Sunday, April 02, 2006

Kevin Phillips: The Republicans Are Pushing America Toward a Theocracy

Few observers of American politics have been or are as shrewd and insightful as Kevin Phillips, who predicted and helped engineer the Republican seizure of the South and the Sunbelt (his term) in general. Now, he sees the coalition of religious fundamentalists and debt-driven financial interests pushing America to the brink of disaster. Key excerpts:
The political corollary -- fascinating but appalling -- is the recent transformation of the Republican presidential coalition. Since the election of 2000 and especially that of 2004, three pillars have become central: the oil-national security complex, with its pervasive interests; the religious right, with its doctrinal imperatives and massive electorate; and the debt-driven financial sector, which extends far beyond the old symbolism of Wall Street.

Over a quarter-century of Bush presidencies and vice presidencies, the Republican Party has slowly become the vehicle of all three interests -- a fusion of petroleum-defined national security; a crusading, simplistic Christianity; and a reckless credit-feeding financial complex. The three are increasingly allied in commitment to Republican politics. On the most important front, I am beginning to think that the Southern-dominated, biblically driven Washington GOP represents a rogue coalition, like the Southern, proslavery politics that controlled Washington until Abraham Lincoln's election in 1860.
And further:
Besides providing critical support for invading Iraq -- widely anathematized by preachers as a second Babylon -- the Republican coalition has also seeded half a dozen controversies in the realm of science. These include Bible-based disbelief in Darwinian theories of evolution, dismissal of global warming, disagreement with geological explanations of fossil-fuel depletion, religious rejection of global population planning, derogation of women's rights and opposition to stem cell research. This suggests that U.S. society and politics may again be heading for a defining controversy such as the Scopes trial of 1925. That embarrassment chastened fundamentalism for a generation, but the outcome of the eventual 21st century test is hardly assured.

These developments have warped the Republican Party and its electoral coalition, muted Democratic voices and become a gathering threat to America's future. No leading world power in modern memory has become a captive of the sort of biblical inerrancy that dismisses modern knowledge and science. The last parallel was in the early 17th century, when the papacy, with the agreement of inquisitional Spain, disciplined the astronomer Galileo for saying that the sun, not the Earth, was the center of our solar system.
Folks, this man knows whereof he speaks. He is a trenchant, deeply informed critic of the organized crime cartel known as the Bush Family and its ties to Armageddon-desiring right wing religious fanatics. I'm going to get his new book and I think you might be interested, too.
Our nation is in mortal danger. The Republican Party is responsible for this mortal danger. Stopping them from destroying our beloved country must be job one for every true patriot.

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