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Other Title: A Strange Evolution: When Fundagelicals Loved the ACLU Long, long ago, when I was a wee bright-eyed Pentecostal lass, I had a run-in with an anti-theist college professor. I wrote about it a few years ago, but I always intended to come back to that story because there was a part I hadnt mentioned at the time. You see, my evangelical peers had an instantand unanimousresponse to the situation when I told them about it. They wanted me to go talk to the ACLU. Does that shock you? Surprise you? It should. Ill tell you about it today. Today, Lord Snow Presides over another strange evolution in fundagelicalism. As I said in that earlier post, it must have been 1988 or 1989. I was a freshman or sophomore, taking a class required for my major. And wow, the professor of this class did. Not. Like. Christians. At. ALL. I was Pentecostal, of course. Back then that made me a fundamentalist. I had a lot of friends in college, almost all of them evangelical. And we brooked no muddying of the terms! Theyd have been offended at the mere suggestion that they were fundamentalists. To them, that term meant dangerous extremism. By contrast and in similar fashion, Id have been offended at being called evangelical. To me, it indicated dangerous laxity. But we shared a deep passion for all things Christian. We got together often to pray, to talk about Christian stuff, and to argue about our different interpretations of this or that Bible verse. I lived in the dorms then, so often these get-togethers occurred in my dorm room or in the lounge downstairs. My memories of those evenings now seem golden-yellow with nostalgia, from the color of the lights and walls there. We shared our daily struggles and triumphs with each other. At the same time, we all tried not to fret whenever the others didnt agree with our arguments or interpretations. Naturally, when this professor got totally out of hand, I shared this concern with my group. The exact conversation is lost to my memory, but my complaint probably went like this: In every class, this guy insults Christians. He looks right at me when he does it, so he knows what hes doing. I cant even concentrateIm always just waiting for the next snide jab. Ugh! He thinks hes just so clever, but I feel attacked and singled out. Nobody likes it when he does this, but I dont know what to say to make him stop. I had no idea what to do. My stress was getting bad enough that I was considering just dropping the class. But I needed it for my major. What Im describing is, in essence, the plot of the first Gods Not Dead movie, right? But my friends didnt suggest a debate about Creationism. They had something else entirely in mind. Every one of them, including my then-boyfriend Biff, suggested I contact the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Yes. You heard me. This group is now one of the most-demonized groups in the entire country. Once fundamentalists merged with evangelicals, creating the foul, lumbering, drooling behemoth that is fundagelicalism, one of the first groups they set up as their tribal enemy was this group of lawyers who are dedicated to protecting peoples rights and liberties. It wasnt always like that though. In the late 1980s, the ACLU was considered a friend to Christians. By 2006, Christianity Today was running pleading op-eds trying to defend it. By 2015, someone was whining at the misleadingly-named Reason.com about how the ACLU was being totally meeeeeeeeeeean to bigoted Christians. Today, fundagelicals take it as a point of doctrine that the ACLU has it out for them specifically, and specifically that this crusade against them is happening jus fer bein Christian. Back in my college days, Christians enjoyed a position of uncontested dominance in popular culture. Nobody could even imagine a future in which Christians were anything but an effortless majority, much less no longer the arbiters of cultural mores. We had a great respect for higher education, though we still thought that the inspiration of the Holy Ghost could make up for it. We saw ourselves as the future leaders of our country. Even Ia womancould imagine a future as a professional in the sciences. And we certainly didnt see watchdog groups as anything but helpers to us. We were doing nothing wrong, and so we had nothing to fear from any such groups. Wow, a lot can happen in a few decades, right? Somewhere in those intervening decades, Christians began subscribing to a totally different narrative about the ACLU. Their stunning about-face didnt happen in a vacuum, of course. Those were also the years in which they began engaging in their cruelest, most extremist culture wars. The ACLU stood against their constant, nonstop attempts to hijack American law and culture, and so the ACLU became their most dreaded enemies. But fundagelicals dont think they changed at all. To them, the ACLU changed. Ive no doubt that their elders cant even remember a time when Christians thought anything on the topic but what they think now. But I do. When my friends suggested this course of action, I felt unnerved. I wasnt hesitating because I dreaded the help of a tribal enemy. No, I was simply nervous about tangling with lawyers and court cases. It felt like a lot of trouble over something that might be able to be resolved in some other way. But even the older guys at my church thought it was a great idea. One of them, a genial deacon, was ready to make some phone calls. No, Brother Flowers, I told him. Please, not yet. Though the idea made me want to throw up from dread, I decided to talk to the professor first. And that proved to be all that was necessary. Unlike Dr. Radisson in the dumb Christian movie, this real instructor toned down his sniping, and I was able to continue taking the class with no further stress. I got a good grade in it, even. Even more than that, though, I wonder who the first right-wing Christian was who went from HOORAY, the ACLU is helping to stop others from infringing on our rights! to Whoa, why is the ACLU now stopping us from doing what we want to do? I think there must have been a first Christian to make that observation, back then. But they werent quite self-aware enough to make that vital connection: that the ACLU that had once helped them and now opposed them was doing so because they were now the oppressors, not the ones in need of help against oppression. See, back then my tribe seemed like they had a faint understanding of why we needed the ACLU. America was a secular country, yes. But sometimes a legislative group might make a law that pushed against religious peoples rights. And sometimes someone in authority might get out of hand, like my professor had, and maybe that person wouldnt be reasonable when asked to stop. Thats why it was so vitally important that we had a legal watchdog group that was willing to step in between oppressed citizens and those figures of authority who had crossed boundaries. None of us specifically talked about it like that, but its how I sure as heck thought of the situation. The ACLU was our friendnot our enemy. It was part of that very necessary system of checks and balances upon powerwhere rubber met the roadwhere the buck stopped. No wonder right-wing Christians today hate this group. Theyre focused single-mindedly on power, and consequently arent real fans of obstacles to their overreach that they cant simply steamroll, trample, or ignore. Nor have they ever been fans of abiding by rules that everybody has to follow. When a group of people enjoy unwarranted perks and privileges for decades and centuries, losing even a little of them can feel an awful lot like persecution. Instead of seeing the ACLUs firm opposition to fundagelicals culture warring as maybe a sign that theyre overstepping boundaries, fundagelicals are instead seeing that opposition as a sign that Satans gotten into this onetime friends heart. One absolutely hysterical Catholic forum outright calls the ACLU Satans Army. The poster breathlessly talks about his suspicions that the leader of the ACLU isGASP!!! OMG!!!a militant gay, which appears to mean someone who absolutely wont put up with his bigotry. The posters main issue with the ACLU appears to be their campaigns against bigotry, in fact. Though he did get some pushback from some of the posters, most of them were totally on board with his shrill denunciation. They were so outraged about the ACLU that they couldnt think of a more serious accusation to fling at them than simply stating that they were directly affiliated with their religions worst boogeyman. (They were Catholic, not Protestant, but there isnt any difference between their respective ultra-conservative members anymore, really; theyve been merging ever since they teamed up for their cynically-manufactured culture war against abortion.) This bizarre hate hard-on for the ACLU is about par for the course for Christians since I left the religion and it went full-throttle extremist. If anything, Christians have only grown more extreme in their hatred and vitriol year by year. And as with everything in that end of the religion, theres a reason why this is happening. Often these Christians dont even have any idea what the ACLU is or what it doeslike this pastor, who thinks the ACLU is Marxist. He doesnt appear to have the faintest idea why the lawsuits he names happened, but bless his little cotton socks, that isnt stopping him from making some wild speculations. But he does dimly senseas do his bunkmates in their tent of wackadoodlerythat the ACLU stands between him and his tribes goal of domination. That opposition is what makes the ACLU evil, to extremist Christians. Of course, when we remember that they define evil as, largely, anybody who opposes them in their grab for power, the picture comes into sharper focus. Their leaders egg them on in this hatred, and neither they nor their followers actually look for themselves to see that why yes, the ACLU has steadfastly and constantly defended Christians religious rights. And I could have been one of the Christians they defended, in the late 1980s, back when I was a bright-eyed, true-blue little Pentecostal lass. Oh, but that was back before fundagelicals saw the ACLU as the enemy, and back before theyd made themselves the enemy of rights and liberties. Now, years after leaving the religion, I look at a Christians opinion about the ACLU as a barometer that tells me what kind of person they are. If theyre aware of the ACLUs function and necessity in a secular country with robust protections for individuals liberties and are completely on board with that idea, then theyre probably all right. Probably. If they freak out about demons and get frothy-mouthed about their weirdly-defined, self-serving version of religious liberty, then I know to avoid that person. So I suppose their war against the ACLU has accomplished somethingfor us at least. Poster Comment: ... shaking head ... Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 18.
#1. To: Gatlin (#0)
Tater, America lost its love for the ACLU years ago. The ACLU is a putrid, cesspool of communists and has no connection to liberties, freedoms and rights.
+100. And NOTHING BUT. No real American supports the subversive policies of the ACLU and its close fascist-Commie cousin, the SPLC.
I dont know if you consider the folks on the list below to be real Americans, but it would be a logical conclusion that based on what the ACLU did for these CONSERVATIVE Americans, that they probably do fully support the ACLU on certain causes. The ACLU even helped Rush Limbaugh ACLU Asks Court to Protect Confidentiality of Rush Limbaugh's Medical Records. The ACLU defended Ann Coulter after the conservative pundit cancelled a speech at the University of California, Berkeley, citing security concerns. The ACLU defended Milo Yiannopoulos right to free speech after D.C.s transit removed the conservative authors ads.. The ACLU defended a Confederate veterans group that wanted the state of Texas to approve a specialty license plate with the Confederate flag. The state denied the plate, and the veterans group sued Texas for violating its free speech. When Chick-fil-A president Dan Cathy said in 2012 he believes marriage is between a man and a woman, city mayors in Boston and Chicago wanted to give the Christian- owned restaurant the boot. But the ACLU very publicly had Chick-fil-A's back. When Congress was debating renewing the Patriot Act (the 2001 law that allowed the National Security Agency to collect Americans' phone data) the ACLU and the tea party started running TV ads together calling for the end of the NSA program. The head of the ACLU and the president of Tea Party Patriots co-wrote an op-ed in The Des Moines Register on the issue. When Republican mega-donors Charles and David Koch announced a Koch-funded public campaign for criminal justice reform, the ACLU hopped on board. And the list goes on ...
How did the ACLU get Olive North out of prison when he was never there?
Ooops. Notice the parsing of the word, "defending"; The ACLU *never* went to court to sue on behalf of any "conservative" or conservative org. They merely go on record half-heartedly as a stunt. "Publicly having their back" = BS. The ACLU reminds me of what the Soviets did ONLY once the US dropped their nukes on Japan; They "declared war" on Japan. IOW, phony displays of support. The ACLU actually "defended" NONE of those entities Gatlin mentioned in a court of law. Thus, his list is just "FAKE-DEFENSE".
In a legal brief filed in a Federal appeals cour, the liberties union said the conspiracy indictment against the defendants must be dismissed on grounds that their testimony before Congress was being used against them in violation of the Constitution. The three testified under grants of limited immunity from prosecution.
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