Sunday, July 22, 2012

Religious Right Blames Secularism for Colorado Massacre

THIS IS GETTING RIDICULOUS. I've had it with Religious Right figures blaming tragedies on America being too secular or insufficiently Christian. I've had it with right-wingers using human suffering to take cheap shots at gays, liberals, or whoever annoys them at the moment. I thought Religious Right voices had hit a new low when they used the Jerry Sandusky scandal in this manner (see here, here, and here), but they're also using the recent Colorado shootings this way as well.

During the early hours of July 20th, a gunman opened fire on movie-goers at a midnight showing of The Dark Night Rises at the Century 16 Theater in Aurora, CO. The Washington Post reports that the massacre left 12 people dead and 59 injured. According to Reuters, Aurora police believe that the suspect, James Holmes, planned the attack in advanced, as suggested by months of deliveries to his work and home addresses.

My heart goes out to all those who have been affected by this tragedy. I cannot begin to imagine the horror that the victims experienced, or the anguish that their loved ones now carry. Why the shooter would perpetrate such a senseless massacre is beyond my grasp, and I hope he faces the full consequences of his bloodshed. Now is a time for empathy, for reflection, and for justice.

Sadly, and as usual, some voices from the Religious Right think that now is a time for pontificating.

During the July 20th edition of Istook Live!, Rep Louis Gohmert (R-Texas) suggested a connection between "attacks on Judeo-Christian beliefs" and the Aurora attack. (Hat tip to Huffington Post. See www[dot]istook[dot]com/programhighlights)
"Some of us happen to believe that when our founders talked about guarding our virtue and freedom, that that was important. Whether it's John Adams saying our Constitution was made only for moral and religious people and totally inadequate to government of any others, Ben Franklin, only a virtuous people are capable of freedom, as nations become corrupt and vicious they have more need of masters ... We have been at war with the very pillars, the very foundation of this country ... What really gets me as a Christian is to see the ongoing attacks on Judeo-Christian beliefs, and then some senseless crazy act of terror like this takes place."
Gohmert also suggested that alleged indifference toward God was connected to such violence.
"Where was God in all of this? ... We've threatened high school graduation participants that if they use God's name, that they're going to be jailed. We had a principle and a superintendent down in--or a coach down in Florida that were theatened with jail because they said the blessing at a voluntary, off-campus dinner ... Where was God? Well, what have we done with God? We told him we don't want him around. I kind of like his protective hand being present."
The American Family Association's Bryan Fischer weighed in as well. In a July 20th post at Rightly Concerned, Fischer blamed school secularization for everything from lower SAT scores to STDs to violence, including the Aurora violence. (Hat tip to Right Wing Watch. See www[dot]afa[dot]net/Blogs/BlogPost.aspx?id=2147524440)
"How many more mindless massacres like the one that took place last night in Aurora, Colorado will it take before we tell the ACLU and the Supreme Court to take a hike and we get back to unapologetically and publicly trusting in God?"
In a July 20th commentary at OneNewsNow, Jerry Newcombe also blamed secularization for the outburst of senseless violence.
"I can't help but feel that to some extent, we're reaping what we've been sowing as a society. We said to God, "Get out of the public arena." Lawsuit after lawsuit, often by misguided "civil libertarians," have chased away any fear of God in the land -- at least in the hearts of millions."
Newcombe speculated that a diminishing fear of hell could also fuel acts of violence.
"Tens of millions of young people in this culture seem to have no fear of God. It's becoming too commonplace that some frustrated person will go on a killing spree of random people. If they kill themselves, they think it's all over. But that's like going from the frying pan into the fire. Where's the fear of God in our society? I don't think people would do those sorts of things if they truly understood the reality of Hell."
A member of the Phelps family added less articulate but equally appalling commentary to the public discussion. In a July 20th Twitter post, Westboro Baptist Church member Margie Phelps tweeted that the massacre was a "DIRECT result of filthy fag pride parade in Colo." (Hat tip to the New Civil Rights Movement. See twitter[dot]com/MargieJPhelps/statuses/226292172322926593?tw_p=twt)

I'm sick of this. I'm sick of the Religious Right using human suffering to take cheap shots at their opponents. I'm tired of their tasteless jabs, their lack of human decency, and their dominionist smugness. Spare us your rhetoric. For once in your lives, show some sensitivity in the face of tragedy.


For additional commentary, visit the following links.

SPLC Hatewatch: Gohmert Blames ‘Attacks on Judeo-Christian Beliefs’ for Colorado Massacre

Joe.My.God: Wingnut GOP Rep Blames CO Shooting On Attacks On Religious Freedom

The Maddow Blog: How Not to Respond to a Tragedy

17 comments:

  1. I'm with you, Ahab. There are many lessons that might be drawn from this tragedy, and I happen to have my own ideas what some of those lessons are -- as perhaps do most people.

    But apparently neither I, nor you, nor most people in this country, are willing to advance our views before the bodies are even cold. The Religious Right, on the other hand, has not waited even 24 hours before shamelessly milking it.

    Worse, their efforts have largely been directed at stirring up hatreds and animosities towards their opponents.

    They are vultures and have no decency.

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    1. Paul -- They completely lack decency when they say such things.

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  2. This really, really needs to stop. I am so tired of feeling like a second-class, unsavory citizen simply because of my lack of religious beliefs. Empathy - and the ability to respect fellow human beings - is independent of religion.

    When will this end?

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    1. Postmormon Girl -- I'm tired of it too. I'm tired of fundamentalists acting like they have a corner on morality and respectability, when the opposite is painfully apparent.

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  3. Opportunistic parasites, the lot of them.

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  4. I agree. It's sickening. I'm afraid we all knew it was coming though.

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    1. Donna -- As with so many previous tragedies...

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  5. I'm tired of it too. Thank you for this post.

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  6. Sorry to hear you've had it with this, because they aren't going to stop, ever (well, not until religion finally goes extinct). It's the way they are.

    At least they're alienating and disgusting everyone who's not part of their own narrow little world.

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    1. infidel753 -- I hope the alienation they're producing comes back to haunt them.

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  7. I linked to this posting, because it made me think. It's appalling. All of it. Someone just posted the link to the AFA on Facebook.

    I have been a wreck over this incident and being told that people were murdered because God is angry just makes their deaths seem even more of a waste.

    I really want to move to a deserted island.

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    1. Left Leaning Lady -- Thanks for the shout-out at your blog. Speculations about God's supposed anger just rub salt in the wound. The vitcims were human beings. They deserve dignity in death.

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    2. And we all deserve dignity in life without the threat of being blasted away by a nutjob anytime we leave our homes.. or stay in our homes.

      But nothing is going to change.

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  8. This post sums up how appalling it is whenever someone decides to tell us that a tragedy occurred because God is trying to get our attention.

    Do they even realize how unappealing that sounds, "God might send some armed attacker into your local movie house if you don't start worshiping him."

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    Replies
    1. Christian Agnostic -- Unappealing is right. It definitely doesn't make their god sound very loving.

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