
The following article is from Free Inquiry magazine, Volume 25, Number 2.
Bizarrely, the 2004 U.S. presidential election was decided by voters who oppose the theory of evolution or await the Rapture or speak in the unknown tongue or seek faith-healing or send money to television preachers or think Satan is a real spirit stalking America.
White evangelicals and fundamentalistsmostly puritanical people who hate homosexuality, abortion, stem-cell research, Hollywood, etc. and who tend to favor guns and the death penalty tipped the ballot balance to their hero, President Bush. The three GsGod, guns, and gayswere a crucial factor in the squeaker election. Exit polls credited born-again voters who ranked moral values as their chief concern, more important than the Iraq war, job losses, or other issues.
There are roughly 70 million people in America who do not believe in evolution, and those are Bush supporters, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Seymour Hersh said just before the election when asked to explain the presidents mammoth backing. Other estimates of what has been called the Bigoted Christian Redneck realm range as high as 100 million, counting narrow-minded members of mainline churches. This segment of the U.S. population isnt monolithic, either denominationally or politically. Nonetheless, its a mighty force in the electorate.
How did the Religious Right rise to power? Its a long story, involving Americas amazing moral change over the past half-century. Ponder this social history:
Back in the 1950s, when I was young, moral values were oppressive: You could be jailed for looking at the equivalent of todays R-rated movies or Playboy magazine; gays were sent to prison for sodomy; it was a crime to buy a cocktail or a lottery ticket in most states; blacks were forbidden to enter white schools, restaurants, hotels, theaters, pools, etc.; it was a crime for interracial couples to marry; Jews were banned from some clubs; birth control was still a crime in some states; blue laws made it illegal for stores to open on Sunday; divorce or unwed pregnancy were hush-hush; police might jail an unmarried couple for sharing a bedroom; a doctor who performed an abortion faced prison; schoolchildren were led in government-mandated prayers every morning; etc.
Of course, there was sin in the 1950s. Bootleggers furtively supplied illegal booze, pornography circulated illicitly, some unwed couples hid away, and so forth. But it was generally an era of narrow taboos.
Then came the historic Civil Rights movement and the youth rebellion, mostly in the 1960s, Americas liberal heyday. Young protesters fought the Vietnam draft, blacks marched for equality, courts struck down censorship, and human rights laws were passed. The sexual revolution snowballed. Bigotry became unlawful. Despite the adolescent excesses of the 1960s, it was a time of moral improvement, in my view. Many old prejudices were swept aside.
Then a backlash occurred in the 1970s and 80s. Fundamentalists, who previously had seemed a mere fringe group, began mobilizing against the wave of wickedness that had arrived. The historic U.S. Supreme Court rulings in 1962 and 1963 against government-led school prayer, plus the 1973 opinion legalizing a womans right to choose abortion, along with the easing of social stigmas against gays and the like, all convinced them that Satan was gaining control of America.
Evangelist Jerry Falwell coalesced this group by forming the Moral Majority.
He demanded restoration of school prayer, crackdowns on porn, recriminalization of abortion, and the ostracism of gays. This group yearned for a return to the moral 1950sseemingly unaware that it had been a time of harsh prejudice. It was more proof of the age-old axiom that the most intolerant people in any society are religious hard-liners.
Although fundamentalists are mostly blue-collar folks and previously had tended to be Democrats, they began finding an ally in the Republican Party. In 1980, they were instrumental in electing Ronald Reagan president. When the Moral Majority faded, it was replaced by evangelist Pat Robertsons Christian Coalition, again solidly Republican.
Gradually, white evangelicals and fundamentalists became a wing of the GOPanchoring the base that strategist Karl Rove milks for votes. The group is especially devoted to George W. Bush because he underwent an emotional conversion after years of heavy drinking, which makes him their hero, one of us. Conservative Catholics joined this base.
Meanwhile, liberal mainline Protestant churcheswhich advocate somewhat more tolerant and humane valueshave shrunk in America, losing millions of members. The national tide has flowed toward fundamentalism and narrow morality.
Today, some in the latter camp even say born-again President Jimmy Carter isnt a real Christian because he doesnt embrace the Religious Rights political agenda. He quit the Southern Baptist Church in protest of its hidebound outlook. Oddly, Carters piety would have galled many U.S. voters around 1970, but by 1976 the evangelical upsurge buoyed him. Yet now hes reviled by the same group. A cycle has been completed.
So, today, born-again whites are a potent political element in the United States. Over the past decade, many researchers have found that Americans who attend church more than once a week are the most ardent Republican voterswhile those who dont worship generally vote Democratic. This gives the GOP a huge power base, because America is more religious than other advanced nations. Is this lineup permanent? I hope not. Although the future is unforeseeable, thinking people should hope that America gradually will follow Europe, Australia, and other societies where churchgoing has faded. U.S. secularism is rising. In 1993, the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago found that only 9 percent of U.S. respondents said they have no religion, but this group rose to 14 percent by 2002. During the same period, the ratio of Americans identifying themselves as Protestants fell from 63 to 52 percent.
Two 2004 reportsby the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life and the Institute for Jewish and Community Researchboth raise the none group to 16 percent of the U.S. population. This trend toward rationality, away from supernaturalism, someday may weaken the Religious Right.
Right now, however, America must endure a political powerhouse of mean-spirited believers who can sway elections. For the good of the nation, lets hope that 2004 was the nadir and that an upward path lies ahead.
James A. Haught is the editor of the Charleston Gazette in West Virginia.
CFI SUMMIT
OCTOBER 24-27 2013
TACOMA, WASHINGTON
Joint Conference of the Council for Secular Humanism, Center for Inquiry, and Committee for Skeptical Inquiry
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