Saturday, October 23, 2010

Masters of mendacity

Sarah Palin says that the Constitution tells us that our "Unalienable rights" come from God. They don't, nor does the Biblical God deviate from the endless list of things he'll incinerate you for long enough to get into life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Ask the Amorites. We're commanded to kill their children or be destroyed by old God-O-love. Ask Job. "Shut up or I'll kill you along with your wife and kids" is far more typical. Freedom to worship or not worship your own gods after your own custom? Freedom to choose your own government? Fughettaboutit. That the authority of Government comes from God and not from the governed is as antithetical to our constitution as an electron is to a positron and as Palin is to Jefferson.

But it's more than just stupidity on her part. It's more than ignorance. It's more than the will to power and the lack of conscience that might prevent a better person from playing upon the passions of the ignorant rabble who listen to her, it's a slap in the face to those who after mankind's long struggle with God appointed kings and heresy trials, the persecution of variant religions, divinely justified genocide and slavery, managed to found a government free of the notion that only God or his self appointed agents can found a legitimate government. Far from being behind the 1789 Constitution, religious conservatives who hadn't already fled to Canada and the Bahamas or back to England, opposed it for Biblical reasons. To oppose George III, rex Dei gratia, was to oppose the will of God and the Bible is the source of that idea, not the enlightenment philosophers of the era.

Sharon Angle says the constitution isn't even about government. "Government isn't what our founding fathers put into the constitution" she says. dumb questions are hardest to answer and dumb assertions of this magnitude are virtually unassailable and those who make them are ineducable, so why try?

But if it's a race for the Master of Mendacity degree, Glenn Beck is ahead of the pack. Commies like Franklin Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson separated us from our history -- were trying "to separate us from our Constitution and God" he tells us -- hoping, I suppose that putting the words next to each other will generate the illusion that a document banning state recognition of religious institutions is somehow the product of religious belief. Are we trying to separate anyone from the law, by interpreting it as supporting freedom of religion, freedom of speech, the freedom to protest and petition and discuss? Are we trying to invent a new history by reading the source documents? Are we trying to separate Beck from whatever bizarre religious beliefs he has or from the magic underwear he wears? Only in his paranoid fantasies.

We're trying to keep him and his cronies and his bronze age taboos out of our religious lives, which although that may be a slap in the face to his imagined God, it's what mine approves of. It's hard to know whether such conniving, power seeking serpents truly believe the apple they offer us is good to eat, but the audience of both these creatures is uneducated, opinionated and as chock full O' nuts as a New York coffee shop. What they don't know is dangerous. What they think they know is calamitous.

What the constitution is about, what it says, what it was meant to accomplish and what the motivations for it were is not a mystery. It's meant to be flexible; to be able to change to suit changing times, but none of the claims made by the dime store revolutionaries in tricorn hats are remotely true. Their concept of freedom resembles the tyranny Jefferson was so passionate to oppose. Their concept of history is a mythology written by enemies of freedom.

7 comments:

  1. Another masterpiece from Capt. Fogg. The dinosaurs are suitably wowed. At base, the unreasonables are bent upon obliterating all conception of the rule of law. Their 1984-ish ways with logic and history serve them well in that regard -- they just appropriate the terms used by sane, civil people and make them mean anything they like. No need for consistency from one minute to the next.

    As for me, can't stay long -- I'm hoping to go for a nice bike ride today, if this drizzly, dreary socialist weather cooperates.

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  2. It's really intolerable that a clown like Beck has any crediblity with any group in this country. But the fact that he does and that he makes oodles of money by being a resounding asshat is among the many reasons I despair for this country.

    His latest nincompoopery about not believing in evolution because he's never seen a half man, half monkey is too cute by half.

    By stating such asininity with his absusrd fake conviction, he's appealing to the dumbest of the dumb--his base--the people who hope to gain control of the House and Senate.

    My fellow Americans, we've been through dark periods like this before, and the outcome was not good.

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  3. Bravo Captain!

    There is nothing I can add...I am so speechless right now, it seems that everytime you turn around someone on the right is outdoing the last absurdity.

    It has all got to be based upon racism because it sure isn't logical.

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  4. "...a government free of the notion that only God or his self appointed agents can found a legitimate government."

    Mighty, good, and true. Thank you, Capt.

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  5. Just as Elisabeth Kübler-Ross outlined the five stages of grief as one faces their own mortality, perhaps the collective response to the end of the American Century can be similarly described: Denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. Right now, it seems, the masters of mendacity represent the denial and anger phase.

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  6. Well said, Capt. Somehow I think that the Tea Party adherents are unaware of the age of enlightenment. Thanks for spurring my own musings as to the significance of "unalienable rights."

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  7. I'm very happy that I can print such things where everyone won't jump on me. It's no longer possible in the "real" world and I've lost friends whom I considered to be intelligent and educated for hinting that Beck wasn't some sort of Messiah.

    It's not that I think the future looks gloomy, it's that I've begun to write off the "American experiment" as an abject failure.

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