Monday, January 09, 2006

they all love their petroleum

i'm genuinely starting to overtly dislike ALL evangelicals. i posted the whole wall street journal article below. i never read the wsj -- i read about this article on the huffington post. it's not long.
Ministers Say They Blessed Seats Ahead of Alito Hearing

By JUNE KRONHOLZ Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNALJanuary 5, 2006 7:20 p.m.

WASHINGTON -- Insisting that God "certainly needs to be involved" in the Supreme Court confirmation process, three Christian ministers today blessed the doors of the hearing room where Senate Judiciary Committee members will begin considering the nomination of Judge Samuel Alito on Monday.

Capitol Hill police barred them from entering the room to continue what they called a consecration service. But in a bit of one-upsmanship, the three announced that they had let themselves in a day earlier, touching holy oil to the seats where Judge Alito, the senators, witnesses, Senate staffers and the press will sit, and praying for each of the 13 committee members by name.

"We did adequately apply oil to all the seats," said the Rev. Rob Schenck, who identified himself as an evangelical Christian and as president of the National Clergy Council in Washington.

Rev. Schenck called the consecration service the kick-off in a series of prayer meetings that will continue throughout the confirmation hearing.

Capitol Hill police said they weren't aware that the three had entered the hearing room earlier, but added that hearing rooms typically aren't locked because "they're not of interest to anyone." Lt. Dominick Costa said the Judiciary Committee room will be swept for bombs and perhaps for electronic bugging equipment before the hearing begins.

The three ministers insisted they weren't taking sides in the Alito debate. "This is not a pro-Alito prayer," insisted the Rev. Patrick Mahoney, director of the Christian Defense Coalition. With abortion, public prayer, gay marriage and right-to-life issues among those topping public debate, however, "God…is interested in what goes on" in the nomination hearing, Rev. Schenck said.

The two men, along with Grace Nwachukwu, general manager of a group called Faith and Action, read three Psalms outside the committee room, knelt to say the Lord's Prayer and marked a cross in oil on the committee door before leaving.

Rev. Schenck said he and Rev. Mahoney had blessed the same room before hearings for Chief Justice John Roberts last year. That hearing "went very well," Rev. Schenck said.

now when they say they anointed the seats with "oil", is that actual, flammable oil? couldn't that be construed as attempted arson (aside from just completely daffy)?

if islamic suicide bombers are considered religious extremists, how should we classify this evangelical voodoo? i can't call it religious moderation. moderates practice their faith and contentedly allow others to practice theirs unfettered.

obviously there are varying degrees of religious fundamentalism -- some involving dynamite vests, and some involving anointing inanimate objects (george bush, for example). frankly though i'm starting to think that even the moderates, all religions, are dangerous.

4 comments:

Flamingo Jones said...

My most liberal friend and I both had free subscriptions to WSJ our junior and senior years of college. It's basically worthless, but bulky. We used to curse and mock it on a regular basis.

I'm frightened by this article as well...they seem to be thinking of newer and crazier ways to make themselves stand-out as total nut-jobs.

Nez said...

I just listened to an interview with Senator George McGovern on the Diane Rehm show. What I took away from the show was that McGovern said the electorate in this country needs educating.
I don't know how that can be accomplished, but he is corrrect. Look to the last election (and the stolen one before that) for proof.

Phillip said...

nez, i would aver with 95% certainty that the last election was stolen as well. read the conyer's report and it's pretty shocking.

we do need mass education of some sort, but i don't think it's possible. perhaps a mass manipulation is more viable.

Ian McGibboney said...

"The three ministers insisted they weren't taking sides in the Alito debate. 'This is not a pro-Alito prayer,' insisted the Rev. Patrick Mahoney, director of the Christian Defense Coalition. With abortion, public prayer, gay marriage and right-to-life issues among those topping public debate, however, 'God…is interested in what goes on' in the nomination hearing, Rev. Schenck said."

Yeah, RIGHT. The evangelicals don't care? Yes, phizz, they are stupid if they expect us to buy their obvious double-talk. This is the same rhetoric behind "suggested donation": "Yeah, it's free, but we'd really like it if you paid us."

They want Alito and have already seen the power of fake prayer and oil in "electing" Bush. They won't be happy until everyone in office is completely fanatical.