The Seeds of the
American Taliban
December 10 2004
Counterbias.com
by W. David Jenkins III
"God told me to strike at al Qaeda and I struck them, and then He
instructed me to strike at Saddam, which I did, and now I am
determined to solve the problem in the Middle East” — George W. Bush
to Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas, July 2003
"We tell them that we do not seek to kill, but we will chop off the
hand which seeks to inflict harm on us, God willing" — Ayman al-Zawahri
deputy to Osama bin Laden, September 2003
"The national government will maintain and defend the
foundations on which the power of our nation rests. It will offer
strong protection to Christianity as the very basis of our
collective morality. Today Christians stand at the head of our
country. We want to fill our culture again with the Christian
spirit. We want to burn out all the recent immoral developments in
literature, in the theatre, and in the press — in short, we want to
burn out the poison of immorality which has entered into our whole
life and culture as a result of LIBERAL excess during the past
years" — Adolph Hitler (Taken from The Speeches of Adolph Hitler,
1922-1939, Vol. 1, Michael Hakeem, Ph.D. (London, Oxford University
Press, 1942), pp. 871-872.)
Now that the smoke has begun to dissipate from the bomb dropped on
America by Campaign ’04, we can start to get some perspective on
exactly what happened. Many of us want to know just how John Kerry
lost a race against absolutely the worst president in modern history
– if not all time.
Well, if the pundits are to be believed, it would be largely because
of the folks who are presently thumping their chests as hard as they
thump their bibles. Those righteous, pompous, judgmental,
sanctimonious and incredibly ignorant brethren known as the
“religious right.” The ones who are convinced that Jesus hates gays,
liberals, science, tolerance and, what’s more, he’s armed to the
teeth.
Lock and load . . . amen!
What is amazing to me is that more people do not see the
similarities between what I call Cherry Pickin’ Christians – those
who select and pervert Bible scripture to suit their political and
social agenda – and their counterparts who are doing the very same
thing in the name of Allah. The history of the world is tainted with
eras of divisive and bloody conflict centered in the misconception
that God is on their side. From the persecution of Pagans centuries
ago to the Spanish Inquisition, from the streets of Belfast to the
streets of Tel Aviv and the Gaza Strip and now Bush’s war on terror
there are numerous glaring examples that religious conflict is not
only never-ending but a pointless and destructive exercise in “my
God is better than your God.”
There is a growing movement within this country of people who are
convinced that God is only on their side and the rest of us are
going to Hell. Apparently, quite a few of them voted recently and
their call to arms was something called “moral values.” Eleven
states were compliant with the wishes of Bush Co.’s moral value
fearmongers and included a referendum on their ballots to legally
refuse certain citizens the same rights as others in regard to the
subject of marriage. Not based upon law but based upon scripture,
lovingly cherry-picked from a book that also says that shellfish are
an abomination (Lev. 11:10) and that if you work on a Sunday then
you should be executed (Exodus 35:2). Go ahead, look it up. And
there’s more where that came from.
The thing is, these cherry pickers are becoming a political force in
our country and history has shown time and time again that this type
of cultist population and its influence is a threat to any sense of
stability here or around the world. There is little more dangerous
than some group of zealots thinking that some omnipresent “entity”
is sanctioning their wishes at the expense of those who do not
agree. The events of September 11 are a perfect example.
God vs. God
Shortly after 9/11, I did a piece on the threat that fundamentalism
posed for America. Now religious fundamentalism is a relatively new
phenomenon in the United States, characterized by a sense of
embattled alienation nurtured by some misguided perceived threat
from a surrounding culture. The term can also refer specifically to
the belief that one's religious texts (i.e.: the Bible or Koran) are
infallible and historically accurate, despite contradiction of these
claims by modern religious scholarship. There is almost a sense of
righteous paranoia that fuels these individual movements and the
source of that paranoia would seem to be the very “God” that these
people worship. It’s almost as if these people are out to change the
world into their way of thinking and worshiping because they feel if
they screw up then their God will smite them for their failure.
Think back to just after 9/11 and the comments made by certain
religious leaders. Some said that God was “angry” with us because He
perceived weakness in our society concerning homosexuals, the ACLU
and other “pornographic liberal values,” so He allowed those planes
to attack us. One has to wonder about the value of praying to such a
vengeful deity.
Although conservative Christians profess a love of Jesus and are
diligent in their efforts to create new believers, they seem to be
stuck in an Old Testament way of thinking. Most importantly, by
their actions they seem to have done away with the line about “judge
not lest ye be judged.” It would seem that Jesus makes a great
selling point to join the club, so to speak, and God help you once
they have you. But at least you know, once you’re in, that only you
and people who believe like you will go to heaven – right?
The only problem is there are others who feel that they have the
only keys to heaven or whatever paradise apparently waits. As I
stated earlier, the world has a long history of bloody conflicts
which have been little more than one side imposing its version of
God on those who do not share the same beliefs. Many are so pompous
as to proclaim that they know how God feels or whose side God is on.
On one hand, you have a military leader such as Gen. William Boykin
speaking at an evangelical Christian meeting that “the war on terror
is a fight against Satan” and then tossing in his boast that “My God
is bigger” and “My God is real” while others are just “idols.” On
the other hand, you have folks like the Taliban's supreme leader,
Mullah Omar, predicting the destruction of America. “If Allah’s help
is with us, this will happen within a short period of time,” Omar
said. So fundamentalism teaches that my God is better than your God
– I’m right and you’re wrong and if I say my God states that you
have no right to exist than you’re just going to have to deal with
it.
This line of thinking begins to shed light on how the
shortsightedness and intolerance of religious fundamentalism can
lead to everlasting wars with the will of a minority having a
devastating effect on the rest of us.
Distant Dysfunctional Cousins
The comparisons between conservative Christians and their Islamic
counterparts in the Taliban are numerous – the most glaring being
the drive to adopt a form of government based upon a repressive
theocracy. These two movements are determined to bring their brand
of fundamentalism to their respective governments. (I use the
present tense since the Taliban is currently regaining strength
because the Bush administration has ignored them for the last few
years due to the great things we’re doing in Iraq.) Fundamentalist
Christians have the jump on the Taliban as far as longevity and
they’re confident that their goals are being met – they’re just
taking their time about it. Now, since the last perhaps spurious
attempt at an election in this country, the religious right is
starting to step things up a bit.
Now one of the powder kegs that I’m sure I'm setting a match to is
the argument that Christian conservatives aren’t nearly as brutal as
their Islamic cousins. To accept this declaration would betray the
history of gruesome deeds committed in God’s name and we don’t have
to go all the way back to the Crusades or Salem in this country to
prove the point. Eric Rudolph (the women’s clinic bomber) and James
Kopp (the sniper from Buffalo) come to mind as recent examples of
brutality and murder supported by Christian extremists. In the same
light that not all Muslims support such drastic behavior as
committed by the Taliban or al Qaeda, neither do most Christians
support snipers and clinic bombers. However, we are experiencing a
small but growing extremist faction on both sides that sees such
brutality as acting in God’s name.
"Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these, my
brethren you did it to me. (Matthew 25:40)
After the Soviet/Afghan war and the Taliban had assumed control of
Kabul, they instituted and began to enforce a purist way of life
based on their fundamentalist interpretation of Islam. Although many
of their edicts had little to do with the teachings of the Koran, it
was their fear and disdain for all things modern that caused them to
feel the need to inflict such strict rules in order to preserve what
they felt was pleasing to their version of “God.”
Like the Taliban, conservative Christians have moved the thrust of
the education of their youth to specific “values” according to their
interpretation of their respective texts. Although their teachings
are largely based on their interpretation , it is also their fear
and disdain for all things modern (or liberal, if you prefer) that
forces them to enact such drastic measures on their own young
“disciples.”
Both groups mask their extremism as a crusade to install a “perfect
morality” in society with their version of God. Both groups are
involved in a moral standoff, not only against society as a whole,
but against members of their own faith. Right-wing Christian
evangelicals, like the Islamic Wahhabi, see conformity with and
acceptance of modern or liberal values as a blasphemy and weakness
in spirit to which they speak out and, in some cases, they even
strike out against their own respective communities. And both
Christian and Islam seem to have the unifying theme that they are
trying to “save” folks from all of those evil weaknesses in order to
somehow “justify” their words and actions.
Both of these religious factions stress that they are inclusive in
their practice yet they are exclusive in their teachings. While many
conservative Christians rail against schools in Arab countries that
teach their students that all westerners are evil, deserve death and
are their supreme enemy, those same outraged folks are scooping up
the “Left Behind” series by the ton in order to spread the good word
that they’re the only ones going to heaven and everybody else can go
to Hell. And if you don’t hurry up and get on board with these
folks, well, don’t expect them to cry any tears for you. You’re just
a sinner in their eyes and deserve everything you get.
Recognizing and Repairing the Damage
There are certain things in life that just do not go together.
Peanut butter and tuna fish come to mind. There’s nothing wrong with
either one but I don’t recommend mixing them together or you’ll end
up with a bad taste in your mouth. The same can be said of mixing
religion and politics. There is no possible way to merge the two
without them mutually polluting each other.
Some folks may be convinced that I despise religion and am just
another Godless liberal who cannot see the righteousness of George
W. Bush or Jerry Falwell. They’d be wrong on the first count and
right on the second. My religious views are where I think they
should be – personal. My failure to see anything Christian or
righteous regarding Bush, Falwell and the religious right is because
I feel those characteristics require a bit more than lip service.
The good Reverend Jerry just proclaimed that “we should just keep
bombing them (terrorists) all in the name of the Lord” the other
night. Sure, Rev, that’ll solve everything.
The unfortunate thing about organized religion – all religion – is
the fundamentalist element within it that isn’t satisfied until all
people accept their way of life and worship and even are willing to
go to violent extremes to achieve that goal. When this element's
"moral values" become a basis for governmental involvement and the
policies which follow, the innocents of the world community ends up
suffering.
The Bush administration may insist that the war on terror is not a
war against Islam but try explaining that to the Arab nations. They
see the television reports on the “fundamentalist take-over” here in
America after the last election. They hear the hateful and pompous
words of such blow-hards as Falwell and others like him. Now, the
members of the conservative Christian movement will argue that they
are in no way like the Taliban or al Qaeda because they have not
attained the level of brutality on as large a scale. I would counter
that there are some mangled orphans in Fallujah who might beg to
differ with that argument. The war between perspectives can be just
as long and as destructive as the war between religions.
What is also just as destructive is the image given to Christianity
-- as a whole -- by these Cherry Pickin’ Christians. This world is
full of people who show that they are at peace with their religion
through their good works. They are building houses through Habitat
for Humanity, they are feeding the hungry and they are reaching out
to those in need – without any strings attached. These are the
people who have taken the words they hear when they worship and put
them into action in order to give to people – not take away. These
are the Christians who are angry that the image of their faith has
been given such a black eye by such outspoken and all too visible
“religious leaders” who think God supports invasions and torture,
just as long as it’s done in “His name.”
The seed of fundamentalism in conservative politics has begun to
take root and is seriously endangering the American political
landscape. The synthesis of evangelicalism and republicanism is
showing the same destructive trends as the religious extremism in
Afghanistan and Pakistan. This movement threatens to use the
Constitution to take away guaranteed rights for certain citizens for
the first time. It has moved into our schools and wants to discredit
science in order to implement the “reality of Creationism.” It wants
to shield us from the evils of intellectualism and rob us all of our
free thinking. It wants to reverse course and remove rights from
women and, most of all, it wants to rid the scourge that hates them
for their “moral values” and their “freedoms.”
Jihad has been declared in America. The seeds have been planted. We
will become like our Arab counterparts who have been at Holy War
with each other for centuries. While we have not yet reached the
same level of hostility and violence active in these not so far away
places staring back at us from our television screens, we must bear
in mind that we’re still in the early stages. We still time to
recognize that in order to preserve that which is good in each,
religion and politics must divorce themselves from each other before
they become mutually dysfunctional – more than they already are.
W. David Jenkins III is a writer from New York. He can be reached
at WDavidJenkinsIII@aol.com.