Tuesday, July 10, 2012

My Scholarship Essay


Absurdities into Atrocities

          In March of 2012, Pew Research Forum released the results of a poll that showed 38% of Americans believe that politicians are laying it on rather thick in regards to religion.  In a similar poll in 2001, that figure was 12%.  Surprisingly, 52% of Americans also say that religion needs to stay out of politics.[1]  While I personally tend to take most polls with a Buick-sized grain of salt, this is a refreshing trend, especially when noting that 38% of then Rick Santorum voters agreed with the sentiment.  However, this atmosphere of common sense is difficult to see when analyzing the big picture of legislation and politics.
            Karl Marx’s oft-paraphrased quote, “Religion is the opiate of the masses” is one of the basic truisms of mankind.  Church attendance rises during wartime and other times of great strife, as though God would stop war and divert that tsunami if only more people decided to forego football in favor of Mass.  The day Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich dropped out of the presidential race was a day of celebration for me; but there are dozens more zealots to take their place.  I watched with real terror when Mr. Santorum seemed to be a real contender to the GOP throne.  The irony of every word he spoke in favor of what amounted to a theocracy was obviously lost to him, but what frightened me was that it seemed to be lost to the mass of his followers.  During one campaign stop, Santorum said one of the most horrifying statements since Queen Mary I told England they all had to be Catholic now: “We have civil laws, but our civil laws have to comport with the higher law”. 
            One only has to look to countries like Afghanistan, Iran, and Saudi Arabia to see how well it works out when the government decides to legislate based on biblical codes.  The fact that Santorum was proposing Sharia Law here in the United States while in the same breath saying “…it is evil. Sharia law is incompatible with American jurisprudence and our Constitution” didn’t give any of the true-believers even a moment’s pause.  It is important to note that when these types of politicians talk about the importance of religion, they of course mean the importance of their religion; all other religions that are not Judeo-Christian in nature should be deemed the work of the devil.
            Rick Santorum is no longer slouching towards Bethlehem, fortunately, but the GOP’s heir apparent, Mitt Romney, is only marginally better.  Romney has said “In recent years, the notion of the separation of church and state has been taken by some well beyond its original meaning. … It is as if they are intent on establishing a new religion in America — the religion of secularism”.  Even ignoring the oxymoronic nature of the statement, his words bring forth the religious right’s most offensive misinterpretation- that they, rather than historians and everyone else, know what the Founding Fathers intended when they designed the Constitutional right to freedom of religion.  They deliberately ignore not just the history of the men themselves, but also the spirit in which the document was forged; the Founding Fathers knew the importance of not merely freedom of religion, but also freedom from religion.  They clearly understood the danger inherent in having those in power believe they had the right to promulgate the integrity of man.
            Despite the fact that the nation’s attitude is seemingly swinging in the direction of sense, the religious right are not ones to give up a war just because the battle isn’t going well.  In researching for this essay I came across something even more terrifying than Rick Santorum.  The war on secularism and free thought is one that has always been waged, and may still be for the foreseeable future.  It is a war fought in increments, and one of the more popular incremental battles is that fought against women’s rights.  No other form of “morality” is more fiercely legislated-or attempted to be legislated- and has more potential for dangerous consequences than that of abortion.  Roe v Wade was won almost thirty years ago, and for thirty years the religious and conservative right has battled to overturn it.  All of the 2012 potential Republican candidates swore to make abortion illegal in the event they were to win the Office.  35 states have laws that have led to hundreds of women’s prosecution for the crime of stillbirth and miscarriages.  A woman in Alabama was recently convicted after her infant died 19 minutes after birth.  In utero it was determined that the fetus had Down’s syndrome and she was advised to terminate; which she did not because she was against abortion.  Yet she faces ten years for being the mother of a dead child.[2] 
            This is what happens when a government has the ability to legislate morality.  When politicians ignore the rights and beliefs-or lack thereof- of the citizens of this country, and are not driven back by the sense of the mass of common man, we are merely a step away from a dystopia worthy of George Orwell.  It is our duty in every election year to ensure we safeguard our freedom of free-thought, and fight in the spirit of our Founding Fathers.  Republicans are fond of saying (ad naseum) that there can be no morality if there is no God.  That without an amorphous higher being in the sky telling people the difference between right and wrong, there will be chaos and anarchy; the ethical center will no longer hold.  I contend that the most powerful of principles arise from those who have no one to answer to but themselves.  After all, no one has ever been able to see the Almighty when they look in a mirror.  Unless, of course, you happen to be Rick Santorum. 

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