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Southern conservatives? Inoculated at birth
South Carolina’s Gov. Mark Sanford is contrite about his extramarital affair. He plans to tour the state asking constituents for forgiveness. In South Carolina, he will probably get it.
In Southern Baptist-steeped South Carolina, public repentance is a tradition. Weepy evangelists, altar calls, redemption pageants and encounter weekends are deeply rooted in the culture.
There is a joke Southern towns share about having a church on every street corner. It is also a competition — several claim the informal title of “Buckle of the Bible Belt.”
In this culture, it is a time-honored ritual to answer a tearfully delivered altar call at the end of the church service. The repentant rise slowly from their seats and shuffle humbly to the front of the church — or stadium, in the case of a Billy Graham crusade — for a humiliating public cleansing, to shed their own tears and accept Jesus as their personal savior. Or to accept him again. Or to receive forgiveness, prayers and the laying on of hands after “backsliding.”
Church audiences love testimonies — sordid, public confessions of a
life ill-spent before finding God. Personal testimonies featuring all
the forbidden fruits — alcohol, sex, drugs, and rock and roll — allow
them to vicariously partake of guilty pleasures right out in public.
In church, even, and without taking their clothes off.
Returning to the faith after some really good sinning was entertainment in these parts long before the VCR.
Decades ago, I caught a piece of a late-night, AM gospel talk
radio show out of somewhere in Georgia. The host was interviewing
Demond Wilson, the actor from the 1970s TV sitcom, “Sanford and Son.”
After the show went into reruns, Wilson had become a minister and was
on the radio to talk about his new ministry.
But the host didn’t want to hear about that. He wanted to hear
about Wilson’s life as a rich Hollywood celebrity. What about the wild
parties? the host wanted to know. What about the sex and the drugs?
Wilson explained that he and his wife weren’t really party
people. He played tennis, he said, with some star (whose name I can’t
remember). But basically, he went to work and they had largely kept to
themselves.
The host kept at it. He kept pushing.
You could hear the anxiousness in his voice. He’d expected some
really quality sinning, but this more was like coitus interruptus.
“But when did you really hit bottom?” he asked a couple of
times. This guy hoped to hear how Wilson had found Jesus after coming
to in some strangers’ bathroom after a drunken orgy, a needle still in
his arm. You know, a really good testimony.
He never got it. Wilson just decided one day that he would rather give up acting and serve God.
The radio host was audibly disappointed.
What has any of this got to do with Gov. Mark Sanford’s Argentine junket? Inoculation.
For conservative politicians, the testimony has morphed into
“inoculation politics,” e.g., falsely accusing opponents of personal
failings they themselves share. Accustom the public to your neighbors’
faults so as not to look as bad in case you are caught indulging them
yourself.
“For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God,” Paul
wrote in Romans 3. Anybody who has ever been to a revival meeting knows
that one.
Sinning. Everybody does it. But unlike a godless liberal, a good
conservative who confesses his sin publicly is eligible to be welcomed
back into the fold. Just one of the boys.
“Hallelujah, brother!” as Dwayne Hickman once said.
Southern-strategy Republicans learned that lesson well. Man is sinful by nature. The Mark of Cain. It’s old news.
Soon enough, Sen. John Ensign of Nevada (and of the Promise
Keepers) will be old news. South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford (of The
Fellowship), too.
But unlike Rep. Mark Foley’s (R-FL) men’s room affairs, Mark Sanford’s Argentine junket sounds like really good sinning.
Already, fleets of tabloid photographers have arrived in Buenos Aires, hoping to give us a glimpse of just how good.
Thus, when Sanford contritely strikes out on his political
redemption tour of South Carolina, pious sinners anxious to hear all
the details will probably forgive him his sins. They’ve already been
inoculated.
TOM SULLIVAN
Asheville
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Tom Sullivan is the founder of BlueCentury.org. He blogs for Campaign
for America’s Future and Undercover Blue and holds degrees in
philosophy from Furman University and in mechanical engineering from
Clemson University.
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N.C. GOP Chair Tim Johnson
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Why is news media largely ignoring election of N.C. GOP’s vice chair?
Buncombe County Republican Party Chair Tim Johnson has been
recently eviscerated through print, radio and television media outlets
in WNC for misconduct in his marriage 12 years ago.
The district chair of the Republican Party and others were
active participants in this questionably timed effort to undermine this
gentleman’s candidacy for state office.
In spite of the negative publicity, this gentleman went to
Raleigh and handily won the election for vice chairman of the North
Caroling State Republican Party. Not bad for a guy, unlike the rest of
us, who made mistakes in his younger years.
When public humiliation was the theme, this gentleman made front
page of WNC’s largest paper. When, the very next day, he won his
special seat, he received a brief left-hand column insert.
The Republican Party has elected a black male to the second
highest seat in the state party. That deserves mention — more
importantly, this gentleman deserves recognition for stepping through
the hurdles with great courage and perserverance.
CARL MUMPOWER
Member, Asheville City Council
Asheville
Calling U.S. health care system ‘free market’ termed erroneous
EDITOR’S NOTE: A copy of the following letter to the
Asheville Citizen-Times was sent to the Daily Planet and is being
reprinted here because of its relevance to the current health-care
debate.
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In a recent Asheville Citizen-Times editorial on health care (“We need
serious debate on health care reform, not political theater,” Jun 24,
2009), the writer claims to be unable to decipher how efficient
capitalism can be bested by inefficient government. That, of course,
does not mean that question is undecipherable.
First, we do not have a free market in healthcare. This industry
is heavily regulated. The problems we experience in healthcare derive
from a long history of politically-driven government interference in
that once-proud industry.
The truth is that the government, with its hands already in your
pocket, competing with counterparts the private sector is the
antithesis of competition. It is the direct negation of fair
competition. It is in reality a pathway to coercive monopoly that
ultimately squeezes private providers out of the market. Which, of
course, is what this administration and the supporters of
government-run healthcare want.
In 2003, Mr. Obama said, “I happen to be a proponent of a
single-payer universal healthcare plan. But we may not get there
immediately.” And as Chicago Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) said
in April of 2009, “a public option will put the private insurance
industry out of business and lead to single-payer.”
This is not how a free market competes, this is how the Mafia competes.
TIM PECK
Asheville
Rep. Heath Shuler accused of being hoodwinked during Sri Lanka trip
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Rep. Heath Shuler, D-Waynesville
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EDITOR’S NOTE: The following letter was sent in
reference to a June 6 protest by North Carolinians for Peace, a
nonprofit organization, for which the author urged attendance outside
Rep. Heath Shuler’s office in Asheville. The author is a
Tamil-American, who has been living in North Carolina since 1983.
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Congressman Heath Shuler was in Sri Lanka recently, presumably to check
out the situation in the northern part of Sri Lanka, after the recent
war.
Contrary to what the congressman said at the press conference
sponsored by the Sri Lankan government, the displaced civilains and war
casualties are interred in camps which have been comapred to
concentration camps.
The 200,000 civilians, (including women and children) are being
held there, under the pretext of protecting them, live in apalling
conditons as attested by humanitarian aid workers and a few
international reporters (British Channel 4 news) who have managed to
visit the camps.
There are reports of abductions, rape and beatings, mainly carried out by the Sri Lankan army and the para-military.
Also, there is a severe shortage of food, medicine and water.
Infectious deseases are spreading, and there are no doctors on site to
care for the sick, the injured and the dying. The children in the
camps and the surrounding areas have no access to school, because the
schools have been taken over by the army. The civilians are under the
constant watch of the Sri Lankan military and para-military.
I feel that the congressman was taken on a guided tour, and he
is obviously under the impression that the civiliamns are well-looked
after.
No media or humanitarian workers and definitely no visitors are
allowed in these camps. In addition, people coming in search of
relatives are not allowed to visit nor bring food.
SUBI RAJENDRA
Wilmington
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