A Palin Theocracy

by on September 14, 2008 · 2 comments

in Civil Rights, Election

by: Marjorie Cohn / t r u t h o u t | Perspective / Thursday 11 September 2008

(Photo: The Daily Pulse)John McCain’s selection of Sarah Palin as his vice-presidential running mate has invigorated a lackluster campaign. The media can’t stop talking about her. Given McCain’s age and state of health (his medical file was nearly 1,200 pages long), Palin would indeed be a heartbeat away from becoming president. But what would a Palin administration really look like?

Palin is a radical, right-wing, fundamentalist Christian who would love to create a theocracy. She believes we are living in the “end times” which will result in a bloody inferno from which only true Christians will be saved. Palin recently attended a service in her Wasilla Bible Church run by David Brickner, who runs Jews for Jesus, a group the Anti-Defamation League criticizes for its “aggressive and deceptive” proselytizing of Jews. Those who don’t accept Jesus as their savior will burn in Hell, according to Palin’s brand of theology.

As governor of Alaska, Palin asked her congregation to pray for the natural gas pipeline, which she characterized as “God’s will.” She thinks the war in Iraq is a “task that is from God.” Palin has pushed for creationism to be taught in schools, and she opposes stem cell research.

Palin’s choice to have a Down syndrome child and her teenage daughter’s choice to continue her pregnancy have made right-wing evangelical Christians ecstatic. But while she chose pregnancy, Palin would deny a woman victimized by rape or incest the right to choose abortion, and then criminally punish both the woman for having one and her doctor for performing it.

McCain would also love to inject a heavy dose of Christianity into his administration. A year ago, he declared, “The Constitution established the United States of America as a Christian nation.” Just about the only issue on which McCain has not flip-flopped is his opposition to abortion rights. The next president will almost certainly make at least one appointment to the Supreme Court. McCain has pledged to appoint judges in the mold of Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito; these would also be Palin’s preferred judges. Another conservative on the court would mean that Roe v. Wade would be overruled. That would return us to back-alley abortions with coat hangers.

Rick Davis, McCain’s campaign manager, said that “this election is not about issues … This election is about a composite view of what people take away from these candidates.” The Republicans know they will lose if they really focus on issues such as the economy, the war, healthcare, education and the environment. They are hoping that pro-choice women who supported Hillary Clinton will gravitate to Palin because she’s a feisty – albeit anti-choice – woman. They are also banking on support from people who cannot bring themselves to vote for a black man.

But those non-evangelicals who back the McCain-Palin ticket do so at their peril. Not only will they continue to suffer four more years of the disastrous Bush policies; they will also find themselves living in a Christian theocracy.  [Go here for the article.]


Marjorie Cohn is president of the National Lawyers Guild and a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law in San Diego, CA. She is the author of “Cowboy Republic: Six Ways the Bush Gang Has Defied the Law.” Her new book, “Rules of Disengagement: The Politics and Honor of Military Dissent” (co-authored with Kathleen Gilberd), will be published this winter.

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Stu September 15, 2008 at 9:00 am

Ya gotta hand it to the Republicans they may not know how to run a democracy but they sure know how to put together a team that can win an election. After all isn’t that what it is about – WINNING. good government and fixing our fiscal and social problems have nothing to do with it.
Obama picked a great running mate that is skilled in foreign policy and will provide needed skills to the administration. McCain picked a running made that will make headlines and appeal to folks with a sixth grade reading level. Sound bites – it is all about sound bites – people don’t read.
Its the 2000 and the 2004 election all over again. If this election and running the country wasn’t so important it would make this whole thing comical. Pick the most popular kid in the class and vote for them. who cares if they can’t add or have any kind of logic at all. No one really knows the issues, much less understands them. heck the majority of people don’t know the color of a orange.
The Republicans are like the Yankees when they win. They got the actor to win in 1980 and Bush 1 came in on the actors coat tails. They got the good old frat boy to win in 2000 and they knew that the POW probably couldn’t pull it off in 2008 so they put up the cute hockey mom to make headlines. Who cares if her foreign policy experience is going to Canada and Mexico and being able to see Russia on a clear day from her home state.

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Matt Sieger September 15, 2008 at 10:30 am

I am a Jewish believer in Jesus. Here is a direct quote from David Brickner of Jews for Jesus regarding his remarks at Sarah Palin’s church: “The comments attributed to me were taken out of context. The notion that the terrorist, bulldozer attack in Jerusalem this summer was God’s judgment on Israel for not believing in Jesus, is absolutely not what I believe. In retrospect, I can see how my rhetoric might be misunderstood and I truly regret that. Of course I never expected the kind of magnifying glass scrutiny on a message where I was speaking extemporaneously. Let me be clear. I don’t believe that any one event whether a terrorist attack or a natural disaster is a specific fulfillment of or manifestation of a Biblical prediction of judgment. I don’t believe that the newspaper should be used to interpret the Bible. The Bible interprets the Bible. I love my Jewish people and the land of Israel. I stand with and support her against all efforts to harm her or her people in any way. Please feel free to read my further explanations on the front page of our website, both in my article and in the interviews I did with Christianity Today and NBC.” The website is http://www.jewsforjesus.org

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