Yesterday, as I wrote about the presidential aspirations of Newt Gingrich and Mike Huckabee, and how both gentlemen are now doing everything in their power to position themselves as the candidate of choice of the religious right, I said,
The 2012 election cycle is going to be interesting to watch. I predict it will be one of the slimiest, most unabashedly mendacious eruptions of religious and moral hypocrisy by so-called defenders of religion that we've seen in a long time on the American political scene.
In a separate posting on the ongoing and astonishing attempt of the leaders of the Catholic church to redefine the term "religious freedom" to mean that they have the right to block the freedom of other religious groups to solemnize gay unions, I wrote,
Interesting, isn't it, to see people twist words like "freedom" and "non-discrimination" (not to mention "love," if they ever get around to talking about it) into something that means the very opposite of what the words actually mean, even while claiming that they are the ones whose freedom is being curtailed, and they are the ones being discriminated against?
And here's a story that combines aspects of both of those previous postings: another right-wing Catholic who is making noises these days about a 2012 presidential run, and who, like his fellow Catholic Mr. Gingrich, is also seeking to woo the religious right, is Rick Santorum. And recently, in the heartland of the American religious right, at a private Christian school in Spartanburg, South Carolina, Santorum made the baffling claim that the medieval crusades were not about aggression at all, but that the "left" has revised the history of that shameful moment of Christian history in order to score points against Christendom.
Santorum stated,
The idea that the Crusades and the fight of Christendom against Islam is somehow an aggression on our part is absolutely anti-historical. And that is what the perception is by the American left who hates Christendom.
And he went on to say,
What I'm talking about is onward American soldiers. What we're talking about are core American values. "All men are created equal" — that's a Christian value, but it's an American value. It's become part of our national religion, if you will. The point I was trying to make was that the national faith, the national ideal, is rooted in the Christian ideal — in the Judeo-Christian concept of the person.
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