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Cult Watch Title: Tea Parties Stir Evangelicals' Fears The rise of a new conservative grass roots fueled by a secular revulsion at government spending is stirring fears among leaders of the old conservative grass roots, the evangelical Christian right. A reeling economy and the massive bank bailout and stimulus plan were the triggers for a resurgence in support for the Republican Party and the rise of the tea party movement. But theyve also banished the social issues that are the focus of many evangelical Christians to the background. And while health care legislation has brought social and economic conservatives together to fight government funding of abortion, some social conservative leaders have begun to express concern that tea party leaders dont care about their issues, while others object to the personal vitriol against President Barack Obama, whose personal conduct many conservative Christians applaud. Theres a libertarian streak in the tea party movement that concerns me as a cultural conservative, said Bryan Fischer, director of Issue Analysis for Government and Public Policy at the American Family Association. The tea party movement needs to insist that candidates believe in the sanctity of life and the sanctity of marriage. As far as I can tell [the tea party movement] has a politics thats irreligious. I cant see how some of my fellow conservatives identify with it, said Richard Cizik, who broke with a major evangelical group over his support for government action on climate change, but who remains largely in line with the Christian right on social issues. The younger Evangelicals who I interact with are largely turned off by the tea party movement by the incivility, the name-calling, the pathos of politics. Theres no centralized tea party organization, and anecdotes suggest that many tea party participants hold socially conservative views. But those views have been little in evidence at movement gatherings or in public statements, and are sometimes deliberately excluded from the political agenda. The groups coordinating them eschew social issues, and a new Contract From America, has become an article of concern on the social right. The contract, sponsored by the grass-roots Tea Party Patriots as well as Washington groups such as FreedomWorks and Americans for Tax Reform, asks supporters to choose the 10 most important issues from a menu of 21 choices that makes no mention of socially conservative priorities such as gay marriage and abortion. Theyre free to do it, but they cant say [the contract] represents America, said Family Research Council President Tony Perkins, a veteran of the Christian right. If they do it theyre lying. Groups such as FreedomWorks, said Perkins, bring a libertarian bias that doesnt represent the true tea parties. Brendan Steinhauser, the director of federal and state campaigns at FreedomWorks, responded that the contract represents activists priorities.
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#2. To: Brian S (#0)
Maybe some of your fellow conservatives aren't trying to change the US into a religious dictatorship.
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