The Army of God marching for Bush

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Marksist
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The Army of God marching for Bush

Post by Marksist »

Times online-UK
Voters in Florida are voting for Jesus — and John Kerry it seems, is not his candidate

IF JESUS were voting in next month’s presidential election, Pastor Jim Henry frequently tells his congregation of 11,000 evangelicals, the Son of God would back the candidate most supportive of family values and the Bible.

“And George Bush cares about those issues and that’s why he’s energised the evangelical base,” Pastor Henry told The Times yesterday inside his sleek, modern office at Orlando’s vast First Baptist Church. “And I’ve preached from the pulpit. I’ve told them that if they don’t go out and vote, they should be ashamed.”

For Karl Rove, Mr Bush’s chief political adviser, those words will be electoral manna. Mr Rove is a fervent believer in the power of America’s Religious Right to decide the election. It is now an article of faith inside the White House that if white born-again and evangelical Christians turn out in big numbers, Mr Bush cannot lose.

In the four years since the disputed 2000 election, Mr Rove has been obsessed by his conviction that up to four million evangelical Christians who should have voted for Mr Bush stayed at home, partly because of last-minute revelations about Mr Bush’s 1976 arrest for drink-driving.

Since then, Mr Bush has done everything possible to boost turnout among all religious voters, but has been particularly assiduous in his efforts to energise the predominately white, evangelical Christian Right.

Born a high-church Episcopalian, before turning to evangelical Methodism when he gave up drinking in 1986, Mr Bush laces all his speeches with religious rhetoric, has outlawed partial birth abortion, called for a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage, opposed stem-cell research and talks often about the power of Jesus Christ in his life — the essence of evangelical faith.

It is easy to see why. The Religious Right in America is a massive, largely Republican, “army of God”, with huge numbers in critical swing states such as Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Iowa. If it marches to the polling stations on November 2, Mr Bush’s faith is likely to be handsomely rewarded.

White Protestants in America who describe themselves as either born-again or evangelical account for a quarter of the electorate, a bigger voting bloc than blacks and Hispanics combined.

A recent poll by the National Annenberg Election Survey estimated that born-agains and evangelicals account for 36 per cent of registered voters in Missouri, 27 per cent in Ohio, 30 per cent in Iowa and 22 per cent in Pennsylvania. Recent polls show that up to 80 per cent of those voters prefer Mr Bush. Another survey found that 54 per cent of born-agains plan to vote for Mr Bush, while a massive 90 per cent of evangelicals plan to do so.

Calling for a constitutional ban on gay marriage, for example, was Machiavellian in its political calculation. Almost certain to die in Congress, the move forced Mr Kerry to oppose it. James Dobson, of the group Focus on the Family, now calls the fight against gay marriage “our D-Day or Gettysburg or Stalingrad.”

In Florida, the biggest prize among the battleground states, a third of voters describe themselves as evangelical. The state has more than 2,000 Baptist churches and a Baptist membership of nearly 1.1 million. Pastor Henry has been registering voters at his services since June. He does not tell them who to vote for, but it is clear that Mr Kerry, a practising Roman Catholic who backs abortion rights, is not the evangelicals’ favourite.

Another poll by the Barna Group found that Mr Bush also has a 63 per cent to 36 per cent lead among Catholic voters. If these voters need any more encouragement not to vote for Mr Kerry, the Republican National Committee directs them to a website: www.kerrywrongforevangelicals.com.

The party also sent a mass mailing to voters in West Virginia and Arkansas last month telling them that if Mr Kerry won, Bible-reading might be banned.

“George Bush is a man of principle,” Pastor Henry said. “Senator Kerry has taken the opposite stance on the values issues, right down the line. His wife says that she wants to push the gay rights agenda. To push a wrong lifestyle contradicts the Bible’s standards. I’ll think you’ll find that after this election, the evangelical vote has picked up a lot.”
Emphasis mine.

These douche bag religious leaders should stop preaching politics from the pulpit, and those that do should have their tax-exempt status and any "faith-based incentives" revoked.
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Durandal
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Post by Durandal »

STOP GENERALIZING!! WAAAAAHH!!
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Bertie Wooster
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Post by Bertie Wooster »

I did national telephone surveys for the Center for Survey Research and Analysis at Uconn for two years and I've got to tell you that when I conducted national political polls, that the Born-Again Christians were very vocal during the interviews about the fact that they were Born-Agains, much much more than any other religious group, and frequently referred to their religion when giving their opinion about national issues.

I didn't encounter this pattern in any other religious group. Until reading this article, I didn't realize that they in fact make up such a large percentage of the American electorate.
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The Kernel
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Post by The Kernel »

Bush has a big base among the evangelicals, no question there. I'd still say that this has less to do with religion then with ideological similarities (racism, homophobia, etc).
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The Dark
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Post by The Dark »

:roll: I honestly don't know how people can stand to stay at First Baptist of Orlando. He always comes across as condescending to me, but perhaps that's because I'm a non-evangelical Methodist, so I'm much less willing to unquestioningly accept what a preacher says.
Stanley Hauerwas wrote:[W]hy is it that no one is angry at the inequality of income in this country? I mean, the inequality of income is unbelievable. Unbelievable. Why isn’t that ever an issue of politics? Because you don’t live in a democracy. You live in a plutocracy. Money rules.
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