Courtesy of Salon:
Over the past few years, America has been divided
by religion. The culture wars have heated up with secularists on one side
and God-fearing Americans on the other, and to understate things: They
disagree. But does that mean we hate one another? If the animosity is so
intense, what kind of outrage goes too far? Bonnie Weinstein has tackled
this issue in an important but very troubling book out Dec. 2, titled “To
the Far Right Christian Hater … You Can Be a Good Speller or a Hater, But
You Can’t Be Both: Official Hate Mail, Threats, and Criticism From the
Archives of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation.”
Married
to Mikey Weinstein, founder of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation
(MRFF), the author has collected and annotated a sampling of the hate mail
the foundation has received over the past few years. This hate mail is not
trolling or anonymous “Internet comments.” The letters are specific and
threatening and most often include a return address or email. The
Weinsteins’ home has been vandalized — many times — and the family has had
to take serious and expensive security measures. It’s no joke. As I read the
book, curled up on my couch, my wife kept asking if I was OK. My face was
fixed in an expression of horror and disbelief as I read the rage, hate and
cruelty cataloged on every page. Bonnie has uncovered a shocking reality:
Self-professed Christians deny the fundamental humanity of other people they
don’t even know.
As hard as it was to read in places,
it’s important to read and understand. It offers an unflinching examination
of a subset of American fundamentalism, created by a segment of our society
that is whiter, more conservative and a lot angrier than the rest of
America. For some people the future of their faith and of the nation are in
danger, threatened by secular forces controlled by Satan himself. This
existential threat to Christian supremacy justifies the most offensive,
vulgar and cruel letters I’ve ever read. Think I’m overstating it? Read the
book.
"Self-professed Christians deny the fundamental
humanity of other people they don’t even know." Gee, ya think?
As
somebody who has been on the receiving end of some of this vitriol I am
completely unsurprised by the fact that so-called "Christians" can be filled
with an almost bottomless pit of hatred which bubbles to the surface
whenever they feel their religion or idols are under attack.
I
have little doubt that the people who called the school where I worked and
threatened to shoot me on the playground would self identify as Christians.
Just
as the people who send the off times hilariously angry comments to Richard
Dawkins. Which he enjoys reading aloud to his
supporters.
Of course the idea that being a Christian, whether
practicing or merely for ornamental purposes, makes you a more ethical or
moral person is utter nonsense. Yet that is the conceit used to sell the
religion to the masses, and impress upon people that these believers should
be trusted and admired above all others.
These letters do much to
disprove that assertion.
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