-Caveat Lector-

Saturday February 15, 2003

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/storydisplay.cfm?storyID=3100103
&thesection=news&thesubsection=dialogue

Diana Wichtel: Beware statesman invoking God

08.02.2003 -

The alarm bells really started ringing after September 11, when George
W began throwing around words like "crusade" and "evil-doers". I liked him
better in the old days, when he said things like, "I know how hard it is for
you to put food on your family" and "I know the human being and fish can
coexist peacefully".

Actually, I never liked him.

But such pronouncements, though devoid of discernible meaning, were at
least relatively harmless.

Now, emboldened by getting away with sounding increasingly like an Old
Testament prophet rather than a 21st century world leader, Bush
continues to blur the lines, not just between church and state but
between the will of God and the will of George W. Bush.

In journalist Bob Woodward's behind-the-scenes book, Bush at War, we
hear this from Bush: "There is a human condition that we must worry
about in times of war. There is a value system that cannot be compromised
- God-given values. These aren't United States-created values."

He is talking about things like freedom and mother love, apparently. But
he's also setting up the outrageous notion that if and when America goes
to war it will be about upholding Divine law. Nothing to do with American
foreign policy.

They say Bush was quite a drinker before he saw the light. For that
matter, Bush says it himself. Then he gave up the booze and became a
born again Christian.

This explains a lot. Like many a reformed hellraiser, he seems to think this
gives him permission to preach to the rest of us, even though most of us
knew way before George W did that excessively abusing oneself with
substances was a bad idea.

Bush has certainly retained the manipulative qualities and denial
techniques of the hardened boozer. To invoke God in the way he does is
to cut the moral ground out from under anyone who disagrees with you.
By the time he's finished, to be against America's policies is to be against
God. It would be quite clever if it wasn't so scary.

Well, not that clever. Even in Old Testament mode, Bush sometimes reverts
to his English-as-a-second-language ways. "We hold dear what our
Declaration of Independence says, that all have got uninalienable rights,
endowed by a Creator," he told community and religious leaders in
Moscow last year.

It was an interesting Freudian slip. That double negative in "uninalienable"
means the rights are, in fact, alienable, something a lot of innocent
civilians may be about to find out.

But it's getting harder to laugh. Some commentators are seriously worried
about what has been referred to as Bush's "Messiah complex". Others think
the rhetoric is largely for political purposes.

I hope the latter are right. The alternative is that the most powerful man
in the world believes that God's plan includes apocalypse, if not now, then
possibly quite soon.

Whatever Bush's temporal or spiritual agenda, he was at it again in his State
of the Union speech. "The liberty we prize is not America's gift to the
world, it is God's gift to humanity."

Cue wild applause. Liberty is God's gift to humanity. America sees itself as a
free nation, therefore God has favoured America. Iraq, on the other hand,
is not free, therefore God doesn't like Iraq and it's okay to bomb it back
into the Stone Age. Nice.

This sort of thinking has done some good - there are hilarious parodies of
Bush speeches to be found on the net - "Our God also pities the atheists
who insist on separation of church and state. Forgive them Father, for
they do not know that in Hell, even your teeth burn. (Applause.)"

And, of course he is not the first politician to claim that God is on his side.
Nor, sadly, will he be the last. You also have to take into account the
general God-bothering tendencies of American public life. American
entertainment industry awards ceremonies are full of people, mostly living
lives of appalling consumption and hedonism, who seem to believe God is
directly responsible for their latest forgettable album or awful sitcom.

But this is different. This is a fundamentalist mindset. And what disturbs me
about fundamentalism of any flavour is that it is usually so frighteningly
primitive and literal. Writing about Woodward's aforementioned book, a
reviewer says, "What are readers to make of the anecdote in which a CIA
operative is told to bring Osama bin Laden's head home in a box? Was this
for real? Apparently so, since the operative took a cardboard box and dry
ice with him."

Yikes. The trouble with bringing God into politics - well, you only need to
think of Northern Ireland, the Middle East, Bosnia ... and it's not that big a
step from believing you are serving God to believing you are God.

The Nazis saw themselves as super beings with the right to give and take
away, to decide who would live and die, who was human and who was not.
The horror of what they did stays so fresh not because they behaved like
monsters. Live long enough and you see a lot of that. It's because they
behaved like gods. And that's something we don't want to see again.





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the authority of teachers, elders or wise men.  Believe only after
careful observation and analysis, when you find that it agrees with
reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all.
Then accept it and live up to it." The Buddha on Belief,
from the Kalama Sut

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