of banning "religious
symbols" in the public schools of the West has always referred to
symbols placed by the school – not worn by students, which
had never before been an issue. The whole point of not having those
symbols is that they, like a teacher-led prayer, might violate the
religious convictions of students, who are themselves free to express
those convictions. What was going on here?
The responses
were published in the April issue. Some readers were as appalled
as I, but many were not. One saw it as a matter of cultural relativism:
"I am unfamiliar with the history and culture of France in this
regard, and thus cannot make a judgment for that nation." I couldn't
recall such relativism ever being brought to bear on the issue of
freedom of religion as it concerned the "history and culture" of,
say, Iran. Another complained that the ban exempted small crosses
and thus gave Christians "privileges that are not accorded other
groups." One agreed with a "complete ban on the wearing of religious
symbols" in theory but saw practical problems with its "implementation."
Other responses included:
- "France
is setting the right example of separation."
- "Certainly
France sees things more clearly than we do...."
- And my favorite,
a one-word answer: "YES!"
Adding his
own two cents, LISH's director opined, "France may be overreacting,
but then again, they've experienced religious wars on their own
soil." He concluded the matter with: "Read Don Ardell's article
for another point of view."
"Viva La France!
Just Say 'Non' To Religious Displays in Public Schools – Everywhere!"
appears on the opposite page. Its writer is the expositor of "rational
social wellness," which, he informs us, "entails promoting freedoms,
discouraging totalitarian mindsets and advancing basic rights."
After finishing his piece, I had rather the opposite impression.
Ardell is
delighted with the news from abroad: "France is leading the way
for secular democracies in taking steps to ban religious emblems
in state schools ... [and therefore] doing the rest of us (e.g.,
Canadians, Australians, Americans, British, etc.) a huge service."
Again, this doesn't mean religious symbols posted by the "state
schools," but religious articles (e.g., "Jewish skullcaps") worn
by students. "Students who violate the ban can be expelled," we
are assured. No multiculturalist he, Ardell doesn't even attempt
to deny that the law is aimed at France's Muslim population ("the
key target of the ban") and quotes then-National Assembly speaker
Jean-Louis Debre: "What is at issue here is the clear affirmation
that public school is a place for learning and not for militant
activity or proselytism." One more time: We have always been told
that this "affirmation" means that the school will take no
position regarding the religious beliefs of its students. And if
a student can't "proselytize" even by wearing a religious symbol,
doesn't logic demand that he further be prohibited from in any context
speaking about religion?
The mobilization
of the public schools to undermine religion has been blatantly the
most animating campaign of the Anti-Religious Left – a fact reflected
in the increasing number of Americans fleeing those schools precisely
because what is taught conflicts so greatly with their personal
convictions (e.g., ExodusMandate.org). The publications of Americans
United and sundry "freethought" organizations speak with horror
of what things religious ("fundamentalist") parents would (and would
not) teach their children if all schools were privatized. Even welfare-check
"vouchers" are considered too dangerous – dangerous, that is, to
what can be described only as a thought-control monopoly.
That "progressives"
see no bias in condoms in the classroom, just as their conservative
counterparts never saw bias in prayer in the classroom – and with
neither, in an unholy alliance, seeing anything wrong in a ban on
Muslim headdress – only demonstrates that both are blind to a single
reality: Where there's no political noninterference, there's no
political neutrality. Government can remain impartial towards the
organic nexus of religious conviction and educational policy only
by having nothing to do with either element. Thus, rather than attempt
an impossible separation of Church and School, the State should
effect what it can: the separation of itself from both.
The point
extends beyond our First Amendment. No nation can morally maintain
both a separation of Church and State and a union of School
and State – i.e., state noninterference and state intervention,
laissez faire and socialism, freedom and coercion, A and non-A.
Privatized religion and socialized education – privatized anything
and socialized anything – are the oil and water of political practice.
The "mixed economy" never mixes.
What enables
the Anti-Religious Left to use public education as a political weapon
in the culture wars? The pretense that they are fighting only to
maintain the "wall of separation between Church and State." And
what makes that pretense possible is a contemporary "liberal" interpretation
of Jefferson's metaphor – and thus Madison's amendment – that is
actually a misrepresentation on almost every point, i.e., an approach
that can only topple that wall. The Founders' "Church" is
not a synonym for Christianity or even supernaturalism. It stands
for the religious convictions of American citizens – whatever they
might be. That's why the First Amendment guarantees freedom of "religion"
to the atheist as well as to every kind of theist. Quoting Jefferson:
"[I]t does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty
gods, or no god." And the "State" does not mean government in any
form. It stands for the limited state, the federal government
established by the Constitution. It is by limiting itself to an
area of specific functions (Article I, Section 8) that the "State"
separates itself from those areas then left to the "Church," that
is, the various private (i.e., consensual) institutions formed by
a free people wherein to practice their diverse beliefs. (With the
Fourteenth Amendment, the "State" came to subsume also the state
governments. See Michael Kent Curtis' No
State Shall Abridge: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Bill of Rights.)
Regrettably,
most of this is lost on today's self-designated "civil libertarians,"
who have instead distilled the metaphor – and thus the amendment
– to mean: "Where the State is, the Church cannot be." But here
the "State" is the interventionist state. As this government
bursts its original boundaries and expands into previously separated
areas, their native institutions must be purged of all expressions
of religious conviction. It is ultimately a theory of, not classical
liberal Church-State separation, but state imperialism – i.e., not
secularism, but socialism. And if you've never seen it stated
quite so explicitly, we've all witnessed it being implemented publicly
for decades.
With socialized
education consolidated, medicine is the next area where the Anti-Religious
Left will turn, especially with the focus on the issue that will
follow Michael Moore's pro-socialization Sicko (more praise
for the French!) and the race for 2008. A microcosm of what's to
come can be found in New York State's 2002 passage of the "Women's
Wellness Act." As the Rev. William Murphy, bishop of the Diocese
of Rockville Centre, explained in a 2/14/02 Newsday op-ed:
As written,
this bill maintains that government shall decide what constitutes
religion and what does not, what is Catholic and what is not.
What this bill will require is that the Catholic Church and other
religious bodies pay for employee insurance coverage that they
believe is morally impermissible.
This insistence
that religious bodies must compromise their beliefs is, or should
be, especially chilling for all Americans who believe religious
freedom is part of our American heritage....
We cannot
... accept that in our hospitals and clinics there is to be mandatory
insurance coverage for contraception, including methods and devices
that cause abortion. These contradict our faith, and they force
us either to break the law or deny the teaching of our church.
This denial of our right to offer health care in accordance with
our faith is a violation of our right to religious freedom according
to the First Amendment.
Amen. But how
would this legislation be seen from the perspective of the "liberal"
perversion of the First Amendment? Eight days later, Newsday
printed this letter:
The Rev.
William Murphy charges that the state Senate's Women's Wellness
Act interferes with the freedom of religion.
But this
misrepresents the bill, which simply requires that employers include
contraception and other essential women's health care services
in their comprehensive health plans....
In fact,
the bill restores the separation of church and state in the insurance
market. It has become common practice for employers and insurance
companies that claim a religious affiliation to deny insurance
coverage for basic health care services on religious grounds,
even when most of their customers and employees are not of the
faith. When a religious institution hires and serves the public
primarily, it should play by the public rules. Employees of many
faiths who work for religious charities, for example, and serve
the public should not have their employers' religion dictate their
health benefits.
The Senate
bill properly respects free exercise of religion. It also recognizes
that the Constitution will not tolerate the state's establishment
of religion – a principle Murphy fails to appreciate.
Observe what
is necessary to bring a minimum of coherence to the argument: an
equivocation between "the public primarily" – the private citizens
who work for or patronize these private institutions – and "the
public rules" – the dictates that government wants to force upon
these private parties. The "bill restores the separation of church
and state in the insurance market" only in the sense that when the
"State" invades that market, the "Church" must go – state imperialism
in practice. Observe also the real motive: the dubious insulation
of employees from what Leftism labels the "economic power" of employers.
In practical terms, prospective employees who don't like the benefits
package offered by a religious employer will flock to his secular
competitors – something that millions of people do every day. (Conversely,
there are many religious "customers and employees" who very much
want a company that reflects their values – something that "progressives"
have no problem understanding when it involves their values.)
Finally, observe the fundamental principle: Socialist imperatives
supersede civil liberties – déjà vu encore une
fois.
Oh, who wrote
it? Donna Lieberman. And? The editor's note says that she
"is executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union" –
officially. Unofficially, she's just another mole of the Anti-Religious
Left.
The unidentified
nature of the Anti-Religious Left has actually proved to be its
greatest strength – note the increasing implicit acceptance of its
premises. The Theocratic Right, because of its openness with its
goals, is widely monitored and fiercely countered. The Theocratic
Left, by denying that it is in any way theocratic, has been able
to leap over the wall of separation (e.g., our "Social Gospel"
welfare state). But the Anti-Religious Left, whose existence no
one even acknowledges, has a clear path to batter down that wall.
What will be left standing is a nation of socialized everything,
where an American citizen, like a Soviet citizen, can practice his
religion only within the confines of his own skull.
September
20, 2007
Barry
Loberfeld [send him
mail] is an educator, writer, journalist, and Libertarian Party
official based on LI, NY. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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