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War of the worldviews
Church & State, May 2003 by Whittle, Jim
Family Research Council, Washington Allies Fight For Religious Right Agenda In Nation's Capital
To Gary Bauer, the United States is in the midst of two great conflicts. One is the fight against international terrorism. The other is a culture clash over "the meaning of America."
Addressing the Family Research Council's Washington Briefing March 15, Bauer said our nation is in a "war between two worldviews."
"A good bit of the country," said Bauer, "thinks the meaning of America is it's a place where you get to do whatever you want. Different strokes for different folks; if it feels good, do it.... And then there are people like us who believe with all our hearts that that was NOT what the country was supposed to be about. We believe that it's supposed to be a place built on ordered liberty under God."
Bauer, former president of the FRC, made it clear that he wants to do the ordering on God's behalf.
"Somebody," he said, "gets to put their views into practice through our laws. And the winner of this big war between those two worldviews is going to win our children."
Concluded Bauer, "In the war over the meaning of America, we're going to win."
Bauer's call to arms was enthusiastically received by the audience of 300 Religious Right activists gathered for a three-day strategy session at the Willard Hotel in Washington, D.C. Celebrating its 20th anniversary this year, the FRC has slowly grown into one of the most powerful Religious Right lobbies in the nation's capital, although it is still relatively unknown to the general public.
The tax-exempt group, founded by religious broadcaster James Dobson in 1983 as part of his Focus on the Family empire, today sports a $10.3 million budget and an influence in Washington that far exceeds its membership base. Billing itself as organization that touts family, human life and the "Judeo-Christian worldview," FRC, in fact, operates as a right-wing GOP political outfit, harshly attacking Democrats and goading Republicans toward ultraconservative positions.
Despite its mainstream-sounding name, the group presses for an extreme agenda, seeking to undercut church-state separation and bring American law into conformity with evangelical Christian theology. FRC attacks public education and lobbies to divert public funds to religious schools and "faith-based" social services. Other goals include a ban on all abortions, defunding of population control programs and the outlawing of cloning even for medical research purposes. The group opposes civil rights protections for gays, campaign finance reform and federal arts funding, and it advocates slashing federal taxes, including repeal of the estate tax.
This year, FRC is campaigning hard for Senate approval of President George W. Bush's federal court nominees, in the hope that right-leaning judges will roll back the separation of church and state and advance its theocratic agenda.
In a recent email update, FRC President Ken Connor lambasted Democratic senators for standing in Bush's way.
Calling the Democrats' position on judges a "frontal assault on the Constitution," Connor observed, "In their effort to deny the president the fruits of his election, the Democrats, in effect, have declared war on the Constitution."
The FRC's clout in Washington - and its partisan bent - are reflected in the luminaries who showed up on its briefing dais. Among the speakers were Attorney General John Ashcroft and Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.). Kay Coles James, Bush's director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, also spoke, along with pundits and activists such as columnist George Will, former attorney general Ed Meese, former Christian Coalition executive director (and Georgia Republican Party chair) Ralph Reed and Dobson, who remains the key force behind the FRC.
Ashcroft, a long-time Religious Right crusader whose confirmation as attorney general was enthusiastically supported by the FRC, was clearly a crowd favorite. Assuring the audience that their ideas were "welcome" in Washington, he recounted what the Bush administration is doing to fight terrorism, exploitation of children and pornography and called for action on Bush's judicial appointees.
Pointing to a Senate decision to ban some late-term abortions, Ashcroft said, "If you don't believe you have an impact in this city, take a look at the vote in the United States Senate yesterday and then go 16 blocks down Pennsylvania Avenue and think about the fact that the president has indicated he will sign that legislation." The ballroom erupted in cheers and applause.
Ashcroft also singled out Dee Wampler, one of the activists in the audience, who is a life-long friend of the attorney general and a native of his hometown. Wampler, a Christian Coalition leader in Missouri, was at the gathering to promote his book The Myth of Separation Between Church & State, a self-published work that argues there is "no high or impregnable wall of separation between church and state." Copies of Wampler's book were distributed free at the FRC literature table.