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Republican Gomorrah: Inside the Movement That Shattered the Party

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  • Republican Gomorrah: Inside the Movement That Shattered the Party

    Republican Gomorrah: Inside the Movement That Shattered the Party


    asbarez
    Friday, June 3rd, 2011

    Republican Gomorrah
    BOOK REVIEW BY LEVON KIRAKOSIAN

    Republican Gomorrah
    Max Blumenthal
    Nationbooks
    Available at your local bookstore and anywhere else that books are sold.

    In April 1915, the snow had just begun to melt from the peaks of Mount
    Ararat and run into the villages nestled in its valleys. In the shadow
    of the mountain lay the idyllic town of Van, which the Rushdoony clan
    had called home for nearly 2,000 years. That spring brought
    catastrophe for the Rushdoony's. The Ottoman army laid siege to their
    town, hoping to quash the only fortress of resistence against the
    military crusade to eradicate the Armenian race. When the Ottoman
    cannons opened fire, Y.K. Rushdoony and his wife fled for the hills,
    embarking on a harrowing horseback trek westward through Europe, a
    voyage across the Atlantic, and a trip from one end of the American
    continent to the other, finally to begin a new life in California.

    In 1916, the year of their arrival in the United States, Y.K.'s wife
    gave birth to their second son, Roussas John `RJ' Rushdoony. (R.J.'s
    older brother had been one of the 1.5 million who perished in the
    Armenian Genocide.) ......., and as a son of survivors of a recent
    genocide the young Rushdoony was raised on tales of the slaughter that
    uprooted his family's ancient Christian heritage. The above is an
    excerpt from Max Blumenthal's book, Republican Gomorrah: Inside the
    Movement That Shattered the Party. Soon `RJ' Rushdoony became an
    ultraconservative Orthodox Presbyterian minister, started his campaign
    to `restore purity' to the fallen world and nurtured the sprouting
    conservative counterculture.

    R.J. Rushdoony, who's almost unheard of, influenced the Christian
    right and provided them with their plan for what they saw as the
    promised land, which is a actually theocratic dystopia, a virtual
    hell. He advocated substituting theocracy for the Constitution, wrote,
    thousand-word tomes explaining how this would work out during the
    1960s, during the battles for desegregation, and the extreme right.
    Under Rushdoony's plan, disobedient children, witches, blasphemers,
    adulterers, abortion doctors would all be executed, according to,
    Leviticus case law.

    As extreme as it sounds, it had an enormous impact on the right-wing
    evangelical movement as it moved from the pews into the political
    realm, because it gave them something to campaign for, even if what
    they were going to get was going to be more along the lines of a
    Shattered Republican Party.

    It was astonishing to find at the center of a radical theocratic
    movement that has influenced and provided a moral blueprint for the
    emerging conservative counter culture, RJ Rushdoony, a son of Armenian
    immigrants. After I finished reading this book I kept thinking about
    RJ Rushdoony and asking myself how could a son of Armenian immigrants,
    who witnessed the annihilation of their people, possess such
    intolerance for those who have been pushed out to the margins of
    society. Strangely, I have seen this on a personal level meeting young
    men who have emigrated to the U.S. from socially conservative
    countries of the Middle East, however, not to such an extreme level
    from those who have lived their entire lives and have been educated in
    the U.S

    Reasonably one would think that a man whose family escaped mass murder
    and were victims of the same ideology would go on to encourage
    compassion, solidarity, and understanding, but Rushdoony went the
    other way, taking literally the 613 laws in the Book of Leviticus.

    In 1973 RJ Rushdoony wrote The Institutes of Biblical Law.his magnum
    opus, outlined his philosophy of Christian Reconstructionism and it
    greatly interested racist southern pastors in America, particularly
    Jerry Falwell. Rushdoony's writings were a major influence on the
    Christian Right's philosophy. In his book he advocates capital
    punishment for `disobedient children, unchaste women, apostates,
    blasphemers, practitioners of witchcraft, adulterers.' He wanted
    nothing less than to grasp the reins of government to force a
    theocratic society; there are so many parallels to the goals and
    aspirations of the Taliban.

    Gary North, the Presbyterian Christian Reconstructionist, is his
    son-in-law, and, while not backing down on the mass death penalty,
    advocates stoning rather than burning at the stake, because stoning is
    cheaper. As for who would be doing the killing it would be Christians.
    We thought that such ideology could be harbored in foreign places such
    as Afghanistan regrettably it is being advocated in the U.S. today.

    During the early 1950's Rushdoony befriend Robert Welch who shared his
    visceral hatred for anyone who liberal tendencies. Welch had retired
    as a candy manufacturer and used his wealth to create the John Birch
    Society. (Its headquarters was in Glendale California.) This fringe
    group gained notoriety by red baiting prominent public figures such as
    President Truman, President Eisenhower, and Allen Dulles, director of
    the CIA. On the fateful day that President John F. Kennedy visited
    Dallas, November 22, 1963, Birchers welcomed him by mounting posters
    around the city showing the president's head at the center of rifle
    crosshairs. Rushdoony was impressed by the Birchers actions, he wrote,
    `The key to the John Birch Society's effectiveness has been a plan of
    operation which has strong resemblance to the early church.'

    For the leadership of the Christian right, race was the issue that
    galvanized their political activism. But as America grew increasingly
    weary of overt, ugly displays of Dixieland racism, their resentment
    transmuted into a more palatable moral crusade. The strategy to win
    that crusade -propelled the Christian right close to Rushdoony's
    theocratic vision of government.

    The G.O.P. of the 21st century bears scant resemblance to The Party of
    Eisenhower. It has been co-opted by authoritarians like James Dobson
    and Tom DeLay, people who, as predicted by psychologist Erich Fromm
    nearly 70 years earlier, in an attempt to deny their own human flaws
    have risen to power by donning the armor of religious, bullying
    self-righteousness and imposing their misdirected anger on others.

    The Party of President Eisenhower has been seized by the religious
    right the Republican Party of today bears very little likeness to that
    of the G.O, P. of Lincoln, Roosevelt and Eisenhower.

    President Eisenhower was fascinated throughout his presidency (and
    probably before), with Eric Hoffer's book The True Believer which was
    likely influenced by social psychologist and psychoanalyst Erich
    Fromm's Escape From Freedom. It is the latter who argues that popular
    movements are people eager to surrender their freedom to a cause,
    people who seek personal transcendence through authoritarian political
    parties, causes and heroes. They allow the tyranny of the majority and
    permit small groups to control their movement why not their Party.
    Hoffer puts it this way: `Faith in a holy cause is to a considerable
    extent a substitute for the lost faith in ourselves.' Blumenthal
    throughout his book refers to Fromm`s teachings as he explores the
    many scandals, cover-ups and hypocrisies of the ever more radical
    Republican Party.

    This hardbound book was a fascinating read, Max Blumenthal has written
    for The Nation Magazine, Media Matters For America, the Huffington
    Report and the Daily Beast, which constitutes much of his reporting. I
    learned a great deal about the Republican Party, the Christian Right's
    culture of personal crises, and that they're as out of control as
    America's future is. I highly recommend it so you may better
    understand the sad, but true story behind this mass movement.

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