The religious right has splintered, but hard times could bring it back.
For conservatives, 2008 is shaping up to be a year as baffling as it is dreadful. For Americans under 40, it seems incredible that the Republican platform should not be rooted in the moral assumptions of traditionally minded Christian groups allied with conservative economic stances and an aggressive foreign policy. And yet that familiar model fits none of the party's likely presidential candidates -- not evangelical Mike Huckabee, with his economic populism, or pro-choice and pro-gay rights Rudy Giuliani. Neither John McCain nor Mitt Romney convinces many people that his conversion to moralist positions is anything other than a matter of convenience.
Evangelical voters are deeply divided, and even religious voters who remain concerned about abortion and homosexuality are deeply unhappy about Iraq, charges of torture and runaway climate change. At least for the present, the dependable Republican coalition forged during the 1970s looks terminally ill.
These strains are easier to understand, however, if we recall how improbable the seemingly inevitable GOP coalition has always been. The alliances among the Republicans' diverse constituencies grew out of a particular set of historical circumstances.
The conservative coalition is the product of events that more or less coincided with the doom-laden presidency of Jimmy Carter. Between 1977 and 1980, even Americans of quite moderate views became desperately alarmed at the signs of social decay at home, the collapse of the nation's international standing and a hair-raising economic situation. This was the era of the Iran hostage crisis; of gasoline lines and surging inflation; of booming violent crime, urban decay and the worrying, fast transformation of sexual values. Not for the first time in American history, many voters saw the crisis in religious terms, as the consequence of a nation that had betrayed its divine mission.
Building on a widespread evangelical revival, religious conservatives mobilized a substantial voting bloc alarmed by what seemed like a literally apocalyptic situation. They preached the necessity of rebuilding America's defenses and restraining the liberal government that they held guilty of causing many undesirable changes. Although these ideas had broad appeal, conservative religious believers offered a rock-solid electoral foundation through the Reagan years and beyond.
Yet for all its power, the conservative coalition always had some odd and even unnatural alignments. Instead of asking why the alliance now seems troubled, we should rather ask how it survived as long as it did.
After all, there was no natural reason why the lower- and middle-income people who faithfully attend evangelical churches should favor the free-trade policies that have over the last quarter of a century wiped out much of the U.S. manufacturing base. Ordinary evangelical voters are disproportionately unlikely to be represented in the sectors of the economy that have boomed most conspicuously in recent years -- finance and high-tech, services and information. It was only a matter of time before religious believers started asking where their true interests might lie. Politically, evangelicals are up for grabs. Remember when commentators discovered such strange creatures as the Reagan Democrats? Perhaps this will be the year of Obama Republicans or even Hillary's megachurches.
But before we hold a funeral for the Reagan coalition, we should note how easily the circumstances of the late 1970s could repeat themselves. Already, looking at inflation rates and oil prices, journalists are drawing comparisons with the events of 1979-1980 and projecting a recession at least as bad as those years.
Now remember two things. First, there was no single issue or grievance that drove religious believers to the conservative banner. Rather, it was a generalized sense of threat to traditional ideals of community and family, and above all, the undermining of gender roles. Conservative rhetoric did a wonderful job of promising to restore traditional manliness by shoring up the family at home and reasserting American strength abroad.
Second, the real beneficiaries of Carter's 1976 victory turned out to be the Republicans, who managed to avoid blame for the problems of the late '70s.
Now imagine the potential reaction against any Democratic administration elected this November. Suppose 2009-2010 brings us a recession and fiscal chaos, coupled with military withdrawal and retrenchment overseas. Once more, we could hear complaints about threatened families and communities at home, of national debility overseas, of the United States again becoming what Richard Nixon called "a pitiful, helpless giant." And as in earlier eras of chaos and confusion, people would likely turn to those religious institutions that seem to offer hope and solidity. Quite possibly, we would be set for a new era of religious-based conservatism, in which the politics of military and moral reconstruction coincided neatly.
In 2008, the religious right may appear to be dying, but it could just be going into hibernation.
Philip Jenkins is the author of many books including "Decade of Nightmares: The End of the 1960s and the Making of Eighties America."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times
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18 Comments so far
Show AllZero Zion Train
When I was just a boy 1984 seemed so far away
but it hitched a ride on the zero Zion train just one digit late
I dreamt a terrorizing thought crime that preempted hate
and the stormland home troupers soon were at my gate
Naught was trashing tables for the money temple changers
as the mount and the shining city on a hill were spewing sulfur
‘bring em on’ echoed in the valley with four horsemen spurred
while the greenback lost a third and the rock of ages stirred
And I was humming get your spot on the zero zion train
one digit is all it takes so we’ve lots of fare to spare
I predicted the break-up of one half of the two corporate/autocratic parties a long time ago. The bloc that Reagan forged was Big Money, Big Bibles, Big Bombs, Big Flags, Big Energy.
But with this breakup, we might have reason to be concerned that Big Bibles tries to contort/influence whatever exists of progressive ideas among the Democrats -- such as conservation, single-payer health care, paid maternal/paternal leave, shorter work-week, and a whole host of other long-forgotten issues that actually affect our daily lives.
I say we might have reason to be concerned because if they contort these causes the way they contort science and reason, they're doomed.
But this all feeds into my analysis in another article here, that left/right are useless terms. The religious "right" is just a social/memetic tool of one of the two corporate/autocratic parties (if we still wish to call them two separate parties).
Reagan and both Bushes have found that if they appoint right-wing judges and take actions against abortion and gay marriage, evangelicals and conservative Catholics will cheerfully vote for candidates whose trickle-down economics comes as a warm yellow stream on their heads. They'll sell their economic interests and constitutional rights for the illusion of security and sanctity.
Heathens. have you forgotten 9-11? Jesus will come down at ground zero, where the greatest crime in the history of humanity occurred, and lead all humanity to Shea stadium for the Last Judgement. The losers will be left out in the parking lot.
The author appears naive about what really counts as the "democracy" organization which runs the U.S. The religionists are nothing more than, and have never been more than, a tool that the criminals manipulate so that they can maintain control over the masses and hence the nation and it's concomitant resources. All of the christian groups are no more important or useful than the war against the minorities (especially the blacks), and the attendant prisons, or the war against the drugs that the government doesn't openly sell, and the attendant prisons, or the mass murder that always attenuates stealing other nation's resources, and the attendant prisons. The business of the U.S. has always been their unvarying business and it's been that way since before the christian organizations were organized.
The corporate governments, being made up of people who are of a mediocre intelligence and of decidedly low moral stature, if such a term as morals could even be applied to such worthless human scum as they are, have finally placed themselves in an untenable position. They have allowed the world to become informed of what kind of evil human beings they truly are and that defining trait can never again be obscured. They have made enemies who will not be placated by silver or gold and who will only be satisfied when the heads of those vile scum are held aloft on the points of bloody pikes.
Of course, anticipating their certain future, those dimwits could submit to the surrender terms and relinquish their ill-gotten gains, and thus save themselves the blissful retirement state of Ariel Sharon, but if I was a betting person I'd be inclined to reckon that their stupid kind will entertain delusions of grandeur until they meet their just end in a similar fashion as did the shameful French at Dien Bien Phu.
The rapture already happened. The evangelicals were left behind. We're here to make their lives a tribulation.
alexnosal: You're right about Americans not waking up to join a revolution. But they will when the economy collapses and we are all equally screwed.
Just checked the DOW after the final bell. It is down over 1000 points since the beginning of the year. And oil is up, and gold is through the roof. I'm still thinking that the lipstick on the pig is going to become transparent in late March to April. I'm actually kinda lookin' forward to the collapse. I agree with the person who said that sometimes things have to get worse be fore they get better.
Oh, and what is coming to America is going to be what came to the USSR in 1991 during their economic meltdown. Maybe even worse.
Hold on to your hats folks! This ride is going to get very weird.
In USSR, the workers often joked that:
"We pretend to work;
they pretend to pay us."
Nothing will accelerate the erosion of 'family values' more than the excessive taxing of the poor and middle class to enrich a few defence contractors, medical companies and Big Oil at the expense of social programs, public transportation and the environment. The bottom line is that the BS of the Neo-Cons sucked in Evangelicals as real bread and butter issues were replaced with marginal crap like gay marriage rights and abortion. Listening to the MSM one would come to the conclusion that the average American is not concerned about feeding their families, job security, slaughtering millions of innocents abroad, our dependency on oil or the size of our pay checks. Instead we're bombarded with the tales of celebrities gone awry or how the privileged got taken advantage of.
I agree with Rebel Farmer too. In the days of the Soviet Union, Americans use to make fun of the fact that voters in Russia could vote for either Stalin or no one at all. Now in America you can either vote for the Corporate American candidate(s) or no one at all.
However a revolution will face tremendous obstacles. Corporate America has developed a system in which they can lock up millions of Americans. The police and military are armed to the teeth and have sworn an allegiance to the establishment. The media has a lock on information and the internet would simply be shut down in case of an uprising. But the biggest obstacle of all is that the average American, while angry and frustrated, is not really sure whom to blame. They have been conditioned (effectively) to believe that our system of democracy works, that news is “fair and balanced†and that what is good for big business, is good for everyone.
Those business interests who dominate conservatism have a two-tier strategy: moderate conservatives who hold the line (often including “liberalsâ€) and issue conservatives who advance the line. Social conservatives comprise the latter while the business elite comprise the former. When moderate conservatism offers too many benefits to the public, profits stagnate and the business elite promotes the issues of social conservatism. When issue conservatives run aground on the shoals of reality, moderate conservatives hold the line. As a result the play of politics remains constantly on the brink, if not the fact of conservative touchdown. The religious right is merely being put on the bench until it again becomes useful.
Rebel Farmer is right. America in 2008 is looking increasingly like Russia in 1908 - Revolution T-9 years and counting.
The bible thumpers ain't ever coming back. They are all going to be looking for their next meal, just like the rest of us. The economic collapse is going to be bipartisan. And the next war is going to be a class war, not a religious one.
And while the people were distracted by the social/cultural issues, the corporate oligarchy took over and hardly anyone noticed. Good luck getting the country back from them, because they do not believe in fairness, social justice, or even giving a sucker an even break. The only path available would require a trip down a river of blood, and I doubt most Americans have the stomach for that, at least not yet.
One fundamentalist said that, after Noah's flood, God had promised that the earth would never again be devastated by floods. According to him, the biblical texts should be included in the "data" used to evaluate climate change and sea level rise.
I am furious about this. Also, this week I went to the library and, as always, looked for new books on climate change. There was one. It discussed climate change in terms of the prophecies in the book of Revelations. The book was in the science section, not in the religion or new age section.
What's next? Maybe we should also add Edgar Cayce's prediction or the Sybilline prophecies just to be one the safe side.
Science, when passed through a sieve of political or religious dogma, ceases to be science.
If there is a god he owes the world an apology.
Hoa binh
Has anyone seen any statistics showing a relationship between people who take out mortgages that are way too big, and people who firmly believe the rapture will take place any time now? I can see how the latter could lead to the former...
Ill bet that these Regressives will be screaming about an invasion of 'Mexican-fetus-eating-gay&married-terrorist cells who hate us for our freedoms' as the election date looms closer.
Don’t these people have any important issue to attend to? What the hell is wrong with you people? Why do you worry about someone else’s ass or uterus? Just mind your own freaking business. Your freedom is being taken away and your Constitution is being shredded by your government, and all you are infatuated with is someone else’s genitals. Shame on all you idiots. Go do your Rapture thing, and leave other people alone.