Ediblog.com
Selwyn Duke
The Church of Huck: Growing Government in the Name of Religion
©
2007 Selwyn Duke
There
is a candidate in the presidential race who has a serious religion problem.
No, it’s not Mormon Mitt or recently-religious Rudy.
It is Mike Huckabee.
Just
for the record, I share Huck’s faith in Jesus Christ.
Not only have I no problem with religion in public life, I also
understand that one can’t really separate a person’s world view from his
politics. The political is merely a
reflection of the spiritual; our politics doesn’t emerge in a vacuum.
So
what is my problem with Huck? Do I
accuse him of false religiosity?
No,
what scares me is that his beliefs are all too real.
To
that enormous secular conservative voting block out there, I will say, be not
afraid. It’s not that Huck would
impose religion through government. No,
his actions would truly offend you.
He
would impose statism in the name of religion through government.
While
Huck will say what you want to hear to win office, he will not hear what you
want to say once there. He will make
tone-deaf Bush seem like a maestro. How
do I know this?
He
believes.
Belief
can be a great thing, of course. Our
Founding Fathers’ unprecedented respect for liberty was born of their
Christian belief that rights were bestowed by the divine king and not worldly
ones. Mother Teresa’s Christian
beliefs inspired her to toil tirelessly to aid the destitute and dying in India.
But whereas the founders kept charity out of government and Teresa kept
government out of charity, Huck conflates the two in a disastrous mix of bad
theology and bad political science. Perverting
Christianity’s message and violating 2000 years of its tradition, he believes
it is his Christian mandate to do good works through government.
With,
of course, your money.
Huck
invokes faith to justify ambitions ranging from the insidious to the idiotic.
For the former, look no further than immigration, where Huck espoused the
Christian principle, “Do unto others as you would have others do unto you,”
while advocating an apparent open-door
policy. This, despite the
fact that if any good Christian were to find himself in a country illegally, he
would expect its citizens to demand he return home.
This
illegal-enabling attitude was also apparent in a deal to establish a partially
taxpayer-financed Mexican consulate office in Little Rock, a scheme involving
the lease of building space to the Mexican government for $1 a year.
Then there was Huck’s support of drivers’ licenses, government
benefits and in-state tuition rates for illegals and his opposition to a bill
requiring proof of citizenship to vote.
What
was the motivation for these outrages? While
some critics assert
that he created a “magnet” for illegals at the behest of business interests,
for certain is that Huck invoked his Christian faith while attacking supporters
of the proof-of-citizenship bill. He
labeled the measure irresponsible, un-American, anti-life and un-Christian.
This prompted one of the assailed legislators, Jim Holt, to say
that “Christian charity does not include turning a blind eye to
lawbreaking.”
The
problem, according to many, is that Huck doesn’t agree.
For instance, Daniel Larison at the American Conservative wrote,
“.
. . Huckabee regards it as his Christian duty to help subvert and liberalize
U.S. immigration laws. Together
[with Sam Brownback], they embrace the notion that fidelity to the Gospel
requires privileging the interests of non-citizens over those of fellow
citizens.”
(Note:
This is why immigration crusader Tom Tancredo just exited the presidential race
and endorsed Romney; he knows Mexicali Mike must be stopped.)
Huck
explicitly cited
the same “Christian duty” when explaining a lenient attitude toward felons
that would allow for twice as many pardons under his Arkansas administration as
those of his last three predecessors combined.
Among those pardoned was the notorious Wayne Dumond, a thug serving 25
years for raping a teenage high school cheerleader.
But Dumond had no feeling of Christian duty.
He then raped and murdered a woman named Carol Sue Shields.
As
for that ol’ Huck sense of Christian duty, “Thou shalt not bear false
witness” seems no more a part of it than does the imperative to protect the
innocent. He denied playing a role
in Dumond’s pardon, but this is contradicted
by the very man who had to sign the criminal’s parole papers, one Ermer
Pondexter. Said he,
“I
signed the [parole] papers because the governor wanted Dumond paroled.”
This
Clintonesque relationship with truth also evidenced itself in the YouTube debate
when Huck was asked about his plan for college tuition benefits for illegals.
Writing about this, columnist Jerome
Corsi has “identified five specific, easily documented
misrepresentations of historical facts” in Huck’s answer to the question.
Yet
there is another fact: In his quest to fill the schools, Huck hasn’t forgotten
citizens. No, not at all.
Huck signed a bill
in Arkansas making it more difficult to homeschool your children, perhaps at the
behest of the left-wing National Education Association (whose endorsement he
captured). The homeschooling
families supporting him should take note.
But
what will concern all families is Huck’s philosophy on one of the biggest
issues of our time, terrorism. He
has some very definite ideas
about thwarting it, and they’re probably a bit different from yours.
Said Huck,
We
must first destroy existing terrorist groups and then attack the underlying
conditions that breed them: the lack of basic sanitation, health care,
education, jobs, a free press, fair courts — which all translates into a lack
of opportunity and hope. The United States’ strategic interests as the
world’s most powerful country coincide with its moral obligations as the
richest.
Ah,
true innovation: Giving social programs international scope.
And, I wonder, does Huck know that Osama bin Laden is worth about $300
million? I’ll also note that there
is no moral obligation to use other people’s money for your government-run
charities.
Then
there are Huck’s silly health-police measures.
He says he would favor a national smoking
ban (not the role of the federal government – unconstitutional).
Then, many of us have heard about how Huck shed more than 100 pounds
after developing diabetes, a commendable achievement.
But, not content with personal victory in the battle of the bulge, Huck
took his crusade public, creating a program to test the body-fat index of every
student in Arkansas’ school system.
Is
this Huck’s conception of small government and proper use of tax money?
Does a 10-year-old child oft-teased as a double-wide need that assessment
affirmed through a taxpayer-funded program?
Yes, Christy, just so you know, you’re now officially, legally fat –
signed and stamped by the state.
Huck’s
puerile passions are understandable, but not excusable.
He lost all that weight, and he said his wife’s 1975 battle with cancer
left him “scared to death” of the disease.
Thus, like gun-control nut Carolyn McCarthy – elected to Congress after
her husband and son were shot in the L.I.R.R.
massacre – he is a statist who feels compelled to impose his
passions through government. But,
I’m sorry, I don’t find the nanny state more attractive because she’s
dressed up like the church lady.
Protect
our borders, Huck; I can protect my own lungs and arteries, thank you.
Perhaps
what’s most offensive about the Huck, though, is his clear message that those
opposed to his statist measures aren’t good Christians.
Yet I will cede that he’s half right, in that we should pursue charity
in ways that correspond with our gifts.
And
I hear that the Ghatal Missionary Baptist Fellowship in India is looking for
candidates.
As
for candidates, Huck is the only one who would bring not just missionary zeal to
the White House, but missionary intentions.
This makes him especially dangerous because, to use a variation on a
famous Blaise Pascal line, men never grow government so completely and
cheerfully as when they do it with religious conviction.
This
is why those who support Huck because he has religious conviction ought to
wonder what those convictions actually are.
Is it enough that he professes some version of Christianity?
I will remind you that Jesus himself said,
“You
will know them by their fruits. . . . Not
everyone that says to me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven. .
. .”
Nor
do simple pronouncements qualify one to enter the White House.
Sure, Huck now speaks in a tongue palatable to his audience; he’s Tom
Tancredo on immigration, Torquemada on punishment and the ancient Chinese on
border barriers. But you can believe
the rhetoric or the reality. He
hasn’t changed his ways and in office would fulfill his statist promise, not
his promises. How do I know?
Because
he believes.
As
a man of faith, I understand that when you believe your principles reflect
God’s will, you won’t bend.
Ever.
This
is the greatest asset; that is, when you have the right principles.
As
to this, it’s just too bad the Church of Huck has nothing to say about lying
to get elected.
Selwyn Duke is a freelance writer out or Larchmont, NY. He has written for various publications including: IntellectualConservative.com, AmericanThinker.com and is a regular columnist for RenewAmerica.us.