National NOW Times >> August 1995 >> Article
The Re-Packaged Bigotry of the Christian Coalition
by Sandy Alexander, NOW intern
NOW Action Vice President Rosemary Dempsey speaks
out about the "Religious Wrong" at NOW's rally in Columbus Ohio.
The misnamed
Christian Coalition is
having great success in showing off its seemingly sweet new packaging,
while the underlying product is growing more dangerous every day. Youthful
director and spokesperson
Ralph
Reed is the telegenic new mouth piece for the closed-minded and selectively-interpreted
religious views of the group's founder, reactionary broadcast evangelist
Pat Robertson.
A similar public relations strategy is evident in the packaging
of the Coalition's "Contract
With the American Family." It uses the reasonable and benevolent-sounding
goal of "strengthening the American family" to mask legislative proposals
that would threaten such fundamental freedoms as the separation of church
and state and women's rights to reproductive planning.
The Coalition is making the most of this growing publicity, a powerful
lobbying presence, millions of dollars in funding, and the deference of
elected officials and presidential hopefuls. The Coalition is quickly amassing
the power to see its agenda realized.
"Their agenda is rooted in elitism, restricted only by what polls
say voters are willing to accept," says NOW Action Vice President Rosemary
Dempsey. "It is masked in rhetoric that appeals to people's desire for
a better society, but also uses their fears to cast blame. It is an agenda
we are working to unmask, to educate the public about and to see brought
to a halt before more real families are hurt."
The "common sense values" that the Contract wants to restore include
measures that would:
-
abolish the long-held Constitutional doctrine of separating church and
state;
-
endanger the quality of education for low-income and special needs children
by abolishing the Department of Education and installing voucher programs
that divert dollars from public to private schools, which can reject students
for numerous reasons;
-
threaten children's basic human rights by rejecting the UN Convention on
the Rights of the Child;
-
end federal funding of the NEA and PBS, thereby endangering educational
and cultural exhibits, workshops, and programs;
-
return prayer to schools;
-
deny children potentially life saving sex education under the guise of
parental rights to regulate school curriculum;
-
endanger millions of families by transforming the bureaucratic welfare
state into a system of private and faith- based compassion;
-
make birth control, family planning and other women's health services unavailable
by denying funding to health clinics;
-
and undermine the right of all women to choose abortion.
Some religious denominations have started asking if it is appropriate to
associate the word "Christian" with conservative political agendas. One
group
of 80 ecumenical leaders issued a "Cry for Renewal" that protested
the actions of the Coalition and its identification with the Republican
Party. The statement also criticized religious liberals who were affiliated
with the Democratic Party for not showing, "moral imagination or prophetic
integrity."
One question looming on the horizon: if the Contract is, as it claims,
"the first word, not the last word," then where will the Coalition stop?
A new, similarly unsigned and more extreme contract could be taken seriously
if the Coalition continues to gain political power, if more religious-right
supported candidates are elected, or if one wins the presidency. Dempsey
says NOW's resounding answer is "stop these regressive measures now."
Copyright 1995-2009, All rights reserved. Permission granted for non-commercial use. National Organization for Women
(This was printed from http://www.now.org/nnt/08-95/christco.html)